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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #65560 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/65560)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Land of Afternoon, by Gilbert Knox
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: The Land of Afternoon
- A Satire
-
-Author: Gilbert Knox
-
-Release Date: June 18, 2021 [eBook #65560]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-Produced by: Al Haines, Mark Akrigg, Jen Haines & the online Distributed
- Proofreaders Canada team at https://www.pgdpcanada.net
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LAND OF AFTERNOON ***
-
-
-
-
-
-
- [Cover Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- _The Land of_
- _Afternoon_
-
- A SATIRE
-
- BY
-
- _Gilbert Knox_
-
- OTTAWA
- THE GRAPHIC PUBLISHERS
-
-
-
-
- _Copyright, 1924_
- _By Gilbert Knox_
- PRINTED IN THE DOMINION OF CANADA
- ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
-
-
-
-
- _The Land of Afternoon_
- _By_ GILBERT KNOX
-
- PART ONE ...................................THEY CAME.
- PART TWO ....................................THEY SAW.
- PART THREE ..............................THEY CONQUERED.
-
-
-
-
- “Courage,” he said, and pointed to the land.
- “This mounting wave will roll us shoreward soon,”
- In the afternoon they came unto a land
- In which it seemed always afternoon.
- —_The Lotus Eaters_
-
-
-
-
- _Foreword_
-
-
-However this novel may be classified by readers or librarians, it is
-frankly intended to be a satire upon some phases of social and political
-life in Canada. Satire is properly a criticism of human folly or
-unworthiness in a class or in the mass, and the exact limning of people
-in real life is no part of its metier. When it makes such an attempt, it
-ceases to be satire and tends to become biography seasoned with
-defamation—a sad misuse of what is broadly regarded as a medium for the
-regeneration of society.
-
- * * * * *
-
-But however satire is regarded in the abstract by his readers, the
-author desires it to be clearly understood that all the characters upon
-his stage are purely imaginary. While he thought it necessary to occupy
-himself with some unpleasant minor types, on the other hand, he felt an
-optimistic joy in the creation of his protagonist. He feels that
-“Raymond Dilling” is no false start with the practical ethics of
-Superman. On the contrary, he believes that there are many men with whom
-we mingle in every-day contact, who, if put to the test, would react
-with a moral firmness and fineness quite measurable with “Dilling’s”
-conduct.
-
-
-
-
- First Imprint, October, 1925
- Second Imprint, December, 1925
-
-
-
-
- THE
- LAND OF AFTERNOON
-
-
-
-
- THEY CAME
-
-
- CHAPTER 1.
-
-Byward Market had been freshened during the night by a heavy fall of
-powdery snow, that knew no peace from a bitter wind which drove it, in
-stinging clouds, up and down the street. The thermometer had made its
-record drop of the season.
-
-Marjorie Dilling stood on the outskirts of a tight-packed group and
-shivered. The strangeness of the scene struck her afresh; the sense of
-loneliness was almost overpowering. She simply could not bring herself
-to push and jostle as the other women did—and a few men,
-too!—consequently she was always thrust away from the curb and
-prevented from seeing what lay beneath the furs and blankets and odd
-bits of cloth in the carts. Only now and again could she catch a glimpse
-of a tower of frozen beef, or rigid hogs which were trundled by their
-hind legs through the thronged streets, in a manner strongly suggestive
-of a wheelbarrow. Or, as the crowds broke and parted, she could
-occasionally see a stiff fringe of poultry and rabbits strung across the
-ends of the wagons. Eggs, butter, vegetables and cream were well
-covered, and spared in so far as possible, the rigours of the morning.
-
-Byward was an open market which attracted farmers from districts as
-remote as the Upper Gatineau—across the river, in the Province of
-Quebec. Behind the line of carts or sleighs—automobiles, now!—there
-ran a row of nondescript buildings that rarely claimed the attention of
-the marketers; a confusion of second-hand stores, an occasional produce
-shop, and third-rate public houses, whose broad windows revealed a
-cluster of dilapidated chairs flanked by battered _crachoirs_, which had
-seen many years of unspeakable service. Behind these, a narrow passage
-led to the abode of spirits, of the kind latterly and peculiarly called
-departed. Here, the farmers gathered for warmth in winter and coolness
-in summer, and to slake—or intensify—their thirst in either season,
-while their women-folk remained in discomfort outside, and attended to
-the practical issues of the day.
-
-The sigh that fluttered from Marjorie’s lips took form like a ghostly
-balloon and floated away on the frosty air. Her basket was light and her
-spirits were heavy. She found it incredibly difficult to shop in the
-Ottawa market. She simply dreaded Saturday mornings.
-
-At the corner, where the wind whipped down the street and few people
-cared to linger, she found herself standing before an ancient crone, who
-sat amid an assortment of roughly-cured hides, and under a huge,
-weather-stained umbrella. At her feet lay a rusty pail overflowing with
-a curious mass that looked like bloated sausages in the last stages of
-decay.
-
-“What—what is that?” asked Marjorie, in her soft timid voice.
-
-The old woman made unintelligible sounds from between toothless gums.
-
-“I beg your pardon?”
-
-“I tol’ you, it is _sang pouding_. ’Ow much you want?”
-
-“I don’t want any, thank you,” answered Marjorie. “I was looking for
-some sweetbreads. Have you any?”
-
-“Sweet _bread_?” echoed the ancient, grumpily. “Well, why you don’ look
-on de store, hein? W’at you t’ink I am—de baker’s cart?”
-
-Although unaware of the complexities of the French tongue and the French
-character, Marjorie perceived a rebuff in the old woman’s words. She
-apologised hastily and moved away. What, she kept asking herself, could
-she substitute for sweetbreads? Chickens were expensive and eggs, a
-fabulous price. Nobody in Ottawa seemed to keep hens . . .
-
-“Have _you_ any sweetbreads?”
-
-She began to feel a little hysterical. It _was_ a funny question! No
-wonder the old woman answered her crossly. Have you any sweetbreads?
-_How_ many times had she asked it? She thought of the game the children
-played—_Black sheep, black sheep, have you any wool?_ And what on earth
-should she get in place of sweetbreads? Raymond was so difficult about
-his food. He had such a tiny and pernickety appetite . . .
-
-By wriggling, she gained the curb before another cart.
-
-“Have _you_ any sweetbreads?”
-
-No one paid her the slightest heed. The centre of the stage was held by
-a tall, spare woman with a stridulous voice. Marjorie knew her slightly.
-Two weeks ago she had called—not as people called at home, in Pinto
-Plains—but sternly and coldly, neither giving nor receiving pleasure by
-the visit, save when she had laid three bits of pasteboard on the corner
-of the table and left the house. Mrs. Pratt was the wife of a cheerfully
-ineffectual professional man with political aspirations, and she felt
-her position keenly. So did Marjorie; and she backed away while
-summoning her courage to speak.
-
-“A dollar and a half?” Mrs. Pratt was saying. “Outrageous! I can’t think
-what you people are coming to! I’ll give you a dollar and a quarter, and
-not one penny more.” She indicated a pair of frozen chickens, each with
-a large mauve face, that lay exposed on an old red blanket.
-
-“Can’t do it, lady,” said the farmer, with chattering teeth, “it cost me
-mor’n that to feed them this three year,” and he winked heavily at the
-surrounding circle.
-
-“Oh, they’re fowl! Well then, of course, they’re not worth that much!
-There’s a woman across the road,”—Mrs. Pratt swept her muff vaguely
-towards the horizon and unconsciously disarranged Marjorie’s hat,—“who
-is selling her fowl for eighty cents!”
-
-“_I’ll_ take them,” cried a woman at this juncture. “It’s too cold to
-haggle over a few cents. Giv’um to me!” She thrust a dollar and a half
-into the man’s hand, seized the chickens and started off.
-
-“Those are mine!” called Mrs. Pratt, in a tone that rivalled the
-sharpness of the atmosphere.
-
-“You take the others at eighty cents,” returned the woman, amid a ripple
-of laughter.
-
-“Impertinence!” snapped Mrs. Pratt, as she turned away.
-
-Marjorie drifted on, her basket still empty. These awful Saturday
-mornings! They seemed to accentuate her loneliness. Of course, the cold
-discouraged long conversations and the exchange of tittle-tattle that
-makes shopping, to some people, so delightful, but she was aware of the
-greetings that passed between women as they met—a tip, perhaps, as to
-some bargain, or a brief reference to some impending social
-function—and she would have been grateful for even the smallest sign of
-friendly recognition. Frequently, she saw people who had called upon
-her, but evidently she had made too little impression to be remembered.
-How different from Pinto Plains, where everybody knew her and cordiality
-was mutual!
-
-She noticed that many of the ladies who came into church richly dressed
-on Sundays, wore the most dreadfully shabby clothes at market, but it
-was not until long afterwards, she understood that this was part of a
-scheme for economy—for beating the farmers at their own game. They
-disguised themselves that they might give no hint as to the fatness of
-their bank account, thus implying that well-to-do shoppers were asked a
-higher price than those of obviously modest means. These same
-shabbily-clad ladies never seemed to buy very much, and Marjorie often
-wondered how it was worth their while to spend the morning with so
-little result. In those days, she didn’t realise that they had left
-their motors round the corner, and that their parcels were transferred,
-two or three at a time, to a liveried chauffeur who sat in a heated car
-and read stimulating items from the _Eye-Opener_.
-
-Others, she learned, dragged overflowing baskets into one of the “Market
-Stores,” whose prices were known to be a few cents in excess of those
-demanded by the owners of the carts. Here, they made an insignificant
-purchase, thereby placing the onus of free delivery on the shoulders of
-the management. The degree to which this practice was employed varied
-with the temperament of the shopper. Those of a less sensitive nature,
-felt no hesitation in asking Lavalee, the aristocratic Purveyor of Sea
-Food and Game, to send home six dollars’ worth of marketing with a pound
-of smelts. Likewise, Smithson suffered the exigencies of trade, not only
-delivering the type of foodstuffs that he didn’t keep, but every week of
-the year he was asked to send home the very things that were purchasable
-in his own store and which had been bought for a few cents less, half a
-block away. Seeing the baskets of produce that were piled high on the
-sidewalk every Saturday morning, Marjorie wondered how it was worth
-while for him to carry on his business or maintain his livery, at all!
-
-Having made a few purchases, she set off down Mosgrove Street for the
-tram as fast as her burden would permit, when she came for the second
-time upon Mrs. Pratt, still searching for a bargain in chickens.
-
-“One seventy-five?” she was saying. “Sheer piracy! I refused a much
-better pair for a dollar fifty!”
-
-“Call it a dollar fifty, ma’am,” agreed the farmer, between spasms of
-coughing. “The wife’ll give me the devil, but I’m ’most dead with cold,
-and I wanta go home.”
-
-Pity for the man, coupled with a touch of innocent curiosity, tempted
-Marjorie to linger close at hand and see the end of the transaction.
-
-“But that’s what I’m telling you,” cried Mrs. Pratt. “They’re not worth
-a dollar fifty. They’re miserable things. Half fed . . .” Her eyes
-rested upon the owner resentfully, as though emphasising a definite
-resemblance between him and his produce. “I’ll give you a dollar and a
-quarter and not one penny more!”
-
-“Oh, lady! I’ve gotta live!”
-
-Something in the man’s tone told the astute lady that he was weakening,
-that he needed the money, that the chickens were hers. She pushed a
-dollar and a quarter into his hand, seized her purchase, and disappeared
-round the corner, into a waiting limousine.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A little later that same morning, Marjorie, finding that the children
-were all right in the care of Mrs. Plum, who “charred” her on Saturdays,
-went down town to The Ancient Chattellarium. Her errand was simple. She
-wished to have a piece of furniture repaired. It had been broken in the
-moving, and one of her callers had given her this address.
-
-The Chattellarium could not, even by the most vulgar, be called a shop.
-It was an opulent apartment where elegant furniture was displayed—and
-sold—at dignified prices. Marjorie Dilling paused uncertainly on the
-threshold, feeling that she must, through error, have strayed into
-someone’s residence.
-
-But she hadn’t! A lady glanced over the rim of a lampshade she was
-making, and invited her to enter.
-
-“Just looking around?” she asked, with the instinct of one who
-recognises the difference between a shopper and a buyer. “I’ve got some
-rather nice things just unpacked,” and she went on sticking pins into
-the dull-rose silk with which she was covering a huge wire frame.
-
-“Thank you, very much,” answered Marjorie, stealing a timid glance over
-her shoulder, “but I haven’t a great deal of time, and I really came to
-see—if—if—to ask about getting a piece of furniture repaired. I was
-told that I might have it done, here.”
-
-The young lady took several pins from her mouth and looked up. She was
-quite pretty and had a pleasant manner in spite of her way of addressing
-most people as though they were her inferiors, and a few very prominent
-people as though they were her equals. She talked incessantly, and it
-had become her custom to illumine her speech with Glittering
-Personalities.
-
-She discovered Marjorie’s name and that her husband was a
-recently-elected Back Bencher from an obscure little Western town, as
-well as the nature of the repairs required, so cleverly, that she seemed
-to be answering questions instead of asking them, and she was ever so
-kind in promising to help.
-
-“Of course, I _don’t_ do this sort of thing as a rule,” she explained,
-“I simply _couldn’t_! My men are dreadfully overworked as it is, and we
-are three months behind in our orders. But because I have just recently
-repaired a dressing-table for Government House, and repolished a china
-cabinet for Lady Elton, at Rockcliffe, I haven’t the conscience to
-refuse _you_.”
-
-Marjorie was rather uncomfortable after this speech. She had no earthly
-wish to ask a favour, and felt unduly exalted by “being repaired” in
-such impressive company. She tried to make this clear, and urged the
-young lady to suggest some much more humble establishment or person.
-
-“I feel at such a loss,” she explained, “not knowing where to turn
-. . .” and then, when Miss Brant had insisted upon helping her out of
-the difficulty, she said, “I wouldn’t dare trust it to just anyone, you
-know. It’s such a lovely thing! Solid mahogany, a sort of what-not
-design, with some of the little compartments enclosed in glass, and
-mirrors at the back—and each shelf ending in a decoration like a wee,
-little carved steeple. It’s one of the steeple things that is broken,
-and one of the glass doors. I told Mr. Dilling,”—the young lady winced
-when she spoke of her husband as “Mr. Dilling”—“that it reminded me of
-a beautiful doll’s house, and that we would have to collect heaps of
-souvenir spoons and things to fill it.”
-
-“How interesting,” observed the other.
-
-“And the association counts for so much, you see. The townspeople—our
-friends—gave it to us when we left Pinto Plains; a kind of testimonial
-it was, in the church. They said such beautiful things, I’ll never
-forget it.” Her voice was husky.
-
-“Charming,” murmured the young lady, wondering how such a pretty woman
-could be so plain.
-
-Marjorie asked to be given some idea of the price, but her enquiry was
-waved airily aside. “Oh, don’t bother about that,” she was told. “It
-will only be a matter of my workman’s time—” an implication that
-translated itself to Mrs. Dilling in the terms of cents, but which to
-the young lady resolved itself into about fifteen dollars.
-
-Marjorie’s thanks were cut short by the entrance of two Arresting
-Personalities.
-
-One of them was Lady Fanshawe, the wife of a retired lumber magnate, and
-the other—Mrs. Blaine—assisted her husband to discharge his social
-duties as a Minister of the Crown.
-
-“Well, well,” cried Miss Brant, assuming her other manner, “this _is_ a
-surprise! I’m simply _thrilled_! Only yesterday, I was saying to Lady
-Elton that I hadn’t seen you since the House opened. I’m _dying_ to tell
-you all about my trip in England, and my _dear_, such things as I’ve
-brought back! That’s one!” She indicated a red lacquer table. “Isn’t it
-a perfect _dream_? And there’s another—no, no—not the mirror, the
-table! It was positively and absolutely taken from Bleakshire Castle
-where Disraeli used to visit, and there he sat to write some of his
-marvellous speeches! Isn’t it _thrilling_?”
-
-The ladies agreed that she had done very well, and moved about the
-apartment under the spur of her constant direction. Marjorie, feeling
-that she ought to go, but not knowing whether to slip away unnoticed or
-to shake hands and say goodbye, had just decided upon the former course,
-when Mrs. Pratt made a flamboyant entrance.
-
-Seeing the group at the farther end of the room, she bewildered Marjorie
-with a nod that was like a rap over the knuckles, and rustled
-self-consciously forward.
-
-“Good morning,” she cried, so graciously that Marjorie could scarcely
-recognise her voice. “Cold, isn’t it? I’ve just come from market. It was
-simply perishing down there—perishing!” She left an entire syllable out
-of this word, pronouncing it as though speaking the name of a famous
-American General, then continued, “I’m a perfect martyr when it comes to
-marketing! I can’t overcome a sense of duty towards the _fermers_, who
-depend on us for encouragement and support; and when all’s said and
-done, the only char’ty worth while is the kind that helps people to help
-themselves. Don’t you agree with me, Lady Fanshawe?”
-
-Lady Fanshawe supposed so, and turned to the examination of a Meissen
-bowl. Mrs. Blaine caught sight of an old French print on the far wall
-and appeared to lose interest in all else. Miss Brant discovered a
-blemish of some sort on the red lacquer table and bent anxiously over
-it, using the corner of her handkerchief in lieu of a duster.
-
-No one considered Marjorie at all. Each was engrossed in her part,
-playing a little scene in the successful _Comédie Malice_ which has been
-running without a break since June 8th, 1866, in the Capital.
-
-If Mrs. Pratt was conscious of any lack of cordiality in the attitude of
-the others, she gave no sign. Hers was an ebullient part. All she had to
-do was to gush over the people who snubbed her, and to inveigle them
-into her house (making sure that their visits were chronicled in the
-Press). Incidentally, she had to provide them with as much as they
-wished to drink, and more than they wished to eat, and to acquire the
-reputation for liberal spending when and where her extravagance would be
-noted and commented upon.
-
-Lady Fanshawe and Mrs. Blaine were cast in simpler parts. They had
-merely to preserve an air of well-bred disdain, merging now and again
-into restrained amazement.
-
-Miss Brant, on the other hand, had a very difficult role to play.
-Marjorie scarcely realised how difficult. It devolved upon her to take
-advantage of Mrs. Pratt’s effort to impress the others, to sell her the
-most expensive and unsaleable articles in the establishment, and, at the
-same time, to convey subtly to Lady Fanshawe and Mrs. Blaine, her
-contempt for this monied upstart.
-
-The conversation progressed in this vein:
-
-Mrs. Pratt.—Now, _do_ help me pick up some odds and ends for my new
-home.
-
-Miss Brant.—Oh, have you moved?
-
-Mrs. Pratt.—Dear me, yes! Our old house was much too cramped for
-entertaining.
-
-Miss Brant (_Half confidentially to Lady Fanshawe_).—Speaking of
-entertaining, shall I see you, by any chance, at the Country Club,
-to-morrow?
-
-Lady Fanshawe (_Distantly_).—I am going to Mrs. Long’s luncheon, if
-that is what you mean.
-
-Miss Brant (_Burbling_).—It’s _exactly_ what I mean! I’m _so thrilled_
-at being asked—humble little me—with all you impressive personages.
-
- Mrs. Long was the wife of the owner of The Chronicle and it was
- suspected that she found the columns—both social and
- political—of her husband’s paper a convenient medium for the
- maintaining of discipline and the administration of justice. She
- was naturally held in very high esteem, and persons of
- astuteness made much of her.
-
- “I never know what’s going on,” she was fond of saying, “for I
- can’t endure the sight of a newspaper. It’s so much easier to
- blame than to read them,” she said, paraphrasing Dr. Johnson.
-
- Notwithstanding her professed disinterestedness, however, the
- arm of coincidence seemed longer than usual when it was observed
- that the recently-distinguished Lady Elton, who had overlooked
- her when issuing invitations to a reception in honour of her
- husband’s knighthood, appeared on the following day as “Mrs.
- Elton”. And, furthermore, that on the day succeeding this, her
- letter of protest, which was never intended for other than
- editorial eyes, was published under the heading “Regrettable
- Error in ignoring a New Tittle!” This was only one of many such
- incidents that entertained the subscribers and suggested that
- there might be a subtle influence behind the typographical
- errors which occurred in the composing room.
-
-Mrs. Pratt’s voice rolled like a relentless sea over that of the others,
-as she announced: “We’ve bought the Tillington place.”
-
-Miss Brant.—Oh, that charming old house! Tudor, isn’t it? I used to go
-there as a child. They had some _wonderful_ things. I recall the
-bookcase especially, that stood opposite the bow-window in the library.
-Er—er—something like that one, it was. And one knob was off the
-drawer—I remember it distinctly.
-
-Mrs. Pratt (_examining the piece indicated_).—I think I’ll take this
-one.
-
-Miss Brant (_evidently much embarrassed_).—Oh, _really_ now—I didn’t
-mean to suggest—this is really _too_ dreadful! I assure you, I was only
-reminiscencing.
-
-Mrs. Pratt.—Well, I’ll take it. It’s much more suitable than my old
-one. Do _you_ like it, Lady Fanshawe?
-
-Lady Fanshawe (_as though not having heard the question_).—Delightful!
-
-Miss Brant.—Well, you’re awfully good, I’m sure! I’m really ever so
-glad you’ve got it. It’s rather a good thing, you know—only, I don’t
-want you to think . . . However, if you change your mind after you get
-it home, of course, I’ll take it back. I mean, you _may_ find it out of
-tune with your old—er—er—your _own_ things.
-
-Mrs. Pratt.—What would you suggest in the way of a chair, and a table,
-perhaps?
-
-Miss Brant (_tearing herself from a whispered pæon on the subject of
-Mrs. Blaine’s hat_).—Well, of course, if you want something good,
-that’s rather nice! A little heavy for the modern home, but _the_ thing
-for the Tillington library. And there’s rather a decent chair—see, Lady
-Fanshawe? Isn’t that cross-stitch adorable?—that harmonises perfectly
-with the other two pieces. I don’t deny that it would be a bit stiff for
-the tired business man to sit in, but for the person who can _afford_ to
-have a well-balanced room . . .
-
-Mrs. Pratt (_promptly_).—I’ll take the chair!
-
-Quietly, Marjorie left the room, and as the door closed behind her, Mrs.
-Pratt was saying in an attempt at playful graciousness.
-
-“A hundred and seventy-five? Vurry reasonable! And it’s such a
-satisfaction to get the best! I hope, Lady Fanshawe, and you, too, Mrs.
-Blaine, that you’ll drop in on Tuesday afternoon for a cuppa-tea, and
-tell me how you like my new home!”
-
-
- CHAPTER 2.
-
-The Dillings had come to Ottawa joyously, eager to accept its invitation
-and to become identified with its interests. They were less flattered by
-the call than elated by it. Neither of them expected merely to skim the
-pleasures offered by life in the Capital; they were acutely alive to
-their responsibilities, and were ready to assume them. They hoped to
-gain something from the great city, it is true, but equally did they
-long to give. Everyone who was privileged to live in Ottawa must, they
-imagined, have something of value to contribute to their country, and
-the Dillings welcomed the opportunity to serve rather than be served.
-
-But when Marjorie thought of Pinto Plains, of its gay simplicity and
-warm friendliness, the three months that marked her absence from it,
-stretched themselves out like years. On the other hand, when she
-considered how little progress she had made in adapting herself to the
-formal ways of the Capital, they shrunk into so many days; hours,
-indeed. So far as happy transplanting was concerned, she might even now
-be stepping off the train, a stranger.
-
-Raymond Dilling, a country schoolmaster still in his thirties, had
-strong predilections towards politics, and saw in this move a coveted
-opportunity for the furtherance of his ambitions. Yet the idealist who
-shared his mortal envelope believed with Spencer: “None can be happy
-until all are happy; none can be free until all are free,” and he fought
-sternly to crush a budding and dangerous individualism. With a little
-less ambition and response to the altruistic urge—public service—he
-would have remained a country schoolmaster to the end of his days. As it
-was, he heard the evocation of Destiny for higher things, read law as an
-avenue to what seemed to him the primrose path of politics, and grasped
-the hand of opportunity before it was definitely thrust towards him. He
-lived in the West during its most provocative period—provocative, that
-is, for a man of imagination—but he never caught the true spirit of the
-land, he never felt his soul respond to the lure of its fecundity, its
-spaciousness, its poignant beauty. The sun always set for him behind the
-grain elevators, and it never occurred to him to lift his eyes to the
-eternal hills . . .
-
-Dilling was scarcely conscious of his soul. Had he been, he would have
-set about supplying it with what he conceived to be its requirements. Of
-his mind, on the other hand, he was acutely aware, and he fed it freely
-on Shakespeare, Milton, and the King James’ Bible, copies of which were
-always to be found on the parlour table save between the hours of six
-and seven in the morning, when he held them in his abnormally long, thin
-hands. By following the example of those two great figures, Daniel
-Webster and Rufus Choate, Dilling hoped to acquire a similarly spacious
-vocabulary and oratorical persuasiveness.
-
-He was a bit of a dreamer, too, believing in Party as the expression of
-the British theory of Government. He was simply dazed when he heard the
-ante-bellum ideas of group government, the talk of Economic Democracy
-and the Gospel of the I.W.W., which was merely Prudhon’s epigram—“_La
-Propriété c’est vol_,” writ large.
-
-He had secured nomination for Parliament through the finesse of the Hon.
-Godfrey Gough, who recognised his dialectical supremacy over that of any
-other man in the West. Gough was the _âme damnée_ of the vested
-interests, and so clever was his advocacy that it captivated Dilling
-into whole-hearted support of their political stratagems, and made it
-easy for him to bring them into alignment with his conscience. But he
-did so without hope of pecuniary reward. He was honest. During his
-entire career, he held temptation by the throat, as it were, determined
-that no selfish advantage or gain should deflect him from unremitting
-endeavour for the Nation’s good. No parliamentary success attained, nor
-honours received, should be less than a meed for a faithful adherence to
-high principles.
-
-He had never talked much with politicians, but he had been talked to by
-them. On these occasions, it was not apparent to him that they were
-striving to maintain politics on its lowest plane, rather than to
-achieve the ideal commonwealth that is supposed to be the end and aim of
-their profession. He read into their speeches and conversations the
-doctrine with which he, himself, was impregnated, and the thought of
-working side by side with these men, aroused in him an emotion akin to
-consecration . . .
-
-For years Marjorie had pictured Ottawa much as she had pictured
-Bagdad—The City of Mystery and a Thousand Delights—a place of gracious
-boulevards and noble architecture, where highly intelligent people
-occupied themselves with the performance of inspired tasks. And she
-thought of it as the Heart of the Great Dominion, as necessary to the
-national body as the human heart is essential to the physical body,
-transmitting the tide of national life to the very finger-tips of
-civilisation.
-
-And often, down in the secret places of her self, she had even a more
-solemn thought—that Ottawa was the Chalice of a Nation’s Hopes, and
-that merely to look upon it would produce an effect like that of
-entering some Holy Temple. Sin and sadness would disappear, and even the
-most degenerate must be led there to spiritual refreshment and
-transfiguration.
-
-Nor did she stand alone; most of her friends were of the same opinion.
-They linked themselves to the Capital as closely as they were able, and
-informed themselves minutely concerning its activities, by careful study
-of the daily press. They read the Parliamentary news first—this was a
-sacred duty; they wrote papers on politicians and politics for their
-clubs, and spoke with a certain reverent intimacy of the People in the
-Public Eye. But most of all they enjoyed the social notes, the
-description of the gowns, and the tidbits of gossip that crept into the
-columns of their papers! Even the accidents, the obscure births and
-deaths that occurred in Ottawa, were invested with a stupendous
-importance in their eyes.
-
-To them, it was The Land of Afternoon.
-
-And now, as she sat in her tiny drawing-room, denuded of its handsome
-what-not, and waiting for possible callers, Marjorie tried to stifle a
-sense of depression, a conviction that all was not right with the world.
-
-She reproached herself for this attitude of mind, trying to remove the
-trouble without searching for its origin or cause. The house was very
-still. The children were outside, playing. Her thoughts were filled with
-Pinto Plains and longing for her friends there.
-
-She could almost guess what they were doing, especially Genevieve
-Woodside, whose turn it would be, to-day, to entertain the Ladies’
-Missionary Circle. A mist filled her eyes, and before she could control
-herself, she was sobbing.
-
-“I’ve just got to put an end to this nonsense,” she scolded herself.
-“They’d be ashamed of me, at home. I’m ashamed of myself, big baby!
-Whatever would Raymond say? I really am _very happy_. This is a _nice_
-little house, and the people _are_ kind! A person couldn’t expect to
-feel perfectly at home, even in Pinto Plains, all at once. They simply
-couldn’t—and to think we are really living in Ottawa! Why, it’s too
-wonderful to be true!”
-
-The door-bell rang.
-
-With a nervous glance at the tea table, covered with the handsome white
-cloth embroidered in pink roses and edged with home-made lace that had
-been such a work of love for her trousseau, Marjorie went into the tiny
-hall and opened the door.
-
-“Is Mrs. Dilling at home?” asked a frail, little person, in purple
-velvet and ermine.
-
-“I’m Mrs. Dilling, and I’m ever so glad to see you. Won’t you come in,
-please?”
-
-“Lady Denby,” murmured the other, stepping daintily past her.
-
-Marjorie closed the door, feeling very small and very frightened. This
-was the wife of the great Sir Eric Denby, the most perdurable public
-figure of our time. The soundest of sound statesmen, he stood, to
-Raymond Dilling, just a shade lower than God, Himself.
-
-And the Dillings were profoundly religious people.
-
-“Won’t you take off your things?” she asked, timidly, and upon receiving
-a refusal, tinctured with a suggestion of reproach, excused herself and
-went into the kitchen to make tea.
-
-When she returned, Lady Denby and Althea were staring unsympathetically
-at one another across the table.
-
-“Why, darling,” Marjorie exclaimed, setting down the teapot, and
-forgetting her social obligations in the pride of motherhood, “I didn’t
-hear you come in. Dear, dear, what a very untidy little girl, with her
-tam all crooked and her ribbon untied! This is Althea, Lady Denby.
-You’ve no idea how helpful she can be—Go and shake hands, precious!”
-
-Althea was obedient on this occasion. She marched round the table and
-offered a grimy, wet mitten—the left one—from which the visitor shrank
-with a movement of alarm.
-
-“How do you do?” said Lady Denby, discovering, after an embarrassing
-search, a spot upon the shoulder, dry enough, and clean enough, to be
-touched by her white-gloved hand.
-
-“Having a good time, darling?” asked Marjorie, glowing with joy in the
-child’s loveliness. “Not playing too rough a game?”
-
-“Cream, but no sugar,” said Lady Denby, significantly.
-
-For a few awkward moments, Marjorie gave herself up entirely to the
-duties of hostess, then turned again to her daughter.
-
-“Where is Sylvester, and Baby? Are they all right, my pet?”
-
-Althea nodded.
-
-“Baby’s all covered with snow,” she explained. “Besser’s playing she’s a
-egg and he’s a hen, and he’s sitting on her!”
-
-“Oh, mercy!” exclaimed Marjorie. “What a naughty boy! Bring them both
-home at once, Althea—he’ll hurt Baby. Quick, now!”
-
-Althea rushed off, leaving the front door open. Marjorie excused herself
-to close it. She was surprised that Lady Denby exhibited neither
-amusement nor concern in the family affairs. Indeed, she wondered if
-deafness might not account for her curious austerity of manner. Old Mrs.
-Kettlewell, at home, was like that, but everybody knew it was because
-she couldn’t hear half of what was going on.
-
-“Do let me give you some more tea,” she urged, her voice slightly
-raised. Anxiety distracted her. She scarcely knew what she was doing.
-Suppose the baby should be smothered in the snow? Suppose the children
-couldn’t dig her out? She felt that she should go to the door, at least,
-to make sure that Althea was successful in her mission. But something in
-Lady Denby’s manner prevented her. She couldn’t explain it, yet she
-simply couldn’t find an excuse to leave the room.
-
-Her hands fluttered nervously over the table and her eyes haunted the
-door.
-
-“Cream, and no sugar, I think you said, Mrs.—er—er—”
-
-“_Lady Denby_,” corrected the other, with gentle reproof.
-
-Apologies. Increased nervousness. Desperate effort at self-control.
-Where could they be, those children of hers? Sipping tea like this, when
-anything might be happening out there in the snow! It was cruel, cruel!
-
-“How many children have you?” The calm voice trickled over her
-consciousness like a stream of ice-cold water.
-
-“Three,” she answered, hurriedly. “Althea’s five, and Sylvester’s nearly
-four—Besser, we call him, you know—and Baby, her name is really
-Eulalie, is two and a half and simply huge for her age. Have you any
-children?”
-
-“No,” said Lady Denby, implying by her tone that the propagation of the
-species was, in her opinion, a degraded and vulgar performance.
-
-Marjorie tried other topics; church work, conundrums, Sir Eric’s health
-and gastronomic peculiarities. She offered her favourite recipes, and
-patterns for crocheted lace, interrupted, thank Heaven, by the entrance
-of the snow-covered children and the consequent confusion that they
-caused.
-
-In her domestic activities she was perfectly at ease, hanging damp
-garments on radiators to dry, wiping tear stains from ruddy cheeks, and
-even arranging a juvenile tea-party in a corner of the room.
-
-She chattered happily all the while, never for a moment realising that
-in the Upper Social Circles, the last task in the world a woman should
-undertake cheerfully is the care of her children; that even allowing
-them to stay in the same room and breathe the rarified air with which
-the exalted adults have finished, is a confession of eccentricity, if
-not _bourgeoisisme_. She had no ideas that there were mothers, outside
-of books—or possibly New York—who not only considered their children a
-nuisance, but were ashamed to be surprised in any act of maternal
-solicitude.
-
-Had Ottawa been Pinto Plains, and Lady Denby one of her neighbours
-there, she would have been helping to change the children’s clothing,
-then she would have joined the juvenile tea-party, and later, would have
-heard Althea count up to twenty, prompted Baby to recite “Hickory,
-Dickory, Dock,” and would have played “Pease Porridge Hot,” with
-Sylvester until her palms smarted painfully.
-
-As it was, Lady Denby did none of these things. She sipped tea and
-nibbled toast as though vast distances separated her from the rest of
-them, distances that she had no wish to bridge. Marjorie came to the
-conclusion that she was not only deaf, but suffering the frailties of
-extreme age, her contradictory appearance notwithstanding. In this
-kindly way did she account for her guest’s indifference. That her
-visitor was a great and powerful lady, Marjorie well knew, but she had
-no idea that it was necessary for the great and powerful to assume this
-manner, as a means whereby they might display their superiority.
-According to her simple philosophy, the more exalted the person, the
-readier the graciousness. For what was greatness but goodness, and what
-was goodness but love of humanity? Was not Queen Victoria sociability
-itself, when she visited the humbler subjects of her Kingdom?
-
-Other callers came; Mrs. Gullep, whose mission it was to visit newcomers
-to the church; Mrs. Haynes, whose husband was also a Member from the
-West, and two or three of the neighbours, with whose children Marjorie’s
-children played. She had a somewhat confused recollection of the late
-afternoon, but certain features of Lady Denby’s conversation recurred
-with disturbing vividness.
-
-She was amazed to learn that opening her own door was, in future, quite
-out of the question. If she could not, or would not, engage the
-permanent services of a domestic, she must, at least, have someone on
-Wednesday afternoons to admit her callers. Furthermore, she must be
-relieved—relieved was Lady Denby’s word—of all bother—(also Lady
-Denby’s) with the children.
-
-“They will stand between you and the possibility of making friends of
-the right sort,” she warned, a viewpoint which was in direct opposition
-to the theory Marjorie had always held. “At least once a week, social
-duties demand your undivided attention.”
-
-Again, without in the least having said so, Lady Denby managed to convey
-the fact that she considered Marjorie a very pretty woman, and that it
-would be wise, in view of her husband’s position, to make the most of
-her good looks. In the Capital, she observed, much weight attached to
-one’s appearance, and Marjorie would find herself repaid for dressing a
-little more—another interesting word of Lady Denby’s—“definitely”. The
-word was puzzling. Marjorie made all her own and the children’s clothes,
-her husband’s shirts, his pyjamas and summer underwear, and she was
-humbly proud of her accomplishment. She had no doubt as to her ability
-to make more “definite” clothes, could she but understand exactly what
-Lady Denby meant. There wasn’t anything very striking in a purple velvet
-suit, even though it had a collar and cuffs of ermine. Besides, Marjorie
-couldn’t wear purple velvet, it was too elderly.
-
-Her own crepe-de-chine blouse was a definite pink. There could be no
-possibility of mistaking it for green or blue. She had embroidered it
-profusely in a black poppy design (copied from a pattern in the
-needlework section of a fashion magazine) to harmonise with her black
-velveteen skirt, the flaps of which were faced with pink crepe-de-chine
-to harmonise with the blouse. Feminine Pinto Plains, calling singly and
-in groups to inspect her “trousseau,” agreed that it was more than a
-costume—it was a creation—and they prophesied that it would dazzle
-Ottawa.
-
-“So rich looking,” they said, “with all that hand-work!” Pinto Plains
-set a great deal of store by hand-work. “With your lovely colour,
-Marjorie, in that bright pink you’ll be charming!” And yet Lady Denby
-thought that she should have more definite clothes!
-
-Then there was another thing—and on this point Lady Denby spoke with
-greater lucidity.
-
-“I am sure you will find it convenient, my dear,” she had said, in a
-whispered colloquy that took place in the hall, “to know some young girl
-who would be flattered by your patronage, and gratified to be of service
-to you. There are so many things the right sort of person could do—pour
-tea, and have a general eye to the arrangements when you receive; give
-you valuable hints as to the connections you should, or should not,
-form; advise you as to tradesmen, and a dozen other minor matters that
-must, for a stranger, be exceedingly confusing. It is quite the thing to
-encourage such an association in the Capital, and I might add that it
-lends an air of _empressement_ to Members of the Party. One must always
-consider the Party, my dear.”
-
-Lady Denby saw no difficulty in the fact that Marjorie knew of no such
-person. “Leave it to me,” she said, with an air of brilliant finality,
-“I have just such a girl in mind. Not pretty enough to be attractive,
-and too clever to be popular; so her time is pretty much her own. She
-would welcome the opportunity, I know, of shining in your reflected
-glory. I’ll send her to you. Her name is Azalea Deane. And remember
-always, in your associations, to maintain the dignity that is due to
-your husband’s position. I would almost go so far as to say that
-indiscriminate intimacies should be discouraged; they are so apt to be
-embarrassing—in politics, you know . . .” Without exactly forming the
-words, her lips seemed to pronounce Mrs. Gullep’s name. “Very estimable
-people, I am sure, the very vertebræ of Church Societies, but in a small
-_ménage_ like this, my dear, you must not waste your chairs!”
-
-Marjorie lay awake that night reviewing the events of the day. Some cog
-in the well-ordered machinery of her existence had slipped out of place,
-and was causing unaccustomed friction. She didn’t know what was the
-matter. Neither analytical nor introspective, she never got down to
-fundamentals, and the results that showed on the surface were apt to
-bewilder her. Consequently, she refused to admit disappointment with her
-surroundings, and did not even remotely suspect that she was
-experiencing the first, faint stirrings of disillusionment. She was a
-little depressed, that she admitted, but the fault was hers; of that she
-was thoroughly convinced, not only at the moment but throughout the
-months and years that stretched ahead. Always she blamed herself for
-failing to attain the state of mental and spiritual growth that would
-enable her to fit comfortably into her environment.
-
-Of course, she couldn’t put all this into words. She never could make
-her feelings clear to other people—not even to Raymond. So, when,
-somewhat impatient at her restlessness, he asked what was the matter,
-she answered, with a little sigh.
-
-“Oh, nothing, dearie . . . nothing that’s awfully important, I ought to
-say. Only—only—I sometimes wonder . . . do _you_ ever feel that
-Ottawa’s a difficult place to get acquainted?”
-
-
- CHAPTER 3.
-
-Dilling adapted himself to his new environment much more readily than
-did his wife. He had not anticipated that the House of Commons would be
-a glorified Municipal Council such as he had left in Pinto Plains, and
-that his associations and activities would be virtually the same save on
-a magnificent scale; whereas Marjorie had deluded
-herself—subconsciously, it may be—with the thought that Ottawa would
-be an idealised prairie town, and that she would live a beatified
-extension of her old life, there. Differences in customs, in social and
-moral codes, ever remained for her a hopeless enigma, just as Euclid’s
-problems evade solution for some people. She never could master them
-because she never could understand them. Black was black and white was
-white, and neither sunshine nor shadow could convert either into gray.
-No leopard ever possessed more changeless spots.
-
-While, therefore, her husband was joyously engrossed in his work,
-finding novelty and stimulation in every smallest detail, remodelling
-himself to fit the mantle he had been called upon to adorn, Marjorie was
-confronted with unexpected obstacles, bewildered by inexplicable ways,
-homesick for familiar standards and people, and groping for something
-stable to which she could cling and upon which she could build her
-present life.
-
-Of the nature of Dilling’s work, she had but the sketchiest idea. His
-conversation was becoming almost unintelligible to her, try as she would
-to follow it. When, in the old days, they sat at the table or drew their
-chairs around the fire, and he told her of Jimmy Woodside’s stupidity or
-Elvira Mumford’s high average, she could take a vital interest in his
-daily pursuits, but now, when he referred to Motions, and Amendments,
-and Divisions, she had no idea of what he was talking about. He was
-seldom at home, and upon those rare occasions he fortressed himself
-behind a palisade of Blue Books and Financial Returns.
-
-He abandoned himself to reading almost as a man abandons himself to
-physical debauch, and Marjorie, furtively watching him, could scarcely
-believe that the stranger occupying that frail, familiar shell was, in
-reality, her husband. There was about him a suggestion of emotional
-pleasure, an expression of ecstacy, as when a man gazes deep into his
-beloved’s eyes.
-
-“Ah,” he would murmur, “three thousand, six hundred and forty-two . . .
-annually! Seventy-nine thousand less than . . . well, well!”
-
-His cheeks would flush, his breathing would thicken, his forehead would
-gleam with a crown of moisture, and he would lose his temper shockingly
-if the children spoke to him or played noisily in the room.
-
-Long afterwards, a rural wag observed that Prohibition touched few
-persons less than Raymond Dilling, who could get drunk on Blue Books and
-Trade Journals, any day in the year!
-
-Marjorie got into the way of keeping the little ones shut up in the
-kitchen with her. The house was too small to allow Dilling the privacy
-of a library or study, and the three bedrooms were cold and cheerless.
-So he appropriated the tiny drawing-room and converted it into what
-seemed to her, a literary rubbish heap. Books, pamphlets, Hansards, and
-more books . . . she was nearly crazy with them!
-
-She had never been to the House of Commons save once, when Raymond took
-the entire family on a tour of inspection. She had never seen Parliament
-in Session, and had no idea that many of the women who accompanied their
-husbands to Ottawa, spent all the time they could spare from bridge, in
-the Gallery; not profiting by the progress of the Debates, but carrying
-on mimic battles amongst themselves. Here was the cockpit, from which
-arose the causes of bitter though bloodless conflicts—conflicts which
-embroiled both the innocent and the guilty, and formed the base of
-continuous social warfare.
-
-However, on the afternoon that Dilling was expected to deliver his
-maiden speech, she found her way to the Ladies’ Gallery with the aid of
-a courteous official, and ingenuously presented her card of admission.
-Without appearing to glance at it, the doorkeeper grasped the
-information it bore.
-
-“This way, please, Mrs. Dilling,” he said, with just the proper shade of
-cordiality tempering his authority. “Here’s a seat—in the second row.
-They are just clearing the Orders for your husband’s speech,” he added,
-in an officious whisper.
-
-Marjorie sank unobtrusively into the place he indicated and thanked him.
-She wondered how he knew her name, not realising that he had held his
-position for forty years by the exercise of that very faculty which so
-amazed her. It was his duty to know not only all those who sought an
-entrance through the particular portal that he guarded, but also to know
-where to place them. Should he fail to recognise an applicant, he never
-betrayed himself. She was presently to learn that as her husband
-progressed nearer the front benches downstairs, she would be advanced to
-the front, upstairs.
-
-Her first sensation—could she have singled one out of the medley that
-overwhelmed her—was not of exaltation at having entered into the
-sanctuary of the Canadian Temple of Politics, and being in a position to
-look down upon one of the clumsiest and most complex institutions that
-ever failed to maintain the delusion of democracy, but of the immensity
-of the place. The Green Chamber was at least four times as large as the
-Arena in Pinto Plains! Its sombreness discomfited her. Although she had
-read descriptions of the Commons, she never visualised the dullness of
-the green with which it was carpeted and upholstered; she had rather
-taken clusters of glittering candelabra for granted; indeed, it would
-not have surprised her to find golden festoons catching dust from the
-whirlwind of oratory which rose from the floor beneath. The unregality
-of the place made her want to cry. She felt like a child standing before
-a fairy king without his crown.
-
-Directly opposite her sat the Speaker on his Throne—the chair which the
-late King Edward had used when visiting the Colonies in 1860. Above the
-Speaker, in a shallow gallery suspended below that reserved for the
-Proletariat, several men were languidly trailing their pencils across
-the stationery provided them by the generous taxpayers of the country.
-These were the scribes of the Press, profundite scriveners, whose golden
-words she had absorbed so often in her far-away prairie home.
-
-On the floor of the House, at a long table in front of the Speaker, sat
-the Clerk. At the other end of the table lay the Mace, the massive
-bauble that aroused Oliver Cromwell’s choler, and which symbolises, by
-its position, the functioning of the House. In splendid isolation sat
-the Sergeant-at-Arms, an incumbent of the office for forty-three years,
-during which time, it is said, he never changed the colour of his
-overcoat, or his dog.
-
-On the Speaker’s left sat His Majesty’s loyal Opposition, led by that
-illustrious tribune of the people, the Right Honourable Sir Wilfrid
-Laurier. Facing him, across the table, was the Right Honourable Sir
-Robert Borden and the Members of his Cabinet, prominent among whom was
-Sir Eric Denby, who dreamed of a Saharan drought for Canada, and
-affirmed his stand on the Temperance question with the zeal of a Hebrew
-prophet. Then, as a counterpoise to Sir Eric, there was the Honourable
-Godfrey Gough, who sought to mould a policy for his Party that would
-have made Machiavelli blush!
-
-These were the notables; the rest were a jumble of tailenders.
-
-Marjorie could not locate her husband, immediately, but after a little
-she recognised the top of his head. He was sitting in a dim corner, in
-the very last row under the Gallery that was devoted to the
-accommodation of the ruck of our splendid democracy.
-
-Then, before she was quite prepared for it, she saw him rise to his
-feet. Her eyes filled with tears of terror, and for a moment he seemed
-to stand alone—like a splendid column, islanded in a rolling sea.
-Marjorie could not resist the impulse to inform the impassive lady
-sitting beside her, that the speaker was her husband.
-
-The lady looked surprised at being addressed.
-
-“Indeed?” she replied, and her eyebrows added, “Well, what of it?”
-
-Marjorie kept her hand pressed tightly over her heart. It thumped so
-heavily, she could scarcely hear what Raymond was saying. If he should
-forget his speech! If he should fail!
-
-Gradually, the blur before her cleared, and she saw that he was standing
-quite at ease, one hand resting on his hip—a favourite and familiar
-attitude—and the other negligently grasping the back of his chair. His
-flat voice, carrying well for all its lack of resonancy, was perfectly
-steady, and his words were unhurried, clear; in fine, she realised that
-Raymond had no dread of what to her, was a scarifying experience, and,
-unimaginative though she was, there was borne upon her a strange, new
-consciousness of her husband’s power.
-
-For the formal test of his ability to command the attention of the
-House, he had seized upon the Motion of a Representative from the West,
-calling upon the Government to adopt a vigourous policy in the
-construction of grain elevators and facilities for the transportation of
-wheat—Canada’s prime commodity in the markets of the world.
-
-“. . . As I stand here, enveloped by the traditions of the past,” she
-heard him say, “listening to the echoes in this Chamber of the noble
-words and sound policies that have builded this great structure that is
-our Country, I am awed by the privilege that has come to me of taking a
-part, however small, in directing the national welfare of this Dominion.
-I seek not at this moment, Mr. Speaker, merely the glory of the Party to
-which I have the honour to belong, but I am ambitious to maintain a
-principle, to be worthy of the men who fashioned a nation out of chaos,
-out of a wilderness of local and parochial interests. I shall strive to
-be the force for good that such men would wish to see in every member in
-this legislative body to-day . . .”
-
-Although he had known that Marjorie would be in the Gallery that
-afternoon, it was typical of Dilling to ignore the fact. Small acts of
-pretty gallantry were utterly foreign to his nature. He could no more
-have raised a woman’s glove to his lips before returning it to her, than
-he could have manicured his fingernails. To himself he termed such
-graces “_la-di-da_”, by which he probably meant foppish. If his personal
-vanity revealed itself in any one direction it was that he might appear
-superlatively masculine—even to the verge of brutality.
-
-“. . . The cause I plead,” he continued, “is that which must appeal to
-every thinking man, to-day. I plead an economical policy for the
-guarding of our grain . . .”
-
-“. . . Wheat!” she heard him say. “The West is crying for elevators, and
-for freighting facilities in order that she may distribute her vast
-resources. The East is crying for food. The world needs wheat. _Wheat!_
-The very word rings with a strange magic, flares with a golden gleam of
-prosperity.”
-
-His eyes were fixed on his Chief’s profile, save when they leaped across
-the aisle to the “White Plume” of the grand Old Man who bent over his
-desk and scribbled with a slender yellow pencil, apparently quite
-oblivious to Dilling’s existence. Marjorie saw him through brimming
-eyes. She did not know that in the corridor men were saying, “Come on
-in! Dilling’s got the floor. He’s talking a good deal of rhetorical
-rot—as must be expected from an amateur—but the making of an orator is
-there. . . Come on in!” She was too nervous to notice that the empty
-benches which comprise the flattering audience usually accorded to a new
-speaker, were rapidly filling, that Members who discovered some trifling
-business to keep them in the Chamber, had stopped sorting the collection
-of visiting cards, forgotten appointments, and notes with which their
-pockets were stuffed. Laryngitical gentlemen forbore to snap their
-fingers at the bob-tailed pages for glasses of water—in short, Raymond
-was making an impression. He was receiving the attention of the House.
-
-His concluding words were,
-
-“I have come amongst you, a stranger, unversed in the ways of this great
-assembly of a young, ardent and democratic people—of members whose
-experience has been so much richer than my own. I trust that none of
-you—even those whose views may be at variance with mine—will have
-cause to resent my coming. I realise that a profound responsibility
-devolves upon each and every one of us who steps across the threshold of
-this Chamber, and that although our creeds may be translated
-differently, their actuating principles are identical.
-
-“I know, Mr. Speaker, that life lies in the struggle, that work—and not
-its wage—brings us joy. The game is the important thing, not the score.
-To gain the peak of the mountain is the climber’s ambition. If he be a
-true man, a man who rejoices in service for others, he has no wish to
-possess the summit. To serve the Empire at the cost of ease and leisure,
-to expend one’s strength in the solving of her myriad problems, is the
-sum total of an honest man’s desire.
-
-“I submit that it is possible to spread peace and plenty throughout our
-Dominion. The Government has but to build treasure-houses for the grain,
-and lend assistance in the way of subsidies for transportation. A hungry
-people make poor citizens, and will inevitably bring desolation to any
-land, for, as Ruskin has said, ‘There is no wealth but life, and that
-nation is the richest that breeds the greatest number of noble and happy
-homes and beings’.”
-
-His speech was short and admirably delivered. It hit the temper of the
-House, and Dilling sat down amid a storm of applause.
-
-Through a mist of tears Marjorie noted that Sir Robert was bending over
-her husband with an air that was more than perfunctorily gracious.
-Several other men also left their desks and offered him congratulations.
-She felt a little faint with pride and the reaction of it all.
-
-“A real triumph,” said the voice of the lady sitting next to her,
-suddenly. “Your husband’s quite a speaker, isn’t he?” and Marjorie was
-too grateful for these words of friendliness to sense that the lady (who
-was Mrs. Bedford, wife of the Whip of the Liberal Party) would have been
-much more gratified had Raymond Dilling made of his speech a bleak
-failure.
-
-
- CHAPTER 4.
-
-The Hon. Member for Morroway did not wait for the adjournment of the
-afternoon Session. With a gesture that the thirsty never fail to
-recognise, he signalled two colleagues who occupied adjacent benches,
-and led the way from the Green Chamber.
-
-The Hon. Member was more than a little piqued at Marjorie Dilling’s
-insensibility to his persistent Gallery-gazing. It was almost
-unprecedented in his experience that a young woman should find the
-sparsely-covered crown of her husband’s head more magnetic an objective
-than his own luxuriant growth of silver hair. Looked at from above, the
-leonine mane of Mr. Rufus Sullivan was in the midst of such hirsute
-barrenness, as conspicuous as a spot of moonlight on a drab, gray wall.
-
-The Hon. Member for Morroway disliked many things: work, religion,
-temperance, ugly women, clever men, home cooking, cotton stockings, and
-male stenographers, to mention only a few. But more than any of these,
-he disliked being ignored by a girl upon whom he had focussed his
-attention. Such occasions (happily rare!) always induced extreme warmth
-that was like a scorching rash upon Mr. Sullivan’s sensitive soul, and
-this, in turn, promoted an intense dryness of the throat. Mr. Sullivan
-disliked being dry.
-
-So, with admirable directness of movement, he led the way to his room,
-unlocked a drawer marked “Unfinished Business,” and set a bottle upon
-the desk at the same time waving hospitality towards his two companions.
-
-For a space the silence was broken only by the ring of glass upon glass
-and the cooling hiss of a syphon. Then, three voices pronounced, “Here’s
-how!” and there followed an appreciative click of the tongue and a
-slight gurgling.
-
-“Ah . . .” breathed the trio.
-
-The Hon. Member for Morroway closed one limpid brown eye and examined
-his glass against the light. Although an incomparable picture stood
-framed in the small Gothic window of his room, it did not occur to Mr.
-Sullivan to look at the distant Laurentians slipping into the purple
-haze of evening, to feast his soul upon the glory of soft river tones
-and forest shades; to note the slender spire of silver that glowed like
-a long-drawn-out star on a back-drop of pastel sky.
-
-Mr. Sullivan was concerned only with the amber fluid in his glass, where
-tiny bubbles climbed hurriedly to the surface and clung to the sides of
-the tumbler. If he looked out of the window at all, it was to
-investigate the possible charms of unattached maidens who strolled
-towards Nepean Point ostentatiously enjoying the view. Sometimes, Mr.
-Sullivan found the outlook enchanting, himself. This was when he was
-stimulated by the enthusiasm of a pretty girl who invariably remarked
-that it was a sin “to spoil the river shore with those hideous mills,
-and poison good air with the reek of sulphite.”
-
-Mr. Sullivan vehemently agreed, for he called himself an ardent
-Nature-lover, unwilling to admit that Nature, for him, was always
-feminine and young.
-
-“Not much doubt as to the direction the wind blows from Pinto Plains,”
-he observed, still intent upon his glass.
-
-“Not a shadow,” agreed Howarth, sombrely. “Eastlake and Donahue have
-certainly got that lad buffaloed to a standstill.”
-
-“Railroaded, you mean,” amended Turner, essaying a wan jest. “I wonder
-what his price was.” He drained his glass, set it on the table with a
-thud, and cried, “I never saw their equal—that pair! Time after time,
-we’ve thought they were down and out. Their subsidies were discounted,
-banks closed down on ’em, credit was exhausted—you remember the
-contractors we’ve fixed so that they wouldn’t operate?—even their own
-supporters got weak in the knees . . . and they manage to find some
-inspired spell-binder, who pours the floods of his forensic eloquence on
-the sterile territory, so that first thing we know, a stream of currency
-begins to trickle from the banks, subsidies are renewed . . . God! how
-do they pull it off, boys? In a case like this, where do they get the
-cash to pay Dilling, and what do they promise him? What’s his price, I’m
-asking you, eh?”
-
-Rufus Sullivan, feeling that two pairs of eyes were upon him, spoke.
-
-“Do you know,” he said, slowly, “it wouldn’t surprise me much to learn
-that young Dilling hasn’t been bought at all, that he gave himself to
-the cause, and that all of that grandiose bunk he talked was truth to
-him?”
-
-“Good God!” breathed Howarth, and gulped loudly.
-
-“’S a fact! I listened hard all the time he talked, and I watched him
-some, and it struck me he wasn’t speaking a part he had learned at the
-Company’s dictation, nor for a price . . .”
-
-“—which means,” interrupted Turner, “that he’s another of those damned
-nuisances with principles, and ideas about making politics clean and
-uplifting for the man in the street.”
-
-“Worse than that,” corrected Howarth. “It means that he’ll be a damsite
-harder to handle, and more expensive to buy than a fellow who has no
-definite convictions and finds mere money acceptable.”
-
-“That’s right!” Sullivan set down his empty glass and spread his elbows
-on the desk, facing them. “I don’t anticipate that Dilling will be any
-bargain, but,” he thundered, “we’ve got to have him. Fortunately, we can
-rely upon the incontrovertible fact that like every other man, he _has_
-a price. It’s up to us to find out what it is!”
-
-“But, damn it all, Sullivan,” cried Howarth, “I’m sick of paying prices!
-Surely we can find some means of muzzling this altruistic western
-stripling.”
-
-“Nothing simpler,” returned the older man, with heavy sarcasm. “We’ve
-only got to go to the country, defeat the Government, assassinate
-Eastlake and Donahue, deport Gough as an undesirable . . . Godfrey
-happens to be backing Dilling in his constituency don’t you forget
-. . .”
-
-“What?” asked Turner.
-
-“What for?” from Howarth.
-
-Sullivan spread out his large, fat hands. “For some dark purpose of his
-own that is yet to be revealed . . . and then, we must squash the vested
-interests. Suppose you take on this trifling job, Bill. I’m going to be
-busy this evening.”
-
-“Just the same,” cut in Turner, “I think Billy’s right. He ought to be
-intimidated—Dilling, of course, I mean—not bought. These Young
-Lochinvars ought not to be allowed to think they can run the country.”
-
-“Buying or intimidating, it’s much the same thing in the end,” said
-Sullivan. “You’ve got to find a price or a weapon.” He corked the
-bottle, locked it away and strolled across the office to examine his
-features in a heavy gilt mirror that hung on the wall. “Did either of
-you remark Mrs. Dilling?” he enquired, attacking his mass of hair with a
-small pocket comb.
-
-“Mrs. Dilling?” echoed the others.
-
-“Why not? She sat in the Gallery all afternoon.”
-
-“How did you know her?” demanded Howarth.
-
-“Why, I saw her come in, and noting that she was a stranger—”
-
-“—and extremely pretty,” suggested Turner, “you took the trouble to
-find out.”
-
-“Well, she is pretty,” said the Member for Morroway, reflectively. “A
-fair, childish face, like a wild, unplucked prairie flower.”
-
-“Humph,” observed Turner, exchanging a significant look with Howarth
-behind his host’s back.
-
-“Beauty is an amazingly compelling force,” Sullivan continued,
-sententiously. “I have a theory—shared by very few people, it is true,
-but convincing to me, nevertheless—that Beauty wields a more powerful
-influence than Fear. What do you think?”
-
-“Never thought about it at all,” confessed Howarth, bluntly. “But what
-has all this to do with Dilling’s price?”
-
-“Oh, nothing, my dear fellow,” said Sullivan, airily, “nothing at all! I
-was merely indulging in a moment’s reflection, inspired, as it were, by
-Mrs. Dilling’s loveliness. You must meet her . . . We must see to it
-that Ottawa treats her with cordiality and friendliness.”
-
-“Do you know her, yourself . . . already?” asked Turner.
-
-“Er—no. I have not been through the formality of an introduction, but I
-know her sufficiently well to wager that she is the sort of little woman
-who responds to the sympathetic word; who is lonely, and searching for
-warmth rather than grandeur in her associations and who can be relied
-upon to work for her husband’s advancement . . . when that good time
-comes.”
-
-A new light gleamed in the eyes of his two listeners. They gave up
-trying to think of ways in which the new Member might be
-intimidated—discredited with his constituents or sponsors; and waited
-for the master mind to reveal itself. But Rufus Sullivan, M.P., was not
-the man to discuss half-formulated plans. He changed the subject
-adroitly, jotted down the Dilling’s address and excused himself on the
-plea that he was dining with the Pratts for the purpose of laying the
-foundations for a successful campaign.
-
-“There’s an interesting type,” he declared. “Useful—most useful!”
-
-“Pratt?” cried Turner. “Why, he’s a jolly old ass, in my opinion!”
-
-“I mean Mrs. Pratt, of course,” was Sullivan’s mild reproof. “Don’t you
-realise, my dear chap, that the women of our day are the chief factors
-in our Government? We are harking back to the piping times of the ‘Merry
-Monarch’.”
-
-“Oh, rot!” contradicted Howarth, who was a married man.
-
-“_Régime du cotillon_ . . . petticoat Government, eh?” Turner laughed.
-Both he and Sullivan had evaded the snares of feminine hunters. “I don’t
-know the lady, but take it that she, also, is easy on the eye.”
-
-Sullivan shook his great white head. Mrs. Pratt, he explained, had not
-been born to adorn life, but to emphasise it. Nature, in her wisdom, had
-given to some women determination, and the callousness that must
-accompany it.
-
-“Purposeful,” said Mr. Sullivan, “grimly purposeful, with about as much
-sensitiveness as you would find in a piece of rock crystal. She’s got
-her mind set on having Gus in Parliament, and if Queen Victoria and her
-attendant lion got off the pedestal outside there, they wouldn’t be able
-to prevent her. She would repeal the B.N.A. Act if it stood in her way.
-A very useful woman,” he repeated, and insinuated himself into his
-overcoat.
-
-“What’s he up to?” Howarth asked his companion as they bent their steps
-towards the restaurant and dinner.
-
-“God knows!” answered Turner. “But there’s a load taken off my mind by
-the knowledge that he’s got something up his sleeve. And it won’t be all
-laughter either, if I know him.”
-
-Howarth paused in the corridor. His dulled conscience was trying to
-shake off its political opiate and prompt him to play the man in this
-thing, but its small voice was speedily hushed by the animated scene
-about him. Pages were scurrying around; Members, released from the
-tension of debate, were greeting each other noisily; the _omnium
-gatherum_ of the Galleries was debouching upon the Main lobby, so that
-the very air he breathed was vibrant with a _scherzo_ of human voices.
-
-“I say,” he cried, “let’s ask Dilling to feed with us. Under the
-intoxication of triumph, he may loosen up a bit—become loquacious. You
-get a table. I’ll get him!”
-
-
- CHAPTER 5.
-
-“It isn’t the thing, my dear!” Or, “It’s quite the thing, you know!”
-
-The thing! THE THING! What on earth did it mean?
-
-Marjorie first heard the phrase on the lips of Lady Denby, and gradually
-she recognised it as a social influence that was as powerful as it was
-mysterious. It was one of the most elusive of her problems, for, while
-she understood vaguely, the significance of the term, she failed
-entirely to apply its principles to the exigencies of her new life.
-“Besides,” she said to herself, “one discovers what _is_ the thing, only
-to find presently, that it isn’t . . . or the other way round. There
-doesn’t seem to be any fixed rule.”
-
-It was hers to learn in the hard school of experience, that Ottawa in
-the twentieth century, was controlled by a social code quite as
-remorseless in its way as the tribal etiquette which governed the
-Algonquins when Champlain visited its site, three hundred years before.
-Wherever she went, the attitude of the people from Government House down
-to those who moved on the very periphery of its circle, was such as to
-repress and chill the frank and unquestioning impulse for friendliness
-that lent much charm to her character. She developed a curious sort of
-nervousness—an inner quaking, that disconcerted her, and made her feel
-unnatural. She became so fearful of offending people, that her manner
-was frequently described as obsequious. Now and then, she knew she was
-being criticised, but could not, for the life of her, fathom the reason.
-
-The Thing . . . of course, but what _was_ The Thing?
-
-She had tried to break the children of saying “ma’am”. Lady Denby told
-her it wasn’t _the thing_.
-
-“No nice people speak like that, Althea, darling,” Marjorie declared.
-“You should say, ‘Yes, mother,’ or ‘No, Lady Denby,’ or ‘I don’t know,
-Miss Deane,’—as the case may be, but please, darling, don’t say
-‘ma’am’!” And yet to her astonishment, she heard Miss Leila Brant
-address no less a personage than the Lady of Government House in this
-ill-bred manner!
-
-“This, ma’am,” said she, “is one of the forks used at the Carlyle table.
-It’s really rather a good thing, and I was _thrilled_ at having picked
-it up.”
-
-“You have some very interesting bits,” observed The Lady, graciously.
-
-“Oh, _ma’am_! How can I ever thank you for those words,” cried Miss
-Brant. “Even the slightest breath of praise from you, means—well, it
-means more than you can possibly realise.”
-
-Ma’am . . . ma’am . . . Why, Marjorie could scarcely believe that she
-wasn’t dreaming.
-
-She left the Ancient Chattellarium in a despondent frame of mind. Why,
-in Ottawa, must she appear so stupid? Why could she not make friends?
-Would she be humiliated forever, by the lifted eyebrow and the open
-reproof . . . “It isn’t the thing, my dear?”
-
-It was not her nature, however, to be melancholy, so she thrust dark
-thoughts away and gave herself up to ingenuous excitement in
-anticipation of her first party at Rideau Hall.
-
-The Skating Parties held at Government House on Saturday afternoons
-during January and February were very much THE THING; in fact,
-geographically speaking, Rideau Hall was its very source, its essence,
-the spot from which it emanated and seeped into virtually every other
-residence in the Capital. Scarcely a person from a master plumber down,
-but felt and yielded to its malison.
-
-Owing to the intense and protracted cold, there was excellent ice as
-late as the middle of March, and Their Royal Highnesses extended the
-hospitality of the rink considerably beyond the date specified on the
-original invitations.
-
-Not that the majority of the people went to the Skating Parties to
-skate, or even to toboggan—the thoughtful alternative suggested on the
-large, square card—about two inches below the Royal Coat of Arms.
-Sufficiently difficult were the performances already expected of
-them—the curvettings, gyrations and genuflexions demanded at the moment
-of their presentation to the Vice-Regal party. Sebaceous dowagers
-teetered dangerously in their endeavour to achieve a court curtsey,
-occasionally passing the centre of bouyancy and plunging headlong
-between the two pairs of august feet.
-
-A crowd larger than usual massed in the skating pavilion and fought
-politely for the mulled claret, tea, coffee, cake and sandwiches that
-were being served from long, narrow trestles. His Royal Highness, the
-Duke of Connaught, and the picturesque Princess Pat had come in from the
-open-air rink below, and without removing their skates, had led the way
-to the tea-room, whereupon several hundred people unleashed their
-appetites, sampled the various refreshments, and disposed of the vessels
-from which they had eaten on the floor, window-sills or chairs, if any,
-that had been vacated.
-
-In a corner, removed as far as possible from the disordered tea-tables
-sat three ladies, eating, drinking and conversing as though they were
-spectators at some bizarre entertainment. They stared with frank
-insolence about them, looking through many persons who came hopefully
-within their vicinage, and warning a few by the manner of their
-salutation that they must approach no nearer. They had been
-distinguished by receiving a welcome from the Duke and Duchess, who
-called each by name and hoped that their health was good. After this
-distinction, the ladies withdrew from the commonalty into their corner,
-exalted and envied.
-
-“Who in the world _are_ all these people?” asked Lady Elton. She spoke
-fretfully, with an edge of desperation on her voice. A stranger might
-have imagined that she was required by the statutes to learn the name
-and history of each member of the throng, and that she found the task
-inexpressibly irksome.
-
-Of course, such was not the case. It didn’t matter whether she knew any
-of these people or not—at least, it only mattered to the people
-themselves, many of whom would have been glad to be known by her or any
-other titled person. She asked the question because it was the thing
-_to_ ask at Government House, because it was one of those intellectual
-insipidities that have supplanted conversation and made it possible for
-a group of persons without visible qualifications, according to the
-standards of yesterday, to exchange an absence of ideas, and form
-themselves into a close corporation known as Society.
-
-Mrs. Chesley shook her head. “Isn’t it amazing?” she breathed. “Only a
-few years ago it was such a pleasure to come down here—one knew
-everybody—and now . . .”
-
-“Sessional people, I suppose?” interrupted Miss de Latour, with just the
-faintest movement of her nose as though she was speaking of a
-drain-digger, or some other useful class of citizen who, by reason of
-necessity, moved in the effluvia occasioned by his work.
-
-Captain the Honourable Teddy Dodson approached at this moment to ask if
-the ladies were satisfactorily served.
-
-“Do let me get you some more tea,” he begged. “I’m afraid no one’s
-looking after you—this awful mob, you know.” He pushed a collection of
-discarded cups aside and seated himself on the edge of a chair, leaning
-forward with an air of flattering confidence. “Cross your hearts and
-hope you may die,” he whispered, “and I’ll tell you what we call these
-beastly tea fights.”
-
-The trio playfully followed his instructions and encouraged him to
-reveal the limit of his naughtiness.
-
-“We call them ‘slum parties’,” confided the young Aide, and while the
-ladies shrieked their appreciation of his wicked wit, he clumped away on
-his expensive skates, balancing three cups quite cleverly as he elbowed
-a passage to the table.
-
-“How do you suppose these people get invitations?” Miss de Latour
-demanded, indignantly. “Look at that woman over there—no, no, the one
-in the purple hat. Isn’t that the awful Pratt creature who’s pushing
-herself into everything?”
-
-“My husband,” said Mrs. Chesley, “calls her the Virginia Creeper.
-However, she’ll get on. They say she’s been left a disgusting lot of
-money, and that her husband’s going to run for Parliament.”
-
-“That’s no reason why she should be here,” said the other. “Are there no
-impregnable bulwarks left to protect Society?”
-
-“Why, Pamela,” cried Mrs. Chesley, “how clever of you to remember that!
-I read it, too, in Lady Dunstan’s Memoirs, but I’ve no memory—I can’t
-quote things . . .”
-
-“. . . as though they were your own!” finished Lady Elton, and laughed
-at the neatness of her thrust.
-
-Miss de Latour’s question as to how people secured their invitations was
-merely an echo of her friend’s banality. There was no secret about the
-matter; no bribery or corruption. Anyone—almost anyone—desiring to be
-insulted by the Lady Eltons, Mrs. Chesleys, and Miss de Latours of
-Ottawa, or to be snubbed of their acquaintances, had only to proceed to
-the Main Entrance of Rideau Hall, pass beneath the new facade—so
-symbolic of fronts, both physical and architectural, that had suddenly
-been acquired all over the City in honour of the Royal
-Governor-General—and there, in the white marble, red-carpeted hall,
-sign a huge register, under the eye of two supercilious, scarlet-coated
-flunkeys, who regarded each newcomer with all the antagonism of their
-class. This unique procedure was known as “calling at Government House,”
-and within a few days of the delightful and friendly visit, His
-Majesty’s Mails conveyed a large, rich-looking card to the door and one
-learned that “Their Royal Highnessess had desired the A.D.C. in Waiting
-to invite Mr. and Mrs. Van Custard and the Misses Van Custard for
-Skating and Toboganning between the hours, etc., etc.”. Thereupon, one
-wrote to rural relations or foreigners of one kind and another, and
-mentioned carelessly that one had been “entertained at Government
-House”.
-
-“There’s Mrs. Long,” announced Lady Elton. “Who’s the man?”
-
-“Oh, some newspaper person, I think—an American,” volunteered Miss de
-Latour. Obviously it was bad enough in her opinion to be any kind of a
-newspaper person, but to be an American newspaper person offered an
-affront to Society that was difficult to condone. Pamela de Latour was
-intensely proud of her father’s legendary patrician lineage, her
-capacity for avoiding friendships, and her mother’s wealth. She was well
-aware of the fact that she was regarded as a person whom “one should
-know.”
-
-“He’s not bad looking,” murmured Lady Elton, charitably, “and he must be
-rather worth while, Pam. She’s introducing him to everyone. Let’s wander
-over and see what we can see.”
-
-But Mrs. Long, watching them from the corner of her very alert brown
-eyes, and anticipating this move, beat a strategic retreat, and soon
-lost herself and her newspaper man in the dense crowd. Lady Elton, Mrs.
-Chesley and Miss de Latour looked significantly at one another as though
-to say,
-
-“Ah-ha! What do you think of that? Something queer about this affair, if
-you ask me!”
-
-An expression of their thoughts was denied them, however, for the moment
-they left the shelter of their corner they were like the Romans
-advancing across the Danube—a target for the surrounding barbarian
-hordes.
-
-Almost immediately they were attacked by the Angus-McCallums, two
-sisters with generous, florid cheeks and rotund figures, who, to quote
-Azalea Deane, seemed to lie fatly on the surface of every function,
-rather like cream on a pan of milk.
-
-Their grandfather was a Bytown pioneer whose first task, after complying
-with the formalities imposed upon all immigrants by the various
-government officials, had been to find a house—a house, that is to say,
-requiring the services of a stone mason.
-
-Now Masonry, whether Free or Stone, has always offered signal advantages
-to those who labour in its interests, and the present case was no
-exception to the rule. Not only did prosperity attend the twilight years
-of old Thaddeus McCallum, but especial privileges descended to his
-progeny, the most conspicuous being the Freedom of Government House
-grounds which the Misses Angus-McCallum enjoyed. That is to say, the
-young ladies were at liberty to pass unchallenged within the sacrosanct
-limits of this estate, whenever whim or convenience dictated . . . an
-inconceivably rich reward for the excellence of the fine old man’s
-chisel-drafting and hammer-dressing! They seemed, however, to lose sight
-of the patriotic service he had rendered to the nation, in an
-unremitting search for families on whom, without demeaning themselves,
-they could call.
-
-“Who is . . .,” dominated their every conscious thought.
-
-“Ah, Effie,” cried the elder sister, addressing Lady Elton, “I thought
-you would be skating.”
-
-“For Heaven’s sake, hush!” warned Lady Elton, severely. “Weren’t you
-here last week to see me crash to the ice with H.R.H.? I dared not risk
-another such fall!”
-
-“But with the uncle of a King,” murmured Miss Mabel Angus-McCallum,
-“such an honour, my dear!”
-
-Helena Chesley laughed.
-
-“That’s not bad for you, Mabel. It’s a pity Mrs. Long didn’t overhear
-it,” she said.
-
-Between her and the Angus-McCallums there existed an almost perceptible
-antagonism which was regarded variously as a source of amusement and
-uneasiness by their friends. Such traditional antipathy was not at all
-unusual, and marked the relation between many of the “old” families in
-the Capital.
-
-Before her marriage to the scholarly young man, whose nimble wit and
-charm of manner had won him a permanent place in the Vice-Regal
-entourage, Helena Chesley had been a Halstead, and the Halsteads had
-owned the estate upon which such discomfiting evidences of Thaddeus
-McCallum’s craftsmanship rose up to confound his descendants. Whether
-they imagined it or not, is difficult to state, but the Angus-McCallums
-always felt the condescension of the landed proprietor to the day
-labourer in Helena Chesley’s cynical smile, while the latter resented
-the patronising air which the others assumed as a cloak for the
-inherited resentfulness of Industry towards Capital.
-
-Miss Mabel Angus-McCallum’s retort was cut short by the arrival of Mrs.
-Hudson, who, metaphorically speaking, embraced the ladies as Crusoe
-might have taken Friday to his bosom.
-
-“My dears,” she breathed, “I’m so glad to find you! Did anyone ever see
-such a mob, and _such_ people? Who do you suppose brought me my tea?”
-and without waiting for an answer to the question, she continued, “That
-awful Lennox man! You remember, he used to be the stenographer in Sir
-Mortimer Fanshawe’s office!”
-
-“Did you drink it?” asked Mrs. Chesley.
-
-Mrs. Hudson’s social position was triumphant and secure. She could sit
-on the top rung of the steep and slippery ladder (if one finds an apt
-metaphor in so comfortless a recreation) and look down upon a mass of
-struggling, straining, pushing microcosms who clutched, and climbed, and
-slid and fell in an effort to reach the pinnacle she had attained; for
-just what reason or by what right, no one was prepared to explain. True,
-she was a frank snob, which was partially accountable. Also, she was
-wealthy, and “entertained” in a pleasantly formal manner that lent an
-air of importance to the least important sort of functions.
-
-Had breakfast been served in Mrs. Hudson’s small but well-regulated
-_ménage_, indubitably it would have been announced with an impressive
-opening of double doors, and served by respectful, liveried attendants.
-Moreover, there would have been a correctly morning-coated gentleman for
-each lady of the party, for the express and especial purpose of offering
-her his arm and escorting her to the card-marked table!
-
-Nor was that all. There were those who called Mrs. Hudson a “bug
-specialist,” and attributed her social success to this interesting form
-of enthusiasm. Her entomological research was conducted with
-considerable originality and on lines that differed radically from the
-method of the late Dr. Gordon Hewitt, similarly called by a large group
-of affectionate and admiring associates. In Mrs. Hudson’s case, “bug
-specialising” signified an ardent (and inconstant) pursuit of a fad, or
-a person, or a combination of both. Rarely did a stranger with any claim
-whatever to renown, escape from Ottawa without enjoying her hospitality,
-and it must not be forgotten that she frequently dragged absolute
-obscurities out of their gloom and played most happily with them for a
-time.
-
-Azalea Deane said that Mrs. Hudson was the most recent development of
-The Big Game Hunter—game and bug being interchangeable, if not
-synonymous in her mind. The truth of the matter was, she made a serious
-study of the state of being termed Society. She attacked the problems
-and the methods of succeeding in it, with the same energy and
-concentrated purpose that a man gives to a great commercial enterprise.
-It was her business and she made it pay. Mob psychology and
-regimentation of thought were the fountains from which she derived her
-source of supply, and judicious investment added to her power. People
-often wondered how Mrs. Hudson had achieved social eminence when women
-with superior claims had failed. The answer lies just here—her life was
-spent in a conscious striving for it. Never a move, an invitation, an
-acceptance, a salutation on the street, was made without forethought.
-She made Society her tool. Most people are tools, themselves. Usually,
-Mrs. Hudson was described as a “character”, which meant that she was
-different from ordinary people. Her peculiarities—and she wore them
-consciously, like a crown—were called odd; her vulgarities, original.
-She was clever enough to keep the fact that she _was_ clever from being
-realised, and many people were sorry for her! She had married a man
-several years her junior, and loved to confess that he was an answer to
-prayer!
-
-“I saw him first at a concert,” she was wont to remark, “and the moment
-my eyes fell upon his dear, unsuspecting head, I said to myself, ‘Thank
-God! I have found the man I intend to marry, and need look no further!’
-I went home, and prayed for him, and I got him!”
-
-What effect this disclosure may have had upon the spiritual trend of the
-community, what intensity of supplication or increase of attendance at
-the churches, there is, unfortunately, no means of estimating. It can
-scarcely have failed, however, to have exerted some marked influence
-upon the spinsters of the Capital, and many a married woman, I am told,
-bent a devout knee because of it, arguing hopefully, that if the Lord
-could give, He could also take away!
-
-Mrs. Hudson loved her husband with a sort of cantankerous affection that
-was like the rubbing of a brass bowl to make it shine. She was always
-prodding him, or polishing him, or smacking at him with her hands or her
-tongue. Marriage had robbed her of the joy of believing him a genius,
-but she was fond of him in her peculiar, rasping way.
-
-“Is anyone else here?” she enquired, wiping out the hundreds of people
-about her with a gesture.
-
-“Mrs. Long,” she was told, “and a strange man.”
-
-“Ah-h-h!” cried Mrs. Hudson. “Speaking of Mrs. Long, have you heard
-. . . can’t we sit down, my dears? They say,” she continued, after the
-group had recaptured their corner, “that her bridge winnings are simply
-fabulous; and that if she can’t get money, she’ll take the very clothes
-off your back. Of course, you’ve heard what happened at the Country
-Club, the other afternoon?”
-
-The group drew in closer, and Mrs. Hudson set forth on the most
-dangerous of all adventures, the telling of a half-truth.
-
-“She invited Mrs. Knowles, Madam Valleau and little Eva Leeds to lunch,
-at which, my dears, _they say_, far too much Burgundy was served,
-(especially for Eva, who is not used to it) and afterwards, of course,
-they settled themselves at the bridge table. I’m not saying that Eva is
-free from blame. Indeed, I have spoken to her most frankly on the
-subject, and she knows that I think her behaviour most culpable.
-Gambling amongst women who can afford it is bad enough, but that those
-who can’t, should be given an opportunity to imperil their husband’s
-meagre Civil Servant’s salary, is a crime that should be punishable by
-law.”
-
-“It might be done, too,” murmured Lady Elton, who was an agitative
-member of the National Council. “If we can prohibit the sale of liquor
-to a drunken man, I don’t see why we can’t restrict gambling to persons
-of a certain income.” The sum which occurred to her was, of course,
-amply covered in her own case and that of her companions. “But, go
-on—what happened then?”
-
-“Well, Eva lost, and lost, and _lost_! But do you think that Hattie Long
-would stop playing? Not a bit of it! At last—this really is too awful,
-my dears, you’ll never believe me—”
-
-The ladies had already foreseen this possibility, but like everyone else
-they liked the colourful romance of Mrs. Hudson’s stories, so they urged
-her to continue.
-
-“Very well,” she agreed, “but mind, not a breath of this must go any
-further! To make a long story short, when they stopped, Eva was so badly
-in the hole that she couldn’t cover her loss by an I.O.U. for Tom Leeds’
-_monthly cheque_!”
-
-“Horrible!” whispered the group, genuinely shocked.
-
-“What did she do?” asked Lady Elton.
-
-“It seems that a few days before, she had bought from Leila Brant an
-Empire table. How she buys these things, I’ve no idea. The point is,
-that Hattie Long was crazy about that same table, too, and fully
-expected to have it. When she found Eva had got ahead of her she was
-simply wild, and offered almost double the price—certainly more than
-the thing was worth.”
-
-“And Eva refused it?”
-
-“I’m obliged to say she did. No one can admire her for doing so. I
-repeat, I don’t think she has behaved properly, but the point is that
-she had the table Hattie Long wanted, and so, when she had been driven
-into this quagmire of debt from which she could not possibly extricate
-herself, Hattie, with devilish finesse, suggested that she should give
-up the table and call the matter settled.”
-
-“She didn’t do it?”
-
-“She had to! Her I.O.U.’s for . . .” Mrs. Hudson had the grace to pause
-“. . . such a sum were utterly valueless! So, bright and early the
-following morning there was a transfer at her door and now the table
-decorates Harriet’s reception room.”
-
-At that instant the crowd parted, and before either faction could avoid
-an encounter, Mrs. Long and her newspaper man stood beside them.
-Elaborately amiable greetings were exchanged. Mr. Reginald Harper was
-introduced. Inured as they were to association with the owners of great
-names, there was not a member of the group who escaped a sudden
-palpitation upon meeting this world-famed monarch of newspaperdom. It
-was not easy to keep gratification out of their manner when
-acknowledging the introduction, but by tacit agreement they were
-obligated to flick Mrs. Long over his innocent head.
-
-“Are you living in Ottawa, Mr. Carter?” asked Lady Elton, deliberately
-mis-calling his name, but with a charming show of interest.
-
-Mr. Harper had only arrived the day previous, for a brief stay.
-
-“The place is full of strangers,” volunteered Miss de Latour. “It
-scarcely seems like home, any more.”
-
-“It’s the fault of the Government,” declared Mrs. Hudson. “New people
-are always getting in. I don’t understand how they work it, but there
-you are. Are you connected with the Government?” she asked the stranger,
-coyly.
-
-Mrs. Long flashed a sharp look at the questioner and answered for her
-guest. “Only to the extent of financing our poor little country,” she
-replied. “Mr. Harper,”—she turned to him, archly—“I suppose I may tell
-it? . . . Mr. Harper has just concluded a loan for a few paltry millions
-which a New York syndicate is advancing, so that the salaries of the
-Civil Service,”—her glance rested for a fraction of a second on the
-trio—“will be paid as usual.”
-
-The elder Miss Angus-McCallum hurriedly changed the subject. “How
-stunning you look, Hattie,” she said. “But then, you’ve a style of your
-own and can wear those inexpensive things. _I_ saw that costume in
-Hammerstein’s window, and thought it charming.”
-
-Hammerstein was an obscure costumer of Semitic origin, who had recently
-benefited by one of his frequent fire-sales, and the implication that
-Mrs. Long’s exclusive tailor-made had been purchased there was so
-obvious as to border on crudity. Mrs. Hudson could have done much
-better!
-
-Mrs. Long ignored the thrust. “There seem to be so few men at these
-parties, nowadays,” she observed, at no one in particular. “But when one
-looks at the women, one can hardly blame them.”
-
-“If we had a little gambling,” said Miss de Latour, “no doubt they would
-find it more attractive.”
-
-“But there would be complications.” Mrs. Hudson objected.
-
-“In what way?” prompted Miss Mabel Angus-McCallum.
-
-“Well, my dear, they couldn’t play for the Vice-Regal furniture, could
-they? They’d get into immediate trouble with such stakes, for the
-furniture belongs to the taxpayers of Canada and is not negotiable.”
-
-In the sharp silence, Mrs. Long flushed slightly, realising that the
-incident to which this remark referred had been grossly distorted under
-Mrs. Hudson’s capable and imaginative manipulation. She was about to
-make a stinging retort when she thought better of it, promising herself
-a day of reckoning in the future. Just how, did not at the moment occur
-to her, but time would show her the way.
-
-“There’s Captain Teddy beckoning us, Mr. Harper,” she said. “We must
-go,” and over her shoulder she explained, “Mr. Harper has never enjoyed
-the delicious terrors of toboganning. The Princess is going to take him
-down. Goodbye!”
-
-“That’s that,” snapped Miss de Latour. “Now, look out for yourself, Mrs.
-Hudson!”
-
-The well-known purple velvet and ermine of Lady Denby caught Mrs.
-Chesley’s attention. “She’s got Azalea with her this afternoon, and who
-in Heaven’s name is _that_?”
-
-Lady Denby did not leave them long in doubt. “You must all know Mrs.
-Dilling,” she said. “Mrs. Raymond Dilling, from Pinto Plains. Her
-husband is a Member, you know, and one of the most promising young
-speakers in the Party.”
-
-The ladies bowed frostily, not because they bore any particular grudge
-against Marjorie, but because they could not afford to miss this golden
-opportunity for expressing their dislike of Lady Denby, who, though
-glorified by a title, was not “of their set”. They looked upon her as an
-“uplifter”, living well within her husband’s income, and exuding an
-atmosphere, not only of economy, but frugality; one who allied herself
-with organizations for the benefit of the human race, notably of women
-and children, and preached the depressing doctrine, that “Life is real,
-Life is earnest, and the grave is not its goal!”
-
-Marjorie was embarrassed. She had been embarrassed all the afternoon,
-and something inside of her old fur coat ached intolerably. She noticed
-that an air of hostility prevailed over the entire throng. She did not
-realise, however, its fundamental cause; that the acknowledgments of
-friendships was a delicate matter within the grounds of Government
-House, for, as a man is known by the company he keeps, so the guests
-were desirous of being ranked in a higher classification than that in
-which they ordinarily moved. Which is to say, that although Mrs.
-Polduggan and Mrs. Crogganthorpe were friendly neighbours, and quite
-ready to acknowledge one another on their own verandahs, the moment they
-entered the skating pavilion their vision became blurred, and they saw
-for the most part, only the Ministers’ wives, persons who were
-especially prominent, or, better than all, chatted with the wife of a
-Foreign Consul who was too polite, or too ignorant of Western
-conditions, to take a decided stand with regard to class distinctions.
-
-“Dilling, did she say?” asked Mrs. Chesley, as Lady Denby and her
-protegées moved away. “What an impossible person!”
-
-“Who is she?” asked Miss Angus-McCallum. “Should we call?”
-
-Pamela de Latour shrugged her shoulders. “I haven’t anything to do on
-Wednesday afternoon.”
-
-“Lunch with me,” said Lady Elton. “We’ll all go together.”
-
-“One never knows . . .”
-
-The crowd had thinned perceptibly by the time Lady Denby released
-Marjorie from the strain of constant introductions, and went away to
-have a moment’s chat with Miss Denison-Page, the statuesque
-Lady-in-Waiting.
-
-Marjorie indicated a tall, florid gentleman with a shock of silver hair,
-who loitered at the doorway in a manner that suggested he was waiting
-for someone to go home.
-
-“Who is that?” she whispered to Azalea.
-
-“Where? Oh, that’s Rufus Sullivan, the Member for Morroway,” answered
-the girl. “I meant to have pointed him out to you earlier in the
-afternoon, only I had no chance. He’s Lady Denby’s pet aversion. One
-dares not mention his name in her presence.”
-
-“But why?”
-
-“Lots of reasons. He’s quite a character, you know. Heavens, how he
-stares!”
-
-Marjorie turned away with flaming cheeks. She was loath to admit that he
-had not only been staring, but that he had been at her elbow during the
-entire afternoon. This distressed her, for, according to the ethics of
-Pinto Plains, a man impressed his attentions only upon the woman who
-encouraged him, and Marjorie felt that something in her manner must have
-been very misleading. She resented his pursuit less than she felt
-ashamed of herself for inspiring it, and was inexpressibly relieved when
-he finally left the room.
-
-The terrible disorder of the pavilion sickened her housekeeper’s soul,
-and she turned to Azalea, impetuously.
-
-“Just look at this place! Isn’t it disgusting to expect any human being
-to clean it up?” Then, a little afraid of her own daring, “Wouldn’t you
-just love to open the back door and let a drove of pigs come in?”
-
-“Yes,” answered Azalea, shortly, “after you’d opened the front door and
-let them out!”
-
-
- CHAPTER 6.
-
-Marjorie was far from happy. The experience at Government House haunted
-her. Incidents that she had scarcely noted at the time, recurred in the
-pitiless glare of a good memory to harry her and rob her of her peace of
-mind. It had all been so different from what she expected!
-
-Sunday dragged wearily on. The children seemed fretful and unusually
-difficult. The roast was tough and the furnace went out, so that Raymond
-was obliged to devote most of his precious afternoon to re-lighting it.
-By the time, therefore, that the children had sung their evening hymn,
-had each chosen a Bible story to be read aloud, and had been put to bed,
-Marjorie felt that she could bear no more, and she invaded the
-disorderly “drawing-room,” too troubled to be repulsed by the
-unwelcoming expression in her husband’s eyes.
-
-“Well, what is it, my dear?” Dilling closed the volume upon his long,
-thin finger, and tapped it with a slender pencil. “Is anything
-especially the matter?”
-
-“I don’t know,” sighed Marjorie. “That’s just what I want to ask you,
-dear. Something _must_ be wrong, somewhere, only I can’t find it! I seem
-to be so stupid here, Raymond, and people don’t like me. I know I
-oughtn’t to bother you, dear,” she said, noticing how his eyes strayed
-back to the book that at the moment she almost hated, with its chrome
-leather binding, its overwhelming contents, and the voluptuous
-overpowering odour that reflected the literary richness of its
-substance, “and I won’t stay long, but _can’t_ you help me, and tell me
-what to do, so that I’ll be more like the Ottawa people?”
-
-Dilling stared down into the mist-blurred eyes, only half seeing them.
-His thoughts were snared by his own problems and he could not free them
-immediately. His casual words of encouragement carried no comfort to his
-wife, who stumbled on,
-
-“You’re so clever, dearie! If you aren’t sure of a thing, you always
-know where to learn all about it. . . and that’s all I’m asking you,
-Raymond—to tell me some book that will explain these queer things that
-I don’t seem to understand.”
-
-“What kind of things?”
-
-The question was not exactly brusque, but to anyone less troubled it
-would have suggested a definite desire for a brief interview. Marjorie
-raised her hands and let them fall to her sides helplessly.
-
-“Hundreds—hundreds!” she began. “All sorts . . .”
-
-“Give me a concrete illustration. Tell me one.”
-
-“Well, I never do anything _right_! Yesterday—you _do_ shake hands with
-people when you meet them, don’t you?—well, yesterday, Lady Denby took
-me to the Skating Party at Government House. I thought it was going to
-be so nice, Raymond. We always thought so at home, you know, but it
-wasn’t just like what we imagined—in fact, it was awfully different.”
-
-“Yes, yes. But the point of the story, Marjorie?”
-
-“I’m trying to tell you, dearie. You see, if you haven’t been there,
-it’s so difficult to understand the queer customs of the place. I’d been
-introduced to Captain Dodson—he called out the names, you know,
-standing just beside Their Royal Highnesses—and when we got into the
-room where they were receiving, Lady Denby went first, and I came
-second, and Miss Deane last, and you understand, Raymond, I couldn’t see
-whether Lady Denby spoke to him or not, and so when I came along and he
-saw me and sort of smiled, I said, ‘How do you do, Captain Dodson?’ and
-held out my hand. You _do_ shake hands with people, don’t you, Raymond?”
-
-“Never mind just now. Go on.”
-
-“Well, he didn’t shake hands with me! Worse than that, he put his hands
-behind his back and said, ‘Mrs. Raymond Dilling,’ in an awful voice, and
-Miss Deane simply _pushed_ me past him! I didn’t know what to do when I
-got there in front of the Duke and the Duchess. I didn’t know whether to
-shake hands or not, and I’m—I’m afraid, darling, that I behaved like a
-terrible simpleton. It was easy enough to see that Lady Denby was
-frightfully annoyed. She said that to shake hands with Captain Dodson
-was _not_ the thing, and to shake hands with Their Royal Highnesses,
-_was_ the thing, and altogether, I’m so muddled, I don’t know what to
-do! Raymond, what on earth _is_ THE THING?”
-
-Dilling drew his finger definitely from his book, laid the volume on the
-table, and gave his attention to the question.
-
-“Well, Marjorie,” he said, “although I’ve never formed a considered
-opinion on this subject, I’ll lay the facts before you, and we’ll reason
-it out together.”
-
-Reasoning a subject out together between Marjorie and her husband was a
-merest euphemism for a philosophical lecturette with Dilling on the
-platform and his wife supplying the atmosphere. With his characteristic
-gesture when entering upon a discussion of some remote topic that
-interested him—an upward sweep of the right arm with the sensitive
-fingers coming to rest on his rapidly-thinning chevelure—he proceeded
-to instruct her.
-
-“_The Thing_, my dear girl, as I see it, is one of the forms of what the
-Polynesians call ‘Tabu’. In the large, ‘tabu’ may be said to be negative
-magic—that is, abstention from certain acts in order that unpleasant or
-malefic results may not ensue. Do you follow, so far?”
-
-“Yes, dear . . . I think so . . . a kind of rule, you mean, don’t you?
-One can see that, but what puzzles me, is that it works both ways. How
-does one learn _when_ it is right, and when it is wrong? Isn’t there
-some starting point?”
-
-“Most certainly! ‘Tabu’ originated in religion, and was rooted in fear.
-Moreover, it was common to all peoples in their tribal beginnings. It is
-associated with the Totem of the North American Indian and the Fetish of
-the African races; it oppressed the alert Greek mind for an astonishing
-period, and prevailed amongst the Romans. Some day, you must read about
-the Flamen Dialis—a member of the priestly caste, who stood next the
-King in sacerdotal rank.”
-
-“I was thinking especially of shaking hands,” murmured Marjorie.
-
-But Dilling ignored her. He slipped easily into his Parliamentary
-manner, as though addressing Mr. Speaker, and his political associates.
-Furthermore, he was enjoying this opportunity to open doors that led
-into little-used rooms in the treasure-house of his mind.
-
-“So rigid were the laws that governed the Flamen’s conduct—er—so
-drastic was the discipline of The Thing—that even a knot in the thread
-of his clothing was practically a crime against the State! Can you
-imagine it? He couldn’t spend a night outside the City. He was forbidden
-to ride—even touch—a horse. He . . . well, I could continue at length,
-but this is sufficient to show you that The Thing, as you term it, is no
-new, prohibitive measure, designed for your particular embarrassment.”
-
-“Oh, I didn’t think that . . .”
-
-“I forgot to mention that it was not The Thing for the Flamen to suffer
-marriage a second time—an historical statement, my dear, which has no
-personal application, I assure you! You see, the wife of the Flamen
-became sacrosanct, and passed, also, under the iron rule of the ‘Tabu’.”
-
-Marjorie nodded hopefully, and urged her husband to explain how women
-were affected.
-
-“If you are thinking of the Flaminica,” returned Dilling, “she was
-affected very severely. I seem to remember that she was forbidden to
-comb her hair at certain intervals; also, she became unable to discharge
-her religious duties unless purified by a sacrifice, after hearing
-thunder. Upon my word,” he broke off suddenly, “I shouldn’t wonder if
-the wide-spread fear of electric storms may have taken its root from
-this very law! You have provoked a most interesting train of thought, my
-dear!”
-
-“I’m ever so glad,” was Marjorie’s quick response. “But do you remember
-anything about her shaking hands?”
-
-“Not at the moment. However, I venture this opinion . . . the Flaminica
-was the foundress of those social ‘Tabus’ which have held the minds of
-women in bondage for so many ages; that she was the dictatrix of moral
-and social etiquette, to-day. You can readily understand how ladies,
-supporting this distinguished but irksome office, would seek to mitigate
-its rigours by using their rank to the discomfiture of less favoured
-members of their sex.” He began to chuckle. “In short, I believe that
-Mrs. Grundy and Queen Victoria were her lineal descendants.”
-
-“Queen Victoria?” echoed Marjorie.
-
-“I mean, my dear, that the Flaminica was the mother of Snobocracy, the
-divine High Priestess of the Order, whose code is expressed in the
-cryptic formula, ‘It is—or is not—The Thing!’.”
-
-The alarum of the kitchen clock startled them both. Marjorie frowned.
-Althea must have been naughty again. She had been distinctly forbidden
-to touch it.
-
-“I’m afraid I’ll have to leave it at that, my dear,” said Raymond, as he
-opened his book. Its peculiar odour enveloped her like a puff of smoke.
-“This report is somewhat more tricky than I had anticipated. But you
-have the main facts of the case—haven’t you? To-morrow, I’ll bring you
-a book from the Library.”
-
-As Marjorie closed the door, a sharp whirr sounded from the telephone.
-
-“Hello,” she said, wondering whether Raymond would mind being called.
-
-“Is Mrs. Dilling at home?” asked a mellow voice at the other end of the
-wire. It was a voice that vibrated, and struck some unfamiliar chord
-within her consciousness; a voice that unreasonably disturbed her.
-
-“I am Mrs. Dilling,” answered Marjorie, and waited.
-
-“My name is Sullivan,” the voice continued. “Rufus Sullivan, the Member
-for Morroway.”
-
-“Oh!” cried Marjorie, startled. Then, “Oh, yes?”
-
-“I am wondering if you will allow me the pleasure of calling on you,
-Mrs. Dilling. I have been a fervent admirer of your husband ever since I
-heard his speech in the House, last week, and I’m very eager to meet
-you. It is scarcely necessary for me to tell you that we have not had
-Dilling’s equal in Parliament for many years.”
-
-“You’re awfully kind,” murmured Dilling’s wife, to the accompaniment of
-a pounding heart. She didn’t know why, but she was trembling.
-
-“Well, I’m not sure about being kind,” laughed the Hon. Member easily,
-“but I confess that I am desperately jealous. There’s something about a
-man of Dilling’s calibre that accuses us old chaps of unappreciated
-opportunities and wasted youth. One begins to taste the ashes of
-discouragement.”
-
-“Nobody should be discouraged,” returned Marjorie, feeling the words
-inadequate, but not knowing what else to say.
-
-“No, no! You’re right, of course! As Walpole tells us, ‘It’s not life
-that matters; it’s the courage you put into it.’ Just the same, courage
-is acquired rather less by an effort of will, than by inspiration, don’t
-you think so?”
-
-“Ye-es,” returned Marjorie, not very sure after all.
-
-“I was wondering, Mrs. Dilling,” the Hon. Member went on in a lighter
-tone, “if I might be admitted to the list of your acquaintances? If you
-would permit me to call?”
-
-“I should be very pleased.”
-
-“Thank you . . . thank you . . . I can’t say more! Are you busy this
-evening, or have you other guests? It goes without saying that I should
-not care to intrude.”
-
-Marjorie explained that she was quite free and that a call would not be
-the slightest intrusion, but that “Mr. Dilling” seemed to be very much
-engrossed in a book, and she wasn’t quite certain—
-
-“Don’t think of it!” cried Sullivan. “I understand perfectly, and
-wouldn’t allow you to disturb him for the world. Just let me slip in
-quietly, and when he has finished, perhaps he will join us. I do want to
-know your husband better, Mrs. Dilling, but it’s quite impossible to
-form any intimate contacts up there on the Hill, and in the midst of the
-turmoil of our every-day existence. I won’t say any more, however,
-through the medium of this unsatisfactory instrument. I will be with you
-in a moment.”
-
-He was. Before Marjorie had decided whether or not it was The Thing to
-entertain a Member of Parliament in the dining-room (where the table was
-set for breakfast) she was summoned to the door by a discreet tinkle of
-the bell.
-
-Although his enormous bulk nearly filled the tiny passage, Sullivan’s
-handclasp was very gentle and his voice was low.
-
-“No words, Mrs. Dilling, can convey to you my gratitude for this
-privilege! I am a lonely man, a shy man for all my huge body, and I do
-not readily make friends!”
-
-The house seemed to quiver as he followed her to the dining-room, and
-Marjorie was distressed at her failure to regain her composure and to
-still the strange quaking within herself. She had never been affected
-like this, before.
-
-“What a cosy little nest!” exclaimed her guest. “And are there _three_
-birdlings?”
-
-His fine brown eyes turned from the children’s places—where neat
-oilcloth bibs and porridge bowls stood ready for the morning—back to
-her face.
-
-“Yes, we have three children—two girls and a boy.”
-
-“Wonderful little woman,” he breathed, reverently, “and she’s only a
-slip of a girl, herself.”
-
-“I’m twenty-seven,” declared Marjorie.
-
-“A golden age,” he sighed. “But tell me about the children—do! One of
-the bitterest disappointments of my life is that I haven’t half a dozen
-. . . I’m a lonely old bachelor, Mrs. Dilling. Few people realise just
-_how_ lonely.”
-
-It flashed through Marjorie’s mind that he had lost his sweetheart years
-ago. Perhaps she had died. Perhaps she had married someone else. In
-either case, Mr. Sullivan had remained true to her memory. She liked him
-for his constancy. Her embarrassment faded a little.
-
-“It’s dreadful to be lonely,” she said, feeling that it would not be
-polite to ask why he had not married. “I’ve been a little lonely,
-myself, since we came to Ottawa.”
-
-“Poor child!”
-
-Mr. Sullivan pressed Marjorie’s hand with bland sympathy. The gesture
-reminded her of Uncle Herbert, whose comfort, in the face of any trial,
-expressed itself by a clicking of the tongue and that same spasmodic
-crushing of the hand. Indeed, now that she grew more at ease with him,
-Marjorie noticed that Mr. Sullivan was quite an old man and she
-attributed that mysterious something in his manner to the eagerness of a
-lonely man to make friends. She smiled, brightly.
-
-“Oh, you mustn’t pity me,” she cried. “I like Ottawa. All my life I have
-dreamed of coming here, and now the dream has come true. But, it is only
-natural that I miss some of my dearest friends. I wouldn’t be a really
-nice person if I didn’t, now, would I?”
-
-Mr. Sullivan knitted his brows and said that, try as he would, he could
-not imagine her being anything but a fine friend. There was just the
-slightest suggestion of a pause before he added—
-
-“You remind me of the noblest woman I ever knew.”
-
-“Did—did she—die?”
-
-The great, white head sank slowly. Again, Mr. Sullivan sought her hand.
-“She was just twenty . . . I was a youngster, too. Life has never been
-the same . . . But there! I mustn’t burden you with my sorrows. You were
-going to tell me about the children. I don’t suppose you would let me
-peep at them—just a little tiny peep, if I promise not to wake them?”
-
-“Would you really like to see them?” asked Marjorie, now thoroughly at
-ease with her guest.
-
-“I can’t tell you how much.”
-
-“Then, of course, you may!”
-
-With an unconsciously coquettish gesture, she laid her finger on her
-lips and led the way up the creaking stairs. Her thoughts were of the
-children. Had she been careful to wash all the jam from Baby’s rosebud
-mouth? Althea, she remembered, had pulled the button off her Teddies and
-she had found it necessary to resort to the ubiquitous safety pin. And
-Sylvester—well, there was no prophesying what might have happened to
-Sylvester since she heard his “Now-I-lay-me,” and kissed him.
-
-The thoughts of Mr. Sullivan, on the other hand, were concerned with
-almost everything but the children. He was wondering why that door at
-the foot of the stairs did not open and a voice ask what the devil he
-was doing, prowling through the house. He was trying to decide whether
-Marjorie had advised her husband of his coming and he was being
-deliberately ignored, or whether Dilling habitually shrouded himself
-with aloofness, and indifference to the affairs of the home and the
-personnel of his wife’s callers.
-
-At the landing, Marjorie turned to whisper.
-
-“Please don’t look at the room. It’s so hard to be tidy with babies, you
-know.”
-
-Mr. Sullivan hung yearningly over the cots where Althea and Sylvester
-were sleeping. He did it very well, and Marjorie was delighted.
-
-“Beautiful,” he murmured, and he indicated that he found a strong
-resemblance to her.
-
-Beside the baby’s little crib he was overcome with emotion, and
-Marjorie’s heart went out to him as he groped hastily for his
-handkerchief and passed it across his eyes. “The cherub,” he whispered,
-“the exquisite little flower. She has her father’s cast of features,
-but—” transferring his expression of adoration to the face nearer his
-“—but I’ll wager she has her mother’s eyes!”
-
-When they creaked their way downstairs again they were on the
-friendliest terms, and Marjorie could scarcely reconcile this kind,
-elderly gentleman and his interested, avuncular air, with the debonair
-gallant who had caught and held her attention so unpleasantly at
-Government House.
-
-“It only shows,” she reproved herself, “how you can misjudge a person.
-And he’s old enough to be my father . . .” which state was always
-synonymous to her with extreme rectitude and respectability.
-
-He would not hear of her disturbing Raymond, nor would he allow her to
-make cocoa for him, fond of it as he avowed himself to be. But he made
-her promise that she would let him come soon again, when the children
-were awake, and that when he was especially lonely, he might telephone
-her; and moreover, that once in a while she would have tea with him in
-order that he might prove what an excellent and handy man he would have
-been . . . under different circumstances!
-
-“This has been for me a wondrous night,” he said, holding her hand and
-looking affectionately down at her, “and one that I shall never forget.
-There is little I can do to prove my gratitude for a glimpse of real
-home life, and the joy that has eluded me, but perhaps there may come a
-time when you feel that I can serve you. Will you put me to the test,
-then, Mrs. Dilling?” he queried, softly.
-
-Touched, Marjorie nodded. “I am very pleased to have had you come in
-like this—”
-
-“‘_Sans ceremonie_,’ as our French friends say,” interrupted Sullivan,
-looking furtively over her head at the closed door behind which he knew
-that Dilling sat. “The strength of the weak,” he murmured, “the courage
-to endure the emptiness of solitary days and weary evenings. I’ve been
-through it. I understand. God bless you, little woman! But there can be
-no more loneliness for us so long as we are . . . friends!” He pressed
-her hand and was gone.
-
-As she went upstairs, Marjorie wondered whether or not she had imagined
-a shade of difference in him as he left her.
-
-
-
-
- PART II
- They Saw
-
-
- CHAPTER 7.
-
-Azalea Deane was a much befamilied young woman, who was leaving “mile
-30” behind so rapidly that it was already quite blurred in the distance.
-Ahead, there stretched a bleak and desolate roadway, leading right into
-the heart of that repository for the husks of men—Beechwood—and at the
-best of times, she found her journey wearisome and uninspiriting.
-
-She did not cavil at her fate. No one ever heard Azalea complain—of
-poverty, obscurity, dullness or villenage. She accepted her destiny with
-a fine stoicism, which reflected itself in well-feigned indifference and
-enabled her to proceed along the same monotonous route at the same
-monotonous speed, with the same monotonous companions month after month,
-and year after year, without developing gangrene of the soul or breaking
-into open revolt.
-
-“Oh, God,” she prayed each morning, before descending to the agitated
-atmosphere of the breakfast table, “keep me from being difficult to live
-with!”
-
-And Heaven heard her prayer.
-
-No one really knew Azalea—least of all, her family. Perhaps, no one
-ever really knows anyone else, a phase of ignorance which, personally, I
-am not inclined to deplore. Souls should be clad no less than bodies.
-They should be gowned with decency, and in so far as possible,
-loveliness; and if, now and again, the garment slips or wears thin, then
-should the beholder turn his eyes away, nor seek to pry into anything
-that may be so terrible or so sublime.
-
-Outwardly, as Lady Denby had said, Azalea was a plain little person. She
-should have been dainty of form, but through some irreparable
-miscalculation, the Creator had dowered her with the large features,
-hands and feet designed for some much more ample person. Therefore, she
-gave no pleasure to the sensitive, artistic eye, and this was an acute
-grievance to her who possessed a deep and pagan love for Beauty. She was
-a toneless girl, with thin, straight, dun-coloured hair which she could
-not afford to keep marcelled. Her eyes were unarresting, as a rule; too
-sharp to be appealing and not lustrous enough to sparkle. Her skin had a
-sandy cast and usually shone. Even when rouge and the ubiquitous
-lip-stick assumed the respectability of universal usage, Azalea’s
-appearance was scarcely improved, for the former would not blend, and
-lay like a definite glaze upon her cheeks, while the latter only
-accentuated the flatness of her too-ample mouth, and made one wish that
-she had not tampered with it at all.
-
-Her wardrobe was an appalling miscellany of discarded grandeur. Ladies
-whose clothes were too passé for their own adornment, bestowed them upon
-Azalea with the remark,
-
-“You can see, my dear, that these are scarcely worn, and anyway, they
-are not the sort of things one could give the servants!”
-
-She had learned to smother the hot rebellion that flared up in her
-heart, to thank them prettily, and to convey huge, unwieldy bundles
-through the streets and hold her tongue when her family commented upon
-the generosity of Lady This or Mrs. That. But she often wondered that
-her father never divined that Lady Elton’s cloth-of-gold dinner gown
-remodelled by her impatient and unskilled fingers, caused abrasions upon
-her spirit deeper than sackcloth could have produced, and blithely would
-she have consigned every stitch that she owned to the flames, for the
-joy of buying the most ordinary, commonplace, inexpensive frock at a
-bargain sale.
-
-The future of the Deanes stretched behind them. The best of the family
-lay underground. Mr. Grenville Harrison Deane was the sole male survivor
-of an illustrious line that could be traced (so he declared) with an
-occasional hiatus, back to Alfred the Great! It was never clear to the
-upstarts whose genealogical tree took root in England about the time of
-the Conquest, or thereafter, how he arrived at his conclusion, but if
-antiquity of ideas was anything of a proof, then they were forced to
-admit that there was justification in his contention, for his views of
-life antedated those of Britain’s noble King.
-
-Aloofness from fatiguing toil had rewarded him with an erectness that
-was impressive, and a complexion that a flapper might have envied. A
-Dundreary of silver gossamer caressed his cheeks, and his clear,
-lustrous eyes looked out from an unfurrowed setting. His chief
-characteristics were piety and an Eumenidean temper. The former, which
-should have been broad, was constricted to the dimensions of a number
-ten needle, and the latter, which should have been narrow, expanded to
-encompass impartially every one who held views divergent from his own.
-Particularly, was it directed against the blistering injustice of the
-Civil Service.
-
-The Civil Service had served him faithfully for thirty-five years,
-despite his eternal villification of it. Recently, his incompetence had
-been recompensed by superannuation and the payment of seven-tenths of
-his salary—shall it be said, seven times as much as he was worth? But
-Mr. Deane had always fancied himself in the Premier’s place, or at least
-in a Ministerial capacity. Failing that, a Trade Commissionership, or
-even a Deputy’s post would have appeased him. Therefore, to be
-superannuated after thirty-five years’ inconspicuous hampering of the
-postal service, appeared to him as a blot upon the integrity of the
-Nation.
-
-He was forever “taking up his case” with this or that influential
-person. What his case was, Azalea had but a misty idea, and whether he
-actually took it up or merely gloated over the notion of doing so, she
-had no means of ascertaining. Anyway, the matter had long ago ceased to
-interest her.
-
-Mrs. Deane was the type of woman now happily becoming quite extinct, who
-was born to be dominated, and ably fulfilled her destiny. The eldest and
-most unattractive daughter of a rural English divine, she had won her
-husband by a trick for which he never forgave her, though he realised
-that she was in no way responsible. He had fallen fatuously in love with
-Dorothea, her younger sister, and had received the parental sanction to
-an engagement before setting sail for “Kenneda” and a post that his name
-might dignify. Six months later, Dorothea, who had quite innocently
-intrigued the affection of a visiting curate—a nephew of the Dean of
-Torborough, no less—had been prodded weeping to the altar, while Fanny
-was trundled on a steamer and shipped to Montreal to console the
-palpitant bridegroom, who had not even been apprised of the fact that a
-substitute had been forwarded.
-
-The agony of that trip left its mark on Fanny Deane. A kindly lie would
-have spared her so much—for a time, at least. But the Rev. Arthur
-Somerset deemed suffering a salutory need, for others, and stated the
-case to his first-born with unequivocal lucidity . . . One phase of a
-woman’s duty is to grasp the opportunity for marriage and thus clear the
-way for her younger sisters, who, also, must have husbands. The prospect
-of fulfilling this duty in St. Ethelwyn’s was slender, and Fanny was no
-longer young . . . Did she want to be a burden in her old age to her
-family? . . . Dependent upon them for a home . . . Such inconsideration
-in a daughter of his was unthinkable . . . And as for young Deane, the
-Rev. Arthur waived his preference aside with a clerical gesture
-calculated to display advantageously his well-kept hand . . . Any man
-might be proud of a wife begotten and bred by Arthur Somerset, D.D.
-
-“You must carry it off well, Fanny,” he adjured her, at the close of the
-interview, “for otherwise, you will be stranded in a strange country
-where . . .” the alternative was painted in no mean and unromantic
-terms.
-
-Fanny “carried it off” successfully enough, though by no fault or virtue
-of her own. Too ill, almost, to stand, she crept down the gangway, and
-cowered before the eager-eyed young man who did not even recognise her
-when she addressed him.
-
-Ah, if she had only been told that kindly little lie, and could have
-raised a radiant face to his, whispering,
-
-“Here I am, dear! It was too wonderful that you should have sent for
-me!”
-
-Instead, with ashen lips and shame-filled eyes, she muttered, “Mr.
-Deane, they married Dorothea to a curate—she couldn’t help it—she
-wanted you to know! Here is your ring . . . and . . . and . . . they
-made me come . . . For God’s sake, don’t send me back! I’ll work for you
-till I drop dead . . . I’ll be your servant—anything—only, for God’s
-sake, don’t send me home!”
-
-He stared at her while the devastating truth burst over him like an
-engulfing flood. He shook with rage, with the anguish of blighted hopes
-and his own impotence in escaping the net that had been spread for him,
-while Fanny cringed beside him praying that God would strike her dead
-. . .
-
-And Heaven did not hear her prayer.
-
-Speechless, they faced one another. After a bit, he took her roughly by
-the arm.
-
-“Come, girl,” he said, “we’ll get this rotten business over, quickly.
-The license reads ‘Dorothea’—I suppose I’ll have to get another one.
-There now, for God’s sake, don’t sniffle! People are looking at us.”
-
-To give him credit, Grenville Harrison Deane never charged her with the
-deception of her parents. He never referred to it in so many words. But
-for two and forty years, Fanny lived in connubial torment, under the
-shadow of this smothering humiliation, and the fear that he might some
-day be led to speak of it. Often, there was that in his manner, that
-threatened to burst into violent and comminatory reproach.
-
-She tried to efface herself, to reduce herself to nothingness, and to
-spare him the reminder of her substitution. She had a way of watching
-him, endeavouring to divine his whims and moods, that was loathesome in
-its humility. Her entire life was an apology for having failed to be her
-sister.
-
-Unfortunately, Fanny never suspected that the greatest need of her
-overlord was association with a strong-minded tyrant, who, in the guise
-of the clinging-vine—or any other—would have thrust upon him the
-unexperienced pleasure of putting his shoulder to the wheel and hearing
-it creak as he moved it. He would have been happy doing things, being
-wheedled into service; but, as matters stood, Fanny Deane would have
-breathed for him, had such been possible. She relieved him of every
-burden and responsibility, and became a substitute not only for her
-silly, simpering sister, but for a shabby armchair and a pair of carpet
-slippers. Azalea, who was the youngest of five daughters, went so far as
-to say that the tomb to which his mortal envelope must one day be
-committed, would never equal in comfort the padded sepulchre her mother
-provided him while living.
-
-Azalea’s earliest remembrance centred round a very common
-occurrence—her mother kneeling in the midst of broken toys and howling
-children, pleading,
-
-“Don’t cry, my darlings! We will mend them! Sh-sh-sh—_Please_ be quiet!
-_Don’t_ irritate your father.”
-
-She lived in constant dread of irritating a man who would have kept his
-temper had he really been vouchsafed anything to be irritated about; and
-her life was one which no self-respecting dog would have endured.
-
-No one was more surprised than Fanny Deane when her four elder girls
-found husbands. Naturally, perhaps, she regarded marriage as a difficult
-and sordid undertaking—for parents, that is to say. Many a night, as
-she sat beside a moaning baby, the thought that one day she might have
-to engineer her children into the State of Holy Wedlock was like a
-deadly stricture about her heart. However, Hannah, Flossie, Tottie and
-May all married without any fuss or flurry, in a satisfactory,
-chronological fashion, the Civil Service yielding up its living dead to
-provide their sustenance. They became the Mrs. Polduggans and Mrs.
-Crogganthorpes of Ottawa; that large, uneasy, imitigable
-body—scrabbling, straining, jostling, niggling, fighting for the power
-to give rather than receive—snubs!—and living largely in the hope of
-supplanting their superiors and lifting themselves out of the ruck
-composed of other women, whose husbands, like their own, were merely
-“something in the Government”.
-
-But Azalea was different. Marriage, in her opinion, was neither the
-subliminal pinnacle of feminine felicity, as her father claimed to
-conceive it, nor the Open Door to Independence, as her sisters averred.
-Shrewd observation led her to the conclusion that of independence there
-was little, and feminine felicity there was none. Always interested in
-the dark side of life, e.g., the married side, Azalea divided the women
-of her acquaintance into two classes—the parasites, who slyly or
-seductively tapped their husbands and appropriated their material and
-spiritual substance without suffering the smallest compensatory impulse,
-and the antithetical order, who resigned themselves to a stronger will
-and found matrimony a state of reluctant vassalage.
-
-Azalea dreamed sometimes of an ideal companionship, or perhaps, a
-companionable ideal, but the paradigmatic young men whom her sisters
-(with the patronage of the successful angler who has already gaffed his
-fish and offers to instruct the novice how to bait a hook, and cast)
-enticed for her selection, inflamed her disgust rather than her
-romanticism.
-
-Her greatest hunger was for economic independence, and this was
-summarily denied her.
-
-Mr. Deane, drenched in archaic theories, confused idleness with
-refinement, and work with degradation. Moreover, he would have felt a
-sense of incompetence, mute reproach, even contempt, had he permitted
-his daughters to join the restless ranks of the employed. By such a
-measure, would he have confessed his inability to support them as
-befitted women of gentle breeding, and to provide them with all the
-amenities that their natures craved. That one of them should possess a
-bank account of her own and feel at liberty to spend money without the
-humiliating necessity of applying to him, was a condition that smacked
-of positive shamelessness. It was characteristic of him that although he
-never wished to perform any useful task unaided by the members of his
-household, he never allowed them to perform the task alone.
-
-He had a genuine horror of the modern business woman who could look him
-unflinching in the eye, without that sweet deference which testified to
-his superiority. All business women were, in his opinion, coarse;
-besides, economic independence resulted in their getting “out of hand”,
-and a woman who got out of hand, was, in Mr. Deane’s judgment, a very
-dangerous proposition. Therefore, he refused Azalea the freedom she
-craved. He immolated her self-respect (and that of the community for
-her, in a measure) on the altar of his vanity, and condemned her to a
-life of servitude far more degrading than anything she would have
-chosen. She was depressed under the burden of obligations that gave her
-little benefit and no pleasure, and she secretly despised herself for
-being forced to accept them.
-
-“Do let me go away and work,” she used to entreat, “I could teach.
-That’s a lady’s profession.”
-
-But her mother made vague gestures of distress that said,
-
-“Don’t bring up this dreadful subject again! Please, my dear, be careful
-or you will irritate your father!”
-
-And father, giving every promise of fulfilling this prophecy, would
-reply,
-
-“So long as I live, I hope that no daughter of mine will be forced from
-the shelter of her home, and out amongst the ravening wolves of
-commerce. When I am gone . . .” he left an eloquent pause “. . . But in
-the meantime . . .”
-
-The words, not to mention the gesture that accompanied them, implied
-somehow that caravans of voluptuous commodities assembled by his protean
-labours, should continue to arrive at their very door.
-
-He was unctuously proud of her friends, and actually toadied to her in
-deference to her association with the aristocracy of the Capital. So did
-her sisters, and their husbands, and the “char”, and the tradespeople,
-all of whom knew that she enjoyed sufficient intimacy with Lady Elton to
-assist at a luncheon or dinner-party—assist, that is to say, in the
-kitchen. And the splendid thing about this kind of assistance was that
-she received no honorarium for her services. That was where she took
-conspicuous precedence over Mrs. Wiggin, the char, and Ellen Petrie, who
-“waited on all the exclusive affairs of the city”. To work without
-salary was Mr. Deane’s conception of a lady’s highest calling, and a
-means whereby she might be kept from getting out of hand.
-
-He was supported in this attitude by one of the foremost ladies in the
-land, who argued that “no woman engaged in earning her own living should
-be presented at the Drawing Room!”
-
-The Dillings struck a new note in the monotone of Azalea’s existence.
-She had never seen their like, and was profoundly touched by their
-genuineness, their simplicity. For the first time in her life she felt
-that she had come into contact with people to whom friendship is dearer
-than the advantageous acquaintanceship that travesties it; for the first
-time in her life she could show an honest affection without being
-suspected of having an ulterior motive. At that time, Azalea had nothing
-to gain from the Dillings. On the contrary, she had something to
-give—an ineffably joyous experience—and she delighted in the sensation
-of being for once the comet instead of the tail; instead of the trailer,
-the cart.
-
-Towards Raymond Dilling, she was conscious of an intense maternalism.
-Mentally, she acknowledged him her master, but in every other respect,
-he was an utter child—hard, undemonstrative, cold, but, despite that, a
-very appealing child. And she saw with her native shrewdness that mere
-mentality would never gain for him the success which he deserved.
-Ottawa, she knew, was thronged with brilliant people whose gifts were
-lost to the City—to the Dominion—because they lacked the empty
-artifices and consequent social standing which enabled them to get a
-hearing. No strolling mummer in the Middle Ages needed ducal patron more
-sorely than does a mere genius in the Capital of Canada.
-
-And Dilling liked Azalea. She was a new and interesting type to him who
-had never considered feminine psychology a topic that was worth
-pursuing. His wife’s friends in Pinto Plains were, he realised,
-estimable creatures running to fat and porcelain teeth at middle age.
-They were conscientious mothers, faithful to their husbands and earnest
-seekers after a broader knowledge than that provided by their homely
-tasks. But they wearied him. Whenever he encountered a group of them,
-his dominant wish was to escape, and he rarely failed to gratify this
-desire by excusing himself with some such remark as,
-
-“I’ll just slip off and leave you ladies free to discuss the three D’s”,
-by which he implied (with some degree of justification, doubtless) that
-the conversation of women is restricted to the topics of Dress,
-Domestics and Disease. He hated women’s chatter.
-
-Azalea Deane was the only woman he had ever known who possessed what he
-later termed a bi-sexual mind. He was never irritably conscious, as was
-the case with Marjorie’s other friends, of the fact that she was a
-woman. Even when she discussed the three D’s, there was a broad
-impersonality, a pleasing and quizzical tang to her remarks that he
-chose to arrogate to the mind of man. Before he had known her any length
-of time, he discovered that, unlike Marjorie she not only understood
-what he said, but that in some startling and inexplicable manner she
-divined thoughts which he had expressly refrained from putting into
-words.
-
-For him, she was a novel experience, whose flavour he enjoyed rather
-more intensely than he was aware. Not that his emotions were even
-remotely touched by the personality of the girl. No! She was a mental
-adventure which he followed with frank curiosity and a diminishing
-display of patronage. Her mind was full of exhilarating surprises, and
-he was astounded to discover how easily she ornamented arid facts with
-garlands plucked from her rich imagination. She had a neat twist in the
-handling of them which Dilling was not slow to see and imitate. She
-guided him into many a pungent domain of thought, where he lost himself
-completely in an exciting pursuit after some winking little light, that
-led to the very middle of an icy stream into which he fell, spluttering,
-only to find Azalea calm and dry, on the opposite shore, laughing at
-him. He contracted the habit of reading extracts from his speeches to
-her, and presently, he tried the effect of an entire discourse. Now and
-again, he sounded her as to what he considered saying, and discovered
-that her enthusiastic understanding was like an extra filter to his
-already well-clarified intention.
-
-He stored up particularly smart bits of political repartee to tell her,
-while his own triumphs of wit were laid at her feet rather than those of
-his bewildered wife. And all this time, the prevailing fancy that
-overlaid his subconscious mind, was,
-
-“Quite a good sort, that girl! Pity she isn’t a man!”
-
-He voiced this latter sentiment to Azalea one evening shortly before
-prorogation and his return for the summer to Pinto Plains. In their
-sharp and peppery fashion, they had been discussing the Budget,
-inflated, Azalea contended, beyond all reason by the conscienceless
-demands of those picaresque buccaneers, Eastlake and Donahue, whose
-issue of private enterprise was begotten in the womb of the public
-treasury, when Dilling turned to her and cried,
-
-“You’ve made out a good case, Miss Deane! You should have been a man!”
-
-The girl’s cheeks burned a painful brick tint. But she laughed and
-retorted,
-
-“By which you tactfully imply my unsuitability for the state to which it
-has pleased God to call me, and regret that physical limitations prevent
-my choosing a more adequate sphere. I confess to you in strict
-confidence, that frequently, I have deplored this condition, myself.”
-
-“Come along into politics,” invited Dilling, a touch of seriousness
-behind his banter.
-
-“Right-o! Just so soon as you amend the B.N.A. and offer me a refuge in
-the Senate,” she answered, and changed the subject.
-
-Later that night, Marjorie hinted that he had hurt Azalea.
-
-“Eh?” cried Dilling. “What are you talking about? Hurt her—how?”
-
-“By what you said.”
-
-“What did I say?”
-
-“That she should have been a man.”
-
-Dilling carefully twisted his collar free from the button. A violent
-physical action of any kind was foreign to him. Running the curved band
-between his fingers, he gave an abstracted thought to the possibility of
-wearing it again on the morrow, even while he turned to contradict his
-wife. “Nonsense, Marjorie, she liked it! All women like it; it’s a
-tribute to their mentality, my dear. One often has to say some such
-thing to a perfect ninny, but in this case I happen to be sincere and I
-think Miss Deane knew it.”
-
-Marjorie did not contest the point. She never argued with Raymond, but
-once in a while she felt, as now, that his non-combatible correctness
-covered an error in judgment. Of course, he was sincere in paying a
-tribute to Azalea’s cleverness, and, of course, she knew he meant what
-he said. But that was the very trouble—the very barb that pierced her
-spirit!
-
-In a strange and mysterious way (of which she was somewhat ashamed)
-Marjorie often reached perfectly amazing conclusions that were directly
-opposed to Raymond’s incontrovertible logic. And Azalea’s hurt was a
-case in point. Just why the words had stung, it was beyond Marjorie
-Dilling to explain. Orderly thinking and systematic juxtaposition of
-facts found their substitute in flashes of intuition which, throughout
-the ages, have stood for women in the place of reason. But she knew,
-without knowing how she knew, that Azalea would rather have impressed
-Raymond with her incomparable womanhood, than the fact that she was the
-possessor of a brain that should have functioned in the body of a man.
-
-As for Azalea, she was not conscious that Marjorie had heard the echo of
-that discordant note, and she would have been inexpressibly surprised
-had she suspected it. Years of rigid discipline had taught her to
-conceal all the emotions she thought she had not strangled, and she was
-accustomed to being treated as a man when not as a nonentity. Times
-without number she had paid for an evening’s entertainment by escorting
-timourous and penurious ladies safely home in the silent watches of the
-night . . . a delicate assumption that she, herself, lacked sufficient
-fascination to stimulate brute design. On other occasions, hostesses
-frankly asked her to slip away quietly, “so that my husband won’t feel
-obliged to take you home, dear.” And once, a particularly considerate
-host glimpsing the blizzard that raged beyond his portal, had placed her
-in the care of a diminutive messenger boy, of some nine years, who
-struggled through the snowdrifts and sniffled that he had come from
-Hewitt’s Service, and please where was the parcel?
-
-So Dilling’s words cut without producing an unendurable pain. The spot
-was well cocained and would ache long after the incision had been made.
-Azalea listened to his defence of his leader, his Party, and Messrs.
-Eastlake and Donahue, sensitive to a breath of discouragement beneath
-his words.
-
-“I came to Ottawa expecting to find co-operation, and in its place
-fierce competition confronts me—competition,” he said, “within the very
-ranks of the Party! It may strike you as being particularly naive, but I
-confess that I had not expected to find this sort of friction. It puts a
-different complexion on politics.”
-
-This was a tremendous admission for him to make, and in one of those
-flashing visions that supplemented her more leisured mental processes,
-Azalea saw that just as Marjorie groped along her level, so Dilling
-stumbled into pitfalls in his particular sphere, that a cumulus vapour
-of disenchantment threatened the horizon of his career, and that even as
-his wife bade fair to be a victim of the Social Juggernaut, so he would
-be crushed beneath the wheels of the political machine.
-
-And they thought that this was The Land of Afternoon!
-
-
- CHAPTER 8.
-
-The Dillings returned to Ottawa refreshed in body and spirit. Their
-summer in Pinto Plains had been a prolonged triumph and its effect,
-beneficial. Not only had they been welcomed with affectionate deference,
-entertained sedulously, and permitted to depart with honest regret and a
-dash of frank envy, but they had been reclaimed by that splendid
-illusion from which six months in the Capital had freed them.
-
-By the time they turned their faces eastward, they were quite prepared
-to attribute their disheartening experiences of the previous winter to
-hyper-sensitiveness—the difficulty generally felt in accommodating
-oneself to a new environment.
-
-It was during the last stages of the journey that uneasiness returned,
-and expressed itself in remarks such as,
-
-“Just think . . . this time last year we were strangers, and now, it
-seems almost like coming home!” or
-
-“It’s nice to know that we have friends here, isn’t it? We won’t be so
-lonely, this year, will we?”
-
-Each in a characteristic way tried to capture a sense of confidence, a
-glow of happiness, and to feel that being no longer aliens, Ottawa would
-be different—that is, as each would like to find it.
-
-Marjorie succeeded better than her husband.
-
-“It’s awfully exciting, isn’t it?” she cried, as the train panted along
-beside the canal, and familiar landmarks unfolded before her.
-
-Across the muddy water where barges and the Rideau Royal Pair were tied
-up for the winter, she could see the Driveway, spotted with children and
-women casually attendant upon perambulators. The Pavilion at Somerset
-Street, where she used to sit with her little brood, looked bleak and
-uninviting, but she was glad to see it, just the same. Two lovers
-occupied a bench in front of the Collegiate, and kissed shamelessly as
-the train moved past. Marjorie’s heart warmed to them, not that she
-approved of kissing in public places, but because there was something
-human about them; they added weight to her theory that Ottawa was not so
-forbidding and formidable, after all.
-
-Dilling stared out of the window, too, but he did not see the lovers,
-the Armouries, the Laurier Avenue Bridge, the Arena, nor the warehouses
-flanked by the Russell Hotel. He saw a straggling little lumber village,
-gay with the costumes of Red Men, voyageurs, and the uniforms of sappers
-and miners, who were at work on the Canal. What a mammoth undertaking
-and how freighted with significance! By the building of a hundred and
-twenty-six miles of waterway that linked Kingston with the infant
-Bytown, English statesmen provided an expedient for adding to the
-impregnability of the British Empire!
-
-“War,” he mused. “How it has stimulated the ingenuity of man! With
-sacrifice, with blood and tears, we carve a niche for ourselves out of
-the resistant rock, in the hope that there we will find peace, but
-immediately the task is finished, we set ourselves to fortify it against
-the hour of war.”
-
-He pictured the Cave Dweller, bent over his crude instruments of
-destruction, clubs of bone and stone, which, in all probability, the
-modern man could scarcely lift. He considered the inventor of primitive
-projectiles. That was a long step toward the mechanism of modern
-homicide. One could lie, ambushed, behind a mound and use a sling, a
-boomerang, a blow-pipe or a javelin, and arrows . . . he gave a mental
-shudder and thanked God that he had not lived a hundred years ago. There
-was something about an Indian that made his flesh creep; a traditional
-antagonism that he did not try to overcome. The romance of the Red Man
-never gripped him. Like all unimaginative people, his prejudices were
-sharp and immutable.
-
-He picked the word “blunderbuss” from a confusion of pictures that
-combined Gibraltar and Queenston Heights, and cumbrous cannon that were
-dangerous alike to friend and foe, and repeated,
-
-“War! Always fashioning some new tool to strengthen the hand of Death.
-They spent a million pounds on a ‘military measure’ to safeguard the
-Colony from invasion on the South . . . and behold, the Rideau Canal!”
-
- * * * * *
-
-He started when Marjorie thrust parcels into his arms, and observed that
-at last they had arrived.
-
-Azalea met them at the station. She had opened their tiny house, and
-with the assistance of Mrs. Plum had put it in order.
-
-Hers had been an exceptionally uneventful summer, and she had looked
-forward to the Dillings’ return with an impatience that astonished her.
-
-From the last of June until the first of September, Ottawa is like a
-City of the Dead. Despite the fact that these are the pleasantest weeks
-of the year, the town is deserted by every one who can get away, even
-though the exodus extends no farther than Chelsea, on the other side of
-the river. But Azalea hadn’t even got so far, this summer. Her time had
-been pretty fully occupied carrying out commissions for more fortunate
-friends. Lady Denby who had gone to the sea, asked her to superintend
-the installation of the winter’s coal. Mrs. Long preferring the
-irresponsibility of Banff to the responsibility of presiding over her
-country home and a succession of unappreciated house-parties, decided
-that this was an excellent opportunity for papering some of the obscurer
-portions of her town residence, and ‘knew that Azalea wouldn’t mind
-overseeing the work’. She interviewed a cook for Mrs. Blaine, hunted up
-a photograph of Sir Mortimer Fanshawe taken on the golf links (before he
-had acquired the game) and excellent as a pictorial feature for a
-sporting supplement. She shopped, exchanged articles, paid bills that
-had been forgotten, and found herself generally confronted with the _res
-angusta domi_ of a woman without an income. She did not grumble. At the
-same time, she could imagine a hundred happier ways of spending a
-summer.
-
-Mr. and Mrs. Deane left the shelter of their comfortable home to suffer
-in turn the hospitality of each of their married daughters, who
-holidayed according to their means (i.e., spent a good deal more money
-than they could afford, and returned home soured by the necessity for
-retrenchment). Azalea could have gone, too, but there were limits even
-to her endurance.
-
-The Dillings fell upon her joyously, not only Marjorie and the children,
-but Raymond.
-
-“You must come home with us,” he cried, “and tell us all the news. Is it
-true that Pratt is running for the Federal House? I heard a rumour to
-that effect on the train.”
-
-Azalea nodded.
-
-“You can’t be surprised. This has been his wife’s ambition for years.
-She’ll achieve it, too, if there’s anything in persistent campaigning.
-But I’ve something else to say—I wrote you about it a few days ago,
-before your wire came. The house that Lady Denby has been so keen for
-you to take, is empty. I have an option on it in your name.”
-
-Marjorie could not suppress an exclamation. The house in question was
-large, and in her opinion, unduly pretentious. Their living expenses
-would be more than doubled. It seemed strange to her that people of
-their modest means should be encouraged—urged, indeed—to make such
-extravagant outlay. Display of any sort was, in the eyes of Pinto
-Plains, vulgar, and a cardinal sin upon which her friends felt
-themselves qualified to sit in judgment, was that of trying to appear
-above one’s station.
-
-To Marjorie, one of the most amazing features about life in the Capital
-was the discovery that women who dressed with most conspicuous elegance,
-lived in impressive style and drove in motor cars, commanded only a
-Civil Servant’s meagre salary. Later, she learned that over their heads
-a cloud of debt continually hung, but it caused them no more distress
-than did the dome of the sky. The infamous credit system in the city was
-responsible for these moral callouses which she simply could not
-understand. Debt, to her, was synonymous with dishonesty, and that
-anyone could become accustomed to living in its shadow, was beyond the
-limits of her comprehension. It was a shock for her to learn that
-respected families had unpaid accounts at the large stores extending
-over a period of twenty years!
-
-Virtually, any tradesman would supply merchandise on account to a Civil
-Servant, because although the salary could no longer be garnisheed, they
-hoped that a small payment would be snipped with regularity from the
-infallible Governmental cheque.
-
-“Why don’t you buy a set of sectional bookcases for your husband’s
-books?” asked Azalea’s sister, Flossie, during the progress of a call.
-
-Marjorie’s reply was ingenuous, naively truthful. “We’ve been under so
-much expense lately,” she said, “I felt that I couldn’t afford them.”
-
-Mrs. Howard, whose husband was an anaemic little man, occupying a humble
-post in the Department of Labor, opened her eyes in genuine
-astonishment.
-
-“You don’t have to _pay_ for them,” she cried. “Hapgood is most
-considerate in the matter of his accounts. I generally have to beg for
-mine!”
-
-This latter remark was not strictly in line with the truth—not in Mrs.
-Howard’s case. She had heard it, however, dropped from the lips of one
-of Ottawa’s twenty-three millionaires, and appropriated it, she felt,
-with some effect.
-
-But Marjorie couldn’t see any future happiness at all, knowing that she
-would be faced with financial problems, and she was absolutely unable to
-understand the attitude of Lady Denby, who, throughout the previous
-winter, had stressed the necessity for making a better appearance “for
-the sake of the Party”.
-
-“When people are wealthy and have an assured position,” she counselled,
-“they can enjoy a freedom of action that is denied those less
-fortunately conditioned. Mrs. Hudson is an example. She could, if one of
-her extraordinary whims dictated, dine at Government House in her
-great-grandmother’s faded bombazine, without injuring her position in
-the slightest degree. On the other hand, should _you_ attempt the
-smallest unconventionality, I assure you the result would be socially
-disastrous. The same principle applies in the matter of entertaining.
-You are no less a part of public life than is your husband, and you can
-render him no greater assistance than by displaying a judicious and
-well-regulated hospitality. Cultivate _nice_ people—er—the Minister’s
-wives, and so on . . . Entertain them and entertain them well, but—”
-she broke off, abruptly, “—you can’t do it _here_!”
-
-It quite took Marjorie’s breath away to learn that Lady Denby considered
-women important in politics, and that they might sway their husbands for
-or against a fellow member was an idea that had never entered her mind.
-Neither could she understand how her own popularity could be a factor in
-Raymond’s success, and that it was dependent upon maintaining a position
-she would not afford, instead of living according to her means and
-simplicity of requirement—was an attitude of mind that she never
-completely grasped. But the necessity for it all was made evident even
-to Raymond, and by no less a person than Sir Eric himself, who ably
-coached by his wife, remarked that “to save, one must first learn to
-spend!”
-
-“Establish yourself, my dear fellow,” were his words, “establish
-yourself in the life of the Capital, and when the roots are firmly
-implanted in this loamy soil, draw in your horns—if one may be
-permitted to mix a metaphor. I am not advocating a reckless expenditure
-of more than you have to spend,” emphasised the advocate of all the
-verbotens, “but rather the point that it is not advisable for a young
-politician to appear to hoard his salary. Education, you say? The
-children’s education will, I trust, be well provided for by a generous
-and appreciative country.”
-
-So the Dillings moved, and Marjorie memorialised the occasion by issuing
-invitations to a large tea.
-
-“I suppose you didn’t keep a visiting list?”
-
-“No!”
-
-Azalea had expected a negative answer, so she was not disappointed. But
-Marjorie added,
-
-“I’m sure I shan’t forget any of my friends.”
-
-“Doubtless! The difficulty will lie in remembering all your active
-enemies!”
-
-“Oh, Miss Deane—I mean Azalea—what shocking things you say! Surely, I
-don’t have to ask people who have—that is, who haven’t—who aren’t
-exactly what you might call friendly with me?”
-
-“Positively!”
-
-“Oh, but that doesn’t seem right!” protested Marjorie, in dismay. “It’s
-deceitful! There’s no use liking people if you treat the ones you don’t
-like just as well!”
-
-“Sound logic, my dear, but impractical from a social standpoint. You
-see, it’s something like this—” Azalea slipped a thin gold bracelet
-from her arm, pouring within and about it, a quantity of pen nibs.
-“Society is like this bangle, and these nibs are the people who compose
-it. I’ll jostle the desk and then see what happens to those who are not
-safe within its golden boundary. They fall off and go down to oblivion.
-The others, though disturbed, are in a sense secure, so you can see, my
-dear, that the paramount business of life in the Capital is to get
-_inside_. Of course, there are circles within circles, and you must
-learn about them, later. But for the moment, concentrate upon getting
-within the shining rim. Once there, you can stick, and prick, and jab,
-and stab to your heart’s content, and you need not treat your friends
-and enemies alike. But until you _do_ get there—well, you really won’t
-matter, one way or the other. Your friendship will be prized scarcely
-more than your enmity will be deplored.”
-
-“But,” objected Marjorie. “I never heard of dividing people into lots,
-unless—” a sudden thought occurred to her “—unless you mean that all
-the nice people are inside and the other kind are not. Is that it?”
-
-“Indubitably,” laughed Azalea. “And you must affirm your belief that
-this is so, on each and every occasion.”
-
-“I don’t know what you mean.”
-
-“Why, you must find all the people within the circle charming and
-brilliant and desirable, and all those outside commonplace and dull, and
-not worth while. You must like the former and despise the latter. Oh,
-it’s quite simple, really!”
-
-Marjorie smiled the smile she reserved for her husband’s excursions in
-wit. She thought, of course, that Azalea was joking.
-
-“Now, there’s sometimes a little difficulty in classifying people who
-teeter on the edge,” she poised a nib on the golden circle to illustrate
-her point. “A little push one way or the other will decide which way
-they will go, and until they get pushed, I admit they are something of a
-problem. However, we’ll begin with the certainties, and then I’ll borrow
-a list from Lady Denby, so as to be sure not to overlook anybody . . .
-The Ministers’ wives—Mrs. Blaine, Mrs. Carewe, Mrs. Haldane, Mrs.
-Carmichael, Lady Denby . . .”
-
-Azalea wrote rapidly for a few moments, carefully spelling the French
-names as she recalled them.
-
-“Then the wife of the Black Rod: she goes everywhere—”
-
-“And I like her,” interrupted Marjorie. “She’s not a bit stiff, is she?”
-
-Azalea laughed and shook her head. Marjorie’s dread of women who were
-“stiff” and men who were “sarcastic”, amused her.
-
-Between consultations with Lady Denby, the Parliamentary Guide and the
-Telephone Book, the invitations were issued, and Azalea sat back,
-sighing after her labours.
-
-“Now you will have paid off all your tea obligations,” she said, “but
-you really must keep a list. Separate ones for luncheons, dinners and
-suppers. Probably, a dinner will be the next thing.”
-
-“And who must I ask for dinner, when I give one?” enquired Marjorie,
-ignoring in her distress the rules of grammar.
-
-“Why, the people who have had you, of course! Not luncheon people, not
-tea people, mind!” Azalea was quite stern. “But the people who have had
-you for _dinner_! It will be simple until you have been entertained
-frequently, and then you will have to sort out members of different
-sets.”
-
-“I don’t like it,” said Raymond Dilling’s wife. “I don’t want to
-entertain that way. I tell you, it’s deceitful!”
-
-“Entertaining,” said Azalea, with a suspicion of hardness in her voice,
-“is an admirable illustration of the ‘eye for an eye’ transaction
-mentioned in Holy Writ. Only, in the Capital, an astute woman schemes to
-obtain two eyes for one optic, and a whole set, upper and lower, for the
-molar she has sacrificed. When she accomplishes this, my dear, then she
-has achieved real social success. Bismillah!”
-
-
- CHAPTER 9.
-
-Several circumstances combined to make possible the large and
-representative crowd that attended Mrs. Raymond Dilling’s first big
-crush. The day was fine, the season was only beginning so that there
-were few counter-attractions, and the Parliamentary set, who were
-hearing with increasing frequency of the fervid young prophet of the
-prairies, went out of curiosity to see, as Mrs. Lorimer tactfully put
-it, “_What_ he had married.”
-
-Dilling had already made a strong impression—partly favourable, and
-partly the reverse. But it was definite in either case.
-
-Lastly, the Hollingsworth house, into which the Dillings had moved, was
-a landmark which still bequeathed a flavour of by-gone grandeur to its
-successive tenants, although no member of the illustrious family had
-lived beneath its roof for close upon half a century. But no matter who
-lived there, it was a mansion into which one could pass with dignity and
-a certain satisfaction, secure in the knowledge that even should it be
-converted into a boarding-house, there would remain the manifest though
-indefinable air that differentiates the messuages of patricians from the
-tenements of the proletariat.
-
-That the Hollingsworths’ should be transformed into anything so needful
-as a private hostelry, however, was almost inconceivable, for Ottawa’s
-last concern was her housing problem.
-
-Accommodation was so scarce at the seat of Government that many Members
-began to fear, after a discouraging search, that they would have to
-stand. Over-furnished rooms, and under-furnished houses were offered at
-opulent rentals, but of comfortable pensions, there were none. There are
-but two or three to-day. What solution has been reached, may be
-attributed to the number of picturesque old residences that have been
-remodelled and split into half a dozen inconvenient mouse-traps.
-
-Inside, the Hollingsworths’ was a riot of fantastic ugliness. A gaunt
-reception hall engulfed the visitor and cast him, from beneath a series
-of grilled oak arches, into a sombre drawing room. One end was bounded
-by folding doors that resisted all efforts at movement, and beyond,
-there yawned a portentous bay window that invited invasion by the house
-next door and reduced the cubic contents of the dining-room. Strange
-abutments, niches that looked as though they had been designed for
-cupboards and abandoned before completion, appeared in unsuspected
-places. Angles were everywhere. The ceilings were lumpy, like the
-frosting of a birthday cake, and there wasn’t a gracious line to be
-seen.
-
-Marjorie’s hangings, chosen with the idea of giving a cheerful touch,
-looked somewhat as a collar of baby ribbon might have looked upon the
-neck of an elephant. Her Brussels rugs were suggestive of a postage
-stamp on a very large envelope, while the Mission furniture and mahogany
-What-not, added to the general air of discord. With several violent
-examples of the lithographers’ skill on the walls, there was completed a
-terrorising picture that might aptly have been labelled “The Carnage of
-Art”.
-
-Marjorie stood in front of the cherry-wood fireplace and tried not to be
-nervous, but she couldn’t forget that immense issues depended upon the
-success of this tea—Raymond’s entire future, perhaps! It was a thought
-that almost petrified her.
-
-Pamela de Latour was one of the first guests to arrive. She was early
-because she was assisting, and she was assisting because Lady Denby had
-made the matter a personal favour to herself. It was customary, in
-Ottawa, for unmarried ladies to “assist” in the dining-room, no matter
-what their age, while matrons, either old or young, officiated at the
-tea table. It therefore frequently developed that youthful
-matrons—brides, indeed—were comfortably seated behind the tea-urn, or
-that they cut interminable ices, while spinsters thrice their age,
-percolated kittenishly among the guests on high-heeled slippers,
-deprived by man’s short-sightedness, of the rest which their years were
-craving.
-
-Miss Lily Tyrrell, aristocrat by inclination and democrat by
-necessity—a charming woman whose family had been both wealthy and
-conspicuous in an older generation—also assisted, as did the wholesome
-Misses McDermott. These latter were so much in demand that their
-“assistance” had become almost a profession, as had tea-pouring for Mrs.
-Chalmers, wife of the Black Rod, and presiding at meetings for Mrs. B.
-E. Tillson.
-
-“I’m so pleased to see you,” said Marjorie to Miss de Latour, a little
-too precipitously, and spoiling the effect of Hawkin’s announcement.
-
-Hawkins “announced” at every function of any importance, and infallibly
-employed the precise nuance of impressiveness with which to garnish each
-name.
-
-“Miss de Latour,” he called, and in a tone which plainly said, “Here’s
-Somebody!”
-
-“Missus ’Anover,” he droned, a moment later, looking over that lady’s
-shoulder, and taking a deep breath before booming,
-
-“_Lydy Denby!_”
-
-That was his way.
-
-“It was so good of you to come,” Marjorie continued. “I didn’t know but
-that you would have forgotten me.”
-
-“Not at all,” murmured Miss de Latour, gazing with a sort of outraged
-intensity about the room. “Had you a pleasant summer?”
-
-“Oh, wonderful, perfectly wonderful! It was so good to get home and feel
-. . .”
-
-“Missus Moss,” observed Hawkins, listlessly.
-
-“Pleased to meet you,” said Marjorie, nervously cordial. (She recalled
-later, with considerable puzzlement, that most of her guests said
-briefly, “How d’y do?” If they reciprocated her friendly sentiments,
-they displayed admirable restraint in suppressing the fact.) “Isn’t it a
-lovely day?”
-
-“Glorious,” agreed Mrs. Moss, estimating Miss de Latour’s dress at an
-even hundred. “I suppose you’re glad to be back in Ottawa? Those little
-prairie towns must be so dull!”
-
-Before Marjorie could spring to the defence of Pinto Plains, Mrs.
-Hotchkiss was announced. The smile with which she was prepared to meet
-her guest changed to a look of surprise. The rather plain little person
-advancing towards her was not the dashing Mrs. Hotchkiss she so greatly
-admired.
-
-“You were expecting my namesake, I see,” laughed the newcomer, easily.
-“Yes, there are two of us—no relation. She’s the good-looking Mrs.
-Hotchkiss. I’m the other one!”
-
-“Pleased to meet you,” said Marjorie, magenta-colour with embarrassment.
-“Have you had—I mean, won’t you have your tea?”
-
-“Mrs. Plantagenet Promyss,” blared Hawkins, as though impatient to get
-Mrs. Hotchkiss out of the way.
-
-A small, untidy woman plunged into the room.
-
-“How d’y do?” she said, not only to Marjorie, but all who were within
-hearing distance. “I hope I’m not too late for a nice hot cup of tea!
-There’s nothing so depressing to me as a third lukewarm steeping . . .
-and that’s what a good many sessional hostesses give one, my dear!” Then
-catching sight of Mrs. Long, “I’ve just come from a meeting of the
-Little Learning League, where Lady Elton read a perfectly delightful
-paper called ‘Good Buys in Old By-town’. You know, she’s so clever at
-bargaining and that sort of thing . . . eh? The Little Learning League,
-my dear Mrs. Dilling, is the only organization of its kind in the
-Capital. It concentrates once a fortnight, the essence—absolutely the
-essence—of feminine culture and intelligence. Mrs. Lauderdale Terrace
-is our president. You probably haven’t met her . . . yet,” she added,
-kindly.
-
-As a rule, Mrs. Promyss found the literary afternoons very wearisome.
-She possessed a pretty gift for modelling in soap, and was eager to
-instruct her fellow-members in the use of this charming and ductile
-medium. So skillful was she that her copy of the famous Rogers’ group,
-“You Dirty Boy” was once mistaken for the original. Indeed, she was so
-intrigued by its artistic quality, that she was disposed to argue that
-soap should be used for no other purpose, whatsoever!
-
-Lady Elton’s personal title, however, combined with the smart caption of
-her paper, had quite enchanted the sculptor, and she was in high good
-humour. “You must come to see me in my studio,” she called, as one of
-the Misses McDermott led her away to the dining-room and a hot cup of
-tea.
-
-Marjorie smiled and shook hands until faces, like great expressionless
-balloons, wavered in the air. She lost all power to distinguish what was
-being said to her, and had no idea what she replied. Now and again
-phrases tumbled against her ear out of the general uproar but they
-seemed to have very little sense.
-
-“. . . very proud of his children,” shouted a richly-dressed person on
-her right.
-
-“. . . me, too,” came from a group on her left, “only we fry ours in
-butter.”
-
-From the direction of her leatherette divan drifted a remarkable
-statement—“. . . and she learned to swim . . .” “with a floating kidney
-. . .” “. . . and came ashore at Quebec in a Mandarin’s coat!”
-
-Mechanically, she took the tea Azalea brought her, and approached a
-group of Cabinet ladies.
-
-“Appalling,” one of them was saying. “Like something in a nightmare!”
-
-“Do you think she’ll ever learn?” murmured another. “He’s really
-clever.”
-
-They turned suddenly.
-
-“We were just admiring your house,” exclaimed Mrs. Carewe. “This room
-. . .”
-
-“Oh, I’m so glad you like it!” Marjorie’s voice trembled with happiness.
-“I feel very small in such grandeur, but we’re not using the top floor
-at all, and that helps a little. It was fortunate that our furniture was
-dark, wasn’t it? I used to think there was nothing more gorgeous than a
-gold drawing-room suite, but even if I could have it, it wouldn’t do at
-all in here, would it?”
-
-“Positively not!” agreed the ladies, heartily.
-
-At the other end of the room, a group of Ottawa’s youthful Smart Set
-sought to extract a modicum of enjoyment from what they termed a dee-dee
-party.
-
-“They’re getting damnder and duller,” sighed one.
-
-“I thought nothing could beat Lady Denby’s, but this has it skinned to a
-finish!”
-
-“Can’t any one think of a funny stunt?” asked another. “I’m so bored, I
-could lie down on the floor and sing hymns.”
-
-“Do it,” dared Mona Carmichael, obviously the leader of the group. “Go
-on, Zoe . . . I’ll bet my new pink knickers, you haven’t the nerve!”
-
-“Nerve’s my middle name,” declared Zoe, with a toss of her head. “But
-the trouble with me is Mother. She’s prowling about somewhere in the
-festal chamber, and she never appreciates my originality.”
-
-“Let’s eat,” suggested Elsa Carmichael, the Minister’s second daughter.
-“That always fills up time.”
-
-“My time’s stuffed full,” observed Mona. “Had an awfully late lunch.”
-
-Their shrieks of laughter sounded above the din.
-
-“Sh—sh—sh—!” warned Zoe. “Little Nell from Pinto Plains is looking at
-us.”
-
-“Well, let’s do _something_,” insisted the first speaker. “Couldn’t we
-go upstairs and hide things?”
-
-Mona objected that this form of recreation was stale.
-
-“We might smear their tooth brushes with cold cream,” suggested Elsa.
-
-“Perhaps they don’t use them,” Zoe returned.
-
-“I say,” cried Mona, suddenly alive to a new thought, “how many olives
-can you hold in your mouth at once?”
-
-Nobody had ever tried.
-
-“Let’s do it now,” they agreed with one accord.
-
-“Me first,” said Mona. “It was my idea.”
-
-They seized a plate from the table, surrounded the experimentator, and
-watched half a dozen large, green olives disappear.
-
-“My word,” breathed Elsa, “she’s swallowing them whole!”
-
-“Eight,” counted Dolly Wentworth, her cousin. “Nine, ten—my Sunday hat,
-doesn’t she look like a chipmunk?”
-
-This was too much for Mona. She gulped, grabbed the plate now almost
-empty, and shot explosively, ten whole olives into it.
-
-Screams of delight rewarded her.
-
-“Look,” panted Zoe, “she hasn’t even bitten them!”
-
-“You beast,” said Elsa, “now we can’t tell t’other from which.”
-
-“Sorry,” replied her sister, “but you know I can’t eat them. They make
-me disgustingly sick.”
-
-“You’ve got to eat them,” cried Dolly. “If you don’t, they’ll be served
-up at the next party.”
-
-The thought threw them into agonising spasms of mirth. Oh, this was
-wonderful . . . priceless . . . _mervellus_ . . . the very best ever!
-They really expected to expire . . .
-
-“Slip them back on the table,” commanded Mona, as she saw Marjorie
-approaching.
-
-“Not a minute too soon,” whispered Dolly. “Now then, girls, your best
-Augusta Evans smile . . .”
-
-“Have you had tea?” asked Marjorie, finding something about their
-hilarity that was as incomprehensible as the sombreness of the other
-groups who appeared to be too bored for words. She had little time for
-reflection, but there flashed through her mind a comparison between this
-and a tea in Pinto Plains, where a friendly atmosphere was
-inter-penetrating and a hostess wasn’t ignored by her guests.
-
-They turned to her with the insolence of people who felt they had graced
-her home by their presence. Mona Carmichael answering for her friends,
-replied, “Quarts . . . thanks.”
-
-As that seemed to be productive of no further conversation, Marjorie
-moved away, suddenly conscious that there was a slight commotion at the
-door. A late guest was arriving. To her amazement, she recognised Mrs.
-Augustus Pratt, coarctated in a sapphire velvet, whose fashionable slit
-skirt revealed a length of limb that fascinated, while it unutterably
-shocked her.
-
-“Mrs. Pratt,” confided the lady to Hawkins.
-
-“Parding?”
-
-“Mrs. Pratt,” she repeated, bending a shade nearer.
-
-“Missus Spratt!” he relayed, resentfully.
-
-Hawkins knew Mrs. Pratt. He knew that she was marching round the golden
-circle seeking a weak spot through which she might force an entrance,
-and he felt it an insult to his position that he should have to deal
-with any one outside the charmed enclosure. He hated Mrs. Pratt.
-
-Mrs. Pratt bore down upon Marjorie, and in her wake followed a girl who
-was obviously a relative.
-
-“I came because I knew you must be expecting me. I said to Mod ‘. . .
-something has happened to that invitation, and your father would never
-forgive me if I didn’t make a particular effort to get down to Mrs.
-Dilling’s this afternoon’. This is Mod, Mrs. Dilling. I suppose she’s a
-little older than your children?”
-
-Marjorie was unequal to the occasion. She was surprised that Azalea had
-asked Mrs. Pratt. Azalea was surprised, herself, although she took in
-the situation at a glance, knowing that it was not unusual for persons
-of Mrs. Pratt’s calibre to attend functions at Government House—and
-elsewhere—with a sublime disregard for the necessity of an invitation.
-
-Maude was impaled upon the group of smart young ladies who stared
-disapprovingly at her, while her mother wandered about for half an hour
-with the intention of having everyone in the room know that she was
-there. Later, that night, she took the precaution to telephone Miss
-Ludlow, society reporter of The Dial, and, with cunning innocence,
-offered the item about Mrs. Dilling’s tea as a means of helping the girl
-to fill up her column—or colyum, in Mrs. Pratt’s phraseology. She
-believed in helping women, and she realised how difficult a task
-confronted the reporters. At any time, she would always be willing to
-confide information, and advised Miss Ludlow (who listened with her
-tongue in her cheek) not to hesitate to call upon her.
-
-As the crowd thinned, a chic little motor drove up to the Dilling’s
-door, and, after a tired glance in the direction of the bright chintz
-curtains, the driver settled back to await the pleasure of his lady.
-
-He was discovered almost immediately by the group standing in the
-dining-room.
-
-“What slavery,” murmured Mrs. Long. “I wonder if it’s worth it.”
-
-“Perhaps he doesn’t mind,” suggested Mrs. Blaine.
-
-“Oh, I should say it’s part of the day’s routine,” said Miss de Latour.
-“He calls somewhere for her every afternoon. One can grow accustomed to
-anything.”
-
-“They say she’s writing a novel,” confided Mrs. Long, “an acrimonious
-tale about all of us in the Capital.”
-
-“How delicious,” cried Miss de Latour. “Dante will be jealous, I fear!”
-
-“But it isn’t a novel,” Mrs. Blaine informed the group. “At least,
-that’s not what she calls it.”
-
-“What is it, then?”
-
-“Well,” said Mrs. Blaine, “I’ve never seen it—nor any of the other
-literary productions of which she is guilty, but she told me that it was
-a sort of allegory, a child’s story, called “The Fable of the Fairy
-Ferry-boat” . . . and she’s having it multigraphed for free distribution
-among the children of the English peerage.”
-
-“Be careful,” cautioned Pamela de Latour, “here she is!”
-
-Mrs. Hudson fluttered to the window in response to the summons of Azalea
-Deane. She waved a sprightly hand in the direction of the waiting car,
-and mouthed,
-
-“Coming, directly, darling!” as though speaking to a young and
-inexperienced lip-reader.
-
-“Isn’t it absurd?” she cooed coquettishly to the others. “But he _will_
-come! One would think we were bride and groom,” and she made an
-ineffectual effort to blush.
-
-“Some men are lovers always,” sighed Mrs. Blaine.
-
-“That’s Bob to the life,” cried Mrs. Hudson. “No wonder I’m so spoiled.”
-
-“You certainly look exceptionally well,” remarked Mrs. Long. “Such a
-becoming hat . . .” the fibs trickled fluently from her lips “. . . such
-an artistic blending of gay colours . . . I like bright colours on any
-one who can wear them. And your hair has grown so beautifully white
-. . . not a dark strand to be seen anywhere . . .” Her eyes wandered to
-the patient car “. . . And Mr. Hudson looks like a perfect boy . . .”
-
-
- CHAPTER 10.
-
-Mrs. Pratt was racked by indecision. She was faced by a stupendous
-problem. She could not determine whether to invite the young girls who
-had so frankly snubbed “Mod” to drive home in her limousine, or whether
-to honour herself by cringing before a group of elderly notables. She
-had not possessed a motor long enough to understand that people to whom
-driving would be a boon, do not expect to be invited, and that only
-those who own cars, themselves, or are perfectly able to hire taxis,
-should be asked to enjoy the convenience of a motor.
-
-So she made the mistake of offering to drop Miss Lily Tyrrell at her
-remote apartment, and prodded Maude into urging the Carmichael sisters
-to be driven home.
-
-“We could easily take a couple more,” she announced from the doorway,
-rather as a barker tries to fill up his sight-seeing car. “No trouble at
-all!” But as couples were slow in stepping forward, she strode off with
-the persons already captured.
-
-There was silence for a space after Mrs. Pratt had telephoned directions
-to her chauffeur. A sensitive stranger would have suspected that each
-member of the party was waiting for the other to throw the first stone.
-But such was not precisely the case. The unpleasant _timbre_ in the
-atmosphere was due to the fact that between each individual there
-existed a definite sense of animosity which was clothed with the
-filmiest cloak. Each seemed to be waiting an opportunity to step into
-the open and club the others into sensibility of her own importance.
-
-Mrs. Pratt looked at the ears of her chauffeur. Miss Tyrrell turned her
-head towards the window and thanked Heaven she would soon be able to
-take off her shoes. The Carmichaels maintained a series of signals by
-kicking one another beneath the lap robes, and Maude stared into her
-folded hands, wondering vaguely why people were born at all. Chickens
-and dogs and cats seemed so much more worth while.
-
-“Where do _you_ live?” asked Miss Tyrrell, with just the proper shade of
-patronage. She wished to make very clear to the Carmichael sisters that
-there existed no intimacy between Mrs. Pratt and herself.
-
-The former plunged into a minute description of the improvements she had
-effected in the Tillington place, and warned Miss Tyrrell that she would
-scarcely recognise it, now.
-
-“I suppose in its day, it was considered all right,” she said, “but it
-was quite impossible when I took it over. You must see it . . . Of
-course, you _will_! With a husband in Parliament, I shall have to do a
-lot of entertaining. Do you like to dance?” she asked Mona, suddenly.
-
-“I adore it,” returned the girl, with elaborate indifference. “You
-don’t, do you?” she demanded of Maude.
-
-“Oh, yes, I love dancing.”
-
-“Really? I never see you, anywhere.”
-
-“Mod is just home from school,” said Mrs. Pratt. “I don’t believe in a
-girl carrying all her brains in her feet. She went out rather more than
-was good for her in Montreal . . . not being vurry strong. That’s why I
-can’t let her go to the University, as she wants.”
-
-“What a pity,” murmured the sisters, in a tone that made Miss Tyrrell
-bite her lips to keep from laughing.
-
-The moment they were alone, Mrs. Pratt wheeled upon her daughter.
-“Whatever will I do with you, Mod?” she scolded. “Aren’t you ever going
-to learn to say anything for yourself?”
-
-“I don’t like those girls,” muttered Mod.
-
-“I should hope not! But is that any reason why you shouldn’t make
-friends with them?”
-
-“I don’t want to have friends that I don’t like.”
-
-Mrs. Pratt was struck speechless by such philosophy. It had never
-occurred to her that anyone could hold views at variance with her own,
-least of all, her daughter. She found herself at a loss for an argument,
-a retort, indeed. The girl might just as well have said she didn’t like
-having two hands.
-
-“But everybody has!” exclaimed Mrs. Pratt. “There’s no getting around
-it! Look at your father . . . look at me!”
-
-Maude looked.
-
-“You don’t suppose I went to that Dilling imbecile’s tea because I
-_liked_ her—or any of the people there, for the matter of that—do
-you?”
-
-“Then why did you go?” asked Maude, sullenly.
-
-“Why—why—how absurd you are! I went, and you will have to go because
-other people do—because it’s the way of Society, because, whether you
-like it or not, it’s THE THING!”
-
-They found Mr. Rufus Sullivan enjoying the fruits of the cellar when
-they reached home.
-
-“Blame Gus, not me!” he cried. “Heaven knows I’ve tried to take myself
-off half a dozen times. Is this your girl?”
-
-“Yep,” answered Pratt, his harsh voice softening. “This is our baby.”
-
-“Too big for me to kiss, I suppose,” said Sullivan, secretly
-congratulating himself that this was so. Maude bore a striking
-resemblance to her mother.
-
-Mrs. Pratt acknowledged this witticism with a dry cackle, and invited
-the Hon. Member to stay and take _pot-pourri_ with them. She slurred
-over the words cautiously, never quite certain as to the correct
-application of the phrase. Some people, she knew, said pot luck, but
-this had, to her way of thinking, a vulgar sound.
-
-“That’s the stuff,” cried Gus. “We can go back to the House together
-after a bite of supper.”
-
-“Dinner,” corrected his wife, coldly. “You’re quite all right as you
-are, Mr. Sullivan. None of us will dress.”
-
-“I should hope not,” breathed the irrepressible Pratt, and drained his
-glass with a smack. “Sullivan’s no party.”
-
-As it had been this gentleman’s intention to stay and talk with Mrs.
-Pratt, he demurred politely, calling himself an inconsiderate nuisance
-and other equally applicable terms. But in the end he allowed himself to
-be persuaded, and settled down to accomplish the object of his coming.
-
-“It’s a great pleasure to meet a woman with so keen a sense for
-politics,” he remarked, speaking to Pratt but indicating his wife. Mr.
-Sullivan was one of the few men who could eat and talk at the same time,
-without seeming to give undue preference to either operation. “Our
-Canadian women take shockingly little interest in the life of the
-country.”
-
-“Don’t blame ’em,” mumbled Pratt, struggling with a very hot potato.
-
-“Augustus!” Between telegraphing reproach to her husband, and directing
-the maid in what she conceived to be the correct serving of a meal, Mrs.
-Pratt’s heavy eyebrows attained a bewildering flexibility. “He pretends
-not to take his position seriously, but leave him to me, Mr. Sullivan,
-leave him to me!”
-
-“With confidence, Madam,” returned the Hon. Member, gallantly. “Would
-that I had half so much in the other women of the Party. Is it not
-curious,” he went on, “that a politician’s wife rarely appreciates the
-extent of her influence in shaping her husband’s career? The parson’s
-lady identifies herself with his interests; the doctor’s wife realises
-that she can attract or repel patients; and only the other day, the wife
-of a small-town banker confided to me that she never misses an
-opportunity for doing a stroke of business on her husband’s behalf. As a
-matter of fact, I understand that she was largely responsible for the
-rival institution closing its doors, and leaving the field. Yet, a
-politician’s wife as a rule, seems to take pride in holding herself
-aloof from politics.”
-
-“Dirty business for a woman,” commented Pratt, stroking Maude’s hand
-underneath the table.
-
-“Not a whit dirtier than Society, my dear fellow, and there she likes to
-wallow. Am I not right, Mrs. Pratt? As a woman of the world, I feel sure
-you will agree with me.”
-
-Mrs. Pratt, who desired above all else to be a woman of the world,
-agreed with him, darkly. In this coalition, they seemed to form a vague
-but tacit compact from which the recently-elected Member for Ottawa was
-excluded.
-
-“What, in your opinion, is the vurry best way for a woman to help her
-husband, politically?” she enquired, as they rose from the table.
-
-Sullivan managed to assume an arch expression as he pressed her arm, and
-answered,
-
-“How can you ask such a question of a mere man?”
-
-“I can ask anything of anybody when there’s something I want to find
-out,” was the blunt retort. “Gus—Augustus—has _got_ to make good.”
-
-“He will! We have the utmost faith in him . . . and may I add, in you.
-You’ll be a tower of strength to Gus, Mrs. Pratt, with your keen sense
-for politics. Only the other evening, I was making this statement to my
-little friend, Mrs. Dilling.”
-
-“Mrs. Dilling?”
-
-“Yes. Wife of the Member for Pinto Plains. You should know her, Mrs.
-Pratt. A creature of rare beauty and charm.”
-
-Mrs. Pratt confessed to a slight acquaintance in a tone calculated to
-chill her guest’s enthusiasm. “She gave a big tea, this afternoon. Mod
-and I were there.”
-
-“Really? I am glad to hear it. You two ought to be great friends—with
-interests that are so nearly identical.” As Mrs. Pratt said nothing, the
-Hon. Member continued—somewhat more easily, noting that his host and
-Maude had left the room—“I’m so fond of her . . . almost _too_ fond,
-I’m afraid! She’s a wonderful little woman, Mrs. Pratt—and I’ve known a
-good many in my day. Do you realise that Marjorie could simply _make_
-her husband, if she had a tithe of your political sense . . . if she
-only knew how!”
-
-“You surprise me,” said Mrs. Pratt, and in her tone the Hon. Member was
-gratified to detect the ring of truth.
-
-“Well, it’s a fact. Dilling’s a marvel, my dear lady. Even the
-Opposition concede him the respect due a powerful antagonist.”
-
-“He’s not a bad speaker,” admitted Mrs. Pratt.
-
-“There isn’t a man in the House who can touch him! Now, is there?”
-
-Mrs. Pratt hedged by suggesting that the country looked for something
-more than forensic eloquence.
-
-“A profound remark!” Mr. Sullivan could not restrain his admiration. He
-beamed and stroked his knees, deriving from the performance, apparently,
-much satisfaction. “Trust you to dig right down to the root of the
-matter! Not that he hasn’t principles, dear lady, and also the courage
-necessary to express them. We mustn’t overlook that. Moreover, it’s
-almost impossible to defeat him in argument . . . Such disconcerting
-agility of mind, you know. He lets the other fellow expend himself in an
-offensive, and then, without apparent effort, stabs and thrusts until
-his opponents fall in regular—er—regular—”
-
-“Windrows,” suggested Mrs. Pratt, whose unacknowledged relatives were
-honest farming people.
-
-“Windrows, a capital comparison! They fall in regular windrows before
-him. Why, he can prove that black is white any day in the week.”
-
-“Men are fools!” was the lady’s oracular remark.
-
-“Unfortunately for them . . . us, I really ought to say. I, myself, have
-felt the force of that young man’s power, and I’ve been absolutely putty
-in his hands.”
-
-Mrs. Pratt drew her lips into a thin, straight line, and forbore to
-comment on this weakness.
-
-“The trouble is—as, of course, you are aware—he has been trained in a
-bad school, and it may take some time to undo the effect of early
-education. Then, naturally, he’s only human and the wine of success is a
-heady beverage. He’s somewhat determined—”
-
-“Mule-ish,” amended Mrs. Pratt.
-
-“No, no, I protest,” cried the Hon. Member, playfully. “You must not be
-too hard on the fellow. All he needs is a little guidance—perhaps even
-a shade more definite opposition. For example, this elevator and freight
-idea of his . . .”
-
-“G’aranteed to plunge the whole country into roon,” interrupted Mrs.
-Pratt, whose investments were centred strictly to the East.
-
-“I anticipated you would take the view of the better minds,” returned
-Mr. Sullivan, perceiving that the time had come for him to discard the
-subtler implements of finesse, and employ the rough, but honest trowel.
-“But when all’s said and done, it may be better to support a man with
-whose policies we are not in accord than to split into groups, and
-eventually be forced from our seats into the benches on the opposite
-side of the house.”
-
-Mrs. Pratt watched her guest with unmistakable bewilderment in her hard
-blue eyes.
-
-“I see that you agree with me,” he went on, “and you are probably
-wondering, just as I am, how soon the need will come for us to prove our
-Party loyalty. It can’t be far away, dear lady. I have ten dollars in my
-pocket that says there’ll be a Cabinet vacancy before the spring.”
-
-“And Dilling will get the portfolio!” barked Mrs. Pratt, thrown
-completely off her guard.
-
-“What a head you have!” cried Sullivan. “I’ll wager there aren’t a dozen
-men who have suspected it! But he needs support . . . he must have it.
-We must stand solidly behind him, for no matter how divergent may be our
-views upon this question of western freight, we’ve got to train up a
-man—a good strong fellow—who will sweep the country and be able to
-step into the shoes of the Prime Minister, some day!”
-
-“Prime Minister!” gasped Mrs. Pratt, and fell to preening herself in
-order that she might hide the trembling of her hands.
-
-She hated the Dillings—Raymond for his reputed genius, the clear, cold
-brilliance that would not be eclipsed, and Marjorie for her childish
-friendliness and ingratiating ways. The meek might inherit the Kingdom
-of Heaven without provoking her envy, but that they should also inherit
-the earth was a contingency that aroused her cold fury.
-
-She saw them sought after, deferred to, taking precedence over everyone
-save the representative of the King! Her thoughts fell into narrower
-channels and she pictured Marjorie opening bazaars, lending her
-patronage to this or that gathering of Society’s choicest blossoms,
-arriving at the state where she would be unstirred by invitations to
-Government House!
-
-Under the turquoise velvet, her bosom rose and fell, heavily. At the
-moment she hated her husband no less fiercely than she hated the man
-whom she chose to consider his rival. What could Augustus carve in the
-way of a career? How could he ever hope to triumph over this aggressive
-man from the West? Where would she be when Marjorie Dilling had become
-the wife of Canada’s young Prime Minister?
-
-The suave voice of Rufus Sullivan fashioned itself into words. The first
-ones she failed to catch, but the last pierced her like the point of a
-white-hot rapier.
-
-“. . . and then, naturally, a title. And how graciously she will wear
-it, eh?”
-
-A title . . . Mrs. Pratt felt suffocated. A portfolio was bad enough;
-the Premiership was a possibility that she could not consider without a
-cataclysm of emotion, but a title . . . the pinnacle of human desire,
-the social and political apogee . . .
-
-Sir Raymond and Lady Dilling . . . Lady Dilling . . .
-
-She rose abruptly and strode to the door. Pratt avoided a collision with
-difficulty. He was just coming in.
-
-“No more time for philandering,” he cried, with vulgar geniality. “On to
-Pretoria! Nelson expects every man to do his duty!”
-
-Mrs. Pratt watched their departure with contradictory sensations. The
-Hon. Member for Morroway was not the man to spoil a good impression by
-an inartistic exit. He made a graceful adieu, managing to convey the
-idea that, although now and again he might be the bearer of news that
-was disturbing, on the whole he was a man who could be mulct by a woman
-of astuteness, of the most intimate and useful information.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Augustus Pratt, M.P., arrived home on the stroke of midnight to find his
-wife and daughter in the midst of a litter of stationery, calling lists,
-telephone and Blue Books.
-
-“What’s up now?” he demanded, picking his way across the floor as one
-hops over a brook by means of stepping stones.
-
-“Look at that,” cried his wife, and pointed to the evening paper.
-
-Pratt gave his attention to the item indicated. It headed the Personal
-column, and read,
-
-“The following ladies and gentlemen had the honour of dining at
-Government House last evening . . . and Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Dilling.”
-
-“Well,” he yawned, “there’s nothing very startling about that! I don’t
-see the answer.”
-
-“No! Naturally you wouldn’t!” Mrs. Pratt pounded a stamp on an envelope.
-
-The M.P. turned to his daughter. “Tell her old dad what it means, little
-Maudie.”
-
-“Mother’s giving a big dinner party, on the seventeenth.”
-
-“Oh, my God!” sighed Augustus. Then, “I’ve got to go to Montreal on that
-date, Minnie—honest, I have!”
-
-“You dare! And listen, Gus, while I think of it; if I ever hear that
-you’ve given one atom of support to that Dilling, I’ll have my trunks
-packed and the house closed, before you can get home! Now, don’t
-forget!”
-
-“Dear, dear!” Pratt assumed an air of panic. “What’s the poor beggar
-been up to now?”
-
-“He’s up to getting himself into the Cabinet, if men like you don’t want
-the job, yourselves—that’s what he’s up to. And once in the Cabinet,
-you know where he’ll land next.”
-
-“Where?”
-
-“In the Prime Minister’s seat,” returned Mrs. Pratt, sourly.
-
-“In the Senate, you mean,” laughed Augustus, and pinched Maude’s ear.
-
-“Your idea of jokes is sickening,” Mrs. Pratt declared. “Sometimes I
-wonder why I bother with you. Now, Mod, read out the names on those
-envelopes down there!”
-
-Dutifully, Maude complied . . . “Mr. and Mrs. Chesley . . .”
-
-“Like enough they won’t come,” interrupted her mother. “We’ve never
-called.”
-
-“. . . Mr. and Mrs. Long! Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hudson . . .”
-
-“There’s another hateful snob. This afternoon I could have strangled
-her!”
-
-“Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Truman . . .”
-
-“They say she only goes to Government House,” mused Mrs. Pratt.
-“However, I took a chance. It only cost two cents—and you never know.”
-
-“You bet you’ll never know,” said the Member. “Minnie, you’re plain
-crazy asking all these swells that you don’t even know when you see ’em!
-Why don’t we have any _real_ friends, nowadays?”
-
-Mrs. Pratt answered with a baleful glance that was more eloquent than
-words. Then, assured that there would be no further interference from
-her husband, directed Maude to finish her work.
-
-“. . . Sir Eric and Lady Denby . . .”
-
-“They ought to come, anyhow,” she groaned, hopefully, “seeing it’s the
-Party. The Fanshawes, the Howarths, Sullivan and Azalea Deane . . .
-she’s sure to come . . . that makes twenty-nine. There’s one more
-envelope, Mod!”
-
-“Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Dilling,” read the girl.
-
-“Dilling?” echoed her father.
-
-“Of course, Augustus. Don’t gape at me in that way!”
-
-“But you just told me—I thought you had your knife into the Dillings.”
-
-“So I have, you fool!”
-
-“Then why the hell do you ask them to your party?”
-
-Mrs. Pratt so forgot herself as to stamp her foot. “Can’t you see,” she
-cried, “that they’re getting on?”
-
-
- CHAPTER 11.
-
-For a time, Dilling was entertained by the visits he received from
-ladies of varying ages and mixed intentions. He found their vapoury
-subterfuges or engaging candour equally amusing. But presently, this
-type of diversion, so eagerly welcomed by many of his confrères, began
-to pall, and he developed amazing ingenuity in the avoidance of such
-callers.
-
-He had grown suspicious of “deserving cases,” and “ancient grievances”;
-he found himself totally unsympathetic towards the erection of monuments
-commemorating the questionable valour of somebody’s obscure progenitors;
-he could sit absolutely unmoved and listen to schemes which were being
-projected “at considerable personal inconvenience,” in order that he
-might attain immortality. The measures he was asked to father in the
-House ranged from the segregation of the feeble-minded to prohibition of
-philandering.
-
-“He’s a cold fish,” complained more than one lady, after failing to
-elicit the smallest response, either to her project or her personal
-charms.
-
-It was true that Dilling’s emotional reactions were slight, but it was
-equally true that had they been vehement, he would have forced himself
-to a course of conduct commensurate with what he conceived to be the
-demands of national welfare. He never could accept the idea that the
-Government Service was an institution in which hundreds of persons—like
-Mr. Deane—might find a comfortable escape from the storm and stress of
-a fruitful life, and render in return but a tithe of the work that even
-their small abilities could fairly perform. He never could sympathise
-with the attitude of those who looked upon the public funds as private
-means, and he opposed, in so far as he was able, every effort to tap the
-Dominion Treasury for individual gain.
-
-There were times when he thought with discouragement about these things;
-times when he was oppressed with the basic insincerity of public life.
-It was so vastly different from what he had imagined! He felt himself
-eternally struggling against the malefic urge of partisanship—and
-partisanship was not always, he found, an expression of high principle.
-
-And he saw also that, as his success gathered head, petty
-jealousies—and great—sprang up on every hand. The very persons who
-assisted in his rise would be the first, he knew, to herald his
-downfall. He used to think that because a man was prominent, he
-possessed universal good-will, but now he knew that the exact reverse
-obtains.
-
-“I am the most unpopular man in the House,” he said to Azalea, one
-evening. “On the floor, they cheer and applaud me, but in private or
-social life, I am shunned.”
-
-Another woman would have contradicted him. Such a course did not occur
-to Azalea.
-
-“Do you mind?” she asked.
-
-He considered a moment.
-
-“I’m not sure. It seems to me that the popular Members don’t _do_
-anything. They’re too busy being popular . . . too busy being agreeable
-to a herd of tireless parasites.”
-
-“Which is quite out of your line, is it not?”
-
-“Well, why _should_ I snivel and crawl?” he defended. “One respects a
-man or one doesn’t. Popularity is, after all, only an expression of mob
-psychology; as you know, it is unstable—having either the vaguest of
-excuses, or palpable insincerity behind it.”
-
-“You mean the insincerity of the person who is popular?”
-
-“Of course! What man feels genuine friendliness towards enough people to
-make him ‘popular’?”
-
-Azalea shook her head in the characteristic way that implied her
-resentment against accepting the inevitable.
-
-“But don’t you feel that a certain amount of studied affability is—let
-us say—necessary to the attainment of success in public affairs?”
-
-“No! I believe with Lincoln that the conduct of a statesman—and that is
-my high ambition, if it be God’s will that I attain to it—should be
-moulded upon three principles; ‘malice towards none, charity for all,
-firmness on the right’. These principles are not compatible with the
-flatteries and lightly-regarded mendacities of a popular idol. A
-statesman ought to be less of a man and more of an ethical inspiration.
-It’s not an easy ideal to live up to,” he concluded, “but at least it’s
-a clean one, and I think the only one that history justifies.”
-
-“Yes,” repeated Azalea, as though careful that her voice should not
-betray her true opinion, “it’s a very clean one.”
-
-Recalling that conversation, Dilling found himself musing rather
-pleasantly about Azalea. What a curious little creature she was! What a
-stimulating companion! He could not, for the life of him, visualise her
-features, but he could bring to mind many an illuminating twist of her
-thoughts. Times without number, he realised, he had invoked her
-extraordinary intuitive powers and transmuted them in the crucible of
-his logic, into what Sullivan was pleased to designate as invincibility
-in debate.
-
-“She’s more than half responsible,” he told himself. “I couldn’t have
-achieved my present position by any process of reasoning alone.”
-
-He looked over his crowded desk with a sensation of helplessness. How
-could any man, single-handed, clear that accumulation away? He wondered
-if other Members allowed their business to get into such a distressing
-tangle, and if they had better luck than he when a stenographer came in
-for a few hours, to reduce the congestion?
-
-“It’s this eternal speech-making,” he reflected. “That’s what takes so
-much of my time. I wish . . .”
-
-He left his chair and began to pace about the room, surrendering to an
-access of restlessness that was quite foreign to him. Azalea Deane . . .
-there was the solution! Why not? Why should she not come to him as a
-permanent assistant . . . a sort of private secretary?
-
-“She could relieve me of a myriad minor duties,” he thought. “Foreign
-press . . . correspondence . . . research work . . . She’s amazingly
-accurate . . .” He smiled as he caught himself suppressing the familiar
-corollary, “for a woman!”
-
-Yes, that was the solution! He would ask Azalea Deane to work with him.
-“We’ll get on famously together,” he thought. “She’s so quick to catch
-the drift of my intention. She really understands me.”
-
-He sat down again, amused at the recollection of an original view
-expressed by Azalea in answer to Marjorie, who complained of Ottawa’s
-persistent misunderstanding.
-
-“There’s no cause for distress in being misunderstood,” she had said.
-“It’s the opposite condition that we should dread! Imagine one’s
-stupidity, covetousness and smallness of spirit being laid bare!
-Unthinkable, isn’t it? You mustn’t forget, my dear Marjorie, that being
-misunderstood works both ways, and through imperfect understanding we
-are frequently credited with motives and qualities that are quite as
-flattering as we could wish. Heaven forfend that I should ever be
-thoroughly understood!”
-
-Dilling applauded her and reminded his wife that if men were compelled
-to write their thoughts and wear them as phylacteries on their
-foreheads, few, indeed, would carry themselves bravely in public.
-
-“And why should they do that, dear?” Marjorie enquired, her pansy eyes
-clouded with perplexity.
-
-“He is only trying to be clever,” explained Azalea. “He is subtly
-suggesting that if the very best of us proclaimed our thoughts upon our
-foreheads, there would be jolly few who didn’t pull their hats low above
-their brows.”
-
-Azalea did not wear her thoughts upon her forehead, Dilling reflected,
-and he smiled at his conceit in thinking that if she did, they would
-probably be written in a language that was difficult to read! It
-suddenly occurred to him that he knew very little of what was passing in
-Azalea’s mind. His endeavour had been directed to an opposite
-course—assisting her to understand what was in his thoughts.
-
-“She’s a curious creature,” he repeated, “a problem. But she has rare
-intelligence and imagination. I need her . . . She is necessary for the
-advancement of my work. I can’t concentrate in this hopeless muddle
-. . .”
-
-The idea excited him more than he realised. In planning a schedule for
-their day’s routine, he did not recognise his keen desire for a closer
-intimacy with the girl’s mind, the assurance of her esteem, the stimulus
-of knowing that she expected him to conquer unconquerable things. He
-began to wear down her arguments, to win her from possible
-disinclination. She must agree! She must come!
-
-He pictured a scene with her tiresome old father, when he should ask not
-for her hand but for her brain. How insensately stubborn the old
-antiquarian would be! How damnably unreasonable!
-
-He consulted his book of appointments . . . not a minute Wednesday . . .
-nor Thursday . . . Ah! Mrs. Pratt’s dinner party . . . Good! He would
-ask her then . . .
-
-A thin smile touched his features as he said to himself,
-
-“If I can move the Opposition in the House, surely I can override the
-objections of Grenville Deane!”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Mr. Deane would have swelled with pride had he known that his daughter
-was engaging the attention of more than one Parliamentary Member that
-day. In a room above that occupied by Raymond Dilling, the thoughts of
-three other gentlemen bent themselves fleetingly upon her.
-
- * * * * *
-
-“The fellow’s not only clever,” grumbled Turner, “but he’s too damned
-careful. We’ll have some trouble in pinning anything on him.”
-
-Sullivan sipped his whisky reflectively. “The trouble is that he never
-meets the right sort of people.”
-
-“God knows they go out enough,” protested Howarth. “According to the
-Personals which I’ve read conscientiously for several weeks past, they
-go pretty much everywhere.”
-
-“Because he’s become the vogue, in a manner of speaking,” said Sullivan.
-“But that won’t do us any good. It won’t last long enough. Socially,
-they are failures and always will be . . . Mark my words, the time will
-come when they will be asked only because their political position
-requires recognition, not for their personal charm. Church-workers and
-unambitious obscurities will be their particular friends . . . her
-particular friends, perhaps I should say. He won’t have any.”
-
-“Still, he’ll meet some interesting women,” objected Turner.
-
-“I grant it, but not deliberately interesting,” returned Sullivan, with
-a wink. “In other words, he won’t stumble into a trap. He’ll have to be
-led into it.”
-
-“Why won’t he stumble?” Howarth asked. “Other men do.”
-
-“His temperament is a safeguard, for one thing. He is not sufficiently
-attracted by women to go exploring, and only those who wander into
-unfamiliar places get caught in traps.”
-
-Howarth remarked that his wife had reported a warm friendship between
-the Dillings and the Deane girl.
-
-“Yes,” said Sullivan, “I’ve been watching that. Mrs. D. tells me that he
-admires the girl intensely.”
-
-“Humph!” commented Turner.
-
-“I’ve never met the lady,” said Howarth, “but judging from her looks I
-should think that a man’s intensity of feeling for her could not be much
-more than a mild passion of the imagination.”
-
-Sullivan laughed. “That’s not bad for you, Billy. I’ll go even further
-and opine that Dilling’s intensity of feeling for anyone will be like
-the passion of a fried sole! However, the Deane girl won’t do.”
-
-“What about de Latour’s daughter?” suggested Howarth. “She looks clever,
-and might help, ‘for the sake of the Party,’ as our estimable Lady Denby
-says.”
-
-“Good God, Billy,” groaned Sullivan. “We don’t want anyone who _looks_
-clever! Don’t you know me better than that?”
-
-“Well, the sweet young thing should be easy to find,” said Turner.
-
-“No good, either. In the first place, it’s hard to find one with any
-sense, and in the second, he gets that type as a daily diet.”
-
-“Those Carmichael girls seem to be consistent winners,” suggested
-Turner, once more. “Some brains, and good looks . . .”
-
-“Too young,” said the old campaigner. “Undependable! Kids are apt to
-lose their heads and weaken, when it comes to using the scalping knife.
-First thing we know, they’d give the whole show away. No,” he went on,
-reflectively, “what we want is a regular stunner, who’ll stick right at
-the game until she has his scalp at her belt . . . a woman of the world,
-you know, chock full of horse sense and able to handle men with as
-little difficulty as an expert trainer handles cats.”
-
-There was a short silence.
-
-“I can’t think of anybody,” Turner’s tone was sodden with
-discouragement.
-
-“Nor I,” said Howarth. “Haven’t you got anybody up your sleeve,
-Sullivan?”
-
-The Hon. Member for Morroway modestly admitted that there was a lady of
-his acquaintance who combined all these alluring vices.
-
-“Either of you ever heard of Mrs. Barrington?” he enquired.
-
-Turner thumped his approval. Howarth took his satisfaction more
-cautiously.
-
-“I’ve seen the dame. Kind of flashy, eh?”
-
-“Tastes differ,” replied his friend.
-
-“Just moved here lately, hasn’t she?”
-
-Sullivan nodded.
-
-“Hangs round the House a good deal, trying to put something over for her
-husband, I’ve heard.”
-
-“You’re remarkably well informed, Billy,” mocked the older man.
-
-“Did you ever know her before?” asked the unabashed Howarth.
-
-Sullivan confessed to a previous acquaintance. “Her mother’s first
-husband was my sister’s brother-in-law. So, you see, she’s a sort of
-relation.”
-
-“Not too close to be interesting,” observed Turner, who had his private
-opinion about Sullivan’s relations. “Has she been sounded? Do you think
-she’ll take on the job?”
-
-The Member for Morroway was hopeful, “provided,” he said, “she is not
-absorbed in any other emotional adventure. They are chronic.”
-
-“Is that the only provision?” Howarth wanted to know.
-
-“Well—er—as you, yourself, remarked, she seems to be determined to get
-Barrington a nice, cushioned berth in which he will be well protected
-against the rigours of enervating toil. I understand that she fancies
-the Chairmanship of the Improvement Commission.”
-
-William Howarth, M.P., expressed relief, and the opinion that this was
-“pie”.
-
-“We’ll just put little Augustus Pratt on the job,” he said. “How soon
-could we see the lady?”
-
-Sullivan didn’t doubt that she was somewhere in the House at the moment.
-
-“You trot along and find her, then,” urged the other. “Bring her up here
-and let’s hold a friendly little conference. The sooner we get her
-started on this escapade, the sooner our young friend will lose his
-head!”
-
-
- CHAPTER 12.
-
-A light but insistent tapping put an end to Dilling’s reflections.
-
-“Come in!” he called, impatiently, and turned towards the window as if
-intent upon the landscape.
-
-There was a slight pause, and then, like a well-timed bit of stage
-business, a woman stood framed in the open door.
-
-Dilling appreciated the dramatic note even while he resented it. On
-general principles he despised the theatrical.
-
-“Oh, I _am_ lucky!” cried his visitor, in a well-disciplined contralto.
-“I scarcely dared hope to find you alone. Every atom of courage I
-possessed oozed out of my finger-tips at the thought of interrupting a
-secret caucus, or some other of the dark conspiracies that are supposed
-to occupy our Members’ time!”
-
-She advanced and extended an ungloved hand. Dilling touched her fingers
-without speaking.
-
-“My name is Hebe Barrington,” she went on, “Mrs. Arthur, on my calling
-cards, you know . . . and I’m here on a desperately serious mission. Its
-success means everything to me, and you, yourself, Mr. Dilling, have
-buoyed me up with the hope that I shall not fail.”
-
-She shifted her position slightly, contriving to draw her skirt close
-about her long, slender limbs like a sheath.
-
-But Dilling was not looking. He had taken a penknife from his pocket,
-and was giving First Aid to an untutored finger-nail.
-
-“How shall I begin?” she went on, watching him from beneath her lashes.
-It was one of her prettiest gestures.
-
-“Perhaps, if you made some notes and sent them to me—”
-
-“Oh, please!” she protested. “That’s heartless of you. And _do_ sit
-down! I can’t think while you wear that ‘Time’s up’ expression. It
-drives every idea from my head. I tell you frankly, Mr. Dilling, I
-expected you would be much more kind.”
-
-She flung him a smile that had dazzled many another man. Dilling
-received it with indifference, in a wholly unprecedented manner. Mrs.
-Barrington found the experience somewhat disconcerting.
-
-In his expression there was no appreciation of her loveliness. Neither
-was there the disapproval that betokens a recognition of it, or a sign
-of that wariness by which man betrays his knowledge of its danger. There
-was nothing.
-
-In the abstract, Dilling saw men as trees, walking, but women he saw
-scarcely at all. Emotionally, he was vestigial. Artistically, he was
-numb. Beauty in any form registered only through his outward eye. He
-missed the inner vision that should have quickened his soul.
-
-Mrs. Barrington was not an unfamiliar figure to him, although he had
-never been sufficiently interested to ask her name. Frequently, of late,
-he had seen her in the restaurant, or in the corridors, sometimes
-surrounded by a group of Parliamentary gallants, and sometimes in
-earnest tete-a-tete with just one man. If he thought of her at all, it
-was to conclude that like other women who haunt the House, she was
-engaged in the popular occupation known as lobbying, and he felt an
-instinctive opposition to whatever request she might be about to make.
-
-On her part, Mrs. Barrington felt the disappointment of one who has been
-unexpectedly repulsed at the first line of attack, and sees the
-necessity for finer strategy. She laid aside the ineffectual weapon of
-physical charm, and took up the subtler blade of flattery.
-
-“I have come to you,” she said, “because you are not only essentially,
-but so patently, sincere. Not your speeches alone, but your whole
-manner, proclaim it. I suppose that is a good deal to say of a
-politician, is it not?”
-
-“By no means!”
-
-“There is little evidence to the contrary! Most of them rant about a
-loftier patriotism, service for the public weal that knows no respite
-and the realisation of a higher idealism for Twentieth Century Canada,
-but their actual performances are not marked with the large
-disinterestedness they profess. You are different. Perhaps you won’t
-like my saying so, Mr. Dilling, but as you sit in the House, surrounded
-by your colleagues, yours is a noticeably solitary figure. I felt it the
-instant I saw you, and the impression has grown steadily stronger . . .
-with reason. You have brought a different element into politics, Mr.
-Dilling. Like Disraeli, you are on the side of the angels! You have
-brought what I call practical spirituality, a force that can and will
-defeat materialism, if—if—you do not get discouraged, and tired of
-struggling on, alone.”
-
-“Aren’t you rather disheartening?”
-
-The question was asked with such utter unconcern that Mrs. Barrington
-could not deceive herself into thinking she had made an impression. Had
-Dilling taken her seriously, or accorded her half the sincerity she
-professed to impute to him, he would have been unconscionably
-embarrassed. As matters stood, her words, like her beauty, failed to
-touch him. He heard them as he heard agreeable music, without annoyance,
-but without pleasure. It was said of him, that once, in Pinto Plains,
-when asked if he enjoyed piano playing he had answered, “Oh, I don’t
-mind it!” and he could aptly have applied the same phrase to this
-woman’s conversation.
-
-He didn’t mind it! He was listening without giving particular heed to
-what she said. He knew that she had come to ask a favour, and he was not
-sufficiently amenable to feminine wiles to lose sight of the methods of
-a shrewd campaigner.
-
-“I may be disheartening,” he heard her say, “but I am sincere. Would you
-have me pretend—tell you how popular you are, and how certain to become
-the idol of the people? Do you not remember that the Cæsars and Lincolns
-of history have been slandered and slain by their friends and
-compatriots, and can you hope to escape a similar fate at the hands of
-our people—even though despotism is not tempered with assassination
-here, as it was a hundred years ago in Russia?”
-
-Dilling was conscious of a flicker of interest. It was curious, he
-reflected, that this woman should have come to him and given expression
-to the very thoughts that had been uppermost in his mind. He wondered
-whether she had been talking to Azalea.
-
-“And what has all this to do with your mission?” he asked, closing his
-penknife with a snap.
-
-“Everything!” she cried, vehemently. “Everything depends upon the
-honesty behind your protestations, upon the fact that you are not merely
-content to talk about idealism, but will work to see it blossom
-throughout the country. Moreover, I have counted on your vision, your
-ability to see the benefit of what, to others, may look like an
-impractical measure. Any other type of man would laugh at me,” she
-added.
-
-She stopped and waited for him to speak. But he made no comment.
-
-He was not insensible to the cleverness with which she assembled her
-points. There was about her address a climacteric quality that compelled
-his admiration. But her speech fell flat because he failed to pick up
-his cues. The obvious retort that she must have anticipated, was never
-spoken; so each pause was pregnant with the suggestion of finality, of
-failure.
-
-“I felt as though I were being driven, blindfold, along a crooked
-passage,” she said, later, in describing the interview to Sullivan.
-“Each time I turned a corner, some one rose and struck me in the face,
-so that I reeled and lost my bearings and had to wait a bit in order to
-recover myself and my sense of direction.”
-
-Dilling half suspected this. He did not, however, assume a difficult and
-disinterested manner, deliberately, nor did he act with conscious
-rudeness. He simply felt no curiosity in Mrs. Barrington nor in the
-object of her visit, and no obligation to pretend that he did.
-
-“I have come to you,” she said, again, “because you are the embodiment
-of all the qualities I have mentioned. Your sympathy, I take for
-granted, for the reason that the cause I plead is a spiritual cause, Mr.
-Dilling. I am asking for the development of a nation’s soul.”
-
-“Oh!”
-
-This response, though almost imperceptible, affected the woman as
-applause breaking suddenly over an unfriendly house, stimulates an actor
-to greater achievement. She left her chair and stood before him, a
-vision of aggressive beauty. She nearly lost herself in the part she was
-playing, and allowed impulse rather than design to dominate the moment.
-
-“We admit that in the fierce struggle for existence, a young country
-must concern itself primarily with material problems, and that the song
-of the spirit is often stifled by the cry of hungry children. But has
-not the day arrived for us when our thought, and at least a small part
-of our resources, should be devoted to providing nourishment for the
-Canadian soul? I know that this sounds like the spell-binder’s affluence
-of speech, but, believe me, Mr. Dilling, I have a practical proposition
-behind it.”
-
-“Well?” said Dilling, without enthusiasm.
-
-She pointed to the Little Theatre movement, to various literary and
-dramatic organisations that have sprung up throughout the Dominion, as a
-proof that we are seeking a means of artistic expression, for spiritual
-development, that we are feeling a reaction from the wave of materialism
-which, in these times, holds the land in thrall. “In a word,” she said,
-“we are looking for happiness, only just realising that we have striven
-without it all these years. We are not a happy nation, Mr. Dilling.”
-
-“Show me a more prosperous one,” he cried.
-
-“Ah! But there’s our trouble. Prosperity and happiness may lie at
-opposite poles. The one is of the earth and its fulness, the other of
-the spirit, and in our pursuit of the former, we too frequently forget
-the needs of the latter. Happiness depends upon the emotions, Mr.
-Dilling, and Canadians have almost suffocated theirs.”
-
-Obviously, the spark of interest she had ignited had turned to ashes. He
-was silent, so she hurried on.
-
-“We need Art—the medium through which spirituality flows into the life
-of man. We want to hear the symphonies of our composers, the songs of
-our poets, as well as the throb and thunder of motor factories and power
-plants. I would ask the Government to recognise the organisations that
-are endeavouring to promote artistic creation, and to give financial
-assistance to the conspicuously talented artists throughout the
-Dominion!”
-
-“Hold on!” cried Dilling, stung into repelling this premeditated attack
-upon the National Treasury. “We maintain a big Gallery out at the
-Museum. We subsidise Art.”
-
-“Yes,” she countered, quickly, “but not the artist. What you do only
-goes to swell the pay-roll of the Civil Service . . . You don’t go far
-enough! Hasn’t the Government helped to build up the industries of this
-country? Has it not pap-fed factories and commercial enterprises of
-various kinds? You know it has! If I should want a water-power for some
-silly little saw-mill, shall I not have it from my Province, for the
-asking? There’s not a doubt of it! Yet, no one thinks of providing a
-greater power and one whereby this growing unrest can be composed. We
-are making a great point of conserving our natural resources, but who
-thinks of conserving our _spiritual_ resources, Mr. Dilling? We need the
-one no less than the other. Men are reaching out towards Art!”
-
-“Government is organised to legislate for peace and order in the
-community.”
-
-“Aristotle said that Government was organised to make people happy. I
-scarcely think we have made good along his principles, do you?”
-
-“You can’t legislate people into happiness.”
-
-“No! But you can provide the things that will create that state of mind.
-I should like to see a National Theatre, Mr. Dilling, in which the
-struggles and triumphs of Canada might be told by her own sons and
-daughters. Love of our common country can be fostered in no happier way.
-Let us have annual prizes for excelling talent in the Arts, and Science,
-and Literature!”
-
-“Have we any poets worth recognising?” interrupted Dilling.
-
-“Ah, I knew you would make that objection!” cried Hebe Barrington. “I
-knew that your thoughts would fly at once to Milton, and Keats, and
-Shelley . . . and the greatest of them all, Shakespeare. You immediately
-compare us with the immortals, and feel that we lose by the comparison.
-I don’t profess to offer you a Homer or a Sappho. But there were lesser
-poets in Athens whom Pericles favoured at the expense of the people’s
-purse. It’s harder for poetry and the Arts to flourish to-day, than two
-thousand years ago—Oh, don’t you see, _we_ need a National Theatre?”
-
-“It’s an idea,” conceded Dilling, with caution.
-
-Hebe Barrington was clever. She did not press her slight advantage but
-prepared to beat a strategic retreat.
-
-“I knew that you would see it,” she cried. “How else can we make
-idealism real save by expressing it first through Art and then weaving
-it into our practical experiences? How else can we keep alive the
-traditions that have given us our Empire? How teach them to the young? I
-am full of schemes for working this thing out. May I come to see you
-again—or better still,” she amended, watching him intently with her
-great, soft eyes, “will you come to me, say this day week?”
-
-“If you like,” he said, opening the door.
-
-Presently, he opened the window, too. The room was close with a heavy,
-sweetish odour that offended him.
-
-He looked down the river, past the Mint and the Archives. Catching sight
-of the smoke-clouded roof of Earnscliffe—once the stately residence of
-Sir John Macdonald—he fell to wondering what the Grand Old Man would
-have said to such a proposition . . .
-
-A National Theatre!
-
-The Greeks, he remembered, spared neither time nor money on their
-dramatic temple, which was free! On the other hand, the Canadian theatre
-was almost prohibitive in point of admission fee, and far from being the
-object of Governmental support, it was controlled by a group of Semitic
-gentlemen whose habitat was Broadway and whose taste reflected anything
-but a Canadian National spirit. In Rome, Mommens had taught him, there
-were fewer occupations more lucrative than those of actor and
-dancer—Roscius, one of the former, receiving the equivalent of $30,000
-as his annual income, and Dionysia, a fairy-footed maid, $10,000
-yearly—more than twice the amount of his Parliamentary indemnity!
-
-Why should Canada not have her theatre?
-
-He had dreamed of leisure to write—a drama of the West. Often he had
-pictured its theme unfolding in a mighty spectacle that would rival
-those of Ancient Rome, when six hundred mules passed in review across
-the stage of a military pageant, and whole armies were in requisition to
-give verisimilitude to a production.
-
-He saw vast herds of buffalo and cattle; he heard the thunder of their
-flying hoofs and the yells of the pursuing Red Men. From the south and
-east, troops of devil-may-care cowboys burst upon the scene. The whirr
-of arrows, the snap of rifles, beat across his consciousness. And as the
-play progressed, over the flaming prairie there crawled a slow, white
-streak, coming to a halt at last in what looked like the heart of
-infinity. And presently, there appeared a tiny farm.
-
-Deep in moonlit gorges, Dilling saw fur traders, whiskey smugglers,
-Indians, and cattle thieves, threading a cautious way. Then came the
-flash of scarlet coats and diminishing disorder.
-
-And along the trails made by the thirsty buffalo, followed by wary Red
-Men, rediscovered by ambitious young surveyors who found that wisdom was
-born in brute, and even in primeval man, before it made its way to
-books, the railway flung its slender arms across an infant nation; and
-settlers came hard upon the heels of construction crews, a strange
-assortment who spoke their parts in the music of unfamiliar, polyglot
-tongues.
-
-And on the site of some forgotten Indian encampment, where patient
-squaws pounded out their corn, there grew a field of wheat which gave
-way to a small settlement, and then a town where gigantic storehouses
-now husbanded the grain!
-
-Ah, God, the glamour of the West—his West! Suddenly, it sang in his
-blood, it shone in his eyes, it dazzled him and provoked emotions that
-no woman had ever stirred.
-
-A National Theatre? Well, it certainly was an idea, but he must not be
-intrigued by it; there was no hurry. The proposition needed thinking
-. . . Dilling crossed the room, took the receiver from its hook and
-called up Azalea. He was unaccountably disappointed to learn that she
-was out.
-
-He realised with a sense of shock that she was the only friend he had
-made since coming to the Capital. At the moment, he felt that she was
-more than a friend . . . that she was a necessity. But he resisted this
-weakness as he would have resisted dependence upon a stimulant or
-sedative. Dilling liked to believe in his self-sufficiency, his
-detachment from all human ties. He could not deny, however, that Azalea
-fed him intellectually—food convenient for him.
-
-“She feeds my mind,” he repeated, surprised that this should be so.
-“Isn’t it curious that she should possess this power . . .” It was all
-he asked of God.
-
-His feeling was one that did honour to Platonism and now, as he sat
-reflecting upon it, Raymond Dilling wondered just what Azalea thought of
-him. Did she think his standards worthy of his calling? Had she faith in
-his singleness of purpose, and did she commend his policy for its
-wisdom? Or could she have misunderstood him, read into his unashamed
-confessions, the easy cant of him who makes a profession of sincerity?
-
-He had taken for granted that she was in accord with his political
-creed, that she appreciated his native worth; but never before had he
-asked himself the question . . . did she like him? He had no assurance
-that she did. Admitting her acceptance of him upon his own terms, so to
-speak, might she not feel for him as we so often feel towards estimable
-persons whose blameless characters inspire us with nothing but
-respectful tolerance? On the other hand, suppose she did not regard him
-as a worthy figure, would she dislike him? Are there not natures to whom
-an impostor presents a personality unreasonably appealing? Has not the
-world had its Casanovas and Cagliostros?
-
-What manner of man did Azalea like? What type stirred her rich
-imagination?
-
-These unanswerable questions provoked him to an unwonted consideration
-of the girl, but he failed to recollect an occasion when she had
-revealed her inner thoughts and aspirations to him. What heart throbs,
-he asked himself, pulsed beneath that strange, drab exterior? What
-spirit wounds were covered with the cuirass of her whimsical satire?
-What was her philosophy of life, and what did she really think of him?
-
-He had no idea, but he did know that he wished to be her friend.
-
-Dilling couldn’t recall ever formulating a definite opinion on the
-subject of friendship, and he was not at all sure what Azalea might
-require of him. Sympathy, he mused, might be helpful in times of strain,
-but he was not prepared to admit that friendships were vital. A man
-could—perhaps should—be independent of their fetters, unseeking and
-unsought. Friendship had its rise in the emotions according to
-philosophers, and was therefore a weakness. Yet, was it? History showed
-that great men transmuted it into strength.
-
-Which would it be for him, a weakness or a source of strength? And if
-the latter, how best could he convert its power into fuel for his
-energy?
-
-He looked at his watch. Almost time for lunch. Azalea should be at home
-now, he thought. Again, he turned to the telephone.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In the room above, Mrs. Barrington was eagerly accepting a whisky and
-soda from the hospitable Member for Morroway.
-
-“You look as though a little stimulant would do you no harm,” observed
-Howarth, busily attentive with the cigarettes.
-
-“Without it, I shan’t last till sundown,” returned the woman. “Never
-have I spent such a half hour . . . and never again!”
-
-“Difficult, eh?” asked Sullivan.
-
-“Impossible! Why, Uncle Rufus, that man’s not human! Heaven knows, I’m
-not a vain woman,” she declared, “but for all the notice he took of me,
-he might have been a graven image, or I might have been one of the
-shrieking sisterhood! There wasn’t a smile . . . there wasn’t a flicker
-of response! I kept thinking all the time of Congreve, and his _Lady
-Wishfort_ trying to captivate that stupid ass, old _Mirabell_!” Her full
-voice trembled with excitement and anger. Into her cheeks flooded a wave
-of natural colour, beneath their expertly applied rouge. “I’m through
-. . . I’m through,” she cried. “He made me think of a eunuch
-contemplating a statue of Venus!”
-
-
- CHAPTER 13.
-
-Mrs. Pratt stood in the hard glitter of too many electric lights, in a
-hard, encrusted green gown, and greeted her guests with a hard, set
-smile that froze any budding sense of enjoyment they may have brought
-with them. Maude was silent and sullen. She had caught the backwash of
-her mother’s ill-temper throughout two trying weeks, and the party had
-become a nightmare to her. Augustus, miserable in his evening clothes,
-and perspiring under the weight of admonitions that warred with his
-sense of hospitality, watched her in a passion of sympathy. After a
-succession of violent scenes, he was dolorously conscious that he and
-Maude together, were no match for the determined woman whom he had
-meekly followed to the altar.
-
-“She’s got too damned much gulp,” he thought to himself, wondering how
-to reduce this hampering characteristic in his daughter.
-
-A vigorous jab in the side reminded him that something was amiss. “Eh,
-my dear?” he whispered. “What’s wrong?”
-
-“Take your hands out of your pockets, Augustus,” hissed Mrs. Pratt, “and
-don’t you dare to call Dr. Prendergast, ‘Doc’!”
-
-“Doctor and Missus Bzen-an-Bza-a!” announced Cr’ymer, from the door.
-
-Cr’ymer was a very recent acquisition to the Pratt ménage. Mrs. Pratt
-would have preferred a Japanese but for once she was overruled by her
-husband, who harboured the malicious belief that every man of foreign
-birth, especially negroes and Orientals, look upon the women of our race
-with lascivious eyes. So when Cr’ymer applied, and upheld his
-cleverly-forged reference with a plausible story, Mrs. Pratt engaged
-him—bibulous mien and Cockney accent, notwithstanding.
-
-Having been but a few weeks in the city, and most of that time
-comfortably soothed by vinous refreshment, Cr’ymer was not conversant
-with the names of social Ottawa, and even had he been, it is doubtful
-that those of Mrs. Pratt’s guests would have been familiar to him.
-
-“How d’ye do?” asked Mrs. Prendergast, annoyed to find that no one else
-had arrived. There was a suggestion of over-eagerness in being early.
-
-“How do yuh do?” returned Mrs. Pratt, wishing that she was Lady Elton or
-someone worth while. “Sit down, won’t you? I think you’ll find any of my
-chairs comfortable, and there’s no need for you to stand because we have
-to . . . The others can’t be long, now.”
-
-“They can if they choose,” remarked Dr. Prendergast, who liked his
-dinner in the middle of the day and a substantial supper at six o’clock.
-“Never saw anything to beat the people, to-day. They don’t start out
-till it’s time for decent folks to be in bed. Things get later and
-later. Shouldn’t be surprised to see the hour for dinner set at eleven
-o’clock . . . Outrageous!”
-
-“Well, with so many engagements to crowd in of an afternoon, and with
-the House sitting till six o’clock, it’s vurry difficult to dine much
-earlier than seven o’clock,” argued Mrs. Pratt. “Oh, here are the Leeds.
-How do yuh do? Augustus, meet Mrs. Leeds!”
-
-“How do?” mumbled Augustus, and prayed for the coming of the cocktails,
-which, as an antidote for the concoctions of an atrocious cook, he had
-made extra strong.
-
-Mrs. Pratt aspired to a good cook, by which she meant a person who could
-disguise the most familiar comestibles so that recognition was
-impossible. Personally, she liked plain and wholesome cooking. Most
-people do. But she laboured under the misapprehension that members of
-the aristocracy ate strange and undistinguishable dishes; moreover, that
-the degree of exaltation which one had attained, was evident by the kind
-of food one ate. For example, she could not conceive of His Majesty
-enjoying a rasher of liver and bacon, nor a Duke sitting down to the
-staple pork and beans so familiar to the humble farming class. Long
-hours she pondered the question of food, rising gradually through the
-ragouts and rissoles, ramakins and casseroles, to ravioli, caviare,
-canapes and the bewildering _aux_ and _a la’s_ that make a wholesome
-menu so picturesque and indigestible.
-
-The cook that Mrs. Pratt had in mind, was one who had served at least an
-Earl, and had titillated the palates of his class. But at that time—now
-half a decade past—social distinctions were drawn quite as finely in
-the kitchen as the drawing-room, and the woman who would exchange her
-culinary gifts and aristocratic associations for the wages of a mistress
-not even an Honourable in her own right, had not been found.
-
-The hour set for dinner had past. In the drawing-room, a noticeable
-chill tempered the atmosphere. Mrs. Pratt was not an easy hostess. The
-word “entertaining” was, for her, the most perfect euphemism, and in
-ordinary circumstances, she would have taken satisfaction rather than
-pleasure by gathering people at her home. On this occasion, she was
-denied satisfaction, and a rising resentment gave her far from gracious
-manner an added acerbity. Conversation lost all semblance to
-spontaneity, and every eye seemed to be fixed upon Mrs. Pratt, who sat
-stiffly on a Louis Quinze chair and hoped that Rufus Sullivan was
-sensible of her displeasure.
-
-She blamed him for this contretemps. It was he who had asked her to
-invite the Barringtons, laying delicate emphasis upon their social
-importance no less than upon their importance to the Party.
-
-“Strangers,” he said, “but excellently connected and frightfully
-smart—rather too smart for parochial Ottawa, I fear, dear lady!
-However, they’re well worth cultivating, and a clever woman could make
-no little use of Hebe Barrington.”
-
-Certainly, she was not difficult to know. Her acceptance of Mrs. Pratt’s
-laboured and formal invitation—delivered for lack of time by
-telephone—was so casual as to startle that good lady. This was not her
-conception of the manners of the elect.
-
-And now they were quite fifteen minutes late. Mrs. Pratt’s anger rose.
-
-She had just decided to proceed to the dining-room without them, when
-there was a furious ring at the bell, a hurried step on the stair, and
-Cr’ymer signalled her that they had arrived.
-
-“My dear Mrs. Pratt,” cried Hebe, sweeping forward, “_is_ there an
-apology profound enough to touch the hearts of your guests—not to
-mention your husband and yourself? How do you do, Mr. Pratt? And your
-daughter . . . why, you dear child, kiss me! Fortune has indeed smiled
-upon this family . . . Mr. Dilling? What a delightful surprise . . .
-Mrs. Pratt,” she went on, bowing and smiling impartially, drawing
-everyone about her, if not actually, at least by suggestion, “_do_ tell
-me that I am to sit next to Mr. Dilling, and—” with an arch glance at
-her host, “not too far from Mr. Pratt!”
-
-“Mr. Dilling is to take you in to dinner,” replied the hostess, tartly.
-
-The cocktails, supplementing Mrs. Barrington’s entrance, infused new
-life into the party. Most of those present walked from the drawing-room
-in a pleasant frame of mind.
-
-“They say that society is divided into two classes,” said Hebe, as they
-took their places at the table, “those who have more dinners than
-appetite, and those who have more appetite than dinners. I don’t know
-that I should confess it, but I belong to the latter class. I’m always
-ready for a meal . . . Ah, what a charming room this is!”
-
-With one or two exceptions, the guests were unpleasantly impressed by
-this expression of frank admiration. According to their canons of
-etiquette, personal remarks were not The Thing. But if the impulse to
-make one proved utterly irresistible, then it should be prefaced by some
-such phrase as,
-
-“If I may be pardoned for saying so, that is a beautiful . . .” or, “I
-hope you won’t be offended if I pass a remark on your . . .”
-
-Even Mrs. Pratt was only slightly mollified. The personnel of her dinner
-party differed radically from what she had designed. Indeed, of the
-eleven guests who took their places at the table, there were but three
-whose names had figured on her original list of invitations. Besides,
-she was not conscious of the instinctive liking for Mrs. Barrington that
-Sullivan had predicted. Quite the contrary! In the first place, she
-disapproved of her gown—a shimmering sheath of opalescent sequins
-infinitely more striking than that which Mrs. Pratt herself was wearing.
-In the second place, she did not like a(nother) woman to monopolise the
-conversation. In the third place, she objected to the manner in which
-Augustus was being captivated right under her very eyes, and these were
-but a few of the items that she set down upon her mental score. But that
-Mrs. Barrington was smart could not be denied; and as illustrious names
-slipped artfully into the recital of her experiences and associations,
-most of the assembled company found themselves giving her a grudging
-respect. There were four exceptions—the Dillings, Sullivan and Azalea.
-
-“I’m sure I’ve heard of you, Dr. Prendergast,” she glowed at that
-gentleman. “But where, or from whom, I simply can’t remember. I have the
-most dreadful habit of forgetting names . . . if it weren’t for Toddles,
-there, I’d forget my own. He’s just as good at remembering as I am at
-forgetting, so we manage famously, eh, my fond love?”
-
-Barrington hid a smile and mumbled something that passed for an answer.
-He was a delightful little man who had become accustomed to his wife’s
-brilliant impertinences, and rather enjoyed them when they were not
-carried too far.
-
-He had not been taken into her confidence, of late, but suspected that
-she had some telling reason for imposing these curious people and this
-abominable dinner upon him. It was his nature to be amiable under trying
-circumstances, so he made himself agreeable to the ladies on either
-side, and tried to look upon the occasion as a bit of a lark. Mrs. Leeds
-was not lacking in charm—a pale little creature whose mouth had a
-discontented droop and who was ashamed or afraid to meet her husband’s
-eyes. She talked bridge throughout the evening, bewailing the sums she
-had lost because someone at the table had failed to bid or to play
-according to the rules of the game. It was quite distressing to hear her
-re-play hands that should have added to her score below the line, but
-which built the tower for her opponents.
-
-“For example,” she said, under cover of Dr. Prendergast’s monologue,
-“only last night, the most unheard-of thing happened! I declared no
-trump. Though weak in spades I had every suit protected, and was
-perfectly justified in my declaration. The man on my left bid two
-spades. My partner passed, telling me he had no protection in that suit,
-but I felt safe in raising to two no trump, because, supposing that the
-bidder held ace, king to five, _at least_, I knew that my queen was
-sufficiently guarded by two little ones. Do you follow me?” she asked,
-anxiously.
-
-“Perfectly,” lied Barrington. “And then what happened?”
-
-“Well, the bidder led the seven of spades. My partner laid down his hand
-which only held the ten. Picture my horror when this woman—” she
-indicated an imaginary third player “—took the trick with the ace, and
-then _led the Jack through my Queen_! Of course, my hand was shot
-absolutely to bits. They took five straight spade tricks and two in
-diamonds before I had a look in. Time after time, I am penalised just
-that way by playing with imbeciles who don’t know how to bid.”
-
-“Rotten luck,” sympathised Barrington. “What the devil is this we are
-eating?”
-
-Mrs. Prendergast was the simplest person to entertain. When not giving
-undivided attention to her husband, she was entrusting to her
-sympathetic partner a list of his outstanding virtues as a citizen,
-husband and father.
-
-What “the Dawkter” thought and said provided her with an inexhaustible
-topic for conversation. Apparently she had no opinions of her own, but,
-as her husband was quite willing to listen to the echo of his oracles,
-they were an exceedingly happy couple.
-
-The Doctor was a generous-waisted gentleman whose talents exercised
-themselves in the field of proprietary medicine. Prendergast’s
-Anti-Agony Aliment was just beginning to fraternise with Best Wear
-Tires, Breakfast Foods and Theatrical Attractions on the bill boards.
-Presently, however, as a result of sapient advertising and the
-deplorable ignorance of English by the people who speak it, “aliment”
-merged into “ailment” and Prendergast’s Anti-Agony Ailment became the
-popular specific for those to whom all advertising makes direct appeal.
-
-And so carefully generalised was the nature of the disorder it was
-supposed to correct that the decoction was consumed indiscriminately by
-sufferers from rheumatism, chilblains, dyspepsy, sciatica, high blood
-pressure and sclerosis. According to the testimonials that made their
-way into the press it did many people . . . good.
-
-The Doctor’s mind was full of human ills, and the value of advertising.
-To the latter he was a recent convert, and inevitably fanatical.
-Requiring several thousand dollars to carry on his campaign, he was
-doing his best to bring the others to his point of view.
-
-With the exception of Mrs. Barrington, no one gave him any
-encouragement. Throughout three entire courses, she murmured,
-“Incredible! Amazing! It sounds like a fairy tale!” at moments when he
-might have given some one else an opportunity to speak, and started him
-off again with renewed zest and vigour. Under cover of his eloquence,
-she talked to Raymond Dilling.
-
-Dilling was suffering acute mental and physical distress. Fastidious
-always about his food, he could not eat the dishes put before him, and
-the little bit he did manage to swallow was flavoured with the scent
-which Hebe Barrington perpetually exuded. Positively, he would have
-preferred the odour of moth balls.
-
-He had never seen a woman so naked . . . not even his wife. Marjorie
-emphasised a characteristic which she called modesty and, having no
-curiosity whatever about the human form, Dilling respected her reserve.
-
-He sat at the corner of the table, next to Mrs. Pratt, and found that he
-could not escape contact with the warm mundanity of Mrs. Barrington.
-Although the table was not crowded, she seemed to give him no room. Once
-or twice, he shuddered, and she mistaking his movement, smiled
-provocatively into his eyes.
-
-“You haven’t forgotten about Monday afternoon?” she whispered. “I’ve
-been thinking of it all week.”
-
-Dilling had forgotten.
-
-“There’s really nothing to be gained by discussing the proposition yet,”
-he said. “We’ve been so busy in the House, I haven’t had time to think
-about it.”
-
-“No matter. We can become friends,” she murmured, significantly. “Can’t
-we?”
-
-A sudden silence relieved him of the necessity to answer. Dr.
-Prendergast had run down, and was looking at Mrs. Barrington.
-
-“Positively the most interesting thing I ever heard,” she cried.
-“Toddles, I wish _you_ could invent something other than tarradiddles.
-_Do_ send me an autographed bottle, Doctor! I haven’t a thing the matter
-with me, and don’t promise to use it. I’m so disgustingly healthy. But
-I’d love to have it to put on the shelf with my signed books and other
-treasures. Won’t it be nice, Toddles?”
-
-Azalea bent her head above her plate and scarcely knew whether to be
-angry or amused. Sitting on the same side of the table as Mrs.
-Barrington, Dilling and the Doctor, neither she nor her partner, Leeds,
-could see exactly what was going on. But what she did not divine, was
-reflected in the varying expressions of Turner, who sat on Mrs. Pratt’s
-left, Eva Leeds and Marjorie. Even Pratt, who had fallen an instant and
-unresisting victim to Hebe Barrington’s charms, gave her more than
-inkling of the by-play at the other end of the table.
-
-She was very much alive to the presence of Sullivan, who sat directly
-opposite and assumed towards Marjorie an air of offensive
-proprietorship. Prejudiced against him perhaps by the opinion of her
-friends, she had never felt for the man active dislike until this moment
-when every slanderous tale she had heard leaped into her mind. Although
-he had become a frequent visitor at the Dilling home, she had met him
-for the first time this evening, and had not the slightest desire to
-continue the acquaintance. Furthermore, she wondered if Marjorie could
-be persuaded to put an end to such a friendship.
-
-“Are you having a good time, little woman?” she heard him whisper.
-
-“Yes, thank you,” replied Marjorie, hoping that telling a polite lie
-would not be a sin.
-
-“Not so good as though we were having dinner alone—without all these
-dull people?”
-
-“No,” admitted Marjorie.
-
-“When shall we have another party . . . of our own?”
-
-“I don’t know just now. Perhaps next week.”
-
-By the furious colour that surged into Marjorie’s cheeks, Azalea knew
-that Sullivan had caressed her under cover of the table.
-
-“It’s always at this point that the liveliest dinner begins to grow
-dull,” cried Hebe Barrington. “Have you ever noticed it, Mrs. Pratt? No?
-Dear me, _what_ partners you must have had! I believe there _are_
-super-women with whom men are never tiresome. How do you account for
-that, Doctor?” Then, without waiting for an answer, she went on, “I have
-a theory of my own regarding this slump in brilliancy and wit. It is
-simply a matter of being too well fed. The animal wants to stretch and
-sleep. What do you think?” she smiled at Augustus, who was so disturbed
-by this sudden attention that he interfered with Cr’ymer’s unsteady
-serving of the wine and between them they managed to upset the decanter.
-
-“Oh, Mrs. Pratt!” Hebe turned in mock terror to her hostess. “I throw
-myself upon your protection. He is going to blame me! I’m sorry, but I’m
-innocent. Uneasy looks the face that wears a frown, Mr. Pratt! If you
-will only forgive me, I’ll promise not to speak to you again all
-evening.”
-
-“Wish you’d get the missus to go that far,” retorted Augustus, avoiding
-his wife’s eye.
-
-There was a laugh in which Mrs. Pratt did not join. Conversation dropped
-to a murmur between couples. Hebe repeated her question to Dilling and
-received from him a grudging affirmative. A ponderous hummock of doughy
-consistency was tasted and thrust aside, and the hostess rose from the
-table.
-
-“Poor Augustus!” whispered Hebe, as she sank down beside Azalea in the
-drawing-room. “Won’t hell-fire be his when we’ve gone?”
-
-“Perhaps if we’re especially nice to her, she will have forgotten by
-then.”
-
-“Not a chance, my dear! I don’t know the individual, but I know the
-type. Death will be his only escape . . . But, tell me, just who are
-you?”
-
-“Nobody in particular,” answered Azalea. “That’s why I’m here,” she
-added, with an unusual touch of malice.
-
-Mrs. Barrington was startled at this thrust. Into her eyes there shone a
-budding respect for the girl.
-
-“Yes, but who _are_ you? What’s your name?”
-
-Azalea told her.
-
-“Deane? Oh! You’re a great friend of the Dillings, then?”
-
-“You seem surprised.”
-
-“I am,” confessed the other woman. “I’ve heard of you, but—er—” she
-ran an appraising look over the reconstructed gown that had adorned the
-person of Lady Elton for three years—“I thought you would be
-different.”
-
-“A doubtful compliment,” suggested Azalea.
-
-“As you like,” returned Hebe, and seated herself at the piano.
-
-Somewhat to Azalea’s surprise, Mrs. Barrington made no effort to capture
-Dilling when the men re-joined them. She turned the battery of her
-fascinations upon Pratt with an occasional shot at the Doctor. Dilling
-made his way directly to Azalea and dropped on the chair beside her.
-
-“How long do these things last?” he enquired, under his breath. “Can’t
-we go home?”
-
-“In a few minutes. Wait until Mrs. Barrington stops singing. The bridge
-players will probably stay on.”
-
-Dilling made a frank signal to his wife, then turned back to the girl.
-“Do you mind coming to the house with us?” he asked. “I will see you
-home. There is something particular I want to say.”
-
-The song ended abruptly, and Azalea raised her eyes to meet those of
-Hebe Barrington. There was something in their expression that made her
-flush. And there was the same suggestiveness, the same mockery in her
-words at parting.
-
-“If Miss Deane will wait until I have redeemed my promise to Mr. Pratt
-and sung him one more song, we will drop her at the door and save Mr.
-Dilling the trouble.”
-
-“Cut him out of that pleasure,” amended Barrington, quickly.
-
-“Even pleasures are troublesome, Toddles, dear,” said his wife, “look at
-me, for an illustration. However, there may be another time . . . You
-must all come and see me. They say my parties are rather fun. I’m
-usually at home on Friday evenings, and nearly every Sunday afternoon.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Azalea did not speak for a moment after Dilling had made his
-proposition. She dared not trust her voice.
-
-“You can’t be offended?” he asked, bluntly.
-
-She shook her head.
-
-“On the contrary, it gives me the most extraordinary sense of pleasure
-that you want me . . . that you think I can be of some real service to
-you.”
-
-“Well?”
-
-“Well . . . that’s all! It’s simply out of the question! I know my
-father will never hear of such a thing.”
-
-“He must! I’ll see him to-morrow. I’ll show him that he’s wrong. I’ll
-say . . .”
-
-“You’ll say,” interrupted Azalea, forcing a laugh, “‘Sir, I have come to
-make a formal request for your daughter’s . . . shorthand!’ And then,
-“I’m glad, for your sake, Mr. Dilling, we don’t own a dog!”
-
-“You can’t discourage me,” cried Dilling. “I’ve made up my mind that we
-will work together, and if you consent I feel that the thing is as good
-as settled.”
-
-It was. The following morning, when Azalea carried in her father’s
-breakfast tray, she found that he had passed out of life as he had
-passed through it, easily, and without toil or struggle.
-
-
- CHAPTER 14.
-
-Two months had passed since Azalea had undertaken her secretarial
-duties. She felt that she had entered into a new life, that a wonderful
-renascence was hers. Never in all her imaginings, had she dreamed of
-days so replete with happiness.
-
-A sense of deference to the dead prompted Mrs. Deane to protest against
-her daughter’s accepting the appointment. They talked at one another
-across an abyss that widened daily and separated them.
-
-“You shouldn’t do it, Azalea,” she cried. “It doesn’t seem right. You’re
-disobeying your father when he’s scarcely cold in the grave . . . It
-isn’t as though you didn’t know that . . . I mean, I suppose it wouldn’t
-be so bad if he had been dead a long time . . .”
-
-“Disobedience is a matter of principle, not time, mother!” returned the
-girl. “Don’t you see that I have no choice? We can’t live without the
-equivalent of father’s superannuation allowance!”
-
-“Well, I’m sure I don’t know what to do,” Mrs. Deane whimpered,
-“Business is so difficult for a woman to grasp . . . Oh, Azalea, if he
-knows it, he will be so dreadfully annoyed! Isn’t there some other way?
-If you had only been married . . .”
-
-“Please, mother, let’s not go into that! I’m sorry to have disappointed
-you, but for myself, I haven’t a single regret. I don’t look upon
-marriage as the only solution of a woman’s financial problems, you
-know.”
-
-“It’s a convenient one,” argued Mrs. Deane, rather more pertinently than
-usual. “There are the girls . . . they don’t have to work.”
-
-“If they don’t, then they are cheating their husbands,” cried Azalea,
-purposely misunderstanding. “And too many married women who don’t cheat
-their husbands are being cheated—like you,” she nearly ended.
-
-“Oh, my child!”
-
-“I can’t look upon marriage as a refuge from the dangers that beset a
-female traveller on the Sea of Life. To me it is a tricky craft that may
-play you false as it operates between the two inescapable ports of Birth
-and Death.”
-
-“And you are our baby, too,” sighed Mrs. Deane, as irrelevantly as Mrs.
-Nickleby.
-
-“A baby who has grown up at last, and thanks God for the opportunity
-that has come disguised as a necessity; a baby, dear mother, who does
-not look upon congenial work as a test of courage, but as a divine
-privilege.”
-
-Curiously enough, once she was established in her new position,
-unreserved approval was expressed among her friends. Many of them
-attributed the move to some suggestion of their own. Lady Denby and Mrs.
-Hudson both remembered having advised Azalea to take some such step
-years ago. Lady Elton thought she had shown her good sense at last, but
-hoped that Mr. Dilling would not be too exacting. Entertaining was a
-bore under the best of conditions. She simply could not imagine getting
-along without Azalea’s assistance. Mrs. Long saw an opportunity for
-picking up odd bits of political gossip that eluded the ordinary
-reporter, and making a neat little income on the side.
-
-“You’re clever enough to do it, my dear,” she said. “Now, don’t be
-thin-skinned. Spice is what the people want—any of them who bother to
-read the papers.”
-
-As for Dilling, he felt himself infused with new zest and enthusiasm. He
-was conscious of a greater capacity for work, an accession of power. His
-brain seemed to function tirelessly and with amazing clearness. He
-developed a veritable rapacity for what appeared to be ineluctable
-problems, and he who had been a model of industry became a miracle of
-inexhaustible energy.
-
-It was about this time that men began to look to him as the most able
-exponent of their political creeds; it was upon him that they called to
-master such questions as Newfoundland’s entrance into the Dominion,
-trade with the West Indies, reciprocity with the United States, and upon
-his slender shoulders fell the burden of carrying on the most
-contentious debate of latter times—Canada’s Naval Policy. In short, it
-was to him that his Party turned, as the only man capable of grasping
-those knotty issues of international importance and presenting Canada’s
-case in a masterly way before the Council of the Nations.
-
-“I’ve been invited to join the Golf Club,” he announced one morning, as
-Azalea came into the office.
-
-“I’m glad! You’re not hesitating about it, are you?”
-
-“Oh, I don’t know. What do you think?”
-
-“I think you are becoming no end of a social lion,” she replied,
-smiling, “and that soon you will be roaring as lustily in drawing-rooms
-as on the floor of the House. Seriously, I think you should accept. It
-will be good for Marjorie.”
-
-“I’m not so sure. She hasn’t many friends among that crowd. However, I
-think I see what you mean.”
-
-Azalea hoped he did. She was desperately anxious for him to realise that
-in the Capital success is regarded from only one angle, the Social.
-Professional, literary, political, all these are but feeders to the main
-issue.
-
-“I spent the afternoon with your exceptionally brilliant Dr. Aldrich,”
-said Sir Paul Pollock, the eminent British anthropologist, during the
-course of a dinner the Chesleys had given in his honour.
-
-“Aldrich?” echoed the company. “Who’s he?”
-
-Sir Paul did not take the question seriously. “I don’t blame you,” he
-laughed. “Two scientists at the same party would be excessively heavy
-wheeling.”
-
-“But who _is_ he?” insisted Miss Mabel Angus-McCallum. “I never heard of
-him.”
-
-“Nor I . . .”
-
-“Nor I . . .”
-
-“Well—ah—ha—if you are not pulling my leg,” answered the amazed
-guest, “perhaps you will be interested in knowing that he is one of the
-most famous biologists living. But—ah—ha—! I expect you are just
-stringing me.”
-
-It was gradually borne in upon him that they were not, that they had no
-desire to cultivate the men and women whose lives are devoted to the
-advancement of their race, that even the names of such people were
-unfamiliar to them and that prominence in their especial sphere was
-clouded by a total eclipse of the social solar system.
-
-It was this latter point that Azalea ardently wished to make Dilling
-recognise. He was so immersed in his public life that there was little
-time for the consideration of any other question, and Marjorie had not
-sufficient astuteness to make the most of her advantage or profit by
-experiences.
-
-She seemed incapable of keeping step with her husband, of acquiring a
-broader vision than that which was hers in Pinto Plains. In her eyes, a
-thousand dollars was always a staggering sum, five hundred an immense
-concourse of people.
-
-“But, dearest Marjorie,” cried Azalea, in affectionate exasperation one
-day, “you _must_ learn to see beyond a home-made dress and a parish
-tea-party!”
-
-“If my clothes and my food mean more to people than I do, myself,”
-argued Marjorie, “then I don’t want to have anything more to do with
-them. We’re just plain Canadians, and I don’t want to pretend
-otherwise!”
-
-“Yes, but—but—” Azalea often found herself at a loss for illustrations
-that would co-ordinate with her friend’s code of ethics, “conforming to
-certain conventions isn’t exactly pretence. You might look upon it as a
-ceremony, ritual, something that is an adjunct to a position.”
-
-“A lady is a lady anywhere,” murmured Marjorie conscious, herself, that
-she was not precisely strengthening her argument.
-
-“So is a clergyman,” replied Azalea, “but you would not like to see him
-conduct a Service in a pair of tennis flannels or a bathing suit.”
-
-“Oh!” The point had gone home. “What have I done that’s wrong?”
-
-“Nothing so very wrong, you dear lamb,” said the older girl, kissing
-Marjorie’s troubled mouth, “but try not to be so humble. Humility is a
-splendid virtue, sometimes—but not when we’re heading for the Cabinet!”
-
-“It frightens me to think of it.”
-
-“But you must overcome that, and feel perfectly at ease with Mrs.
-Blaine, Mrs. Carmichael, Lady Denby and the others. You must make them
-your friends.”
-
-“I can’t be friends with people if they don’t want me!”
-
-Azalea tried to explain that in public life friendship and association
-are more or less interchangeable terms. “You were not friends with all
-your classmates at school,” she said, “but you associated with them,
-especially on formal occasions. It was then that your status was fixed
-by your class. It is exactly the same with your position as Mr.
-Dilling’s wife. You must feel yourself worthy of belonging to the
-highest class—the class which has been reached by a very prominent man,
-who will be known in history as one of the greatest statesmen of his
-country.”
-
-“What must I do?” asked Marjorie, as Mrs. Deane might have said it.
-
-“Learn and observe social distinctions. Everyone else does. Show that
-you respect your husband’s achievements and others will follow your
-lead. Why, the Society Columns are read to better advantage by the
-tradespeople, the gas inspector, the telephone operators, the very cab
-drivers, than you.”
-
-“I don’t know what you mean,” said Marjorie, very close to tears.
-
-“I mean that those people almost unerringly place the rest of us in our
-proper class. They observe the rules of precedence, which you don’t. If
-there happened to be but one cab at a stand, and both you and Mrs.
-Blaine wanted it, which one of you would get the thing?”
-
-Marjorie did not answer.
-
-“Mrs. Blaine! You know it! Why? Because she goes to Church regularly on
-Sundays, pays her bills promptly, refuses to gossip and slander her
-neighbours? Not a bit of it! Because she puts a value on herself that is
-compatible with her husband’s position . . . at least, that’s near
-enough the mark to serve my purpose in scolding you!”
-
-“All right,” sighed Marjorie, “I’ll try to be stiff with people, if
-that’s the way to help Raymond. I don’t believe it, you know, Azalea,
-but I think I see what you mean.”
-
-Azalea, however, was not so sanguine.
-
- * * * * *
-
-“Do you play golf?” she asked Dilling.
-
-“Oh, I’ve handled the clubs once or twice. But I won’t have any time to
-devote to the game.”
-
-“You must make time. It will do you a world of good. All play and no
-work will make you an ideal politician,” she teased.
-
-“You will come out with us to dinner, the first night we go?”
-
-“Oh, no!” she cried. “You must take someone infinitely more
-distinguished. You must shine and let your light be seen before men. If
-I might make a suggestion, give a very exclusive dinner party and invite
-the Chief.”
-
-“But you must come, too!”
-
-“We’ll see. In the meantime, hadn’t we better tackle this formidable
-mail? It seems to grow larger every morning.”
-
-Towards the middle of the afternoon, a spare, thin-lipped little man
-came into the room.
-
-“Howdy, Raymond?” he greeted. “Been tryin’ to run you down to your hole
-this last half hour. Got kinder twisted in this big buildin’.”
-
-“How are you, Sam?” said Dilling, shaking hands. “It’s good to see
-someone from home. Just get in?”
-
-“Just about. How’s the Missus and the kids?”
-
-Dilling assured his visitor that their health was good.
-
-“We’ve had an awful lot of sickness this winter. First, the baby was
-taken with swollen glands, and we’d no sooner got her up an’ about when
-Sammy came down with grippe, and on top o’ that, the wife had to be
-operated on for appendicitis. Makes me creep to think what the doctor’s
-bill is goin’ to be.”
-
-“Don’t worry about that, Sam. Halsey is the soul of consideration and
-patience.”
-
-“Still, he’s got to be paid. Swell office, you’ve got, Raymond.”
-
-Dilling smiled.
-
-“An improvement on my old one, but modest as offices go.”
-
-“This all there is of it?” queried the stranger.
-
-“This is all. We don’t have suites, you know, until we get to be
-Deputies or Commissioners, perhaps. It’s plenty large enough.”
-
-“Sure. I was only wonderin’ where we could have a little talk—a kinduv
-private confab, as you might say,” returned the other, nodding at
-Azalea’s industrious back.
-
-“We can have it right here,” said Dilling, promptly. “This is my
-confidential secretary, Miss Deane. Mr. Sam Dunlop, of Pinto Plains.
-Miss Deane. He’s an old friend and worked hard at the time of my
-election. Go ahead, Sam. What is it?”
-
-“Well—er—” began Mr. Dunlop, in some embarrassment, “it’s about that
-block of ours out home. You mind when we four bought it from them
-Winnipeg fellows, the idea was that they would start in putting
-improvements all around us?”
-
-“In the centre of the town,” supplemented Dilling. “I remember very
-well. There was some talk of street cars. What of it?”
-
-“They’re a bunch of shysters, that’s what! They haven’t spent a dollar
-on First or Second Streets, they only pulled down a couple of buildings
-on the Avenue, and they’re investin’ every dollar they can raise to
-develop Pond Park and turn it into a summer resort. And business is
-trailin’ ’em right out that way.”
-
-Dilling looked grave.
-
-“Has anyone actually moved off First Street?”
-
-“Bowers is moving in the spring. Jennings got an option on the corner of
-Cedar and the Avenue which takes the two biggest merchants away. After
-that, all the little fellows will go.”
-
-“And the hotel they talked about?”
-
-“If they build, it’ll be out the other way. Oh, there ain’t a bit of use
-in you settin’ there thinkin’ that we’ve got a chance,” cried Mr.
-Dunlop. “We’ve studied this thing till it’s a wonder we didn’t get brain
-fever. Says Lewis, ‘We four went into this here deal as friends and
-we’ll stick together. You go down to Ottawa and see Raymond. He’ll look
-after us, same as we’ve been tryin’ to look after his interests.’
-Mumford’s the hardest hit—next to me, that is! But none of us, outside
-of yourself, can afford to hold that property an’ pay taxes while the
-town grows in the other direction.”
-
-“And what do you think I can do?” asked Dilling, in a hard voice.
-
-“You can recommend the sale of our block to the Government, boy, that’s
-where you come in!” Mr. Dunlop dragged his chair closer and poured forth
-his proposition in a rapid whisper.
-
-“But Pinto Plains doesn’t need another Post Office,” argued Raymond
-Dilling. “The Liberals spent fifty thousand dollars for the one we have
-only a few years ago, and you were the first to denounce it, Sam.
-Everyone agreed that the town wouldn’t grow up to it in a hundred
-years.”
-
-“But, damn it all, Raymond, can’t you see that this is different? Can’t
-you get it through your head that we’ll be ruined unless we can sell
-that property and sell it quick? All of us—of course, exceptin’
-you—all of us have got to raise interest on the money we borrowed to
-put into it, and Lord knows where mine is coming from. What’s a dinky
-little Post Office to the Government? Lewis says it ought to be a cinch
-to put it through, for he can condemn the other one, easy! How long do
-you figger it’ll take to get the matter settled, son?”
-
-“It’s settled right now, so far as I’m concerned.”
-
-“How do you mean?”
-
-“I can’t undertake such a job.”
-
-“You . . . what?”
-
-“You’re asking me to betray the confidence of the country, Sam; to rob
-the Treasury. That’s the proposition in plain English, isn’t it?”
-
-Mr. Dunlop denied this accusation eloquently, if irrationally. He
-cajoled, he stormed, he pleaded, he threatened. He reminded Dilling that
-during his election campaign, support had been based on friendship, not
-a strict adherence to truthfulness, and that the boys had not stopped to
-consider every lie that was told on his behalf.
-
-“Runnin’ the country ain’t the same as runnin’ a Sunday School,” he
-added, in justification.
-
-“The governing principles should be the same,” answered Dilling. “No,
-Sam, I can’t do it. Argument is useless. When you and the boys think it
-over, you will agree that the man who would have carried out your
-proposition is not the type that you would have to mould the policy of
-the Nation. I hope that Pinto Plains will never send a chap like that to
-Parliament! You’ll come down to the house, of course, won’t you?”
-
-But Mr. Dunlop did not hear the invitation. He was so absorbed in
-expressing his opinion of the man he had sent to Parliament, that he
-failed to recognise Sir Robert Borden whom he passed in the corridor,
-and ran violently into Sir Eric and Lady Denby without uttering a word
-of apology.
-
-“We’ll fix him,” he muttered under his breath. “We’ll fix him!”
-
-In the office there was silence save for the sibilent fluttering of
-papers on Azalea’s desk. Presently, Dilling spoke.
-
-“I’m too indignant at the moment to be sorry for them!” he said. “And
-it’s something of a shock to find that they held me in no higher esteem
-than to think I would be a party to such jobbery.”
-
-“I doubt that they looked at the matter in just that way. Isn’t it
-merely another example of the common practice of bringing your white
-elephant to feed at the Dominion crib?”
-
-“It’s another example of perverted ethics,” growled Dilling, and he went
-angrily off to lunch.
-
-Azalea sat on, thinking. What, she asked herself, would be the outcome
-of Raymond Dilling’s uncompromising attitude with men of Dunlop’s
-calibre? Would he, like Marjorie, persistently close his eyes to the
-advantage of temporising in matters that affected his political career?
-Would he never learn that a gentle lie turneth away enquiry and that as
-Dunlop had so truly said, the country was not run like a Sunday School?
-She had heard him reject more than one proposition made by men of his
-own Party who never could be brought to see the criminous side of
-misappropriation of public funds. She had known him to ignore the
-Patronage system by refusing positions to incompetents, as bluntly as he
-had discarded Dunlop’s scheme. And a little compromising, or even
-temporising, would have accomplished his object without loss of good
-will.
-
-“Custom,” he once said in answer to her remonstrance, “can never in my
-opinion sanctify piracy or brigandage. I don’t believe in Patronage and
-never shall. Incompetency should be treated and overcome if possible,
-but not rewarded.”
-
-Rejoicing, as she did, in this fine adherence both to the letter and
-spirit of his political creed, yet she could not but feel apprehensive
-for his political future. As a lamp unto his feet were the rules of the
-Independence of Parliament, but he was rapidly making enemies when by
-the employment of a little diplomacy he might have had hosts of friends.
-Scarcely a week passed without bringing forth some public attack upon
-him, and the mere fact that he championed a cause was sufficient to win
-for it a mob of fanatical obstructionists.
-
-Yet Azalea realised that anything less than this unswerving rectitude
-would have been for Dilling ignominious surrender, and she prayed that
-he might uphold his ideals at all costs, that he might achieve a
-spiritual triumph even at the price of material defeat. She wondered how
-it would all end.
-
-
- CHAPTER 15.
-
-“You had better go up to the House, to-night,” called Long, as he passed
-his wife’s door on his way to dress for dinner.
-
-“What’s going on? I’m booked for bridge at the Blaine’s.”
-
-“Dilling’s going to speak. I think you’ll be repaid for calling off your
-game.”
-
-“All right. I’ll telephone,” said Mrs. Long, carefully adjusting a hair
-net. “Perhaps the others would like to go. Only two tables, I understand
-. . .”
-
-The House was crowded by the time Mrs. Blaine and her party arrived. The
-“Ladies of the Cabinet” were shown, of course, into the front row of the
-Speaker’s Gallery, and those of lesser rank were distributed wherever
-space permitted.
-
-Marjorie had been directed to a seat in the second row, immediately
-behind Mrs. Carmichael and next to Mrs. Long, beyond whom sat Eva Leeds,
-Pamela de Latour and Mrs. Chesley. Strictly speaking, none of them
-deserved a place in the Member’s Gallery, but in deference to Mrs.
-Blaine, whose guests they were, and also to their social status, they
-were thus happily privileged. The vacancy next Marjorie was presently
-filled by Mrs. Pratt, although Deputy Minister O’Neill’s wife sat
-several rows behind.
-
-“Well, upon my word,” whispered Mrs. Carmichael to Mme. Valleau, wife of
-the Postmaster-General, “The Virginia Creeper will be clinging to us,
-next. How does she do it?”
-
-There was no mystery. Mrs. Pratt’s superb lack of what her husband
-termed “gulp” was partially responsible; and, in addition, she knew how
-to wring one hundred per cent returns out of a five dollar bill. The
-doorkeeper, who was the object of her investment, was more affected by
-the frigidity of her reception than she was, herself.
-
-“Good evening, Lady Denby . . . How d’yuh do, Mrs. Blaine? Mrs.
-Carmichael . . . Good evening, Madame Valleau . . .” She bowed right and
-left, murmuring names—prominent names—and creating the impression
-among those who didn’t know, that she was on pleasantly intimate terms
-with every one worth while. “Oh, Mrs. Dilling . . . I didn’t notice
-you!”
-
-“Good evening,” returned Marjorie, with strained politeness.
-
-She was determined to be just as stiff as Azalea could have wished. Not
-that she was converted to the belief that this attitude on her part
-would be in the least helpful to Raymond, but because she was, by
-nature, docile and amenable to discipline. Always for Marjorie the word
-“must” held an ineluctable obligation.
-
-Therefore, when Azalea insisted that she must adopt a greater formality
-of manner, the time came when Marjorie surrendered.
-
-“Who is that woman in the other Gallery?” asked Mrs. Long, from behind a
-jewelled lorgnette.
-
-“Which one?” queried Pamela de Latour.
-
-“There—in the front row. She seems to have forgotten her clothes, so
-far as her torso is concerned.”
-
-“Oh,” cut in Mrs. Pratt, “that’s Mrs. Barrington. They’ve recently come
-to Ottawa. Her husband’s something or other on the Driveway Commission.
-I can’t akkerately say just what, although Mr. Pratt was largely
-instrumental in getting him appointed.”
-
-“Barrington?” echoed Mrs. Chesley, “why, that’s the woman who’s rushing
-Raymond Dilling, isn’t it?”
-
-“Sh—sh—sh—” warned Pamela, nodding in Marjorie’s direction.
-
-“Well, isn’t it?” insisted the other.
-
-“Hush! She’ll hear you.”
-
-“I suppose that means it is. Does she know?”
-
-“I don’t think so,” whispered Pamela. “Doesn’t see much beyond the
-kitchen cabinet and the drawing-room curtains, I fancy.”
-
-“Lucky woman,” murmured Helena Chesley, thinking of her impressionable
-husband.
-
-“Who’s speaking?” Mrs. Long was moved to ask. Until that moment, no one
-had given a glance at the House.
-
-Mr. Sullivan, it seemed, had the floor. A few Members watched him
-languidly. Nobody listened.
-
-Pamela de Latour turned attentive eyes upon him for a moment or two.
-Then,
-
-“There’s really something intriguing about that man,” she murmured. “If
-only he would apply a little veneer to cover the knots once in a while,
-he would be accepted everywhere. No one minds what he does when you come
-to analyse things; only they mind what he does so openly. Does anyone
-happen to know the reigning favourite?”
-
-“I hear she is a taffy-haired manicurist,” whispered Eva Leeds, wishing
-they had stayed at home and played Bridge. Her losses had been shocking
-of late, and she felt that the tide of bad luck would certainly have
-turned this evening. That was always the way, she never really had a
-chance! “But there’s no telling . . . That may be ancient history. I
-haven’t heard much about him, lately.”
-
-“About whom?” demanded Madame Valleau, bending back her handsome head in
-order to see the speaker. She was supposed to be the best informed lady
-in the Cabinet—informed, that is to say, regarding the shadowy side of
-the Members’ private lives.
-
-They told her.
-
-“Oh, Sullivan,” she cried, in her fascinating broken English. “A
-delightful dog, hein? I wish there were more men like him in this dull
-town!”
-
-Mrs. Carmichael, having two young daughters to whom she enjoyed applying
-the inappropriate word “innocent”, protested.
-
-“Why, no woman is safe with him,” she said.
-
-“A few,” argued Madame, allowing her eyes to travel slowly over the
-immediate group. “Besides, who wants to feel safe with any man? Not I,
-for one! If women had been safe with men, there would have been no need
-for cavaliers, for gallantry. Sullivan is charming.”
-
-“I think he’s a conscienceless old reprobate,” declared Mrs. Carmichael,
-“and the National Council should make an example of him.”
-
-Marjorie leaned forward. It required a good deal of courage on her part
-to push into this argument, but she felt that loyalty to an absent
-friend demanded it.
-
-“You misjudge him, Mrs. Carmichael,” she defended. “I know him very well
-and I am certain the things people say about him are not true. He’s too
-kind to everybody, that’s his trouble! He is as kind to a—a—manicurist
-as he is to . . . well, to me! He’s always so ready to help people and
-to give them good advice!”
-
-Mme. Valleau gave vent to a musical little scream that was heard by the
-Sergeant-at-Arms, and impelled him to shake a playful warning for
-silence at her.
-
-“Don’t kill my enthusiasm for that man by telling me he is giving good
-advice!” she said. “He won’t be doing that for a long while, I’ll be
-bound.”
-
-“Why not?” demanded Marjorie.
-
-“Because it’s only when Sullivan is too old to give the bad example he
-will begin to give the good advice,” returned the Frenchwoman. “_Mon
-Dieu_, I hope that won’t be for many a long day.”
-
-“I don’t think you are fair to him,” championed Marjorie.
-
-“My child,” interrupted Lady Denby, “I should be greatly disturbed if I
-thought you were trying, seriously, to defend that man! Mme. Valleau has
-original ideas on every subject, including honour, but for you to
-express yourself favourably on Sullivan’s behalf, or admit friendship
-with him, would be little short of compromising. I know you too well to
-misunderstand, but these others might get a sadly erroneous impression.”
-
-“But . . .” began Marjorie.
-
-“Stop chattering,” cautioned Mrs. Long, who had only just stopped,
-herself. “Mr. Dilling is going to speak.”
-
-The House filled rapidly. Members slipped into their seats and turned
-towards the slender young man who stood, hand on hip, in the very last
-row of back benches. In the Press Gallery there wasn’t a vacant chair.
-Representatives of the leading dailies jostled and crowded one another
-at the desk, and those men who could not obtain so convenient a
-position, drew sheaves of copy paper from their pockets and recorded
-Dilling’s speech on the surface offered by their neighbour’s backs.
-Pages flung themselves on the steps of the Speaker’s dais, and relaxed
-into an attitude that was almost inattentive. They had learned that
-while the Member for Pinto Plains was speaking, the House rested from
-its customary finger-snapping, and, like otiose diversions.
-
-A cheer crashed through the silence. On the right of the Speaker, desks
-were thumped and feet beat upon the floor. A babel arose from the
-Opposition, and in the Galleries, visitors forgot that they were
-“strangers in the House,” and that, like the children of a bye-gone
-generation, they were supposed to be unheard.
-
-“Or-r-der,” drawled the Speaker. And the clamour died.
-
-“_Bon!_” chuckled Madame Valleau. “He has the courage to speak, that
-Dilling—and behind his words, there is the mind to think!”
-
-“Very good,” pronounced the ladies surrounding Marjorie. “Most
-interesting! Quite excellent, indeed!”
-
-“Thank you,” returned Marjorie, so stiffly that they looked at her in
-amazement, wondering if success had suddenly turned her head.
-
-They wondered still more when a messenger approached her, delivered a
-note and said there would be an answer. Eyebrows were raised, and
-incredulity was telegraphed from one to the other of the group.
-
-“What’s this?” asked Lady Denby, in what she conceived to be a playful
-tone. “Have we an admirer in the House?”
-
-A furious blush and confused stammering was Marjorie’s reply. With one
-of those rare flashes of insight for which she could never account, she
-knew that in view of the recent discussion about Sullivan and her
-defence of him, he was suspected of being the writer of that letter. She
-didn’t blame the women in the least, for she suspected him, herself.
-
-But she was mistaken. The scrawling signature of Hebe Barrington met her
-eye as she hastily turned the last page, and the body of the
-communication was an invitation to supper.
-
-“I have persuaded Mr. Dilling to join us,” the letter announced, “and he
-asked me to say that we would meet in his room, at once. Please come!”
-
-“Mrs. Barrington has invited me to supper,” Marjorie explained, with a
-noticeable moderation of stiffness. “I think I will say good night and
-hurry on.”
-
-“What’s got into her?” asked the ladies. “Her naiveté was bad enough,
-but her snobbishness is insufferable!”
-
-Marjorie had never seen a home just like the Barrington’s. It reminded
-her of the Ancient Chattellarium, and struck her as being a curious
-place in which to live. There weren’t two chairs that matched in the
-whole house, and the black rugs and hangings she found very depressing.
-Moreover, the rooms bore names as strange as their furnishings, and she
-had no idea what her hostess meant by the Cuddlery or the Tiffinaria.
-
-Mrs. Barrington entertained easily. She did not stand in the centre of
-the drawing-room, beneath the chandelier, and greet her guests with
-flattering though repetitive phrases. In the first place, there wasn’t,
-properly speaking, a drawing-room. In the second, there was no
-chandelier. What light there was, came from half a dozen shaded sconces,
-and a pair of Roman lamps. There were no pictures on the wall. At least,
-Marjorie did not call them pictures. They were scratchy drawings
-representing Chinamen engaged in such profitless occupations as
-contemplating the tonsils of a large-mouthed dragon, or leaning
-thoughtfully upon a naked blade—naked, that is, save for the head that
-clothed the point of it. She had never seen their like, before, and
-thoroughly disapproved of them.
-
-Mrs. Barrington did not stand in the drawing-room at all, but wandered
-about with a cigarette in one hand and a glass of Scotch in the other,
-and seemed intensely surprised to see the people she was entertaining.
-
-“Well,” she greeted more than one guest, “fancy your trotting away out
-here. Are you with anyone or did you come alone?”
-
-With the exception of Mr. Sullivan and the Carmichael girls, they were
-strangers to Marjorie, as, indeed, many of them were to their hostess.
-
-“Who is the young blood so effectively burgling the cellarette?” she
-would ask her husband. Or, “Toddles, tell me quickly, is that girl in
-blue some one I ought to know?”
-
-Supper was spread in the Tiffinaria and eaten all over the house.
-Marjorie was inexpressibly shocked to hear a nice looking young man call
-to his partner,
-
-“You wait upstairs, old dear, and I’ll bring up the victuals. We can
-mangle them on Hebe’s dressing table.”
-
-“Peacherina!” answered the girl, throwing her slipper at him. “What’s on
-the menu, this evening?”
-
-A recital of the contents of the table and buffet resulted in guarded
-approbation.
-
-“Get a dab of everything,” called the girl, “and we’ll manage to find
-something we can digest.”
-
-A Sheffield tray was dismantled and heaped with food sufficient to have
-served four persons. Added to this, the young man used as a centrepiece
-his partner’s slipper, into which he had poured a mould of chicken
-jelly.
-
-The Hon. Member for Morroway was, as always, tenderly solicitous of
-Marjorie. He made several attempts to find a place in which they could
-sit to have their supper tete-a-tete, before he was successful.
-
-“Somebody’s in the Cuddlery,” he announced, backing out of the door and
-guiding her hastily away. “Oh, excuse me,” he cried, to an unseen couple
-who were occupying a nook under the stairs. “Looks as though we’d have
-to try the pantry or the kitchen. Let’s see if we can find a corner on
-the floor above.”
-
-“Oh, no!” protested Marjorie, “I shouldn’t care to do that. Why, can’t
-we go there—into the front room? I don’t mind others being about.”
-
-“Dear little woman,” Sullivan whispered, and drew her close against him
-under the guise of protecting her from collision with a youth who
-carried an empty glass, “of course we don’t mind, but the ridiculous
-fact is that _they do_!” He sighed in his most elderly manner. “I do
-wish that Hebe would infuse some dignity into her parties. Perfectly
-innocent, you understand; not a hint of harm, but just naturally silly
-and boisterous. Look at young Creel, there, daring Mona Carmichael to
-stand on her head! By Jove,” he slapped his leg and burst into a laugh
-that seemed to be a spontaneous expression of hilarious amusement, “he’s
-got her by the ankles and she’s going to try!”
-
-But, after being trundled about the room like a wheelbarrow, Mona
-decided that she didn’t want to stand on her head. “I tell you what,”
-she cried, “let’s dress up in Toddles’ clothes!”
-
-With a whoop they raced for the stairs, half a dozen of them, leaving
-Marjorie and Sullivan in possession of the room. Shrieks and confused
-scamperings followed. Evidently, they were much at home, there.
-
-“Who are all these people?” Marjorie wanted to know.
-
-The girls, it seemed, were a dashing and exclusive group whose number,
-and conduct, had earned for them the sobriquet of “The Naughty Nine”.
-They were the envy of all those who stood without the golden circle
-drawn round them, and subsequently, by dint of heroic pressure that was
-brought to bear, their number was increased by three and they became
-“The Dirty Dozen”. The youths were the scions of Ottawa’s aristocracy.
-
-“You don’t care for them?” asked Sullivan. “You wouldn’t like Althea to
-behave in that way?”
-
-The bare suggestion produced physical pain. “But, she wouldn’t,” cried
-Marjorie. “She _couldn’t_, Mr. Sullivan! Not that they aren’t
-very—er—bright,” she added, seeking to say the kindly thing.
-
-When they returned to the room, the girls were dressed in Mr.
-Barrington’s clothing—business suits, riding breeks, pyjamas and
-underwear, while the boys had costumed themselves in their hostess’s
-attire.
-
-Marjorie kept telling herself that she was dreaming.
-
-She longed to go home. She could neither enter into the revelry nor did
-she wish to separate herself from the crowd and stay alone with
-Sullivan. She had been very uncomfortable with him, lately. Sometimes,
-almost afraid. She refused to acknowledge this fear, even to herself,
-but she knew that it existed.
-
-The conversation in the Gallery recurred to her with disturbing
-vividness—not that slander ever influenced her judgment—ever! The
-person who was swayed by unkind criticism was, in her opinion, no better
-than the person who uttered it. At the same time, there was something
-about the Hon. Member for Morroway from which she instinctively shrank,
-without suspecting that she was making, by her attitude, a confession of
-her secret impression of the man.
-
-No amount of reasoning could correct this state of affairs. In vain did
-she tell herself that he was old enough to be her father, and that his
-frank affection for them all was merely the enthusiastic expression of a
-lonely man’s dependence upon a kindly household. In vain did she try to
-overcome a sensation of shame and personal impurity after she had been
-alone with him.
-
-“My own mind must be evil,” she scourged herself, time and again. “He
-never has done or said a thing that Raymond couldn’t know. What _does_
-make me feel so wicked when I’m alone with him?”
-
-It may have been a sense of impotence that frightened her. She could
-never see the wheels of Mr. Sullivan’s mind in operation, she could
-never tell what he was going to do. He seemed to arrive at a goal
-magically, without progressing step by step, and he had such an uncanny
-way of divining what she was thinking.
-
-She was not conscious of his footfall, nor of the opening of the doors
-that admitted him to a closer intimacy, but suddenly, he would stand
-before her, very near to the Inner Shrine of her Temple, catching her,
-as it were, unclad, or in the act of prayer, and she couldn’t put him
-out.
-
-He was very quiet and respectful and walked as though aware that he was
-in a Holy place, but that didn’t alter the fact that he had passed
-through those obstructing doors without a sound of warning, and without
-her permission.
-
-And he took such shocking liberties. For example, Marjorie couldn’t
-possibly have told how he had been allowed to contract the habit of
-kissing her. To be sure, it had begun in fun, one evening, when they
-were playing with the children. But she couldn’t explain why she found
-it impossible to deny him the privilege thereafter. It was very curious
-and disturbing.
-
-Perhaps her difficulty lay in the artful naturalness with which he
-performed his acts of pretty gallantry, taking so much for granted and
-trading on her clean simplicity.
-
-“I don’t want to behave so that he will think I have nasty notions,” she
-said to herself, and Sullivan knew it.
-
-“You’re tired, dear,” he said to her, not wholly inattentive to the
-Vaudeville on the other side of the room. “Lean back against me. Raymond
-won’t be long, now!”
-
-She felt his arm slip round her and moved away in sudden panic.
-
-“Oh, Mr. Sullivan, not here, please!” she cried.
-
-It wasn’t in the least what she should have said; but there was no
-opportunity for explanations or corrections then.
-
-“You’re right, little woman,” he whispered, “this is _not_ the place. I
-understand.”
-
-It was only too obvious that he didn’t; that he misconstrued her gentle
-repulse of all familiarity into a prudish discouragement of this
-particular expression of it, and his manner suggested satisfaction that
-she should prefer to receive his caresses when they were alone. It was a
-case of another door being opened and one which resisted her efforts to
-close it.
-
-“I’d like to go home,” she said. “Do you think you could find Raymond?”
-
-The Hon. Member for Morroway knew his hostess too well to commit himself
-to a definite promise. But he murmured something hopeful and made his
-way with a good deal of bluster to the top of the house.
-
-The door of the Eyrie was closed.
-
-
- CHAPTER 16.
-
-Meanwhile, Dilling had been an unwilling victim to Hebe Barrington’s
-charms.
-
-“Your wife is coming home with me for a bite of supper,” she had written
-him, “and I want you, too. The bald truth is—I don’t trust Toddles with
-a pretty woman, so you must be on hand to see her home.”
-
-But although he had signified his readiness to perform this happy task
-several times, she had made it impossible for him to break away.
-
-“Don’t you love my little nest?” asked Hebe, closing the door and
-leading him by the arm to a deep couch, standing well beyond the faint
-light thrown by a winking oriental lantern.
-
-“It’s very unusual,” said Dilling.
-
-“Everything here has a history,” she told him, “but I won’t tell you
-about any of my treasures just now. You need only know that this room is
-called the Eyrie, and I want you to feel that it is your own. Any time,
-day or night, that you want to run away from the abominations of
-politics, this place is ready for you. You need not even share it with
-me—if you don’t wish.”
-
-“Thank you,” muttered Dilling, seeing that she expected him to speak.
-
-“And now, let’s talk about your speech. It was tremendous! How easy it
-seems to be for you to avoid the feeble word and choose those that
-thrill one with a sense of power. Every fibre of my being was alive with
-response to you, to-night. But why didn’t you look at me, Raymond?”
-
-“I? Er—why—I didn’t know that you were there,” stammered the man who
-was supposed to avoid the trite and obvious.
-
-“But why didn’t you look and _see_?” insisted Hebe. “Is the admiration
-of mankind in general, and of woman in particular so unimportant? Does
-it give you no stimulation?”
-
-“Oh, it isn’t that,” said Dilling.
-
-He was very ill at ease. Admitting her intellectual attainments, yet he
-never enjoyed talking with Hebe Barrington as he enjoyed talking with
-Azalea. He was too conscious of her, too acutely aware of the fact that
-she sought to attach his scalp to her belt, his frail person to her
-chariot wheels. Instinctively, he was on his guard against a temptation
-to which he could not imagine himself surrendering.
-
-“What is it, then?” she asked, passing her fingers through his thin
-hair.
-
-As Marjorie recoiled from Sullivan, so Dilling tried to withdraw from
-the caresses of Mrs. Barrington. He had never received advances from
-women—decent women—and he was shocked, revolted. Even her use of his
-Christian name jarred unpleasantly upon him whose social standards
-decreed that although a man and woman might address one another
-familiarly before the marriage of either party, the instant they turned
-from the altar, rigid formality should be observed. To be called
-“Raymond” by a married woman whom he had known but a few weeks, smacked
-strongly of indecency.
-
-“Is it possible that beneath your discomfiting iciness of manner,” Hebe
-continued, “you want to attract men, hold them and make them your
-friends? Do you feel the need of friends, Raymond Dilling?”
-
-“I am only human,” he returned.
-
-Suddenly he felt an overpowering urge to talk, an imperious need for
-candour. He wanted to open his heart, deplore his failures and the
-unfulfilment of his desires. He saw his inability to draw men to him,
-and surround them with a vivid atmosphere of comradeship in political
-endeavour and a common patriotic inspiration. He felt that men did not
-like him, that he would never be an adornment to their clubs, one upon
-whom the success of a social event depended. And, unaccountably, he
-realised that he cared—cared for himself, and for Marjorie, and for
-Azalea Deane. As though reading his thoughts, Hebe went on,
-
-“You’ll never do it as you are, Raymond. You are suffering the result of
-the habit contracted, I have learned, in your college days, when you
-withdrew yourself from all but the few who recognised your talents and
-thrust themselves upon you for your worldly, and other-worldly behoof. A
-native shyness of strangers and an inherited reluctance to spend money
-on the amenities of life, moved you to live in cloistered exclusiveness,
-when you should have been expanding your soul in joyous contact with
-your fellow men. Am I not right?”
-
-“I don’t think it was so bad as that,” said Dilling, fighting against
-the stupefying effect of the perfume he had learned to associate with
-her.
-
-“But it was! You avoided human contact, and only by such means is life
-rid of its tendency to become set and small. Don’t you remember the
-French axiom, ‘_L’esprit de l’homme n’est malleable que dans sa
-jeunesse_’? You are still young, Raymond, but it is high time that you
-began remoulding. If you had only allowed yourself the Paganism of
-Youth, you would have spared yourself the Philistinism of Maturity.”
-
-“It’s all very well to preach conviviality and _bon camaraderie_,”
-Dilling returned, stung into making what he afterwards felt to be an
-undignified defence, “but you must remember that I couldn’t afford to
-hold my own with the roisterers at college.” He moved, with a gesture of
-impatience, beyond the reach of her marauding fingers. “It was not so
-much inherited caution as immediate limitations that made my ‘exclusive
-cloistering’ necessary. I put myself through college, you know,” he
-added, with a touch of unconscious pride, “and I couldn’t afford to
-enjoy it.”
-
-“But that’s the very point—the very point I’m driving at,” she
-triumphed. “If only you _had_ spent beyond your means—if only once you
-had overstepped your limitations! We all do, all of us who have souls.
-One way or another, the artist is always spending. The lover never
-counts the cost. You can’t—you shouldn’t want to—reduce emotions to
-blue prints and specifications, and that’s what you have done! Listen,
-Raymond, and forgive me if I offend you. There is a corner of your
-personality that lies fallow because its dull atmosphere refuses
-nourishment to artistic taste and sensuous beauty. In other words, you
-are afraid to spend, even now, lest the ultimate cost may prove to be
-something you think you can’t afford. You are afraid to let yourself go,
-for emotions lead one even farther than the tangible medium of
-exchange.” Her tone changed. “How you ever came to marry a pretty woman
-is something of a mystery to me—a frump would have answered just as
-well. Indeed, I ask myself, why did you ever marry at all. Will you tell
-me?”
-
-“I don’t think there’s any mystery about it,” parried Dilling.
-
-He was not prepared to confess that love had played a very small part in
-his relations with Marjorie, nor that his need of her was more that of
-an amiable associate than wife. With the simplicity that marked so many
-of his social adventurings, he believed that when he could support a
-wife and family he should marry; and he chose the least
-objectionable—and most desirable externally—woman of his
-acquaintanceship. There was the explanation in a nutshell.
-
-“Have you ever felt the appeal of sensuous beauty?” Hebe Barrington
-persisted. “No! I am answered. The very phrase revolts you as I speak
-it. It is an evocation of the Seventh Commandment and a ruined
-household. Queer fellow! Your insensibility to beauty in line and
-colour, not only in Art but in life, proclaims you a Philistine.”
-
-“You’ve called me that before.”
-
-“And I call you so again. You had no ear for the cry from Paxos, ‘When
-you are come to Pallodes announce that the Great Pan is dead’,” she
-cried theatrically. “Little you understand how it was that Pan’s trumpet
-terrified and dispersed the Titans in their fight with the Olympian
-gods.”
-
-“You have a harsh opinion of me,” said Dilling, a little nettled. “I
-thought I knew my classics.”
-
-“You read them—you bathed in their sensuous beauty, but you never felt
-it, Raymond, even while imagining that you were mewing a mighty youth of
-the intellect. Deluded boy,” she murmured. “Blind boy!” Her hand
-fluttered over his face and rested upon his eyes. For the life of him he
-could not respond to this woman, but at the same time he made no
-definite resistance, judging that by so doing he would lay himself open
-to the charge of priggishness. Dilling had little dread of ridicule when
-he trod upon familiar ground, but of late he had realised how virginal
-he was in the social struggle. Quite still he sat, while Hebe
-Barrington’s hands moved softly about him. He did not know that to her
-his unresponsiveness was incredible; the web she was weaving was as
-apparent to him as his power to break it. “It is not too late,” she
-whispered, “to save yourself, to save your soul alive.”
-
-“Am I to take that as encouragement?” he enquired, with intentional
-rudeness.
-
-“As the body in its vigour renews itself every seven years, so it is
-possible for the spirit to open its doors periodically upon new realms
-of percipience and creative power. Set about your own rebirth, Raymond!
-Don’t imagine that you can achieve re-genesis by pondering the sources
-that gave the pagan Greek his apprehension, shall I say, of the joy of
-life. The Greek lived in a narrow time and in a narrow world, in spite
-of which he made living glorious. You, on the other hand, live in a big
-world where there is room for the coming of the superman. Oh, Raymond,
-lay hold of the sensuous beauty that lies within your very grasp. Come
-out of your barren cloister and inhale the warmth of the sun and perfume
-of the blossoming flowers! Mere intellect has never achieved perfect
-happiness for any man. He must develop his emotional nature in order to
-get the most life has to offer and in order that he may give her of his
-best,” she added, quickly. “He must learn to understand men and women,
-and to understand them he must—live!”
-
-“You seem to be very certain that I am one of the unburied dead!”
-
-“Exactly! Every man who doesn’t love is dead. Oh, don’t point to your
-wife and children as contradictory evidence. You love neither, Raymond,
-I mean, with the love that is like a great, engulfing tide, the love
-that haunts and tortures, and racks and exalts. I mean the love that is
-like a deep, ecstatic pain, that simultaneously is a feast and a cruel
-hunger.”
-
-Her words poured over him like a warm scented flood. He was conscious of
-a curious desire to plunge his body into their deeps, to feel their heat
-and moisture. But the impression eluded him. He could not abandon
-himself to the enchantment Hebe Barrington was trying to cast over him.
-No glamorous mist blurred his vision. He saw with penetrating clarity,
-and his only sensation was one of distaste.
-
-“I am of opinion that life can be useful without these exaggerated,
-emotional outbursts,” said Dilling, “that where so much energy is
-expended in one direction the drain is felt in other lines of
-endeavour.”
-
-“But will you never open your eyes to the radiant truth that a great
-love is not a drain but a reservoir, a source of supply? It enlarges
-one’s power and stimulates creation. Did not every conspicuous figure in
-history have his feminine complement, and is not at least a part of his
-achievement credited to the stimulation of an overmastering love?”
-
-Dilling was not so sure. Average and sub-average persons, wholly unable
-to apprehend the subtle forces of will and intellect behind a great
-achievement, accept it with dull simplicity and dismiss it with a word
-of praise. But average and sub-average persons experiencing the driving
-power of emotion in varied degrees think themselves capable of
-understanding a sublime passion and therefore place it—perhaps
-unconsciously—ahead of intellectual accomplishment. In fine, we bring
-others down to our own level, a fact that explains why “human interest”
-and “heart interest” make a wider appeal than things that live and move
-and have their being on the higher plane of mind and spirit.
-
-“I doubt it,” he said, answering Hebe’s question. “I doubt, for example,
-that Parnell’s skill in leadership depended upon the dashing Kitty
-O’Shea, or that Nelson would have failed at Trafalgar save for Lady
-Hamilton.”
-
-“Do you mean that no _particular_ woman is necessary to a man, or that
-emotional relationship between two persons of opposite sexes is
-over-estimated?”
-
-“Either, and both,” laughed Dilling, and rose. “But I really must find
-my wife. She will think I have deserted her, and, anyway, late hours are
-forbidden in our house. Shall we go down?”
-
-But Hebe held him.
-
-“Just a moment,” she begged. “I can’t allow you to leave me with a wrong
-impression. Oh, I know quite well how my conduct to-night must appear in
-your eyes—your blind eyes, Raymond, and it is not a sense of
-prudishness that impels me to explain that I do not throw myself at you
-for a narrow, personal satisfaction. It is true that I love you, but I
-love the big You, the public man, the orator, the statesman, and I have
-a supreme longing to see you attain greater honours and bring greater
-glory to Canada. To achieve this, I am firmly convinced that a closed
-door in your nature must be opened. You are like a man working in
-artificial light. He can see, yes—but he attains results through
-greater strain than is immediately apparent and, therefore, his season
-of usefulness is lessened. There is sunshine, Raymond, and in its
-radiance, much of what was work becomes play. Love is my sunshine and is
-a miraculous creative force. With your frail body, you must draw power
-from an outside source, Raymond, and what other reservoir is there but
-Love? Listen, dear, just a moment more,” she cried, tightening her arms
-about him. “I would rather see you love some other woman than not love
-at all, for I know that the awakening of your soul would be Canada’s
-great gain. And now,” she concluded, rising, “will you kiss me before
-you go?”
-
-Dilling hesitated, and in that instant’s delay a step sounded on the
-stair and a gentle tattoo beat upon the door.
-
-“Come in,” cried Hebe, crossly. “Oh, Uncle Rufus, we were just going
-down!”
-
-
- CHAPTER 17.
-
-Representing the constituency of Morroway by no means exhausted the
-dynamic energy of the Hon. Rufus Sullivan, and he had ample time for
-engaging in pursuits of a tenderer and more congenial nature. But
-occasions did arise when concentration upon Parliamentary problems
-became a necessary part of the day’s routine, for they affected not only
-the political standing of the Hon. Member, but the size and stability of
-his income.
-
-He sat alone in his office, oblivious for the moment, of the heavy gilt
-mirror that hung opposite his desk, and to the contents of the drawer
-marked “Unfinished Business”. He glared unwinkingly into space,
-forgetful of the existence of a fluffy-haired little manicurist who sat
-waiting for him in an over-decorated, under-lighted apartment of his
-choosing. Sullivan was carefully reviewing each step taken at the caucus
-he had just attended, and satisfying himself that his own part in the
-proceedings would react in an advantageous manner.
-
-The anticipated vacancy in the Cabinet had occurred, and the inevitable
-complications had developed. Howarth stepped modestly into the
-spotlight, and put forth claims that were not without justification.
-Gilbert, the Radical, stood out as an advocate for Reciprocity and felt
-the power of the Middle West behind him. Dilling, more or less thrust
-into the contest, was supported by the phalanxes of Eastlake and
-Donahue, and opposed any such trafficking with the United States.
-
-Sullivan endorsed him.
-
-This was an extraordinary thing. Even Howarth was surprised, and no one
-found it more unaccountable than Dilling, himself.
-
-The constituency of Morroway was divided on the Reciprocity issue, but
-the preponderance of sentiment was favourable. This involved a little
-difficulty for the Hon. Member, who did not approve it although he was
-confident that in securing the measure, the Borden Government would in
-no way imperil the existence of Canadian Federation. On the contrary,
-Mr. Sullivan was secretly—oh, very secretly!—of the opinion that
-unrestricted Reciprocity with the United States would be the most
-effective antidote to the disintegration sentiment with which our
-National wells are being poisoned. He believed that it would mean peace,
-plenty, and a renewed ambition amongst a class of people in whom hope
-had almost died; that its immediate result would be employment in lieu
-of discontented idleness, and an instantaneous circulation of money. He
-saw clearly the advantage that would accrue to the fishermen of British
-Columbia and the Maritime Provinces, were they able to dispose of their
-perishable merchandise quickly in the American market at a maximum price
-and a minimum cost for transportation. He saw also that the Quebec and
-Ontario farmers could sell to the Middle States at an advanced profit,
-while the grain speculators of the Prairies could offer their wheat in
-the Chicago pit before it was harvested and at the lowest possible
-figure for haulage. Moreover, Mr. Sullivan realised that there would be
-no congestion at the freight terminals, because cars would be moving
-north and south as well as east and west; and, furthermore, the railways
-of both countries would be co-operating.
-
-Nor did he overlook the fact that the prairie farmers could buy their
-implements at fifty per cent less than present prices for Canadian
-manufactures—a Utopian condition for which every man with large
-holdings ardently prayed according to the particular doctrine he
-professed.
-
-But Mr. Sullivan opposed Reciprocity. For years he had opposed it. He
-held a considerable number of bonds issued by the Grand Trunk Pacific,
-which though guaranteed by the Government of Canada must inevitably
-depreciate if the silver stream continued to be diverted from the
-National coffers in to the channels fashioned by Eastlake and
-Donahue—those enterprising exponents of the cult whose treasure lies in
-earthen vessels. He also happened to be heavily invested in Eastern
-industrial corporations. Long ago, Mr. Sullivan had decided that
-anything less than an impregnable tariff barrier between the United
-States and Canada would spell his financial obliteration.
-
-Therefore, although it irked him to lift a finger towards Dilling’s
-political advancement, and although he found it extremely difficult to
-justify his support in the face of his traditional opposition to
-Eastlake and Donahue, Mr. Sullivan threw the weight of his influence
-against Howarth, who expected it, and Gilbert, who hoped for it, in
-order that Dilling might obtain the portfolio.
-
-“In him we have a specimen of a genuine twentieth century man,” he
-argued, “one who actually believes there is such a thing as a British
-Constitution. He prints it in Capitals, (God save us all!) and he loves
-it with as much veneration as the younger Pitt. Furthermore, he believes
-that the incredible utterance of Pitt, in 1784, is true to-day and
-forever—‘The British Constitution,’ he said, ‘is equally free from the
-distractions of democracy and the tyranny of monarchy. It is the envy of
-the world . . .’
-
-“For myself,” the Hon. Member continued, “I think that Dilling is the
-best debater we have had in the Commons since Confederation. He eclipses
-Cartwright—the best of his day—because when that strict economist fell
-a victim to his own high temper, he swapped logic for vituperation and
-lost the ear of the Big Men of the House; he is a match for Denby, who
-too often talks to Hansard and the Galleries, and too seldom comes to
-grips with his antagonists on the floor of the Chamber. When, I ask you,
-gentlemen, has Sir Eric ever influenced a vote on a Division?
-
-“Dilling, on the other hand, captures both parties by his earnestness,
-and his logic is as irrefragable as his temper is cold. Although I have
-heard him declare that he despises rhetoric, yet we all know his ability
-to draw deep from the pure wells of English undefiled. What Horace
-Walpole said of the youthful Fox as a debater, could be as aptly applied
-to Dilling . . . . ‘Cicero’s laboured orations are puerile in comparison
-with this boy’s manly reason’.”
-
-The Hon. Member brought his remarks to a climax by terming Gilbert a
-traitor, charging Borden with political locomotor ataxia for making no
-effort to stem the tide of Western opinion towards the Reciprocity
-movement, and pronounced it treason against the Imperial Crown—thus
-serving at one and the same time, his ambition and his pocket-book.
-
-The contest was short and sharp. It was universally recognised—even by
-those who held divergent political opinions and were personally
-antipathetic—that Dilling was the man for the Cabinet, and Sullivan’s
-speech left them no alternative but to support him.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Howarth and Turner rattled the handle of the door and demanded
-admission. Sullivan complied jauntily, giving no sign of the mental
-struggle in which he had been engaged. Indeed, at the moment of their
-entrance, he recalled the gilt mirror that hung opposite his desk, the
-drawer marked “Unfinished Business” and the fact that a little
-manicurist was disconsolately awaiting him.
-
-With an admirable gesture of preoccupation, he concerned himself with
-the telephone.
-
-“Is that my dearie?” he questioned into the instrument. “Forgotten? ’Pon
-my soul, I hadn’t! Simply couldn’t break away . . . eh? Yes, in my
-office, certainly . . . No, there was no thought of another party. . . .
-Well, I won’t come if you are going to be cross . . . Promise? All right
-. . . within five minutes . . .”
-
-The business that was never finished while the three of them lived, was
-placed upon the desk and uncorked. Sullenly, two men drank, while the
-third tossed off his portion and then consulted his reflection with
-meticulous care.
-
-“Sorry,” he said, “but I must rush off. Exacting little devils—these
-women. _Très exigèante_, as our French friends say. But help yourselves,
-boys, and lock the drawer when you leave—that is if you have the grace
-to leave anything!”
-
-His flair met with no response.
-
-“Damned if I can understand you, Sullivan,” Howarth burst out. “Here,
-for months, we’ve been trying to freeze Dilling to death, and keep the
-E. D. Co. from establishing a firmer foothold in Parliament, and now you
-turn right round and boost him into the Cabinet. Surely, one of us is
-crazy!”
-
-“Only under stress, old man! Ordinarily, you are merely peculiar,”
-returned Sullivan, with a smile.
-
-“Gilbert’s a much safer man,” Howarth went on, “to say nothing of any
-qualification _I_ may possess.”
-
-“Yes,” Turner cut in, “what the devil were you thinking of, Rufus?
-Didn’t Bill, here, deserve your support?”
-
-“Neither of you would believe me if I were to tell you my reason for
-backing Dilling’s claims,” said the Hon. Member for Morroway, feeling
-that he must make some sort of explanation.
-
-“Let’s have it, anyway,” said Howarth.
-
-“Well—er—” confessed the other man, pulling on his gloves, “I acted
-according to my best judgment in the interest of the whole country.”
-
-“Oh, hell!” remarked Mr. Turner, M.P.
-
-“I’ve been asked to swallow many a big mouthful,” cried Howarth, “but
-this one chokes me.”
-
-“And granting this noble patriotism—this alarmingly noble patriotism, I
-might say—” sneered Turner “why such sudden interest in the welfare of
-our fair Dominion?”
-
-“By God!” breathed Howarth. “I believe in my soul that that little
-baby-faced simpleton has put one over on you, Rufus! She’s got you
-halter-broke and working for her husband!”
-
-“Mrs. Dilling?” echoed Turner, incredulously.
-
-“No fool like an old fool,” quoted his friend. “I’ve become accustomed
-to seeing him lose his heart over a fine pair of shoulders and a
-well-turned ankle, but I’m damned if I ever thought he would lose his
-head!”
-
-Sullivan paused with his hand on the door.
-
-“It strikes me, Billy,” he said, “that disappointment makes you rather
-coarse. Forgive my seeming inhospitality, gentlemen, but I dare not keep
-a lady waiting.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-As he turned from the bright thoroughfare into a shadowy street, Mr.
-Sullivan was not free from disturbing reflections. This was a big game
-he played, and one that admitted of miscalculations. He tried to keep
-before him its analogy to Chess, when a man sees ultimate gain
-developing out of a temporary triumph won by his opponent. He tried to
-assure himself that he had been wise in helping Dilling to victory as a
-means whereby to accomplish his swifter defeat. Only the short-sighted
-player tries to vanquish his foe at every turn.
-
-There was nothing small about Rufus Sullivan. Even his defamers granted
-him a largeness that extended to his very vices. He sinned, but he
-sinned grandly, with a _joie de vivre_ that was lacking in the righteous
-deeds of confessed Christians. He loved readily and hated magnificently,
-but he did not begrudge the object of his hatred a modicum of pleasure.
-So, in this matter, he could look with equanimity upon Dilling’s
-attainment of the Ministership and feel no envy at his brief success.
-
-For it _must_ be brief . . . and yet . . .
-
-As he swung along, his eyes fixed on a window where a balloon of rose
-light swayed out into the darkness, the Hon. Member for Morroway
-realised that such schemes had been known to fail. By some totally
-unforeseen miracle, the anticipated downfall had not occurred, and men
-had lived to bite the hand that so calculatingly fed them. Would Dilling
-prove to be one of these exceptions? Would he survive to frustrate Rufus
-Sullivan’s ambitions?
-
-These and other cogent problems engaged the Hon. Member throughout the
-ensuing hours. The taffy-haired manicurist found him abstracted and
-singularly unresponsive.
-
-
- CHAPTER 18.
-
-The new Minister wore his honours with such an utter absence of hauteur,
-that, to many persons his manner was wanting in the dignity they had
-been taught to associate with the position.
-
-Never cordial and rarely responsive, Dilling now made the unfortunate
-error of trying to be both, and few there were possessed of sufficient
-astuteness to recognise in his changed attitude, a sincerity as native
-to him as it was embarrassing. Most people saw only the insinuating
-affability of the professional politician and added another black mark
-to his already heavy score.
-
-Marjorie, on the other hand, half-convinced that by following the advice
-of Lady Denby and Azalea, her “stiffness” had been a factor in securing
-Dilling the appointment, redoubled her efforts to appear
-ungracious—with the result that the indifference of many acquaintances
-crystallised into active dislike.
-
-“They’re experimenting with _receets_ for popularity,” remarked Mrs.
-Pratt to her social rival, Mrs. Prendergast. “I don’t mind anybody being
-popular,” she graciously conceded, “if I don’t have to see how they go
-about it. But this business,” she jerked her head towards the Dillings,
-“is, in my opinion, perfeckly disgusting!”
-
-The ladies sat in a corner of the Royal Ottawa Golf Club, and although
-they had just partaken of a dinner given in honour of Raymond Dilling,
-their mien was far from congratulatory. They had made astonishing
-progress in their ascent towards Society’s Parnassian Heights, and once
-a week, at least, their names appeared in the local calendar of fame.
-
-Mrs. Pratt employed the methods of a battering ram, charging through
-obstructions with ruthless vigour, and indifferent alike to wounds
-inflicted or received. She spent her money shrewdly, squeezing double
-its worth from every dime. Even her victims respected her.
-
-Mrs. Prendergast adopted the opposite course. She slithered through the
-barriers lying in her path sublimely unaware that they were supposed to
-be barriers. It was related of her that one morning, happening to shop
-in a store sanctified by the immediate presence of a party from
-Government House, she preceded the Governor’s lady down a cleared
-passage, passed first through the door held open by an apoplectic
-Aide-de-Camp, and bestowed upon that young gentleman a gracious, if
-bovine, smile. She spent the proceeds from Prendergast’s Anti-Agony
-Aliment lavishly, using two dollars to accomplish the work of one, with
-regal unconcern. Slowly, she was buying her way onward and upward.
-
-Both she and Mrs. Pratt entertained—if one may be permitted so
-euphemistic a word—with resolute frequency. Mrs. Pratt rarely received
-anyone less important than a Senator, now, and Mrs. Prendergast had
-recently dined a lady, honourable in her own right. The fact was
-chronicled in the Montreal papers and also in Saturday Night.
-
-Both ladies saw the advantage of making their homes a rendezvous for the
-young, and using their children’s friends as a bridge, however
-precarious, to that happy land where Society dwelt. Moreover, both
-expressed the resentment of their class against one who, in their
-judgment, had been exalted above her station, and from that altitude
-demanded homage from people not only just as good but far better, i.e.,
-themselves. There was no limit to the servility they would offer an
-unworthy aristocrat, but a deserving member of the bourgeoisie—never!
-
-“How do you mean ‘experimenting’?” asked Mrs. Prendergast, referring to
-her friend’s remark.
-
-“Well, it’s hard to explain,” said Mrs. Pratt, “in so many words, that
-is.” The implication here was somewhat veiled. How many words
-legitimately belonged to an explanation, Mrs. Pratt didn’t know. But
-Mrs. Prendergast was not embarrassingly curious, so she continued.
-
-“When they first came, _he_ was the disagreeable one, so superior and
-grumpy you couldn’t get a word out of him.”
-
-“Yes,” assented the other. “I remember saying to the Dawkter that it
-must be very trying to be married to a mute.”
-
-“On the other hand, _she_ was just the opposite—apparently trying to
-cover up his grouchiness and bad manners. I don’t know whether you
-understand me, Mrs. Prendergast?”
-
-“Oh, yes! Oh, certainly,” cried Mrs. Prendergast, emphatic in defence of
-her intelligence. “I understand exactly. Indeed, I remember saying to
-the Dawkter that I found her quite a pleasant little thing.”
-
-“Well, she’s fur from pleasant, now! Heaven knows I try to see good in
-everybody, but rully, Mrs. Prendergast, I think I may be purdoned for
-saying that by the airs she puts on, you’d think she was a member of the
-Royal family! And now that _he_ has been given such a prominent position
-in the Party—can you blame me for asking what is politics coming to?”
-
-Mrs. Prendergast hastened to assure her that such a question was
-blameless. She was not vitally interested in politics nor the intrigues
-that grew out of Party differences, and it concerned her very little who
-occupied the positions of prominence. That they should appreciate her
-and those belonging to her was a matter of far greater importance.
-
-She cherished an ambition to be associated with the “Old Families” of
-the Capital—those who regarded the ever-changing political element with
-disfavour. Substantial clubs appealed to her—the Rideau for her
-husband, the Minto for her children, the Laurentian Chapter, I.O.D.E.,
-for herself, and the Royal Ottawa for them all. As a matter of fact, she
-and the Doctor had just been admitted as Life Members of the latter. In
-the ordinary course of procedure, they might have waited twenty-years.
-
-A banging of doors and loud commotion in the hallway prevented further
-conversation, and Hebe Barrington, surrounded by a group of Naughty
-Niners, danced breezily into the room. Seeing Dilling, she ran forward
-and caught him by both arms.
-
-“Congratulations, Raymond!” she cried. “I’ve been out of town or you
-would have had them sooner. Aren’t you very proud and happy? Your
-friends are, for you! Whose funeral is this?” she demanded looking with
-gay impudence over the group. “Ugh! I can guess. One of these deadly
-Party affairs, given—of course—in your honour! How do you do, Mrs.
-Dilling? Why, hello, Mr. Pratt . . . _and_ Doctor Prendergast!” She
-extended a naked left arm and shook hands across the enraged head of
-Lady Denby. “Come along with us, Raymond. We’re going to dance. Mona
-Carmichael will teach us some new convolutions, so to speak. Come!”
-
-In a low, embarrassed voice, Dilling demurred.
-
-“Oh, stuff and nonsense! They won’t miss you. And, besides, a Minister
-must acquire a bagful of lightsome parlour tricks, otherwise he’ll be
-monstrously heavy wheeling. Gaze upon this company, Raymond, and take
-warning!”
-
-She laughed gaily, ignoring the tensity with which the atmosphere was
-charged.
-
-“Seize him!” she cried. “Lay violent hands upon him, and if he
-struggles, smother him—with affection.”
-
-Half a dozen boys and girls rushed forward and dragged Dilling away. As
-Hebe moved off after them, Pratt called out to her.
-
-“Won’t you take me, Mrs. Barrington? I may be a Minister some day—you
-never can tell.” He bravely avoided his wife’s eyes.
-
-“You shall be my particular charge,” retorted Hebe with well-feigned
-delight. Mr. Pratt bored her inexpressibly. He was rapidly acquiring the
-manner of the professional politician, who looks upon every individual
-as a vote and who conducts himself as though life were a perpetual
-election campaign. He had the air of one who thinks he is the soul of
-the very party, moving about from group to group, telling ancient
-political stories as having happened to himself, and releasing at set
-and stated intervals, borrowed and well-worn epigrams.
-
-Certainly, Hebe did not find the companionship of Augustus Pratt
-inspiring, but just now it pleased her to pretend the contrary and bear
-him off beneath the battery of angry eyes the women trained upon her.
-
-As they moved towards the door and his rather moist hand caressed her
-unclad elbow, she said in a loud voice,
-
-“None but the immediate relatives of the deceased followed the body to
-the grave . . . I don’t wonder people have wakes, do you, dear Mr.
-Pratt? Solemnity in massive doses is so depressing. Have you tried the
-Argentine? It’s enchanting! You take three steps to the right . . .”
-
-A brief silence followed their exit. The women glowered at Mrs. Pratt
-and Marjorie Dilling as though they were personally responsible for
-their husbands’ defection. The men fidgetted and offered one another
-fresh cigarettes.
-
-Lady Denby drew her lips into a thin line and remarked to Madame Valleau
-who was choking back a yawn,
-
-“I do wish that woman would wear some clothes! It simply infuriates me
-to see her going abroad like that!”
-
-The Frenchwoman smiled.
-
-“Perhaps that is why she does it.”
-
-“I don’t know what you mean, and I don’t see anything funny,” Lady Denby
-retorted.
-
-“One observes so much! For myself, I think it very funny you do not
-realise that instead of dressing to please men, as most people think,
-women dress to annoy other women. Consider yourself, _par example_ and
-this gay Madame Barrington! There, you see?”
-
- * * * * *
-
-The gay Madame Barrington presented a violently contrasting appearance
-the following morning, as she lay on the Eyrie Chesterfield and consumed
-a box of Russian cigarettes.
-
-Her eyes were heavy and dull. Her complexion, wearing the make-up of the
-night previous, looked thick and dead. Over her citron-tinted sleeping
-robe she had flung an inadequate _batik_ garment that required
-continuous adjustment or reclaiming from the floor.
-
-Sharp spears of light thrust themselves between the close-drawn mulberry
-curtains, and sought out the vulnerable spots in Hebe’s house-keeping. A
-thin film of dust lay on a teakwood table; flakes of ash and tobacco
-strewed the floor. A stale odour combining scent, cigarettes and
-anise-seed hung in the still air.
-
-Mr. Sullivan, correct in new spring tweeds, lay back in an easy chair
-and absently caressed the glass he held in his hand. Beside him on the
-table, stood a decanter and syphon.
-
-He sniffed, with disapproving discernment.
-
-“Do you find absinthe a satisfying beverage, my dear?”
-
-“Oh, as satisfying as any other.”
-
-“Well, tastes differ . . . and stomachs. For my part, I’m afraid of the
-stuff. The less subtle and more reliable Scotch is good enough for me,
-although there are occasions, it goes without saying, when the bouquet
-of a fine wine is somewhat more acceptable. I am fond of a high grade of
-Burgundy, and am unique, I believe, in fancying a glass of old Madeira,
-which, by the way, is not adequately appreciated among the English
-people.”
-
-Hebe watched him sullenly, but said nothing.
-
-“It was during the French war that our soldiers made the discovery of
-this delectable drink, and it was they who carried the taste for it back
-to England, where, I admit, its flavour deteriorates. Climate probably,
-though there are some who maintain that Englishmen don’t know how to
-keep it.”
-
-“Why did you come to see me?” Hebe asked the Hon. Member, bluntly.
-
-She lit a fresh cigarette and dragged her negligée from the floor,
-knowing that Mr. Sullivan had not called upon her to discuss the virtues
-of various intoxicants. She suspected that the real object of his visit
-would be even less agreeable as a topic of conversation. Her feeling
-towards Mr. Sullivan could never be accurately described as blind
-adoration, but this morning she unqualifiedly hated him.
-
-“Why _did_ you come here at such an hour, Uncle Rufus? You know how I
-loathe to be disturbed early in the day. I’m never human till noon.”
-
-“The artistic temperament is interesting in all its phases,” murmured
-Mr. Sullivan, suavely.
-
-“Don’t be funny!”
-
-“Nothing is further from my intention. With perfect gravity I assert
-that a woman is infinitely appealing to me in her gentler moods. Her
-fragility, her beautiful feminine weakness . . . She inspires me with
-overwhelming tenderness . . . And how doubly charming when her verve
-returns.” He smiled, reflectively, at the tip of his boots.
-
-“Oh, drop that nonsense and tell me what brings you here!”
-
-“Well, my dear Hebe, I must plead a stupid man’s irresistible desire to
-discuss a somewhat delicate situation—albeit of his own making—with
-the cleverest woman of his acquaintance.”
-
-“Bosh!”
-
-“The unadulterated truth, I assure you. I am paying you no idle
-compliment, my child.”
-
-“Thanks,” said Hebe, shortly. “Go on.”
-
-“I succumbed to the imperious need for feminine companionship, sympathy,
-understanding.”
-
-“Eliminate the first two.”
-
-“Charming naivèté! Delicious frankness! Hebe, you enchant me!” The Hon.
-Member drained his glass, touched his lips with a lavender handkerchief
-and beamed upon his sulky hostess. “But, tell me, what do you think of
-our new Minister?”
-
-“You know what I think. Not that my opinion matters a damn!”
-
-“A mistake, my dear. If you approve of the appointment, then your
-opinion coincides with my own, and that, in itself, lends it some
-importance. I feel that Dilling is the very man for the post . . .”
-
-“. . . which is the very best reason in the world for your opposition to
-his securing it.”
-
-Sullivan laughed, indulgently. He raised his cuff and consulted the face
-of his watch.
-
-“In ten minutes,” said he, “you will be human. Meanwhile, may I help
-myself?”
-
-The hiss of a syphon filled the room and Hebe stretched out her hand for
-the glass. For a space neither of them spoke, and then the midday gun
-sounded its message over the city.
-
-“Now,” said the Hon. Member for Morroway, “what about this business with
-Dilling?”
-
-“I can’t do anything. I’ve tried.”
-
-Mr. Sullivan protested that she hardly did herself justice. “A woman of
-your age—er—experience,” he tactfully amended, “_and_ talents . . .”
-He smiled benignly at her. “Now is your golden opportunity. The more
-prominent his position, the more conspicuous he becomes, and every act
-is subject to criticism.”
-
-“I tell you I can’t do it.”
-
-“Don’t be so childish. The world talks of men compromising women, but
-that’s a difficult task compared with the ease with which women
-compromise men. What’s the matter? Are your weapons rusty with disuse?
-It seems to me that only just before you came up here I heard rumours of
-. . . Oh, but let that pass! The point is now, that there must be no
-further dallying. Before’s there’s any possibility of his obtaining any
-hold on the country, Dilling must go, must hang himself, must dig his
-own grave and bury himself! It’s up to you!”
-
-Hebe avoided his glance, and, as he regarded her, a change came over
-him. His suavity vanished, his smile disappeared, as his lips set
-themselves into firmer lines. In his eyes, tiny hot sparks gleamed like
-pinpoints of fire. There awoke in Mr. Sullivan’s breast a disturbing
-suspicion.
-
-“What’s the matter?” he repeated. “Why don’t you drag him through the
-streets at your chariot wheels—as is your playful wont? Let people see
-that this zealous prophet who preaches righteousness and a higher
-idealism, is bitten no deeper by his fine doctrine than is the average
-disciple of orthodoxy. Get busy, girl; get busy!”
-
-“He won’t respond,” muttered Hebe. “He’s different.”
-
-“Bah! _You’re_ different—that’s the trouble. I’m half inclined to
-believe you’ve fallen for this aesthetic milk-veined
-Parliamentarian—that you’ve become the victim instead of the
-victor—that you have allowed your undisciplined emotions to play you
-tricks. But by God! you shan’t play any on me! I’m a bad man to double
-cross, Hebe, and don’t lose sight of that for an instant. You undertook
-to see this thing through . . . now, go to it!”
-
-“I tell you it can’t be done! I’ve worked like a dog, and anyhow,
-there’s nothing in it for me—nothing but humiliation . . . Besides,”
-she added, with seeming irrelevance, “I can’t live on Toddles’ salary!”
-
-Mr. Sullivan laughed as he made his way to the door. With the knob in
-his hand he turned, and observed,
-
-“I know you can’t! Moreover, I know you _don’t_ . . . my dear!”
-
-
- CHAPTER 19.
-
-Everybody now called upon Marjorie. Even the A.D.C.’s from Government
-House were to be found at her receptions on Monday afternoons.
-Invitations poured in upon her. She was an integral part of Canada’s
-official life, and her presence was deemed necessary at all public
-assemblages. Socially, she was accounted of importance, and her
-attendance at private affairs lent to them that subtle odour of
-distinction which—with a fine disregard for principle—democracy loves
-to inhale. Tradespeople solicited her custom, agents waited upon her
-pleasure and her patronage was sought for a bewildering variety of
-functions.
-
-She found herself in the hands of exploiters, who called at all hours,
-with slight excuse or no excuse, to crave favours or heap them upon her,
-with high hope that she would liquidate the debt in social currency, and
-Marjorie never learned to deny herself to these people. She was more
-embarrassed than flattered by their ambiguous attentions, and was
-positively distressed at having to take precedence over those who, but
-yesterday, had snubbed her.
-
-Life became a round of perplexing complications, and she yearned for the
-peace and quiet that used to be hers at home.
-
-Then, too, she was worried by the fierce light of publicity that played
-upon her. Interviewers distorted her timid utterances in half a dozen
-metropolitan papers. Illustrated weeklies requested her photograph for
-publication. Local reporters took a sudden and absorbing interest in her
-gowns, and the gatherings at which she was expected to wear
-them—gatherings, which, under other conditions, would not have
-attracted the Press by so much as a line.
-
- “The Sweet Arbutus Club enjoyed the distinction of entertaining
- Mrs. Raymond Dilling at its annual supper on Thursday evening.
- The President of the Club, Mrs. Horatio Gullep, received the
- members, and little Miss Ermyntrude Polduggan presented the
- distinguished guest with a shower bouquet of white carnations.
- The Secretary, Mrs. (Dr.) Deitrich, and the Treasurer, Miss
- Emmeline Crogganthorpe, presided at the supper table, while the
- following young ladies assisted . . . Throughout the evening
- several delightful selections were rendered by the Club
- Orchestra, consisting of the Messrs. . . . and the Misses . . .
- Mrs. (Rev.) Muldoon charmed her audience with three recitations,
- and the programme was brought to a close with a chorus sung by
- seven dainty little maidens all under the age of seven . . .”
-
-This was the sort of thing that Mrs. Long claimed not to have read and
-that drove Lady Denby to a state closely akin to frenzy.
-
-“I never saw anyone so intractable,” she cried to Azalea. “You would
-think that she actually preferred those awful people!”
-
-“I believe they are ardent workers in the church,” murmured Azalea.
-
-“Even so! Church work should be encouraged, and I admire her for
-undertaking so much of it. But you know as well as I do, Azalea, that a
-Minister’s wife has her own peculiar duties to perform, and they are not
-fundamentally concerned with—”
-
-“Church workers,” suggested the girl.
-
-“Well, I mean to say that she needn’t be afraid we will contaminate her.
-There _are_ Christians outside the Church.”
-
-“I’m glad to hear you say so, Lady Denby! There certainly aren’t many in
-it.”
-
-“Child! How can you think of such things?”
-
-“You flatter me,” returned Azalea. “It’s not original. Nietzsche gave me
-the idea. He said there was but one Christian, and Him they crucified.”
-
-Lady Denby was outraged by this blasphemy. She was not the only person
-who thought Azalea Deane had developed an unpleasant emancipation since
-the death of her father, and she took this occasion to mention her
-feeling in the matter.
-
-“I have nothing to say against the Civil Service,” she concluded, “but I
-have noticed that so many of the women who enter it acquire an air of
-independence that is unbecoming to a lady. I am speaking as a friend,
-and for your own good, my dear, so I trust that you will give heed to
-what I say.”
-
-“Thank you, Lady Denby,” murmured Azalea. “Now to return to the
-Dillings—”
-
-“You _must_ make her see that these parochial affairs should not claim
-her attention.”
-
-“I have tried to make her see that, but it is difficult. You will
-remember that her creed is a literal acceptance of the golden rule.
-Indeed, she is literal in everything.”
-
-Lady Denby sighed. “Well, keep on trying. Upon my word, I think the
-world is turning upside down! Where _are_ the nice young people,
-nowadays? Why couldn’t she have been like Helena Chesley or Eva Leeds,
-or the Angus-McCallums, or—er—even you? You would have made him a very
-good wife, Azalea!”
-
-Azalea turned a painful scarlet, but Lady Denby was too deeply immersed
-in her own trend of thought to notice her companion’s confusion or to
-read its meaning.
-
-“There seem to be but two types of young woman,” she complained, “hers,
-and the one represented by that terrible Barrington person. Of the two I
-almost incline towards the latter. At least, she would give some tone to
-the Party.”
-
-“I grant it.”
-
-“Don’t misunderstand me, Azalea! You know well enough what I mean. She
-has a manner . . . On the other hand, here is a young couple, qualified
-in many respects to adorn not only the Party but the Dominion. Heaven
-knows we need his brains. Except for a few of the older men, notably my
-husband, the country can’t muster enough to fill a good-sized thimble!
-But what do they make of their gifts! Nothing! Less than nothing! They
-ignore advice, scorn convention and, unless they suffer a radical change
-of heart, they will undermine the foundations of the very structure
-which has made them, by refusing to adapt themselves to the exigencies
-of their official position. Can you imagine him a Prime Minister,
-representing Canada abroad—for example, at an Imperial Conference?”
-
-“Yes, I can!” flared Azalea. “And furthermore, I can imagine that in a
-broader field, associating with bigger people, Raymond Dilling would be
-accepted at his genuine worth. Proportions would be adjusted, and the
-gifts he undoubtedly possesses would shine with a brilliance undimmed by
-the shadow of his humble origin. I mean to say,” she went on, “a shadow
-that is formed, locally, by petty insistence upon a matter that is of no
-importance. Here, in this trivial atmosphere, heavy with a spurious
-culture, most of us regard the position as less significant than the
-man. We expect him to adorn his office, and the manner in which he wears
-his mantle means more to us than the manner in which he administers his
-public duty.”
-
-“Fine feathers . . .” began Lady Denby.
-
-“Moreover,” continued Azalea, unheeding the interruption, “we are
-impressed with his personality first and his political integrity later.
-People of a different calibre would relegate the mantle to its proper
-place, and Dilling, the orator, the statesman, would come into his own.
-Do you suppose,” she cried, with more heat than she realised, “that the
-men who mould our Imperial policies are influenced in their estimate of
-Raymond Dilling’s usefulness to Canada—to the Empire, indeed—by
-considerations of his talents and inflexibility of purpose, or by his
-adherence to custom in wearing a black tie or a white?”
-
-“Now you are being stupid, Azalea,” pronounced Lady Denby. “Conventions
-cannot be broken without harming both the offender and the cause he
-represents. There never has been a telling argument in favour of
-conventionality, yet it persists. My charwoman may be _gauche_ and amuse
-me, but similar behavior on the part of Lady Elton, for example, would
-disgust me and kill my respect.”
-
-“But the Dillings are _not gauche_,” Azalea defended. “I know few words
-that could be more inaptly applied to them. Mrs. Pratt is _gauche_, for
-if she followed her instincts she would do the clumsy, cruel and vulgar
-thing. The Dillings, on the other hand, do the orderly, kind and decent
-thing. They make no pretence, use no lacquer or veneer. If they err at
-all, it is not due to _gaucherie_, but utter simplicity. They do not
-think that it becomes them to ape or assume the manner of the great.
-They even go so far as to be _logical_, which is the last attribute that
-one should have to be socially presentable. Oh, why, Lady Denby,” she
-cried, “_why_ can’t people let them alone, stop this carping criticism,
-and applaud, if they won’t follow, the fine example that is being set
-them? As a man thinketh . . .”
-
-They parted in some constraint, Lady Denby unpleasantly stirred by the
-truth behind Azalea’s championship, and Azalea quivering with
-indignation at the unreasonableness of such attacks upon the Dillings.
-Never had she hated her townsfolk more bitterly than at this moment.
-“They are like a swarm of vicious wasps,” was her thought, as she raced
-along through the mild spring night, “stinging a lovely and unoffending
-body until its sweetness is absorbed and its beauty marred.”
-
-And Azalea was alive to another sensation. Above the clamour of her
-directed thinking, Lady Denby’s words rushed unbidden into her mind, and
-would not be dislodged.
-
-“You would have made him a good wife, Azalea!”
-
-“God,” she thought, “why must life be so cruel? Why is it that some of
-us are denied not only the privilege of having, but even that of giving?
-I could give him so much . . . so much . . .”
-
-A verse filtered through her memory. It was the cry of Ibsen’s _Agnes_,
-and it spoke to her own heavy heart:
-
- “Through the hours that drag so leaden,
- Think of me shut out of sight
- Of the struggle’s beacon-light;
- Think of me who cannot ask
- Aught beyond my petty task;
- Think of me beside the ember
- Of a silent hearthstone set,
- Where I dare not all remember
- And I cannot all forget . . .”
-
-
- CHAPTER 20.
-
-Sleep eluded her. Wide awake, she lay on her back, staring into the
-tepid darkness and listening to the whisper of a thin, spring rain. Her
-thoughts were of Raymond Dilling.
-
-Only at night, beyond the reach of prying eyes, did Azalea dare to open
-the doors of her soul’s concealment. Only then did she allow herself the
-freedom of the emotion that possessed her, and enjoy the warmth of a
-communion that no one could suspect. Her thoughts were like perfumed
-caresses . . . tender, delicate, and as they held him in sweet contact,
-she glowed with the reflection of their radiance, conscious that her
-entire being was suffused with a light—an ectoplasm—visible to the
-naked eye.
-
-To-night, however, her thoughts were poisoned with acute bitterness. The
-world, as Lady Denby had said, was upside down. Clamouring for justice,
-it offered high reward for iniquity, nepotism and refined knavery of
-every colour.
-
-“Give us Honour and Idealism,” cried the voice of the People, “but give
-them to us garbed in the motley of hypocrisy and alluring vice. If you
-must be good, disguise yourself, so that you are still a knave and a
-rattling good fellow!”
-
-Would the Public—that vague, vast body, of which none of us
-acknowledges himself a member—never come to the realisation that in
-Raymond Dilling the country had the man for whom it sought, a man of
-magnificent honesty, courage and fidelity to high purpose; a man whose
-talents were devoted to more lasting matters than the wearing of a
-morning coat, and the sequence of forks at a dinner-table? Would the
-Public never see that to him these things were non-essentials? Beau
-Brummel, she reminded herself with angry vehemence, spent several hours
-daily conferring with his tailor, and doubtless both found the
-association profitable. A pilot, on the other hand, has time—during the
-pursuit of his calling—for no such recreation. That he guide his ship
-through shoal and reef, fog and other dangers of the sea, is all that is
-required of him. Nor is he adjudged a less worthy pilot because he
-appears unshaven to steer his vessel into port.
-
-Which did Canada need—a Beau Brummel to lend her picturesqueness in the
-Council of the Nations, or a pilot to guide the destiny of her Ship of
-State through the reefs of ready disaster?
-
-Into her mind came the story of a young man who climbing in the Alps,
-lost his footing and was hurled to his death in the glacier hundreds of
-feet below. One of his companions, a scientist, computed that at the end
-of so many years, the body would reappear as the glacier moved towards a
-certain outlet. On the date specified, a group of the youth’s friends
-gathered at the spot signified, to see if the computation would prove
-correct.
-
-It did. There, before the company of old men, battered and scarred in
-their struggles against life, lay the body of the boy—fair and
-unsullied as on the day he had left them.
-
-Azalea wondered whether Raymond Dilling, having climbed so far along the
-treacherous crags of politics, must lose his foothold and plunge into a
-glacier of oblivion; and she wondered, passionately, if such had to be,
-would he emerge after a lapse of years, beautiful and fair, to reproach
-the country that had rejected him.
-
-Azalea was, perhaps, the only person who saw Dilling’s reaction to
-Public Opinion. Universally, he was supposed to be indifferent, a man of
-stone, impervious alike to enmity and friendship. But she could recall
-half a dozen instances when the lack of sympathy—more difficult to
-endure than active opposition—from men whose warm approbation he richly
-deserved, filled him with corroding discouragement. She knew that he
-felt his isolation keenly, and was depressed by it.
-
-Her thoughts turned to this new appointment, and her happiness for him
-was dulled by the manner in which Ottawa had received it. There had been
-noticeably lacking the warmth of genuine congratulation that made formal
-expression of it acceptable. The Press of the Dominion and many foreign
-countries commented enthusiastically upon the Government’s action, and
-paid a worthy tribute to the young Minister, but the people amongst whom
-the Dillings lived, were lukewarm and perfunctory. Azalea knew that to
-Raymond, the honour—the cloak—was cold, and that he shivered as he
-wore it.
-
-She wondered what he thought about the attitude of Rufus Sullivan. There
-was something altogether extraordinary in the support of the Hon. Member
-for Morroway. Azalea did not agree with certain organs of the Press that
-credited him with sinking private considerations in the interest of
-public weal. She did not believe in the sincerity of Mr. Sullivan’s
-vaunted Imperialism. Unable to find any proof for her suspicions, yet
-she came very near the truth in listening to the warning of her
-instinct.
-
-Of Mr. Sullivan’s private affairs, she knew nothing. Nor of his
-ambitions. Amongst his friends—and he had friends!—he was not adjudged
-an ambitious man. He kept modestly out of the Press, and appeared in
-Hansard only often enough to satisfy his rather easygoing constituents.
-He never gave interviews. Interviews, he had observed, had an unpleasant
-way of rising to condemn one. It was safer not to espouse a cause, for
-then one could not be accused of inconstancy when one disavowed it.
-
-This reticence on the part of Mr. Sullivan was variously regarded as
-humility towards those of superior wisdom, and an almost extinct
-distaste for publicity. There were many who thought that save for a
-certain moral obliquity, Mr. Sullivan was a very fine man!
-
-But Azalea distrusted him. With the feminine shrewdness that is really a
-manifestation of Bergsonian intuition, she saw his modesty as caution,
-and naturally inferred that caution is only necessary when one has
-something to conceal. The fact that he never declared himself definitely
-upon any stand, made her suspicious of his enthusiastic support of
-Dilling. Azalea sensed treachery behind it.
-
-Scattered bits of gossip, an odd suggestion dropped here and there,
-unremarked at the time, rose now to the surface of her mind, and
-strengthened her case against Rufus Sullivan. Besides, had not Lady
-Denby hinted that Sir Eric was not unqualifiedly pleased at the
-championship of the Hon. Member for Morroway? That, in itself, was cause
-for apprehension.
-
-So far as Azalea knew, Mr. Sullivan had never denounced Eastlake and
-Donahue, nor had he uttered any anti-Imperialistic shibboleths, but she
-simply could not bring herself to accept his attitude as sincere, and
-something warned her that this sudden flare of patriotism served an
-ignoble end.
-
-What, she asked herself, could he gain by putting Dilling in a position
-of honour and importance?
-
-Bribery was unthinkable, but might it not be that he sought some higher
-honour for himself, some post which could be more easily acquired by a
-friend at court than by personal application?
-
-“That’s stupid,” thought Azalea, “for the man has hosts of influential
-friends, who, though hesitating to introduce him to their wives and
-daughters, would exert no end of energy to gratify a political whim.
-There must be something else . . .”
-
-She drew in her breath sharply.
-
-What if animosity towards Dilling, and not friendship, or even
-self-interest, had prompted this extraordinary act of Mr. Sullivan’s!
-
-Was it possible, she asked herself, that he had built his policy on the
-theory that Dilling would be self-defeated by the deficiencies which
-Lady Denby so persistently deplored? Did he rely on the Capital’s
-beguilement by a Beau Brummell, and its rejection of a pilot who placed
-the substance before the shadow? Sullivan was astute enough to aim at
-Dilling’s most vulnerable spot, realising that it was scarcely probable
-for him to be overthrown by a political misadventure.
-
-A motive was not far to seek . . . Marjorie! Did Mr. Sullivan wish to
-cripple his antagonist beyond the chance of giving battle, and then
-himself reap the spoils? He was, she decided, quite capable of such
-infamy.
-
-She required no complaints from Lady Denby to remind her of the
-Dillings’ social short-comings. Times without number, she had tried to
-convince Marjorie that in Ottawa—in any Capital, probably—Success
-demands that aspect of good breeding which may be described as a
-superficial adaptability to others. But neither Marjorie nor her husband
-would conform to the standards set by other people, when those standards
-were opposed to the principles on which they had been nurtured.
-
-“It’s deceit,” said Marjorie.
-
-“It’s duplicity,” said Raymond.
-
-Success was not worth attaining unless it accompanied a cleanly heart.
-
-In such small matters did they transgress against the rules of that
-great governing body called Society. In such stupid little things! It
-was immaterial to Dilling whether he appeared in black shoes or tan.
-Marjorie developed a perfect genius for wearing the wrong clothes. At a
-luncheon given to some distinguished visitor, she could see no reason
-for “dressing up”, while for an affair confined to the humbler members
-of the Sunday School, she would wear the best that her wardrobe
-afforded. Similarly, in entertaining, she would provide the simplest
-repast for a guest of high degree, and spread before the officers of the
-Sweet Arbutus Club, a dinner that was elaborate by comparison.
-
-“People like Lady Sommerville and the Countess of Lynwood,” she argued,
-“have so much better than I could give them, they wouldn’t even notice
-any effort I could make. But with the others . . . it means something to
-them to be entertained in a Minister’s house. When I have them here, I
-am giving somebody real pleasure. Don’t you think it is worth a good
-deal of trouble?”
-
-The caparisons of greatness would always remain for them non-essentials.
-All externalities were vain pomp and inglorious display. The things that
-counted lay within—within the heart and mind and soul of man, and these
-they pursued and cultivated ardently.
-
-Azalea began to fear that without a drastic shifting of ideals, life
-would soon become quite insupportable for them in their Land of
-Afternoon.
-
-The birds were stirring, and a sullen dawn was taking possession of the
-sky before she fell into a troubled doze. She was conscious of a
-disturbing dissonance, a harsh thumping that beat against her brain, and
-she awoke to the sound of Lady Denby’s voice crying,
-
-“You would have made him a good wife, Azalea!”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Heavy-eyed, she entered the office in the morning.
-
-“Hello,” cried Dilling. “You’re here, at last! I’d begun to fear that
-you were ill.”
-
-The eagerness in his manner enraptured her. She drew it into her being,
-and was refreshed as from a draught of wine. She was conscious of a
-lifting of the weight that lay upon her spirit. He had been watching for
-her . . . he had been anxious . . . afraid that she was ill . . .
-
-She looked at him, standing in the doorway, vibrant with unusual health
-and vigour, scarcely able to keep the glory of her happiness from
-shining through her eyes. “Here you are, at last,” he had said. It was
-wonderful but it was true.
-
-Dilling relapsed into his accustomed matter-of-factness. He was utterly
-unconscious of his dependence upon this girl. At least, he was
-unconscious of the extent of his reliance. During the time he was
-waiting here, when his thoughts were definitely concerned with her, he
-was by no means wholly aware that she stood for him as an absorbing
-problem, intensifying mysteries and contrasts, pricking strange and
-sensitive spots in the sheath of his imagination. He only dimly
-suspected how much he owed her for the enlargement of his world and the
-discovery of new regions of thought and feeling.
-
-He had looked at the clock, trying to summon a sense of irritation.
-Azalea had never been late before. Instead, he succumbed to anxiety. She
-must be ill . . . He tried to recall her appearance, yesterday, and
-failed. He was stupid, that way . . . intensely stupid. He never noticed
-people . . . Marjorie was very clever. She could have seen in an instant
-whether Azalea Deane was ill . . .
-
-A curious thought cut athwart the woof of his reflection, a thought that
-had disturbed him more than once. Might she be tiring of her work? Did
-she find it—him—too exacting? Perhaps she wasn’t coming back at all!
-
-He rose, opened the door and looked out into the corridor. She was not
-coming. Tired out, probably . . . sick of her job! How could he make the
-work more interesting, he wondered? How could he show her greater
-consideration?
-
-He found it difficult not to drive Azalea. She encouraged him to overtax
-her strength. “If she’d only tell me when she’s had enough,” he thought
-guiltily. “But she won’t stop . . . won’t take advantage of the
-scheduled periods of rest!”
-
-Dilling felt that he must put a stop to this sort of thing. For example,
-the girl must go out for lunch. He must see that she went. Anticipation
-of proposed tyranny sent an agreeable warmth over him. There were many
-Members who took their secretaries out to lunch . . . why should he not
-take Azalea?
-
-A very sensible solution, so far as it went. He would see that she ate a
-proper meal in the middle of the day. He might take her at noon . . . if
-she would only come.
-
-The sequence of his thoughts was shattered, and Dilling caught himself
-speculating upon a hitherto unconsidered problem—Azalea’s relations
-with other men. What were they? Had she any close friends? If so, which
-were the men, and if not, why? Had she ever been in love, and why had
-she not married?
-
-Hastily, he discarded all the men he knew as unworthy of such a
-relationship, and then he fell to wondering how much she liked him. Was
-she capable of any depth of feeling, or was a sort of consistent
-cordiality, the expression of an intellectual glow that substituted for
-emotion?
-
-But he made little headway. He found that the clear, cold reason that
-ate like an acid through the metal of ordinary barriers, was impotent to
-solve this subtler question . . . that he was slow and clumsy in
-considering the psychology of Romance.
-
-Not that Dilling scented the least romantic element in his relationship
-with Azalea Deane. On the contrary! Never had he consciously admitted
-her femininity; never was he aware of the slightest exoteric appeal.
-Truly, did women say of him, “He’s a cold fish!” Azalea was, to him, a
-fine mind, a sort of disembodied intelligence, upon whose judgment he
-unconsciously leaned, and whose approbation he keenly desired.
-
-As he drew the telephone towards him to put an end to his impatience,
-the door opened and she entered the room.
-
- * * * * *
-
-“One might judge from your cheerful aspect, that the House would
-prorogue before lunch,” she smiled at him.
-
-“No such luck! Although, as a matter of fact, I believe the end’s in
-sight. The Budget should be down this week. There won’t be much more
-after that.”
-
-“This week?” Azalea bent diligently over her desk, “Then it won’t be
-long before you start West, again.”
-
-“Marjorie and the kids will probably go home. But I have no intention of
-accompanying them.”
-
-“Well, what will you do?” asked Azalea, in surprise.
-
-“I shall stay around Ottawa and become a golf addict. I played eighteen
-holes yesterday afternoon.”
-
-Above the mad singing of her heart, she caught a strange note in his
-voice, a note she was at a loss to diagnose. “I shall stay in Ottawa
-. . .” he said calmly, but in a peculiar way.
-
-She dared not trust herself to look at him. Eyes are responsible for
-more betrayals than are the lips. She wondered, nervously, whether he
-was looking at her. “I shall stay in Ottawa . . .” Surely, he had not
-meant . . . No, no! The thing was impossible! Never, by so much as a
-fleeting glance, had Raymond Dilling expressed anything more than
-friendliness towards her, and at that, it was the friendliness that man
-offers man. Had he not deplored the fact that she was born a woman? Hope
-that was as dear as it was unfounded, died under one smart blow of
-Reason and Azalea called herself a weak fool. She was ashamed.
-
-“You are singularly uninterested in the affairs pertaining to your
-Minister,” Dilling teased. “Why don’t you ask me some intelligent
-questions?”
-
-He looked at her with a sudden softening in his glance that was almost
-warm enough to be affectionate.
-
-“Very well. Why are you going to stay in Ottawa?” she asked, looking
-squarely at him.
-
-“Ah, that’s the wrong question. I can’t tell you at this moment. But you
-may make a note and refer to it, again.” The same curious sombreness
-crept into his voice. A new intensity shone in his face. “Later, I will
-remind you that I _had_ a reason! But ask another . . .”
-
-“With whom did you play golf?”
-
-“None other than His Royal Highness. Are you impressed?”
-
-“Not a whit! I’m not even surprised.”
-
-“What?”
-
-“No! I’ve already seen it in the papers.”
-
-“You’re joking!”
-
-“Really! It’s the first item in the Social Column. Only the reporter
-neglected to mention the score.”
-
-Dilling thanked heaven for that. The Duke, he thought, must be one of
-the best players in the United Kingdom. “He beat me”, he added. “Indeed,
-Pratt, who followed us round with fatuous insistence, called it a
-wallop.”
-
-“Do you know,” said Azalea, “I can scarcely picture you being beaten.
-Somehow, one feels that you ought to do everything well.”
-
-“Heaven forfend! You don’t understand me, Miss Deane! You think me
-always and inevitably serious—that my disposition will not permit me to
-do things by halves. Nothing is further from the truth.”
-
-“But you don’t agree with Horace, do you? Remember, he said that it is
-pleasant to play the fool deliberately, and be silly now and then.”
-
-“I do not! No one who recognises the thin line that divides sanity from
-its awful opposite, can ever willingly approach that line. On the other
-hand, however, I believe that it is an expedient of great psychonomic
-value to do things which one knows he does badly—or let us say
-inartistically—at times.”
-
-“Golf certainly offers rare opportunities to many persons,” murmured
-Azalea.
-
-“And dancing! Look at me . . . I dance as badly as I play golf, but
-candidly, I don’t _want_ to do either of them well. My mind rests itself
-in the conviction that I am doing badly, and so I am refreshed.”
-
-“What harm do you see in doing them well?”
-
-“Speaking for myself—and myself alone, you understand—I should be
-ashamed of excelling in either of these arts, because excellence spells
-much long and arduous labour in acquiring perfection. You remember
-Herbert Spencer’s rebuke to the young man who beat him handily at
-billiards . . . ‘Your exceedingly great skill argues a mis-spent youth’,
-he said. That’s just it! Skill in trivial things is not worth while
-unless you are earning your bread thereby. For example, were I a golf
-pro. or a dancing master . . . No, Miss Deane, I despise the crack
-amateur.”
-
-“Oh!”
-
-“It’s true, and having said so much, you will be prepared to hear me add
-that I dispute the sonorous counsel, ‘Whatsoever thy hand findeth to do,
-do it with all thy might’. Utter nonsense, I call it!”
-
-“Alack, alack!” cried Azalea. “What shall we do for copybook mottoes?”
-
-“I’ll give you a better one . . . ‘What’s only worth doing once in a
-while, should be forgotten until the next time!’ Now for the foreign
-papers. This parcel? Thank you.”
-
-He glanced rapidly through half a dozen of them—English, French and
-German. Azalea, watching him, saw his expression darken into
-apprehension, the meaning of which she could not fathom. Nor was she
-able to interpret his increasing preoccupation until one August morning
-he called her to the telephone.
-
-“I can tell you now why I stayed in Ottawa,” he said. “Despatches have
-just arrived . . . England has declared war on Germany . . . Canada will
-have to fight!”
-
-
-
-
- PART THREE
- They Conquered
-
-
- CHAPTER 21.
-
-Destiny seemed to be setting the stage for Armageddon, the last tragic
-scene in the play of human life. Pandora’s box had been opened and every
-mortal ill loosed to the bonds of hate. For more than three years, the
-sword of War had maimed the body of civilisation. It was a time when the
-vision of young men was carnage, and the dream of old men, despair.
-Prussian frightfulness was still exacting dreadful tribute from Celt and
-Anglo-Saxon battlefields that had lost all trace of old-time chivalry.
-The virtue of sheer sacrifice was confined to the English-speaking
-Dominions, the flower of whose youth had gone forth against a foe that
-had not directly challenged them; gone forth with joy to build their
-splendid bodies into ramparts that might be shattered but never stormed.
-
-The Blond Beast was shaking the blood from his eyes and looking
-anxiously across the Atlantic. But America had not yet decided to step
-into the breach.
-
-Thus with the men. Nor was the mettle of our women lacking in the hour
-of trial. Spartan mothers never sent their sons into battle with finer
-renunciation than did the mothers of the unconscripted youths who
-crowded the transports in the first two years of conflict. Women stepped
-into the gaping ranks of industry at home—into the farms and fields,
-and into factories originally designed for making ploughshares and
-pruning hooks, but now converted into plants for fashioning the
-panoplies of war. Thousands of these women clad themselves in the
-overalls of labour, and hundreds put on the uniform of the Red Cross.
-Life so lived was hard but it was intense, and “Carry on”, came to
-express one of the spiritual values of the ages.
-
-This was one picture of the activities of women during the grim tourney
-of Might against Right. There was another, not so inspiring. It revealed
-the cocotte and the flapper. Birds of beautiful plumage, these, who
-thronged London, Paris, Ostend—God knows where they were not—and sang
-their siren songs into masculine ears echoing with the shriek of shot
-and shell . . . songs that offered forgetfulness, Nirvana, to men who
-came out of a stinking Hell where the form of Death stalked grinning at
-their side. These were they who filled the theatres, cabarets, and tea
-shops, providing fat profits for jewellers, modistes, motor liveries;
-the hotels and inconspicuous road-houses.
-
-How swiftly in our own land came the changes wrought by war! One grew
-inured to bobbed hair, knee-length skirts, universal smoking, Einstein,
-trousered women, camouflage, expensive economy and economical
-extravagance, unashamed macquillage, weddings à la volée, War Babies,
-and appetency for divorce.
-
-The social limousine, as it sped on the road of Hysteria, was not alone
-in its responsiveness to the influences of the time. The car of politics
-was jolted from its accustomed track. Union Government was formed under
-the leadership of Sir Robert Borden, and both the great parties lost
-their distinctiveness, not so much from the deliberate fusion as from
-the departure of the pick of capable men from each. To complete the
-debacle of the Liberal Party, Sir Wilfrid Laurier—the thaumaturge of
-Canada’s peaceful days of growth—passed away, stupefied by the alarms
-of war. The nation lost its beautiful Parliament House by fire, set it
-was generally thought, by the myrmidons of the Kaiser.
-
-In the Dillings’ home, changes had also made their way. Marjorie found
-the top floor convenient as a meeting place for the dozen and one
-organisations over which she was asked to preside. Dilling had an office
-on the ground floor as well as at the Victoria Museum—whither the
-burnt-out Members of Parliament had been driven for refuge, and Azalea
-practically lived at the house.
-
-Mr. Sullivan was by no means an infrequent visitor and Lord Ronald
-Melville, the A.D.C., found a curious respite from Society’s
-kaleidoscopic demands upon him in the prim ugliness of Marjorie’s
-drawing-room.
-
-“I like him better than any man I ever knew,” she confided to Azalea,
-one evening as they sat waiting for the children to return from a
-masquerade at Government House. “He’s so old-fashioned.”
-
-Azalea laughed. “In what way?”
-
-“Ever so many ways! He doesn’t like women who smoke or swear, and he’s
-so fond of children.”
-
-“That _is_ old-fashioned!”
-
-Marjorie nodded. “I don’t think he likes Ottawa very much. He said that
-the Society here was like a blurred and microscopic reflection of London
-life. Wasn’t that pretty strong, Azalea?”
-
-“Well, it certainly is a definite view.”
-
-“I find it easy to get on with him,” Marjorie continued. “All the things
-I like to talk about seem interesting to him. With other people, no
-matter what I say, it doesn’t sound quite right, but with Their
-Excellencies and Lord Ronald, there is such a different feeling!”
-
-She sighed. Long ago, she had observed that famous people whose names
-she used to revere in Pinto Plains, neither talked nor acted like the
-sons of God; gradually, she discovered that age was not to be confused
-with sapience or high life with respectability. She realised that to
-succeed she must say daring things to people from whom she shrunk, and
-repeat the latest gossip freshened by a spraying of her own invention.
-She divined that in being kind to men and allowing them to talk frankly
-with her, she earned the enmity of their wives, and that if she held
-herself aloof, these same women considered her a stick and a fool. She
-could acquire neither the smart badinage of people of parts, nor the air
-of those who used ponderosity to cloak their native insipidities.
-
-“You should be very grateful for being clever,” Marjorie said. “If I
-were only a little bit cleverer, I shouldn’t have found Ottawa half
-so—so—difficult.” She blushed. “Do you know, Azalea, I used to think
-that everybody here would be like Lord Ronald, good and kind and
-friendly. I used to think Society was exactly like _that_!”
-
-Azalea’s mouth grew hard. She knew, without being told, that some one
-had inflicted a hurt upon Marjorie’s tender spirit, and all her love
-rose up in revolt.
-
-“Society!” she cried. “Can’t you see that what we dignify by that name
-is merely a mechanism devised to give a certain class of climbers and
-parasites the power to lead a comfortably otiose existence at the
-expense of the shrinking and the credulous?”
-
-“I’m afraid I don’t understand quite all of that,” confessed Marjorie.
-“But I know it’s clever. There are so many clever people, here. That is
-what makes me seem stupider than I really am, by comparison.”
-
-“They are not clever,” contradicted Azalea. “They are simply experts in
-the art of pretence. They succeed by bluff.”
-
-“You have to be clever to do that,” argued Marjorie. Then suddenly, “I
-hope you won’t mind my saying so, Azalea, but you know I’ve often
-thought how much better everything would have been for everybody if you
-had been married to Raymond!”
-
-Azalea raised startled eyes to see Dilling standing in the doorway. That
-he had overheard Marjorie’s words was obvious. He stood regarding her
-with a strange interest as if studying her in the light of a sudden
-revelation. With an onrush of knowledge, he became conscious of his
-soul, for the first time. He knew its needs and how Azalea had met them
-during the months they had worked together. He saw Azalea as a woman
-. . . as the luminous source of all his inspiration.
-
-A moment passed . . . a moment that held an eternity of understanding.
-Soul met soul, disdaining the barriers of sense. The room was filled
-with the sound of Marjorie’s knitting needles. The clock began to chime
-. . .
-
-The pell-mell entrance of the children shattered the spell that gripped
-them. Baby, drunk with excitement, staggered to Marjorie and climbed, a
-crumpled heap of tarltan and tinsel, into her lap. Besser, proudly
-wearing a jester’s cap over one ear, retrieved from his pocket, three
-sticky lumps that had once been cake, and laid them on the table.
-Althea, infected by the snobbery in which she had so lately been a
-participant, flipped up her skirts at the back, and wriggled decorously
-upon a chair.
-
-“Well, my treasures, and was the party boo-ti-fool?” demanded Marjorie.
-
-A torrent of speech answered her.
-
-“And were you dear, good children?” she asked. “What of my tomboy,
-Althea?”
-
-“I was the goodest one at the party,” replied that young person. “Mind
-you, Mummie, I was the _only child_ what folded up my napkin!”
-
-
- CHAPTER 22.
-
-Dilling and Azalea met on the following morning, in all outward
-respects, exactly as they had met for nearly five years.
-
-A third person watching them would have detected no change in their
-manner, no relaxing in their poise, no studied indifference. Neither was
-there discernible the strained control proclaiming a furtive
-curiosity—a hunger—to see how the other would behave.
-
-“Good morning,” said Dilling, finding her engrossed with the mail. “I
-hope you are well.”
-
-Azalea echoed this cliché and observed that their correspondence seemed
-to increase daily. It was the sort of thing they often said.
-
-“I’ll be ready in just a moment,” he told her, and passed quickly behind
-the green baize door that gave into his private office.
-
-All this was as it had been many times before.
-
-Azalea caught her breath in two fluttering little sighs. That was over;
-and without any of the embarrassments she had dreaded. It had been quite
-easy—almost disappointingly easy—but altogether fine. That was what
-she had prayed that Dilling should remain; it was what she knew he would
-always remain—fine!
-
-At the same time, she wondered how he felt, exactly what minute little
-thoughts had come to him since he stood between the dull, fringed
-portieres and stared at her, stunned, yet with the light of a sublime
-revelation dawning in his eyes. She wondered with a hot stab of pain, if
-he felt himself duped, humbugged, betrayed.
-
-She visualised the brief and pregnant scene again, imagining—or was it
-divining?—the thought that must have come to him as his eyes held hers
-in that sudden bond of understanding. “This is a piece of staggering
-news to me,” he must have said. “I am taken at a disadvantage . . .
-emotionally naked . . . but you knew . . . you knew . . .”
-
-And she saw herself mutely admitting the accusation, but with sadness,
-as a mother might have felt when some disturbing information could no
-longer be withheld from the child she loved. And she wondered if he
-suffered at losing the false serenity in which he had been living.
-
-Did he resent the age-old wisdom that enabled her to see, while he
-groped and stumbled, fatuous in his blindness? Did he feel humiliation?
-
-On her desk the buzzer sounded. His summons. For a moment, Azalea sat
-quite still, looking at the little instrument that had called her in
-exactly the same way countless times before. And yet, not quite the
-same. To-day, there was something different. No, it would never be the
-same again.
-
-As she gathered up her notebook, pencil and a sheaf of papers, her heart
-ached for him.
-
-“Why,” she asked herself, rebelliously, “why must the cup of knowledge
-be so bitter? Why must the coming of truth be so difficult and hard to
-bear?”
-
-He did not raise his eyes when she entered the room, but presently, he
-seemed to know that she was seated and ready.
-
-“Taking up the matter of the Quebec Bridge,” he began, “is the report
-down from Council, yet?” Then, without waiting for an answer, “But
-first, are there any Imperial despatches?”
-
-The routine of the morning progressed as usual. Reports to Council,
-petitions from small centres demanding votes from the Public Treasury
-out of all proportion to their possible returns, eternal complaints and
-criticisms from malcontents, applications for pensions from War Widows,
-enquiries from distracted mothers—all the departmental _acta-diurna_ of
-a ministerial incumbency that had to be cleared away before he was free
-to undertake the pressing matters that fell to his especial talents to
-perform.
-
-And he compelled his brain to function along its accustomed channels,
-while some inner chamber of his mind carried on a separate trend of
-thought—separate, and, at the same time, veiled, like the thinking that
-is part of a dream.
-
-He wondered how Azalea felt, sitting there so composedly; and beautiful,
-like Lamb’s divinely plain _Miss Kelly_. Was there an element of pity,
-even contempt beneath her consistent consideration, for the man who was
-insentient to the message of his own heart? Dilling recoiled from the
-mawkish flavour of the phrase. He despised all sentimentality, and had
-he been called upon to debate the subject would have denied the heart
-the conspicuous place universally accorded it, in emotional relations
-between the sexes. Imbeciles and sensualists “fell in love”, because the
-world refuses to countenance the cruder, if more honest, passion.
-Dilling had never been in love—neither with Marjorie nor any other
-woman. Even now he refused to connect the term with Azalea. He had
-suddenly become aware of joy in her companionship, of his dependence
-upon the mental stimulation she provided, of a hitherto unsuspected
-peace in their spiritual communion. In her, he had found the priceless
-thing for which men seek throughout their lives—Understanding.
-
-“I couldn’t get along without her,” he said to himself. “She understands
-me.” And having thus spoken, he could say no more. It was the highest
-tribute he could pay—the highest tribute any man can pay to woman.
-
-With Azalea, he felt himself the man he wished to be; not smug and
-stodgily content, but rejoicing in the struggle towards an ideal which
-he believed was one that she approved.
-
-Sitting opposite her, apparently engrossed in matters of a widely
-divergent nature, Dilling examined himself, detachedly. He had no desire
-to touch her . . . to cry to her, “I love you!” But the thought of
-losing her companionship, mental contact with her, produced a pain so
-intolerable that it dismayed him.
-
-And in that flash of utter wretchedness, he saw how completely he was
-wedded to Azalea; how sublime was this cold, pure marriage of the
-spirit. With Marjorie, mental companionship was absolutely non-existent.
-They were bound together by duty, habit, and the intimacies permitted
-those who have accepted man-made ritual as final . . . and Divine. They
-had no need of one another. Fondness expressed the extent of his
-emotion, and for several years, he had realised that a fierce
-maternalism on her part was substitute for the rarer ecstasy of love.
-
-He was as free from connubial fetters as it is given man to be. Marjorie
-was never exacting, but even so, Dilling was conscious of restriction,
-bondage. He wanted to be free!
-
-He thought of other married men, and saw for the first time how their
-wives crowded into their lives; they were like two snails trying to
-crowd into the same shell. Through no fault of hers, Marjorie often
-crowded him. Then his mind turned to Azalea, who never had provoked that
-sensation in all the years of their association. On the contrary, she
-always seemed to liberate his mind, to give him light and space and air.
-She was his mate, not his keeper or his charge.
-
-He wondered when she first began to love him, and whether the knowledge
-had brought her pleasure or unrest. Had she felt humiliation at his
-unresponsiveness, perhaps? Had he ever hurt her? What a contrast between
-Azalea and Hebe Barrington! A gentle perspiration broke out on his brow,
-and he lost the trend of his thought for an instant. One was suggestive
-of the hot breath of the jungle; the other, the cool freshness of the
-open sea. Mentally, Dilling removed his sandals as he looked across the
-crowded desk, and reverently kneeled at Azalea’s feet.
-
-“I’m glad I know . . .” he said to himself. “Not that it will make the
-slightest difference. We will go on exactly as before. Thank God, she is
-sensible—not like other women!”
-
-It did not occur to him, however, that he was like other men—in one
-respect, at least; that this was a matter differing from any problem
-that had entered into his career. It would not be settled once and for
-all. It would not be laid away beyond the need of further consideration.
-He was soon to find that he could not ignore the insistency of this
-strange emotion that caught him at most unexpected, inconvenient
-moments. At first, such unaccustomed tyranny annoyed him. But gradually,
-he grew to like it, to seek the refreshment of it, as one who finds
-refreshment in the perfume of a flower.
-
-Mechanically, he selected a letter from the wire basket under his hand,
-and dictated,
-
-“Dear Mr. Jackson,
-
-“(The Jackson case again. I’ll finish it this morning!) . . . I have
-just had your letter, dated 22nd ultimo—now a week overdue, here—by
-this morning’s mail. It does not occur to me that carelessness caused
-your delay in sending it off. I note that it was posted only four days
-ago.
-
-“I am inclined to think that it was some evocation of your better
-judgment, I will even go so far as to say conscience, in this extremely
-unpleasant affair, that provoked a debate within yourself as to whether
-the letter should be mailed to me, at all.
-
-“It is necessary at times to speak plainly to one’s friends, and a
-moment’s reflection will convince you, I am sure, that this is such a
-time. Frankly, your letter and its suggestion that I should use my
-political influence to forward the project of the Moccasin Realty Co.
-Ltd., which is only the business name cloaking that of yourself and your
-son-in-law, to sell the jerry-built Cameron Terrace to the Dominion
-Government at five times the price for which you built it two years
-since, is a stark offence to me. I will have no part or lot in such an
-unpleasant—I speak euphemistically—transaction, and I ask you to
-consider this answer final.
-
-“The Terrace has twice been reported against by the Inspector of the
-Indian Department as quite unfit for the purpose of an Indian School.
-You, sir, are perfectly well aware that it is ill-drained and impossible
-to heat without being veneered, or stuccoed, at great additional cost.
-
-“I shall say no more about the matter, but if my refusal to aid your
-attempt upon the Treasury of this overburdened country costs me the loss
-of your support—if it should cost me the loss of my entire
-constituency—I shall accept the situation in the knowledge that, at
-least, I have done my duty. It is only upon such a footing that I can
-remain in public life . . .”
-
-He raised his eyes, hard and cold with anger, and asked,
-
-“Do you think he’ll believe I’m sincere?”
-
-Azalea shook her head. “He’ll complain, as so many of them do.”
-
-“How’s that?”
-
-“He will say when in power the Liberals forget their principles and the
-Conservatives, their friends.”
-
-They both sighed.
-
-The banging of doors and quivering of beaver-board partitions that had
-converted the spaciousness of the Victoria Memorial Museum into cubicles
-wherein Canada’s Parliamentarians might be temporarily housed, the
-scurrying along corridors and clang of the elevator gate, told Azalea
-that noon had come. When immersed in work, Dilling was utterly oblivious
-to the flight of time.
-
-“What about lunch?” she asked, as soon as he paused. “The gun sounded
-some time ago.”
-
-How often had she said exactly the same thing!
-
-“Are you so hungry?” he asked, astonished to miss the playful effect he
-had intended to convey. Dropping into the still room, the silly words
-had almost a nervous note.
-
-“Starving,” lied Azalea, easily, and knowing his unadmitted dependence
-upon food.
-
-“Very well. I’ll go, too. But I’m coming back early, to-day. We must
-unearth that Hansard before I go to Council. It will never do to let
-Bedford get away with his want-of-confidence Motion on the British
-Preference, in this high-handed fashion! We must make him eat his words
-. . . and while I think of it. Miss Deane, please don’t let
-anyone—_anyone_—disturb me.”
-
-
- CHAPTER 23.
-
-Azalea lunched lightly, and then found herself an inconspicuous bench in
-the little park off Lewis Street. The sun was warm and golden; the air
-soft with the promise of approaching summer. The trees had already burst
-into leaf. Careless children had left their toys about on the moist
-walks. Gardeners, taking advantage of the dinner hour, had deserted the
-wire-fenced enclosures that would presently break into a melody of
-colour.
-
-But Azalea saw none of these things. She was at variance with spring.
-More autumnal was her mood. She sat quite still, unfidgetting, yet with
-the air of one who is tense, who is waiting for the storm that is bound
-to break.
-
-“How long can this go on?” she was thinking. “He won’t continue the
-pretence that things are the same. He is too honest. But what will he
-do, then?”
-
-A wave of exultation surged over her. It wouldn’t be easy for him to
-find another secretary, she said. He would miss her in the office, to
-say the least. And not only in the office. His eyes had betrayed so
-much. Why could they not go on, she asked herself, with passionate
-vehemence?
-
-They could. The whole thing rested upon her. The type of relationship
-that exists between men and women, always rests upon the determination
-of the woman. In this case, Azalea knew that she must keep Dilling from
-being too conscious of her. She must make none of the unspoken demands
-that even the least exacting woman makes upon the man who has confessed
-himself in love. Neither must she allow him to feel that a secret bond
-was held between them. Above all, she must keep his emotional
-temperature at its accustomed low ebb. Any suggestion of coquetry on her
-part, now, would disturb his tranquility, and remind him that he had
-violated the spirit of the narrow law governing his moral code.
-
-Could she do all this? If so, she knew they could go on.
-
-Azalea believed that love could exist between a man and a woman without
-emotional gratification and without expression save in the terms of
-friendship. She believed that it can be fed freely, by the mind and by
-the spirit, just as the body can be fed sanely without the bizarre
-concoctions demanded by self-encouraged neurasthenics. The secret lies
-in a woman’s power, and wish, to keep the association free from the
-tempering of passion. It is not enough to control it, argued Azalea. It
-must never be aroused. And this is rare, but not impossible.
-
-She was not a vain woman. There was no conceit in her, and illusions had
-long since flown on the wings of dreams that were unfulfilled. She knew
-that she was plain, unlovely, unmagnetic; that never since adolescence
-had she awakened the readily distinguishable expression in man’s eyes
-that proclaims his discovery of the femaleness in his companion. But it
-was because she hadn’t tried!
-
-According to her theory, the physical envelope matters comparatively
-little. The mysterious force that is called attraction, magnetism,
-passion, what you will, exists in plain and beautiful alike, and can be
-projected at will. Therefore, she possessed the female’s instinctual
-power to project this force—this beam that is like a shaft of light,
-and blinds the man upon whom it is thrown. He beholds the woman in a
-flame of radiance, unmindful of her lack of pulchritude. And not only is
-his physical sight impaired, but his mental eye loses its clarity of
-vision, and he invests this uncompanionable female with every quality he
-thinks desirable. He wants her. He starves for her. He will not be
-denied. And after marrying her, what happens?
-
-The woman, having acquired the man upon whom she has fixed her choice,
-grows careless, indifferent, lazy. She no longer lights the shaft that
-dazzled him; she no longer projects it in his direction. He blinks,
-looks, and rubs his eyes; half the time, he doesn’t understand . . .
-Where is the woman he loved and married? Who is this creature, this
-unattractive stranger who pushes herself into his life, and tries to
-dominate, absorb it? There has been some hideous mistake . . . Steeped
-in the delusion that man is the determining factor in the mockery of
-emotional marriage, he takes the blame upon himself, persuaded that the
-fault is his. At first, he tries to hide his disenchantment. He says
-nothing . . . He determines to do nothing . . . just go on . . . They
-both go on . . . spiritually too far apart, physically too close
-together . . . bound by Church and State, and accustoming themselves to
-the functioning of two persons who live in that abominable
-intimacy—ironically termed the bonds of Holy Wedlock!
-
-Azalea believed that the bond of wedlock could only be holy when it is
-not artificially constructed by predative females in search of economic
-ease, with a possible thrill or two, to boot. She agreed with the
-cynicism that marriage is man’s after-thought and woman’s first
-intention. She further believed that by continuing the rigid control of
-herself—control that neutralised and de-natured her—she and Dilling
-could maintain a relationship that not only was free from irregularity,
-but embarrassment.
-
-Mingling with the stream of Civil Servants that flowed in and out of the
-Museum, Azalea’s mind was still concerned with the relationships between
-men and women, married and single. She thought of her sisters with
-something very like disgust; of Lady Elton, Eva Leeds, Mrs. Pratt, Mrs.
-Blaine, Mrs. Hudson, Mme. Valleau . . . what real comradeship did they
-offer their husbands? Swift’s words came to her as being especially
-applicable. “There would be fewer unhappy marriages in the world,” he
-said, “if women thought less of making nets, and more of making cages.”
-
-She had never tried to make a net, not even for Raymond Dilling. She
-loved him too deeply to trap—to ensnare him. And if she longed to make
-a cage for him, it was as a means of protection, safety, refuge; not the
-terrible gilt-barred thing in which he would feel a sense of shame at
-his imprisonment.
-
-She could hear him pacing about his little room, muttering fragmentary
-sentences now and then. The sound disturbed her. He was not, as a rule,
-stimulated to intensive thought by prowling. Was she already responsible
-for disorganising the methodical workings of his mind?
-
-Poise, control, fell from her. She turned the pages of Hansard
-feverishly and without intelligence. She longed to go to him, to take
-his frail body in her arms, to soothe him in her self-effacing
-renunciatory way. She longed to whisper to him, “There, my dear, you
-needn’t dread me. You needn’t be afraid.”
-
-Instead, she sat at her desk and fluttered the leaves of Hansard, and
-suffered the anguish of one who cannot take on the suffering of that
-beloved other . . .
-
-A knock on the door startled her. She turned to see Hebe Barrington
-advancing into the room.
-
-“Oh! _You_ are still here?” was her greeting.
-
-“I find the work congenial,” returned Azalea.
-
-The two women faced one another, understood one another. Neither made a
-pretence of concealing the animosity that had always existed between
-them. Azalea resented Hebe’s habit of establishing herself, taking
-complete possession of situations and people, and ordering the destiny
-of all with whom she came in contact. Hebe hated Azalea for the calm
-tenacity and cold superiority that had thwarted her so many times in the
-past. She had just returned from England, whither patriotic fervour and
-the personal attractions of a certain fulgid major had drawn her. The
-zest with which she had undertaken a particular form of War Work had
-strained even Toddles’ indulgence, until the only way they could live
-together was to live apart.
-
-Hebe had abandoned her pursuit of Dilling, and renounced all complicity
-in Sullivan’s plans after a stormy interview with that gentleman. What
-she demanded, grandly, were his nugatory projects compared with the
-clarion call of Empire? He felt very bitterly towards her, blaming her
-for the miscarriage of his schemes. Had he foreseen the outbreak of the
-War, or Hebe’s defection, he never in the world would have assisted
-Dilling to a position of prominence where his public record commanded
-respectful admiration and where his private life was above reproach.
-
-“Isn’t this a killing little hole?” Hebe observed, alert to every
-detail. “Sordid, undignified. You should see the quarters of the British
-politicians . . . and the War Offices . . .”
-
-Tiny flames of anger gathered in Azalea’s eyes. There was something in
-the insolence of the other woman that suggested a personal criticism—as
-though she could have arranged the room more fittingly, prevented its
-sordidness, its displeasing atmosphere.
-
-“A few flowers would make a difference,” she went on, appraising
-Azalea’s coat and hat that hung near the door.
-
-“We don’t spend much money on flowers, now, merely for decorative
-purposes,” answered the other.
-
-“What a pity! I always think that’s what they’re for. Is Raymond—Mr.
-Dilling—in there?”
-
-“Yes, but he’s too busy to be disturbed.”
-
-Their eyes met in open hostility.
-
-“I object to the word ‘disturbed’,” said Hebe. “My visit is supposed to
-have exactly the opposite effect.” She smiled, a brilliantly ugly smile.
-
-Azalea lifted her shoulders almost imperceptibly. “Mr. Dilling gave me
-definite instructions to allow no one to see him. I’m sorry, but I can’t
-make an exception, even in your favour.”
-
-“What fidelity to duty,” mocked Hebe.
-
-“You are very kind,” bowed Azalea, as though receiving a compliment.
-
-“You know very well that your employer would not refuse to admit me,”
-cried Hebe. “Don’t you think I can see the vicious pleasure behind this
-rigid adherence to your instructions? Let me pass!”
-
-“You are making a ridiculous scene,” said Azalea, white to the lips. “I
-am treating you just as I would treat anybody else—the Prime Minister,
-himself. You are not going to disturb—interrupt—Mr. Dilling!”
-
-“How are you going to prevent me?” taunted Hebe. “Lay violent hands upon
-me and fling me to the floor?”
-
-“I shan’t touch you,” retorted Azalea, her voice trembling with cold
-anger. “But I shall regard intrusion upon Mr. Dilling as a personal
-attack, and shall not have the slightest hesitation in ordering the
-policeman to protect his privacy.”
-
-She stretched out her hand towards the telephone and held it ready for
-use.
-
-Hebe burst into a peal of derisive laughter. She advanced with an air of
-high daring. Then an expression of cunning crept into her fire-shot
-eyes. Azalea had threatened to call a policeman. He would lay
-restraining hands upon her. She would struggle upon the very threshold
-of the young Minister’s office. She would scream. People would rush from
-their rooms into the corridor to see . . .
-
-A splendid scene! Magnificent! There would be a glorious scandal . . .
-“Two women fight over the Hon. Mr. Dilling. Shocking episode in the
-temporary House of Parliament.” She laughed again. Uncle Rufus would be
-not only placated; he would be grateful.
-
-“I’ve warned you,” said Azalea.
-
-“You won’t dare!”
-
-“Stop!”
-
-“I’m going in, I tell you!”
-
-Raising her hand to push open the door, Hebe found Azalea directly in
-her path. But it was too late to change her intention, and she struck
-the girl a smart blow in the face. Exactly at that moment, Dilling
-stepped into the room.
-
-There was a painful silence. Of the three, the Minister felt the
-greatest embarrassment. He could readily guess what had happened.
-
-Hebe spoke,
-
-“In another moment, we should have been almost angry, Raymond,” she
-cried. “I couldn’t make this dear girl see that I was an exception to
-your iron-bound rule covering the ordinary visitor.”
-
-“When did you come back?” asked Dilling, allowing his hand to lie limply
-between hers for an instant.
-
-“Only this morning. Half past twelve, from Montreal. Landed yesterday,
-and here I am to pay my respects. And your faithful secretary wanted to
-turn me out. Scold her, Raymond,” she cried, archly. “Please do!”
-
-“I’m afraid I haven’t time, just now,” replied Dilling. Then, as he
-passed the desk to which Azalea had returned with a fine show of
-absorption in Hansard, he said, “Can you stay after five? We must
-consult together as to my future policy following to-day’s eventful
-meeting.”
-
-“We?” echoed Hebe, with a noticeable touch of derision. “La, la! _Que
-c’est charmant!_ I’ve heard that a successful politician is merely a
-matter of having a clever secretary, but I never credited the statement
-until now.” She turned directly to Dilling. “You are going out?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“I will come with you—as far as you go.”
-
-“Thank you,” said Dilling. “We meet in this building.”
-
-He opened the door, started to pass through, then, remembering the
-conventions, waited for Hebe to precede him. Azalea did not raise her
-eyes, but she knew without looking that he did not glance behind him.
-
-She sat motionless after they had gone, while her heart stilled its wild
-plunging, and the air cleared of crimson-hot vibrations. She did not
-think of herself or review the part she had played in the absurd drama
-of Hebe’s making. She did not ask herself whether her attitude had been
-convincing or ridiculous. Strangely enough, she did not think, “I might
-have said . . .” Her concern was for Raymond Dilling.
-
-She knew that he did not, never could, love Hebe Barrington. Jealousy
-was far removed from her considerations. But a slow, cold fear crawled
-through her as she thought of another contingency. Dilling’s balance had
-shifted. He had become conscious of new and disturbing emotions. He was
-like an instrument tuned by a gentle hand and therefore prepared to
-respond even to the coarsest touch. Would not the very fact of his
-awakened love for her, make him an easier victim of Hebe’s seductive
-beleaguerment?
-
-The thought racked her throughout the afternoon. She could not keep her
-mind on her work. She spent herself in a sort of helpless passion of
-protection, feeling that she would give her very life to save him from
-the toils of the other woman. She had set him on a lofty pedestal, high
-above the ruck of mud and slime. Her pride in him was renunciatory,
-fiercely maternal. She wanted to keep him fair and pure for himself
-. . . not in the slightest sense for her.
-
-She had grown strong in a fanatical belief that one of the chief
-elements of Britain’s power is the moral weight behind it; that her
-statesmen are clean, straight-forward and honourable, on the whole, and
-that intrigue and deception are alien to their nature. Furthermore, she
-felt that now, in the Empire’s hour of supreme trial, it was upon the
-power and pressure of this conviction throughout the world, that the
-future of England must depend.
-
-
- CHAPTER 24.
-
-The Premier’s health had been sadly broken by the War. This pandemic
-scourge had come into being while Canada was still in her nonage, and
-what she needed most in leadership throughout the conflict, was what he
-had most to give, namely, a fine obstinacy of purpose. Possessing this,
-the lack of dramatic picturesqueness was forgiven him by a
-spectacle-loving people.
-
-But inflexibility is always a target and a challenge for assault, and
-when not engaged in repelling his foes on Mr. Speaker’s Left, Sir Robert
-was called upon to reckon with the mutiny of his colleagues whose sense
-of honour was not inconveniently high. Throughout the actual ordeal of
-battle, the edge of the weapons of menace found him adamant. But towards
-the end of the four years’ darkness, the strain became too heavy, and
-several months before the world settled to enjoy the hostility of peace,
-rumours of his impending resignation drifted along the currents of the
-House.
-
-The break came later—after he had gone to France to sign the Treaty of
-Versailles on our behalf—a glorious mission, truly, and significant of
-Canada’s entry into the Council of the Nations. It was then that the
-burden of his great labour and achievement levied a heavier toll than he
-could pay. Atropos threatened him with her shears. He sank into the
-relaxation of a profound collapse, and offered his resignation as Prime
-Minister. Holding the Rudder of the Ship of State with a world in arms,
-had broken him, as it broke the great Commoner, Pitt. That the parallel
-was not completed by his death, was a matter of national rejoicing, and
-he lived to know that his purity of conduct, his strength of purpose and
-his courage in the supreme crisis of civilisation, marked him as one of
-the real forces in history.
-
-And so it happened that in Canada there was no man like Lloyd George who
-held his position unchallenged throughout the duration of the War.
-Political and military scandals had their ugly day. Heroes were exalted
-and overthrown almost within the same hour.
-
-Dilling offered the closest analogy, perhaps, to the great British
-statesman. He retained not only his own portfolio, but undertook the
-directing of several others, while an interregnum occurred and there had
-been discovered no incumbent to fill the office. He had “acted” as Prime
-Minister on more than one occasion, and when these resignation rumours
-began to float about, his name was mentioned as a possible successor.
-
-Public Works were paralyzed. The gargantuan ambitions of Eastlake and
-Donahue hung in abeyance. They dared not intrude their demands for
-further subsidies while war taxes bled the country white. Dilling turned
-his eyes from the elevators, and saw only the Empire’s present need.
-Grain moved heavily eastward, but the great driving power of the West
-was crippled. The hand that rocked her cradle was engaged in destroying
-the very manhood she had suckled at her prairie breast. Capable of
-producing food for more than half the world, she was starving for
-sustenance to keep herself alive.
-
-Never had the Hon. Member for Morroway been so deeply engrossed in the
-business of politics. Never had he applied himself so sedulously to the
-successful culmination of his vast schemes and secret projects, or
-neglected for so lengthy a period the gentler pursuits that so intrigued
-him. It was rumoured in some quarters that he had reformed. The rumour
-was not received with universal satisfaction, for the penitent has only
-the applause of the devotee who reclaims him.
-
-Howarth and Turner watched him with mingled concern and respect, and
-wondered as to the nature of his game. After the entry of the United
-States into the War, and when the outcome was a foregone conclusion,
-these two gentlemen became somewhat apprehensive as to the future of the
-Party (and incidentally their own place in the political sun). The
-rumours of Sir Robert’s resignation moved them profoundly.
-
-“Of course,” said Turner, as the three sat in Mr. Sullivan’s cheerful
-office, “Sir Adrian Grant will be a candidate, but I don’t believe he
-has the ghost of a chance. It looks to me like a walk-over for Dilling.
-He’ll march to the seat of honour, terrible as an army with banners.”
-
-“Yes,” agreed Howarth. “I don’t know who’s going to stop him. That
-damned silly boost of yours, Sullivan, has done us in the eye, if you
-ask me.”
-
-Mr. Sullivan examined the contents of his glass against the pale spring
-twilight, and remarked that he was always glad to hear the opinions of
-his friends, even though he had not asked for them. In the present
-instance, however, he seemed to detect some thing monstrous and
-repetitive.
-
-“Sure, I’ve said it before, and I’ll say it again,” announced Howarth,
-warmly. “What’s going to keep him from stepping into the P. M.’s shoes,
-if we have to go to the country? Hasn’t he made good! Don’t the people
-think he’s a little tin god? Hasn’t he got a lot of useful experience
-out of the last few years?”
-
-“All because of this Minister business,” supplemented Turner. “Except
-for that, we could have kept him down. He wouldn’t have had a chance.”
-
-“But now, as matters stand, he’ll walk in, put over the Elevator
-project, and . . .”
-
-“. . . the E. D. Company will flourish like a green bay tree, and where
-will our little plans come in?” demanded Turner, bitterly. “If you want
-to eat honey in peace, say the Russians, you must first kill all the
-bees.”
-
-Mr. Sullivan nodded, but preserved an inscrutable silence.
-
-“Have you got something up your sleeve, old man?” asked Howarth, in a
-foolish, coaxing tone. “There’s no denying you’re a pretty shrewd lad in
-your own way, Rufus, and you don’t often make mistakes. Personally, I
-rely absolutely upon your judgment, and am ready to follow—oh,
-_absolutely_,” he insisted, conscious of a slight twitching at the
-corners of Mr. Sullivan’s full lips. “At the same time, there are
-occasions recorded in history, when the most astute persons have been
-misled, when the best-laid schemes have taken a most unprecedented and
-disastrous twist. If you have a plan, why not take us into your
-confidence, Rufus? Why not discuss your ideas . . . three heads, you
-know . . .”
-
-“Reminiscent of Cerberus”, cut in Turner. “Pretty good watch dog, eh?”
-
-“Sure,” assented Howarth. “Three heads . . . as I say. And besides, I’m
-just restless in my desire to help.”
-
-But it was Marjorie who was the Hon. Member’s first confidante. She
-neither realised the importance of this, nor appreciated the honour that
-he did her.
-
-He had begged for an uninterrupted moment—a moment clipped from her
-over-full days, when appointment followed appointment in a continuous,
-dizzying succession—and, because he had said it was urgent, she agreed
-to receive him one night at ten o’clock. An earlier release was
-impossible from the pandemonium advertised as a Patriotic Bazaar.
-
-“The dear little woman looks tired,” he said, taking her hand. “Isn’t
-she trying to push a great heavy Mercedes up a very steep hill, with a
-Ford engine? Aren’t you doing far too much of this hysterical War Work,
-little Marjorie?”
-
-“Wednesday is my worst day,” she told him, and tried to withdraw her
-hand . . . “not the actual work, but going to things. You see,” she
-explained, “it makes such a difference . . . I can’t understand it,
-really . . . If we go to these patriotic things . . . the Ministers’
-wives, I mean. We don’t do anything but walk around, and have people
-introduced to us, and it’s _so_ useless and tiring!”
-
-“My dear . . . my dear!” murmured the sympathetic Member.
-
-“I don’t mind the work, a bit,” Marjorie continued, trying to force a
-note of weariness out of her voice. “The sewing and sorting of donations
-and that kind of thing. I feel as though—as though, well, I feel that I
-am really doing something for our boys over there, whereas walking
-around these bazaars and sitting idle at Executive meetings—” she shook
-her head and left the sentence unfinished. “But you wanted to see me
-about something in particular, you said.”
-
-The Hon. Member for Morroway assumed his most charmingly avuncular air.
-Little by little, he overcame Marjorie’s instinctive resistance. She was
-always so eager to like people, to believe in them and find them good.
-He asked if she could keep a secret—even from her husband, and gaining
-a somewhat hesitant answer, whispered,
-
-“How would you like to see him Prime Minister, my dear?”
-
-Marjorie’s tired brain reeled. She couldn’t grasp the thought, at all.
-Prime Minister . . . Raymond . . . so soon to see the fulfilment of his
-heart’s desire? No, no! She shrunk away from the idea. There must be
-some mistake. They were so young, so inexperienced. They were not
-properly prepared, not sufficiently worthy. She felt an overwhelming
-pity for all those women whose lives were broken, and whose hearts were
-torn by the War. It shadowed the satisfaction, the joyousness she might
-have taken for herself. Prime Minister!
-
-Sullivan sat quiet, watching her, and the changing expressions that sped
-across her haggard face. He read them as easily as though they had been
-printed there, and he waited.
-
-“Do you want Raymond to be Prime Minister?” Marjorie finally whispered.
-“Do you think he _ought_ to be?”
-
-“There is little doubt on either score.” Mr. Sullivan was soothing,
-reassuring. “As you know, I am only an inconspicuous cog in the
-political machine, but even the smallest cog can control the working of
-the whole. Just as it can obstruct,” he added, lightly. “Without meaning
-to boast, I believe that my influence is sufficient to secure him the
-Premiership—just as I was somewhat instrumental in putting him into the
-Cabinet.”
-
-“Oh, Mr. Sullivan—Uncle Rufus, do you really mean to help?”
-
-“With all my heart, little woman,” he replied, “and so must you.”
-
-“I?” Her confused mind translated the assistance he suggested into a
-need for increasing “stiffness”.
-
-“Of course! Why not?”
-
-“What must I do?”
-
-Mr. Sullivan became affectionately confidential. The most important
-thing, he assured her, was persuading Dilling how ardently she wanted
-him to accept the position.
-
-“But he won’t refuse . . . will he?”
-
-“There is just that little possibility . . . yes, it is conceivable that
-he might. I mustn’t tire you with an exposition of the complicated
-question,” he went on, “but to secure the support he needs, would
-require a slight change of policy . . . not quite superficially, either.
-I might go so far as to say _ab imo pectore_, if you know what I mean.”
-
-He watched the strained bewilderment in her eyes with something akin to
-brutal pleasure.
-
-“Raymond is a strong man, determined almost to stubbornness, may I say?
-He is guided—er misguided, many of the older parliamentarians think—by
-an idée fixe. If I know him as I think I do, it will be hard to convince
-him that relinquishing it will be a sign not of weakness, but of
-strength.”
-
-“I’m afraid I don’t understand all of this . . .”
-
-“Don’t bother your lovely head with it! I did not come here to worry you
-with tedious politics, but I do want you to understand me . . . so that
-we can work together in this most momentous matter. Raymond must be made
-to see that all previous measures now require adjustment to the changed
-times. The end of War is in sight, thank God, but we can’t delude
-ourselves with the thought that the world will find immediate peace,
-that it will pick up its burdens and its pleasures where it left them
-off, and that the policies we followed prior to 1914 are those to take
-us forward to-day. He must change. Can’t you persuade him?”
-
-“I never interfere,” said Marjorie, in a low voice. “He would think I
-was crazy to suggest anything about politics. I’m so stupid, you know.”
-
-“But you can plead your own cause—convince him of the happiness this
-promotion would mean to you . . . and,” he hurried on, “you realise what
-it would mean for him, for the children, for the country! Why, he would
-be the youngest, the most brilliant Prime Minister in the world! Think
-of it, little Marjorie . . . our own splendid Raymond, of Pinto Plains!”
-
-He rose to take his leave. Marjorie got rather dizzily to her feet. The
-room heaved in gentle waves, and the harsh lights suddenly went dim. An
-awful sickness attacked her, and out of the curious amethyst fog, the
-face of Mr. Sullivan advanced upon her, huge, satyric, terrible.
-
-“What is it?” she whispered. “Oh, dear, what is the matter?”
-
-“Aren’t you going to kiss me?” he asked, in a voice that scorched her.
-
-“Oh . . . please . . .”
-
-Marjorie escaped from the hand that came towards her. She slipped behind
-the table. Mr. Sullivan followed. She ran to the Morris chair and took
-refuge on the other side of it, for a moment. Her knees would scarcely
-support her. This cloud threatened to blind her. The room was filled
-with a noise as of some one’s heavy breathing. It occurred to her that
-Althea must be sobbing, upstairs.
-
-“Come on, child! Don’t be silly!” The voice of the Hon. Member sounded
-husky, but very loud. It thumped against her consciousness. “Aren’t you
-going to give me one little kiss in return for the help I’m giving
-Raymond?”
-
-“No, no! Please . . .” She circled unsteadily around the table, again.
-
-“Well, by God, you will, then!” cried Mr. Sullivan. “I’ve had just about
-enough of this catch-as-catch-can. You come here!”
-
-“No . . . oh, no . . .”
-
-Marjorie crumpled in a heap on the floor, and burst into wild sobbing.
-She was beside herself with terror. Never again in his gentlest moments,
-would the Hon. Member deceive her with his avuncular air. Always, she
-would see him as a beast of prey, his eyes flaming, his hands searching
-for her.
-
-Quite unconsciously, she began to pray.
-
-“Oh, God, please . . . Dear God . . .”
-
-Mr. Sullivan paused in his advance. He looked at the disordered heap on
-the floor. A revulsion of feeling came over him, and he turned away.
-
-“Bah!” he said, angrily. “_Women!_” and, seizing his hat, he left the
-house.
-
-
- CHAPTER 25.
-
-The Cathedral was palpitant with Fashion. For the moment, its dim
-religious light was lost in the flamboyance of smart Society’s glare.
-Its serene atmosphere was fractured by cross-currents that blew in from
-an impious world. The Flesh and the Devil walked on the feet that
-pressed the red carpet to save from pollution the soles of those who
-were bidden to the Sloane-Carmichael wedding. And there were many, for
-Mona Carmichael was a Minister’s daughter and the moving spirit of the
-Naughty Nine. Also, she was a bride extremely good to look upon. She
-possessed the slender body of the _jeune fils_, and an age-old wisdom in
-the advantageous exhibition of it. When not engaged in devising
-spectacular “stunts” for her eight disciples, she was usually enjoying
-masculine approbation expressed in terms that described the speaker as
-being simply crazy about her. She had reached the point when a modest
-man was the most boresome thing on earth.
-
-No sermon that was ever preached from the pulpit of the sacred fane
-would have exposed the mephistophelean cynicism of the present day in
-its attitude towards the Solemnization of Matrimony by the Church, as
-did this particular wedding. It might have been a deliberate revival of
-some medieval mystery play, staged for the purpose of provoking a
-recreant world to repentance. Men in youth and age were there, whose
-thoughts throughout the ceremony were never lifted above the level of
-lubricity. Their presence at any of the matrimonial pageants of that
-gallant Defender of the Faith, Henry the Eighth, would have lent a
-distinct flavour to the atmosphere.
-
-The younger married women among the guests recalled their own weddings,
-and endeavoured to convey the impression that they had relinquished
-themselves to their husbands with protest, if not martyrdom. They wore
-an unconvincingly pensive air.
-
-The spinsters betrayed a touch of malice, although they tried to look as
-though feeling that any woman who married was a fool. Bitterly, they
-realised the transparency of their attitude, and that here and there,
-people were saying,
-
-“Oh, there’s So-and-so. Isn’t it a pity _she_ never married?”
-
-Over all the Church, there was a restlessness, a strange suppression,
-louder and more definite than the syllabub of broken conversation.
-
-Ushers, khaki-clad, passed ceaselessly up and down the aisles, wearing a
-manner of mixed hauteur and nervousness. They showed the effect of too
-much prenuptial and anti-prohibition entertainment. Groups of guests
-gathered, argued, accepted the places provided with scantily veiled
-distaste, and became part of the general unrest. Few there were who
-regarded marriage in the light of a spiritual concept, nor was it easy
-to see in these exotic social episodes any striving towards an æsthetic
-ideal. On the contrary, two young people came together, drained the
-moment of its last dram of pleasure, and separated—if not in a physical
-sense, certainly in a spiritual one, seeking amusement elsewhere, and
-with hectic sedulousness.
-
-The family of the bride persistently referred to the spectacle as
-“simple”, and endeavoured to preserve the illusion of economy
-throughout. This was a War Wedding.
-
-A jungle of palms crowded the chancel and reared their feathered heads
-against the pillars of the Church. Masses of yellow tulips and daffodils
-suggested the simplicity of spring. Some twenty pews on either side of
-the centre aisle were barricaded against intrusion by plain silken cords
-instead of the richer bands of ribbon that ordinarily would have been
-used to separate those who had presented gifts in ridiculous excess of
-their means and affection, from those who had blessed the happy pair
-with sugar spoons and bon-bon dishes. Even the gowns of the
-women—according to their own description—harmonised with the note of
-rigid simplicity that prevailed. Mrs. Long, securely imprisoned by the
-yellow silken cord, smiled as she watched the procession, for she had
-seen—by the merest accident—Miss Caplin’s advance copy on the
-function. Miss Caplin was the Society editress of The Chronicle. “The
-mother of the bride wore a rich but simple creation of dove-grey radium
-satin, panelled with bands of solid grey pearls. The sleeves were formed
-of wings that fell to the hem of the gown and were made of dyed rose
-point. Mrs. Carmichael’s hat was of grey tulle with no trimming save a
-simple bird of Paradise.”
-
-That was the sort of thing she had been instructed to say.
-
-Mrs. Blaine passed in review. She was gowned in a black crepe meteor,
-with bands of rhinestones forming the corsage, and she wore a hat of
-uncurled ostrich feathers.
-
-Mrs. Pratt’s idea of economy was expressed by a royal purple chiffon
-velvet, trimmed with ornaments of amethyst and pearl.
-
-Lady Elton had managed to pick up an imported creation at a figure that
-was reduced no more than her own, but she called it a “simple frock” of
-Delft georgette over silver cloth. Owing to some unfortunate confusion
-in the composing room, a few lines reporting work on the Civic
-Playgrounds crept into the account of the wedding, and the following
-extraordinary announcement appeared:
-
- “Lady Elton looked exceptionally charming in a dull blue chiffon
- over three lavatories and two swimming baths.”
-
-A trembling usher, green-white from fatigue and dissipation, bowed Mr.
-and Mrs. Hudson into the pew. Mrs. Long’s practised eye noted that the
-latter wore a sapphire charmeuse, relieved by old Honiton and showing a
-motif of fleur-de-lys done in hand embroidery.
-
-“I don’t know whether I’m all here or not,” panted Mrs. Hudson. “Such a
-scramble at the last minute!”
-
-“There doesn’t seem to be any of you missing,” murmured Mrs. Long.
-
-“Oh, how do you do?” she bowed, as Sir Eric and Lady Denby crowded in.
-
-Commonplaces were exchanged.
-
-“I haven’t seen you for some time,” observed Lady Denby, leaning across
-the Hudsons.
-
-“I’ve been keeping very quiet,” returned Mrs. Long. “In fact, I’m going
-into the hospital to-morrow for rather a beastly operation.”
-
-Vague expressions of sympathy were dropped into the subdued noise about
-them. “I’m so sorry . . . No, you don’t look well . . . Oh, there’s
-Mrs. . . . I hope it’s nothing serious . . . What _has_ Eva Leeds got
-on?”
-
-“That’s the dress Haywood made for Lady Elton and she wouldn’t accept,”
-volunteered Mrs. Hudson. “They say he gave it to her. . . .”
-
-Lady Denby interrupted. “What hospital have you chosen?” she asked,
-making a mental note of the fact that the event called for floral
-recognition.
-
-“St. Christopher’s.”
-
-“Oh, how perfect!” breathed Mrs. Hudson, indifferently. “You’ll love it,
-there. The nurses are _so_ good to your flowers!”
-
-The recently-created knight, Sir Enoch Cunningham, lumbered up the aisle
-in the wake of his wife. Sir Enoch had established a record for
-patriotic service by charging the Government only four times a
-reasonable profit on the output of his mill. He was prominently listed
-in the Birthday Honours and on this, his first public appearance, was
-profoundly self-conscious.
-
-“There go the Cunninghams,” whispered Lady Elton from the pew behind
-Mrs. Long. “Aren’t they sickening?”
-
-“When Knighthood was in Flour,” murmured Lady Denby, over her shoulder.
-
-“He always reminds me of a piece of underdone pastry,” said Mrs. Long.
-
-“Well,” remarked Mrs. Hudson, with a giggle, “they’ll be pie for
-everyone now.”
-
-Across the aisle, Pamela de Latour was agitating herself over the fact
-that Major and Mrs. Beverley were sitting amongst the intimate friends
-of the groom.
-
-“Why, in heaven’s name, do you suppose _they_ have been put _there_?”
-she demanded of Miss Tyrrell and the Angus-McCallums, who shared her
-pew.
-
-“Didn’t he and Sloane fly together?” suggested one of the latter. “Or
-did he save his life . . . or something?”
-
-“I don’t know. But it seems odd to put them away up there. I heard he’d
-lost his job,” said Miss de Latour.
-
-“I heard that, too,” agreed Miss Mabel Angus-McCallum.
-
-Miss Tyrrell couldn’t believe it. She urged her companions to recall
-everything that looked like corroborative evidence, and even then cried
-skeptically,
-
-“But are you _sure_? May he not have taken on something else?”
-
-Miss Latour didn’t think so. She had the news on pretty good authority.
-She regretted, however, to have caused Miss Tyrrell such acute distress,
-and hoped the report might be incorrect.
-
-“Although I doubt it,” she said. “Colonel Mayhew told me that they were
-going back to England.”
-
-“I had no idea they were such great friends of yours, Lily,” whispered
-Miss Mabel Angus-McCallum. “In most quarters they were not very
-popular.”
-
-“Friends?” echoed Miss Tyrrell, indignantly. “They were no friends of
-mine, I assure you!”
-
-“Then why—” began the other three “—why are you so upset by hearing
-that he’s lost his job?”
-
-“Because,” answered Miss Tyrrell. “I was afraid it wasn’t so!”
-
-Several rows behind them, Azalea Deane sat crushed against the ample
-folds of Miss Leila Brant. She had refused to accompany Marjorie
-Dilling, despite the latter’s threat that she would stay at home rather
-than go alone.
-
-“I know you are not serious,” returned Azalea, in her gently insistent
-way, “for, of course, you should be there. A special seat will be
-reserved for you, and you must pretend to enjoy hob-snobbing with the
-notables.”
-
-Miss Brant fidgetted, fretting at her failure to impress Azalea with a
-sense of her importance. Like Mr. Sullivan, her activities were
-conducted largely and with a certain grandeur that was pleasing even to
-those who recognised its intense untruth. She adorned the cheap and
-commonplace, and had really a shrewd eye for transforming simple
-articles into pieces of expensive and decorative uselessness.
-Furthermore, she shared with Dilling a perfect genius for discovering
-clever assistants—artisans—whose ideas were better than her own, and
-whom she never tried to lead, but was content to follow. Moreover, she
-learned long ago to cultivate none but the wealthiest of patrons. Her
-shop, her wares, even she, herself, exuded an atmosphere of opulent
-exclusiveness. To be a regular patron of the Ancient Chattellarium was
-to attain a certain social eminence, to share the air breathed by
-Millionaires, Knights and Ladies—by Government House. One never stepped
-into the shop without meeting somebody of importance.
-
-At the moment, however, she was not entirely happy. She had a vast
-respect for Azalea, but didn’t like her. Azalea always made her
-uncomfortable. She was conscious of secret amusement, perhaps a tinge of
-contempt behind the enigmatic expression in her etiolated eyes. Whereas
-Dilling, in Azalea’s presence, felt himself the man he wished to be,
-Miss Brant recognised a very inferior person hiding behind the arras of
-her very superior manner, and she felt that Azalea saw this creature
-plainly, penetrating its insincerity, its petty ambitions; in short,
-that she perceived all the weaknesses that Miss Brant hoped none would
-suspect.
-
-“There’s So-and-So,” she cried, incessantly. “In strict confidence, I
-will tell you that they have just given me rather a nice commission to
-do their—Oh, and there’s So-and-So! Where in the world, _do_ you
-suppose they will seat all these people?”
-
-Azalea smiled and shrugged. Miss Brant felt snubbed, as though her
-companion had said, “Why bother? It’s not your affair. You always take
-such delight in meddling in other people’s business.”
-
-She took refuge in that too-little used harbour, Silence. But briefly.
-She left it to remark,
-
-“Oh, there go the Prendergasts! How do you do?” she bowed, with extreme
-affability, catching Mrs. Prendergast’s eye. Then she flushed. Azalea
-was regarding her with a smile that seemed to strip every particle of
-cordiality from her salutation and reduce it to a medium of barter
-exchanged for the extremely expensive gift Mrs. Prendergast had been
-cajoled into buying for the bridal pair. Miss Brant felt somehow that
-Azalea was thinking,
-
-“If she hadn’t made a satisfactory purchase, you wouldn’t even bother to
-nod your head. You never used to.”
-
-“You may not believe it, Azalea,” she said, as though moved to
-self-justification, “but Mrs. Prendergast is _really_ rather a dear. It
-sounds stupid, but one can’t help seeing that her intentions are good.”
-
-“Really! Aristotle said that Nature’s intentions were always good. The
-trouble was that she couldn’t carry them out.”
-
-“But they really _are_ getting on,” protested Miss Brant, watching the
-ostentatious progress of her patron down the aisle. “Don’t you think
-they are acquiring _quite_ an air?”
-
-“I think the Dawkter is acquiring quite a pragmatic walk. And it’s
-especially conspicuous in church.”
-
-“Yes, isn’t it?” assented Miss Brant, hastily, and wondering if Azalea
-referred to some physical disability that had resisted the effects of
-Anti-Agony. “There! They’ve been put with the Pratts. Confidentially,
-I’ll tell you that _she_ bought rather a good bit, too . . . didn’t want
-to be eclipsed by the Prendergasts, you know. _Isn’t_ their rivalry
-amusing?”
-
-“And lucrative, I should say.”
-
-Miss Brant veered away from the sordid business angle. “Look at them,
-now,” she cried. “Mrs. Pratt has the floor. She doesn’t even pause for
-breath. Azalea, what _can_ she be saying?”
-
-“Words—words—words! I’m afraid Mr. Pratt frequently regrets ignoring
-Nietzsche’s advice.”
-
-“Whose?”
-
-“Nietzsche’s. Don’t you remember, he said, ‘Before marriage this
-question should be put—Will you continue to be satisfied with this
-woman’s conversation until old age? Everything else in marriage is
-transitory’.”
-
-Miss Brant cast an inward glance upon her own conversational powers, and
-wondered if there was anything personal behind Azalea’s remark. Aloud,
-she said,
-
-“How clever of you to remember all those quotations, my dear! I always
-wish—Oh, there goes Mrs. Dilling! Heavens, doesn’t she look like a
-ghost?”
-
-Azalea had already noted the haggardness of Marjorie’s appearance, and,
-knowing nothing of her encounter with Mr. Sullivan, attributed it solely
-to the over-strain of War Work.
-
-“She doesn’t know how to save herself,” she said.
-
-“Yes, she really has been rather splendid, hasn’t she?” assented Miss
-Brant. “_Everyone_ says so . . . I remember the first time I ever saw
-her. She wanted a terrible what-not-thing repaired. Little did I
-imagine, then, that some day she would be the wife of a Minister of the
-Crown. And have you heard a rumour about the Premiership? It makes me
-feel _quite_ weepy. Only—only—I _wish_ she wouldn’t wear such _awful_
-hats!”
-
-“What do people say?” asked Azalea, ignoring the latter remark.
-
-“Oh, _you_ know the sort of thing—that she has done so much more than
-lend her name to patriotic functions and sit on platforms; that she has
-actually worked in the War Gardens, packed boxes, sewed, cooked and
-visited the soldiers’ wives. You know, it _is_ rather splendid!”
-
-Azalea nodded and raised her eyes to the stained glass window
-memorialising another Gentle Spirit who found His happiness in
-ministering to the needs of the humbler folk. “It _is_ rather splendid,”
-she agreed.
-
-“It must be very late,” said Miss Brant. “I wonder if that little minx,
-Mona, has been up to some of her tricks. By the way, have you heard
-about the Trevelyans?”
-
-“Mercy, no! Not already?”
-
-“Positively!”
-
-“Why, it seems only last week since we were watching them get married.
-Is it a boy or a girl?”
-
-“Both! And the screaming part of it is that the instant Mona heard the
-news, she _had herself insured against twins_!”
-
-“You’re joking!”
-
-“It’s a fact. Lloyd’s took her on. I say, Azalea, doesn’t Mrs. Dilling
-look ghastly?”
-
-Marjorie sat next Mrs. Blaine and Lady Fanshawe, feeling more ghastly
-than she looked. She had never been ill in her life, save when the
-babies came and that, of course, didn’t count. One just naturally had
-babies and made no fuss about it. But this was different. She had no
-particular pain. She wasn’t quite sure that her head ached. But she felt
-strangely weak and uncertain of herself.
-
-Lady Fanshawe and Mrs. Blaine were complaining of their servants.
-Neither would admit the other’s supremacy in having the worst the
-Dominion afforded.
-
-“But you have a very good cook,” Mrs. Blaine protested.
-
-“My dear, how _can_ you say so?” cried Lady Fanshawe. “Twice, she has
-nearly poisoned us!”
-
-“Well, the dinner I ate last Thursday at your house couldn’t have been
-better.”
-
-“A happy exception, I assure you.”
-
-“Why don’t you get rid of her?” asked Mrs. Blaine.
-
-“I shall . . . but not at once—not until I have some one else in view.
-However, if you need a cook, dear,” she went on, “why not try Mrs.
-Hudson’s Minnie? _She_ is really an excellent woman, and can always be
-tempted with higher wages.”
-
-Mrs. Blaine turned away with a fine assumption of indifference, and
-Marjorie ventured a sympathetic word in Lady Fanshawe’s ear.
-
-“It’s very bothersome, isn’t it?” she murmured, “especially when one
-does so much entertaining. You always seem to have such bad luck with
-your servants. I believe I could send you a cook.”
-
-The older woman flung a peculiar look at her, and whispered, “You dear,
-simple soul! I’ve a perfect _treasure_! But I don’t dare say so; every
-one of my friends would try to take her from me!”
-
-Outside, the handsome departmental car drew smartly to a standstill, and
-the Hon. Peter Carmichael assisted his daughter to alight. She tripped
-up the carpeted stairs with no more concern than though she were going
-to a Golf Club Tea.
-
-The trembling, green-white usher came forward to meet her. A group of
-bridesmaids stood near the door.
-
-“Well, old thing,” cried Mona, “how’s the silly show, anyway?”
-
-“Full house,” returned the usher. “S.R.O. as the theatres say. At five
-dollars a head, you’d have quite a tidy nest egg, y’know!”
-
-“Rotten business—ushing,” cried Mona. “You look all in, young fella me
-lad.”
-
-“I am. A company of duds, I call ’em. Balky as mules. Nobody wants to
-sit with anybody else.”
-
-“Do you blame them?”
-
-“My God, no! As the poet sang, ‘I’d rather live in vain than live in
-Ottawa’!”
-
-“Come, daughter,” said the Hon. Peter, fussily crooking his elbow.
-
-“The lovely bride entered the church on the arm of her father,” simpered
-Mona, pinching his ear. “Forward, everybody. We’re off!”
-
-Four little flower girls led the way, four being a simple number, much
-less intricate than forty-four or ninety-four and a fraction. Their
-costumes were beautifully simple—flesh-coloured tights and a pair of
-wings, in cunning imitation of Dan Cupid. They carried bows and a quiver
-full of arrows, the latter tipped with yellow daffodils.
-
-They were followed by the six bridesmaids, who also carried out this
-note of extreme simplicity. Their costumes were composed of yellow
-tulle, sprinkled with a profusion of brilliants, and were supposed to
-suggest early morning dew upon a field of tulips. In place of flowers,
-they carried simple parasols of chiffon, and each wore the gift of the
-groom—a gold vanity box bearing a simple monogram in platinum.
-
-The bride was gowned in plainest ivory satin. She had dispensed with the
-conventional wreath of orange blossoms, and her brow was crowned with a
-simple rose-point cap, whose billowy streamers fell to the tip of her
-slender train. She wore no ornaments save the gift of the groom—a
-simple bar of platinum supporting thirty-two plain diamonds.
-
-At the sight of her, a ripple of admiration ran through the crowd. She
-felt it and was pleased in her youthfully insolent fashion. She bore
-herself with none of the modesty that characterised the bride of fifty
-years ago. Rather was she suggestive of the mannequin on parade.
-
-The bridal party was just turning from the altar to the inspiriting
-strains from Mendelssohn, when Hebe Barrington entered the church with
-Mr. Sullivan.
-
-“Oh, Lord, we’re late,” she muttered, pulling him quickly along the
-aisle. “We’ll have to find seats somewhere before the parade reaches
-us.”
-
-“Not so far forward,” protested the Hon. Rufus, trying to hang back.
-
-“Don’t be so bashful,” returned Hebe. “We’re creating quite a sensation
-and stealing some of the limelight from the bride. ‘_La vice appuyé sur
-la bras de crime_,’” she whispered, enjoying herself enormously.
-
-“This is a damned awkward mess,” growled Mr. Sullivan, under his breath.
-“I can’t see a seat, anywhere.”
-
-“Nor I, and they’re nearly upon us. We’ll have to stop here.”
-
-The location selected for the enforced halt was not a happy one for Lady
-Denby—nor, indeed, for any of the occupants of that pew. In order to
-prevent confusion and a disarrangement of the procession, Mrs.
-Barrington and her escort were obliged to disregard the silken cord and
-squeeze in beside Sir Eric, and thus cut off quite successfully the view
-of the spectacle from his diminutive and enraged wife.
-
-She accepted their apologies frostily, and made an obvious effort to
-escape from the offending pair, but the density of the crowd frustrated
-her design. She found herself impinged upon Mrs. Barrington’s scented
-shoulder, and absolutely unable to free herself. The colour mounted
-hotly to her delicate cheeks. Her eyes sparkled dangerously.
-
-“You _must_ come to some of my parties, dear Lady Denby,” Hebe said,
-sweetly. “You, and Sir Eric . . . just simple affairs, you know, where
-we can snatch an hour’s relaxation. A little drink . . . a cigarette, a
-game of cards—er—do you dance?”
-
-“I do not,” said Lady Denby.
-
-“Ah! What a pity!”
-
-“Nor do I smoke.”
-
-“What?”
-
-“Nor drink, nor gamble.”
-
-“Perhaps you swear,” suggested Hebe, with elaborate mischievousness.
-“One must have some vices.”
-
-“I don’t agree with you,” snapped Lady Denby, relieved to find that they
-had almost reached the door.
-
-“Well, what _do_ you do, then?” queried Hebe, in a tone that was louder
-than was at all necessary.
-
-Lady Denby stepped into the vestibule. In a space momentarily cleared,
-she turned and faced her tormentor.
-
-“What do I do?” she repeated. “I mind my own business . . . wear
-untransparent petticoats, and . . . sleep in my _own_ husband’s bed!”
-
-
- CHAPTER 26.
-
-Dilling had refused to go to the wedding. Work was his excuse. He
-intended to clear up the accumulation of departmental business that lay
-massed in an orderly disarray upon his desk.
-
-But he didn’t work. Each attempt proved to be a failure. He was
-conscious of fatigue—or, if not precisely that—of the ennui one feels
-when work is universally suspended, as on a rainy, dispiriting holiday.
-
-The outer office was hushed and empty. That Azalea’s absence could so
-utterly bereave the atmosphere, struck him as preposterous, an
-incomprehensible thing. He struggled against it, but without success. He
-was lapped about by a feeling of isolation, of stark desolation. Staring
-at Azalea’s vacant chair, it seemed as if he stood in the midst of a
-dead and frozen world. With an effort at pulling himself together, he
-closed the door and returned to his position by the window.
-
-He looked with blind eyes towards the southern sky, where pennons of
-smoke followed the locomotive that crossed and re-crossed the little
-subway bridge. Winter had been industrious during the past months and
-seemed loath, even now, to relinquish her supremacy to Spring. Tall
-pyramids of snow still clung to the corners of the Museum where
-abutments of the building shut off the warmth of a pale gold sun. The
-ground was black and spongy, and in every gutter, rivulets of water
-stirred the urge of the sea in the minds of swarms of children.
-
-But Dilling saw none of these things. He was fighting the oppression of
-this curious lassitude and striving to recapture his ardour for work.
-The effect was not noticeably successful. He felt tired, stupid,
-drugged, as though some vital part of him was imprisoned and inert. He
-longed to be free, to abandon himself to a riot of emotion, to feel as
-acutely with his body as with his mind. He longed to overcome this
-numbness, this nostalgia of the senses, and to taste the fruits that
-gave to life its pungent tang and flavour. For the first time he saw
-himself emotionally shrivelled, inappetent of joy, and he veered away
-from the knowledge, wishing that he could remodel himself to love and
-suffer and hunger like other men.
-
-He forced himself to a perception of the panorama at which he had been
-staring, the clumps of bushes heavy with uncurled buds, the gay costumes
-of the children playing in the icy gutters opposite, a sharp red tulip
-bravely facing the frosty air. He knew now that never had he taken into
-account the vital force behind living objects—cattle, flowers, trees,
-even the wheat itself, and he began to feel that all these and even
-inanimate things, such as the chair and desk in the desolate outer
-office, were instinct with life; Azalea’s life! How pitiful his
-limitations!
-
-He loved her. He wanted her. He needed her. Life was without form and
-void lacking the stimulation, the inspiration of her presence. She was
-his _alter ego_, upon whom his mind and spirit depended as did his frail
-body upon food. Thinking upon her made him free of the hitherto remote
-pleasance of comradeship between the sexes.
-
-“What torment,” he muttered, repeatedly. “What torment to know this joy
-and be unable to possess it!”
-
-The telephone rang. He turned impatiently to the instrument.
-
-“Sullivan?” he echoed. “No—not too busy. I’ll be up there shortly.”
-
-During the week preceding his conversation with Marjorie, the Hon.
-Member for Morroway had busied himself in a cautious testing of the
-extent of his influence. He found that a majority of the Western Members
-needed no incentive from him to support Raymond Dilling, and from them
-he withheld all mention of the proposed change in policy he had
-suggested to Dilling’s wife. With the Maritime Members, however, he
-employed slightly different tactics, approaching them as one entrusted
-with confidential information, and hinting that in exchange for the
-premiership, Dilling would be willing to foreswear his platform, betray
-his original sponsors, and stand forth as a defender of Eastern
-interests, with especial emphasis upon those concerned in the
-annihilation of the Freight Bill, the abandonment of the Elevator
-project, and the indefinite postponement of the Eastlake and Donahue
-railway measures.
-
-With but an odd exception or two, his self-imposed mission was entirely
-successful. He called on Marjorie. He arranged for an interview with
-Dilling.
-
-Five men rose as the youthful Minister entered the room: Howarth,
-Turner, young Gilbert, the Radical, the Hon. Gordon Blaine, who
-administered his Ministerial office—without portfolio—with unbroken
-suavity and bonhomie, and Mr. Sullivan, himself.
-
-“Good afternoon, gentlemen,” said Dilling. “No, I won’t drink, if you
-will excuse me.”
-
-He accepted the chair that Howarth offered, and waited for some one to
-speak.
-
-What a scene it was, and what an episode for the Muse of History . . .
-Over in France, the flower of Canada’s youth—the heirs of the
-ages—were freely offering their splendid bodies upon the altar of War
-in testimony of the eternal need of human sacrifice for things that
-transcend all human values. Over there, the spirit of the young nation
-was responding magnificently to a supreme test of its fineness. Here at
-home, within the very walls of the buildings dedicated to the purpose of
-moulding and directing the welfare of the nation, men of mature years
-were not ashamed, by plot and intrigue, to make of Canada a scorn and a
-byword. A man of the highest instincts for public service was being
-tempted by his political associates to foreswear his ideals by a sordid
-bargaining for power.
-
-The Hon. Member for Morroway was the first to break the silence.
-
-“Mr. Dilling,” he began, “we are all men of plain speech, here, and
-there is nothing to be gained by euphemisms or beating about the bush.
-In a word, then, we wish to sound you on this question of the
-Premiership, and to offer you an option—let us call it—on the post.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-So, and in this wise, the supreme moment of his career had come to
-Raymond Dilling.
-
-The shock was such that his mind refused for a moment to function. The
-Premiership! The goal for which he had striven! The pinnacle of his
-ambition! And to be reached so soon!
-
-What would Azalea say? . . . and poor little Marjorie?
-
-“You—er—take me at a disadvantage, gentlemen,” he said. “I am
-unprepared for this . . .” and he turned again to the spokesman.
-
-Mr. Sullivan felt his way after the manner of a cautious pachyderm,
-
-“This offer,” he said, “is contingent upon a slight change of policy.
-You would, no doubt, be willing to reverse your attitude on what I may
-describe as the Wheat and Railway proposals. I need not say,” he
-continued, smoothly, “that this can be done without any forfeiture of
-your honesty of purpose, or any reflection upon your acumen as a
-statesman. Understand that we approach you in the true and best interest
-of the Canadian people. Once understand that, Mr. Dilling, and I am
-convinced that you will allow no consideration of personal disadvantage
-to weigh against your compliance with our wishes.”
-
-Dilling made no reply, but a pungent French phrase that he had read
-somewhere, welled up to him curiously from the subconscious . . . “_Il
-faut faire tout le rebours de ce qu’il dit._” This gave him pause, the
-instinct for caution was touched. Was this his cue for the answer he
-should ultimately give? Did this not warn him to take the very opposite
-course to that pointed out to him? He must have no illusions as to the
-right of the matter.
-
-Then temptation gripped him. His soul was in tumult. Principle cried
-out, “Abhor that which is evil,” while the Will to Power smote him with
-the reminder that “Opportunity knocks but once at the door of kings”.
-What could he not accomplish for his beloved country with sovereign
-power in his hands and his talents in the very flower of their prime!
-How subtle was the lure.
-
-Must he not recognise in this offer the call of destiny to complete the
-work of nation-building begun by those fathers of
-Confederation—Macdonald, and Cartier and Tupper? These were names never
-to be erased from the scroll of Fame, and why should not he be numbered
-of their immortal company?
-
-The torch of constructive patriotism lighted by them, had burned low.
-Let it be his to revive the waning flame. Was this not the vision that
-had inspired him, that had drawn him from the Last Great West?
-
-That Dilling was powerfully moved was patent to those who had come to
-tempt him. His frail body quivered with the strain, and Sullivan was too
-astute a politician to neglect this fleeting advantage. He pressed for
-an answer before sober second-thought could evoke for Dilling a
-suspicion of the duplicity underlying the offer.
-
-“What do you think of the idea, Dilling?”
-
-This challenge to a swift decision served to impress him with the danger
-of the situation, and Dilling’s mind reacted with fine discernment. No
-matter how he decided, he would not be swayed by impulse.
-
-“What do I think of the idea? I think your proposal is most generous in
-its implication of my fitness for so tremendous a post. I am overwhelmed
-by the honour you would do me, deeply grateful to you and your
-influential friends for this frank appreciation of my efforts in public
-life. But I fear you estimate them too highly.”
-
-“Nothing of the kind,” the Hon. Gordon Blaine interrupted, amiably.
-
-“The only man for the job,” muttered Turner.
-
-“Be that as it may,” Dilling continued, “I must take time to consider.
-For you, as well as for the country and myself, my decision must not be
-arrived at on the low plane of personal advantage. But I shall not delay
-you longer than to-morrow morning, gentlemen. There is need, I see, for
-prompt decision. Meanwhile, accept my assurance of obligation, and allow
-me to bid you good afternoon.”
-
-
- CHAPTER 27.
-
-It was only natural perhaps, that Dilling should suffer the full and
-terrible force of Sullivan’s temptation after he thought he had
-conquered it, for it was only then that he permitted himself the
-dangerous pleasure of examining its possibilities. In his silent office,
-surrounded by the hush of a building deserted now save by the Dominion
-Police who never relaxed their vigilance, he considered the
-might-have-beens, and wrestled with beasts that threatened to rise up
-and devour him.
-
-Sullivan’s implications recurred in their most convincing aspect.
-Sullivan was so nearly right. Must not a statesman possess flexibility
-of mind as well as rigidity of principle? Must not he be able to adapt
-himself to the exigencies of the time? Dilling required none to remind
-him that the whole fabric of Canada’s political life was changed, that
-the policy in ante-bellum days was, in many cases, inimical to the
-public good, to-day. He saw, clearly, that concentration of the
-Dominion’s resources upon Returned Soldiers and their re-establishment
-was an inevitable consequence of War. He knew that Freight, Elevator and
-Railway projects must be postponed. And he was in favour of postponing
-them. But Sullivan asked more. He asked that the very principles that
-had inspired his support be abandoned in exchange for a post of power.
-
-Ambition’s seductive voice whispered of compromise. What else is
-diplomacy, indeed? Supreme issues have been won by a trick;
-statesmanship is permitted greater latitude than is allowed the private
-individual.
-
-He had learned that a sensitive conscience is a disability in political
-life. If a man is revolted by the corruptness of his Party, he can not
-lead it with spirit, nor can he justify it as a medium for serving the
-State. It is sadly true that rather to his imperfections than to the
-fineness of his qualities is the success of the statesman due.
-
-On the other hand, public men of genius, in these days, are not excused
-for their _dulcia vitia_ as they used to be. “I would be damned,” he
-reflected, “for the frailties that seemed to endear Pitt to the
-populace. So long as a leader is chaste and sober, he may be
-unscrupulous with impunity.”
-
-His spirit cried out in anguish, and he was tortured by the whirling orb
-of thought that compels great minds to suffer the perturbation of a
-common life-time in the space of a moment. He raised his eyes to the
-window, unconsciously seeking strength from the glory framed there.
-Suddenly, his soul was quickened; he became alive to the wonder of God
-in Nature . . . the sun was setting in amber dust . . . pale greenish
-streaks stretched overhead and dissolved in a pansy mist. Upon the
-horizon, masses of heavy cloud lay banked like a mountain range bathed
-in violet rain.
-
-The words of the psalmist flashed across Dilling’s mind and he murmured,
-“‘I will lift up mine eyes unto the hills, from whence cometh my help.’
-If God can pour strength into a frail vessel, may He pour it generously
-into me.”
-
-There was a light tap on the door, and Azalea entered the room.
-
-Dilling stared at her without speaking. He had never attached much
-importance to coincidences. They were, he thought, significant only in
-the world of fiction. When they occurred in reality, they only
-emphasised the incoherency of the substance. But Azalea’s coming was
-like an answer to prayer. He could think of nothing to say.
-
-“Marjorie told me you had not come home,” she began, “and I thought that
-perhaps the work—Why, what is it?” Her tone changed. “What is the
-matter?”
-
-Briefly, he told her. “They have given me until to-morrow morning to
-make up my mind.”
-
-“Perhaps I’d better go,” she said.
-
-“No, no! Stay and help me. I don’t feel as if I could fight this thing
-out alone.”
-
-Heavily, he threw himself into a chair. His thinness, his pallor, his
-general air of frailness, made Azalea faint with pity for him. Sitting
-in the half-tone of departing daylight, his hair seemed silvered with
-frost, his face was drawn, his body sagged like that of an old man.
-
-“What do you think I should do?” he asked her.
-
-“What you know is right.”
-
-“But if I don’t know what is right?”
-
-“Ah, but you must! None knows it better. Education is only a matter of
-knowing what is right and then having the courage to do it.”
-
-He objected almost petulantly, supposing that he lacked the necessary
-courage. Azalea smiled, and there was pride behind the gesture.
-
-“That, above all others, is the virtue you possess. It is the foundation
-upon which all the rest are built. It is that which helps them to endure
-. . .”
-
-Dilling listened to the quiet confident voice with an emotion so
-profound that it was like a deep-bosomed bell ringing in his soul. He
-was conscious of a curious sensation, as though his spirit had escaped a
-crushing weight—(a weight that still cramped his body)—as though it
-had been set free.
-
-In a low voice, and in phrases that were disjointed and but half spoken,
-he began to talk about himself, his ambitions, his career; and Azalea
-listened feeling that part of him had died, and that she was hearing but
-the echo of his voice.
-
-“It never occurred to me that my life was barren,” she heard him say,
-“barren and grim . . . just a brain . . . a machine that, given
-direction, could drive on with peculiar force and vanquish those of
-different constitution . . . Never felt the need of friends . . . nor
-the lack of them . . . Alone and grim . . . But I loved Canada!” A
-suggestion of warmth stole into his voice. “I loved the West . . . I
-asked for nothing better than to serve my country—it may be that some
-men serve women that way . . . I wanted to get into the heart of it, to
-feel the throb, the life-waves beating out across the land . . . Then
-the Capital . . . so different . . . The men, the administration . . .
-Bewildering to find that I could take my place with those upon whom I
-had looked as gods . . . Poor Marjorie! This would mean much to her
-. . .”
-
-“When the facts are known, you will go down in history,” Azalea told
-him, “as a shining example of political integrity.”
-
-“I’m not so sure. More likely, I will be held up to illustrate the
-failure of Success. My God,” he cried, suddenly, “why can’t I live . . .
-why can’t I live?”
-
-His suffering was terrible for her to bear. Yet, she held herself in
-strict control. “Success has become an odious word to me,” she said, “a
-juggernaut to which Truth and Justice are too often sacrificed. You have
-achieved . . . there is achievement even in failure . . .”
-
-Her words filled him with bleak despair. He had hoped that she would
-argue his decision, try to persuade him to alter it, show him that he
-was wrong. For a fleeting second, he was guilty of resentment, doubting
-that she divined his pain at relinquishing his career. But he looked
-into her face and was ashamed.
-
-“Azalea!”
-
-“Raymond!”
-
-A flame of delight ran through his being. It was as though his whole
-body had been transfused with the ultimate beauty of life. “Do you think
-I have achieved?”
-
-“Yes . . . the expression of a great spiritual truth,” she answered. “No
-compromise, no diplomacy—another name for deceit. That you have been
-misunderstood and defamed was only to have been expected. It is the
-price men pay for putting forth the truth. But you, who have been so
-fearless—you are not weakening now?”
-
-“No,” he said. “I cannot weaken with you to help me. I will go back.
-There is no other way.”
-
-“Go back?” she echoed. “Go back to the West?”
-
-“Life would be intolerable here—especially for Marjorie.”
-
-“You will leave Ottawa altogether?” The words were scarcely audible. She
-had not anticipated this.
-
-“Not altogether. Part of me will remain. This is my soul’s graveyard,
-Azalea . . . They say a soul cannot die, but never was there a more
-soothing untruth spread abroad for the peace of the credulous. Mine died
-to-day—only a few hours after it was born.”
-
-“My dear, my dear,” she whispered, trying to keep her voice free from
-the coldness of death that lay upon her own spirit.
-
-They sat in silence a space, while waves of misery welled up about them.
-Then Azalea’s control broke. She covered her face with her hands.
-
-“Don’t!” cried Dilling, sharply. “Don’t! Tell me the truth—do you want
-me to stay?”
-
-“No!”
-
-Suddenly, he left his chair and knelt beside her, burying his face in
-the folds of her dress, and groping for her hand. For a time, he could
-not speak, could not tell how much he loved her, could not articulate
-the thought that hers was the power to make vocative his life’s stern
-purpose. He could only cling to her and suffer.
-
-“Azalea,” he cried, at last, “how can I go? I can’t live without
-you—I’m not even sure that I can die!”
-
-She felt strangled and heard words falling from her lips without
-understanding how she spoke them. “Are you forgetting the needs of the
-West—the opportunity for your talents, there? Will you close your ears
-to the call of your ambition?”
-
-He denied the existence of ambition. It had died when life was stricken
-from his soul.
-
-She raised his head between her hands. They trembled and were cold.
-
-“Raymond, do you love me?”
-
-“You know it.”
-
-“Then pick up the standard once more! Carry on! Respond to that inner
-voice that presently will cry out to you. Ambition is inspired by
-emotion rather than intellect. If you love me, don’t fling down the
-torch!”
-
-“But I need you,” he protested. “You are the fount, the source of all my
-power. You are my torch. Without you, the world is plunged in darkness.
-I can see to do nothing.”
-
-“There is an inextinguishable beam of friendship. More . . . When one
-achieves an understanding such as ours, one enters into a spiritual
-romance.”
-
-He bowed his head against her breast. Gently, she encircled his body
-with her arms. Twilight quivered in the still room.
-
-Presently, he looked up.
-
-“And what of you, my dear? Yours is the harder part . . . Will you
-suffer very much, Azalea?”
-
-She closed her eyes to hide from him her agony. “Emotions, even the most
-happy ones, are shot with pain,” she said.
-
-“Yes, I’m learning that, myself, God pity me! But I don’t want you to
-suffer through my love. Oh, Azalea . . . woman . . . you have been my
-white angel, my guiding star, that I took for granted as naturally as
-that one, in the sky! You have been for me the Truth and the Light, the
-balm for which I cried in all my agony and strife. You have accepted me
-as I am, nor asked a profession of my love in any way that was not _me_.
-And I leave you, never having served you. What is there of me that can
-hold a place in your life?”
-
-She thought a moment, then,
-
-“Listen,” she whispered. “Here is my answer. I wrote it yesterday . . .
-
- “Sometimes I wake and say, ‘I love him!’
- And sometimes, ‘He loves me!’
- But whichever way it is
- The day is filled with a finer purpose.”
-
-“Azalea, let me kneel at your feet!”
-
-“No, no! Kiss me . . . Oh, my dear love, kiss me . . .”
-
-For a time, they clung to one another, and when at last she withdrew
-from him, the room was plunged in utter darkness.
-
-
- CHAPTER 28.
-
-Of the five men who were left in Mr. Sullivan’s office, the Hon. Member
-for Morroway was not the least abashed. He had never confronted a moral
-quality like this in his whole experience. After all, he thought,
-recalling the sheer fineness of the man, men are something more than a
-mere merchantable commodity in the market of politics. Possibly, there
-are others who, like Dilling, disproved Walpole’s _mot_, that every man
-has his price . . .
-
-It was not, however, on the knees of the gods that Mr. Sullivan should
-be diverted from his purpose by considerations such as these. He felt
-that Dilling was the only man to play the lead in the interesting drama
-he desired to stage, that he must win him beyond all doubt, and soon.
-Nothing but a refusal could be expected if so lofty and withal so astute
-a mind had time for reflection.
-
-Dilling had just finished a solitary dinner—Marjorie served in a
-canteen every Wednesday evening—when his visitor was announced. The
-Hon. Member for Morroway was conscious of a change in him; there was the
-rapture of a seer in his eyes, and a bearing of victory—a jocund note
-of heroism in him.
-
-“Why did you follow me, Mr. Sullivan?” were his words of greeting. “I
-thought I said I needed time for my decision.”
-
-“Indeed, you did, Mr. Dilling. But it is important that I should have
-your answer at once, and besides, you gave me no chance to persuade you
-that you would be right in accepting the Premiership at this juncture in
-our history. Will you consent to hear what I would like to say?”
-
-Dilling led the way into his study and motioned the Hon. Member to a
-chair. He stood.
-
-“Proceed, Mr. Sullivan. I shall need much encouragement if I am to meet
-your views.”
-
-“Hang it all, Dilling, let’s get off our high horses and down to brass
-tacks—if you will allow me to mix my metaphors! You left us before I
-had a chance to show you, as I had intended, that the interests of
-Canada imperatively demand that no more money be spent at this time in
-facilitating the marketing of wheat—for that is what your Elevator and
-Railway policy means in the last analysis. First and foremost the
-Returned Soldiers are to be considered if we are to shut off Bolshevism
-from rearing its ugly head here. Are you in accord with me, so far?”
-
-“Quite,” returned Dilling. “What then?”
-
-“The inevitable. The Governmental money bags will be kept lean for some
-years in meeting the just demands of the returned men, and the sentiment
-of the whole community will be behind them. Not only will the bankers of
-Eastern Canada put a spoke in your wheel—for they are spiteful over
-losing so much money in the West—but you will find it difficult to
-borrow money in the States when the people recognise that an extension
-of Canadian railroads means hostility to the pet scheme of many of their
-financiers.”
-
-“Financiers are traditionally hostile,” said Dilling.
-
-“True, but the situation here is particularly acute, for these men to
-whom I refer have sought to obtain the sanction of this country to a
-greater utilisation of the Great Lakes and St. Lawrence waterways for
-transportation. They can scarcely be expected to lend money for a
-diverting project . . . and you can wring blood from a turnip as easily
-as you can borrow money in England!”
-
-“I’m afraid your last observation is only too true, Mr. Sullivan.”
-
-“I’m sure of it. I don’t think I need elaborate the national argument in
-favour of your change of front, I’ve said enough on that head. Coming to
-the more personal side of things, every statesman from Julius Cæsar to
-George Washington has had to compromise. You can’t be stiff in your
-adherence to principle even in appointments to government posts! Sir
-John Macdonald, Laurier—all of them—have had to appoint incompetent
-persons to the Civil Service over the heads of men thoroughly qualified
-in ability and character to serve the State in the finest way . . . a
-matter of expediency . . . expediency . . .”
-
-Dilling said nothing, so Sullivan went on.
-
-“What’s the use of quoting Lincoln as a model of probity in dispensing
-offices—Lincoln was the only man in the world who could be prophet,
-priest and king in politics at one and the same time—and _he_ couldn’t
-save his face, to-day!”
-
-Somewhere, a door closed, and the treble of childish voices blended in
-happy confusion.
-
-“Think of your wife and children, Dilling . . . Marjorie . . . I use her
-Christian name by right of a deep and esteemed friendship . . . Marjorie
-has suffered greatly from the snobocracy of Ottawa. She has confided
-much to me, that out of respect for your busy life, has been withheld
-from—er—her natural confidant, and it is only to be expected that you
-should seize the opportunity to furnish her the pleasure of playing a
-supreme stellar role in the social life of the nation. Moreover . . .”
-
-“Stop, Mr. Sullivan! You have said enough . . . more than enough! You
-have offended me by the casuistry of your argument on behalf of the
-public need for my desertion of the policies I have proclaimed. Your
-appeal on the personal side is a gross insult to me. However I may have
-seemed to waver until this moment, I now unhesitatingly and absolutely
-decline to accept your overtures. More than that, you have persuaded me
-that I must leave public life. No, I beg of you, say nothing further!
-Let me bid you good night, Mr. Sullivan—but do not leave me without the
-conviction that you have done me a real service.”
-
-Sullivan lowered his head as he left the room. A curious aching had
-taken possession of his throat. He had been accustomed to swear after
-unsuccessful interviews with politicians . . . Just now, profanity
-refused to rise at his command.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Marjorie’s tired voice roused him.
-
-“It’s very late, dearie,” she said. “Won’t you try to get some rest?”
-
-“Presently. I’ve something to tell you, first. Will you come in and sit
-down?”
-
-With unaccustomed gentleness, he arranged a chair for her. She dropped
-into it as though suddenly bereft of the power to stand. Her eyes were
-feverishly bright, and fixed upon him with apprehension that amounted
-almost to fear.
-
-Dilling was conscious of intense pity for her. How unequal she was to
-the demand he—his life—imposed! How gamely she had borne the strain!
-
-He hated her appearance to-night. Evidently, she had returned from the
-canteen only in time to dress for some more brilliant function. She wore
-a peach-coloured satin, covered with a sort of iridescent lace—a
-hideously sophisticated dress, too low and too light; it bedizened her,
-overlaid all her native simplicity. Dilling was, as a rule, oblivious to
-the details of women’s clothes, but to-night his perceptions were
-sharpened, and he examined his wife critically.
-
-As he did so, a horrid thought took possession of his mind. He saw her
-dress, her manner—her barricade of behavior—as something degrading,
-detestable, utterly foreign to her. A more imaginative man would have
-fallen back upon the fancy that the pure gold of her nature was being
-covered with the whitewash of social pretense. So deeply did it offend
-him.
-
-“I have been offered the Premiership,” he announced.
-
-“Oh!”
-
-That was all she could say. Months ago she had arrived at the point
-where she stood on guard over every act and utterance, fearing to
-proceed lest she should violate some sacred creed and call forth
-criticism and disdain. And now, when she wanted to speak, she could not.
-Inarticulate and frightened, she sat, like a person paralysed by
-nightmare.
-
-“Yes, this afternoon,” Dilling continued, and then as he had told
-Azalea, “they have given me until to-morrow morning to decide.”
-
-“It’s splendid,” said Marjorie. “It’s wonderful . . . but then you
-deserve it, dearie. You’ve worked so hard!”
-
-“So have you, Marjorie!”
-
-“Exactly what will it mean?” she questioned, timidly. “Will we have to
-move again, and do more entertaining?”
-
-“You take it for granted that I’ll accept?”
-
-“Oh! You _can’t_ refuse?”
-
-“Why not?”
-
-“Well—well—” Mr. Sullivan’s promptings eluded her entirely. “The
-premiership? . . . Oh, Raymond, you mustn’t refuse!”
-
-She began to argue, falteringly, but with a desperate earnestness that
-betrayed her own lack of conviction. And as he listened, an odious
-suspicion crept into Dilling’s mind.
-
-“Who’s been putting you up to this?” he demanded. “You are voicing
-arguments that are not your own. Tell me, Marjorie, who has been putting
-words into your mouth?”
-
-Marjorie refused to meet his eyes, but her lips framed the name
-“Sullivan”.
-
-It was her manner more than her speech that caused the dawn of a slow
-horror. Dilling recalled evidences of the man’s frequent visits—books,
-flowers, chocolates, games for the children—Yes, he remembered now,
-that the children called him “Uncle Rufus” . . . and hadn’t Sullivan,
-himself, hinted at an unsuspected intimacy? Had he not boasted of being
-Marjorie’s close confidant?
-
-“How long has this been going on?” he asked, pursuing his own line of
-thought.
-
-“Ever since we first came,” whispered his wife, failing wholly to follow
-him.
-
-“You don’t mean _years_?”
-
-She bowed her head.
-
-“Why did I never know?” He put the query more to himself than to her.
-
-“I never tried to keep it from you, Raymond!” she was stung into making
-a defence. “The very first night . . . you were right in the house. No,
-not this house—the other one. I should think you would have heard us
-coming downstairs . . . Always, I have tried not to bother you!”
-
-“Coming downstairs?” he echoed. “My God . . . my God!”
-
-A sudden blackness enshrouded him. He was swallowed up in the wreckage
-of a too-long life, lived in too short a span. His career had been swept
-away his love was denied him, and now he had lost his wife . . .
-
-“My God,” he said again—elemental words wrung by elemental anguish.
-
-A cry, low and terrible, penetrated his misery. Marjorie flung herself
-at his feet, and gasped,
-
-“No—no—not _that_, Raymond . . . Are you listening to me? Not _that_!”
-
-“What, then?” he muttered.
-
-“Oh, how could you, Raymond? You couldn’t think I would do a thing like
-that?”
-
-“Then what do you mean?”
-
-The story of her association with the Hon. Member for Morroway fell in
-broken sentences, often misleading, by reason of the very shame she felt
-in its avowal. As he listened to the innocent little tale, Dilling’s
-heart was torn with pity, and more clearly than before he saw the
-futility of attempting to mould their simplicity to the form of conduct
-required by their position. He thought of the West—his West—of a
-rugged people who were still alive to the practical advancement of
-idealism, divorced from stultifying subservience to convention. He felt
-an overpowering urge to return, to identify himself once again with
-those sturdy people, whom, he believed, would answer the guidance of his
-hand. He was theirs. They were his. The West was his kingdom, and there
-he would be content to reign.
-
-A crushing weight seemed lifted from his spirit. Shackles fell away.
-
-“Would you like to go home,” he asked Marjorie, “to go home for good and
-all, I mean?”
-
-The light in her face answered him. It is abundantly true that
-experiences realised, are a glorified incarnation of dead wishes. The
-promised return to Pinto Plains was, for Marjorie, a dream that was
-coming true. She knew the exquisite pain of seeing the complete
-fulfilment of a passionate desire. No words could translate her feeling.
-
- * * * * *
-
-And so, with gratulation that was void of all regret, they went back to
-happy mediocrity, far from The Land of Afternoon.
-
- THE END
-
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- The resulting cover is placed in the public domain.
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-
-<div style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Land of Afternoon, by Gilbert Knox</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world 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 <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
-are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: The Land of Afternoon</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:0;'>A Satire</p>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Gilbert Knox</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: June 18, 2021 [eBook #65560]</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Character set encoding: UTF-8</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Produced by: Al Haines, Mark Akrigg, Jen Haines &amp; the online Project Gutenberg team at https://www.pgdpcanada.net</div>
-
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LAND OF AFTERNOON ***</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/cover.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0000' style='width:60%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div class='lgc' style=''> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line0' style='font-size:3em;'><span class='it'>The Land of</span></p>
-<p class='line0' style='font-size:3em;'><span class='it'>Afternoon</span></p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line0' style='font-size:2em;'>A SATIRE</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line0' style='margin-top:1em;margin-bottom:1em;font-size:1.5em;'>BY</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line0' style='font-size:2em;'><span class='it'>Gilbert Knox</span></p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line0' style='margin-top:10em;font-size:2em;'>OTTAWA</p>
-<p class='line0' style='margin-bottom:2em;font-size:2em;'>THE GRAPHIC PUBLISHERS</p>
-</div> <!-- end rend -->
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<p class='line0' style='text-align:center;font-size:1.2em;'><span class='it'>Copyright, 1924</span></p>
-<p class='line0' style='text-align:center;margin-bottom:10em;font-size:1.2em;'><span class='it'>By Gilbert Knox</span></p>
-
-<p class='line0' style='text-align:center;font-size:1.2em;'>PRINTED IN THE DOMINION OF CANADA</p>
-<p class='line0' style='text-align:center;margin-bottom:10em;font-size:1.2em;'>ALL RIGHTS RESERVED</p>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<p class='line0' style='text-align:center;font-size:3em;'><span class='it'>The Land of Afternoon</span></p>
-
-<p class='line0' style='text-align:center;margin-bottom:4em;font-size:2em;'><span class='it'>By</span> GILBERT KNOX</p>
-
-<table id='tab1' summary='' class='center'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 7.5em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 22.5em;'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'>PART ONE</td><td class='tab1c2 leader-dots tdStyle1'><span><a href='#Page_11'>THEY CAME.</a></span></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'>PART TWO</td><td class='tab1c2 leader-dots tdStyle1'><span><a href='#Page_93'>THEY SAW.</a></span></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'>PART THREE</td><td class='tab1c2 leader-dots tdStyle1'><span><a href='#Page_275'>THEY CONQUERED.</a></span></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div class='lgl' style=''> <!-- rend=';fs:1.2em;ml:2em;' -->
-<p class='line0' style='text-align:left;margin-left:2em;font-size:1.2em;'>“Courage,” he said, and pointed to the land.</p>
-<p class='line0' style='text-align:left;margin-left:2em;font-size:1.2em;'>“This mounting wave will roll us shoreward soon,”</p>
-<p class='line0' style='text-align:left;margin-left:2em;font-size:1.2em;'>In the afternoon they came unto a land</p>
-<p class='line0' style='text-align:left;margin-left:2em;font-size:1.2em;'>In which it seemed always afternoon.</p>
-<p class='line0' style='text-align:left;margin-left:15em;font-size:1.2em;'>—<span class='it'>The Lotus Eaters</span></p>
-</div> <!-- end rend -->
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div><h1 class='nobreak'><span class='it'>Foreword</span></h1></div>
-
-<p class='noindent'><span class='dropcap'>H</span>owever this novel may be classified by readers
-or librarians, it is frankly intended to be a satire
-upon some phases of social and political life in
-Canada. Satire is properly a criticism of human folly
-or unworthiness in a class or in the mass, and the exact
-limning of people in real life is no part of its metier.
-When it makes such an attempt, it ceases to be satire
-and tends to become biography seasoned with defamation—a
-sad misuse of what is broadly regarded as a
-medium for the regeneration of society.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But however satire is regarded in the abstract by
-his readers, the author desires it to be clearly understood
-that all the characters upon his stage are purely
-imaginary. While he thought it necessary to occupy
-himself with some unpleasant minor types, on the other
-hand, he felt an optimistic joy in the creation of his
-protagonist. He feels that “Raymond Dilling” is no
-false start with the practical ethics of Superman. On
-the contrary, he believes that there are many men with
-whom we mingle in every-day contact, who, if put to
-the test, would react with a moral firmness and fineness
-quite measurable with “Dilling’s” conduct.</p>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div class='lgc' style='margin-bottom:10em;'> <!-- rend=';fs:0.8em;' -->
-<p class='line0' style='font-size:0.8em;'><span class='sc'>First Imprint, October, 1925</span></p>
-<p class='line0' style='font-size:0.8em;'><span class='sc'>Second Imprint, December, 1925</span></p>
-</div> <!-- end rend -->
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<p class='line0' style='text-align:center;font-size:3em;'>THE</p>
-<p class='line0' style='text-align:center;margin-top:-0.5em;font-size:3em;'>LAND OF AFTERNOON</p>
-
-<div><h1 id='Page_11'>THEY CAME</h1></div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER 1.</h2>
-
-<p class='noindent'><span class='dropcap'>B</span>yward Market had been freshened during
-the night by a heavy fall of powdery snow, that
-knew no peace from a bitter wind which drove it,
-in stinging clouds, up and down the street. The
-thermometer had made its record drop of the season.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Marjorie Dilling stood on the outskirts of a tight-packed
-group and shivered. The strangeness of the
-scene struck her afresh; the sense of loneliness was
-almost overpowering. She simply could not bring
-herself to push and jostle as the other women did—and
-a few men, too!—consequently she was always
-thrust away from the curb and prevented from seeing
-what lay beneath the furs and blankets and odd bits
-of cloth in the carts. Only now and again could she
-catch a glimpse of a tower of frozen beef, or rigid hogs
-which were trundled by their hind legs through the
-thronged streets, in a manner strongly suggestive of a
-wheelbarrow. Or, as the crowds broke and parted,
-she could occasionally see a stiff fringe of poultry and
-rabbits strung across the ends of the wagons. Eggs,
-butter, vegetables and cream were well covered, and
-spared in so far as possible, the rigours of the morning.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Byward was an open market which attracted
-farmers from districts as remote as the Upper Gatineau—across
-the river, in the Province of Quebec. Behind
-the line of carts or sleighs—automobiles, now!—there
-ran a row of nondescript buildings that rarely claimed
-the attention of the marketers; a confusion of second-hand
-stores, an occasional produce shop, and third-rate
-public houses, whose broad windows revealed a cluster
-of dilapidated chairs flanked by battered <span class='it'>crachoirs</span>,
-which had seen many years of unspeakable service.
-Behind these, a narrow passage led to the abode of
-spirits, of the kind latterly and peculiarly called
-departed. Here, the farmers gathered for warmth in
-winter and coolness in summer, and to slake—or
-intensify—their thirst in either season, while their
-women-folk remained in discomfort outside, and
-attended to the practical issues of the day.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The sigh that fluttered from Marjorie’s lips took
-form like a ghostly balloon and floated away on the
-frosty air. Her basket was light and her spirits were
-heavy. She found it incredibly difficult to shop in the
-Ottawa market. She simply dreaded Saturday mornings.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At the corner, where the wind whipped down the
-street and few people cared to linger, she found herself
-standing before an ancient crone, who sat amid an
-assortment of roughly-cured hides, and under a huge,
-weather-stained umbrella. At her feet lay a rusty pail
-overflowing with a curious mass that looked like bloated
-sausages in the last stages of decay.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What—what is that?” asked Marjorie, in her soft
-timid voice.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The old woman made unintelligible sounds from
-between toothless gums.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I beg your pardon?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I tol’ you, it is <span class='it'>sang pouding</span>. ’Ow much you
-want?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I don’t want any, thank you,” answered Marjorie.
-“I was looking for some sweetbreads. Have you any?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Sweet <span class='it'>bread</span>?” echoed the ancient, grumpily.
-“Well, why you don’ look on de store, hein? W’at you
-t’ink I am—de baker’s cart?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Although unaware of the complexities of the French
-tongue and the French character, Marjorie perceived
-a rebuff in the old woman’s words. She apologised
-hastily and moved away. What, she kept asking
-herself, could she substitute for sweetbreads? Chickens
-were expensive and eggs, a fabulous price. Nobody in
-Ottawa seemed to keep hens .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Have <span class='it'>you</span> any sweetbreads?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She began to feel a little hysterical. It <span class='it'>was</span> a funny
-question! No wonder the old woman answered her
-crossly. Have you any sweetbreads? <span class='it'>How</span> many
-times had she asked it? She thought of the game the
-children played—<span class='it'>Black sheep, black sheep, have you any
-wool?</span> And what on earth should she get in place of
-sweetbreads? Raymond was so difficult about his
-food. He had such a tiny and pernickety appetite .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>By wriggling, she gained the curb before another
-cart.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Have <span class='it'>you</span> any sweetbreads?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>No one paid her the slightest heed. The centre of
-the stage was held by a tall, spare woman with a
-stridulous voice. Marjorie knew her slightly. Two
-weeks ago she had called—not as people called at
-home, in Pinto Plains—but sternly and coldly, neither
-giving nor receiving pleasure by the visit, save when
-she had laid three bits of pasteboard on the corner of
-the table and left the house. Mrs. Pratt was the wife
-of a cheerfully ineffectual professional man with
-political aspirations, and she felt her position keenly.
-So did Marjorie; and she backed away while summoning
-her courage to speak.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“A dollar and a half?” Mrs. Pratt was saying.
-“Outrageous! I can’t think what you people are
-coming to! I’ll give you a dollar and a quarter, and
-not one penny more.” She indicated a pair of frozen
-chickens, each with a large mauve face, that lay exposed
-on an old red blanket.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Can’t do it, lady,” said the farmer, with chattering
-teeth, “it cost me mor’n that to feed them this three
-year,” and he winked heavily at the surrounding circle.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, they’re fowl! Well then, of course, they’re
-not worth that much! There’s a woman across the
-road,”—Mrs. Pratt swept her muff vaguely towards
-the horizon and unconsciously disarranged Marjorie’s
-hat,—“who is selling her fowl for eighty cents!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>I’ll</span> take them,” cried a woman at this juncture.
-“It’s too cold to haggle over a few cents. Giv’um to
-me!” She thrust a dollar and a half into the man’s
-hand, seized the chickens and started off.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Those are mine!” called Mrs. Pratt, in a tone that
-rivalled the sharpness of the atmosphere.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You take the others at eighty cents,” returned the
-woman, amid a ripple of laughter.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Impertinence!” snapped Mrs. Pratt, as she turned
-away.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Marjorie drifted on, her basket still empty. These
-awful Saturday mornings! They seemed to accentuate
-her loneliness. Of course, the cold discouraged long
-conversations and the exchange of tittle-tattle that
-makes shopping, to some people, so delightful, but she
-was aware of the greetings that passed between women
-as they met—a tip, perhaps, as to some bargain, or a
-brief reference to some impending social function—and
-she would have been grateful for even the smallest
-sign of friendly recognition. Frequently, she saw
-people who had called upon her, but evidently she had
-made too little impression to be remembered. How
-different from Pinto Plains, where everybody knew her
-and cordiality was mutual!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She noticed that many of the ladies who came into
-church richly dressed on Sundays, wore the most dreadfully
-shabby clothes at market, but it was not until
-long afterwards, she understood that this was part of
-a scheme for economy—for beating the farmers at
-their own game. They disguised themselves that they
-might give no hint as to the fatness of their bank
-account, thus implying that well-to-do shoppers were
-asked a higher price than those of obviously modest
-means. These same shabbily-clad ladies never seemed
-to buy very much, and Marjorie often wondered how
-it was worth their while to spend the morning with so
-little result. In those days, she didn’t realise that they
-had left their motors round the corner, and that their
-parcels were transferred, two or three at a time, to a
-liveried chauffeur who sat in a heated car and read
-stimulating items from the <span class='it'>Eye-Opener</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Others, she learned, dragged overflowing baskets
-into one of the “Market Stores,” whose prices were
-known to be a few cents in excess of those demanded
-by the owners of the carts. Here, they made an
-insignificant purchase, thereby placing the onus of
-free delivery on the shoulders of the management.
-The degree to which this practice was employed varied
-with the temperament of the shopper. Those of a less
-sensitive nature, felt no hesitation in asking Lavalee,
-the aristocratic Purveyor of Sea Food and Game, to
-send home six dollars’ worth of marketing with a
-pound of smelts. Likewise, Smithson suffered the
-exigencies of trade, not only delivering the type of
-foodstuffs that he didn’t keep, but every week of the
-year he was asked to send home the very things that
-were purchasable in his own store and which had been
-bought for a few cents less, half a block away. Seeing
-the baskets of produce that were piled high on the
-sidewalk every Saturday morning, Marjorie wondered
-how it was worth while for him to carry on his business
-or maintain his livery, at all!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Having made a few purchases, she set off down
-Mosgrove Street for the tram as fast as her burden
-would permit, when she came for the second time
-upon Mrs. Pratt, still searching for a bargain in
-chickens.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“One seventy-five?” she was saying. “Sheer piracy!
-I refused a much better pair for a dollar fifty!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Call it a dollar fifty, ma’am,” agreed the farmer,
-between spasms of coughing. “The wife’ll give me
-the devil, but I’m ’most dead with cold, and I wanta
-go home.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Pity for the man, coupled with a touch of innocent
-curiosity, tempted Marjorie to linger close at hand and
-see the end of the transaction.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But that’s what I’m telling you,” cried Mrs. Pratt.
-“They’re not worth a dollar fifty. They’re miserable
-things. Half fed .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” Her eyes rested upon the owner
-resentfully, as though emphasising a definite resemblance
-between him and his produce. “I’ll give you a
-dollar and a quarter and not one penny more!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, lady! I’ve gotta live!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Something in the man’s tone told the astute lady
-that he was weakening, that he needed the money,
-that the chickens were hers. She pushed a dollar and
-a quarter into his hand, seized her purchase, and disappeared
-round the corner, into a waiting limousine.</p>
-
-<hr class='stars'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A little later that same morning, Marjorie, finding
-that the children were all right in the care of Mrs.
-Plum, who “charred” her on Saturdays, went down
-town to The Ancient Chattellarium. Her errand was
-simple. She wished to have a piece of furniture
-repaired. It had been broken in the moving, and one
-of her callers had given her this address.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Chattellarium could not, even by the most
-vulgar, be called a shop. It was an opulent apartment
-where elegant furniture was displayed—and sold—at
-dignified prices. Marjorie Dilling paused uncertainly
-on the threshold, feeling that she must, through error,
-have strayed into someone’s residence.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But she hadn’t! A lady glanced over the rim of a
-lampshade she was making, and invited her to enter.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Just looking around?” she asked, with the instinct
-of one who recognises the difference between a shopper
-and a buyer. “I’ve got some rather nice things just
-unpacked,” and she went on sticking pins into the dull-rose
-silk with which she was covering a huge wire
-frame.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Thank you, very much,” answered Marjorie,
-stealing a timid glance over her shoulder, “but I
-haven’t a great deal of time, and I really came to see—if—if—to
-ask about getting a piece of furniture repaired.
-I was told that I might have it done, here.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The young lady took several pins from her mouth
-and looked up. She was quite pretty and had a
-pleasant manner in spite of her way of addressing
-most people as though they were her inferiors, and a
-few very prominent people as though they were her
-equals. She talked incessantly, and it had become
-her custom to illumine her speech with Glittering
-Personalities.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She discovered Marjorie’s name and that her
-husband was a recently-elected Back Bencher from an
-obscure little Western town, as well as the nature of
-the repairs required, so cleverly, that she seemed to be
-answering questions instead of asking them, and she
-was ever so kind in promising to help.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Of course, I <span class='it'>don’t</span> do this sort of thing as a rule,”
-she explained, “I simply <span class='it'>couldn’t</span>! My men are dreadfully
-overworked as it is, and we are three months
-behind in our orders. But because I have just recently
-repaired a dressing-table for Government House, and
-repolished a china cabinet for Lady Elton, at Rockcliffe,
-I haven’t the conscience to refuse <span class='it'>you</span>.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Marjorie was rather uncomfortable after this speech.
-She had no earthly wish to ask a favour, and felt unduly
-exalted by “being repaired” in such impressive company.
-She tried to make this clear, and urged the
-young lady to suggest some much more humble
-establishment or person.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I feel at such a loss,” she explained, “not knowing
-where to turn .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” and then, when Miss Brant had
-insisted upon helping her out of the difficulty, she said,
-“I wouldn’t dare trust it to just anyone, you know.
-It’s such a lovely thing! Solid mahogany, a sort of
-what-not design, with some of the little compartments
-enclosed in glass, and mirrors at the back—and each
-shelf ending in a decoration like a wee, little carved
-steeple. It’s one of the steeple things that is broken,
-and one of the glass doors. I told Mr. Dilling,”—the
-young lady winced when she spoke of her husband as
-“Mr. Dilling”—“that it reminded me of a beautiful
-doll’s house, and that we would have to collect heaps
-of souvenir spoons and things to fill it.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“How interesting,” observed the other.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And the association counts for so much, you see.
-The townspeople—our friends—gave it to us when we
-left Pinto Plains; a kind of testimonial it was, in the
-church. They said such beautiful things, I’ll never
-forget it.” Her voice was husky.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Charming,” murmured the young lady, wondering
-how such a pretty woman could be so plain.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Marjorie asked to be given some idea of the price,
-but her enquiry was waved airily aside. “Oh, don’t
-bother about that,” she was told. “It will only be a
-matter of my workman’s time—” an implication that
-translated itself to Mrs. Dilling in the terms of cents,
-but which to the young lady resolved itself into about
-fifteen dollars.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Marjorie’s thanks were cut short by the entrance
-of two Arresting Personalities.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>One of them was Lady Fanshawe, the wife of a
-retired lumber magnate, and the other—Mrs. Blaine—assisted
-her husband to discharge his social duties as a
-Minister of the Crown.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, well,” cried Miss Brant, assuming her other
-manner, “this <span class='it'>is</span> a surprise! I’m simply <span class='it'>thrilled</span>!
-Only yesterday, I was saying to Lady Elton that I
-hadn’t seen you since the House opened. I’m <span class='it'>dying</span>
-to tell you all about my trip in England, and my <span class='it'>dear</span>,
-such things as I’ve brought back! That’s one!” She
-indicated a red lacquer table. “Isn’t it a perfect
-<span class='it'>dream</span>? And there’s another—no, no—not the mirror,
-the table! It was positively and absolutely taken
-from Bleakshire Castle where Disraeli used to visit,
-and there he sat to write some of his marvellous
-speeches! Isn’t it <span class='it'>thrilling</span>?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The ladies agreed that she had done very well, and
-moved about the apartment under the spur of her
-constant direction. Marjorie, feeling that she ought
-to go, but not knowing whether to slip away unnoticed
-or to shake hands and say goodbye, had just decided
-upon the former course, when Mrs. Pratt made a
-flamboyant entrance.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Seeing the group at the farther end of the room,
-she bewildered Marjorie with a nod that was like a
-rap over the knuckles, and rustled self-consciously
-forward.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Good morning,” she cried, so graciously that
-Marjorie could scarcely recognise her voice. “Cold,
-isn’t it? I’ve just come from market. It was simply
-perishing down there—perishing!” She left an entire
-syllable out of this word, pronouncing it as though
-speaking the name of a famous American General,
-then continued, “I’m a perfect martyr when it comes
-to marketing! I can’t overcome a sense of duty
-towards the <span class='it'>fermers</span>, who depend on us for encouragement
-and support; and when all’s said and done, the
-only char’ty worth while is the kind that helps people
-to help themselves. Don’t you agree with me, Lady
-Fanshawe?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Lady Fanshawe supposed so, and turned to the
-examination of a Meissen bowl. Mrs. Blaine caught
-sight of an old French print on the far wall and
-appeared to lose interest in all else. Miss Brant
-discovered a blemish of some sort on the red lacquer
-table and bent anxiously over it, using the corner of
-her handkerchief in lieu of a duster.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>No one considered Marjorie at all. Each was
-engrossed in her part, playing a little scene in the
-successful <span class='it'>Comédie Malice</span> which has been running
-without a break since June 8th, 1866, in the
-Capital.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>If Mrs. Pratt was conscious of any lack of cordiality
-in the attitude of the others, she gave no sign. Hers
-was an ebullient part. All she had to do was to gush
-over the people who snubbed her, and to inveigle them
-into her house (making sure that their visits were
-chronicled in the Press). Incidentally, she had to
-provide them with as much as they wished to drink,
-and more than they wished to eat, and to acquire the
-reputation for liberal spending when and where her
-extravagance would be noted and commented upon.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Lady Fanshawe and Mrs. Blaine were cast in
-simpler parts. They had merely to preserve an air of
-well-bred disdain, merging now and again into restrained
-amazement.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Miss Brant, on the other hand, had a very difficult
-role to play. Marjorie scarcely realised how difficult.
-It devolved upon her to take advantage of Mrs. Pratt’s
-effort to impress the others, to sell her the most expensive
-and unsaleable articles in the establishment, and,
-at the same time, to convey subtly to Lady Fanshawe
-and Mrs. Blaine, her contempt for this monied upstart.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The conversation progressed in this vein:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='sc'>Mrs. Pratt.</span>—Now, <span class='it'>do</span> help me pick up some odds
-and ends for my new home.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='sc'>Miss Brant.</span>—Oh, have you moved?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='sc'>Mrs. Pratt.</span>—Dear me, yes! Our old house was
-much too cramped for entertaining.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='sc'>Miss Brant</span> (<span class='it'>Half confidentially to Lady Fanshawe</span>).—Speaking
-of entertaining, shall I see you, by any
-chance, at the Country Club, to-morrow?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='sc'>Lady Fanshawe</span> (<span class='it'>Distantly</span>).—I am going to Mrs.
-Long’s luncheon, if that is what you mean.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='sc'>Miss Brant</span> (<span class='it'>Burbling</span>).—It’s <span class='it'>exactly</span> what I mean!
-I’m <span class='it'>so thrilled</span> at being asked—humble little me—with
-all you impressive personages.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mrs. Long was the wife of the owner of <span class='sc'>The
-Chronicle</span> and it was suspected that she
-found the columns—both social and political—of
-her husband’s paper a convenient medium for
-the maintaining of discipline and the administration
-of justice. She was naturally held in very
-high esteem, and persons of astuteness made much
-of her.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I never know what’s going on,” she was fond
-of saying, “for I can’t endure the sight of a newspaper.
-It’s so much easier to blame than to read
-them,” she said, paraphrasing Dr. Johnson.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Notwithstanding her professed disinterestedness,
-however, the arm of coincidence seemed
-longer than usual when it was observed that the
-recently-distinguished Lady Elton, who had overlooked
-her when issuing invitations to a reception
-in honour of her husband’s knighthood, appeared
-on the following day as “Mrs. Elton”. And,
-furthermore, that on the day succeeding this, her
-letter of protest, which was never intended for
-other than editorial eyes, was published under the
-heading “<span class='sc'>Regrettable Error</span> in ignoring a <span class='sc'>New
-Tittle</span>!” This was only one of many such
-incidents that entertained the subscribers and
-suggested that there might be a subtle influence
-behind the typographical errors which occurred in
-the composing room.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mrs. Pratt’s voice rolled like a relentless sea over
-that of the others, as she announced: “We’ve bought
-the Tillington place.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='sc'>Miss Brant.</span>—Oh, that charming old house!
-Tudor, isn’t it? I used to go there as a child. They
-had some <span class='it'>wonderful</span> things. I recall the bookcase
-especially, that stood opposite the bow-window in the
-library. Er—er—something like that one, it was.
-And one knob was off the drawer—I remember it
-distinctly.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='sc'>Mrs. Pratt</span> (<span class='it'>examining the piece indicated</span>).—I
-think I’ll take this one.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='sc'>Miss Brant</span> (<span class='it'>evidently much embarrassed</span>).—Oh,
-<span class='it'>really</span> now—I didn’t mean to suggest—this is really
-<span class='it'>too</span> dreadful! I assure you, I was only reminiscencing.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='sc'>Mrs. Pratt.</span>—Well, I’ll take it. It’s much more
-suitable than my old one. Do <span class='it'>you</span> like it, Lady Fanshawe?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='sc'>Lady Fanshawe</span> (<span class='it'>as though not having heard the
-question</span>).—Delightful!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='sc'>Miss Brant.</span>—Well, you’re awfully good, I’m sure!
-I’m really ever so glad you’ve got it. It’s rather a
-good thing, you know—only, I don’t want you to
-think .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. However, if you change your mind after
-you get it home, of course, I’ll take it back. I mean,
-you <span class='it'>may</span> find it out of tune with your old—er—er—your
-<span class='it'>own</span> things.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='sc'>Mrs. Pratt.</span>—What would you suggest in the
-way of a chair, and a table, perhaps?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='sc'>Miss Brant</span> (<span class='it'>tearing herself from a whispered pæon
-on the subject of Mrs. Blaine’s hat</span>).—Well, of course,
-if you want something good, that’s rather nice! A
-little heavy for the modern home, but <span class='it'>the</span> thing for the
-Tillington library. And there’s rather a decent chair—see,
-Lady Fanshawe? Isn’t that cross-stitch adorable?—that
-harmonises perfectly with the other two
-pieces. I don’t deny that it would be a bit stiff for
-the tired business man to sit in, but for the person who
-can <span class='it'>afford</span> to have a well-balanced room .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='sc'>Mrs. Pratt</span> (<span class='it'>promptly</span>).—I’ll take the chair!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Quietly, Marjorie left the room, and as the door
-closed behind her, Mrs. Pratt was saying in an attempt
-at playful graciousness.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“A hundred and seventy-five? Vurry reasonable!
-And it’s such a satisfaction to get the best! I hope,
-Lady Fanshawe, and you, too, Mrs. Blaine, that
-you’ll drop in on Tuesday afternoon for a cuppa-tea,
-and tell me how you like my new home!”</p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER 2.</h2>
-
-<p class='noindent'><span class='dropcap'>T</span>he Dillings had come to Ottawa joyously,
-eager to accept its invitation and to become
-identified with its interests. They were less
-flattered by the call than elated by it. Neither of
-them expected merely to skim the pleasures offered by
-life in the Capital; they were acutely alive to their
-responsibilities, and were ready to assume them.
-They hoped to gain something from the great city, it
-is true, but equally did they long to give. Everyone
-who was privileged to live in Ottawa must, they
-imagined, have something of value to contribute to
-their country, and the Dillings welcomed the opportunity
-to serve rather than be served.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But when Marjorie thought of Pinto Plains, of its
-gay simplicity and warm friendliness, the three months
-that marked her absence from it, stretched themselves
-out like years. On the other hand, when she considered
-how little progress she had made in adapting
-herself to the formal ways of the Capital, they shrunk
-into so many days; hours, indeed. So far as happy
-transplanting was concerned, she might even now be
-stepping off the train, a stranger.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Raymond Dilling, a country schoolmaster still in
-his thirties, had strong predilections towards politics,
-and saw in this move a coveted opportunity for the
-furtherance of his ambitions. Yet the idealist who
-shared his mortal envelope believed with Spencer:
-“None can be happy until all are happy; none can be
-free until all are free,” and he fought sternly to crush
-a budding and dangerous individualism. With a little
-less ambition and response to the altruistic urge—public
-service—he would have remained a country
-schoolmaster to the end of his days. As it was, he
-heard the evocation of Destiny for higher things, read
-law as an avenue to what seemed to him the primrose
-path of politics, and grasped the hand of opportunity
-before it was definitely thrust towards him. He lived
-in the West during its most provocative period—provocative,
-that is, for a man of imagination—but he
-never caught the true spirit of the land, he never felt
-his soul respond to the lure of its fecundity, its spaciousness,
-its poignant beauty. The sun always set for him
-behind the grain elevators, and it never occurred to
-him to lift his eyes to the eternal hills .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Dilling was scarcely conscious of his soul. Had he
-been, he would have set about supplying it with what
-he conceived to be its requirements. Of his mind, on
-the other hand, he was acutely aware, and he fed it
-freely on Shakespeare, Milton, and the King James’
-Bible, copies of which were always to be found on the
-parlour table save between the hours of six and seven
-in the morning, when he held them in his abnormally
-long, thin hands. By following the example of those
-two great figures, Daniel Webster and Rufus Choate,
-Dilling hoped to acquire a similarly spacious vocabulary
-and oratorical persuasiveness.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He was a bit of a dreamer, too, believing in Party
-as the expression of the British theory of Government.
-He was simply dazed when he heard the ante-bellum
-ideas of group government, the talk of Economic
-Democracy and the Gospel of the I.W.W., which was
-merely Prudhon’s epigram—“<span class='it'>La Propriété c’est vol</span>,”
-writ large.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He had secured nomination for Parliament through
-the finesse of the Hon. Godfrey Gough, who recognised
-his dialectical supremacy over that of any other man
-in the West. Gough was the <span class='it'>âme damnée</span> of the vested
-interests, and so clever was his advocacy that it
-captivated Dilling into whole-hearted support of their
-political stratagems, and made it easy for him to bring
-them into alignment with his conscience. But he did
-so without hope of pecuniary reward. He was honest.
-During his entire career, he held temptation by the
-throat, as it were, determined that no selfish advantage
-or gain should deflect him from unremitting endeavour
-for the Nation’s good. No parliamentary success
-attained, nor honours received, should be less than a
-meed for a faithful adherence to high principles.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He had never talked much with politicians, but he
-had been talked to by them. On these occasions, it
-was not apparent to him that they were striving to
-maintain politics on its lowest plane, rather than to
-achieve the ideal commonwealth that is supposed to
-be the end and aim of their profession. He read into
-their speeches and conversations the doctrine with
-which he, himself, was impregnated, and the thought
-of working side by side with these men, aroused in him
-an emotion akin to consecration .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>For years Marjorie had pictured Ottawa much as
-she had pictured Bagdad—The City of Mystery and a
-Thousand Delights—a place of gracious boulevards and
-noble architecture, where highly intelligent people
-occupied themselves with the performance of inspired
-tasks. And she thought of it as the Heart of the Great
-Dominion, as necessary to the national body as the
-human heart is essential to the physical body, transmitting
-the tide of national life to the very finger-tips
-of civilisation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And often, down in the secret places of her self, she
-had even a more solemn thought—that Ottawa was
-the Chalice of a Nation’s Hopes, and that merely to
-look upon it would produce an effect like that of entering
-some Holy Temple. Sin and sadness would disappear,
-and even the most degenerate must be led
-there to spiritual refreshment and transfiguration.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Nor did she stand alone; most of her friends were
-of the same opinion. They linked themselves to the
-Capital as closely as they were able, and informed
-themselves minutely concerning its activities, by careful
-study of the daily press. They read the Parliamentary
-news first—this was a sacred duty; they
-wrote papers on politicians and politics for their clubs,
-and spoke with a certain reverent intimacy of the
-People in the Public Eye. But most of all they enjoyed
-the social notes, the description of the gowns, and the
-tidbits of gossip that crept into the columns of their
-papers! Even the accidents, the obscure births and
-deaths that occurred in Ottawa, were invested with a
-stupendous importance in their eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>To them, it was The Land of Afternoon.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And now, as she sat in her tiny drawing-room,
-denuded of its handsome what-not, and waiting for
-possible callers, Marjorie tried to stifle a sense of
-depression, a conviction that all was not right with the
-world.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She reproached herself for this attitude of mind,
-trying to remove the trouble without searching for its
-origin or cause. The house was very still. The
-children were outside, playing. Her thoughts were
-filled with Pinto Plains and longing for her friends there.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She could almost guess what they were doing,
-especially Genevieve Woodside, whose turn it would
-be, to-day, to entertain the Ladies’ Missionary Circle.
-A mist filled her eyes, and before she could control
-herself, she was sobbing.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’ve just got to put an end to this nonsense,” she
-scolded herself. “They’d be ashamed of me, at home.
-I’m ashamed of myself, big baby! Whatever would
-Raymond say? I really am <span class='it'>very happy</span>. This is a
-<span class='it'>nice</span> little house, and the people <span class='it'>are</span> kind! A person
-couldn’t expect to feel perfectly at home, even in Pinto
-Plains, all at once. They simply couldn’t—and to
-think we are really living in Ottawa! Why, it’s
-too wonderful to be true!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The door-bell rang.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>With a nervous glance at the tea table, covered
-with the handsome white cloth embroidered in pink
-roses and edged with home-made lace that had been
-such a work of love for her trousseau, Marjorie went
-into the tiny hall and opened the door.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Is Mrs. Dilling at home?” asked a frail, little
-person, in purple velvet and ermine.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’m Mrs. Dilling, and I’m ever so glad to see you.
-Won’t you come in, please?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Lady Denby,” murmured the other, stepping
-daintily past her.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Marjorie closed the door, feeling very small and
-very frightened. This was the wife of the great Sir
-Eric Denby, the most perdurable public figure of our
-time. The soundest of sound statesmen, he stood, to
-Raymond Dilling, just a shade lower than God,
-Himself.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And the Dillings were profoundly religious people.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Won’t you take off your things?” she asked,
-timidly, and upon receiving a refusal, tinctured with
-a suggestion of reproach, excused herself and went
-into the kitchen to make tea.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>When she returned, Lady Denby and Althea were
-staring unsympathetically at one another across the
-table.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Why, darling,” Marjorie exclaimed, setting down
-the teapot, and forgetting her social obligations in the
-pride of motherhood, “I didn’t hear you come in.
-Dear, dear, what a very untidy little girl, with her
-tam all crooked and her ribbon untied! This is Althea,
-Lady Denby. You’ve no idea how helpful she can
-be—Go and shake hands, precious!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Althea was obedient on this occasion. She marched
-round the table and offered a grimy, wet mitten—the
-left one—from which the visitor shrank with a movement
-of alarm.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“How do you do?” said Lady Denby, discovering,
-after an embarrassing search, a spot upon the shoulder,
-dry enough, and clean enough, to be touched by her
-white-gloved hand.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Having a good time, darling?” asked Marjorie,
-glowing with joy in the child’s loveliness. “Not
-playing too rough a game?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Cream, but no sugar,” said Lady Denby, significantly.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>For a few awkward moments, Marjorie gave herself
-up entirely to the duties of hostess, then turned again
-to her daughter.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Where is Sylvester, and Baby? Are they all
-right, my pet?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Althea nodded.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Baby’s all covered with snow,” she explained.
-“Besser’s playing she’s a egg and he’s a hen, and he’s
-sitting on her!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, mercy!” exclaimed Marjorie. “What a
-naughty boy! Bring them both home at once, Althea—he’ll
-hurt Baby. Quick, now!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Althea rushed off, leaving the front door open.
-Marjorie excused herself to close it. She was surprised
-that Lady Denby exhibited neither amusement nor
-concern in the family affairs. Indeed, she wondered if
-deafness might not account for her curious austerity of
-manner. Old Mrs. Kettlewell, at home, was like that,
-but everybody knew it was because she couldn’t hear
-half of what was going on.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Do let me give you some more tea,” she urged,
-her voice slightly raised. Anxiety distracted her.
-She scarcely knew what she was doing. Suppose the
-baby should be smothered in the snow? Suppose the
-children couldn’t dig her out? She felt that she should
-go to the door, at least, to make sure that Althea was
-successful in her mission. But something in Lady
-Denby’s manner prevented her. She couldn’t explain
-it, yet she simply couldn’t find an excuse to leave the
-room.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Her hands fluttered nervously over the table and
-her eyes haunted the door.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Cream, and no sugar, I think you said, Mrs.—er—er—”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Lady Denby</span>,” corrected the other, with gentle
-reproof.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Apologies. Increased nervousness. Desperate
-effort at self-control. Where could they be, those
-children of hers? Sipping tea like this, when anything
-might be happening out there in the snow! It was
-cruel, cruel!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“How many children have you?” The calm voice
-trickled over her consciousness like a stream of ice-cold
-water.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Three,” she answered, hurriedly. “Althea’s five,
-and Sylvester’s nearly four—Besser, we call him, you
-know—and Baby, her name is really Eulalie, is two
-and a half and simply huge for her age. Have you
-any children?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No,” said Lady Denby, implying by her tone that
-the propagation of the species was, in her opinion, a
-degraded and vulgar performance.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Marjorie tried other topics; church work, conundrums,
-Sir Eric’s health and gastronomic peculiarities.
-She offered her favourite recipes, and patterns for
-crocheted lace, interrupted, thank Heaven, by the
-entrance of the snow-covered children and the consequent
-confusion that they caused.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In her domestic activities she was perfectly at ease,
-hanging damp garments on radiators to dry, wiping
-tear stains from ruddy cheeks, and even arranging a
-juvenile tea-party in a corner of the room.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She chattered happily all the while, never for a
-moment realising that in the Upper Social Circles, the
-last task in the world a woman should undertake
-cheerfully is the care of her children; that even allowing
-them to stay in the same room and breathe the
-rarified air with which the exalted adults have finished,
-is a confession of eccentricity, if not <span class='it'>bourgeoisisme</span>.
-She had no ideas that there were mothers, outside of
-books—or possibly New York—who not only considered
-their children a nuisance, but were ashamed to
-be surprised in any act of maternal solicitude.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Had Ottawa been Pinto Plains, and Lady Denby
-one of her neighbours there, she would have been
-helping to change the children’s clothing, then she
-would have joined the juvenile tea-party, and later,
-would have heard Althea count up to twenty, prompted
-Baby to recite “Hickory, Dickory, Dock,” and would
-have played “Pease Porridge Hot,” with Sylvester
-until her palms smarted painfully.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As it was, Lady Denby did none of these things.
-She sipped tea and nibbled toast as though vast
-distances separated her from the rest of them, distances
-that she had no wish to bridge. Marjorie came to
-the conclusion that she was not only deaf, but suffering
-the frailties of extreme age, her contradictory appearance
-notwithstanding. In this kindly way did she
-account for her guest’s indifference. That her visitor
-was a great and powerful lady, Marjorie well knew,
-but she had no idea that it was necessary for the great
-and powerful to assume this manner, as a means
-whereby they might display their superiority. According
-to her simple philosophy, the more exalted the
-person, the readier the graciousness. For what was
-greatness but goodness, and what was goodness but
-love of humanity? Was not Queen Victoria sociability
-itself, when she visited the humbler subjects of her
-Kingdom?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Other callers came; Mrs. Gullep, whose mission it
-was to visit newcomers to the church; Mrs. Haynes,
-whose husband was also a Member from the West,
-and two or three of the neighbours, with whose children
-Marjorie’s children played. She had a somewhat
-confused recollection of the late afternoon, but certain
-features of Lady Denby’s conversation recurred with
-disturbing vividness.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She was amazed to learn that opening her own door
-was, in future, quite out of the question. If she could
-not, or would not, engage the permanent services of a
-domestic, she must, at least, have someone on Wednesday
-afternoons to admit her callers. Furthermore, she
-must be relieved—relieved was Lady Denby’s word—of
-all bother—(also Lady Denby’s) with the children.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“They will stand between you and the possibility
-of making friends of the right sort,” she warned, a
-viewpoint which was in direct opposition to the theory
-Marjorie had always held. “At least once a week,
-social duties demand your undivided attention.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Again, without in the least having said so, Lady
-Denby managed to convey the fact that she considered
-Marjorie a very pretty woman, and that it would be
-wise, in view of her husband’s position, to make the
-most of her good looks. In the Capital, she observed,
-much weight attached to one’s appearance, and
-Marjorie would find herself repaid for dressing a little
-more—another interesting word of Lady Denby’s—“definitely”.
-The word was puzzling. Marjorie made
-all her own and the children’s clothes, her husband’s
-shirts, his pyjamas and summer underwear, and she
-was humbly proud of her accomplishment. She had
-no doubt as to her ability to make more “definite”
-clothes, could she but understand exactly what Lady
-Denby meant. There wasn’t anything very striking
-in a purple velvet suit, even though it had a collar
-and cuffs of ermine. Besides, Marjorie couldn’t wear
-purple velvet, it was too elderly.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Her own crepe-de-chine blouse was a definite pink.
-There could be no possibility of mistaking it for green
-or blue. She had embroidered it profusely in a black
-poppy design (copied from a pattern in the needlework
-section of a fashion magazine) to harmonise with her
-black velveteen skirt, the flaps of which were faced
-with pink crepe-de-chine to harmonise with the blouse.
-Feminine Pinto Plains, calling singly and in groups to
-inspect her “trousseau,” agreed that it was more than
-a costume—it was a creation—and they prophesied
-that it would dazzle Ottawa.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“So rich looking,” they said, “with all that hand-work!”
-Pinto Plains set a great deal of store by hand-work.
-“With your lovely colour, Marjorie, in that
-bright pink you’ll be charming!” And yet Lady
-Denby thought that she should have more definite
-clothes!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then there was another thing—and on this point
-Lady Denby spoke with greater lucidity.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I am sure you will find it convenient, my dear,”
-she had said, in a whispered colloquy that took place
-in the hall, “to know some young girl who would be
-flattered by your patronage, and gratified to be of
-service to you. There are so many things the right
-sort of person could do—pour tea, and have a general
-eye to the arrangements when you receive; give you
-valuable hints as to the connections you should, or
-should not, form; advise you as to tradesmen, and a
-dozen other minor matters that must, for a stranger,
-be exceedingly confusing. It is quite the thing to
-encourage such an association in the Capital, and I
-might add that it lends an air of <span class='it'>empressement</span> to
-Members of the Party. One must always consider
-the Party, my dear.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Lady Denby saw no difficulty in the fact that
-Marjorie knew of no such person. “Leave it to me,”
-she said, with an air of brilliant finality, “I have just
-such a girl in mind. Not pretty enough to be attractive,
-and too clever to be popular; so her time is
-pretty much her own. She would welcome the
-opportunity, I know, of shining in your reflected glory.
-I’ll send her to you. Her name is Azalea Deane.
-And remember always, in your associations, to maintain
-the dignity that is due to your husband’s position.
-I would almost go so far as to say that indiscriminate
-intimacies should be discouraged; they are so apt to
-be embarrassing—in politics, you know .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” Without
-exactly forming the words, her lips seemed to pronounce
-Mrs. Gullep’s name. “Very estimable people, I am
-sure, the very vertebræ of Church Societies, but in a
-small <span class='it'>ménage</span> like this, my dear, you must not waste
-your chairs!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Marjorie lay awake that night reviewing the events
-of the day. Some cog in the well-ordered machinery
-of her existence had slipped out of place, and was
-causing unaccustomed friction. She didn’t know
-what was the matter. Neither analytical nor introspective,
-she never got down to fundamentals, and the
-results that showed on the surface were apt to bewilder
-her. Consequently, she refused to admit disappointment
-with her surroundings, and did not even remotely
-suspect that she was experiencing the first, faint
-stirrings of disillusionment. She was a little depressed,
-that she admitted, but the fault was hers; of that she
-was thoroughly convinced, not only at the moment
-but throughout the months and years that stretched
-ahead. Always she blamed herself for failing to attain
-the state of mental and spiritual growth that would
-enable her to fit comfortably into her environment.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Of course, she couldn’t put all this into words.
-She never could make her feelings clear to other people—not
-even to Raymond. So, when, somewhat impatient
-at her restlessness, he asked what was the
-matter, she answered, with a little sigh.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, nothing, dearie .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. nothing that’s awfully
-important, I ought to say. Only—only—I sometimes
-wonder .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. do <span class='it'>you</span> ever feel that Ottawa’s a difficult
-place to get acquainted?”</p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER 3.</h2>
-
-<p class='noindent'><span class='dropcap'>D</span>illing adapted himself to his new environment
-much more readily than did his wife. He had
-not anticipated that the House of Commons
-would be a glorified Municipal Council such as he had
-left in Pinto Plains, and that his associations and
-activities would be virtually the same save on a
-magnificent scale; whereas Marjorie had deluded herself—subconsciously,
-it may be—with the thought that
-Ottawa would be an idealised prairie town, and that
-she would live a beatified extension of her old life,
-there. Differences in customs, in social and moral
-codes, ever remained for her a hopeless enigma, just
-as Euclid’s problems evade solution for some people.
-She never could master them because she never could
-understand them. Black was black and white was
-white, and neither sunshine nor shadow could convert
-either into gray. No leopard ever possessed more
-changeless spots.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>While, therefore, her husband was joyously engrossed
-in his work, finding novelty and stimulation
-in every smallest detail, remodelling himself to fit the
-mantle he had been called upon to adorn, Marjorie
-was confronted with unexpected obstacles, bewildered
-by inexplicable ways, homesick for familiar standards
-and people, and groping for something stable to which
-she could cling and upon which she could build her
-present life.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Of the nature of Dilling’s work, she had but the
-sketchiest idea. His conversation was becoming
-almost unintelligible to her, try as she would to follow
-it. When, in the old days, they sat at the table or
-drew their chairs around the fire, and he told her of
-Jimmy Woodside’s stupidity or Elvira Mumford’s high
-average, she could take a vital interest in his daily
-pursuits, but now, when he referred to Motions, and
-Amendments, and Divisions, she had no idea of what
-he was talking about. He was seldom at home, and
-upon those rare occasions he fortressed himself behind
-a palisade of Blue Books and Financial Returns.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He abandoned himself to reading almost as a man
-abandons himself to physical debauch, and Marjorie,
-furtively watching him, could scarcely believe that the
-stranger occupying that frail, familiar shell was, in
-reality, her husband. There was about him a suggestion
-of emotional pleasure, an expression of ecstacy,
-as when a man gazes deep into his beloved’s eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Ah,” he would murmur, “three thousand, six
-hundred and forty-two .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. annually! Seventy-nine
-thousand less than .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. well, well!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>His cheeks would flush, his breathing would thicken,
-his forehead would gleam with a crown of moisture,
-and he would lose his temper shockingly if the children
-spoke to him or played noisily in the room.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Long afterwards, a rural wag observed that Prohibition
-touched few persons less than Raymond Dilling,
-who could get drunk on Blue Books and Trade
-Journals, any day in the year!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Marjorie got into the way of keeping the little ones
-shut up in the kitchen with her. The house was too
-small to allow Dilling the privacy of a library or study,
-and the three bedrooms were cold and cheerless. So
-he appropriated the tiny drawing-room and converted
-it into what seemed to her, a literary rubbish heap.
-Books, pamphlets, Hansards, and more books .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. she
-was nearly crazy with them!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She had never been to the House of Commons save
-once, when Raymond took the entire family on a tour
-of inspection. She had never seen Parliament in Session,
-and had no idea that many of the women who
-accompanied their husbands to Ottawa, spent all the
-time they could spare from bridge, in the Gallery;
-not profiting by the progress of the Debates, but
-carrying on mimic battles amongst themselves. Here
-was the cockpit, from which arose the causes of bitter
-though bloodless conflicts—conflicts which embroiled
-both the innocent and the guilty, and formed the base
-of continuous social warfare.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>However, on the afternoon that Dilling was
-expected to deliver his maiden speech, she found her
-way to the Ladies’ Gallery with the aid of a courteous
-official, and ingenuously presented her card of admission.
-Without appearing to glance at it, the doorkeeper
-grasped the information it bore.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“This way, please, Mrs. Dilling,” he said, with just
-the proper shade of cordiality tempering his authority.
-“Here’s a seat—in the second row. They are just
-clearing the Orders for your husband’s speech,” he
-added, in an officious whisper.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Marjorie sank unobtrusively into the place he
-indicated and thanked him. She wondered how he
-knew her name, not realising that he had held his
-position for forty years by the exercise of that very
-faculty which so amazed her. It was his duty to
-know not only all those who sought an entrance through
-the particular portal that he guarded, but also to know
-where to place them. Should he fail to recognise an
-applicant, he never betrayed himself. She was
-presently to learn that as her husband progressed
-nearer the front benches downstairs, she would be
-advanced to the front, upstairs.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Her first sensation—could she have singled one out
-of the medley that overwhelmed her—was not of
-exaltation at having entered into the sanctuary of the
-Canadian Temple of Politics, and being in a position
-to look down upon one of the clumsiest and most
-complex institutions that ever failed to maintain the
-delusion of democracy, but of the immensity of the
-place. The Green Chamber was at least four times
-as large as the Arena in Pinto Plains! Its sombreness
-discomfited her. Although she had read descriptions
-of the Commons, she never visualised the dullness of
-the green with which it was carpeted and upholstered;
-she had rather taken clusters of glittering candelabra
-for granted; indeed, it would not have surprised her
-to find golden festoons catching dust from the whirlwind
-of oratory which rose from the floor beneath.
-The unregality of the place made her want to cry.
-She felt like a child standing before a fairy king without
-his crown.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Directly opposite her sat the Speaker on his Throne—the
-chair which the late King Edward had used
-when visiting the Colonies in 1860. Above the
-Speaker, in a shallow gallery suspended below that
-reserved for the Proletariat, several men were languidly
-trailing their pencils across the stationery provided
-them by the generous taxpayers of the country.
-These were the scribes of the Press, profundite scriveners,
-whose golden words she had absorbed so often in
-her far-away prairie home.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the floor of the House, at a long table in front
-of the Speaker, sat the Clerk. At the other end of the
-table lay the Mace, the massive bauble that aroused
-Oliver Cromwell’s choler, and which symbolises, by its
-position, the functioning of the House. In splendid
-isolation sat the Sergeant-at-Arms, an incumbent of
-the office for forty-three years, during which time, it is
-said, he never changed the colour of his overcoat, or
-his dog.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the Speaker’s left sat His Majesty’s loyal
-Opposition, led by that illustrious tribune of the
-people, the Right Honourable Sir Wilfrid Laurier.
-Facing him, across the table, was the Right Honourable
-Sir Robert Borden and the Members of his Cabinet,
-prominent among whom was Sir Eric Denby, who
-dreamed of a Saharan drought for Canada, and
-affirmed his stand on the Temperance question with
-the zeal of a Hebrew prophet. Then, as a counterpoise
-to Sir Eric, there was the Honourable Godfrey Gough,
-who sought to mould a policy for his Party that would
-have made Machiavelli blush!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>These were the notables; the rest were a jumble
-of tailenders.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Marjorie could not locate her husband, immediately,
-but after a little she recognised the top of his head.
-He was sitting in a dim corner, in the very last row
-under the Gallery that was devoted to the accommodation
-of the ruck of our splendid democracy.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then, before she was quite prepared for it, she saw
-him rise to his feet. Her eyes filled with tears of
-terror, and for a moment he seemed to stand alone—like
-a splendid column, islanded in a rolling sea.
-Marjorie could not resist the impulse to inform the
-impassive lady sitting beside her, that the speaker was
-her husband.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The lady looked surprised at being addressed.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Indeed?” she replied, and her eyebrows added,
-“Well, what of it?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Marjorie kept her hand pressed tightly over her
-heart. It thumped so heavily, she could scarcely hear
-what Raymond was saying. If he should forget his
-speech! If he should fail!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Gradually, the blur before her cleared, and she saw
-that he was standing quite at ease, one hand resting
-on his hip—a favourite and familiar attitude—and the
-other negligently grasping the back of his chair. His
-flat voice, carrying well for all its lack of resonancy,
-was perfectly steady, and his words were unhurried,
-clear; in fine, she realised that Raymond had no dread
-of what to her, was a scarifying experience, and, unimaginative
-though she was, there was borne upon her
-a strange, new consciousness of her husband’s power.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>For the formal test of his ability to command the
-attention of the House, he had seized upon the Motion
-of a Representative from the West, calling upon the
-Government to adopt a vigourous policy in the construction
-of grain elevators and facilities for the transportation
-of wheat—Canada’s prime commodity in the
-markets of the world.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. As I stand here, enveloped by the traditions
-of the past,” she heard him say, “listening to the echoes
-in this Chamber of the noble words and sound policies
-that have builded this great structure that is our
-Country, I am awed by the privilege that has come to
-me of taking a part, however small, in directing the
-national welfare of this Dominion. I seek not at this
-moment, Mr. Speaker, merely the glory of the Party
-to which I have the honour to belong, but I am
-ambitious to maintain a principle, to be worthy of the
-men who fashioned a nation out of chaos, out of a
-wilderness of local and parochial interests. I shall
-strive to be the force for good that such men would
-wish to see in every member in this legislative body
-to-day .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Although he had known that Marjorie would be in
-the Gallery that afternoon, it was typical of Dilling
-to ignore the fact. Small acts of pretty gallantry were
-utterly foreign to his nature. He could no more have
-raised a woman’s glove to his lips before returning it
-to her, than he could have manicured his fingernails.
-To himself he termed such graces “<span class='it'>la-di-da</span>”, by which
-he probably meant foppish. If his personal vanity
-revealed itself in any one direction it was that he
-might appear superlatively masculine—even to the
-verge of brutality.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. The cause I plead,” he continued, “is that
-which must appeal to every thinking man, to-day.
-I plead an economical policy for the guarding of our
-grain .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Wheat!” she heard him say. “The West is
-crying for elevators, and for freighting facilities in
-order that she may distribute her vast resources. The
-East is crying for food. The world needs wheat.
-<span class='it'>Wheat!</span> The very word rings with a strange magic,
-flares with a golden gleam of prosperity.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>His eyes were fixed on his Chief’s profile, save when
-they leaped across the aisle to the “White Plume” of
-the grand Old Man who bent over his desk and scribbled
-with a slender yellow pencil, apparently quite oblivious
-to Dilling’s existence. Marjorie saw him through
-brimming eyes. She did not know that in the corridor
-men were saying, “Come on in! Dilling’s got the floor.
-He’s talking a good deal of rhetorical rot—as must be
-expected from an amateur—but the making of an
-orator is there.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Come on in!” She was too nervous
-to notice that the empty benches which comprise the
-flattering audience usually accorded to a new speaker,
-were rapidly filling, that Members who discovered some
-trifling business to keep them in the Chamber, had
-stopped sorting the collection of visiting cards, forgotten
-appointments, and notes with which their
-pockets were stuffed. Laryngitical gentlemen forbore
-to snap their fingers at the bob-tailed pages for glasses
-of water—in short, Raymond was making an impression.
-He was receiving the attention of the House.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>His concluding words were,</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I have come amongst you, a stranger, unversed in
-the ways of this great assembly of a young, ardent and
-democratic people—of members whose experience has
-been so much richer than my own. I trust that none
-of you—even those whose views may be at variance
-with mine—will have cause to resent my coming.
-I realise that a profound responsibility devolves upon
-each and every one of us who steps across the threshold
-of this Chamber, and that although our creeds may be
-translated differently, their actuating principles are
-identical.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I know, Mr. Speaker, that life lies in the struggle,
-that work—and not its wage—brings us joy. The
-game is the important thing, not the score. To gain
-the peak of the mountain is the climber’s ambition.
-If he be a true man, a man who rejoices in service for
-others, he has no wish to possess the summit. To
-serve the Empire at the cost of ease and leisure, to
-expend one’s strength in the solving of her myriad
-problems, is the sum total of an honest man’s desire.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I submit that it is possible to spread peace and
-plenty throughout our Dominion. The Government
-has but to build treasure-houses for the grain, and lend
-assistance in the way of subsidies for transportation.
-A hungry people make poor citizens, and will inevitably
-bring desolation to any land, for, as Ruskin has said,
-‘There is no wealth but life, and that nation is the
-richest that breeds the greatest number of noble and
-happy homes and beings’.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>His speech was short and admirably delivered.
-It hit the temper of the House, and Dilling sat down
-amid a storm of applause.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Through a mist of tears Marjorie noted that Sir
-Robert was bending over her husband with an air that
-was more than perfunctorily gracious. Several other
-men also left their desks and offered him congratulations.
-She felt a little faint with pride and the reaction
-of it all.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“A real triumph,” said the voice of the lady sitting
-next to her, suddenly. “Your husband’s quite a
-speaker, isn’t he?” and Marjorie was too grateful for
-these words of friendliness to sense that the lady (who
-was Mrs. Bedford, wife of the Whip of the Liberal
-Party) would have been much more gratified had
-Raymond Dilling made of his speech a bleak failure.</p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER 4.</h2>
-
-<p class='noindent'><span class='dropcap'>T</span>he Hon. Member for Morroway did not wait
-for the adjournment of the afternoon Session.
-With a gesture that the thirsty never fail to
-recognise, he signalled two colleagues who occupied
-adjacent benches, and led the way from the Green
-Chamber.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Hon. Member was more than a little piqued at
-Marjorie Dilling’s insensibility to his persistent
-Gallery-gazing. It was almost unprecedented in his
-experience that a young woman should find the
-sparsely-covered crown of her husband’s head more
-magnetic an objective than his own luxuriant growth
-of silver hair. Looked at from above, the leonine
-mane of Mr. Rufus Sullivan was in the midst of such
-hirsute barrenness, as conspicuous as a spot of moonlight
-on a drab, gray wall.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Hon. Member for Morroway disliked many
-things: work, religion, temperance, ugly women, clever
-men, home cooking, cotton stockings, and male stenographers,
-to mention only a few. But more than any
-of these, he disliked being ignored by a girl upon whom
-he had focussed his attention. Such occasions (happily
-rare!) always induced extreme warmth that was like a
-scorching rash upon Mr. Sullivan’s sensitive soul, and
-this, in turn, promoted an intense dryness of the throat.
-Mr. Sullivan disliked being dry.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>So, with admirable directness of movement, he led
-the way to his room, unlocked a drawer marked
-“Unfinished Business,” and set a bottle upon the desk
-at the same time waving hospitality towards his two
-companions.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>For a space the silence was broken only by the
-ring of glass upon glass and the cooling hiss of a syphon.
-Then, three voices pronounced, “Here’s how!” and
-there followed an appreciative click of the tongue and
-a slight gurgling.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Ah .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” breathed the trio.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Hon. Member for Morroway closed one limpid
-brown eye and examined his glass against the light.
-Although an incomparable picture stood framed in the
-small Gothic window of his room, it did not occur to
-Mr. Sullivan to look at the distant Laurentians
-slipping into the purple haze of evening, to feast
-his soul upon the glory of soft river tones and forest
-shades; to note the slender spire of silver that
-glowed like a long-drawn-out star on a back-drop
-of pastel sky.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mr. Sullivan was concerned only with the amber
-fluid in his glass, where tiny bubbles climbed hurriedly
-to the surface and clung to the sides of the tumbler.
-If he looked out of the window at all, it was to investigate
-the possible charms of unattached maidens who
-strolled towards Nepean Point ostentatiously enjoying
-the view. Sometimes, Mr. Sullivan found the outlook
-enchanting, himself. This was when he was stimulated
-by the enthusiasm of a pretty girl who invariably
-remarked that it was a sin “to spoil the river shore
-with those hideous mills, and poison good air with the
-reek of sulphite.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mr. Sullivan vehemently agreed, for he called himself
-an ardent Nature-lover, unwilling to admit that
-Nature, for him, was always feminine and young.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Not much doubt as to the direction the wind
-blows from Pinto Plains,” he observed, still intent
-upon his glass.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Not a shadow,” agreed Howarth, sombrely.
-“Eastlake and Donahue have certainly got that lad
-buffaloed to a standstill.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Railroaded, you mean,” amended Turner, essaying
-a wan jest. “I wonder what his price was.” He
-drained his glass, set it on the table with a thud, and
-cried, “I never saw their equal—that pair! Time
-after time, we’ve thought they were down and out.
-Their subsidies were discounted, banks closed down on
-’em, credit was exhausted—you remember the contractors
-we’ve fixed so that they wouldn’t operate?—even
-their own supporters got weak in the knees .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-and they manage to find some inspired spell-binder,
-who pours the floods of his forensic eloquence on the
-sterile territory, so that first thing we know, a stream
-of currency begins to trickle from the banks, subsidies
-are renewed .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. God! how do they pull it off, boys?
-In a case like this, where do they get the cash to pay
-Dilling, and what do they promise him? What’s his
-price, I’m asking you, eh?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Rufus Sullivan, feeling that two pairs of eyes were
-upon him, spoke.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Do you know,” he said, slowly, “it wouldn’t
-surprise me much to learn that young Dilling hasn’t
-been bought at all, that he gave himself to the cause,
-and that all of that grandiose bunk he talked was
-truth to him?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Good God!” breathed Howarth, and gulped loudly.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“ ’S a fact! I listened hard all the time he talked,
-and I watched him some, and it struck me he wasn’t
-speaking a part he had learned at the Company’s
-dictation, nor for a price .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“—which means,” interrupted Turner, “that he’s
-another of those damned nuisances with principles, and
-ideas about making politics clean and uplifting for the
-man in the street.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Worse than that,” corrected Howarth. “It means
-that he’ll be a damsite harder to handle, and more
-expensive to buy than a fellow who has no definite
-convictions and finds mere money acceptable.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“That’s right!” Sullivan set down his empty glass
-and spread his elbows on the desk, facing them. “I
-don’t anticipate that Dilling will be any bargain, but,” he
-thundered, “we’ve got to have him. Fortunately, we can
-rely upon the incontrovertible fact that like every other
-man, he <span class='it'>has</span> a price. It’s up to us to find out what it is!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But, damn it all, Sullivan,” cried Howarth, “I’m
-sick of paying prices! Surely we can find some means
-of muzzling this altruistic western stripling.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Nothing simpler,” returned the older man, with
-heavy sarcasm. “We’ve only got to go to the country,
-defeat the Government, assassinate Eastlake and
-Donahue, deport Gough as an undesirable .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Godfrey
-happens to be backing Dilling in his constituency
-don’t you forget .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What?” asked Turner.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What for?” from Howarth.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Sullivan spread out his large, fat hands. “For
-some dark purpose of his own that is yet to be revealed
-.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. and then, we must squash the vested interests.
-Suppose you take on this trifling job, Bill. I’m going
-to be busy this evening.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Just the same,” cut in Turner, “I think Billy’s
-right. He ought to be intimidated—Dilling, of course,
-I mean—not bought. These Young Lochinvars ought
-not to be allowed to think they can run the country.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Buying or intimidating, it’s much the same thing
-in the end,” said Sullivan. “You’ve got to find a
-price or a weapon.” He corked the bottle, locked it
-away and strolled across the office to examine his
-features in a heavy gilt mirror that hung on the wall.
-“Did either of you remark Mrs. Dilling?” he enquired,
-attacking his mass of hair with a small pocket
-comb.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Mrs. Dilling?” echoed the others.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Why not? She sat in the Gallery all afternoon.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“How did you know her?” demanded Howarth.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Why, I saw her come in, and noting that she was
-a stranger—”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“—and extremely pretty,” suggested Turner, “you
-took the trouble to find out.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, she is pretty,” said the Member for Morroway,
-reflectively. “A fair, childish face, like a wild,
-unplucked prairie flower.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Humph,” observed Turner, exchanging a significant
-look with Howarth behind his host’s back.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Beauty is an amazingly compelling force,” Sullivan
-continued, sententiously. “I have a theory—shared
-by very few people, it is true, but convincing to me,
-nevertheless—that Beauty wields a more powerful
-influence than Fear. What do you think?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Never thought about it at all,” confessed Howarth,
-bluntly. “But what has all this to do with Dilling’s
-price?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, nothing, my dear fellow,” said Sullivan, airily,
-“nothing at all! I was merely indulging in a moment’s
-reflection, inspired, as it were, by Mrs. Dilling’s loveliness.
-You must meet her .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. We must see to it
-that Ottawa treats her with cordiality and friendliness.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Do you know her, yourself .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. already?” asked
-Turner.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Er—no. I have not been through the formality
-of an introduction, but I know her sufficiently well to
-wager that she is the sort of little woman who responds
-to the sympathetic word; who is lonely, and searching
-for warmth rather than grandeur in her associations
-and who can be relied upon to work for her husband’s
-advancement .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. when that good time comes.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A new light gleamed in the eyes of his two listeners.
-They gave up trying to think of ways in which the
-new Member might be intimidated—discredited with
-his constituents or sponsors; and waited for the master
-mind to reveal itself. But Rufus Sullivan, M.P., was
-not the man to discuss half-formulated plans. He
-changed the subject adroitly, jotted down the Dilling’s
-address and excused himself on the plea that he was
-dining with the Pratts for the purpose of laying the
-foundations for a successful campaign.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“There’s an interesting type,” he declared. “Useful—most
-useful!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Pratt?” cried Turner. “Why, he’s a jolly old ass,
-in my opinion!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I mean Mrs. Pratt, of course,” was Sullivan’s mild
-reproof. “Don’t you realise, my dear chap, that the
-women of our day are the chief factors in our Government?
-We are harking back to the piping times of
-the ‘Merry Monarch’.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, rot!” contradicted Howarth, who was a
-married man.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Régime du cotillon</span> .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. petticoat Government, eh?”
-Turner laughed. Both he and Sullivan had evaded
-the snares of feminine hunters. “I don’t know the
-lady, but take it that she, also, is easy on the eye.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Sullivan shook his great white head. Mrs. Pratt,
-he explained, had not been born to adorn life, but to
-emphasise it. Nature, in her wisdom, had given to
-some women determination, and the callousness that
-must accompany it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Purposeful,” said Mr. Sullivan, “grimly purposeful,
-with about as much sensitiveness as you would
-find in a piece of rock crystal. She’s got her mind set
-on having Gus in Parliament, and if Queen Victoria
-and her attendant lion got off the pedestal outside
-there, they wouldn’t be able to prevent her. She
-would repeal the B.N.A. Act if it stood in her way.
-A very useful woman,” he repeated, and insinuated
-himself into his overcoat.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What’s he up to?” Howarth asked his companion
-as they bent their steps towards the restaurant and
-dinner.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“God knows!” answered Turner. “But there’s a
-load taken off my mind by the knowledge that he’s
-got something up his sleeve. And it won’t be all
-laughter either, if I know him.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Howarth paused in the corridor. His dulled conscience
-was trying to shake off its political opiate and
-prompt him to play the man in this thing, but its
-small voice was speedily hushed by the animated scene
-about him. Pages were scurrying around; Members,
-released from the tension of debate, were greeting each
-other noisily; the <span class='it'>omnium gatherum</span> of the Galleries
-was debouching upon the Main lobby, so that the very
-air he breathed was vibrant with a <span class='it'>scherzo</span> of human
-voices.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I say,” he cried, “let’s ask Dilling to feed with us.
-Under the intoxication of triumph, he may loosen up a
-bit—become loquacious. You get a table. I’ll get
-him!”</p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER 5.</h2>
-
-<p class='noindent'><span class='dropcap'>“I</span>t isn’t the thing, my dear!” Or, “It’s quite the
-thing, you know!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The thing! THE THING! What on earth
-did it mean?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Marjorie first heard the phrase on the lips of Lady
-Denby, and gradually she recognised it as a social
-influence that was as powerful as it was mysterious.
-It was one of the most elusive of her problems, for,
-while she understood vaguely, the significance of the
-term, she failed entirely to apply its principles to the
-exigencies of her new life. “Besides,” she said to
-herself, “one discovers what <span class='it'>is</span> the thing, only to find
-presently, that it isn’t .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. or the other way round.
-There doesn’t seem to be any fixed rule.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was hers to learn in the hard school of experience,
-that Ottawa in the twentieth century, was controlled
-by a social code quite as remorseless in its way as the
-tribal etiquette which governed the Algonquins when
-Champlain visited its site, three hundred years before.
-Wherever she went, the attitude of the people from
-Government House down to those who moved on the
-very periphery of its circle, was such as to repress and
-chill the frank and unquestioning impulse for friendliness
-that lent much charm to her character. She
-developed a curious sort of nervousness—an inner
-quaking, that disconcerted her, and made her feel
-unnatural. She became so fearful of offending people,
-that her manner was frequently described as obsequious.
-Now and then, she knew she was being
-criticised, but could not, for the life of her, fathom the
-reason.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Thing .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. of course, but what <span class='it'>was</span> The Thing?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She had tried to break the children of saying
-“ma’am”. Lady Denby told her it wasn’t <span class='it'>the thing</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No nice people speak like that, Althea, darling,”
-Marjorie declared. “You should say, ‘Yes, mother,’
-or ‘No, Lady Denby,’ or ‘I don’t know, Miss Deane,’—as
-the case may be, but please, darling, don’t say
-‘ma’am’!” And yet to her astonishment, she heard
-Miss Leila Brant address no less a personage than the
-Lady of Government House in this ill-bred manner!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“This, ma’am,” said she, “is one of the forks used
-at the Carlyle table. It’s really rather a good thing,
-and I was <span class='it'>thrilled</span> at having picked it up.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You have some very interesting bits,” observed
-The Lady, graciously.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, <span class='it'>ma’am</span>! How can I ever thank you for those
-words,” cried Miss Brant. “Even the slightest breath
-of praise from you, means—well, it means more than
-you can possibly realise.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Ma’am .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. ma’am .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Why, Marjorie could
-scarcely believe that she wasn’t dreaming.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She left the Ancient Chattellarium in a despondent
-frame of mind. Why, in Ottawa, must she appear so
-stupid? Why could she not make friends? Would
-she be humiliated forever, by the lifted eyebrow and
-the open reproof .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. “It isn’t the thing, my dear?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was not her nature, however, to be melancholy,
-so she thrust dark thoughts away and gave herself up
-to ingenuous excitement in anticipation of her first
-party at Rideau Hall.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Skating Parties held at Government House on
-Saturday afternoons during January and February
-were very much THE THING; in fact, geographically
-speaking, Rideau Hall was its very source, its essence,
-the spot from which it emanated and seeped into
-virtually every other residence in the Capital. Scarcely
-a person from a master plumber down, but felt and
-yielded to its malison.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Owing to the intense and protracted cold, there was
-excellent ice as late as the middle of March, and Their
-Royal Highnesses extended the hospitality of the rink
-considerably beyond the date specified on the original
-invitations.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Not that the majority of the people went to the
-Skating Parties to skate, or even to toboggan—the
-thoughtful alternative suggested on the large, square
-card—about two inches below the Royal Coat of Arms.
-Sufficiently difficult were the performances already
-expected of them—the curvettings, gyrations and
-genuflexions demanded at the moment of their presentation
-to the Vice-Regal party. Sebaceous dowagers
-teetered dangerously in their endeavour to achieve a
-court curtsey, occasionally passing the centre of
-bouyancy and plunging headlong between the two
-pairs of august feet.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A crowd larger than usual massed in the skating
-pavilion and fought politely for the mulled claret, tea,
-coffee, cake and sandwiches that were being served
-from long, narrow trestles. His Royal Highness, the
-Duke of Connaught, and the picturesque Princess Pat
-had come in from the open-air rink below, and without
-removing their skates, had led the way to the tea-room,
-whereupon several hundred people unleashed their
-appetites, sampled the various refreshments, and disposed
-of the vessels from which they had eaten on the
-floor, window-sills or chairs, if any, that had been
-vacated.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In a corner, removed as far as possible from the
-disordered tea-tables sat three ladies, eating, drinking
-and conversing as though they were spectators at
-some bizarre entertainment. They stared with frank
-insolence about them, looking through many persons
-who came hopefully within their vicinage, and warning
-a few by the manner of their salutation that they
-must approach no nearer. They had been distinguished
-by receiving a welcome from the Duke and
-Duchess, who called each by name and hoped that
-their health was good. After this distinction, the
-ladies withdrew from the commonalty into their
-corner, exalted and envied.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Who in the world <span class='it'>are</span> all these people?” asked Lady
-Elton. She spoke fretfully, with an edge of desperation
-on her voice. A stranger might have imagined
-that she was required by the statutes to learn the
-name and history of each member of the throng, and
-that she found the task inexpressibly irksome.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Of course, such was not the case. It didn’t matter
-whether she knew any of these people or not—at least,
-it only mattered to the people themselves, many of
-whom would have been glad to be known by her or
-any other titled person. She asked the question
-because it was the thing <span class='it'>to</span> ask at Government House,
-because it was one of those intellectual insipidities that
-have supplanted conversation and made it possible for
-a group of persons without visible qualifications,
-according to the standards of yesterday, to exchange
-an absence of ideas, and form themselves into a close
-corporation known as Society.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mrs. Chesley shook her head. “Isn’t it amazing?”
-she breathed. “Only a few years ago it was such a
-pleasure to come down here—one knew everybody—and
-now .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Sessional people, I suppose?” interrupted Miss de
-Latour, with just the faintest movement of her nose
-as though she was speaking of a drain-digger, or some
-other useful class of citizen who, by reason of necessity,
-moved in the effluvia occasioned by his work.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Captain the Honourable Teddy Dodson approached
-at this moment to ask if the ladies were satisfactorily
-served.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Do let me get you some more tea,” he begged.
-“I’m afraid no one’s looking after you—this awful
-mob, you know.” He pushed a collection of discarded
-cups aside and seated himself on the edge of a chair,
-leaning forward with an air of flattering confidence.
-“Cross your hearts and hope you may die,” he whispered,
-“and I’ll tell you what we call these beastly tea
-fights.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The trio playfully followed his instructions and
-encouraged him to reveal the limit of his naughtiness.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“We call them ‘slum parties’,” confided the young
-Aide, and while the ladies shrieked their appreciation
-of his wicked wit, he clumped away on his expensive
-skates, balancing three cups quite cleverly as he
-elbowed a passage to the table.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“How do you suppose these people get invitations?”
-Miss de Latour demanded, indignantly. “Look at
-that woman over there—no, no, the one in the purple
-hat. Isn’t that the awful Pratt creature who’s pushing
-herself into everything?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“My husband,” said Mrs. Chesley, “calls her the
-Virginia Creeper. However, she’ll get on. They say
-she’s been left a disgusting lot of money, and that her
-husband’s going to run for Parliament.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“That’s no reason why she should be here,” said
-the other. “Are there no impregnable bulwarks left
-to protect Society?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Why, Pamela,” cried Mrs. Chesley, “how clever
-of you to remember that! I read it, too, in Lady
-Dunstan’s Memoirs, but I’ve no memory—I can’t
-quote things .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. as though they were your own!” finished Lady
-Elton, and laughed at the neatness of her thrust.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Miss de Latour’s question as to how people secured
-their invitations was merely an echo of her friend’s
-banality. There was no secret about the matter; no
-bribery or corruption. Anyone—almost anyone—desiring
-to be insulted by the Lady Eltons, Mrs.
-Chesleys, and Miss de Latours of Ottawa, or to be
-snubbed of their acquaintances, had only to proceed
-to the Main Entrance of Rideau Hall, pass beneath
-the new facade—so symbolic of fronts, both physical
-and architectural, that had suddenly been acquired all
-over the City in honour of the Royal Governor-General—and
-there, in the white marble, red-carpeted hall,
-sign a huge register, under the eye of two supercilious,
-scarlet-coated flunkeys, who regarded each newcomer
-with all the antagonism of their class. This unique
-procedure was known as “calling at Government
-House,” and within a few days of the delightful and
-friendly visit, His Majesty’s Mails conveyed a large,
-rich-looking card to the door and one learned that
-“Their Royal Highnessess had desired the A.D.C. in
-Waiting to invite Mr. and Mrs. Van Custard and the
-Misses Van Custard for Skating and Toboganning
-between the hours, etc., etc.”. Thereupon, one wrote
-to rural relations or foreigners of one kind and another,
-and mentioned carelessly that one had been “entertained
-at Government House”.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“There’s Mrs. Long,” announced Lady Elton.
-“Who’s the man?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, some newspaper person, I think—an American,”
-volunteered Miss de Latour. Obviously it was
-bad enough in her opinion to be any kind of a newspaper
-person, but to be an American newspaper person
-offered an affront to Society that was difficult to
-condone. Pamela de Latour was intensely proud of
-her father’s legendary patrician lineage, her capacity
-for avoiding friendships, and her mother’s wealth.
-She was well aware of the fact that she was regarded
-as a person whom “one should know.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“He’s not bad looking,” murmured Lady Elton,
-charitably, “and he must be rather worth while, Pam.
-She’s introducing him to everyone. Let’s wander
-over and see what we can see.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But Mrs. Long, watching them from the corner of
-her very alert brown eyes, and anticipating this move,
-beat a strategic retreat, and soon lost herself and her
-newspaper man in the dense crowd. Lady Elton, Mrs.
-Chesley and Miss de Latour looked significantly at one
-another as though to say,</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Ah-ha! What do you think of that? Something
-queer about this affair, if you ask me!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>An expression of their thoughts was denied them,
-however, for the moment they left the shelter of their
-corner they were like the Romans advancing across the
-Danube—a target for the surrounding barbarian
-hordes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Almost immediately they were attacked by the
-Angus-McCallums, two sisters with generous, florid
-cheeks and rotund figures, who, to quote Azalea Deane,
-seemed to lie fatly on the surface of every function,
-rather like cream on a pan of milk.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Their grandfather was a Bytown pioneer whose
-first task, after complying with the formalities imposed
-upon all immigrants by the various government
-officials, had been to find a house—a house, that is to
-say, requiring the services of a stone mason.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now Masonry, whether Free or Stone, has always
-offered signal advantages to those who labour in its
-interests, and the present case was no exception to the
-rule. Not only did prosperity attend the twilight years
-of old Thaddeus McCallum, but especial privileges
-descended to his progeny, the most conspicuous being
-the Freedom of Government House grounds which the
-Misses Angus-McCallum enjoyed. That is to say, the
-young ladies were at liberty to pass unchallenged within
-the sacrosanct limits of this estate, whenever whim
-or convenience dictated .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. an inconceivably rich
-reward for the excellence of the fine old man’s chisel-drafting
-and hammer-dressing! They seemed, however,
-to lose sight of the patriotic service he had
-rendered to the nation, in an unremitting search for
-families on whom, without demeaning themselves,
-they could call.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Who is .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.,” dominated their every conscious
-thought.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Ah, Effie,” cried the elder sister, addressing Lady
-Elton, “I thought you would be skating.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“For Heaven’s sake, hush!” warned Lady Elton,
-severely. “Weren’t you here last week to see me
-crash to the ice with H.R.H.? I dared not risk another
-such fall!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But with the uncle of a King,” murmured Miss
-Mabel Angus-McCallum, “such an honour, my dear!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Helena Chesley laughed.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“That’s not bad for you, Mabel. It’s a pity Mrs.
-Long didn’t overhear it,” she said.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Between her and the Angus-McCallums there
-existed an almost perceptible antagonism which was
-regarded variously as a source of amusement and
-uneasiness by their friends. Such traditional antipathy
-was not at all unusual, and marked the relation between
-many of the “old” families in the Capital.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Before her marriage to the scholarly young man,
-whose nimble wit and charm of manner had won him
-a permanent place in the Vice-Regal entourage, Helena
-Chesley had been a Halstead, and the Halsteads had
-owned the estate upon which such discomfiting evidences
-of Thaddeus McCallum’s craftsmanship rose
-up to confound his descendants. Whether they
-imagined it or not, is difficult to state, but the Angus-McCallums
-always felt the condescension of the
-landed proprietor to the day labourer in Helena
-Chesley’s cynical smile, while the latter resented the
-patronising air which the others assumed as a cloak
-for the inherited resentfulness of Industry towards
-Capital.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Miss Mabel Angus-McCallum’s retort was cut short
-by the arrival of Mrs. Hudson, who, metaphorically
-speaking, embraced the ladies as Crusoe might have
-taken Friday to his bosom.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“My dears,” she breathed, “I’m so glad to find
-you! Did anyone ever see such a mob, and <span class='it'>such</span>
-people? Who do you suppose brought me my tea?”
-and without waiting for an answer to the question, she
-continued, “That awful Lennox man! You remember,
-he used to be the stenographer in Sir Mortimer Fanshawe’s
-office!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Did you drink it?” asked Mrs. Chesley.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mrs. Hudson’s social position was triumphant and
-secure. She could sit on the top rung of the steep and
-slippery ladder (if one finds an apt metaphor in so
-comfortless a recreation) and look down upon a mass
-of struggling, straining, pushing microcosms who
-clutched, and climbed, and slid and fell in an effort to
-reach the pinnacle she had attained; for just what
-reason or by what right, no one was prepared to explain.
-True, she was a frank snob, which was partially
-accountable. Also, she was wealthy, and “entertained”
-in a pleasantly formal manner that lent an air of
-importance to the least important sort of functions.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Had breakfast been served in Mrs. Hudson’s small
-but well-regulated <span class='it'>ménage</span>, indubitably it would have
-been announced with an impressive opening of double
-doors, and served by respectful, liveried attendants.
-Moreover, there would have been a correctly morning-coated
-gentleman for each lady of the party, for the
-express and especial purpose of offering her his arm
-and escorting her to the card-marked table!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Nor was that all. There were those who called
-Mrs. Hudson a “bug specialist,” and attributed her
-social success to this interesting form of enthusiasm.
-Her entomological research was conducted with considerable
-originality and on lines that differed radically
-from the method of the late Dr. Gordon Hewitt,
-similarly called by a large group of affectionate and
-admiring associates. In Mrs. Hudson’s case, “bug
-specialising” signified an ardent (and inconstant)
-pursuit of a fad, or a person, or a combination of both.
-Rarely did a stranger with any claim whatever to
-renown, escape from Ottawa without enjoying her
-hospitality, and it must not be forgotten that she
-frequently dragged absolute obscurities out of their
-gloom and played most happily with them for a time.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Azalea Deane said that Mrs. Hudson was the most
-recent development of The Big Game Hunter—game
-and bug being interchangeable, if not synonymous in
-her mind. The truth of the matter was, she made a
-serious study of the state of being termed Society.
-She attacked the problems and the methods of succeeding
-in it, with the same energy and concentrated purpose
-that a man gives to a great commercial enterprise.
-It was her business and she made it pay. Mob
-psychology and regimentation of thought were the
-fountains from which she derived her source of supply,
-and judicious investment added to her power. People
-often wondered how Mrs. Hudson had achieved social
-eminence when women with superior claims had failed.
-The answer lies just here—her life was spent in a conscious
-striving for it. Never a move, an invitation, an
-acceptance, a salutation on the street, was made without
-forethought. She made Society her tool. Most
-people are tools, themselves. Usually, Mrs. Hudson
-was described as a “character”, which meant that she
-was different from ordinary people. Her peculiarities—and
-she wore them consciously, like a crown—were
-called odd; her vulgarities, original. She was clever
-enough to keep the fact that she <span class='it'>was</span> clever from being
-realised, and many people were sorry for her! She
-had married a man several years her junior, and loved
-to confess that he was an answer to prayer!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I saw him first at a concert,” she was wont to
-remark, “and the moment my eyes fell upon his dear,
-unsuspecting head, I said to myself, ‘Thank God!
-I have found the man I intend to marry, and need
-look no further!’ I went home, and prayed for him,
-and I got him!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>What effect this disclosure may have had upon the
-spiritual trend of the community, what intensity of
-supplication or increase of attendance at the churches,
-there is, unfortunately, no means of estimating. It
-can scarcely have failed, however, to have exerted
-some marked influence upon the spinsters of the
-Capital, and many a married woman, I am told, bent
-a devout knee because of it, arguing hopefully, that if
-the Lord could give, He could also take away!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mrs. Hudson loved her husband with a sort of
-cantankerous affection that was like the rubbing of a
-brass bowl to make it shine. She was always prodding
-him, or polishing him, or smacking at him with her
-hands or her tongue. Marriage had robbed her of the
-joy of believing him a genius, but she was fond of him
-in her peculiar, rasping way.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Is anyone else here?” she enquired, wiping out the
-hundreds of people about her with a gesture.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Mrs. Long,” she was told, “and a strange man.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Ah-h-h!” cried Mrs. Hudson. “Speaking of Mrs.
-Long, have you heard .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. can’t we sit down, my dears?
-They say,” she continued, after the group had recaptured
-their corner, “that her bridge winnings are simply
-fabulous; and that if she can’t get money, she’ll take
-the very clothes off your back. Of course, you’ve heard
-what happened at the Country Club, the other afternoon?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The group drew in closer, and Mrs. Hudson set
-forth on the most dangerous of all adventures, the
-telling of a half-truth.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“She invited Mrs. Knowles, Madam Valleau and
-little Eva Leeds to lunch, at which, my dears, <span class='it'>they say</span>,
-far too much Burgundy was served, (especially for
-Eva, who is not used to it) and afterwards, of course,
-they settled themselves at the bridge table. I’m not
-saying that Eva is free from blame. Indeed, I have
-spoken to her most frankly on the subject, and she
-knows that I think her behaviour most culpable.
-Gambling amongst women who can afford it is bad
-enough, but that those who can’t, should be given an
-opportunity to imperil their husband’s meagre Civil
-Servant’s salary, is a crime that should be punishable
-by law.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It might be done, too,” murmured Lady Elton,
-who was an agitative member of the National Council.
-“If we can prohibit the sale of liquor to a drunken man,
-I don’t see why we can’t restrict gambling to persons
-of a certain income.” The sum which occurred to her
-was, of course, amply covered in her own case and that
-of her companions. “But, go on—what happened
-then?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, Eva lost, and lost, and <span class='it'>lost</span>! But do you
-think that Hattie Long would stop playing? Not a
-bit of it! At last—this really is too awful, my dears,
-you’ll never believe me—”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The ladies had already foreseen this possibility, but
-like everyone else they liked the colourful romance of
-Mrs. Hudson’s stories, so they urged her to continue.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Very well,” she agreed, “but mind, not a breath
-of this must go any further! To make a long story
-short, when they stopped, Eva was so badly in the
-hole that she couldn’t cover her loss by an I.O.U. for
-Tom Leeds’ <span class='it'>monthly cheque</span>!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Horrible!” whispered the group, genuinely shocked.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What did she do?” asked Lady Elton.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It seems that a few days before, she had bought
-from Leila Brant an Empire table. How she buys
-these things, I’ve no idea. The point is, that Hattie
-Long was crazy about that same table, too, and fully
-expected to have it. When she found Eva had got
-ahead of her she was simply wild, and offered almost
-double the price—certainly more than the thing was
-worth.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And Eva refused it?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’m obliged to say she did. No one can admire
-her for doing so. I repeat, I don’t think she has
-behaved properly, but the point is that she had the
-table Hattie Long wanted, and so, when she had been
-driven into this quagmire of debt from which she could
-not possibly extricate herself, Hattie, with devilish
-finesse, suggested that she should give up the table
-and call the matter settled.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“She didn’t do it?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“She had to! Her I.O.U.’s for .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” Mrs. Hudson
-had the grace to pause “.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. such a sum were utterly
-valueless! So, bright and early the following morning
-there was a transfer at her door and now the table
-decorates Harriet’s reception room.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At that instant the crowd parted, and before either
-faction could avoid an encounter, Mrs. Long and her
-newspaper man stood beside them. Elaborately
-amiable greetings were exchanged. Mr. Reginald
-Harper was introduced. Inured as they were to association
-with the owners of great names, there was not
-a member of the group who escaped a sudden palpitation
-upon meeting this world-famed monarch of newspaperdom.
-It was not easy to keep gratification out
-of their manner when acknowledging the introduction,
-but by tacit agreement they were obligated to flick
-Mrs. Long over his innocent head.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Are you living in Ottawa, Mr. Carter?” asked
-Lady Elton, deliberately mis-calling his name, but with
-a charming show of interest.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mr. Harper had only arrived the day previous, for
-a brief stay.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The place is full of strangers,” volunteered Miss
-de Latour. “It scarcely seems like home, any more.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s the fault of the Government,” declared Mrs.
-Hudson. “New people are always getting in. I don’t
-understand how they work it, but there you are.
-Are you connected with the Government?” she asked
-the stranger, coyly.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mrs. Long flashed a sharp look at the questioner
-and answered for her guest. “Only to the extent of
-financing our poor little country,” she replied. “Mr.
-Harper,”—she turned to him, archly—“I suppose I
-may tell it? .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Mr. Harper has just concluded a
-loan for a few paltry millions which a New York
-syndicate is advancing, so that the salaries of the
-Civil Service,”—her glance rested for a fraction of a
-second on the trio—“will be paid as usual.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The elder Miss Angus-McCallum hurriedly changed
-the subject. “How stunning you look, Hattie,” she
-said. “But then, you’ve a style of your own and can
-wear those inexpensive things. <span class='it'>I</span> saw that costume in
-Hammerstein’s window, and thought it charming.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Hammerstein was an obscure costumer of Semitic
-origin, who had recently benefited by one of his frequent
-fire-sales, and the implication that Mrs. Long’s
-exclusive tailor-made had been purchased there was so
-obvious as to border on crudity. Mrs. Hudson could
-have done much better!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mrs. Long ignored the thrust. “There seem to be
-so few men at these parties, nowadays,” she observed,
-at no one in particular. “But when one looks at the
-women, one can hardly blame them.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If we had a little gambling,” said Miss de Latour,
-“no doubt they would find it more attractive.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But there would be complications.” Mrs. Hudson
-objected.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“In what way?” prompted Miss Mabel Angus-McCallum.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, my dear, they couldn’t play for the Vice-Regal
-furniture, could they? They’d get into immediate
-trouble with such stakes, for the furniture belongs
-to the taxpayers of Canada and is not negotiable.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the sharp silence, Mrs. Long flushed slightly,
-realising that the incident to which this remark
-referred had been grossly distorted under Mrs. Hudson’s
-capable and imaginative manipulation. She was
-about to make a stinging retort when she thought
-better of it, promising herself a day of reckoning in
-the future. Just how, did not at the moment occur
-to her, but time would show her the way.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“There’s Captain Teddy beckoning us, Mr. Harper,”
-she said. “We must go,” and over her shoulder she
-explained, “Mr. Harper has never enjoyed the delicious
-terrors of toboganning. The Princess is going to take
-him down. Goodbye!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“That’s that,” snapped Miss de Latour. “Now,
-look out for yourself, Mrs. Hudson!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The well-known purple velvet and ermine of Lady
-Denby caught Mrs. Chesley’s attention. “She’s got
-Azalea with her this afternoon, and who in Heaven’s
-name is <span class='it'>that</span>?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Lady Denby did not leave them long in doubt.
-“You must all know Mrs. Dilling,” she said. “Mrs.
-Raymond Dilling, from Pinto Plains. Her husband
-is a Member, you know, and one of the most promising
-young speakers in the Party.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The ladies bowed frostily, not because they bore
-any particular grudge against Marjorie, but because
-they could not afford to miss this golden opportunity
-for expressing their dislike of Lady Denby, who, though
-glorified by a title, was not “of their set”. They
-looked upon her as an “uplifter”, living well within
-her husband’s income, and exuding an atmosphere,
-not only of economy, but frugality; one who allied
-herself with organizations for the benefit of the human
-race, notably of women and children, and preached
-the depressing doctrine, that “Life is real, Life is
-earnest, and the grave is not its goal!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Marjorie was embarrassed. She had been embarrassed
-all the afternoon, and something inside of her
-old fur coat ached intolerably. She noticed that an
-air of hostility prevailed over the entire throng. She
-did not realise, however, its fundamental cause; that
-the acknowledgments of friendships was a delicate
-matter within the grounds of Government House, for,
-as a man is known by the company he keeps, so the
-guests were desirous of being ranked in a higher
-classification than that in which they ordinarily moved.
-Which is to say, that although Mrs. Polduggan and
-Mrs. Crogganthorpe were friendly neighbours, and
-quite ready to acknowledge one another on their own
-verandahs, the moment they entered the skating
-pavilion their vision became blurred, and they saw for
-the most part, only the Ministers’ wives, persons who
-were especially prominent, or, better than all, chatted
-with the wife of a Foreign Consul who was too polite,
-or too ignorant of Western conditions, to take a decided
-stand with regard to class distinctions.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Dilling, did she say?” asked Mrs. Chesley, as
-Lady Denby and her protegées moved away. “What
-an impossible person!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Who is she?” asked Miss Angus-McCallum.
-“Should we call?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Pamela de Latour shrugged her shoulders. “I
-haven’t anything to do on Wednesday afternoon.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Lunch with me,” said Lady Elton. “We’ll all go
-together.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“One never knows .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The crowd had thinned perceptibly by the time
-Lady Denby released Marjorie from the strain of
-constant introductions, and went away to have a
-moment’s chat with Miss Denison-Page, the statuesque
-Lady-in-Waiting.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Marjorie indicated a tall, florid gentleman with a
-shock of silver hair, who loitered at the doorway in a
-manner that suggested he was waiting for someone to
-go home.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Who is that?” she whispered to Azalea.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Where? Oh, that’s Rufus Sullivan, the Member
-for Morroway,” answered the girl. “I meant to have
-pointed him out to you earlier in the afternoon, only I
-had no chance. He’s Lady Denby’s pet aversion.
-One dares not mention his name in her presence.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But why?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Lots of reasons. He’s quite a character, you know.
-Heavens, how he stares!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Marjorie turned away with flaming cheeks. She
-was loath to admit that he had not only been staring,
-but that he had been at her elbow during the entire
-afternoon. This distressed her, for, according to the
-ethics of Pinto Plains, a man impressed his attentions
-only upon the woman who encouraged him, and
-Marjorie felt that something in her manner must have
-been very misleading. She resented his pursuit less
-than she felt ashamed of herself for inspiring it, and
-was inexpressibly relieved when he finally left the room.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The terrible disorder of the pavilion sickened her
-housekeeper’s soul, and she turned to Azalea, impetuously.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Just look at this place! Isn’t it disgusting to
-expect any human being to clean it up?” Then, a
-little afraid of her own daring, “Wouldn’t you just
-love to open the back door and let a drove of pigs
-come in?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Yes,” answered Azalea, shortly, “after you’d
-opened the front door and let them out!”</p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER 6.</h2>
-
-<p class='noindent'><span class='dropcap'>M</span>arjorie was far from happy. The experience
-at Government House haunted her.
-Incidents that she had scarcely noted at the
-time, recurred in the pitiless glare of a good memory
-to harry her and rob her of her peace of mind. It had
-all been so different from what she expected!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Sunday dragged wearily on. The children seemed
-fretful and unusually difficult. The roast was tough
-and the furnace went out, so that Raymond was
-obliged to devote most of his precious afternoon to
-re-lighting it. By the time, therefore, that the children
-had sung their evening hymn, had each chosen a Bible
-story to be read aloud, and had been put to bed,
-Marjorie felt that she could bear no more, and she
-invaded the disorderly “drawing-room,” too troubled
-to be repulsed by the unwelcoming expression in her
-husband’s eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, what is it, my dear?” Dilling closed the
-volume upon his long, thin finger, and tapped it with
-a slender pencil. “Is anything especially the matter?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I don’t know,” sighed Marjorie. “That’s just
-what I want to ask you, dear. Something <span class='it'>must</span> be
-wrong, somewhere, only I can’t find it! I seem to be
-so stupid here, Raymond, and people don’t like me.
-I know I oughtn’t to bother you, dear,” she said,
-noticing how his eyes strayed back to the book that at
-the moment she almost hated, with its chrome leather
-binding, its overwhelming contents, and the voluptuous
-overpowering odour that reflected the literary richness
-of its substance, “and I won’t stay long, but <span class='it'>can’t</span> you
-help me, and tell me what to do, so that I’ll be more
-like the Ottawa people?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Dilling stared down into the mist-blurred eyes,
-only half seeing them. His thoughts were snared by
-his own problems and he could not free them immediately.
-His casual words of encouragement carried
-no comfort to his wife, who stumbled on,</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You’re so clever, dearie! If you aren’t sure of a
-thing, you always know where to learn all about it.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-and that’s all I’m asking you, Raymond—to tell me
-some book that will explain these queer things that I
-don’t seem to understand.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What kind of things?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The question was not exactly brusque, but to anyone
-less troubled it would have suggested a definite
-desire for a brief interview. Marjorie raised her hands
-and let them fall to her sides helplessly.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Hundreds—hundreds!” she began. “All sorts .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Give me a concrete illustration. Tell me one.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, I never do anything <span class='it'>right</span>! Yesterday—you
-<span class='it'>do</span> shake hands with people when you meet them,
-don’t you?—well, yesterday, Lady Denby took me to
-the Skating Party at Government House. I thought
-it was going to be so nice, Raymond. We always
-thought so at home, you know, but it wasn’t just like
-what we imagined—in fact, it was awfully different.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Yes, yes. But the point of the story, Marjorie?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’m trying to tell you, dearie. You see, if you
-haven’t been there, it’s so difficult to understand the
-queer customs of the place. I’d been introduced to
-Captain Dodson—he called out the names, you know,
-standing just beside Their Royal Highnesses—and
-when we got into the room where they were receiving,
-Lady Denby went first, and I came second, and Miss
-Deane last, and you understand, Raymond, I couldn’t
-see whether Lady Denby spoke to him or not, and so
-when I came along and he saw me and sort of smiled,
-I said, ‘How do you do, Captain Dodson?’ and held
-out my hand. You <span class='it'>do</span> shake hands with people, don’t
-you, Raymond?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Never mind just now. Go on.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, he didn’t shake hands with me! Worse than
-that, he put his hands behind his back and said, ‘Mrs.
-Raymond Dilling,’ in an awful voice, and Miss Deane
-simply <span class='it'>pushed</span> me past him! I didn’t know what to do
-when I got there in front of the Duke and the Duchess.
-I didn’t know whether to shake hands or not, and I’m—I’m
-afraid, darling, that I behaved like a terrible
-simpleton. It was easy enough to see that Lady
-Denby was frightfully annoyed. She said that to shake
-hands with Captain Dodson was <span class='it'>not</span> the thing, and to
-shake hands with Their Royal Highnesses, <span class='it'>was</span> the
-thing, and altogether, I’m so muddled, I don’t know
-what to do! Raymond, what on earth <span class='it'>is</span> THE THING?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Dilling drew his finger definitely from his book, laid
-the volume on the table, and gave his attention to the
-question.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, Marjorie,” he said, “although I’ve never
-formed a considered opinion on this subject, I’ll lay
-the facts before you, and we’ll reason it out together.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Reasoning a subject out together between Marjorie
-and her husband was a merest euphemism for a philosophical
-lecturette with Dilling on the platform and
-his wife supplying the atmosphere. With his characteristic
-gesture when entering upon a discussion of
-some remote topic that interested him—an upward
-sweep of the right arm with the sensitive fingers coming
-to rest on his rapidly-thinning chevelure—he proceeded
-to instruct her.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>The Thing</span>, my dear girl, as I see it, is one of the
-forms of what the Polynesians call ‘Tabu’. In the
-large, ‘tabu’ may be said to be negative magic—that
-is, abstention from certain acts in order that unpleasant
-or malefic results may not ensue. Do you follow, so
-far?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Yes, dear .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I think so .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. a kind of rule, you
-mean, don’t you? One can see that, but what puzzles
-me, is that it works both ways. How does one learn
-<span class='it'>when</span> it is right, and when it is wrong? Isn’t there
-some starting point?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Most certainly! ‘Tabu’ originated in religion,
-and was rooted in fear. Moreover, it was common to
-all peoples in their tribal beginnings. It is associated
-with the Totem of the North American Indian and the
-Fetish of the African races; it oppressed the alert
-Greek mind for an astonishing period, and prevailed
-amongst the Romans. Some day, you must read about
-the Flamen Dialis—a member of the priestly caste,
-who stood next the King in sacerdotal rank.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I was thinking especially of shaking hands,”
-murmured Marjorie.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But Dilling ignored her. He slipped easily into his
-Parliamentary manner, as though addressing Mr.
-Speaker, and his political associates. Furthermore, he
-was enjoying this opportunity to open doors that led
-into little-used rooms in the treasure-house of his mind.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“So rigid were the laws that governed the Flamen’s
-conduct—er—so drastic was the discipline of The
-Thing—that even a knot in the thread of his clothing
-was practically a crime against the State! Can you
-imagine it? He couldn’t spend a night outside the
-City. He was forbidden to ride—even touch—a horse.
-He .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. well, I could continue at length, but this is
-sufficient to show you that The Thing, as you term it,
-is no new, prohibitive measure, designed for your
-particular embarrassment.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, I didn’t think that .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I forgot to mention that it was not The Thing for
-the Flamen to suffer marriage a second time—an
-historical statement, my dear, which has no personal
-application, I assure you! You see, the wife of the
-Flamen became sacrosanct, and passed, also, under the
-iron rule of the ‘Tabu’.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Marjorie nodded hopefully, and urged her husband
-to explain how women were affected.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If you are thinking of the Flaminica,” returned
-Dilling, “she was affected very severely. I seem to
-remember that she was forbidden to comb her hair at
-certain intervals; also, she became unable to discharge
-her religious duties unless purified by a sacrifice, after
-hearing thunder. Upon my word,” he broke off
-suddenly, “I shouldn’t wonder if the wide-spread fear
-of electric storms may have taken its root from this
-very law! You have provoked a most interesting train
-of thought, my dear!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’m ever so glad,” was Marjorie’s quick response.
-“But do you remember anything about her shaking
-hands?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Not at the moment. However, I venture this
-opinion .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. the Flaminica was the foundress of those
-social ‘Tabus’ which have held the minds of women in
-bondage for so many ages; that she was the dictatrix
-of moral and social etiquette, to-day. You can readily
-understand how ladies, supporting this distinguished
-but irksome office, would seek to mitigate its rigours
-by using their rank to the discomfiture of less favoured
-members of their sex.” He began to chuckle. “In
-short, I believe that Mrs. Grundy and Queen Victoria
-were her lineal descendants.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Queen Victoria?” echoed Marjorie.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I mean, my dear, that the Flaminica was the
-mother of Snobocracy, the divine High Priestess of the
-Order, whose code is expressed in the cryptic formula,
-‘It is—or is not—The Thing!’.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The alarum of the kitchen clock startled them both.
-Marjorie frowned. Althea must have been naughty
-again. She had been distinctly forbidden to touch it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’m afraid I’ll have to leave it at that, my dear,”
-said Raymond, as he opened his book. Its peculiar
-odour enveloped her like a puff of smoke. “This
-report is somewhat more tricky than I had anticipated.
-But you have the main facts of the case—haven’t you?
-To-morrow, I’ll bring you a book from the Library.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As Marjorie closed the door, a sharp whirr sounded
-from the telephone.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Hello,” she said, wondering whether Raymond
-would mind being called.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Is Mrs. Dilling at home?” asked a mellow voice at
-the other end of the wire. It was a voice that vibrated,
-and struck some unfamiliar chord within her consciousness;
-a voice that unreasonably disturbed her.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I am Mrs. Dilling,” answered Marjorie, and
-waited.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“My name is Sullivan,” the voice continued.
-“Rufus Sullivan, the Member for Morroway.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh!” cried Marjorie, startled. Then, “Oh, yes?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I am wondering if you will allow me the pleasure
-of calling on you, Mrs. Dilling. I have been a fervent
-admirer of your husband ever since I heard his speech
-in the House, last week, and I’m very eager to meet
-you. It is scarcely necessary for me to tell you that
-we have not had Dilling’s equal in Parliament for
-many years.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You’re awfully kind,” murmured Dilling’s wife,
-to the accompaniment of a pounding heart. She
-didn’t know why, but she was trembling.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, I’m not sure about being kind,” laughed the
-Hon. Member easily, “but I confess that I am desperately
-jealous. There’s something about a man of
-Dilling’s calibre that accuses us old chaps of unappreciated
-opportunities and wasted youth. One begins to
-taste the ashes of discouragement.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Nobody should be discouraged,” returned Marjorie,
-feeling the words inadequate, but not knowing
-what else to say.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No, no! You’re right, of course! As Walpole
-tells us, ‘It’s not life that matters; it’s the courage you
-put into it.’ Just the same, courage is acquired rather
-less by an effort of will, than by inspiration, don’t you
-think so?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Ye-es,” returned Marjorie, not very sure after all.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I was wondering, Mrs. Dilling,” the Hon. Member
-went on in a lighter tone, “if I might be admitted to
-the list of your acquaintances? If you would permit
-me to call?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I should be very pleased.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Thank you .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. thank you .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I can’t say more!
-Are you busy this evening, or have you other guests?
-It goes without saying that I should not care to
-intrude.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Marjorie explained that she was quite free and that
-a call would not be the slightest intrusion, but that
-“Mr. Dilling” seemed to be very much engrossed in a
-book, and she wasn’t quite certain—</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Don’t think of it!” cried Sullivan. “I understand
-perfectly, and wouldn’t allow you to disturb him for
-the world. Just let me slip in quietly, and when he
-has finished, perhaps he will join us. I do want to
-know your husband better, Mrs. Dilling, but it’s quite
-impossible to form any intimate contacts up there on
-the Hill, and in the midst of the turmoil of our every-day
-existence. I won’t say any more, however, through
-the medium of this unsatisfactory instrument. I will
-be with you in a moment.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He was. Before Marjorie had decided whether or
-not it was The Thing to entertain a Member of Parliament
-in the dining-room (where the table was set for
-breakfast) she was summoned to the door by a discreet
-tinkle of the bell.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Although his enormous bulk nearly filled the tiny
-passage, Sullivan’s handclasp was very gentle and his
-voice was low.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No words, Mrs. Dilling, can convey to you my
-gratitude for this privilege! I am a lonely man, a shy
-man for all my huge body, and I do not readily make
-friends!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The house seemed to quiver as he followed her to
-the dining-room, and Marjorie was distressed at her
-failure to regain her composure and to still the strange
-quaking within herself. She had never been affected
-like this, before.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What a cosy little nest!” exclaimed her guest.
-“And are there <span class='it'>three</span> birdlings?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>His fine brown eyes turned from the children’s
-places—where neat oilcloth bibs and porridge bowls
-stood ready for the morning—back to her face.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Yes, we have three children—two girls and a boy.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Wonderful little woman,” he breathed, reverently,
-“and she’s only a slip of a girl, herself.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’m twenty-seven,” declared Marjorie.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“A golden age,” he sighed. “But tell me about
-the children—do! One of the bitterest disappointments
-of my life is that I haven’t half a dozen .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-I’m a lonely old bachelor, Mrs. Dilling. Few people
-realise just <span class='it'>how</span> lonely.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It flashed through Marjorie’s mind that he had
-lost his sweetheart years ago. Perhaps she had died.
-Perhaps she had married someone else. In either case,
-Mr. Sullivan had remained true to her memory. She
-liked him for his constancy. Her embarrassment
-faded a little.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s dreadful to be lonely,” she said, feeling that
-it would not be polite to ask why he had not married.
-“I’ve been a little lonely, myself, since we came to
-Ottawa.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Poor child!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mr. Sullivan pressed Marjorie’s hand with bland
-sympathy. The gesture reminded her of Uncle
-Herbert, whose comfort, in the face of any trial,
-expressed itself by a clicking of the tongue and that
-same spasmodic crushing of the hand. Indeed, now
-that she grew more at ease with him, Marjorie noticed
-that Mr. Sullivan was quite an old man and she
-attributed that mysterious something in his manner to
-the eagerness of a lonely man to make friends. She
-smiled, brightly.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, you mustn’t pity me,” she cried. “I like
-Ottawa. All my life I have dreamed of coming here,
-and now the dream has come true. But, it is only
-natural that I miss some of my dearest friends. I
-wouldn’t be a really nice person if I didn’t, now,
-would I?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mr. Sullivan knitted his brows and said that, try as
-he would, he could not imagine her being anything but
-a fine friend. There was just the slightest suggestion
-of a pause before he added—</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You remind me of the noblest woman I ever
-knew.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Did—did she—die?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The great, white head sank slowly. Again, Mr.
-Sullivan sought her hand. “She was just twenty .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-I was a youngster, too. Life has never been the
-same .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. But there! I mustn’t burden you with my
-sorrows. You were going to tell me about the children.
-I don’t suppose you would let me peep at them—just
-a little tiny peep, if I promise not to wake them?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Would you really like to see them?” asked Marjorie,
-now thoroughly at ease with her guest.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I can’t tell you how much.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Then, of course, you may!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>With an unconsciously coquettish gesture, she laid
-her finger on her lips and led the way up the creaking
-stairs. Her thoughts were of the children. Had she
-been careful to wash all the jam from Baby’s rosebud
-mouth? Althea, she remembered, had pulled the
-button off her Teddies and she had found it necessary
-to resort to the ubiquitous safety pin. And Sylvester—well,
-there was no prophesying what might have
-happened to Sylvester since she heard his “Now-I-lay-me,”
-and kissed him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The thoughts of Mr. Sullivan, on the other hand,
-were concerned with almost everything but the
-children. He was wondering why that door at the
-foot of the stairs did not open and a voice ask what
-the devil he was doing, prowling through the house.
-He was trying to decide whether Marjorie had advised
-her husband of his coming and he was being deliberately
-ignored, or whether Dilling habitually shrouded himself
-with aloofness, and indifference to the affairs of the
-home and the personnel of his wife’s callers.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At the landing, Marjorie turned to whisper.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Please don’t look at the room. It’s so hard to be
-tidy with babies, you know.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mr. Sullivan hung yearningly over the cots where
-Althea and Sylvester were sleeping. He did it very
-well, and Marjorie was delighted.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Beautiful,” he murmured, and he indicated that
-he found a strong resemblance to her.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Beside the baby’s little crib he was overcome with
-emotion, and Marjorie’s heart went out to him as he
-groped hastily for his handkerchief and passed it across
-his eyes. “The cherub,” he whispered, “the exquisite
-little flower. She has her father’s cast of features,
-but—” transferring his expression of adoration to the
-face nearer his “—but I’ll wager she has her mother’s
-eyes!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>When they creaked their way downstairs again
-they were on the friendliest terms, and Marjorie could
-scarcely reconcile this kind, elderly gentleman and his
-interested, avuncular air, with the debonair gallant
-who had caught and held her attention so unpleasantly
-at Government House.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It only shows,” she reproved herself, “how you
-can misjudge a person. And he’s old enough to be my
-father .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” which state was always synonymous to
-her with extreme rectitude and respectability.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He would not hear of her disturbing Raymond, nor
-would he allow her to make cocoa for him, fond of it
-as he avowed himself to be. But he made her promise
-that she would let him come soon again, when the
-children were awake, and that when he was especially
-lonely, he might telephone her; and moreover, that
-once in a while she would have tea with him in order
-that he might prove what an excellent and handy man
-he would have been .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. under different circumstances!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“This has been for me a wondrous night,” he said,
-holding her hand and looking affectionately down at
-her, “and one that I shall never forget. There is little
-I can do to prove my gratitude for a glimpse of real
-home life, and the joy that has eluded me, but perhaps
-there may come a time when you feel that I can serve
-you. Will you put me to the test, then, Mrs. Dilling?”
-he queried, softly.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Touched, Marjorie nodded. “I am very pleased to
-have had you come in like this—”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“ ‘<span class='it'>Sans ceremonie</span>,’ as our French friends say,”
-interrupted Sullivan, looking furtively over her head
-at the closed door behind which he knew that Dilling
-sat. “The strength of the weak,” he murmured, “the
-courage to endure the emptiness of solitary days and
-weary evenings. I’ve been through it. I understand.
-God bless you, little woman! But there can be no
-more loneliness for us so long as we are .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. friends!”
-He pressed her hand and was gone.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As she went upstairs, Marjorie wondered whether
-or not she had imagined a shade of difference in him as
-he left her.</p>
-
-<div><h1 id='Page_93'>PART II<br/> <span class='sub-head'>They Saw</span></h1></div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER 7.</h2>
-
-<p class='noindent'><span class='dropcap'>A</span>zalea Deane was a much befamilied young
-woman, who was leaving “mile 30” behind so
-rapidly that it was already quite blurred in the
-distance. Ahead, there stretched a bleak and desolate
-roadway, leading right into the heart of that repository
-for the husks of men—Beechwood—and at the best of
-times, she found her journey wearisome and uninspiriting.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She did not cavil at her fate. No one ever heard
-Azalea complain—of poverty, obscurity, dullness or
-villenage. She accepted her destiny with a fine
-stoicism, which reflected itself in well-feigned indifference
-and enabled her to proceed along the same
-monotonous route at the same monotonous speed, with
-the same monotonous companions month after month,
-and year after year, without developing gangrene of
-the soul or breaking into open revolt.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, God,” she prayed each morning, before descending
-to the agitated atmosphere of the breakfast
-table, “keep me from being difficult to live with!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And Heaven heard her prayer.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>No one really knew Azalea—least of all, her family.
-Perhaps, no one ever really knows anyone else, a phase
-of ignorance which, personally, I am not inclined to
-deplore. Souls should be clad no less than bodies.
-They should be gowned with decency, and in so far as
-possible, loveliness; and if, now and again, the garment
-slips or wears thin, then should the beholder turn his
-eyes away, nor seek to pry into anything that may be
-so terrible or so sublime.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Outwardly, as Lady Denby had said, Azalea was a
-plain little person. She should have been dainty of
-form, but through some irreparable miscalculation, the
-Creator had dowered her with the large features, hands
-and feet designed for some much more ample person.
-Therefore, she gave no pleasure to the sensitive, artistic
-eye, and this was an acute grievance to her who possessed
-a deep and pagan love for Beauty. She was a
-toneless girl, with thin, straight, dun-coloured hair
-which she could not afford to keep marcelled. Her
-eyes were unarresting, as a rule; too sharp to be
-appealing and not lustrous enough to sparkle. Her
-skin had a sandy cast and usually shone. Even when
-rouge and the ubiquitous lip-stick assumed the respectability
-of universal usage, Azalea’s appearance was
-scarcely improved, for the former would not blend, and
-lay like a definite glaze upon her cheeks, while the latter
-only accentuated the flatness of her too-ample mouth, and
-made one wish that she had not tampered with it at all.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Her wardrobe was an appalling miscellany of discarded
-grandeur. Ladies whose clothes were too passé
-for their own adornment, bestowed them upon Azalea
-with the remark,</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You can see, my dear, that these are scarcely worn,
-and anyway, they are not the sort of things one could
-give the servants!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She had learned to smother the hot rebellion that
-flared up in her heart, to thank them prettily, and to
-convey huge, unwieldy bundles through the streets and
-hold her tongue when her family commented upon the
-generosity of Lady This or Mrs. That. But she often
-wondered that her father never divined that Lady
-Elton’s cloth-of-gold dinner gown remodelled by her
-impatient and unskilled fingers, caused abrasions upon
-her spirit deeper than sackcloth could have produced,
-and blithely would she have consigned every stitch
-that she owned to the flames, for the joy of buying the
-most ordinary, commonplace, inexpensive frock at a
-bargain sale.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The future of the Deanes stretched behind them.
-The best of the family lay underground. Mr. Grenville
-Harrison Deane was the sole male survivor of an
-illustrious line that could be traced (so he declared)
-with an occasional hiatus, back to Alfred the Great!
-It was never clear to the upstarts whose genealogical
-tree took root in England about the time of the Conquest,
-or thereafter, how he arrived at his conclusion,
-but if antiquity of ideas was anything of a proof, then
-they were forced to admit that there was justification
-in his contention, for his views of life antedated those
-of Britain’s noble King.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Aloofness from fatiguing toil had rewarded him
-with an erectness that was impressive, and a complexion
-that a flapper might have envied. A Dundreary of
-silver gossamer caressed his cheeks, and his clear,
-lustrous eyes looked out from an unfurrowed setting.
-His chief characteristics were piety and an Eumenidean
-temper. The former, which should have been broad,
-was constricted to the dimensions of a number ten
-needle, and the latter, which should have been narrow,
-expanded to encompass impartially every one who held
-views divergent from his own. Particularly, was it
-directed against the blistering injustice of the Civil
-Service.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Civil Service had served him faithfully for
-thirty-five years, despite his eternal villification of it.
-Recently, his incompetence had been recompensed by
-superannuation and the payment of seven-tenths of
-his salary—shall it be said, seven times as much as he
-was worth? But Mr. Deane had always fancied himself
-in the Premier’s place, or at least in a Ministerial
-capacity. Failing that, a Trade Commissionership, or
-even a Deputy’s post would have appeased him.
-Therefore, to be superannuated after thirty-five years’
-inconspicuous hampering of the postal service, appeared
-to him as a blot upon the integrity of the Nation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He was forever “taking up his case” with this or
-that influential person. What his case was, Azalea
-had but a misty idea, and whether he actually took it
-up or merely gloated over the notion of doing so, she
-had no means of ascertaining. Anyway, the matter
-had long ago ceased to interest her.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mrs. Deane was the type of woman now happily
-becoming quite extinct, who was born to be dominated,
-and ably fulfilled her destiny. The eldest and most
-unattractive daughter of a rural English divine, she
-had won her husband by a trick for which he never
-forgave her, though he realised that she was in no way
-responsible. He had fallen fatuously in love with
-Dorothea, her younger sister, and had received the
-parental sanction to an engagement before setting sail
-for “Kenneda” and a post that his name might dignify.
-Six months later, Dorothea, who had quite innocently
-intrigued the affection of a visiting curate—a nephew
-of the Dean of Torborough, no less—had been prodded
-weeping to the altar, while Fanny was trundled on a
-steamer and shipped to Montreal to console the
-palpitant bridegroom, who had not even been
-apprised of the fact that a substitute had been forwarded.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The agony of that trip left its mark on Fanny
-Deane. A kindly lie would have spared her so much—for
-a time, at least. But the Rev. Arthur Somerset
-deemed suffering a salutory need, for others, and stated
-the case to his first-born with unequivocal lucidity .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-One phase of a woman’s duty is to grasp the opportunity
-for marriage and thus clear the way for her
-younger sisters, who, also, must have husbands. The
-prospect of fulfilling this duty in St. Ethelwyn’s was
-slender, and Fanny was no longer young .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Did she
-want to be a burden in her old age to her family? .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-Dependent upon them for a home .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Such inconsideration
-in a daughter of his was unthinkable .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-And as for young Deane, the Rev. Arthur waived his
-preference aside with a clerical gesture calculated to
-display advantageously his well-kept hand .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Any
-man might be proud of a wife begotten and bred by
-Arthur Somerset, D.D.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You must carry it off well, Fanny,” he adjured her,
-at the close of the interview, “for otherwise, you will
-be stranded in a strange country where .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” the alternative
-was painted in no mean and unromantic terms.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Fanny “carried it off” successfully enough, though
-by no fault or virtue of her own. Too ill, almost, to
-stand, she crept down the gangway, and cowered before
-the eager-eyed young man who did not even recognise
-her when she addressed him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Ah, if she had only been told that kindly little lie,
-and could have raised a radiant face to his, whispering,</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Here I am, dear! It was too wonderful that you
-should have sent for me!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Instead, with ashen lips and shame-filled eyes, she
-muttered, “Mr. Deane, they married Dorothea to a
-curate—she couldn’t help it—she wanted you to know!
-Here is your ring .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. and .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. and .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. they made me
-come .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. For God’s sake, don’t send me back! I’ll
-work for you till I drop dead .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I’ll be your servant—anything—only,
-for God’s sake, don’t send me
-home!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He stared at her while the devastating truth burst
-over him like an engulfing flood. He shook with rage,
-with the anguish of blighted hopes and his own impotence
-in escaping the net that had been spread for him,
-while Fanny cringed beside him praying that God
-would strike her dead .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And Heaven did not hear her prayer.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Speechless, they faced one another. After a bit, he
-took her roughly by the arm.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Come, girl,” he said, “we’ll get this rotten business
-over, quickly. The license reads ‘Dorothea’—I suppose
-I’ll have to get another one. There now, for
-God’s sake, don’t sniffle! People are looking at us.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>To give him credit, Grenville Harrison Deane never
-charged her with the deception of her parents. He
-never referred to it in so many words. But for two
-and forty years, Fanny lived in connubial torment,
-under the shadow of this smothering humiliation, and
-the fear that he might some day be led to speak of it.
-Often, there was that in his manner, that threatened
-to burst into violent and comminatory reproach.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She tried to efface herself, to reduce herself to
-nothingness, and to spare him the reminder of her
-substitution. She had a way of watching him, endeavouring
-to divine his whims and moods, that was
-loathesome in its humility. Her entire life was an
-apology for having failed to be her sister.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Unfortunately, Fanny never suspected that the
-greatest need of her overlord was association with a
-strong-minded tyrant, who, in the guise of the clinging-vine—or
-any other—would have thrust upon him the
-unexperienced pleasure of putting his shoulder to the
-wheel and hearing it creak as he moved it. He would
-have been happy doing things, being wheedled into
-service; but, as matters stood, Fanny Deane would
-have breathed for him, had such been possible. She
-relieved him of every burden and responsibility, and
-became a substitute not only for her silly, simpering
-sister, but for a shabby armchair and a pair of carpet
-slippers. Azalea, who was the youngest of five daughters,
-went so far as to say that the tomb to which his
-mortal envelope must one day be committed, would
-never equal in comfort the padded sepulchre her
-mother provided him while living.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Azalea’s earliest remembrance centred round a very
-common occurrence—her mother kneeling in the
-midst of broken toys and howling children, pleading,</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Don’t cry, my darlings! We will mend them!
-Sh-sh-sh—<span class='it'>Please</span> be quiet! <span class='it'>Don’t</span> irritate your father.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She lived in constant dread of irritating a man who
-would have kept his temper had he really been vouchsafed
-anything to be irritated about; and her life was
-one which no self-respecting dog would have endured.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>No one was more surprised than Fanny Deane
-when her four elder girls found husbands. Naturally,
-perhaps, she regarded marriage as a difficult and sordid
-undertaking—for parents, that is to say. Many a
-night, as she sat beside a moaning baby, the thought
-that one day she might have to engineer her children
-into the State of Holy Wedlock was like a deadly
-stricture about her heart. However, Hannah, Flossie,
-Tottie and May all married without any fuss or flurry,
-in a satisfactory, chronological fashion, the Civil
-Service yielding up its living dead to provide their
-sustenance. They became the Mrs. Polduggans and
-Mrs. Crogganthorpes of Ottawa; that large, uneasy,
-imitigable body—scrabbling, straining, jostling, niggling,
-fighting for the power to give rather than receive—snubs!—and
-living largely in the hope of supplanting
-their superiors and lifting themselves out of the ruck
-composed of other women, whose husbands, like their
-own, were merely “something in the Government”.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But Azalea was different. Marriage, in her
-opinion, was neither the subliminal pinnacle of feminine
-felicity, as her father claimed to conceive it, nor the
-Open Door to Independence, as her sisters averred.
-Shrewd observation led her to the conclusion that of
-independence there was little, and feminine felicity
-there was none. Always interested in the dark side of
-life, e.g., the married side, Azalea divided the women of
-her acquaintance into two classes—the parasites, who
-slyly or seductively tapped their husbands and appropriated
-their material and spiritual substance without
-suffering the smallest compensatory impulse, and the
-antithetical order, who resigned themselves to a
-stronger will and found matrimony a state of reluctant
-vassalage.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Azalea dreamed sometimes of an ideal companionship,
-or perhaps, a companionable ideal, but the
-paradigmatic young men whom her sisters (with the
-patronage of the successful angler who has already
-gaffed his fish and offers to instruct the novice how to
-bait a hook, and cast) enticed for her selection, inflamed
-her disgust rather than her romanticism.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Her greatest hunger was for economic independence,
-and this was summarily denied her.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mr. Deane, drenched in archaic theories, confused
-idleness with refinement, and work with degradation.
-Moreover, he would have felt a sense of incompetence,
-mute reproach, even contempt, had he permitted his
-daughters to join the restless ranks of the employed.
-By such a measure, would he have confessed his
-inability to support them as befitted women of gentle
-breeding, and to provide them with all the amenities
-that their natures craved. That one of them should
-possess a bank account of her own and feel at liberty
-to spend money without the humiliating necessity of
-applying to him, was a condition that smacked of
-positive shamelessness. It was characteristic of him
-that although he never wished to perform any useful
-task unaided by the members of his household, he
-never allowed them to perform the task alone.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He had a genuine horror of the modern business
-woman who could look him unflinching in the eye,
-without that sweet deference which testified to his
-superiority. All business women were, in his opinion,
-coarse; besides, economic independence resulted in
-their getting “out of hand”, and a woman who got out
-of hand, was, in Mr. Deane’s judgment, a very dangerous
-proposition. Therefore, he refused Azalea the
-freedom she craved. He immolated her self-respect (and
-that of the community for her, in a measure) on the
-altar of his vanity, and condemned her to a life of servitude
-far more degrading than anything she would have
-chosen. She was depressed under the burden of obligations
-that gave her little benefit and no pleasure, and she
-secretly despised herself for being forced to accept them.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Do let me go away and work,” she used to entreat,
-“I could teach. That’s a lady’s profession.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But her mother made vague gestures of distress
-that said,</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Don’t bring up this dreadful subject again!
-Please, my dear, be careful or you will irritate your
-father!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And father, giving every promise of fulfilling this
-prophecy, would reply,</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“So long as I live, I hope that no daughter of mine
-will be forced from the shelter of her home, and out
-amongst the ravening wolves of commerce. When I
-am gone .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” he left an eloquent pause “.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. But in
-the meantime .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The words, not to mention the gesture that accompanied
-them, implied somehow that caravans of
-voluptuous commodities assembled by his protean
-labours, should continue to arrive at their very door.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He was unctuously proud of her friends, and
-actually toadied to her in deference to her association
-with the aristocracy of the Capital. So did her sisters,
-and their husbands, and the “char”, and the tradespeople,
-all of whom knew that she enjoyed sufficient
-intimacy with Lady Elton to assist at a luncheon or
-dinner-party—assist, that is to say, in the kitchen.
-And the splendid thing about this kind of assistance
-was that she received no honorarium for her services.
-That was where she took conspicuous precedence over
-Mrs. Wiggin, the char, and Ellen Petrie, who “waited
-on all the exclusive affairs of the city”. To work
-without salary was Mr. Deane’s conception of a lady’s
-highest calling, and a means whereby she might be
-kept from getting out of hand.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He was supported in this attitude by one of the
-foremost ladies in the land, who argued that “no woman
-engaged in earning her own living should be presented
-at the Drawing Room!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Dillings struck a new note in the monotone of
-Azalea’s existence. She had never seen their like, and
-was profoundly touched by their genuineness, their
-simplicity. For the first time in her life she felt that
-she had come into contact with people to whom friendship
-is dearer than the advantageous acquaintanceship
-that travesties it; for the first time in her life she
-could show an honest affection without being suspected
-of having an ulterior motive. At that time, Azalea
-had nothing to gain from the Dillings. On the contrary,
-she had something to give—an ineffably joyous
-experience—and she delighted in the sensation of being
-for once the comet instead of the tail; instead of the
-trailer, the cart.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Towards Raymond Dilling, she was conscious of an
-intense maternalism. Mentally, she acknowledged
-him her master, but in every other respect, he was an
-utter child—hard, undemonstrative, cold, but, despite
-that, a very appealing child. And she saw with her
-native shrewdness that mere mentality would never
-gain for him the success which he deserved. Ottawa,
-she knew, was thronged with brilliant people whose
-gifts were lost to the City—to the Dominion—because
-they lacked the empty artifices and consequent social
-standing which enabled them to get a hearing. No
-strolling mummer in the Middle Ages needed ducal
-patron more sorely than does a mere genius in the
-Capital of Canada.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And Dilling liked Azalea. She was a new and
-interesting type to him who had never considered
-feminine psychology a topic that was worth pursuing.
-His wife’s friends in Pinto Plains were, he realised,
-estimable creatures running to fat and porcelain teeth
-at middle age. They were conscientious mothers,
-faithful to their husbands and earnest seekers after a
-broader knowledge than that provided by their homely
-tasks. But they wearied him. Whenever he encountered
-a group of them, his dominant wish was to
-escape, and he rarely failed to gratify this desire by
-excusing himself with some such remark as,</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’ll just slip off and leave you ladies free to discuss
-the three D’s”, by which he implied (with some degree
-of justification, doubtless) that the conversation of
-women is restricted to the topics of Dress, Domestics
-and Disease. He hated women’s chatter.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Azalea Deane was the only woman he had ever
-known who possessed what he later termed a bi-sexual
-mind. He was never irritably conscious, as was the
-case with Marjorie’s other friends, of the fact that she
-was a woman. Even when she discussed the three
-D’s, there was a broad impersonality, a pleasing and
-quizzical tang to her remarks that he chose to arrogate
-to the mind of man. Before he had known her any
-length of time, he discovered that, unlike Marjorie
-she not only understood what he said, but that in some
-startling and inexplicable manner she divined thoughts
-which he had expressly refrained from putting into
-words.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>For him, she was a novel experience, whose flavour
-he enjoyed rather more intensely than he was aware.
-Not that his emotions were even remotely touched by
-the personality of the girl. No! She was a mental
-adventure which he followed with frank curiosity and
-a diminishing display of patronage. Her mind was
-full of exhilarating surprises, and he was astounded to
-discover how easily she ornamented arid facts with
-garlands plucked from her rich imagination. She had
-a neat twist in the handling of them which Dilling was
-not slow to see and imitate. She guided him into
-many a pungent domain of thought, where he lost
-himself completely in an exciting pursuit after some
-winking little light, that led to the very middle of an
-icy stream into which he fell, spluttering, only to find
-Azalea calm and dry, on the opposite shore, laughing
-at him. He contracted the habit of reading extracts
-from his speeches to her, and presently, he tried the
-effect of an entire discourse. Now and again, he
-sounded her as to what he considered saying, and discovered
-that her enthusiastic understanding was like
-an extra filter to his already well-clarified intention.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He stored up particularly smart bits of political
-repartee to tell her, while his own triumphs of wit
-were laid at her feet rather than those of his bewildered
-wife. And all this time, the prevailing fancy that
-overlaid his subconscious mind, was,</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Quite a good sort, that girl! Pity she isn’t a man!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He voiced this latter sentiment to Azalea one evening
-shortly before prorogation and his return for the
-summer to Pinto Plains. In their sharp and peppery
-fashion, they had been discussing the Budget, inflated,
-Azalea contended, beyond all reason by the conscienceless
-demands of those picaresque buccaneers, Eastlake
-and Donahue, whose issue of private enterprise was
-begotten in the womb of the public treasury, when
-Dilling turned to her and cried,</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You’ve made out a good case, Miss Deane! You
-should have been a man!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The girl’s cheeks burned a painful brick tint. But
-she laughed and retorted,</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“By which you tactfully imply my unsuitability for
-the state to which it has pleased God to call me, and regret
-that physical limitations prevent my choosing a more
-adequate sphere. I confess to you in strict confidence,
-that frequently, I have deplored this condition, myself.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Come along into politics,” invited Dilling, a touch
-of seriousness behind his banter.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Right-o! Just so soon as you amend the B.N.A.
-and offer me a refuge in the Senate,” she answered,
-and changed the subject.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Later that night, Marjorie hinted that he had hurt
-Azalea.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Eh?” cried Dilling. “What are you talking
-about? Hurt her—how?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“By what you said.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What did I say?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“That she should have been a man.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Dilling carefully twisted his collar free from the
-button. A violent physical action of any kind was
-foreign to him. Running the curved band between
-his fingers, he gave an abstracted thought to the
-possibility of wearing it again on the morrow, even
-while he turned to contradict his wife. “Nonsense,
-Marjorie, she liked it! All women like it; it’s a tribute
-to their mentality, my dear. One often has to say
-some such thing to a perfect ninny, but in this case I
-happen to be sincere and I think Miss Deane
-knew it.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Marjorie did not contest the point. She never
-argued with Raymond, but once in a while she felt,
-as now, that his non-combatible correctness covered
-an error in judgment. Of course, he was sincere in
-paying a tribute to Azalea’s cleverness, and, of course,
-she knew he meant what he said. But that was the
-very trouble—the very barb that pierced her spirit!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In a strange and mysterious way (of which she was
-somewhat ashamed) Marjorie often reached perfectly
-amazing conclusions that were directly opposed to
-Raymond’s incontrovertible logic. And Azalea’s hurt
-was a case in point. Just why the words had stung,
-it was beyond Marjorie Dilling to explain. Orderly
-thinking and systematic juxtaposition of facts found
-their substitute in flashes of intuition which, throughout
-the ages, have stood for women in the place of
-reason. But she knew, without knowing how she
-knew, that Azalea would rather have impressed
-Raymond with her incomparable womanhood, than
-the fact that she was the possessor of a brain that
-should have functioned in the body of a man.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As for Azalea, she was not conscious that Marjorie
-had heard the echo of that discordant note, and she
-would have been inexpressibly surprised had she suspected
-it. Years of rigid discipline had taught her to
-conceal all the emotions she thought she had not
-strangled, and she was accustomed to being treated as
-a man when not as a nonentity. Times without
-number she had paid for an evening’s entertainment by
-escorting timourous and penurious ladies safely home
-in the silent watches of the night .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. a delicate assumption
-that she, herself, lacked sufficient fascination to
-stimulate brute design. On other occasions, hostesses
-frankly asked her to slip away quietly, “so that my
-husband won’t feel obliged to take you home, dear.”
-And once, a particularly considerate host glimpsing
-the blizzard that raged beyond his portal, had placed
-her in the care of a diminutive messenger boy, of some
-nine years, who struggled through the snowdrifts and
-sniffled that he had come from Hewitt’s Service, and
-please where was the parcel?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>So Dilling’s words cut without producing an unendurable
-pain. The spot was well cocained and
-would ache long after the incision had been made.
-Azalea listened to his defence of his leader, his Party,
-and Messrs. Eastlake and Donahue, sensitive to a
-breath of discouragement beneath his words.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I came to Ottawa expecting to find co-operation,
-and in its place fierce competition confronts me—competition,”
-he said, “within the very ranks of the
-Party! It may strike you as being particularly naive,
-but I confess that I had not expected to find this sort
-of friction. It puts a different complexion on politics.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This was a tremendous admission for him to make,
-and in one of those flashing visions that supplemented
-her more leisured mental processes, Azalea saw that
-just as Marjorie groped along her level, so Dilling
-stumbled into pitfalls in his particular sphere, that a
-cumulus vapour of disenchantment threatened the horizon
-of his career, and that even as his wife bade fair
-to be a victim of the Social Juggernaut, so he would
-be crushed beneath the wheels of the political machine.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And they thought that this was The Land of
-Afternoon!</p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER 8.</h2>
-
-<p class='noindent'><span class='dropcap'>T</span>he Dillings returned to Ottawa refreshed in
-body and spirit. Their summer in Pinto Plains
-had been a prolonged triumph and its effect,
-beneficial. Not only had they been welcomed with
-affectionate deference, entertained sedulously, and
-permitted to depart with honest regret and a dash of
-frank envy, but they had been reclaimed by that
-splendid illusion from which six months in the Capital
-had freed them.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>By the time they turned their faces eastward, they
-were quite prepared to attribute their disheartening
-experiences of the previous winter to hyper-sensitiveness—the
-difficulty generally felt in accommodating
-oneself to a new environment.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was during the last stages of the journey that
-uneasiness returned, and expressed itself in remarks
-such as,</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Just think .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. this time last year we were strangers,
-and now, it seems almost like coming home!” or</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s nice to know that we have friends here, isn’t it?
-We won’t be so lonely, this year, will we?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Each in a characteristic way tried to capture a
-sense of confidence, a glow of happiness, and to feel
-that being no longer aliens, Ottawa would be different—that
-is, as each would like to find it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Marjorie succeeded better than her husband.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s awfully exciting, isn’t it?” she cried, as the
-train panted along beside the canal, and familiar landmarks
-unfolded before her.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Across the muddy water where barges and the
-Rideau Royal Pair were tied up for the winter, she
-could see the Driveway, spotted with children and
-women casually attendant upon perambulators. The
-Pavilion at Somerset Street, where she used to sit
-with her little brood, looked bleak and uninviting,
-but she was glad to see it, just the same. Two lovers
-occupied a bench in front of the Collegiate, and kissed
-shamelessly as the train moved past. Marjorie’s heart
-warmed to them, not that she approved of kissing in
-public places, but because there was something human
-about them; they added weight to her theory that
-Ottawa was not so forbidding and formidable, after all.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Dilling stared out of the window, too, but he did
-not see the lovers, the Armouries, the Laurier Avenue
-Bridge, the Arena, nor the warehouses flanked by the
-Russell Hotel. He saw a straggling little lumber village,
-gay with the costumes of Red Men, voyageurs, and the
-uniforms of sappers and miners, who were at work on
-the Canal. What a mammoth undertaking and how
-freighted with significance! By the building of a
-hundred and twenty-six miles of waterway that linked
-Kingston with the infant Bytown, English statesmen
-provided an expedient for adding to the impregnability
-of the British Empire!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“War,” he mused. “How it has stimulated the
-ingenuity of man! With sacrifice, with blood and
-tears, we carve a niche for ourselves out of the resistant
-rock, in the hope that there we will find peace, but
-immediately the task is finished, we set ourselves to
-fortify it against the hour of war.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He pictured the Cave Dweller, bent over his crude
-instruments of destruction, clubs of bone and stone,
-which, in all probability, the modern man could scarcely
-lift. He considered the inventor of primitive projectiles.
-That was a long step toward the mechanism of
-modern homicide. One could lie, ambushed, behind a
-mound and use a sling, a boomerang, a blow-pipe or a
-javelin, and arrows .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. he gave a mental shudder and
-thanked God that he had not lived a hundred years
-ago. There was something about an Indian that made
-his flesh creep; a traditional antagonism that he did
-not try to overcome. The romance of the Red Man
-never gripped him. Like all unimaginative people, his
-prejudices were sharp and immutable.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He picked the word “blunderbuss” from a confusion
-of pictures that combined Gibraltar and Queenston
-Heights, and cumbrous cannon that were dangerous
-alike to friend and foe, and repeated,</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“War! Always fashioning some new tool to strengthen
-the hand of Death. They spent a million pounds
-on a ‘military measure’ to safeguard the Colony from
-invasion on the South .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. and behold, the Rideau
-Canal!”</p>
-
-<hr class='stars'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He started when Marjorie thrust parcels into his
-arms, and observed that at last they had arrived.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Azalea met them at the station. She had opened
-their tiny house, and with the assistance of Mrs. Plum
-had put it in order.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Hers had been an exceptionally uneventful summer,
-and she had looked forward to the Dillings’ return with
-an impatience that astonished her.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>From the last of June until the first of September,
-Ottawa is like a City of the Dead. Despite the fact
-that these are the pleasantest weeks of the year, the
-town is deserted by every one who can get away, even
-though the exodus extends no farther than Chelsea, on
-the other side of the river. But Azalea hadn’t even
-got so far, this summer. Her time had been pretty
-fully occupied carrying out commissions for more
-fortunate friends. Lady Denby who had gone to the
-sea, asked her to superintend the installation of the
-winter’s coal. Mrs. Long preferring the irresponsibility
-of Banff to the responsibility of presiding over her
-country home and a succession of unappreciated
-house-parties, decided that this was an excellent
-opportunity for papering some of the obscurer portions
-of her town residence, and ‘knew that Azalea wouldn’t
-mind overseeing the work’. She interviewed a cook
-for Mrs. Blaine, hunted up a photograph of Sir Mortimer
-Fanshawe taken on the golf links (before he had
-acquired the game) and excellent as a pictorial feature
-for a sporting supplement. She shopped, exchanged
-articles, paid bills that had been forgotten, and found
-herself generally confronted with the <span class='it'>res angusta domi</span>
-of a woman without an income. She did not grumble.
-At the same time, she could imagine a hundred happier
-ways of spending a summer.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mr. and Mrs. Deane left the shelter of their comfortable
-home to suffer in turn the hospitality of each
-of their married daughters, who holidayed according
-to their means (i.e., spent a good deal more money
-than they could afford, and returned home soured by
-the necessity for retrenchment). Azalea could have
-gone, too, but there were limits even to her endurance.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Dillings fell upon her joyously, not only
-Marjorie and the children, but Raymond.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You must come home with us,” he cried, “and tell
-us all the news. Is it true that Pratt is running for
-the Federal House? I heard a rumour to that effect
-on the train.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Azalea nodded.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You can’t be surprised. This has been his wife’s
-ambition for years. She’ll achieve it, too, if there’s
-anything in persistent campaigning. But I’ve something
-else to say—I wrote you about it a few days ago,
-before your wire came. The house that Lady Denby
-has been so keen for you to take, is empty. I have an
-option on it in your name.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Marjorie could not suppress an exclamation. The
-house in question was large, and in her opinion, unduly
-pretentious. Their living expenses would be more
-than doubled. It seemed strange to her that people
-of their modest means should be encouraged—urged,
-indeed—to make such extravagant outlay. Display
-of any sort was, in the eyes of Pinto Plains, vulgar, and
-a cardinal sin upon which her friends felt themselves
-qualified to sit in judgment, was that of trying to
-appear above one’s station.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>To Marjorie, one of the most amazing features
-about life in the Capital was the discovery that women
-who dressed with most conspicuous elegance, lived in
-impressive style and drove in motor cars, commanded
-only a Civil Servant’s meagre salary. Later, she
-learned that over their heads a cloud of debt continually
-hung, but it caused them no more distress than
-did the dome of the sky. The infamous credit system
-in the city was responsible for these moral callouses
-which she simply could not understand. Debt, to her,
-was synonymous with dishonesty, and that anyone
-could become accustomed to living in its shadow, was
-beyond the limits of her comprehension. It was a
-shock for her to learn that respected families had
-unpaid accounts at the large stores extending over a
-period of twenty years!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Virtually, any tradesman would supply merchandise
-on account to a Civil Servant, because although the
-salary could no longer be garnisheed, they hoped that
-a small payment would be snipped with regularity
-from the infallible Governmental cheque.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Why don’t you buy a set of sectional bookcases
-for your husband’s books?” asked Azalea’s sister,
-Flossie, during the progress of a call.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Marjorie’s reply was ingenuous, naively truthful.
-“We’ve been under so much expense lately,” she said,
-“I felt that I couldn’t afford them.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mrs. Howard, whose husband was an anaemic little
-man, occupying a humble post in the Department of
-Labor, opened her eyes in genuine astonishment.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You don’t have to <span class='it'>pay</span> for them,” she cried.
-“Hapgood is most considerate in the matter of his
-accounts. I generally have to beg for mine!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This latter remark was not strictly in line with the
-truth—not in Mrs. Howard’s case. She had heard it,
-however, dropped from the lips of one of Ottawa’s
-twenty-three millionaires, and appropriated it, she felt,
-with some effect.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But Marjorie couldn’t see any future happiness at
-all, knowing that she would be faced with financial
-problems, and she was absolutely unable to understand
-the attitude of Lady Denby, who, throughout
-the previous winter, had stressed the necessity for
-making a better appearance “for the sake of the
-Party”.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“When people are wealthy and have an assured
-position,” she counselled, “they can enjoy a freedom
-of action that is denied those less fortunately conditioned.
-Mrs. Hudson is an example. She could, if
-one of her extraordinary whims dictated, dine at
-Government House in her great-grandmother’s faded
-bombazine, without injuring her position in the slightest
-degree. On the other hand, should <span class='it'>you</span> attempt the
-smallest unconventionality, I assure you the result
-would be socially disastrous. The same principle
-applies in the matter of entertaining. You are no less
-a part of public life than is your husband, and you can
-render him no greater assistance than by displaying a
-judicious and well-regulated hospitality. Cultivate
-<span class='it'>nice</span> people—er—the Minister’s wives, and so on .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-Entertain them and entertain them well, but—” she
-broke off, abruptly, “—you can’t do it <span class='it'>here</span>!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It quite took Marjorie’s breath away to learn that
-Lady Denby considered women important in politics,
-and that they might sway their husbands for or against
-a fellow member was an idea that had never entered
-her mind. Neither could she understand how her own
-popularity could be a factor in Raymond’s success,
-and that it was dependent upon maintaining a position
-she would not afford, instead of living according to
-her means and simplicity of requirement—was an
-attitude of mind that she never completely grasped.
-But the necessity for it all was made evident even to
-Raymond, and by no less a person than Sir Eric himself,
-who ably coached by his wife, remarked that “to
-save, one must first learn to spend!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Establish yourself, my dear fellow,” were his
-words, “establish yourself in the life of the Capital,
-and when the roots are firmly implanted in this loamy
-soil, draw in your horns—if one may be permitted to
-mix a metaphor. I am not advocating a reckless
-expenditure of more than you have to spend,” emphasised
-the advocate of all the verbotens, “but rather the
-point that it is not advisable for a young politician to
-appear to hoard his salary. Education, you say?
-The children’s education will, I trust, be well provided
-for by a generous and appreciative country.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>So the Dillings moved, and Marjorie memorialised
-the occasion by issuing invitations to a large tea.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I suppose you didn’t keep a visiting list?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Azalea had expected a negative answer, so she was
-not disappointed. But Marjorie added,</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’m sure I shan’t forget any of my friends.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Doubtless! The difficulty will lie in remembering
-all your active enemies!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, Miss Deane—I mean Azalea—what shocking
-things you say! Surely, I don’t have to ask people
-who have—that is, who haven’t—who aren’t exactly
-what you might call friendly with me?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Positively!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, but that doesn’t seem right!” protested
-Marjorie, in dismay. “It’s deceitful! There’s no use
-liking people if you treat the ones you don’t like just
-as well!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Sound logic, my dear, but impractical from a
-social standpoint. You see, it’s something like this—”
-Azalea slipped a thin gold bracelet from her arm,
-pouring within and about it, a quantity of pen nibs.
-“Society is like this bangle, and these nibs are the
-people who compose it. I’ll jostle the desk and then
-see what happens to those who are not safe within its
-golden boundary. They fall off and go down to
-oblivion. The others, though disturbed, are in a sense
-secure, so you can see, my dear, that the paramount
-business of life in the Capital is to get <span class='it'>inside</span>. Of
-course, there are circles within circles, and you must
-learn about them, later. But for the moment, concentrate
-upon getting within the shining rim. Once
-there, you can stick, and prick, and jab, and stab to
-your heart’s content, and you need not treat your
-friends and enemies alike. But until you <span class='it'>do</span> get there—well,
-you really won’t matter, one way or the other.
-Your friendship will be prized scarcely more than your
-enmity will be deplored.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But,” objected Marjorie. “I never heard of
-dividing people into lots, unless—” a sudden thought
-occurred to her “—unless you mean that all the nice
-people are inside and the other kind are not. Is that
-it?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Indubitably,” laughed Azalea. “And you must
-affirm your belief that this is so, on each and every
-occasion.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I don’t know what you mean.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Why, you must find all the people within the
-circle charming and brilliant and desirable, and all
-those outside commonplace and dull, and not worth
-while. You must like the former and despise the
-latter. Oh, it’s quite simple, really!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Marjorie smiled the smile she reserved for her
-husband’s excursions in wit. She thought, of course,
-that Azalea was joking.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Now, there’s sometimes a little difficulty in
-classifying people who teeter on the edge,” she poised
-a nib on the golden circle to illustrate her point. “A
-little push one way or the other will decide which way
-they will go, and until they get pushed, I admit they
-are something of a problem. However, we’ll begin
-with the certainties, and then I’ll borrow a list from
-Lady Denby, so as to be sure not to overlook anybody
-.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. The Ministers’ wives—Mrs. Blaine, Mrs.
-Carewe, Mrs. Haldane, Mrs. Carmichael, Lady
-Denby .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Azalea wrote rapidly for a few moments, carefully
-spelling the French names as she recalled them.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Then the wife of the Black Rod: she goes everywhere—”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And I like her,” interrupted Marjorie. “She’s
-not a bit stiff, is she?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Azalea laughed and shook her head. Marjorie’s
-dread of women who were “stiff” and men who were
-“sarcastic”, amused her.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Between consultations with Lady Denby, the
-Parliamentary Guide and the Telephone Book, the
-invitations were issued, and Azalea sat back, sighing
-after her labours.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Now you will have paid off all your tea obligations,”
-she said, “but you really must keep a list.
-Separate ones for luncheons, dinners and suppers.
-Probably, a dinner will be the next thing.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And who must I ask for dinner, when I give one?”
-enquired Marjorie, ignoring in her distress the rules of
-grammar.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Why, the people who have had you, of course!
-Not luncheon people, not tea people, mind!” Azalea
-was quite stern. “But the people who have had you
-for <span class='it'>dinner</span>! It will be simple until you have been
-entertained frequently, and then you will have to sort
-out members of different sets.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I don’t like it,” said Raymond Dilling’s wife.
-“I don’t want to entertain that way. I tell you, it’s
-deceitful!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Entertaining,” said Azalea, with a suspicion of
-hardness in her voice, “is an admirable illustration of
-the ‘eye for an eye’ transaction mentioned in Holy
-Writ. Only, in the Capital, an astute woman schemes
-to obtain two eyes for one optic, and a whole set, upper
-and lower, for the molar she has sacrificed. When she
-accomplishes this, my dear, then she has achieved real
-social success. Bismillah!”</p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER 9.</h2>
-
-<p class='noindent'><span class='dropcap'>S</span>everal circumstances combined to make possible
-the large and representative crowd that attended
-Mrs. Raymond Dilling’s first big crush. The day
-was fine, the season was only beginning so that there
-were few counter-attractions, and the Parliamentary
-set, who were hearing with increasing frequency of the
-fervid young prophet of the prairies, went out of
-curiosity to see, as Mrs. Lorimer tactfully put it,
-“<span class='it'>What</span> he had married.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Dilling had already made a strong impression—partly
-favourable, and partly the reverse. But it was
-definite in either case.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Lastly, the Hollingsworth house, into which the
-Dillings had moved, was a landmark which still bequeathed
-a flavour of by-gone grandeur to its successive
-tenants, although no member of the illustrious
-family had lived beneath its roof for close upon half a
-century. But no matter who lived there, it was a
-mansion into which one could pass with dignity and a
-certain satisfaction, secure in the knowledge that even
-should it be converted into a boarding-house, there
-would remain the manifest though indefinable air that
-differentiates the messuages of patricians from the
-tenements of the proletariat.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That the Hollingsworths’ should be transformed
-into anything so needful as a private hostelry, however,
-was almost inconceivable, for Ottawa’s last concern
-was her housing problem.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Accommodation was so scarce at the seat of Government
-that many Members began to fear, after a discouraging
-search, that they would have to stand.
-Over-furnished rooms, and under-furnished houses
-were offered at opulent rentals, but of comfortable
-pensions, there were none. There are but two or
-three to-day. What solution has been reached, may
-be attributed to the number of picturesque old residences
-that have been remodelled and split into half
-a dozen inconvenient mouse-traps.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Inside, the Hollingsworths’ was a riot of fantastic
-ugliness. A gaunt reception hall engulfed the visitor
-and cast him, from beneath a series of grilled oak
-arches, into a sombre drawing room. One end was
-bounded by folding doors that resisted all efforts at
-movement, and beyond, there yawned a portentous
-bay window that invited invasion by the house next
-door and reduced the cubic contents of the dining-room.
-Strange abutments, niches that looked as
-though they had been designed for cupboards and
-abandoned before completion, appeared in unsuspected
-places. Angles were everywhere. The ceilings were
-lumpy, like the frosting of a birthday cake, and there
-wasn’t a gracious line to be seen.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Marjorie’s hangings, chosen with the idea of giving
-a cheerful touch, looked somewhat as a collar of baby
-ribbon might have looked upon the neck of an elephant.
-Her Brussels rugs were suggestive of a postage stamp
-on a very large envelope, while the Mission furniture
-and mahogany What-not, added to the general air of
-discord. With several violent examples of the lithographers’
-skill on the walls, there was completed a
-terrorising picture that might aptly have been labelled
-“The Carnage of Art”.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Marjorie stood in front of the cherry-wood fireplace
-and tried not to be nervous, but she couldn’t forget
-that immense issues depended upon the success of this
-tea—Raymond’s entire future, perhaps! It was a
-thought that almost petrified her.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Pamela de Latour was one of the first guests to
-arrive. She was early because she was assisting, and
-she was assisting because Lady Denby had made the
-matter a personal favour to herself. It was customary,
-in Ottawa, for unmarried ladies to “assist” in the dining-room,
-no matter what their age, while matrons,
-either old or young, officiated at the tea table. It
-therefore frequently developed that youthful matrons—brides,
-indeed—were comfortably seated behind the
-tea-urn, or that they cut interminable ices, while
-spinsters thrice their age, percolated kittenishly among
-the guests on high-heeled slippers, deprived by man’s
-short-sightedness, of the rest which their years were
-craving.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Miss Lily Tyrrell, aristocrat by inclination and
-democrat by necessity—a charming woman whose
-family had been both wealthy and conspicuous in an
-older generation—also assisted, as did the wholesome
-Misses McDermott. These latter were so much in
-demand that their “assistance” had become almost a
-profession, as had tea-pouring for Mrs. Chalmers, wife
-of the Black Rod, and presiding at meetings for Mrs.
-B. E. Tillson.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’m so pleased to see you,” said Marjorie to Miss
-de Latour, a little too precipitously, and spoiling the
-effect of Hawkin’s announcement.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Hawkins “announced” at every function of any
-importance, and infallibly employed the precise nuance
-of impressiveness with which to garnish each name.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Miss de Latour,” he called, and in a tone which
-plainly said, “Here’s Somebody!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Missus ’Anover,” he droned, a moment later,
-looking over that lady’s shoulder, and taking a deep
-breath before booming,</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Lydy Denby!</span>”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That was his way.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It was so good of you to come,” Marjorie continued.
-“I didn’t know but that you would have
-forgotten me.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Not at all,” murmured Miss de Latour, gazing
-with a sort of outraged intensity about the room.
-“Had you a pleasant summer?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, wonderful, perfectly wonderful! It was so
-good to get home and feel .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Missus Moss,” observed Hawkins, listlessly.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Pleased to meet you,” said Marjorie, nervously
-cordial. (She recalled later, with considerable puzzlement,
-that most of her guests said briefly, “How d’y
-do?” If they reciprocated her friendly sentiments,
-they displayed admirable restraint in suppressing the
-fact.) “Isn’t it a lovely day?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Glorious,” agreed Mrs. Moss, estimating Miss de
-Latour’s dress at an even hundred. “I suppose you’re
-glad to be back in Ottawa? Those little prairie towns
-must be so dull!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Before Marjorie could spring to the defence of
-Pinto Plains, Mrs. Hotchkiss was announced. The
-smile with which she was prepared to meet her guest
-changed to a look of surprise. The rather plain little
-person advancing towards her was not the dashing
-Mrs. Hotchkiss she so greatly admired.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You were expecting my namesake, I see,” laughed
-the newcomer, easily. “Yes, there are two of us—no
-relation. She’s the good-looking Mrs. Hotchkiss.
-I’m the other one!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Pleased to meet you,” said Marjorie, magenta-colour
-with embarrassment. “Have you had—I mean,
-won’t you have your tea?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Mrs. Plantagenet Promyss,” blared Hawkins, as
-though impatient to get Mrs. Hotchkiss out of the way.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A small, untidy woman plunged into the room.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“How d’y do?” she said, not only to Marjorie, but
-all who were within hearing distance. “I hope I’m
-not too late for a nice hot cup of tea! There’s nothing
-so depressing to me as a third lukewarm steeping .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-and that’s what a good many sessional hostesses give
-one, my dear!” Then catching sight of Mrs. Long,
-“I’ve just come from a meeting of the Little Learning
-League, where Lady Elton read a perfectly delightful
-paper called ‘Good Buys in Old By-town’. You know,
-she’s so clever at bargaining and that sort of thing .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-eh? The Little Learning League, my dear Mrs. Dilling,
-is the only organization of its kind in the Capital.
-It concentrates once a fortnight, the essence—absolutely
-the essence—of feminine culture and intelligence.
-Mrs. Lauderdale Terrace is our president. You
-probably haven’t met her .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. yet,” she added, kindly.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As a rule, Mrs. Promyss found the literary afternoons
-very wearisome. She possessed a pretty gift
-for modelling in soap, and was eager to instruct her
-fellow-members in the use of this charming and ductile
-medium. So skillful was she that her copy of the
-famous Rogers’ group, “You Dirty Boy” was once
-mistaken for the original. Indeed, she was so intrigued
-by its artistic quality, that she was disposed to argue
-that soap should be used for no other purpose, whatsoever!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Lady Elton’s personal title, however, combined
-with the smart caption of her paper, had quite enchanted
-the sculptor, and she was in high good humour.
-“You must come to see me in my studio,” she called,
-as one of the Misses McDermott led her away to the
-dining-room and a hot cup of tea.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Marjorie smiled and shook hands until faces, like
-great expressionless balloons, wavered in the air. She
-lost all power to distinguish what was being said to
-her, and had no idea what she replied. Now and
-again phrases tumbled against her ear out of the
-general uproar but they seemed to have very little sense.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. very proud of his children,” shouted a richly-dressed
-person on her right.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. me, too,” came from a group on her left,
-“only we fry ours in butter.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>From the direction of her leatherette divan drifted
-a remarkable statement—“.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. and she learned to
-swim .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” “with a floating kidney .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” “.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. and came
-ashore at Quebec in a Mandarin’s coat!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mechanically, she took the tea Azalea brought her,
-and approached a group of Cabinet ladies.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Appalling,” one of them was saying. “Like something
-in a nightmare!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Do you think she’ll ever learn?” murmured another.
-“He’s really clever.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>They turned suddenly.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“We were just admiring your house,” exclaimed
-Mrs. Carewe. “This room .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, I’m so glad you like it!” Marjorie’s voice
-trembled with happiness. “I feel very small in such
-grandeur, but we’re not using the top floor at all, and
-that helps a little. It was fortunate that our furniture
-was dark, wasn’t it? I used to think there was nothing
-more gorgeous than a gold drawing-room suite,
-but even if I could have it, it wouldn’t do at all in
-here, would it?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Positively not!” agreed the ladies, heartily.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At the other end of the room, a group of Ottawa’s
-youthful Smart Set sought to extract a modicum of
-enjoyment from what they termed a dee-dee party.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“They’re getting damnder and duller,” sighed one.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I thought nothing could beat Lady Denby’s, but this
-has it skinned to a finish!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Can’t any one think of a funny stunt?” asked
-another. “I’m so bored, I could lie down on the floor
-and sing hymns.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Do it,” dared Mona Carmichael, obviously the
-leader of the group. “Go on, Zoe .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I’ll bet my new
-pink knickers, you haven’t the nerve!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Nerve’s my middle name,” declared Zoe, with a
-toss of her head. “But the trouble with me is Mother.
-She’s prowling about somewhere in the festal chamber,
-and she never appreciates my originality.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Let’s eat,” suggested Elsa Carmichael, the
-Minister’s second daughter. “That always fills up
-time.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“My time’s stuffed full,” observed Mona. “Had
-an awfully late lunch.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Their shrieks of laughter sounded above the din.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Sh—sh—sh—!” warned Zoe. “Little Nell from
-Pinto Plains is looking at us.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, let’s do <span class='it'>something</span>,” insisted the first speaker.
-“Couldn’t we go upstairs and hide things?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mona objected that this form of recreation was
-stale.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“We might smear their tooth brushes with cold
-cream,” suggested Elsa.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Perhaps they don’t use them,” Zoe returned.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I say,” cried Mona, suddenly alive to a new
-thought, “how many olives can you hold in your
-mouth at once?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Nobody had ever tried.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Let’s do it now,” they agreed with one accord.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Me first,” said Mona. “It was my idea.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>They seized a plate from the table, surrounded the
-experimentator, and watched half a dozen large, green
-olives disappear.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“My word,” breathed Elsa, “she’s swallowing them
-whole!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Eight,” counted Dolly Wentworth, her cousin.
-“Nine, ten—my Sunday hat, doesn’t she look like a
-chipmunk?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This was too much for Mona. She gulped, grabbed
-the plate now almost empty, and shot explosively, ten
-whole olives into it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Screams of delight rewarded her.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Look,” panted Zoe, “she hasn’t even bitten them!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You beast,” said Elsa, “now we can’t tell t’other
-from which.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Sorry,” replied her sister, “but you know I can’t
-eat them. They make me disgustingly sick.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You’ve got to eat them,” cried Dolly. “If you
-don’t, they’ll be served up at the next party.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The thought threw them into agonising spasms of
-mirth. Oh, this was wonderful .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. priceless .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-<span class='it'>mervellus</span> .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. the very best ever! They really expected
-to expire .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Slip them back on the table,” commanded Mona,
-as she saw Marjorie approaching.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Not a minute too soon,” whispered Dolly. “Now
-then, girls, your best Augusta Evans smile .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Have you had tea?” asked Marjorie, finding
-something about their hilarity that was as incomprehensible
-as the sombreness of the other groups who
-appeared to be too bored for words. She had little
-time for reflection, but there flashed through her mind
-a comparison between this and a tea in Pinto Plains,
-where a friendly atmosphere was inter-penetrating and
-a hostess wasn’t ignored by her guests.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>They turned to her with the insolence of people
-who felt they had graced her home by their presence.
-Mona Carmichael answering for her friends, replied,
-“Quarts .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. thanks.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As that seemed to be productive of no further
-conversation, Marjorie moved away, suddenly conscious
-that there was a slight commotion at the door.
-A late guest was arriving. To her amazement, she
-recognised Mrs. Augustus Pratt, coarctated in a
-sapphire velvet, whose fashionable slit skirt revealed
-a length of limb that fascinated, while it unutterably
-shocked her.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Mrs. Pratt,” confided the lady to Hawkins.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Parding?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Mrs. Pratt,” she repeated, bending a shade nearer.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Missus Spratt!” he relayed, resentfully.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Hawkins knew Mrs. Pratt. He knew that she was
-marching round the golden circle seeking a weak spot
-through which she might force an entrance, and he
-felt it an insult to his position that he should have to
-deal with any one outside the charmed enclosure.
-He hated Mrs. Pratt.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mrs. Pratt bore down upon Marjorie, and in her
-wake followed a girl who was obviously a relative.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I came because I knew you must be expecting me.
-I said to Mod ‘.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. something has happened to that
-invitation, and your father would never forgive me if
-I didn’t make a particular effort to get down to Mrs.
-Dilling’s this afternoon’. This is Mod, Mrs. Dilling.
-I suppose she’s a little older than your children?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Marjorie was unequal to the occasion. She was
-surprised that Azalea had asked Mrs. Pratt. Azalea
-was surprised, herself, although she took in the situation
-at a glance, knowing that it was not unusual for
-persons of Mrs. Pratt’s calibre to attend functions at
-Government House—and elsewhere—with a sublime
-disregard for the necessity of an invitation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Maude was impaled upon the group of smart
-young ladies who stared disapprovingly at her, while
-her mother wandered about for half an hour with the
-intention of having everyone in the room know that
-she was there. Later, that night, she took the precaution
-to telephone Miss Ludlow, society reporter of
-<span class='sc'>The Dial</span>, and, with cunning innocence, offered the
-item about Mrs. Dilling’s tea as a means of helping
-the girl to fill up her column—or colyum, in Mrs.
-Pratt’s phraseology. She believed in helping women,
-and she realised how difficult a task confronted the
-reporters. At any time, she would always be willing
-to confide information, and advised Miss Ludlow (who
-listened with her tongue in her cheek) not to hesitate
-to call upon her.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As the crowd thinned, a chic little motor drove up
-to the Dilling’s door, and, after a tired glance in the
-direction of the bright chintz curtains, the driver
-settled back to await the pleasure of his lady.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He was discovered almost immediately by the
-group standing in the dining-room.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What slavery,” murmured Mrs. Long. “I wonder
-if it’s worth it.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Perhaps he doesn’t mind,” suggested Mrs. Blaine.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, I should say it’s part of the day’s routine,”
-said Miss de Latour. “He calls somewhere for her
-every afternoon. One can grow accustomed to anything.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“They say she’s writing a novel,” confided Mrs.
-Long, “an acrimonious tale about all of us in the
-Capital.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“How delicious,” cried Miss de Latour. “Dante
-will be jealous, I fear!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But it isn’t a novel,” Mrs. Blaine informed the
-group. “At least, that’s not what she calls it.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What is it, then?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well,” said Mrs. Blaine, “I’ve never seen it—nor
-any of the other literary productions of which she is
-guilty, but she told me that it was a sort of allegory, a
-child’s story, called “The Fable of the Fairy Ferry-boat”
-.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. and she’s having it multigraphed for free
-distribution among the children of the English peerage.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Be careful,” cautioned Pamela de Latour, “here
-she is!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mrs. Hudson fluttered to the window in response
-to the summons of Azalea Deane. She waved a
-sprightly hand in the direction of the waiting car, and
-mouthed,</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Coming, directly, darling!” as though speaking to
-a young and inexperienced lip-reader.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Isn’t it absurd?” she cooed coquettishly to the
-others. “But he <span class='it'>will</span> come! One would think we
-were bride and groom,” and she made an ineffectual
-effort to blush.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Some men are lovers always,” sighed Mrs. Blaine.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“That’s Bob to the life,” cried Mrs. Hudson.
-“No wonder I’m so spoiled.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You certainly look exceptionally well,” remarked
-Mrs. Long. “Such a becoming hat .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” the fibs
-trickled fluently from her lips “.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. such an artistic
-blending of gay colours .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I like bright colours on
-any one who can wear them. And your hair has
-grown so beautifully white .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. not a dark strand to
-be seen anywhere .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” Her eyes wandered to the
-patient car “.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. And Mr. Hudson looks like a perfect
-boy .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER 10.</h2>
-
-<p class='noindent'><span class='dropcap'>M</span>rs. Pratt was racked by indecision. She
-was faced by a stupendous problem. She
-could not determine whether to invite the
-young girls who had so frankly snubbed “Mod” to
-drive home in her limousine, or whether to honour
-herself by cringing before a group of elderly notables.
-She had not possessed a motor long enough to understand
-that people to whom driving would be a boon,
-do not expect to be invited, and that only those who
-own cars, themselves, or are perfectly able to hire
-taxis, should be asked to enjoy the convenience of a
-motor.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>So she made the mistake of offering to drop Miss
-Lily Tyrrell at her remote apartment, and prodded
-Maude into urging the Carmichael sisters to be driven
-home.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“We could easily take a couple more,” she announced
-from the doorway, rather as a barker tries to
-fill up his sight-seeing car. “No trouble at all!”
-But as couples were slow in stepping forward, she
-strode off with the persons already captured.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There was silence for a space after Mrs. Pratt had
-telephoned directions to her chauffeur. A sensitive
-stranger would have suspected that each member of
-the party was waiting for the other to throw the first
-stone. But such was not precisely the case. The
-unpleasant <span class='it'>timbre</span> in the atmosphere was due to the
-fact that between each individual there existed a
-definite sense of animosity which was clothed with the
-filmiest cloak. Each seemed to be waiting an opportunity
-to step into the open and club the others into
-sensibility of her own importance.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mrs. Pratt looked at the ears of her chauffeur.
-Miss Tyrrell turned her head towards the window and
-thanked Heaven she would soon be able to take off her
-shoes. The Carmichaels maintained a series of signals
-by kicking one another beneath the lap robes, and
-Maude stared into her folded hands, wondering vaguely
-why people were born at all. Chickens and dogs and
-cats seemed so much more worth while.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Where do <span class='it'>you</span> live?” asked Miss Tyrrell, with just
-the proper shade of patronage. She wished to make
-very clear to the Carmichael sisters that there existed
-no intimacy between Mrs. Pratt and herself.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The former plunged into a minute description of
-the improvements she had effected in the Tillington
-place, and warned Miss Tyrrell that she would scarcely
-recognise it, now.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I suppose in its day, it was considered all right,”
-she said, “but it was quite impossible when I took it
-over. You must see it .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Of course, you <span class='it'>will</span>!
-With a husband in Parliament, I shall have to do a
-lot of entertaining. Do you like to dance?” she asked
-Mona, suddenly.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I adore it,” returned the girl, with elaborate indifference.
-“You don’t, do you?” she demanded of Maude.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, yes, I love dancing.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Really? I never see you, anywhere.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Mod is just home from school,” said Mrs. Pratt.
-“I don’t believe in a girl carrying all her brains in her
-feet. She went out rather more than was good for her
-in Montreal .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. not being vurry strong. That’s why
-I can’t let her go to the University, as she wants.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What a pity,” murmured the sisters, in a tone that
-made Miss Tyrrell bite her lips to keep from laughing.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The moment they were alone, Mrs. Pratt wheeled
-upon her daughter. “Whatever will I do with you,
-Mod?” she scolded. “Aren’t you ever going to learn
-to say anything for yourself?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I don’t like those girls,” muttered Mod.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I should hope not! But is that any reason why
-you shouldn’t make friends with them?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I don’t want to have friends that I don’t like.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mrs. Pratt was struck speechless by such philosophy.
-It had never occurred to her that anyone
-could hold views at variance with her own, least of all,
-her daughter. She found herself at a loss for an
-argument, a retort, indeed. The girl might just as
-well have said she didn’t like having two hands.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But everybody has!” exclaimed Mrs. Pratt.
-“There’s no getting around it! Look at your father .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-look at me!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Maude looked.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You don’t suppose I went to that Dilling imbecile’s
-tea because I <span class='it'>liked</span> her—or any of the people there,
-for the matter of that—do you?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Then why did you go?” asked Maude, sullenly.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Why—why—how absurd you are! I went, and
-you will have to go because other people do—because
-it’s the way of Society, because, whether you like it or
-not, it’s THE THING!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>They found Mr. Rufus Sullivan enjoying the fruits
-of the cellar when they reached home.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Blame Gus, not me!” he cried. “Heaven knows
-I’ve tried to take myself off half a dozen times. Is
-this your girl?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Yep,” answered Pratt, his harsh voice softening.
-“This is our baby.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Too big for me to kiss, I suppose,” said Sullivan,
-secretly congratulating himself that this was so.
-Maude bore a striking resemblance to her mother.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mrs. Pratt acknowledged this witticism with a dry
-cackle, and invited the Hon. Member to stay and take
-<span class='it'>pot-pourri</span> with them. She slurred over the words
-cautiously, never quite certain as to the correct application
-of the phrase. Some people, she knew, said pot
-luck, but this had, to her way of thinking, a vulgar
-sound.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“That’s the stuff,” cried Gus. “We can go back to
-the House together after a bite of supper.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Dinner,” corrected his wife, coldly. “You’re quite
-all right as you are, Mr. Sullivan. None of us will
-dress.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I should hope not,” breathed the irrepressible
-Pratt, and drained his glass with a smack. “Sullivan’s
-no party.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As it had been this gentleman’s intention to stay
-and talk with Mrs. Pratt, he demurred politely, calling
-himself an inconsiderate nuisance and other equally
-applicable terms. But in the end he allowed himself
-to be persuaded, and settled down to accomplish the
-object of his coming.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s a great pleasure to meet a woman with so
-keen a sense for politics,” he remarked, speaking to
-Pratt but indicating his wife. Mr. Sullivan was one
-of the few men who could eat and talk at the same
-time, without seeming to give undue preference to
-either operation. “Our Canadian women take shockingly
-little interest in the life of the country.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Don’t blame ’em,” mumbled Pratt, struggling
-with a very hot potato.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Augustus!” Between telegraphing reproach to
-her husband, and directing the maid in what she
-conceived to be the correct serving of a meal, Mrs.
-Pratt’s heavy eyebrows attained a bewildering flexibility.
-“He pretends not to take his position seriously,
-but leave him to me, Mr. Sullivan, leave him to me!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“With confidence, Madam,” returned the Hon.
-Member, gallantly. “Would that I had half so much
-in the other women of the Party. Is it not curious,”
-he went on, “that a politician’s wife rarely appreciates
-the extent of her influence in shaping her husband’s
-career? The parson’s lady identifies herself with his
-interests; the doctor’s wife realises that she can
-attract or repel patients; and only the other day, the
-wife of a small-town banker confided to me that she
-never misses an opportunity for doing a stroke of business
-on her husband’s behalf. As a matter of fact, I
-understand that she was largely responsible for the
-rival institution closing its doors, and leaving the field.
-Yet, a politician’s wife as a rule, seems to take pride
-in holding herself aloof from politics.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Dirty business for a woman,” commented Pratt,
-stroking Maude’s hand underneath the table.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Not a whit dirtier than Society, my dear fellow,
-and there she likes to wallow. Am I not right, Mrs.
-Pratt? As a woman of the world, I feel sure you will
-agree with me.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mrs. Pratt, who desired above all else to be a woman
-of the world, agreed with him, darkly. In this coalition,
-they seemed to form a vague but tacit compact
-from which the recently-elected Member for Ottawa
-was excluded.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What, in your opinion, is the vurry best way for
-a woman to help her husband, politically?” she enquired,
-as they rose from the table.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Sullivan managed to assume an arch expression as
-he pressed her arm, and answered,</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“How can you ask such a question of a mere man?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I can ask anything of anybody when there’s something
-I want to find out,” was the blunt retort. “Gus—Augustus—has
-<span class='it'>got</span> to make good.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“He will! We have the utmost faith in him .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-and may I add, in you. You’ll be a tower of strength
-to Gus, Mrs. Pratt, with your keen sense for politics.
-Only the other evening, I was making this statement
-to my little friend, Mrs. Dilling.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Mrs. Dilling?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Yes. Wife of the Member for Pinto Plains. You
-should know her, Mrs. Pratt. A creature of rare
-beauty and charm.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mrs. Pratt confessed to a slight acquaintance in a
-tone calculated to chill her guest’s enthusiasm. “She
-gave a big tea, this afternoon. Mod and I were there.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Really? I am glad to hear it. You two ought to
-be great friends—with interests that are so nearly
-identical.” As Mrs. Pratt said nothing, the Hon.
-Member continued—somewhat more easily, noting
-that his host and Maude had left the room—“I’m so
-fond of her .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. almost <span class='it'>too</span> fond, I’m afraid! She’s a
-wonderful little woman, Mrs. Pratt—and I’ve known
-a good many in my day. Do you realise that Marjorie
-could simply <span class='it'>make</span> her husband, if she had a tithe of
-your political sense .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. if she only knew how!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You surprise me,” said Mrs. Pratt, and in her tone
-the Hon. Member was gratified to detect the ring of
-truth.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, it’s a fact. Dilling’s a marvel, my dear lady.
-Even the Opposition concede him the respect due a
-powerful antagonist.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“He’s not a bad speaker,” admitted Mrs. Pratt.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“There isn’t a man in the House who can touch
-him! Now, is there?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mrs. Pratt hedged by suggesting that the country
-looked for something more than forensic eloquence.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“A profound remark!” Mr. Sullivan could not
-restrain his admiration. He beamed and stroked his
-knees, deriving from the performance, apparently,
-much satisfaction. “Trust you to dig right down to
-the root of the matter! Not that he hasn’t principles,
-dear lady, and also the courage necessary to express
-them. We mustn’t overlook that. Moreover, it’s
-almost impossible to defeat him in argument .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-Such disconcerting agility of mind, you know. He
-lets the other fellow expend himself in an offensive,
-and then, without apparent effort, stabs and thrusts
-until his opponents fall in regular—er—regular—”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Windrows,” suggested Mrs. Pratt, whose unacknowledged
-relatives were honest farming people.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Windrows, a capital comparison! They fall in
-regular windrows before him. Why, he can prove that
-black is white any day in the week.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Men are fools!” was the lady’s oracular remark.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Unfortunately for them .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. us, I really ought to
-say. I, myself, have felt the force of that young
-man’s power, and I’ve been absolutely putty in his
-hands.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mrs. Pratt drew her lips into a thin, straight line,
-and forbore to comment on this weakness.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The trouble is—as, of course, you are aware—he
-has been trained in a bad school, and it may take some
-time to undo the effect of early education. Then,
-naturally, he’s only human and the wine of success is
-a heady beverage. He’s somewhat determined—”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Mule-ish,” amended Mrs. Pratt.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No, no, I protest,” cried the Hon. Member,
-playfully. “You must not be too hard on the fellow.
-All he needs is a little guidance—perhaps even a shade
-more definite opposition. For example, this elevator
-and freight idea of his .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“G’aranteed to plunge the whole country into roon,”
-interrupted Mrs. Pratt, whose investments were centred
-strictly to the East.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I anticipated you would take the view of the
-better minds,” returned Mr. Sullivan, perceiving that
-the time had come for him to discard the subtler implements
-of finesse, and employ the rough, but honest
-trowel. “But when all’s said and done, it may be
-better to support a man with whose policies we are not
-in accord than to split into groups, and eventually be
-forced from our seats into the benches on the opposite
-side of the house.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mrs. Pratt watched her guest with unmistakable
-bewilderment in her hard blue eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I see that you agree with me,” he went on, “and
-you are probably wondering, just as I am, how soon
-the need will come for us to prove our Party loyalty.
-It can’t be far away, dear lady. I have ten dollars in
-my pocket that says there’ll be a Cabinet vacancy
-before the spring.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And Dilling will get the portfolio!” barked Mrs.
-Pratt, thrown completely off her guard.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What a head you have!” cried Sullivan. “I’ll
-wager there aren’t a dozen men who have suspected it!
-But he needs support .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. he must have it. We must
-stand solidly behind him, for no matter how divergent
-may be our views upon this question of western freight,
-we’ve got to train up a man—a good strong fellow—who
-will sweep the country and be able to step into
-the shoes of the Prime Minister, some day!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Prime Minister!” gasped Mrs. Pratt, and fell to
-preening herself in order that she might hide the
-trembling of her hands.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She hated the Dillings—Raymond for his reputed
-genius, the clear, cold brilliance that would not be
-eclipsed, and Marjorie for her childish friendliness and
-ingratiating ways. The meek might inherit the Kingdom
-of Heaven without provoking her envy, but that
-they should also inherit the earth was a contingency
-that aroused her cold fury.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She saw them sought after, deferred to, taking
-precedence over everyone save the representative of
-the King! Her thoughts fell into narrower channels
-and she pictured Marjorie opening bazaars, lending her
-patronage to this or that gathering of Society’s choicest
-blossoms, arriving at the state where she would be
-unstirred by invitations to Government House!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Under the turquoise velvet, her bosom rose and
-fell, heavily. At the moment she hated her husband
-no less fiercely than she hated the man whom she
-chose to consider his rival. What could Augustus
-carve in the way of a career? How could he ever hope
-to triumph over this aggressive man from the West?
-Where would she be when Marjorie Dilling had become
-the wife of Canada’s young Prime Minister?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The suave voice of Rufus Sullivan fashioned itself
-into words. The first ones she failed to catch, but the
-last pierced her like the point of a white-hot rapier.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. and then, naturally, a title. And how graciously
-she will wear it, eh?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A title .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Mrs. Pratt felt suffocated. A portfolio
-was bad enough; the Premiership was a possibility
-that she could not consider without a cataclysm of
-emotion, but a title .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. the pinnacle of human desire,
-the social and political apogee .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Sir Raymond and Lady Dilling .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Lady Dilling .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She rose abruptly and strode to the door. Pratt
-avoided a collision with difficulty. He was just coming
-in.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No more time for philandering,” he cried, with
-vulgar geniality. “On to Pretoria! Nelson expects
-every man to do his duty!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mrs. Pratt watched their departure with contradictory
-sensations. The Hon. Member for Morroway was
-not the man to spoil a good impression by an inartistic
-exit. He made a graceful adieu, managing to convey
-the idea that, although now and again he might be
-the bearer of news that was disturbing, on the whole
-he was a man who could be mulct by a woman of
-astuteness, of the most intimate and useful information.</p>
-
-<hr class='stars'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Augustus Pratt, M.P., arrived home on the stroke
-of midnight to find his wife and daughter in the midst
-of a litter of stationery, calling lists, telephone and
-Blue Books.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What’s up now?” he demanded, picking his way
-across the floor as one hops over a brook by means of
-stepping stones.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Look at that,” cried his wife, and pointed to the
-evening paper.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Pratt gave his attention to the item indicated. It
-headed the Personal column, and read,</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The following ladies and gentlemen had the
-honour of dining at Government House last evening .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-and Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Dilling.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well,” he yawned, “there’s nothing very startling
-about that! I don’t see the answer.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No! Naturally you wouldn’t!” Mrs. Pratt pounded
-a stamp on an envelope.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The M.P. turned to his daughter. “Tell her old
-dad what it means, little Maudie.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Mother’s giving a big dinner party, on the seventeenth.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, my God!” sighed Augustus. Then, “I’ve got
-to go to Montreal on that date, Minnie—honest, I
-have!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You dare! And listen, Gus, while I think of it;
-if I ever hear that you’ve given one atom of support
-to that Dilling, I’ll have my trunks packed and the
-house closed, before you can get home! Now, don’t
-forget!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Dear, dear!” Pratt assumed an air of panic.
-“What’s the poor beggar been up to now?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“He’s up to getting himself into the Cabinet, if
-men like you don’t want the job, yourselves—that’s
-what he’s up to. And once in the Cabinet, you know
-where he’ll land next.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Where?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“In the Prime Minister’s seat,” returned Mrs. Pratt,
-sourly.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“In the Senate, you mean,” laughed Augustus, and
-pinched Maude’s ear.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Your idea of jokes is sickening,” Mrs. Pratt
-declared. “Sometimes I wonder why I bother with
-you. Now, Mod, read out the names on those envelopes
-down there!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Dutifully, Maude complied .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. “Mr. and Mrs.
-Chesley .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Like enough they won’t come,” interrupted her
-mother. “We’ve never called.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Mr. and Mrs. Long! Mr. and Mrs. Robert
-Hudson .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“There’s another hateful snob. This afternoon I
-could have strangled her!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Truman .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“They say she only goes to Government House,”
-mused Mrs. Pratt. “However, I took a chance. It
-only cost two cents—and you never know.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You bet you’ll never know,” said the Member.
-“Minnie, you’re plain crazy asking all these swells
-that you don’t even know when you see ’em! Why
-don’t we have any <span class='it'>real</span> friends, nowadays?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mrs. Pratt answered with a baleful glance that was
-more eloquent than words. Then, assured that there
-would be no further interference from her husband,
-directed Maude to finish her work.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Sir Eric and Lady Denby .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“They ought to come, anyhow,” she groaned,
-hopefully, “seeing it’s the Party. The Fanshawes, the
-Howarths, Sullivan and Azalea Deane .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. she’s sure
-to come .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. that makes twenty-nine. There’s one
-more envelope, Mod!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Dilling,” read the girl.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Dilling?” echoed her father.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Of course, Augustus. Don’t gape at me in that
-way!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But you just told me—I thought you had your
-knife into the Dillings.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“So I have, you fool!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Then why the hell do you ask them to your party?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mrs. Pratt so forgot herself as to stamp her foot.
-“Can’t you see,” she cried, “that they’re getting on?”</p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER 11.</h2>
-
-<p class='noindent'><span class='dropcap'>F</span>or a time, Dilling was entertained by the visits
-he received from ladies of varying ages and mixed
-intentions. He found their vapoury subterfuges
-or engaging candour equally amusing. But presently,
-this type of diversion, so eagerly welcomed by many
-of his confrères, began to pall, and he developed amazing
-ingenuity in the avoidance of such callers.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He had grown suspicious of “deserving cases,” and
-“ancient grievances”; he found himself totally unsympathetic
-towards the erection of monuments
-commemorating the questionable valour of somebody’s
-obscure progenitors; he could sit absolutely unmoved
-and listen to schemes which were being projected “at
-considerable personal inconvenience,” in order that he
-might attain immortality. The measures he was asked
-to father in the House ranged from the segregation of
-the feeble-minded to prohibition of philandering.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“He’s a cold fish,” complained more than one lady,
-after failing to elicit the smallest response, either to
-her project or her personal charms.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was true that Dilling’s emotional reactions were
-slight, but it was equally true that had they been
-vehement, he would have forced himself to a course of
-conduct commensurate with what he conceived to be
-the demands of national welfare. He never could
-accept the idea that the Government Service was an
-institution in which hundreds of persons—like Mr.
-Deane—might find a comfortable escape from the
-storm and stress of a fruitful life, and render in return
-but a tithe of the work that even their small abilities
-could fairly perform. He never could sympathise with
-the attitude of those who looked upon the public funds
-as private means, and he opposed, in so far as he was
-able, every effort to tap the Dominion Treasury for
-individual gain.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There were times when he thought with discouragement
-about these things; times when he was oppressed
-with the basic insincerity of public life. It was so
-vastly different from what he had imagined! He felt
-himself eternally struggling against the malefic urge of
-partisanship—and partisanship was not always, he
-found, an expression of high principle.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And he saw also that, as his success gathered head,
-petty jealousies—and great—sprang up on every hand.
-The very persons who assisted in his rise would be the
-first, he knew, to herald his downfall. He used to
-think that because a man was prominent, he possessed
-universal good-will, but now he knew that the exact
-reverse obtains.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I am the most unpopular man in the House,” he
-said to Azalea, one evening. “On the floor, they cheer
-and applaud me, but in private or social life, I am
-shunned.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Another woman would have contradicted him.
-Such a course did not occur to Azalea.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Do you mind?” she asked.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He considered a moment.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’m not sure. It seems to me that the popular
-Members don’t <span class='it'>do</span> anything. They’re too busy being
-popular .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. too busy being agreeable to a herd of tireless
-parasites.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Which is quite out of your line, is it not?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, why <span class='it'>should</span> I snivel and crawl?” he defended.
-“One respects a man or one doesn’t. Popularity is,
-after all, only an expression of mob psychology; as
-you know, it is unstable—having either the vaguest of
-excuses, or palpable insincerity behind it.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You mean the insincerity of the person who is
-popular?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Of course! What man feels genuine friendliness
-towards enough people to make him ‘popular’?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Azalea shook her head in the characteristic way
-that implied her resentment against accepting the
-inevitable.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But don’t you feel that a certain amount of studied
-affability is—let us say—necessary to the attainment
-of success in public affairs?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No! I believe with Lincoln that the conduct of a
-statesman—and that is my high ambition, if it be
-God’s will that I attain to it—should be moulded upon
-three principles; ‘malice towards none, charity for all,
-firmness on the right’. These principles are not
-compatible with the flatteries and lightly-regarded
-mendacities of a popular idol. A statesman ought to
-be less of a man and more of an ethical inspiration.
-It’s not an easy ideal to live up to,” he concluded,
-“but at least it’s a clean one, and I think the only one
-that history justifies.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Yes,” repeated Azalea, as though careful that her
-voice should not betray her true opinion, “it’s a very
-clean one.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Recalling that conversation, Dilling found himself
-musing rather pleasantly about Azalea. What a
-curious little creature she was! What a stimulating
-companion! He could not, for the life of him, visualise
-her features, but he could bring to mind many an
-illuminating twist of her thoughts. Times without
-number, he realised, he had invoked her extraordinary
-intuitive powers and transmuted them in the crucible
-of his logic, into what Sullivan was pleased to designate
-as invincibility in debate.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“She’s more than half responsible,” he told himself.
-“I couldn’t have achieved my present position by any
-process of reasoning alone.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He looked over his crowded desk with a sensation
-of helplessness. How could any man, single-handed,
-clear that accumulation away? He wondered if other
-Members allowed their business to get into such a
-distressing tangle, and if they had better luck than he
-when a stenographer came in for a few hours, to reduce
-the congestion?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s this eternal speech-making,” he reflected.
-“That’s what takes so much of my time. I wish .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He left his chair and began to pace about the room,
-surrendering to an access of restlessness that was quite
-foreign to him. Azalea Deane .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. there was the
-solution! Why not? Why should she not come to him
-as a permanent assistant .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. a sort of private secretary?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“She could relieve me of a myriad minor duties,”
-he thought. “Foreign press .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. correspondence .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-research work .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. She’s amazingly accurate .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”
-He smiled as he caught himself suppressing the
-familiar corollary, “for a woman!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Yes, that was the solution! He would ask Azalea
-Deane to work with him. “We’ll get on famously
-together,” he thought. “She’s so quick to catch the
-drift of my intention. She really understands me.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He sat down again, amused at the recollection of
-an original view expressed by Azalea in answer to
-Marjorie, who complained of Ottawa’s persistent misunderstanding.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“There’s no cause for distress in being misunderstood,”
-she had said. “It’s the opposite condition
-that we should dread! Imagine one’s stupidity,
-covetousness and smallness of spirit being laid bare!
-Unthinkable, isn’t it? You mustn’t forget, my dear
-Marjorie, that being misunderstood works both
-ways, and through imperfect understanding we are
-frequently credited with motives and qualities that
-are quite as flattering as we could wish. Heaven
-forfend that I should ever be thoroughly understood!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Dilling applauded her and reminded his wife that
-if men were compelled to write their thoughts and wear
-them as phylacteries on their foreheads, few, indeed,
-would carry themselves bravely in public.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And why should they do that, dear?” Marjorie
-enquired, her pansy eyes clouded with perplexity.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“He is only trying to be clever,” explained Azalea.
-“He is subtly suggesting that if the very best of us
-proclaimed our thoughts upon our foreheads, there
-would be jolly few who didn’t pull their hats low above
-their brows.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Azalea did not wear her thoughts upon her forehead,
-Dilling reflected, and he smiled at his conceit in
-thinking that if she did, they would probably be
-written in a language that was difficult to read! It
-suddenly occurred to him that he knew very little of
-what was passing in Azalea’s mind. His endeavour
-had been directed to an opposite course—assisting her
-to understand what was in his thoughts.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“She’s a curious creature,” he repeated, “a problem.
-But she has rare intelligence and imagination. I need
-her .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. She is necessary for the advancement of my
-work. I can’t concentrate in this hopeless muddle .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The idea excited him more than he realised. In
-planning a schedule for their day’s routine, he did not
-recognise his keen desire for a closer intimacy with the
-girl’s mind, the assurance of her esteem, the stimulus
-of knowing that she expected him to conquer unconquerable
-things. He began to wear down her
-arguments, to win her from possible disinclination.
-She must agree! She must come!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He pictured a scene with her tiresome old father,
-when he should ask not for her hand but for her brain.
-How insensately stubborn the old antiquarian would
-be! How damnably unreasonable!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He consulted his book of appointments .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. not a
-minute Wednesday .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. nor Thursday .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Ah! Mrs.
-Pratt’s dinner party .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Good! He would ask her
-then .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A thin smile touched his features as he said to
-himself,</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If I can move the Opposition in the House, surely
-I can override the objections of Grenville Deane!”</p>
-
-<hr class='stars'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mr. Deane would have swelled with pride had he
-known that his daughter was engaging the attention
-of more than one Parliamentary Member that day.
-In a room above that occupied by Raymond Dilling,
-the thoughts of three other gentlemen bent themselves
-fleetingly upon her.</p>
-
-<hr class='stars'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The fellow’s not only clever,” grumbled Turner,
-“but he’s too damned careful. We’ll have some
-trouble in pinning anything on him.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Sullivan sipped his whisky reflectively. “The
-trouble is that he never meets the right sort of people.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“God knows they go out enough,” protested Howarth.
-“According to the Personals which I’ve read
-conscientiously for several weeks past, they go pretty
-much everywhere.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Because he’s become the vogue, in a manner of
-speaking,” said Sullivan. “But that won’t do us any
-good. It won’t last long enough. Socially, they are
-failures and always will be .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Mark my words, the
-time will come when they will be asked only because
-their political position requires recognition, not for
-their personal charm. Church-workers and unambitious
-obscurities will be their particular friends .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-her particular friends, perhaps I should say. He won’t
-have any.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Still, he’ll meet some interesting women,” objected
-Turner.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I grant it, but not deliberately interesting,”
-returned Sullivan, with a wink. “In other words, he
-won’t stumble into a trap. He’ll have to be led into
-it.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Why won’t he stumble?” Howarth asked. “Other
-men do.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“His temperament is a safeguard, for one thing.
-He is not sufficiently attracted by women to go exploring,
-and only those who wander into unfamiliar places
-get caught in traps.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Howarth remarked that his wife had reported a
-warm friendship between the Dillings and the Deane
-girl.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Yes,” said Sullivan, “I’ve been watching that.
-Mrs. D. tells me that he admires the girl intensely.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Humph!” commented Turner.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’ve never met the lady,” said Howarth, “but
-judging from her looks I should think that a man’s
-intensity of feeling for her could not be much more
-than a mild passion of the imagination.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Sullivan laughed. “That’s not bad for you, Billy.
-I’ll go even further and opine that Dilling’s intensity
-of feeling for anyone will be like the passion of a fried
-sole! However, the Deane girl won’t do.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What about de Latour’s daughter?” suggested
-Howarth. “She looks clever, and might help, ‘for the
-sake of the Party,’ as our estimable Lady Denby says.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Good God, Billy,” groaned Sullivan. “We don’t
-want anyone who <span class='it'>looks</span> clever! Don’t you know me
-better than that?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, the sweet young thing should be easy to
-find,” said Turner.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No good, either. In the first place, it’s hard to
-find one with any sense, and in the second, he gets
-that type as a daily diet.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Those Carmichael girls seem to be consistent
-winners,” suggested Turner, once more. “Some brains,
-and good looks .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Too young,” said the old campaigner. “Undependable!
-Kids are apt to lose their heads and weaken,
-when it comes to using the scalping knife. First thing
-we know, they’d give the whole show away. No,” he
-went on, reflectively, “what we want is a regular
-stunner, who’ll stick right at the game until she has
-his scalp at her belt .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. a woman of the world, you
-know, chock full of horse sense and able to handle men
-with as little difficulty as an expert trainer handles cats.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There was a short silence.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I can’t think of anybody,” Turner’s tone was
-sodden with discouragement.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Nor I,” said Howarth. “Haven’t you got anybody
-up your sleeve, Sullivan?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Hon. Member for Morroway modestly admitted
-that there was a lady of his acquaintance who
-combined all these alluring vices.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Either of you ever heard of Mrs. Barrington?” he
-enquired.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Turner thumped his approval. Howarth took his
-satisfaction more cautiously.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’ve seen the dame. Kind of flashy, eh?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Tastes differ,” replied his friend.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Just moved here lately, hasn’t she?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Sullivan nodded.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Hangs round the House a good deal, trying to
-put something over for her husband, I’ve heard.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You’re remarkably well informed, Billy,” mocked
-the older man.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Did you ever know her before?” asked the unabashed
-Howarth.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Sullivan confessed to a previous acquaintance.
-“Her mother’s first husband was my sister’s brother-in-law.
-So, you see, she’s a sort of relation.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Not too close to be interesting,” observed Turner,
-who had his private opinion about Sullivan’s relations.
-“Has she been sounded? Do you think she’ll take on
-the job?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Member for Morroway was hopeful, “provided,”
-he said, “she is not absorbed in any other
-emotional adventure. They are chronic.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Is that the only provision?” Howarth wanted to
-know.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well—er—as you, yourself, remarked, she seems
-to be determined to get Barrington a nice, cushioned
-berth in which he will be well protected against the
-rigours of enervating toil. I understand that she
-fancies the Chairmanship of the Improvement Commission.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>William Howarth, M.P., expressed relief, and the
-opinion that this was “pie”.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“We’ll just put little Augustus Pratt on the job,”
-he said. “How soon could we see the lady?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Sullivan didn’t doubt that she was somewhere in
-the House at the moment.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You trot along and find her, then,” urged the
-other. “Bring her up here and let’s hold a friendly
-little conference. The sooner we get her started on
-this escapade, the sooner our young friend will lose his
-head!”</p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER 12.</h2>
-
-<p class='noindent'><span class='dropcap'>A</span> light but insistent tapping put an end to
-Dilling’s reflections.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Come in!” he called, impatiently, and
-turned towards the window as if intent upon the landscape.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There was a slight pause, and then, like a well-timed
-bit of stage business, a woman stood framed in
-the open door.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Dilling appreciated the dramatic note even while
-he resented it. On general principles he despised the
-theatrical.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, I <span class='it'>am</span> lucky!” cried his visitor, in a well-disciplined
-contralto. “I scarcely dared hope to find
-you alone. Every atom of courage I possessed oozed
-out of my finger-tips at the thought of interrupting a
-secret caucus, or some other of the dark conspiracies
-that are supposed to occupy our Members’ time!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She advanced and extended an ungloved hand.
-Dilling touched her fingers without speaking.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“My name is Hebe Barrington,” she went on,
-“Mrs. Arthur, on my calling cards, you know .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. and
-I’m here on a desperately serious mission. Its success
-means everything to me, and you, yourself, Mr. Dilling,
-have buoyed me up with the hope that I shall not fail.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She shifted her position slightly, contriving to draw
-her skirt close about her long, slender limbs like a sheath.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But Dilling was not looking. He had taken a
-penknife from his pocket, and was giving First Aid to
-an untutored finger-nail.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“How shall I begin?” she went on, watching him
-from beneath her lashes. It was one of her prettiest
-gestures.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Perhaps, if you made some notes and sent them
-to me—”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, please!” she protested. “That’s heartless of
-you. And <span class='it'>do</span> sit down! I can’t think while you wear
-that ‘Time’s up’ expression. It drives every idea from
-my head. I tell you frankly, Mr. Dilling, I expected
-you would be much more kind.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She flung him a smile that had dazzled many
-another man. Dilling received it with indifference, in
-a wholly unprecedented manner. Mrs. Barrington
-found the experience somewhat disconcerting.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In his expression there was no appreciation of her
-loveliness. Neither was there the disapproval that
-betokens a recognition of it, or a sign of that wariness
-by which man betrays his knowledge of its danger.
-There was nothing.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the abstract, Dilling saw men as trees, walking,
-but women he saw scarcely at all. Emotionally, he
-was vestigial. Artistically, he was numb. Beauty in
-any form registered only through his outward eye.
-He missed the inner vision that should have quickened
-his soul.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mrs. Barrington was not an unfamiliar figure to
-him, although he had never been sufficiently interested
-to ask her name. Frequently, of late, he had seen her
-in the restaurant, or in the corridors, sometimes surrounded
-by a group of Parliamentary gallants, and
-sometimes in earnest tete-a-tete with just one man.
-If he thought of her at all, it was to conclude that
-like other women who haunt the House, she was engaged
-in the popular occupation known as lobbying,
-and he felt an instinctive opposition to whatever
-request she might be about to make.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On her part, Mrs. Barrington felt the disappointment
-of one who has been unexpectedly repulsed at the
-first line of attack, and sees the necessity for finer
-strategy. She laid aside the ineffectual weapon of
-physical charm, and took up the subtler blade of
-flattery.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I have come to you,” she said, “because you are
-not only essentially, but so patently, sincere. Not
-your speeches alone, but your whole manner, proclaim
-it. I suppose that is a good deal to say of a politician,
-is it not?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“By no means!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“There is little evidence to the contrary! Most of
-them rant about a loftier patriotism, service for the
-public weal that knows no respite and the realisation
-of a higher idealism for Twentieth Century Canada,
-but their actual performances are not marked with the
-large disinterestedness they profess. You are different.
-Perhaps you won’t like my saying so, Mr. Dilling, but
-as you sit in the House, surrounded by your colleagues,
-yours is a noticeably solitary figure. I felt it the
-instant I saw you, and the impression has grown
-steadily stronger .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. with reason. You have brought
-a different element into politics, Mr. Dilling. Like
-Disraeli, you are on the side of the angels! You have
-brought what I call practical spirituality, a force that
-can and will defeat materialism, if—if—you do not get
-discouraged, and tired of struggling on, alone.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Aren’t you rather disheartening?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The question was asked with such utter unconcern
-that Mrs. Barrington could not deceive herself into
-thinking she had made an impression. Had Dilling
-taken her seriously, or accorded her half the sincerity
-she professed to impute to him, he would have been
-unconscionably embarrassed. As matters stood, her
-words, like her beauty, failed to touch him. He heard
-them as he heard agreeable music, without annoyance,
-but without pleasure. It was said of him, that once,
-in Pinto Plains, when asked if he enjoyed piano playing
-he had answered, “Oh, I don’t mind it!” and he
-could aptly have applied the same phrase to this
-woman’s conversation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He didn’t mind it! He was listening without
-giving particular heed to what she said. He knew
-that she had come to ask a favour, and he was not
-sufficiently amenable to feminine wiles to lose sight of
-the methods of a shrewd campaigner.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I may be disheartening,” he heard her say, “but
-I am sincere. Would you have me pretend—tell you
-how popular you are, and how certain to become the
-idol of the people? Do you not remember that the
-Cæsars and Lincolns of history have been slandered
-and slain by their friends and compatriots, and can
-you hope to escape a similar fate at the hands of our
-people—even though despotism is not tempered with
-assassination here, as it was a hundred years ago in
-Russia?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Dilling was conscious of a flicker of interest. It
-was curious, he reflected, that this woman should have
-come to him and given expression to the very thoughts
-that had been uppermost in his mind. He wondered
-whether she had been talking to Azalea.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And what has all this to do with your mission?”
-he asked, closing his penknife with a snap.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Everything!” she cried, vehemently. “Everything
-depends upon the honesty behind your protestations,
-upon the fact that you are not merely content
-to talk about idealism, but will work to see it blossom
-throughout the country. Moreover, I have counted
-on your vision, your ability to see the benefit of what,
-to others, may look like an impractical measure. Any
-other type of man would laugh at me,” she added.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She stopped and waited for him to speak. But he
-made no comment.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He was not insensible to the cleverness with which
-she assembled her points. There was about her address
-a climacteric quality that compelled his admiration.
-But her speech fell flat because he failed to pick up
-his cues. The obvious retort that she must have
-anticipated, was never spoken; so each pause was
-pregnant with the suggestion of finality, of failure.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I felt as though I were being driven, blindfold,
-along a crooked passage,” she said, later, in describing
-the interview to Sullivan. “Each time I turned a
-corner, some one rose and struck me in the face, so
-that I reeled and lost my bearings and had to wait a
-bit in order to recover myself and my sense of direction.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Dilling half suspected this. He did not, however,
-assume a difficult and disinterested manner, deliberately,
-nor did he act with conscious rudeness. He simply
-felt no curiosity in Mrs. Barrington nor in the object
-of her visit, and no obligation to pretend that he did.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I have come to you,” she said, again, “because
-you are the embodiment of all the qualities I have
-mentioned. Your sympathy, I take for granted, for
-the reason that the cause I plead is a spiritual cause,
-Mr. Dilling. I am asking for the development of a
-nation’s soul.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This response, though almost imperceptible, affected
-the woman as applause breaking suddenly over an
-unfriendly house, stimulates an actor to greater
-achievement. She left her chair and stood before him,
-a vision of aggressive beauty. She nearly lost herself
-in the part she was playing, and allowed impulse
-rather than design to dominate the moment.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“We admit that in the fierce struggle for existence,
-a young country must concern itself primarily with
-material problems, and that the song of the spirit is
-often stifled by the cry of hungry children. But has
-not the day arrived for us when our thought, and at
-least a small part of our resources, should be devoted
-to providing nourishment for the Canadian soul? I
-know that this sounds like the spell-binder’s affluence
-of speech, but, believe me, Mr. Dilling, I have a
-practical proposition behind it.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well?” said Dilling, without enthusiasm.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She pointed to the Little Theatre movement, to
-various literary and dramatic organisations that have
-sprung up throughout the Dominion, as a proof that
-we are seeking a means of artistic expression, for
-spiritual development, that we are feeling a reaction
-from the wave of materialism which, in these times,
-holds the land in thrall. “In a word,” she said, “we
-are looking for happiness, only just realising that we
-have striven without it all these years. We are not a
-happy nation, Mr. Dilling.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Show me a more prosperous one,” he cried.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Ah! But there’s our trouble. Prosperity and
-happiness may lie at opposite poles. The one is of
-the earth and its fulness, the other of the spirit, and
-in our pursuit of the former, we too frequently forget
-the needs of the latter. Happiness depends upon the
-emotions, Mr. Dilling, and Canadians have almost
-suffocated theirs.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Obviously, the spark of interest she had ignited
-had turned to ashes. He was silent, so she hurried on.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“We need Art—the medium through which spirituality
-flows into the life of man. We want to hear
-the symphonies of our composers, the songs of our
-poets, as well as the throb and thunder of motor
-factories and power plants. I would ask the Government
-to recognise the organisations that are endeavouring
-to promote artistic creation, and to give financial
-assistance to the conspicuously talented artists throughout
-the Dominion!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Hold on!” cried Dilling, stung into repelling this
-premeditated attack upon the National Treasury.
-“We maintain a big Gallery out at the Museum.
-We subsidise Art.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Yes,” she countered, quickly, “but not the artist.
-What you do only goes to swell the pay-roll of the
-Civil Service .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. You don’t go far enough! Hasn’t
-the Government helped to build up the industries of
-this country? Has it not pap-fed factories and commercial
-enterprises of various kinds? You know it
-has! If I should want a water-power for some silly
-little saw-mill, shall I not have it from my Province,
-for the asking? There’s not a doubt of it! Yet, no
-one thinks of providing a greater power and one
-whereby this growing unrest can be composed. We
-are making a great point of conserving our natural
-resources, but who thinks of conserving our <span class='it'>spiritual</span>
-resources, Mr. Dilling? We need the one no less than
-the other. Men are reaching out towards Art!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Government is organised to legislate for peace
-and order in the community.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Aristotle said that Government was organised to
-make people happy. I scarcely think we have made
-good along his principles, do you?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You can’t legislate people into happiness.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No! But you can provide the things that will
-create that state of mind. I should like to see a
-National Theatre, Mr. Dilling, in which the struggles
-and triumphs of Canada might be told by her own sons
-and daughters. Love of our common country can be
-fostered in no happier way. Let us have annual prizes
-for excelling talent in the Arts, and Science, and
-Literature!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Have we any poets worth recognising?” interrupted
-Dilling.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Ah, I knew you would make that objection!”
-cried Hebe Barrington. “I knew that your thoughts
-would fly at once to Milton, and Keats, and Shelley .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-and the greatest of them all, Shakespeare. You
-immediately compare us with the immortals, and feel
-that we lose by the comparison. I don’t profess to
-offer you a Homer or a Sappho. But there were lesser
-poets in Athens whom Pericles favoured at the expense
-of the people’s purse. It’s harder for poetry and the
-Arts to flourish to-day, than two thousand years ago—Oh,
-don’t you see, <span class='it'>we</span> need a National Theatre?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s an idea,” conceded Dilling, with caution.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Hebe Barrington was clever. She did not press her
-slight advantage but prepared to beat a strategic
-retreat.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I knew that you would see it,” she cried. “How
-else can we make idealism real save by expressing it
-first through Art and then weaving it into our practical
-experiences? How else can we keep alive the traditions
-that have given us our Empire? How teach them to
-the young? I am full of schemes for working this
-thing out. May I come to see you again—or better
-still,” she amended, watching him intently with her
-great, soft eyes, “will you come to me, say this day
-week?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If you like,” he said, opening the door.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Presently, he opened the window, too. The room
-was close with a heavy, sweetish odour that offended
-him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He looked down the river, past the Mint and the
-Archives. Catching sight of the smoke-clouded roof
-of Earnscliffe—once the stately residence of Sir John
-Macdonald—he fell to wondering what the Grand Old
-Man would have said to such a proposition .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A National Theatre!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Greeks, he remembered, spared neither time
-nor money on their dramatic temple, which was free!
-On the other hand, the Canadian theatre was almost
-prohibitive in point of admission fee, and far from
-being the object of Governmental support, it was
-controlled by a group of Semitic gentlemen whose
-habitat was Broadway and whose taste reflected anything
-but a Canadian National spirit. In Rome,
-Mommens had taught him, there were fewer occupations
-more lucrative than those of actor and dancer—Roscius,
-one of the former, receiving the equivalent of
-$30,000 as his annual income, and Dionysia, a fairy-footed
-maid, $10,000 yearly—more than twice the
-amount of his Parliamentary indemnity!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Why should Canada not have her theatre?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He had dreamed of leisure to write—a drama of
-the West. Often he had pictured its theme unfolding
-in a mighty spectacle that would rival those of Ancient
-Rome, when six hundred mules passed in review across
-the stage of a military pageant, and whole armies were
-in requisition to give verisimilitude to a production.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He saw vast herds of buffalo and cattle; he heard
-the thunder of their flying hoofs and the yells of the
-pursuing Red Men. From the south and east, troops
-of devil-may-care cowboys burst upon the scene. The
-whirr of arrows, the snap of rifles, beat across his consciousness.
-And as the play progressed, over the
-flaming prairie there crawled a slow, white streak,
-coming to a halt at last in what looked like the heart
-of infinity. And presently, there appeared a tiny
-farm.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Deep in moonlit gorges, Dilling saw fur traders,
-whiskey smugglers, Indians, and cattle thieves, threading
-a cautious way. Then came the flash of scarlet
-coats and diminishing disorder.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And along the trails made by the thirsty buffalo,
-followed by wary Red Men, rediscovered by ambitious
-young surveyors who found that wisdom was born in
-brute, and even in primeval man, before it made its
-way to books, the railway flung its slender arms across
-an infant nation; and settlers came hard upon the
-heels of construction crews, a strange assortment who
-spoke their parts in the music of unfamiliar, polyglot
-tongues.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And on the site of some forgotten Indian encampment,
-where patient squaws pounded out their corn,
-there grew a field of wheat which gave way to a small
-settlement, and then a town where gigantic storehouses
-now husbanded the grain!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Ah, God, the glamour of the West—his West!
-Suddenly, it sang in his blood, it shone in his eyes, it
-dazzled him and provoked emotions that no woman
-had ever stirred.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A National Theatre? Well, it certainly was an
-idea, but he must not be intrigued by it; there was no
-hurry. The proposition needed thinking .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Dilling
-crossed the room, took the receiver from its hook and
-called up Azalea. He was unaccountably disappointed
-to learn that she was out.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He realised with a sense of shock that she was the
-only friend he had made since coming to the Capital.
-At the moment, he felt that she was more than a
-friend .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. that she was a necessity. But he resisted
-this weakness as he would have resisted dependence
-upon a stimulant or sedative. Dilling liked to believe
-in his self-sufficiency, his detachment from all human
-ties. He could not deny, however, that Azalea fed
-him intellectually—food convenient for him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“She feeds my mind,” he repeated, surprised that
-this should be so. “Isn’t it curious that she should
-possess this power .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” It was all he asked of God.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>His feeling was one that did honour to Platonism
-and now, as he sat reflecting upon it, Raymond Dilling
-wondered just what Azalea thought of him. Did she
-think his standards worthy of his calling? Had she
-faith in his singleness of purpose, and did she commend
-his policy for its wisdom? Or could she have misunderstood
-him, read into his unashamed confessions, the
-easy cant of him who makes a profession of sincerity?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He had taken for granted that she was in accord
-with his political creed, that she appreciated his native
-worth; but never before had he asked himself the
-question .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. did she like him? He had no assurance
-that she did. Admitting her acceptance of him upon
-his own terms, so to speak, might she not feel for him
-as we so often feel towards estimable persons whose
-blameless characters inspire us with nothing but
-respectful tolerance? On the other hand, suppose she
-did not regard him as a worthy figure, would she dislike
-him? Are there not natures to whom an impostor
-presents a personality unreasonably appealing? Has
-not the world had its Casanovas and Cagliostros?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>What manner of man did Azalea like? What type
-stirred her rich imagination?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>These unanswerable questions provoked him to an
-unwonted consideration of the girl, but he failed to
-recollect an occasion when she had revealed her inner
-thoughts and aspirations to him. What heart throbs,
-he asked himself, pulsed beneath that strange, drab
-exterior? What spirit wounds were covered with the
-cuirass of her whimsical satire? What was her philosophy
-of life, and what did she really think of him?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He had no idea, but he did know that he wished to
-be her friend.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Dilling couldn’t recall ever formulating a definite
-opinion on the subject of friendship, and he was not
-at all sure what Azalea might require of him. Sympathy,
-he mused, might be helpful in times of strain,
-but he was not prepared to admit that friendships were
-vital. A man could—perhaps should—be independent
-of their fetters, unseeking and unsought. Friendship
-had its rise in the emotions according to philosophers,
-and was therefore a weakness. Yet, was it? History
-showed that great men transmuted it into strength.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Which would it be for him, a weakness or a source
-of strength? And if the latter, how best could he
-convert its power into fuel for his energy?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He looked at his watch. Almost time for lunch.
-Azalea should be at home now, he thought. Again,
-he turned to the telephone.</p>
-
-<hr class='stars'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the room above, Mrs. Barrington was eagerly
-accepting a whisky and soda from the hospitable
-Member for Morroway.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You look as though a little stimulant would do
-you no harm,” observed Howarth, busily attentive
-with the cigarettes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Without it, I shan’t last till sundown,” returned
-the woman. “Never have I spent such a half hour .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-and never again!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Difficult, eh?” asked Sullivan.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Impossible! Why, Uncle Rufus, that man’s not
-human! Heaven knows, I’m not a vain woman,” she
-declared, “but for all the notice he took of me, he
-might have been a graven image, or I might have been
-one of the shrieking sisterhood! There wasn’t a smile
-.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. there wasn’t a flicker of response! I kept thinking
-all the time of Congreve, and his <span class='it'>Lady Wishfort</span> trying
-to captivate that stupid ass, old <span class='it'>Mirabell</span>!” Her full
-voice trembled with excitement and anger. Into her
-cheeks flooded a wave of natural colour, beneath their
-expertly applied rouge. “I’m through .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I’m through,”
-she cried. “He made me think of a eunuch contemplating
-a statue of Venus!”</p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER 13.</h2>
-
-<p class='noindent'><span class='dropcap'>M</span>rs. Pratt stood in the hard glitter of too
-many electric lights, in a hard, encrusted green
-gown, and greeted her guests with a hard, set
-smile that froze any budding sense of enjoyment they
-may have brought with them. Maude was silent and
-sullen. She had caught the backwash of her mother’s
-ill-temper throughout two trying weeks, and the party
-had become a nightmare to her. Augustus, miserable
-in his evening clothes, and perspiring under the weight
-of admonitions that warred with his sense of hospitality,
-watched her in a passion of sympathy. After a succession
-of violent scenes, he was dolorously conscious that
-he and Maude together, were no match for the determined
-woman whom he had meekly followed to the
-altar.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“She’s got too damned much gulp,” he thought to
-himself, wondering how to reduce this hampering
-characteristic in his daughter.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A vigorous jab in the side reminded him that
-something was amiss. “Eh, my dear?” he whispered.
-“What’s wrong?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Take your hands out of your pockets, Augustus,”
-hissed Mrs. Pratt, “and don’t you dare to call Dr.
-Prendergast, ‘Doc’!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Doctor and Missus Bzen-an-Bza-a!” announced
-Cr’ymer, from the door.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Cr’ymer was a very recent acquisition to the Pratt
-ménage. Mrs. Pratt would have preferred a Japanese
-but for once she was overruled by her husband, who
-harboured the malicious belief that every man of
-foreign birth, especially negroes and Orientals, look
-upon the women of our race with lascivious eyes. So
-when Cr’ymer applied, and upheld his cleverly-forged
-reference with a plausible story, Mrs. Pratt engaged
-him—bibulous mien and Cockney accent, notwithstanding.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Having been but a few weeks in the city, and most
-of that time comfortably soothed by vinous refreshment,
-Cr’ymer was not conversant with the names of
-social Ottawa, and even had he been, it is doubtful
-that those of Mrs. Pratt’s guests would have been
-familiar to him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“How d’ye do?” asked Mrs. Prendergast, annoyed
-to find that no one else had arrived. There was a
-suggestion of over-eagerness in being early.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“How do yuh do?” returned Mrs. Pratt, wishing
-that she was Lady Elton or someone worth while.
-“Sit down, won’t you? I think you’ll find any of my
-chairs comfortable, and there’s no need for you to stand
-because we have to .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. The others can’t be long, now.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“They can if they choose,” remarked Dr. Prendergast,
-who liked his dinner in the middle of the day and
-a substantial supper at six o’clock. “Never saw anything
-to beat the people, to-day. They don’t start
-out till it’s time for decent folks to be in bed. Things
-get later and later. Shouldn’t be surprised to see the
-hour for dinner set at eleven o’clock .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Outrageous!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, with so many engagements to crowd in of
-an afternoon, and with the House sitting till six o’clock,
-it’s vurry difficult to dine much earlier than seven
-o’clock,” argued Mrs. Pratt. “Oh, here are the Leeds.
-How do yuh do? Augustus, meet Mrs. Leeds!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“How do?” mumbled Augustus, and prayed for the
-coming of the cocktails, which, as an antidote for the
-concoctions of an atrocious cook, he had made extra
-strong.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mrs. Pratt aspired to a good cook, by which she
-meant a person who could disguise the most familiar
-comestibles so that recognition was impossible. Personally,
-she liked plain and wholesome cooking. Most
-people do. But she laboured under the misapprehension
-that members of the aristocracy ate strange and
-undistinguishable dishes; moreover, that the degree of
-exaltation which one had attained, was evident by the
-kind of food one ate. For example, she could not
-conceive of His Majesty enjoying a rasher of liver and
-bacon, nor a Duke sitting down to the staple pork
-and beans so familiar to the humble farming class.
-Long hours she pondered the question of food, rising
-gradually through the ragouts and rissoles, ramakins
-and casseroles, to ravioli, caviare, canapes and the
-bewildering <span class='it'>aux</span> and <span class='it'>a la’s</span> that make a wholesome
-menu so picturesque and indigestible.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The cook that Mrs. Pratt had in mind, was one
-who had served at least an Earl, and had titillated
-the palates of his class. But at that time—now half a
-decade past—social distinctions were drawn quite as
-finely in the kitchen as the drawing-room, and the
-woman who would exchange her culinary gifts and
-aristocratic associations for the wages of a mistress
-not even an Honourable in her own right, had not
-been found.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The hour set for dinner had past. In the drawing-room,
-a noticeable chill tempered the atmosphere.
-Mrs. Pratt was not an easy hostess. The word
-“entertaining” was, for her, the most perfect euphemism,
-and in ordinary circumstances, she would have
-taken satisfaction rather than pleasure by gathering
-people at her home. On this occasion, she was denied
-satisfaction, and a rising resentment gave her far from
-gracious manner an added acerbity. Conversation
-lost all semblance to spontaneity, and every eye seemed
-to be fixed upon Mrs. Pratt, who sat stiffly on a Louis
-Quinze chair and hoped that Rufus Sullivan was
-sensible of her displeasure.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She blamed him for this contretemps. It was he
-who had asked her to invite the Barringtons, laying
-delicate emphasis upon their social importance no less
-than upon their importance to the Party.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Strangers,” he said, “but excellently connected
-and frightfully smart—rather too smart for parochial
-Ottawa, I fear, dear lady! However, they’re well
-worth cultivating, and a clever woman could make no
-little use of Hebe Barrington.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Certainly, she was not difficult to know. Her
-acceptance of Mrs. Pratt’s laboured and formal
-invitation—delivered for lack of time by telephone—was
-so casual as to startle that good lady. This was
-not her conception of the manners of the elect.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And now they were quite fifteen minutes late.
-Mrs. Pratt’s anger rose.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She had just decided to proceed to the dining-room
-without them, when there was a furious ring at the
-bell, a hurried step on the stair, and Cr’ymer signalled
-her that they had arrived.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“My dear Mrs. Pratt,” cried Hebe, sweeping forward,
-“<span class='it'>is</span> there an apology profound enough to touch
-the hearts of your guests—not to mention your husband
-and yourself? How do you do, Mr. Pratt?
-And your daughter .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. why, you dear child, kiss me!
-Fortune has indeed smiled upon this family .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Mr.
-Dilling? What a delightful surprise .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Mrs.
-Pratt,” she went on, bowing and smiling impartially,
-drawing everyone about her, if not actually, at least
-by suggestion, “<span class='it'>do</span> tell me that I am to sit next to
-Mr. Dilling, and—” with an arch glance at her host,
-“not too far from Mr. Pratt!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Mr. Dilling is to take you in to dinner,” replied
-the hostess, tartly.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The cocktails, supplementing Mrs. Barrington’s
-entrance, infused new life into the party. Most of
-those present walked from the drawing-room in a
-pleasant frame of mind.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“They say that society is divided into two classes,”
-said Hebe, as they took their places at the table, “those
-who have more dinners than appetite, and those who
-have more appetite than dinners. I don’t know that
-I should confess it, but I belong to the latter class.
-I’m always ready for a meal .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Ah, what a charming
-room this is!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>With one or two exceptions, the guests were unpleasantly
-impressed by this expression of frank
-admiration. According to their canons of etiquette,
-personal remarks were not The Thing. But if the
-impulse to make one proved utterly irresistible, then
-it should be prefaced by some such phrase as,</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If I may be pardoned for saying so, that is a
-beautiful .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” or, “I hope you won’t be offended if I
-pass a remark on your .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Even Mrs. Pratt was only slightly mollified. The
-personnel of her dinner party differed radically from
-what she had designed. Indeed, of the eleven guests
-who took their places at the table, there were but
-three whose names had figured on her original list of
-invitations. Besides, she was not conscious of the
-instinctive liking for Mrs. Barrington that Sullivan
-had predicted. Quite the contrary! In the first
-place, she disapproved of her gown—a shimmering
-sheath of opalescent sequins infinitely more striking
-than that which Mrs. Pratt herself was wearing. In
-the second place, she did not like a(nother) woman to
-monopolise the conversation. In the third place, she
-objected to the manner in which Augustus was being
-captivated right under her very eyes, and these were
-but a few of the items that she set down upon her
-mental score. But that Mrs. Barrington was smart
-could not be denied; and as illustrious names slipped
-artfully into the recital of her experiences and associations,
-most of the assembled company found themselves
-giving her a grudging respect. There were four exceptions—the
-Dillings, Sullivan and Azalea.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’m sure I’ve heard of you, Dr. Prendergast,” she
-glowed at that gentleman. “But where, or from whom,
-I simply can’t remember. I have the most dreadful
-habit of forgetting names .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. if it weren’t for Toddles,
-there, I’d forget my own. He’s just as good at remembering
-as I am at forgetting, so we manage famously,
-eh, my fond love?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Barrington hid a smile and mumbled something
-that passed for an answer. He was a delightful little
-man who had become accustomed to his wife’s brilliant
-impertinences, and rather enjoyed them when they
-were not carried too far.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He had not been taken into her confidence, of late,
-but suspected that she had some telling reason for
-imposing these curious people and this abominable
-dinner upon him. It was his nature to be amiable
-under trying circumstances, so he made himself agreeable
-to the ladies on either side, and tried to look upon
-the occasion as a bit of a lark. Mrs. Leeds was not
-lacking in charm—a pale little creature whose mouth
-had a discontented droop and who was ashamed or
-afraid to meet her husband’s eyes. She talked bridge
-throughout the evening, bewailing the sums she had lost
-because someone at the table had failed to bid or to
-play according to the rules of the game. It was quite
-distressing to hear her re-play hands that should have
-added to her score below the line, but which built the
-tower for her opponents.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“For example,” she said, under cover of Dr.
-Prendergast’s monologue, “only last night, the most
-unheard-of thing happened! I declared no trump.
-Though weak in spades I had every suit protected,
-and was perfectly justified in my declaration. The
-man on my left bid two spades. My partner passed,
-telling me he had no protection in that suit, but I felt
-safe in raising to two no trump, because, supposing
-that the bidder held ace, king to five, <span class='it'>at least</span>, I knew
-that my queen was sufficiently guarded by two little
-ones. Do you follow me?” she asked, anxiously.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Perfectly,” lied Barrington. “And then what
-happened?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, the bidder led the seven of spades. My
-partner laid down his hand which only held the ten.
-Picture my horror when this woman—” she indicated
-an imaginary third player “—took the trick with the
-ace, and then <span class='it'>led the Jack through my Queen</span>! Of course,
-my hand was shot absolutely to bits. They took five
-straight spade tricks and two in diamonds before I had
-a look in. Time after time, I am penalised just that
-way by playing with imbeciles who don’t know how to
-bid.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Rotten luck,” sympathised Barrington. “What
-the devil is this we are eating?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mrs. Prendergast was the simplest person to entertain.
-When not giving undivided attention to her
-husband, she was entrusting to her sympathetic partner
-a list of his outstanding virtues as a citizen, husband
-and father.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>What “the Dawkter” thought and said provided
-her with an inexhaustible topic for conversation.
-Apparently she had no opinions of her own, but, as
-her husband was quite willing to listen to the echo of
-his oracles, they were an exceedingly happy couple.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Doctor was a generous-waisted gentleman
-whose talents exercised themselves in the field of
-proprietary medicine. <span class='sc'>Prendergast’s Anti-Agony
-Aliment</span> was just beginning to fraternise with Best
-Wear Tires, Breakfast Foods and Theatrical Attractions
-on the bill boards. Presently, however, as a
-result of sapient advertising and the deplorable ignorance
-of English by the people who speak it, “aliment”
-merged into “ailment” and <span class='sc'>Prendergast’s Anti-Agony
-Ailment</span> became the popular specific for those
-to whom all advertising makes direct appeal.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And so carefully generalised was the nature of the
-disorder it was supposed to correct that the decoction
-was consumed indiscriminately by sufferers from
-rheumatism, chilblains, dyspepsy, sciatica, high blood
-pressure and sclerosis. According to the testimonials
-that made their way into the press it did many people
-.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. good.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Doctor’s mind was full of human ills, and the
-value of advertising. To the latter he was a recent
-convert, and inevitably fanatical. Requiring several
-thousand dollars to carry on his campaign, he was
-doing his best to bring the others to his point of view.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>With the exception of Mrs. Barrington, no one gave
-him any encouragement. Throughout three entire
-courses, she murmured, “Incredible! Amazing! It
-sounds like a fairy tale!” at moments when he might
-have given some one else an opportunity to speak, and
-started him off again with renewed zest and vigour.
-Under cover of his eloquence, she talked to Raymond
-Dilling.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Dilling was suffering acute mental and physical
-distress. Fastidious always about his food, he could
-not eat the dishes put before him, and the little bit he
-did manage to swallow was flavoured with the scent
-which Hebe Barrington perpetually exuded. Positively,
-he would have preferred the odour of moth balls.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He had never seen a woman so naked .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. not even
-his wife. Marjorie emphasised a characteristic which
-she called modesty and, having no curiosity whatever
-about the human form, Dilling respected her reserve.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He sat at the corner of the table, next to Mrs.
-Pratt, and found that he could not escape contact
-with the warm mundanity of Mrs. Barrington. Although
-the table was not crowded, she seemed to give
-him no room. Once or twice, he shuddered, and she
-mistaking his movement, smiled provocatively into his
-eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You haven’t forgotten about Monday afternoon?”
-she whispered. “I’ve been thinking of it all week.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Dilling had forgotten.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“There’s really nothing to be gained by discussing
-the proposition yet,” he said. “We’ve been so
-busy in the House, I haven’t had time to think about
-it.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No matter. We can become friends,” she murmured,
-significantly. “Can’t we?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A sudden silence relieved him of the necessity to
-answer. Dr. Prendergast had run down, and was looking
-at Mrs. Barrington.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Positively the most interesting thing I ever heard,”
-she cried. “Toddles, I wish <span class='it'>you</span> could invent something
-other than tarradiddles. <span class='it'>Do</span> send me an autographed
-bottle, Doctor! I haven’t a thing the matter with me,
-and don’t promise to use it. I’m so disgustingly
-healthy. But I’d love to have it to put on the shelf
-with my signed books and other treasures. Won’t it
-be nice, Toddles?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Azalea bent her head above her plate and scarcely
-knew whether to be angry or amused. Sitting on the
-same side of the table as Mrs. Barrington, Dilling and
-the Doctor, neither she nor her partner, Leeds, could
-see exactly what was going on. But what she did not
-divine, was reflected in the varying expressions of
-Turner, who sat on Mrs. Pratt’s left, Eva Leeds and
-Marjorie. Even Pratt, who had fallen an instant and
-unresisting victim to Hebe Barrington’s charms, gave
-her more than inkling of the by-play at the other end
-of the table.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She was very much alive to the presence of Sullivan,
-who sat directly opposite and assumed towards
-Marjorie an air of offensive proprietorship. Prejudiced
-against him perhaps by the opinion of her friends, she
-had never felt for the man active dislike until this
-moment when every slanderous tale she had heard
-leaped into her mind. Although he had become a
-frequent visitor at the Dilling home, she had met him
-for the first time this evening, and had not the slightest
-desire to continue the acquaintance. Furthermore,
-she wondered if Marjorie could be persuaded to put
-an end to such a friendship.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Are you having a good time, little woman?” she
-heard him whisper.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Yes, thank you,” replied Marjorie, hoping that
-telling a polite lie would not be a sin.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Not so good as though we were having dinner
-alone—without all these dull people?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No,” admitted Marjorie.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“When shall we have another party .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. of our own?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I don’t know just now. Perhaps next week.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>By the furious colour that surged into Marjorie’s
-cheeks, Azalea knew that Sullivan had caressed her
-under cover of the table.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s always at this point that the liveliest dinner
-begins to grow dull,” cried Hebe Barrington. “Have
-you ever noticed it, Mrs. Pratt? No? Dear me, <span class='it'>what</span>
-partners you must have had! I believe there <span class='it'>are</span> super-women
-with whom men are never tiresome. How do
-you account for that, Doctor?” Then, without waiting
-for an answer, she went on, “I have a theory of
-my own regarding this slump in brilliancy and wit.
-It is simply a matter of being too well fed. The
-animal wants to stretch and sleep. What do you
-think?” she smiled at Augustus, who was so disturbed
-by this sudden attention that he interfered with
-Cr’ymer’s unsteady serving of the wine and between
-them they managed to upset the decanter.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, Mrs. Pratt!” Hebe turned in mock terror to
-her hostess. “I throw myself upon your protection.
-He is going to blame me! I’m sorry, but I’m innocent.
-Uneasy looks the face that wears a frown, Mr. Pratt!
-If you will only forgive me, I’ll promise not to speak
-to you again all evening.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Wish you’d get the missus to go that far,” retorted
-Augustus, avoiding his wife’s eye.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There was a laugh in which Mrs. Pratt did not join.
-Conversation dropped to a murmur between couples.
-Hebe repeated her question to Dilling and received
-from him a grudging affirmative. A ponderous hummock
-of doughy consistency was tasted and thrust
-aside, and the hostess rose from the table.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Poor Augustus!” whispered Hebe, as she sank
-down beside Azalea in the drawing-room. “Won’t
-hell-fire be his when we’ve gone?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Perhaps if we’re especially nice to her, she will
-have forgotten by then.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Not a chance, my dear! I don’t know the
-individual, but I know the type. Death will be his
-only escape .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. But, tell me, just who are you?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Nobody in particular,” answered Azalea. “That’s
-why I’m here,” she added, with an unusual touch of
-malice.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mrs. Barrington was startled at this thrust. Into
-her eyes there shone a budding respect for the girl.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Yes, but who <span class='it'>are</span> you? What’s your name?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Azalea told her.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Deane? Oh! You’re a great friend of the Dillings,
-then?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You seem surprised.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I am,” confessed the other woman. “I’ve heard
-of you, but—er—” she ran an appraising look over the
-reconstructed gown that had adorned the person of
-Lady Elton for three years—“I thought you would be
-different.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“A doubtful compliment,” suggested Azalea.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“As you like,” returned Hebe, and seated herself at
-the piano.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Somewhat to Azalea’s surprise, Mrs. Barrington
-made no effort to capture Dilling when the men re-joined
-them. She turned the battery of her fascinations
-upon Pratt with an occasional shot at the Doctor.
-Dilling made his way directly to Azalea and dropped
-on the chair beside her.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“How long do these things last?” he enquired, under
-his breath. “Can’t we go home?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“In a few minutes. Wait until Mrs. Barrington
-stops singing. The bridge players will probably stay
-on.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Dilling made a frank signal to his wife, then turned
-back to the girl. “Do you mind coming to the house
-with us?” he asked. “I will see you home. There is
-something particular I want to say.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The song ended abruptly, and Azalea raised her
-eyes to meet those of Hebe Barrington. There was
-something in their expression that made her flush.
-And there was the same suggestiveness, the same
-mockery in her words at parting.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If Miss Deane will wait until I have redeemed my
-promise to Mr. Pratt and sung him one more song, we
-will drop her at the door and save Mr. Dilling the
-trouble.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Cut him out of that pleasure,” amended Barrington,
-quickly.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Even pleasures are troublesome, Toddles, dear,”
-said his wife, “look at me, for an illustration. However,
-there may be another time .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. You must all come
-and see me. They say my parties are rather fun.
-I’m usually at home on Friday evenings, and nearly
-every Sunday afternoon.”</p>
-
-<hr class='stars'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Azalea did not speak for a moment after Dilling
-had made his proposition. She dared not trust her
-voice.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You can’t be offended?” he asked, bluntly.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She shook her head.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“On the contrary, it gives me the most extraordinary
-sense of pleasure that you want me .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. that
-you think I can be of some real service to you.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. that’s all! It’s simply out of the question!
-I know my father will never hear of such a
-thing.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“He must! I’ll see him to-morrow. I’ll show him
-that he’s wrong. I’ll say .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You’ll say,” interrupted Azalea, forcing a laugh,
-“ ‘Sir, I have come to make a formal request for your
-daughter’s .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. shorthand!’ And then, “I’m glad, for
-your sake, Mr. Dilling, we don’t own a dog!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You can’t discourage me,” cried Dilling. “I’ve
-made up my mind that we will work together, and if
-you consent I feel that the thing is as good as settled.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was. The following morning, when Azalea
-carried in her father’s breakfast tray, she found that
-he had passed out of life as he had passed through it,
-easily, and without toil or struggle.</p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER 14.</h2>
-
-<p class='noindent'><span class='dropcap'>T</span>wo months had passed since Azalea had
-undertaken her secretarial duties. She felt that
-she had entered into a new life, that a wonderful
-renascence was hers. Never in all her imaginings, had
-she dreamed of days so replete with happiness.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A sense of deference to the dead prompted Mrs.
-Deane to protest against her daughter’s accepting the
-appointment. They talked at one another across an
-abyss that widened daily and separated them.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You shouldn’t do it, Azalea,” she cried. “It
-doesn’t seem right. You’re disobeying your father
-when he’s scarcely cold in the grave .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. It isn’t
-as though you didn’t know that .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I mean, I
-suppose it wouldn’t be so bad if he had been dead a
-long time .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Disobedience is a matter of principle, not time,
-mother!” returned the girl. “Don’t you see that I
-have no choice? We can’t live without the equivalent
-of father’s superannuation allowance!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, I’m sure I don’t know what to do,” Mrs.
-Deane whimpered, “Business is so difficult for a
-woman to grasp .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Oh, Azalea, if he knows it, he
-will be so dreadfully annoyed! Isn’t there some other
-way? If you had only been married .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Please, mother, let’s not go into that! I’m sorry
-to have disappointed you, but for myself, I haven’t a
-single regret. I don’t look upon marriage as the only
-solution of a woman’s financial problems, you know.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s a convenient one,” argued Mrs. Deane, rather
-more pertinently than usual. “There are the girls .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-they don’t have to work.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If they don’t, then they are cheating their husbands,”
-cried Azalea, purposely misunderstanding.
-“And too many married women who don’t cheat their
-husbands are being cheated—like you,” she nearly
-ended.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, my child!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I can’t look upon marriage as a refuge from the
-dangers that beset a female traveller on the Sea of Life.
-To me it is a tricky craft that may play you false as it
-operates between the two inescapable ports of Birth
-and Death.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And you are our baby, too,” sighed Mrs. Deane,
-as irrelevantly as Mrs. Nickleby.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“A baby who has grown up at last, and thanks God
-for the opportunity that has come disguised as a necessity;
-a baby, dear mother, who does not look upon
-congenial work as a test of courage, but as a divine
-privilege.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Curiously enough, once she was established in her
-new position, unreserved approval was expressed among
-her friends. Many of them attributed the move to
-some suggestion of their own. Lady Denby and Mrs.
-Hudson both remembered having advised Azalea to
-take some such step years ago. Lady Elton thought
-she had shown her good sense at last, but hoped that
-Mr. Dilling would not be too exacting. Entertaining
-was a bore under the best of conditions. She simply
-could not imagine getting along without Azalea’s
-assistance. Mrs. Long saw an opportunity for picking
-up odd bits of political gossip that eluded the ordinary
-reporter, and making a neat little income on the side.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You’re clever enough to do it, my dear,” she said.
-“Now, don’t be thin-skinned. Spice is what the people
-want—any of them who bother to read the papers.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As for Dilling, he felt himself infused with new zest
-and enthusiasm. He was conscious of a greater capacity
-for work, an accession of power. His brain seemed
-to function tirelessly and with amazing clearness. He
-developed a veritable rapacity for what appeared to be
-ineluctable problems, and he who had been a model of
-industry became a miracle of inexhaustible energy.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was about this time that men began to look to
-him as the most able exponent of their political creeds;
-it was upon him that they called to master such questions
-as Newfoundland’s entrance into the Dominion,
-trade with the West Indies, reciprocity with the United
-States, and upon his slender shoulders fell the burden
-of carrying on the most contentious debate of latter
-times—Canada’s Naval Policy. In short, it was to
-him that his Party turned, as the only man capable of
-grasping those knotty issues of international importance
-and presenting Canada’s case in a masterly way before
-the Council of the Nations.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’ve been invited to join the Golf Club,” he
-announced one morning, as Azalea came into the office.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’m glad! You’re not hesitating about it, are
-you?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, I don’t know. What do you think?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I think you are becoming no end of a social lion,”
-she replied, smiling, “and that soon you will be roaring
-as lustily in drawing-rooms as on the floor of the House.
-Seriously, I think you should accept. It will be good
-for Marjorie.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’m not so sure. She hasn’t many friends among
-that crowd. However, I think I see what you mean.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Azalea hoped he did. She was desperately anxious
-for him to realise that in the Capital success is regarded
-from only one angle, the Social. Professional, literary,
-political, all these are but feeders to the main
-issue.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I spent the afternoon with your exceptionally
-brilliant Dr. Aldrich,” said Sir Paul Pollock, the
-eminent British anthropologist, during the course of a
-dinner the Chesleys had given in his honour.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Aldrich?” echoed the company. “Who’s he?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Sir Paul did not take the question seriously. “I
-don’t blame you,” he laughed. “Two scientists at the
-same party would be excessively heavy wheeling.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But who <span class='it'>is</span> he?” insisted Miss Mabel Angus-McCallum.
-“I never heard of him.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Nor I .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Nor I .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well—ah—ha—if you are not pulling my leg,”
-answered the amazed guest, “perhaps you will be
-interested in knowing that he is one of the most famous
-biologists living. But—ah—ha—! I expect you are
-just stringing me.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was gradually borne in upon him that they were
-not, that they had no desire to cultivate the men and
-women whose lives are devoted to the advancement of
-their race, that even the names of such people were
-unfamiliar to them and that prominence in their
-especial sphere was clouded by a total eclipse of the
-social solar system.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was this latter point that Azalea ardently wished
-to make Dilling recognise. He was so immersed in his
-public life that there was little time for the consideration
-of any other question, and Marjorie had not
-sufficient astuteness to make the most of her advantage
-or profit by experiences.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She seemed incapable of keeping step with her
-husband, of acquiring a broader vision than that which
-was hers in Pinto Plains. In her eyes, a thousand
-dollars was always a staggering sum, five hundred an
-immense concourse of people.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But, dearest Marjorie,” cried Azalea, in affectionate
-exasperation one day, “you <span class='it'>must</span> learn to see beyond
-a home-made dress and a parish tea-party!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If my clothes and my food mean more to people
-than I do, myself,” argued Marjorie, “then I don’t want
-to have anything more to do with them. We’re just plain
-Canadians, and I don’t want to pretend otherwise!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Yes, but—but—” Azalea often found herself at a
-loss for illustrations that would co-ordinate with her
-friend’s code of ethics, “conforming to certain conventions
-isn’t exactly pretence. You might look upon it
-as a ceremony, ritual, something that is an adjunct to
-a position.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“A lady is a lady anywhere,” murmured Marjorie
-conscious, herself, that she was not precisely strengthening
-her argument.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“So is a clergyman,” replied Azalea, “but you would
-not like to see him conduct a Service in a pair of tennis
-flannels or a bathing suit.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh!” The point had gone home. “What have
-I done that’s wrong?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Nothing so very wrong, you dear lamb,” said the
-older girl, kissing Marjorie’s troubled mouth, “but try
-not to be so humble. Humility is a splendid virtue,
-sometimes—but not when we’re heading for the
-Cabinet!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It frightens me to think of it.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But you must overcome that, and feel perfectly at
-ease with Mrs. Blaine, Mrs. Carmichael, Lady Denby
-and the others. You must make them your friends.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I can’t be friends with people if they don’t want
-me!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Azalea tried to explain that in public life friendship
-and association are more or less interchangeable terms.
-“You were not friends with all your classmates at
-school,” she said, “but you associated with them,
-especially on formal occasions. It was then that your
-status was fixed by your class. It is exactly the same
-with your position as Mr. Dilling’s wife. You must
-feel yourself worthy of belonging to the highest class—the
-class which has been reached by a very prominent
-man, who will be known in history as one of the greatest
-statesmen of his country.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What must I do?” asked Marjorie, as Mrs. Deane
-might have said it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Learn and observe social distinctions. Everyone
-else does. Show that you respect your husband’s
-achievements and others will follow your lead. Why,
-the Society Columns are read to better advantage by
-the tradespeople, the gas inspector, the telephone
-operators, the very cab drivers, than you.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I don’t know what you mean,” said Marjorie, very
-close to tears.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I mean that those people almost unerringly place
-the rest of us in our proper class. They observe the
-rules of precedence, which you don’t. If there happened
-to be but one cab at a stand, and both you and Mrs.
-Blaine wanted it, which one of you would get the thing?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Marjorie did not answer.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Mrs. Blaine! You know it! Why? Because she
-goes to Church regularly on Sundays, pays her bills
-promptly, refuses to gossip and slander her neighbours?
-Not a bit of it! Because she puts a value on herself
-that is compatible with her husband’s position .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. at
-least, that’s near enough the mark to serve my purpose
-in scolding you!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“All right,” sighed Marjorie, “I’ll try to be stiff
-with people, if that’s the way to help Raymond. I
-don’t believe it, you know, Azalea, but I think I see
-what you mean.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Azalea, however, was not so sanguine.</p>
-
-<hr class='stars'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Do you play golf?” she asked Dilling.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, I’ve handled the clubs once or twice. But I
-won’t have any time to devote to the game.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You must make time. It will do you a world of
-good. All play and no work will make you an ideal
-politician,” she teased.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You will come out with us to dinner, the first
-night we go?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, no!” she cried. “You must take someone
-infinitely more distinguished. You must shine and
-let your light be seen before men. If I might make a
-suggestion, give a very exclusive dinner party and
-invite the Chief.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But you must come, too!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“We’ll see. In the meantime, hadn’t we better
-tackle this formidable mail? It seems to grow larger
-every morning.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Towards the middle of the afternoon, a spare, thin-lipped
-little man came into the room.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Howdy, Raymond?” he greeted. “Been tryin’ to
-run you down to your hole this last half hour. Got
-kinder twisted in this big buildin’.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“How are you, Sam?” said Dilling, shaking hands.
-“It’s good to see someone from home. Just get in?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Just about. How’s the Missus and the kids?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Dilling assured his visitor that their health was
-good.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“We’ve had an awful lot of sickness this winter.
-First, the baby was taken with swollen glands, and
-we’d no sooner got her up an’ about when Sammy
-came down with grippe, and on top o’ that, the wife
-had to be operated on for appendicitis. Makes me
-creep to think what the doctor’s bill is goin’
-to be.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Don’t worry about that, Sam. Halsey is the soul
-of consideration and patience.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Still, he’s got to be paid. Swell office, you’ve got,
-Raymond.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Dilling smiled.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“An improvement on my old one, but modest as
-offices go.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“This all there is of it?” queried the stranger.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“This is all. We don’t have suites, you know,
-until we get to be Deputies or Commissioners, perhaps.
-It’s plenty large enough.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Sure. I was only wonderin’ where we could have
-a little talk—a kinduv private confab, as you might
-say,” returned the other, nodding at Azalea’s industrious
-back.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“We can have it right here,” said Dilling, promptly.
-“This is my confidential secretary, Miss Deane. Mr.
-Sam Dunlop, of Pinto Plains. Miss Deane. He’s an
-old friend and worked hard at the time of my election.
-Go ahead, Sam. What is it?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well—er—” began Mr. Dunlop, in some embarrassment,
-“it’s about that block of ours out home.
-You mind when we four bought it from them Winnipeg
-fellows, the idea was that they would start in putting
-improvements all around us?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“In the centre of the town,” supplemented Dilling.
-“I remember very well. There was some talk of street
-cars. What of it?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“They’re a bunch of shysters, that’s what! They
-haven’t spent a dollar on First or Second Streets, they
-only pulled down a couple of buildings on the Avenue,
-and they’re investin’ every dollar they can raise to
-develop Pond Park and turn it into a summer resort.
-And business is trailin’ ’em right out that way.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Dilling looked grave.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Has anyone actually moved off First Street?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Bowers is moving in the spring. Jennings got an
-option on the corner of Cedar and the Avenue which
-takes the two biggest merchants away. After that, all
-the little fellows will go.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And the hotel they talked about?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If they build, it’ll be out the other way. Oh,
-there ain’t a bit of use in you settin’ there thinkin’ that
-we’ve got a chance,” cried Mr. Dunlop. “We’ve
-studied this thing till it’s a wonder we didn’t get brain
-fever. Says Lewis, ‘We four went into this here deal
-as friends and we’ll stick together. You go down to
-Ottawa and see Raymond. He’ll look after us, same
-as we’ve been tryin’ to look after his interests.’ Mumford’s
-the hardest hit—next to me, that is! But none
-of us, outside of yourself, can afford to hold that property
-an’ pay taxes while the town grows in the other
-direction.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And what do you think I can do?” asked Dilling,
-in a hard voice.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You can recommend the sale of our block to the
-Government, boy, that’s where you come in!” Mr.
-Dunlop dragged his chair closer and poured forth his
-proposition in a rapid whisper.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But Pinto Plains doesn’t need another Post Office,”
-argued Raymond Dilling. “The Liberals spent fifty
-thousand dollars for the one we have only a few years
-ago, and you were the first to denounce it, Sam.
-Everyone agreed that the town wouldn’t grow up to it
-in a hundred years.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But, damn it all, Raymond, can’t you see that
-this is different? Can’t you get it through your head
-that we’ll be ruined unless we can sell that property
-and sell it quick? All of us—of course, exceptin’ you—all
-of us have got to raise interest on the money we
-borrowed to put into it, and Lord knows where mine
-is coming from. What’s a dinky little Post Office to
-the Government? Lewis says it ought to be a cinch
-to put it through, for he can condemn the other one,
-easy! How long do you figger it’ll take to get the
-matter settled, son?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s settled right now, so far as I’m concerned.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“How do you mean?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I can’t undertake such a job.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. what?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You’re asking me to betray the confidence of the
-country, Sam; to rob the Treasury. That’s the proposition
-in plain English, isn’t it?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mr. Dunlop denied this accusation eloquently, if
-irrationally. He cajoled, he stormed, he pleaded, he
-threatened. He reminded Dilling that during his election
-campaign, support had been based on friendship,
-not a strict adherence to truthfulness, and that the
-boys had not stopped to consider every lie that was
-told on his behalf.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Runnin’ the country ain’t the same as runnin’ a
-Sunday School,” he added, in justification.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The governing principles should be the same,”
-answered Dilling. “No, Sam, I can’t do it. Argument
-is useless. When you and the boys think it over, you
-will agree that the man who would have carried out
-your proposition is not the type that you would have
-to mould the policy of the Nation. I hope that Pinto
-Plains will never send a chap like that to Parliament!
-You’ll come down to the house, of course, won’t you?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But Mr. Dunlop did not hear the invitation. He
-was so absorbed in expressing his opinion of the man
-he had sent to Parliament, that he failed to recognise
-Sir Robert Borden whom he passed in the corridor, and
-ran violently into Sir Eric and Lady Denby without
-uttering a word of apology.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“We’ll fix him,” he muttered under his breath.
-“We’ll fix him!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the office there was silence save for the sibilent
-fluttering of papers on Azalea’s desk. Presently,
-Dilling spoke.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’m too indignant at the moment to be sorry for
-them!” he said. “And it’s something of a shock to
-find that they held me in no higher esteem than to
-think I would be a party to such jobbery.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I doubt that they looked at the matter in just
-that way. Isn’t it merely another example of the
-common practice of bringing your white elephant to
-feed at the Dominion crib?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s another example of perverted ethics,” growled
-Dilling, and he went angrily off to lunch.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Azalea sat on, thinking. What, she asked herself,
-would be the outcome of Raymond Dilling’s uncompromising
-attitude with men of Dunlop’s calibre?
-Would he, like Marjorie, persistently close his eyes to
-the advantage of temporising in matters that affected
-his political career? Would he never learn that a
-gentle lie turneth away enquiry and that as Dunlop
-had so truly said, the country was not run like a
-Sunday School? She had heard him reject more than
-one proposition made by men of his own Party who
-never could be brought to see the criminous side of
-misappropriation of public funds. She had known
-him to ignore the Patronage system by refusing positions
-to incompetents, as bluntly as he had discarded
-Dunlop’s scheme. And a little compromising, or even
-temporising, would have accomplished his object
-without loss of good will.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Custom,” he once said in answer to her remonstrance,
-“can never in my opinion sanctify piracy or
-brigandage. I don’t believe in Patronage and never
-shall. Incompetency should be treated and overcome
-if possible, but not rewarded.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Rejoicing, as she did, in this fine adherence both to
-the letter and spirit of his political creed, yet she could
-not but feel apprehensive for his political future. As
-a lamp unto his feet were the rules of the Independence
-of Parliament, but he was rapidly making enemies
-when by the employment of a little diplomacy he might
-have had hosts of friends. Scarcely a week passed
-without bringing forth some public attack upon him,
-and the mere fact that he championed a cause was
-sufficient to win for it a mob of fanatical obstructionists.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Yet Azalea realised that anything less than this
-unswerving rectitude would have been for Dilling
-ignominious surrender, and she prayed that he might
-uphold his ideals at all costs, that he might achieve a
-spiritual triumph even at the price of material defeat.
-She wondered how it would all end.</p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER 15.</h2>
-
-<p class='noindent'><span class='dropcap'>“Y</span>ou had better go up to the House, to-night,”
-called Long, as he passed his wife’s door on his
-way to dress for dinner.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What’s going on? I’m booked for bridge at the
-Blaine’s.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Dilling’s going to speak. I think you’ll be repaid
-for calling off your game.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“All right. I’ll telephone,” said Mrs. Long, carefully
-adjusting a hair net. “Perhaps the others would
-like to go. Only two tables, I understand .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The House was crowded by the time Mrs. Blaine
-and her party arrived. The “Ladies of the Cabinet”
-were shown, of course, into the front row of the
-Speaker’s Gallery, and those of lesser rank were distributed
-wherever space permitted.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Marjorie had been directed to a seat in the second
-row, immediately behind Mrs. Carmichael and next to
-Mrs. Long, beyond whom sat Eva Leeds, Pamela de
-Latour and Mrs. Chesley. Strictly speaking, none of
-them deserved a place in the Member’s Gallery, but
-in deference to Mrs. Blaine, whose guests they were,
-and also to their social status, they were thus happily
-privileged. The vacancy next Marjorie was presently
-filled by Mrs. Pratt, although Deputy Minister
-O’Neill’s wife sat several rows behind.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, upon my word,” whispered Mrs. Carmichael
-to Mme. Valleau, wife of the Postmaster-General,
-“The Virginia Creeper will be clinging to us, next.
-How does she do it?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There was no mystery. Mrs. Pratt’s superb lack
-of what her husband termed “gulp” was partially
-responsible; and, in addition, she knew how to wring
-one hundred per cent returns out of a five dollar bill.
-The doorkeeper, who was the object of her investment,
-was more affected by the frigidity of her reception than
-she was, herself.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Good evening, Lady Denby .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. How d’yuh do,
-Mrs. Blaine? Mrs. Carmichael .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Good evening,
-Madame Valleau .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” She bowed right and left,
-murmuring names—prominent names—and creating
-the impression among those who didn’t know, that she
-was on pleasantly intimate terms with every one worth
-while. “Oh, Mrs. Dilling .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I didn’t notice you!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Good evening,” returned Marjorie, with strained
-politeness.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She was determined to be just as stiff as Azalea
-could have wished. Not that she was converted to
-the belief that this attitude on her part would be in
-the least helpful to Raymond, but because she was,
-by nature, docile and amenable to discipline. Always
-for Marjorie the word “must” held an ineluctable
-obligation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Therefore, when Azalea insisted that she must adopt
-a greater formality of manner, the time came when
-Marjorie surrendered.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Who is that woman in the other Gallery?” asked
-Mrs. Long, from behind a jewelled lorgnette.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Which one?” queried Pamela de Latour.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“There—in the front row. She seems to have forgotten
-her clothes, so far as her torso is concerned.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh,” cut in Mrs. Pratt, “that’s Mrs. Barrington.
-They’ve recently come to Ottawa. Her husband’s
-something or other on the Driveway Commission.
-I can’t akkerately say just what, although Mr. Pratt
-was largely instrumental in getting him appointed.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Barrington?” echoed Mrs. Chesley, “why, that’s
-the woman who’s rushing Raymond Dilling, isn’t it?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Sh—sh—sh—” warned Pamela, nodding in Marjorie’s
-direction.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, isn’t it?” insisted the other.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Hush! She’ll hear you.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I suppose that means it is. Does she know?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I don’t think so,” whispered Pamela. “Doesn’t
-see much beyond the kitchen cabinet and the drawing-room
-curtains, I fancy.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Lucky woman,” murmured Helena Chesley, thinking
-of her impressionable husband.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Who’s speaking?” Mrs. Long was moved to ask.
-Until that moment, no one had given a glance at the
-House.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mr. Sullivan, it seemed, had the floor. A few
-Members watched him languidly. Nobody listened.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Pamela de Latour turned attentive eyes upon him
-for a moment or two. Then,</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“There’s really something intriguing about that
-man,” she murmured. “If only he would apply a little
-veneer to cover the knots once in a while, he would be
-accepted everywhere. No one minds what he does
-when you come to analyse things; only they mind
-what he does so openly. Does anyone happen to
-know the reigning favourite?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I hear she is a taffy-haired manicurist,” whispered
-Eva Leeds, wishing they had stayed at home and
-played Bridge. Her losses had been shocking of late,
-and she felt that the tide of bad luck would certainly
-have turned this evening. That was always the way,
-she never really had a chance! “But there’s no telling
-.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. That may be ancient history. I haven’t heard
-much about him, lately.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“About whom?” demanded Madame Valleau,
-bending back her handsome head in order to see the
-speaker. She was supposed to be the best informed
-lady in the Cabinet—informed, that is to say, regarding
-the shadowy side of the Members’ private lives.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>They told her.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, Sullivan,” she cried, in her fascinating broken
-English. “A delightful dog, hein? I wish there were
-more men like him in this dull town!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mrs. Carmichael, having two young daughters to
-whom she enjoyed applying the inappropriate word
-“innocent”, protested.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Why, no woman is safe with him,” she said.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“A few,” argued Madame, allowing her eyes to
-travel slowly over the immediate group. “Besides,
-who wants to feel safe with any man? Not I, for one!
-If women had been safe with men, there would have
-been no need for cavaliers, for gallantry. Sullivan is
-charming.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I think he’s a conscienceless old reprobate,”
-declared Mrs. Carmichael, “and the National Council
-should make an example of him.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Marjorie leaned forward. It required a good deal
-of courage on her part to push into this argument, but
-she felt that loyalty to an absent friend demanded it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You misjudge him, Mrs. Carmichael,” she defended.
-“I know him very well and I am certain the
-things people say about him are not true. He’s too
-kind to everybody, that’s his trouble! He is as kind
-to a—a—manicurist as he is to .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. well, to me! He’s
-always so ready to help people and to give them good
-advice!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mme. Valleau gave vent to a musical little scream
-that was heard by the Sergeant-at-Arms, and impelled
-him to shake a playful warning for silence at her.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Don’t kill my enthusiasm for that man by telling
-me he is giving good advice!” she said. “He won’t
-be doing that for a long while, I’ll be bound.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Why not?” demanded Marjorie.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Because it’s only when Sullivan is too old to give
-the bad example he will begin to give the good advice,”
-returned the Frenchwoman. “<span class='it'>Mon Dieu</span>, I hope that
-won’t be for many a long day.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I don’t think you are fair to him,” championed
-Marjorie.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“My child,” interrupted Lady Denby, “I should
-be greatly disturbed if I thought you were trying,
-seriously, to defend that man! Mme. Valleau has
-original ideas on every subject, including honour, but
-for you to express yourself favourably on Sullivan’s
-behalf, or admit friendship with him, would be little
-short of compromising. I know you too well to misunderstand,
-but these others might get a sadly erroneous
-impression.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” began Marjorie.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Stop chattering,” cautioned Mrs. Long, who had
-only just stopped, herself. “Mr. Dilling is going to
-speak.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The House filled rapidly. Members slipped into
-their seats and turned towards the slender young man
-who stood, hand on hip, in the very last row of back
-benches. In the Press Gallery there wasn’t a vacant
-chair. Representatives of the leading dailies jostled
-and crowded one another at the desk, and those men
-who could not obtain so convenient a position, drew
-sheaves of copy paper from their pockets and recorded
-Dilling’s speech on the surface offered by their neighbour’s
-backs. Pages flung themselves on the steps of
-the Speaker’s dais, and relaxed into an attitude that
-was almost inattentive. They had learned that while
-the Member for Pinto Plains was speaking, the House
-rested from its customary finger-snapping, and, like
-otiose diversions.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A cheer crashed through the silence. On the right
-of the Speaker, desks were thumped and feet beat
-upon the floor. A babel arose from the Opposition,
-and in the Galleries, visitors forgot that they were
-“strangers in the House,” and that, like the children
-of a bye-gone generation, they were supposed to be
-unheard.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Or-r-der,” drawled the Speaker. And the clamour
-died.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Bon!</span>” chuckled Madame Valleau. “He has the
-courage to speak, that Dilling—and behind his words,
-there is the mind to think!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Very good,” pronounced the ladies surrounding
-Marjorie. “Most interesting! Quite excellent, indeed!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Thank you,” returned Marjorie, so stiffly that
-they looked at her in amazement, wondering if success
-had suddenly turned her head.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>They wondered still more when a messenger
-approached her, delivered a note and said there would
-be an answer. Eyebrows were raised, and incredulity
-was telegraphed from one to the other of the group.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What’s this?” asked Lady Denby, in what she
-conceived to be a playful tone. “Have we an admirer
-in the House?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A furious blush and confused stammering was Marjorie’s
-reply. With one of those rare flashes of insight
-for which she could never account, she knew that in view
-of the recent discussion about Sullivan and her defence
-of him, he was suspected of being the writer of that
-letter. She didn’t blame the women in the least, for
-she suspected him, herself.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But she was mistaken. The scrawling signature of
-Hebe Barrington met her eye as she hastily turned the
-last page, and the body of the communication was an
-invitation to supper.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I have persuaded Mr. Dilling to join us,” the
-letter announced, “and he asked me to say that we
-would meet in his room, at once. Please come!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Mrs. Barrington has invited me to supper,”
-Marjorie explained, with a noticeable moderation of
-stiffness. “I think I will say good night and hurry on.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What’s got into her?” asked the ladies. “Her
-naiveté was bad enough, but her snobbishness is insufferable!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Marjorie had never seen a home just like the
-Barrington’s. It reminded her of the Ancient Chattellarium,
-and struck her as being a curious place in which
-to live. There weren’t two chairs that matched in the
-whole house, and the black rugs and hangings she
-found very depressing. Moreover, the rooms bore
-names as strange as their furnishings, and she had no
-idea what her hostess meant by the Cuddlery or the
-Tiffinaria.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mrs. Barrington entertained easily. She did not
-stand in the centre of the drawing-room, beneath the
-chandelier, and greet her guests with flattering though
-repetitive phrases. In the first place, there wasn’t,
-properly speaking, a drawing-room. In the second,
-there was no chandelier. What light there was, came
-from half a dozen shaded sconces, and a pair of Roman
-lamps. There were no pictures on the wall. At least,
-Marjorie did not call them pictures. They were
-scratchy drawings representing Chinamen engaged in
-such profitless occupations as contemplating the
-tonsils of a large-mouthed dragon, or leaning thoughtfully
-upon a naked blade—naked, that is, save for the
-head that clothed the point of it. She had never seen
-their like, before, and thoroughly disapproved of them.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mrs. Barrington did not stand in the drawing-room
-at all, but wandered about with a cigarette in one
-hand and a glass of Scotch in the other, and seemed
-intensely surprised to see the people she was entertaining.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well,” she greeted more than one guest, “fancy
-your trotting away out here. Are you with anyone or
-did you come alone?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>With the exception of Mr. Sullivan and the Carmichael
-girls, they were strangers to Marjorie, as,
-indeed, many of them were to their hostess.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Who is the young blood so effectively burgling the
-cellarette?” she would ask her husband. Or, “Toddles,
-tell me quickly, is that girl in blue some one I ought to
-know?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Supper was spread in the Tiffinaria and eaten all
-over the house. Marjorie was inexpressibly shocked
-to hear a nice looking young man call to his partner,</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You wait upstairs, old dear, and I’ll bring up the
-victuals. We can mangle them on Hebe’s dressing
-table.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Peacherina!” answered the girl, throwing her
-slipper at him. “What’s on the menu, this evening?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A recital of the contents of the table and buffet
-resulted in guarded approbation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Get a dab of everything,” called the girl, “and
-we’ll manage to find something we can digest.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A Sheffield tray was dismantled and heaped with
-food sufficient to have served four persons. Added to
-this, the young man used as a centrepiece his partner’s
-slipper, into which he had poured a mould of chicken
-jelly.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Hon. Member for Morroway was, as always,
-tenderly solicitous of Marjorie. He made several
-attempts to find a place in which they could sit to have
-their supper tete-a-tete, before he was successful.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Somebody’s in the Cuddlery,” he announced,
-backing out of the door and guiding her hastily
-away. “Oh, excuse me,” he cried, to an unseen couple
-who were occupying a nook under the stairs. “Looks
-as though we’d have to try the pantry or the kitchen.
-Let’s see if we can find a corner on the floor above.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, no!” protested Marjorie, “I shouldn’t care to
-do that. Why, can’t we go there—into the front
-room? I don’t mind others being about.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Dear little woman,” Sullivan whispered, and drew
-her close against him under the guise of protecting her
-from collision with a youth who carried an empty glass,
-“of course we don’t mind, but the ridiculous fact is
-that <span class='it'>they do</span>!” He sighed in his most elderly manner.
-“I do wish that Hebe would infuse some dignity into
-her parties. Perfectly innocent, you understand; not
-a hint of harm, but just naturally silly and boisterous.
-Look at young Creel, there, daring Mona Carmichael
-to stand on her head! By Jove,” he slapped his leg
-and burst into a laugh that seemed to be a spontaneous
-expression of hilarious amusement, “he’s got her by
-the ankles and she’s going to try!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But, after being trundled about the room like a
-wheelbarrow, Mona decided that she didn’t want to
-stand on her head. “I tell you what,” she cried, “let’s
-dress up in Toddles’ clothes!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>With a whoop they raced for the stairs, half a
-dozen of them, leaving Marjorie and Sullivan in possession
-of the room. Shrieks and confused scamperings
-followed. Evidently, they were much at home, there.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Who are all these people?” Marjorie wanted to
-know.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The girls, it seemed, were a dashing and exclusive
-group whose number, and conduct, had earned for
-them the sobriquet of “The Naughty Nine”. They
-were the envy of all those who stood without the golden
-circle drawn round them, and subsequently, by dint of
-heroic pressure that was brought to bear, their number
-was increased by three and they became “The Dirty
-Dozen”. The youths were the scions of Ottawa’s
-aristocracy.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You don’t care for them?” asked Sullivan. “You
-wouldn’t like Althea to behave in that way?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The bare suggestion produced physical pain.
-“But, she wouldn’t,” cried Marjorie. “She <span class='it'>couldn’t</span>,
-Mr. Sullivan! Not that they aren’t very—er—bright,”
-she added, seeking to say the kindly thing.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>When they returned to the room, the girls were
-dressed in Mr. Barrington’s clothing—business suits,
-riding breeks, pyjamas and underwear, while the boys
-had costumed themselves in their hostess’s attire.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Marjorie kept telling herself that she was dreaming.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She longed to go home. She could neither enter
-into the revelry nor did she wish to separate herself
-from the crowd and stay alone with Sullivan. She
-had been very uncomfortable with him, lately. Sometimes,
-almost afraid. She refused to acknowledge this
-fear, even to herself, but she knew that it existed.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The conversation in the Gallery recurred to her
-with disturbing vividness—not that slander ever
-influenced her judgment—ever! The person who was
-swayed by unkind criticism was, in her opinion, no
-better than the person who uttered it. At the same
-time, there was something about the Hon. Member for
-Morroway from which she instinctively shrank, without
-suspecting that she was making, by her attitude, a
-confession of her secret impression of the man.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>No amount of reasoning could correct this state of
-affairs. In vain did she tell herself that he was old
-enough to be her father, and that his frank affection
-for them all was merely the enthusiastic expression of
-a lonely man’s dependence upon a kindly household.
-In vain did she try to overcome a sensation of shame
-and personal impurity after she had been alone with
-him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“My own mind must be evil,” she scourged herself,
-time and again. “He never has done or said a thing
-that Raymond couldn’t know. What <span class='it'>does</span> make me
-feel so wicked when I’m alone with him?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It may have been a sense of impotence that
-frightened her. She could never see the wheels of
-Mr. Sullivan’s mind in operation, she could never tell
-what he was going to do. He seemed to arrive at a
-goal magically, without progressing step by step, and
-he had such an uncanny way of divining what she was
-thinking.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She was not conscious of his footfall, nor of the
-opening of the doors that admitted him to a closer
-intimacy, but suddenly, he would stand before her,
-very near to the Inner Shrine of her Temple, catching
-her, as it were, unclad, or in the act of prayer, and she
-couldn’t put him out.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He was very quiet and respectful and walked as
-though aware that he was in a Holy place, but that
-didn’t alter the fact that he had passed through those
-obstructing doors without a sound of warning, and
-without her permission.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And he took such shocking liberties. For example,
-Marjorie couldn’t possibly have told how he had been
-allowed to contract the habit of kissing her. To be
-sure, it had begun in fun, one evening, when they were
-playing with the children. But she couldn’t explain
-why she found it impossible to deny him the privilege
-thereafter. It was very curious and disturbing.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Perhaps her difficulty lay in the artful naturalness
-with which he performed his acts of pretty gallantry,
-taking so much for granted and trading on her clean
-simplicity.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I don’t want to behave so that he will think I
-have nasty notions,” she said to herself, and Sullivan
-knew it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You’re tired, dear,” he said to her, not wholly inattentive
-to the Vaudeville on the other side of the
-room. “Lean back against me. Raymond won’t be
-long, now!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She felt his arm slip round her and moved away in
-sudden panic.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, Mr. Sullivan, not here, please!” she cried.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It wasn’t in the least what she should have said;
-but there was no opportunity for explanations or
-corrections then.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You’re right, little woman,” he whispered, “this is
-<span class='it'>not</span> the place. I understand.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was only too obvious that he didn’t; that he misconstrued
-her gentle repulse of all familiarity into a
-prudish discouragement of this particular expression of
-it, and his manner suggested satisfaction that she
-should prefer to receive his caresses when they were
-alone. It was a case of another door being opened and
-one which resisted her efforts to close it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’d like to go home,” she said. “Do you think
-you could find Raymond?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Hon. Member for Morroway knew his hostess
-too well to commit himself to a definite promise. But
-he murmured something hopeful and made his way
-with a good deal of bluster to the top of the house.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The door of the Eyrie was closed.</p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER 16.</h2>
-
-<p class='noindent'><span class='dropcap'>M</span>eanwhile, Dilling had been an unwilling
-victim to Hebe Barrington’s charms.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Your wife is coming home with me for a
-bite of supper,” she had written him, “and I want you,
-too. The bald truth is—I don’t trust Toddles with a
-pretty woman, so you must be on hand to see her
-home.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But although he had signified his readiness to
-perform this happy task several times, she had made
-it impossible for him to break away.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Don’t you love my little nest?” asked Hebe,
-closing the door and leading him by the arm to a deep
-couch, standing well beyond the faint light thrown by
-a winking oriental lantern.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s very unusual,” said Dilling.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Everything here has a history,” she told him,
-“but I won’t tell you about any of my treasures just
-now. You need only know that this room is called
-the Eyrie, and I want you to feel that it is your own.
-Any time, day or night, that you want to run away
-from the abominations of politics, this place is ready
-for you. You need not even share it with me—if you
-don’t wish.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Thank you,” muttered Dilling, seeing that she
-expected him to speak.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And now, let’s talk about your speech. It was
-tremendous! How easy it seems to be for you to avoid
-the feeble word and choose those that thrill one with a
-sense of power. Every fibre of my being was alive
-with response to you, to-night. But why didn’t you
-look at me, Raymond?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I? Er—why—I didn’t know that you were
-there,” stammered the man who was supposed to
-avoid the trite and obvious.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But why didn’t you look and <span class='it'>see</span>?” insisted Hebe.
-“Is the admiration of mankind in general, and of
-woman in particular so unimportant? Does it give
-you no stimulation?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, it isn’t that,” said Dilling.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He was very ill at ease. Admitting her intellectual
-attainments, yet he never enjoyed talking with Hebe
-Barrington as he enjoyed talking with Azalea. He was
-too conscious of her, too acutely aware of the fact that
-she sought to attach his scalp to her belt, his frail
-person to her chariot wheels. Instinctively, he was on
-his guard against a temptation to which he could not
-imagine himself surrendering.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What is it, then?” she asked, passing her fingers
-through his thin hair.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As Marjorie recoiled from Sullivan, so Dilling tried
-to withdraw from the caresses of Mrs. Barrington.
-He had never received advances from women—decent
-women—and he was shocked, revolted. Even her use
-of his Christian name jarred unpleasantly upon him
-whose social standards decreed that although a man
-and woman might address one another familiarly
-before the marriage of either party, the instant they
-turned from the altar, rigid formality should be observed.
-To be called “Raymond” by a married woman
-whom he had known but a few weeks, smacked strongly
-of indecency.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Is it possible that beneath your discomfiting
-iciness of manner,” Hebe continued, “you want to
-attract men, hold them and make them your friends?
-Do you feel the need of friends, Raymond Dilling?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I am only human,” he returned.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Suddenly he felt an overpowering urge to talk, an
-imperious need for candour. He wanted to open his
-heart, deplore his failures and the unfulfilment of his
-desires. He saw his inability to draw men to him,
-and surround them with a vivid atmosphere of comradeship
-in political endeavour and a common patriotic
-inspiration. He felt that men did not like him, that
-he would never be an adornment to their clubs, one
-upon whom the success of a social event depended.
-And, unaccountably, he realised that he cared—cared
-for himself, and for Marjorie, and for Azalea Deane.
-As though reading his thoughts, Hebe went on,</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You’ll never do it as you are, Raymond. You are
-suffering the result of the habit contracted, I have
-learned, in your college days, when you withdrew
-yourself from all but the few who recognised your
-talents and thrust themselves upon you for your
-worldly, and other-worldly behoof. A native shyness
-of strangers and an inherited reluctance to spend
-money on the amenities of life, moved you to live in
-cloistered exclusiveness, when you should have been
-expanding your soul in joyous contact with your fellow
-men. Am I not right?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I don’t think it was so bad as that,” said Dilling,
-fighting against the stupefying effect of the perfume he
-had learned to associate with her.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But it was! You avoided human contact, and
-only by such means is life rid of its tendency to become
-set and small. Don’t you remember the French axiom,
-‘<span class='it'>L’esprit de l’homme n’est malleable que dans sa jeunesse</span>’?
-You are still young, Raymond, but it is high time that
-you began remoulding. If you had only allowed yourself
-the Paganism of Youth, you would have spared
-yourself the Philistinism of Maturity.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s all very well to preach conviviality and <span class='it'>bon
-camaraderie</span>,” Dilling returned, stung into making
-what he afterwards felt to be an undignified defence,
-“but you must remember that I couldn’t afford to hold
-my own with the roisterers at college.” He moved,
-with a gesture of impatience, beyond the reach of her
-marauding fingers. “It was not so much inherited
-caution as immediate limitations that made my
-‘exclusive cloistering’ necessary. I put myself through
-college, you know,” he added, with a touch of unconscious
-pride, “and I couldn’t afford to enjoy it.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But that’s the very point—the very point I’m
-driving at,” she triumphed. “If only you <span class='it'>had</span> spent
-beyond your means—if only once you had overstepped
-your limitations! We all do, all of us who have souls.
-One way or another, the artist is always spending.
-The lover never counts the cost. You can’t—you
-shouldn’t want to—reduce emotions to blue prints and
-specifications, and that’s what you have done! Listen,
-Raymond, and forgive me if I offend you. There is a
-corner of your personality that lies fallow because its
-dull atmosphere refuses nourishment to artistic taste
-and sensuous beauty. In other words, you are afraid
-to spend, even now, lest the ultimate cost may prove
-to be something you think you can’t afford. You are
-afraid to let yourself go, for emotions lead one even
-farther than the tangible medium of exchange.” Her
-tone changed. “How you ever came to marry a pretty
-woman is something of a mystery to me—a frump
-would have answered just as well. Indeed, I ask myself,
-why did you ever marry at all. Will you tell me?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I don’t think there’s any mystery about it,”
-parried Dilling.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He was not prepared to confess that love had played
-a very small part in his relations with Marjorie, nor
-that his need of her was more that of an amiable
-associate than wife. With the simplicity that marked
-so many of his social adventurings, he believed that
-when he could support a wife and family he should
-marry; and he chose the least objectionable—and most
-desirable externally—woman of his acquaintanceship.
-There was the explanation in a nutshell.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Have you ever felt the appeal of sensuous beauty?”
-Hebe Barrington persisted. “No! I am answered.
-The very phrase revolts you as I speak it. It is an
-evocation of the Seventh Commandment and a ruined
-household. Queer fellow! Your insensibility to
-beauty in line and colour, not only in Art but in
-life, proclaims you a Philistine.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You’ve called me that before.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And I call you so again. You had no ear for the
-cry from Paxos, ‘When you are come to Pallodes
-announce that the Great Pan is dead’,” she cried
-theatrically. “Little you understand how it was that
-Pan’s trumpet terrified and dispersed the Titans in
-their fight with the Olympian gods.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You have a harsh opinion of me,” said Dilling, a
-little nettled. “I thought I knew my classics.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You read them—you bathed in their sensuous
-beauty, but you never felt it, Raymond, even while
-imagining that you were mewing a mighty youth of
-the intellect. Deluded boy,” she murmured. “Blind
-boy!” Her hand fluttered over his face and rested
-upon his eyes. For the life of him he could not respond
-to this woman, but at the same time he made no
-definite resistance, judging that by so doing he would
-lay himself open to the charge of priggishness. Dilling
-had little dread of ridicule when he trod upon familiar
-ground, but of late he had realised how virginal he was
-in the social struggle. Quite still he sat, while Hebe
-Barrington’s hands moved softly about him. He did
-not know that to her his unresponsiveness was incredible;
-the web she was weaving was as apparent
-to him as his power to break it. “It is not too late,”
-she whispered, “to save yourself, to save your soul
-alive.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Am I to take that as encouragement?” he enquired,
-with intentional rudeness.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“As the body in its vigour renews itself every seven
-years, so it is possible for the spirit to open its doors
-periodically upon new realms of percipience and
-creative power. Set about your own rebirth, Raymond!
-Don’t imagine that you can achieve re-genesis
-by pondering the sources that gave the pagan Greek
-his apprehension, shall I say, of the joy of life. The
-Greek lived in a narrow time and in a narrow world,
-in spite of which he made living glorious. You, on the
-other hand, live in a big world where there is room for
-the coming of the superman. Oh, Raymond, lay hold
-of the sensuous beauty that lies within your very grasp.
-Come out of your barren cloister and inhale the
-warmth of the sun and perfume of the blossoming
-flowers! Mere intellect has never achieved perfect
-happiness for any man. He must develop his emotional
-nature in order to get the most life has to offer and
-in order that he may give her of his best,” she added,
-quickly. “He must learn to understand men and
-women, and to understand them he must—live!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You seem to be very certain that I am one of the
-unburied dead!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Exactly! Every man who doesn’t love is dead.
-Oh, don’t point to your wife and children as contradictory
-evidence. You love neither, Raymond, I mean,
-with the love that is like a great, engulfing tide, the
-love that haunts and tortures, and racks and exalts.
-I mean the love that is like a deep, ecstatic pain, that
-simultaneously is a feast and a cruel hunger.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Her words poured over him like a warm scented
-flood. He was conscious of a curious desire to plunge
-his body into their deeps, to feel their heat and moisture.
-But the impression eluded him. He could not
-abandon himself to the enchantment Hebe Barrington
-was trying to cast over him. No glamorous mist
-blurred his vision. He saw with penetrating clarity,
-and his only sensation was one of distaste.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I am of opinion that life can be useful without
-these exaggerated, emotional outbursts,” said Dilling,
-“that where so much energy is expended in one direction
-the drain is felt in other lines of endeavour.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But will you never open your eyes to the radiant
-truth that a great love is not a drain but a reservoir, a
-source of supply? It enlarges one’s power and stimulates
-creation. Did not every conspicuous figure in
-history have his feminine complement, and is not at
-least a part of his achievement credited to the stimulation
-of an overmastering love?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Dilling was not so sure. Average and sub-average
-persons, wholly unable to apprehend the subtle forces
-of will and intellect behind a great achievement, accept
-it with dull simplicity and dismiss it with a word of
-praise. But average and sub-average persons experiencing
-the driving power of emotion in varied degrees
-think themselves capable of understanding a sublime
-passion and therefore place it—perhaps unconsciously—ahead
-of intellectual accomplishment. In fine, we
-bring others down to our own level, a fact that explains
-why “human interest” and “heart interest”
-make a wider appeal than things that live and move
-and have their being on the higher plane of mind and
-spirit.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I doubt it,” he said, answering Hebe’s question.
-“I doubt, for example, that Parnell’s skill in leadership
-depended upon the dashing Kitty O’Shea, or that
-Nelson would have failed at Trafalgar save for Lady
-Hamilton.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Do you mean that no <span class='it'>particular</span> woman is necessary
-to a man, or that emotional relationship between
-two persons of opposite sexes is over-estimated?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Either, and both,” laughed Dilling, and rose.
-“But I really must find my wife. She will think I
-have deserted her, and, anyway, late hours are forbidden
-in our house. Shall we go down?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But Hebe held him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Just a moment,” she begged. “I can’t allow you
-to leave me with a wrong impression. Oh, I know
-quite well how my conduct to-night must appear in
-your eyes—your blind eyes, Raymond, and it is not a
-sense of prudishness that impels me to explain that I
-do not throw myself at you for a narrow, personal
-satisfaction. It is true that I love you, but I love the
-big You, the public man, the orator, the statesman,
-and I have a supreme longing to see you attain greater
-honours and bring greater glory to Canada. To
-achieve this, I am firmly convinced that a closed door
-in your nature must be opened. You are like a man
-working in artificial light. He can see, yes—but he
-attains results through greater strain than is immediately
-apparent and, therefore, his season of usefulness is
-lessened. There is sunshine, Raymond, and in its
-radiance, much of what was work becomes play. Love
-is my sunshine and is a miraculous creative force.
-With your frail body, you must draw power from an
-outside source, Raymond, and what other reservoir is
-there but Love? Listen, dear, just a moment more,”
-she cried, tightening her arms about him. “I would
-rather see you love some other woman than not love
-at all, for I know that the awakening of your soul
-would be Canada’s great gain. And now,” she concluded,
-rising, “will you kiss me before you go?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Dilling hesitated, and in that instant’s delay a step
-sounded on the stair and a gentle tattoo beat upon the
-door.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Come in,” cried Hebe, crossly. “Oh, Uncle Rufus,
-we were just going down!”</p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER 17.</h2>
-
-<p class='noindent'><span class='dropcap'>R</span>epresenting the constituency of Morroway
-by no means exhausted the dynamic energy of
-the Hon. Rufus Sullivan, and he had ample
-time for engaging in pursuits of a tenderer and more
-congenial nature. But occasions did arise when concentration
-upon Parliamentary problems became a
-necessary part of the day’s routine, for they affected
-not only the political standing of the Hon. Member,
-but the size and stability of his income.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He sat alone in his office, oblivious for the moment,
-of the heavy gilt mirror that hung opposite his desk,
-and to the contents of the drawer marked “Unfinished
-Business”. He glared unwinkingly into space, forgetful
-of the existence of a fluffy-haired little manicurist
-who sat waiting for him in an over-decorated, under-lighted
-apartment of his choosing. Sullivan was carefully
-reviewing each step taken at the caucus he had
-just attended, and satisfying himself that his own part
-in the proceedings would react in an advantageous
-manner.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The anticipated vacancy in the Cabinet had
-occurred, and the inevitable complications had developed.
-Howarth stepped modestly into the spotlight, and
-put forth claims that were not without justification.
-Gilbert, the Radical, stood out as an advocate for
-Reciprocity and felt the power of the Middle West
-behind him. Dilling, more or less thrust into the
-contest, was supported by the phalanxes of Eastlake
-and Donahue, and opposed any such trafficking with
-the United States.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Sullivan endorsed him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This was an extraordinary thing. Even Howarth
-was surprised, and no one found it more unaccountable
-than Dilling, himself.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The constituency of Morroway was divided on the
-Reciprocity issue, but the preponderance of sentiment
-was favourable. This involved a little difficulty for
-the Hon. Member, who did not approve it although
-he was confident that in securing the measure, the
-Borden Government would in no way imperil the
-existence of Canadian Federation. On the contrary,
-Mr. Sullivan was secretly—oh, very secretly!—of the
-opinion that unrestricted Reciprocity with the United
-States would be the most effective antidote to the
-disintegration sentiment with which our National wells
-are being poisoned. He believed that it would mean
-peace, plenty, and a renewed ambition amongst a class
-of people in whom hope had almost died; that its
-immediate result would be employment in lieu of discontented
-idleness, and an instantaneous circulation of
-money. He saw clearly the advantage that would
-accrue to the fishermen of British Columbia and the
-Maritime Provinces, were they able to dispose of their
-perishable merchandise quickly in the American market
-at a maximum price and a minimum cost for transportation.
-He saw also that the Quebec and Ontario
-farmers could sell to the Middle States at an advanced
-profit, while the grain speculators of the Prairies could
-offer their wheat in the Chicago pit before it was
-harvested and at the lowest possible figure for haulage.
-Moreover, Mr. Sullivan realised that there would be
-no congestion at the freight terminals, because cars
-would be moving north and south as well as east and
-west; and, furthermore, the railways of both countries
-would be co-operating.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Nor did he overlook the fact that the prairie farmers
-could buy their implements at fifty per cent less than
-present prices for Canadian manufactures—a Utopian
-condition for which every man with large holdings
-ardently prayed according to the particular doctrine
-he professed.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But Mr. Sullivan opposed Reciprocity. For years
-he had opposed it. He held a considerable number of
-bonds issued by the Grand Trunk Pacific, which
-though guaranteed by the Government of Canada
-must inevitably depreciate if the silver stream continued
-to be diverted from the National coffers in to
-the channels fashioned by Eastlake and Donahue—those
-enterprising exponents of the cult whose treasure
-lies in earthen vessels. He also happened to be
-heavily invested in Eastern industrial corporations.
-Long ago, Mr. Sullivan had decided that anything less
-than an impregnable tariff barrier between the United
-States and Canada would spell his financial obliteration.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Therefore, although it irked him to lift a finger
-towards Dilling’s political advancement, and although
-he found it extremely difficult to justify his support in
-the face of his traditional opposition to Eastlake and
-Donahue, Mr. Sullivan threw the weight of his influence
-against Howarth, who expected it, and Gilbert, who
-hoped for it, in order that Dilling might obtain the
-portfolio.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“In him we have a specimen of a genuine twentieth
-century man,” he argued, “one who actually believes
-there is such a thing as a British Constitution. He
-prints it in <span class='sc'>Capitals</span>, (God save us all!) and he loves
-it with as much veneration as the younger Pitt.
-Furthermore, he believes that the incredible utterance
-of Pitt, in 1784, is true to-day and forever—‘The
-British Constitution,’ he said, ‘is equally free from the
-distractions of democracy and the tyranny of monarchy.
-It is the envy of the world .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.’</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“For myself,” the Hon. Member continued, “I
-think that Dilling is the best debater we have had in
-the Commons since Confederation. He eclipses Cartwright—the
-best of his day—because when that strict
-economist fell a victim to his own high temper, he
-swapped logic for vituperation and lost the ear of the
-Big Men of the House; he is a match for Denby, who
-too often talks to Hansard and the Galleries, and too
-seldom comes to grips with his antagonists on the floor
-of the Chamber. When, I ask you, gentlemen, has
-Sir Eric ever influenced a vote on a Division?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Dilling, on the other hand, captures both parties
-by his earnestness, and his logic is as irrefragable as
-his temper is cold. Although I have heard him declare
-that he despises rhetoric, yet we all know his ability
-to draw deep from the pure wells of English undefiled.
-What Horace Walpole said of the youthful Fox as a
-debater, could be as aptly applied to Dilling .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-‘Cicero’s laboured orations are puerile in comparison
-with this boy’s manly reason’.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Hon. Member brought his remarks to a climax
-by terming Gilbert a traitor, charging Borden with
-political locomotor ataxia for making no effort to stem
-the tide of Western opinion towards the Reciprocity
-movement, and pronounced it treason against the
-Imperial Crown—thus serving at one and the same
-time, his ambition and his pocket-book.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The contest was short and sharp. It was universally
-recognised—even by those who held divergent
-political opinions and were personally antipathetic—that
-Dilling was the man for the Cabinet, and Sullivan’s
-speech left them no alternative but to support him.</p>
-
-<hr class='stars'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Howarth and Turner rattled the handle of the door
-and demanded admission. Sullivan complied jauntily,
-giving no sign of the mental struggle in which he had
-been engaged. Indeed, at the moment of their entrance,
-he recalled the gilt mirror that hung opposite
-his desk, the drawer marked “Unfinished Business”
-and the fact that a little manicurist was disconsolately
-awaiting him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>With an admirable gesture of preoccupation, he
-concerned himself with the telephone.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Is that my dearie?” he questioned into the instrument.
-“Forgotten? ’Pon my soul, I hadn’t! Simply
-couldn’t break away .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. eh? Yes, in my office, certainly
-.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. No, there was no thought of another party.
-.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Well, I won’t come if you are going to be cross .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-Promise? All right .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. within five minutes .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The business that was never finished while the three
-of them lived, was placed upon the desk and uncorked.
-Sullenly, two men drank, while the third tossed off his
-portion and then consulted his reflection with meticulous
-care.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Sorry,” he said, “but I must rush off. Exacting
-little devils—these women. <span class='it'>Très exigèante</span>, as our
-French friends say. But help yourselves, boys, and
-lock the drawer when you leave—that is if you have
-the grace to leave anything!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>His flair met with no response.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Damned if I can understand you, Sullivan,”
-Howarth burst out. “Here, for months, we’ve been
-trying to freeze Dilling to death, and keep the E. D. Co.
-from establishing a firmer foothold in Parliament, and
-now you turn right round and boost him into the
-Cabinet. Surely, one of us is crazy!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Only under stress, old man! Ordinarily, you are
-merely peculiar,” returned Sullivan, with a smile.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Gilbert’s a much safer man,” Howarth went on,
-“to say nothing of any qualification <span class='it'>I</span> may
-possess.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Yes,” Turner cut in, “what the devil were you
-thinking of, Rufus? Didn’t Bill, here, deserve your
-support?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Neither of you would believe me if I were to tell
-you my reason for backing Dilling’s claims,” said the
-Hon. Member for Morroway, feeling that he must
-make some sort of explanation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Let’s have it, anyway,” said Howarth.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well—er—” confessed the other man, pulling on
-his gloves, “I acted according to my best judgment
-in the interest of the whole country.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, hell!” remarked Mr. Turner, M.P.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’ve been asked to swallow many a big mouthful,”
-cried Howarth, “but this one chokes me.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And granting this noble patriotism—this alarmingly
-noble patriotism, I might say—” sneered Turner
-“why such sudden interest in the welfare of our fair
-Dominion?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“By God!” breathed Howarth. “I believe in my
-soul that that little baby-faced simpleton has put one
-over on you, Rufus! She’s got you halter-broke and
-working for her husband!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Mrs. Dilling?” echoed Turner, incredulously.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No fool like an old fool,” quoted his friend.
-“I’ve become accustomed to seeing him lose his heart
-over a fine pair of shoulders and a well-turned ankle,
-but I’m damned if I ever thought he would lose his
-head!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Sullivan paused with his hand on the door.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It strikes me, Billy,” he said, “that disappointment
-makes you rather coarse. Forgive my seeming
-inhospitality, gentlemen, but I dare not keep a lady
-waiting.”</p>
-
-<hr class='stars'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As he turned from the bright thoroughfare into a
-shadowy street, Mr. Sullivan was not free from disturbing
-reflections. This was a big game he played,
-and one that admitted of miscalculations. He tried
-to keep before him its analogy to Chess, when a man
-sees ultimate gain developing out of a temporary
-triumph won by his opponent. He tried to assure
-himself that he had been wise in helping Dilling to
-victory as a means whereby to accomplish his swifter
-defeat. Only the short-sighted player tries to vanquish
-his foe at every turn.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There was nothing small about Rufus Sullivan.
-Even his defamers granted him a largeness that
-extended to his very vices. He sinned, but he sinned
-grandly, with a <span class='it'>joie de vivre</span> that was lacking in the
-righteous deeds of confessed Christians. He loved
-readily and hated magnificently, but he did not begrudge
-the object of his hatred a modicum of pleasure.
-So, in this matter, he could look with equanimity upon
-Dilling’s attainment of the Ministership and feel no
-envy at his brief success.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>For it <span class='it'>must</span> be brief .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. and yet .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As he swung along, his eyes fixed on a window where
-a balloon of rose light swayed out into the darkness,
-the Hon. Member for Morroway realised that such
-schemes had been known to fail. By some totally
-unforeseen miracle, the anticipated downfall had not
-occurred, and men had lived to bite the hand that so
-calculatingly fed them. Would Dilling prove to be
-one of these exceptions? Would he survive to frustrate
-Rufus Sullivan’s ambitions?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>These and other cogent problems engaged the Hon.
-Member throughout the ensuing hours. The taffy-haired
-manicurist found him abstracted and singularly
-unresponsive.</p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER 18.</h2>
-
-<p class='noindent'><span class='dropcap'>T</span>he new Minister wore his honours with such an
-utter absence of hauteur, that, to many persons
-his manner was wanting in the dignity they had
-been taught to associate with the position.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Never cordial and rarely responsive, Dilling now
-made the unfortunate error of trying to be both, and
-few there were possessed of sufficient astuteness to
-recognise in his changed attitude, a sincerity as native
-to him as it was embarrassing. Most people saw only
-the insinuating affability of the professional politician
-and added another black mark to his already heavy
-score.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Marjorie, on the other hand, half-convinced that
-by following the advice of Lady Denby and Azalea,
-her “stiffness” had been a factor in securing Dilling
-the appointment, redoubled her efforts to appear ungracious—with
-the result that the indifference of many
-acquaintances crystallised into active dislike.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“They’re experimenting with <span class='it'>receets</span> for popularity,”
-remarked Mrs. Pratt to her social rival, Mrs. Prendergast.
-“I don’t mind anybody being popular,” she
-graciously conceded, “if I don’t have to see how they
-go about it. But this business,” she jerked her head
-towards the Dillings, “is, in my opinion, perfeckly disgusting!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The ladies sat in a corner of the Royal Ottawa Golf
-Club, and although they had just partaken of a dinner
-given in honour of Raymond Dilling, their mien was
-far from congratulatory. They had made astonishing
-progress in their ascent towards Society’s Parnassian
-Heights, and once a week, at least, their names appeared
-in the local calendar of fame.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mrs. Pratt employed the methods of a battering
-ram, charging through obstructions with ruthless
-vigour, and indifferent alike to wounds inflicted or
-received. She spent her money shrewdly, squeezing
-double its worth from every dime. Even her victims
-respected her.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mrs. Prendergast adopted the opposite course.
-She slithered through the barriers lying in her path
-sublimely unaware that they were supposed to be
-barriers. It was related of her that one morning,
-happening to shop in a store sanctified by the immediate
-presence of a party from Government House, she
-preceded the Governor’s lady down a cleared passage,
-passed first through the door held open by an apoplectic
-Aide-de-Camp, and bestowed upon that young gentleman
-a gracious, if bovine, smile. She spent the
-proceeds from Prendergast’s <span class='sc'>Anti-Agony Aliment</span>
-lavishly, using two dollars to accomplish the work of
-one, with regal unconcern. Slowly, she was buying
-her way onward and upward.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Both she and Mrs. Pratt entertained—if one may
-be permitted so euphemistic a word—with resolute
-frequency. Mrs. Pratt rarely received anyone less
-important than a Senator, now, and Mrs. Prendergast
-had recently dined a lady, honourable in her own right.
-The fact was chronicled in the Montreal papers and
-also in <span class='sc'>Saturday Night</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Both ladies saw the advantage of making their
-homes a rendezvous for the young, and using their
-children’s friends as a bridge, however precarious, to
-that happy land where Society dwelt. Moreover, both
-expressed the resentment of their class against one
-who, in their judgment, had been exalted above her
-station, and from that altitude demanded homage from
-people not only just as good but far better, i.e., themselves.
-There was no limit to the servility they would
-offer an unworthy aristocrat, but a deserving member
-of the bourgeoisie—never!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“How do you mean ‘experimenting’?” asked Mrs.
-Prendergast, referring to her friend’s remark.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, it’s hard to explain,” said Mrs. Pratt, “in
-so many words, that is.” The implication here was
-somewhat veiled. How many words legitimately
-belonged to an explanation, Mrs. Pratt didn’t know.
-But Mrs. Prendergast was not embarrassingly curious,
-so she continued.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“When they first came, <span class='it'>he</span> was the disagreeable one,
-so superior and grumpy you couldn’t get a word out of
-him.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Yes,” assented the other. “I remember saying
-to the Dawkter that it must be very trying to be
-married to a mute.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“On the other hand, <span class='it'>she</span> was just the opposite—apparently
-trying to cover up his grouchiness and bad
-manners. I don’t know whether you understand me,
-Mrs. Prendergast?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, yes! Oh, certainly,” cried Mrs. Prendergast,
-emphatic in defence of her intelligence. “I understand
-exactly. Indeed, I remember saying to the Dawkter
-that I found her quite a pleasant little thing.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, she’s fur from pleasant, now! Heaven
-knows I try to see good in everybody, but rully, Mrs.
-Prendergast, I think I may be purdoned for saying
-that by the airs she puts on, you’d think she was a
-member of the Royal family! And now that <span class='it'>he</span> has
-been given such a prominent position in the Party—can
-you blame me for asking what is politics coming to?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mrs. Prendergast hastened to assure her that such
-a question was blameless. She was not vitally interested
-in politics nor the intrigues that grew out of Party
-differences, and it concerned her very little who
-occupied the positions of prominence. That they
-should appreciate her and those belonging to her was
-a matter of far greater importance.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She cherished an ambition to be associated with
-the “Old Families” of the Capital—those who regarded
-the ever-changing political element with disfavour.
-Substantial clubs appealed to her—the Rideau for her
-husband, the Minto for her children, the Laurentian
-Chapter, I.O.D.E., for herself, and the Royal Ottawa
-for them all. As a matter of fact, she and the Doctor
-had just been admitted as Life Members of the latter.
-In the ordinary course of procedure, they might have
-waited twenty-years.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A banging of doors and loud commotion in the
-hallway prevented further conversation, and Hebe
-Barrington, surrounded by a group of Naughty Niners,
-danced breezily into the room. Seeing Dilling, she
-ran forward and caught him by both arms.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Congratulations, Raymond!” she cried. “I’ve
-been out of town or you would have had them sooner.
-Aren’t you very proud and happy? Your friends are,
-for you! Whose funeral is this?” she demanded
-looking with gay impudence over the group. “Ugh!
-I can guess. One of these deadly Party affairs, given—of
-course—in your honour! How do you do, Mrs.
-Dilling? Why, hello, Mr. Pratt .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. <span class='it'>and</span> Doctor
-Prendergast!” She extended a naked left arm and
-shook hands across the enraged head of Lady Denby.
-“Come along with us, Raymond. We’re going to
-dance. Mona Carmichael will teach us some new
-convolutions, so to speak. Come!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In a low, embarrassed voice, Dilling demurred.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, stuff and nonsense! They won’t miss you.
-And, besides, a Minister must acquire a bagful of
-lightsome parlour tricks, otherwise he’ll be monstrously
-heavy wheeling. Gaze upon this company, Raymond,
-and take warning!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She laughed gaily, ignoring the tensity with which
-the atmosphere was charged.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Seize him!” she cried. “Lay violent hands upon
-him, and if he struggles, smother him—with affection.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Half a dozen boys and girls rushed forward and
-dragged Dilling away. As Hebe moved off after them,
-Pratt called out to her.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Won’t you take me, Mrs. Barrington? I may be
-a Minister some day—you never can tell.” He bravely
-avoided his wife’s eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You shall be my particular charge,” retorted Hebe
-with well-feigned delight. Mr. Pratt bored her
-inexpressibly. He was rapidly acquiring the manner
-of the professional politician, who looks upon every
-individual as a vote and who conducts himself as
-though life were a perpetual election campaign. He
-had the air of one who thinks he is the soul of the
-very party, moving about from group to group, telling
-ancient political stories as having happened to himself,
-and releasing at set and stated intervals, borrowed and
-well-worn epigrams.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Certainly, Hebe did not find the companionship of
-Augustus Pratt inspiring, but just now it pleased her
-to pretend the contrary and bear him off beneath the
-battery of angry eyes the women trained upon her.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As they moved towards the door and his rather
-moist hand caressed her unclad elbow, she said in a
-loud voice,</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“None but the immediate relatives of the deceased
-followed the body to the grave .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I don’t wonder
-people have wakes, do you, dear Mr. Pratt? Solemnity
-in massive doses is so depressing. Have you tried the
-Argentine? It’s enchanting! You take three steps to
-the right .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A brief silence followed their exit. The women
-glowered at Mrs. Pratt and Marjorie Dilling as though
-they were personally responsible for their husbands’
-defection. The men fidgetted and offered one another
-fresh cigarettes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Lady Denby drew her lips into a thin line and
-remarked to Madame Valleau who was choking back a
-yawn,</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I do wish that woman would wear some clothes!
-It simply infuriates me to see her going abroad like
-that!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Frenchwoman smiled.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Perhaps that is why she does it.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I don’t know what you mean, and I don’t see
-anything funny,” Lady Denby retorted.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“One observes so much! For myself, I think it
-very funny you do not realise that instead of dressing
-to please men, as most people think, women dress to
-annoy other women. Consider yourself, <span class='it'>par example</span>
-and this gay Madame Barrington! There, you see?”</p>
-
-<hr class='stars'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The gay Madame Barrington presented a violently
-contrasting appearance the following morning, as she
-lay on the Eyrie Chesterfield and consumed a box of
-Russian cigarettes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Her eyes were heavy and dull. Her complexion,
-wearing the make-up of the night previous, looked
-thick and dead. Over her citron-tinted sleeping robe
-she had flung an inadequate <span class='it'>batik</span> garment that required
-continuous adjustment or reclaiming from the floor.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Sharp spears of light thrust themselves between
-the close-drawn mulberry curtains, and sought out the
-vulnerable spots in Hebe’s house-keeping. A thin film
-of dust lay on a teakwood table; flakes of ash and
-tobacco strewed the floor. A stale odour combining
-scent, cigarettes and anise-seed hung in the still air.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mr. Sullivan, correct in new spring tweeds, lay
-back in an easy chair and absently caressed the glass
-he held in his hand. Beside him on the table, stood a
-decanter and syphon.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He sniffed, with disapproving discernment.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Do you find absinthe a satisfying beverage, my
-dear?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, as satisfying as any other.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, tastes differ .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. and stomachs. For my
-part, I’m afraid of the stuff. The less subtle and
-more reliable Scotch is good enough for me, although
-there are occasions, it goes without saying, when the
-bouquet of a fine wine is somewhat more acceptable.
-I am fond of a high grade of Burgundy, and am unique,
-I believe, in fancying a glass of old Madeira, which,
-by the way, is not adequately appreciated among the
-English people.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Hebe watched him sullenly, but said nothing.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It was during the French war that our soldiers
-made the discovery of this delectable drink, and it was
-they who carried the taste for it back to England,
-where, I admit, its flavour deteriorates. Climate
-probably, though there are some who maintain that
-Englishmen don’t know how to keep it.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Why did you come to see me?” Hebe asked the
-Hon. Member, bluntly.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She lit a fresh cigarette and dragged her negligée
-from the floor, knowing that Mr. Sullivan had not
-called upon her to discuss the virtues of various
-intoxicants. She suspected that the real object of his
-visit would be even less agreeable as a topic of conversation.
-Her feeling towards Mr. Sullivan could never be
-accurately described as blind adoration, but this
-morning she unqualifiedly hated him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Why <span class='it'>did</span> you come here at such an hour, Uncle
-Rufus? You know how I loathe to be disturbed early
-in the day. I’m never human till noon.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The artistic temperament is interesting in all its
-phases,” murmured Mr. Sullivan, suavely.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Don’t be funny!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Nothing is further from my intention. With
-perfect gravity I assert that a woman is infinitely
-appealing to me in her gentler moods. Her fragility,
-her beautiful feminine weakness .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. She inspires me
-with overwhelming tenderness .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. And how doubly
-charming when her verve returns.” He smiled,
-reflectively, at the tip of his boots.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, drop that nonsense and tell me what brings
-you here!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, my dear Hebe, I must plead a stupid man’s
-irresistible desire to discuss a somewhat delicate situation—albeit
-of his own making—with the cleverest
-woman of his acquaintance.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Bosh!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The unadulterated truth, I assure you. I am
-paying you no idle compliment, my child.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Thanks,” said Hebe, shortly. “Go on.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I succumbed to the imperious need for feminine
-companionship, sympathy, understanding.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Eliminate the first two.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Charming naivèté! Delicious frankness! Hebe,
-you enchant me!” The Hon. Member drained his
-glass, touched his lips with a lavender handkerchief
-and beamed upon his sulky hostess. “But, tell me,
-what do you think of our new Minister?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You know what I think. Not that my opinion
-matters a damn!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“A mistake, my dear. If you approve of the
-appointment, then your opinion coincides with my
-own, and that, in itself, lends it some importance.
-I feel that Dilling is the very man for the post .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. which is the very best reason in the world for
-your opposition to his securing it.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Sullivan laughed, indulgently. He raised his cuff
-and consulted the face of his watch.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“In ten minutes,” said he, “you will be human.
-Meanwhile, may I help myself?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The hiss of a syphon filled the room and Hebe
-stretched out her hand for the glass. For a space
-neither of them spoke, and then the midday gun
-sounded its message over the city.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Now,” said the Hon. Member for Morroway,
-“what about this business with Dilling?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I can’t do anything. I’ve tried.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mr. Sullivan protested that she hardly did herself
-justice. “A woman of your age—er—experience,” he
-tactfully amended, “<span class='it'>and</span> talents .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” He smiled
-benignly at her. “Now is your golden opportunity.
-The more prominent his position, the more conspicuous
-he becomes, and every act is subject to criticism.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I tell you I can’t do it.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Don’t be so childish. The world talks of men
-compromising women, but that’s a difficult task compared
-with the ease with which women compromise
-men. What’s the matter? Are your weapons rusty
-with disuse? It seems to me that only just before
-you came up here I heard rumours of .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Oh, but let
-that pass! The point is now, that there must be no
-further dallying. Before’s there’s any possibility of
-his obtaining any hold on the country, Dilling must go,
-must hang himself, must dig his own grave and bury
-himself! It’s up to you!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Hebe avoided his glance, and, as he regarded her, a
-change came over him. His suavity vanished, his
-smile disappeared, as his lips set themselves into firmer
-lines. In his eyes, tiny hot sparks gleamed like pinpoints
-of fire. There awoke in Mr. Sullivan’s breast a
-disturbing suspicion.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What’s the matter?” he repeated. “Why don’t
-you drag him through the streets at your chariot
-wheels—as is your playful wont? Let people see that
-this zealous prophet who preaches righteousness and a
-higher idealism, is bitten no deeper by his fine doctrine
-than is the average disciple of orthodoxy. Get busy,
-girl; get busy!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“He won’t respond,” muttered Hebe. “He’s
-different.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Bah! <span class='it'>You’re</span> different—that’s the trouble. I’m
-half inclined to believe you’ve fallen for this aesthetic
-milk-veined Parliamentarian—that you’ve become the
-victim instead of the victor—that you have allowed
-your undisciplined emotions to play you tricks. But
-by God! you shan’t play any on me! I’m a bad man
-to double cross, Hebe, and don’t lose sight of that for
-an instant. You undertook to see this thing through
-.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. now, go to it!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I tell you it can’t be done! I’ve worked like a
-dog, and anyhow, there’s nothing in it for me—nothing
-but humiliation .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Besides,” she added, with seeming
-irrelevance, “I can’t live on Toddles’ salary!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mr. Sullivan laughed as he made his way to the
-door. With the knob in his hand he turned, and
-observed,</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I know you can’t! Moreover, I know you <span class='it'>don’t</span> .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-my dear!”</p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER 19.</h2>
-
-<p class='noindent'><span class='dropcap'>E</span>verybody now called upon Marjorie. Even
-the A.D.C.’s from Government House were to
-be found at her receptions on Monday afternoons.
-Invitations poured in upon her. She was an integral
-part of Canada’s official life, and her presence was
-deemed necessary at all public assemblages. Socially,
-she was accounted of importance, and her attendance
-at private affairs lent to them that subtle odour of
-distinction which—with a fine disregard for principle—democracy
-loves to inhale. Tradespeople solicited her
-custom, agents waited upon her pleasure and her
-patronage was sought for a bewildering variety of
-functions.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She found herself in the hands of exploiters, who
-called at all hours, with slight excuse or no excuse, to
-crave favours or heap them upon her, with high hope
-that she would liquidate the debt in social currency,
-and Marjorie never learned to deny herself to these
-people. She was more embarrassed than flattered by
-their ambiguous attentions, and was positively distressed
-at having to take precedence over those who,
-but yesterday, had snubbed her.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Life became a round of perplexing complications,
-and she yearned for the peace and quiet that used to
-be hers at home.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then, too, she was worried by the fierce light of
-publicity that played upon her. Interviewers distorted
-her timid utterances in half a dozen metropolitan
-papers. Illustrated weeklies requested her photograph
-for publication. Local reporters took a sudden and
-absorbing interest in her gowns, and the gatherings at
-which she was expected to wear them—gatherings,
-which, under other conditions, would not have attracted
-the Press by so much as a line.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The Sweet Arbutus Club enjoyed the distinction of entertaining
-Mrs. Raymond Dilling at its annual supper on Thursday
-evening. The President of the Club, Mrs. Horatio Gullep,
-received the members, and little Miss Ermyntrude Polduggan
-presented the distinguished guest with a shower bouquet of white
-carnations. The Secretary, Mrs. (Dr.) Deitrich, and the
-Treasurer, Miss Emmeline Crogganthorpe, presided at the
-supper table, while the following young ladies assisted .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-Throughout the evening several delightful selections were
-rendered by the Club Orchestra, consisting of the Messrs.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-and the Misses .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Mrs. (Rev.) Muldoon charmed her audience
-with three recitations, and the programme was brought to a
-close with a chorus sung by seven dainty little maidens all under
-the age of seven .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This was the sort of thing that Mrs. Long claimed
-not to have read and that drove Lady Denby to a
-state closely akin to frenzy.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I never saw anyone so intractable,” she cried to
-Azalea. “You would think that she actually preferred
-those awful people!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I believe they are ardent workers in the church,”
-murmured Azalea.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Even so! Church work should be encouraged,
-and I admire her for undertaking so much of it. But
-you know as well as I do, Azalea, that a Minister’s
-wife has her own peculiar duties to perform, and they
-are not fundamentally concerned with—”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Church workers,” suggested the girl.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, I mean to say that she needn’t be afraid we
-will contaminate her. There <span class='it'>are</span> Christians outside
-the Church.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’m glad to hear you say so, Lady Denby! There
-certainly aren’t many in it.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Child! How can you think of such things?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You flatter me,” returned Azalea. “It’s not
-original. Nietzsche gave me the idea. He said there
-was but one Christian, and Him they crucified.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Lady Denby was outraged by this blasphemy.
-She was not the only person who thought Azalea Deane
-had developed an unpleasant emancipation since the
-death of her father, and she took this occasion to
-mention her feeling in the matter.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I have nothing to say against the Civil Service,”
-she concluded, “but I have noticed that so many of
-the women who enter it acquire an air of independence
-that is unbecoming to a lady. I am speaking as a
-friend, and for your own good, my dear, so I trust
-that you will give heed to what I say.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Thank you, Lady Denby,” murmured Azalea.
-“Now to return to the Dillings—”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You <span class='it'>must</span> make her see that these parochial affairs
-should not claim her attention.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I have tried to make her see that, but it is difficult.
-You will remember that her creed is a literal acceptance
-of the golden rule. Indeed, she is literal in everything.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Lady Denby sighed. “Well, keep on trying.
-Upon my word, I think the world is turning upside
-down! Where <span class='it'>are</span> the nice young people, nowadays?
-Why couldn’t she have been like Helena Chesley or
-Eva Leeds, or the Angus-McCallums, or—er—even
-you? You would have made him a very good wife,
-Azalea!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Azalea turned a painful scarlet, but Lady Denby
-was too deeply immersed in her own trend of thought
-to notice her companion’s confusion or to read its
-meaning.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“There seem to be but two types of young woman,”
-she complained, “hers, and the one represented by
-that terrible Barrington person. Of the two I almost
-incline towards the latter. At least, she would give
-some tone to the Party.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I grant it.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Don’t misunderstand me, Azalea! You know well
-enough what I mean. She has a manner .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. On the
-other hand, here is a young couple, qualified in many
-respects to adorn not only the Party but the Dominion.
-Heaven knows we need his brains. Except for a few
-of the older men, notably my husband, the country
-can’t muster enough to fill a good-sized thimble! But
-what do they make of their gifts! Nothing! Less
-than nothing! They ignore advice, scorn convention
-and, unless they suffer a radical change of heart, they
-will undermine the foundations of the very structure
-which has made them, by refusing to adapt themselves
-to the exigencies of their official position. Can you
-imagine him a Prime Minister, representing Canada
-abroad—for example, at an Imperial Conference?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Yes, I can!” flared Azalea. “And furthermore, I
-can imagine that in a broader field, associating with
-bigger people, Raymond Dilling would be accepted at
-his genuine worth. Proportions would be adjusted,
-and the gifts he undoubtedly possesses would shine
-with a brilliance undimmed by the shadow of his
-humble origin. I mean to say,” she went on, “a
-shadow that is formed, locally, by petty insistence
-upon a matter that is of no importance. Here, in this
-trivial atmosphere, heavy with a spurious culture, most
-of us regard the position as less significant than the man.
-We expect him to adorn his office, and the manner
-in which he wears his mantle means more to us than
-the manner in which he administers his public duty.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Fine feathers .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” began Lady Denby.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Moreover,” continued Azalea, unheeding the
-interruption, “we are impressed with his personality
-first and his political integrity later. People of a
-different calibre would relegate the mantle to its proper
-place, and Dilling, the orator, the statesman, would
-come into his own. Do you suppose,” she cried, with
-more heat than she realised, “that the men who mould
-our Imperial policies are influenced in their estimate
-of Raymond Dilling’s usefulness to Canada—to the
-Empire, indeed—by considerations of his talents and
-inflexibility of purpose, or by his adherence to custom
-in wearing a black tie or a white?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Now you are being stupid, Azalea,” pronounced
-Lady Denby. “Conventions cannot be broken without
-harming both the offender and the cause he represents.
-There never has been a telling argument in
-favour of conventionality, yet it persists. My charwoman
-may be <span class='it'>gauche</span> and amuse me, but similar
-behavior on the part of Lady Elton, for example, would
-disgust me and kill my respect.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But the Dillings are <span class='it'>not gauche</span>,” Azalea defended.
-“I know few words that could be more inaptly applied
-to them. Mrs. Pratt is <span class='it'>gauche</span>, for if she followed her
-instincts she would do the clumsy, cruel and vulgar
-thing. The Dillings, on the other hand, do the orderly,
-kind and decent thing. They make no pretence, use
-no lacquer or veneer. If they err at all, it is not due
-to <span class='it'>gaucherie</span>, but utter simplicity. They do not think
-that it becomes them to ape or assume the manner of
-the great. They even go so far as to be <span class='it'>logical</span>, which
-is the last attribute that one should have to be socially
-presentable. Oh, why, Lady Denby,” she cried,
-“<span class='it'>why</span> can’t people let them alone, stop this carping
-criticism, and applaud, if they won’t follow, the fine
-example that is being set them? As a man thinketh .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>They parted in some constraint, Lady Denby unpleasantly
-stirred by the truth behind Azalea’s championship,
-and Azalea quivering with indignation at the
-unreasonableness of such attacks upon the Dillings.
-Never had she hated her townsfolk more bitterly than
-at this moment. “They are like a swarm of vicious
-wasps,” was her thought, as she raced along through
-the mild spring night, “stinging a lovely and unoffending
-body until its sweetness is absorbed and its beauty
-marred.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And Azalea was alive to another sensation. Above
-the clamour of her directed thinking, Lady Denby’s
-words rushed unbidden into her mind, and would not
-be dislodged.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You would have made him a good wife, Azalea!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“God,” she thought, “why must life be so cruel?
-Why is it that some of us are denied not only the
-privilege of having, but even that of giving? I could
-give him so much .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. so much .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A verse filtered through her memory. It was the
-cry of Ibsen’s <span class='it'>Agnes</span>, and it spoke to her own heavy
-heart:</p>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“Through the hours that drag so leaden,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;Think of me shut out of sight</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;Of the struggle’s beacon-light;</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;Think of me who cannot ask</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;Aught beyond my petty task;</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;Think of me beside the ember</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;Of a silent hearthstone set,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;Where I dare not all remember</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;And I cannot all forget .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<h2>CHAPTER 20.</h2>
-
-<p class='noindent'><span class='dropcap'>S</span>leep eluded her. Wide awake, she lay on her
-back, staring into the tepid darkness and listening
-to the whisper of a thin, spring rain. Her
-thoughts were of Raymond Dilling.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Only at night, beyond the reach of prying eyes, did
-Azalea dare to open the doors of her soul’s concealment.
-Only then did she allow herself the freedom of the
-emotion that possessed her, and enjoy the warmth of
-a communion that no one could suspect. Her thoughts
-were like perfumed caresses .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. tender, delicate, and
-as they held him in sweet contact, she glowed with the
-reflection of their radiance, conscious that her entire
-being was suffused with a light—an ectoplasm—visible
-to the naked eye.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>To-night, however, her thoughts were poisoned with
-acute bitterness. The world, as Lady Denby had
-said, was upside down. Clamouring for justice, it
-offered high reward for iniquity, nepotism and refined
-knavery of every colour.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Give us Honour and Idealism,” cried the voice of
-the People, “but give them to us garbed in the motley
-of hypocrisy and alluring vice. If you must be good,
-disguise yourself, so that you are still a knave and a
-rattling good fellow!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Would the Public—that vague, vast body, of which
-none of us acknowledges himself a member—never
-come to the realisation that in Raymond Dilling the
-country had the man for whom it sought, a man of
-magnificent honesty, courage and fidelity to high
-purpose; a man whose talents were devoted to more
-lasting matters than the wearing of a morning coat,
-and the sequence of forks at a dinner-table? Would
-the Public never see that to him these things were
-non-essentials? Beau Brummel, she reminded herself
-with angry vehemence, spent several hours daily conferring
-with his tailor, and doubtless both found the
-association profitable. A pilot, on the other hand, has
-time—during the pursuit of his calling—for no such
-recreation. That he guide his ship through shoal and
-reef, fog and other dangers of the sea, is all that is
-required of him. Nor is he adjudged a less worthy
-pilot because he appears unshaven to steer his vessel
-into port.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Which did Canada need—a Beau Brummel to lend
-her picturesqueness in the Council of the Nations, or a
-pilot to guide the destiny of her Ship of State through
-the reefs of ready disaster?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Into her mind came the story of a young man who
-climbing in the Alps, lost his footing and was hurled
-to his death in the glacier hundreds of feet below.
-One of his companions, a scientist, computed that at
-the end of so many years, the body would reappear as
-the glacier moved towards a certain outlet. On the date
-specified, a group of the youth’s friends gathered at
-the spot signified, to see if the computation would
-prove correct.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It did. There, before the company of old men,
-battered and scarred in their struggles against life, lay
-the body of the boy—fair and unsullied as on the day
-he had left them.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Azalea wondered whether Raymond Dilling, having
-climbed so far along the treacherous crags of politics,
-must lose his foothold and plunge into a glacier of
-oblivion; and she wondered, passionately, if such had
-to be, would he emerge after a lapse of years, beautiful
-and fair, to reproach the country that had rejected him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Azalea was, perhaps, the only person who saw
-Dilling’s reaction to Public Opinion. Universally, he
-was supposed to be indifferent, a man of stone, impervious
-alike to enmity and friendship. But she could
-recall half a dozen instances when the lack of sympathy—more
-difficult to endure than active opposition—from
-men whose warm approbation he richly deserved,
-filled him with corroding discouragement. She knew
-that he felt his isolation keenly, and was depressed
-by it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Her thoughts turned to this new appointment, and
-her happiness for him was dulled by the manner in
-which Ottawa had received it. There had been
-noticeably lacking the warmth of genuine congratulation
-that made formal expression of it acceptable.
-The Press of the Dominion and many foreign countries
-commented enthusiastically upon the Government’s
-action, and paid a worthy tribute to the young Minister,
-but the people amongst whom the Dillings lived, were
-lukewarm and perfunctory. Azalea knew that to
-Raymond, the honour—the cloak—was cold, and that
-he shivered as he wore it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She wondered what he thought about the attitude
-of Rufus Sullivan. There was something altogether
-extraordinary in the support of the Hon. Member for
-Morroway. Azalea did not agree with certain organs
-of the Press that credited him with sinking private
-considerations in the interest of public weal. She did
-not believe in the sincerity of Mr. Sullivan’s vaunted
-Imperialism. Unable to find any proof for her suspicions,
-yet she came very near the truth in listening
-to the warning of her instinct.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Of Mr. Sullivan’s private affairs, she knew nothing.
-Nor of his ambitions. Amongst his friends—and he
-had friends!—he was not adjudged an ambitious man.
-He kept modestly out of the Press, and appeared in
-Hansard only often enough to satisfy his rather easygoing
-constituents. He never gave interviews. Interviews,
-he had observed, had an unpleasant way of
-rising to condemn one. It was safer not to espouse a
-cause, for then one could not be accused of inconstancy
-when one disavowed it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This reticence on the part of Mr. Sullivan was
-variously regarded as humility towards those of
-superior wisdom, and an almost extinct distaste for
-publicity. There were many who thought that save
-for a certain moral obliquity, Mr. Sullivan was a very
-fine man!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But Azalea distrusted him. With the feminine
-shrewdness that is really a manifestation of Bergsonian
-intuition, she saw his modesty as caution, and naturally
-inferred that caution is only necessary when one has
-something to conceal. The fact that he never declared
-himself definitely upon any stand, made her suspicious
-of his enthusiastic support of Dilling. Azalea sensed
-treachery behind it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Scattered bits of gossip, an odd suggestion dropped
-here and there, unremarked at the time, rose now to
-the surface of her mind, and strengthened her case
-against Rufus Sullivan. Besides, had not Lady Denby
-hinted that Sir Eric was not unqualifiedly pleased at
-the championship of the Hon. Member for Morroway?
-That, in itself, was cause for apprehension.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>So far as Azalea knew, Mr. Sullivan had never
-denounced Eastlake and Donahue, nor had he uttered
-any anti-Imperialistic shibboleths, but she simply
-could not bring herself to accept his attitude as sincere,
-and something warned her that this sudden flare of
-patriotism served an ignoble end.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>What, she asked herself, could he gain by putting
-Dilling in a position of honour and importance?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Bribery was unthinkable, but might it not be that
-he sought some higher honour for himself, some post
-which could be more easily acquired by a friend at
-court than by personal application?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“That’s stupid,” thought Azalea, “for the man has
-hosts of influential friends, who, though hesitating to
-introduce him to their wives and daughters, would
-exert no end of energy to gratify a political whim.
-There must be something else .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She drew in her breath sharply.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>What if animosity towards Dilling, and not friendship,
-or even self-interest, had prompted this extraordinary
-act of Mr. Sullivan’s!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Was it possible, she asked herself, that he had built
-his policy on the theory that Dilling would be self-defeated
-by the deficiencies which Lady Denby so persistently
-deplored? Did he rely on the Capital’s
-beguilement by a Beau Brummell, and its rejection of
-a pilot who placed the substance before the shadow?
-Sullivan was astute enough to aim at Dilling’s most
-vulnerable spot, realising that it was scarcely probable
-for him to be overthrown by a political misadventure.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A motive was not far to seek .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Marjorie! Did
-Mr. Sullivan wish to cripple his antagonist beyond the
-chance of giving battle, and then himself reap the
-spoils? He was, she decided, quite capable of such
-infamy.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She required no complaints from Lady Denby to
-remind her of the Dillings’ social short-comings.
-Times without number, she had tried to convince
-Marjorie that in Ottawa—in any Capital, probably—Success
-demands that aspect of good breeding which
-may be described as a superficial adaptability to others.
-But neither Marjorie nor her husband would conform
-to the standards set by other people, when those
-standards were opposed to the principles on which
-they had been nurtured.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s deceit,” said Marjorie.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s duplicity,” said Raymond.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Success was not worth attaining unless it accompanied
-a cleanly heart.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In such small matters did they transgress against
-the rules of that great governing body called Society.
-In such stupid little things! It was immaterial to
-Dilling whether he appeared in black shoes or tan.
-Marjorie developed a perfect genius for wearing the
-wrong clothes. At a luncheon given to some distinguished
-visitor, she could see no reason for “dressing
-up”, while for an affair confined to the humbler members
-of the Sunday School, she would wear the best
-that her wardrobe afforded. Similarly, in entertaining,
-she would provide the simplest repast for a guest of
-high degree, and spread before the officers of the
-Sweet Arbutus Club, a dinner that was elaborate by
-comparison.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“People like Lady Sommerville and the Countess
-of Lynwood,” she argued, “have so much better than
-I could give them, they wouldn’t even notice any
-effort I could make. But with the others .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. it means
-something to them to be entertained in a Minister’s
-house. When I have them here, I am giving somebody
-real pleasure. Don’t you think it is worth a good deal
-of trouble?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The caparisons of greatness would always remain
-for them non-essentials. All externalities were vain
-pomp and inglorious display. The things that counted
-lay within—within the heart and mind and soul of
-man, and these they pursued and cultivated ardently.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Azalea began to fear that without a drastic shifting
-of ideals, life would soon become quite insupportable
-for them in their Land of Afternoon.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The birds were stirring, and a sullen dawn was
-taking possession of the sky before she fell into a
-troubled doze. She was conscious of a disturbing
-dissonance, a harsh thumping that beat against her
-brain, and she awoke to the sound of Lady Denby’s
-voice crying,</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You would have made him a good wife, Azalea!”</p>
-
-<hr class='stars'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Heavy-eyed, she entered the office in the morning.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Hello,” cried Dilling. “You’re here, at last! I’d
-begun to fear that you were ill.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The eagerness in his manner enraptured her. She
-drew it into her being, and was refreshed as from a
-draught of wine. She was conscious of a lifting of the
-weight that lay upon her spirit. He had been watching
-for her .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. he had been anxious .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. afraid that she
-was ill .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She looked at him, standing in the doorway, vibrant
-with unusual health and vigour, scarcely able to keep
-the glory of her happiness from shining through her
-eyes. “Here you are, at last,” he had said. It was
-wonderful but it was true.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Dilling relapsed into his accustomed matter-of-factness.
-He was utterly unconscious of his dependence
-upon this girl. At least, he was unconscious of
-the extent of his reliance. During the time he was
-waiting here, when his thoughts were definitely concerned
-with her, he was by no means wholly aware
-that she stood for him as an absorbing problem,
-intensifying mysteries and contrasts, pricking strange
-and sensitive spots in the sheath of his imagination.
-He only dimly suspected how much he owed her for
-the enlargement of his world and the discovery of new
-regions of thought and feeling.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He had looked at the clock, trying to summon a
-sense of irritation. Azalea had never been late before.
-Instead, he succumbed to anxiety. She must be ill .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-He tried to recall her appearance, yesterday, and failed.
-He was stupid, that way .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. intensely stupid. He
-never noticed people .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Marjorie was very clever.
-She could have seen in an instant whether Azalea
-Deane was ill .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A curious thought cut athwart the woof of his
-reflection, a thought that had disturbed him more
-than once. Might she be tiring of her work? Did
-she find it—him—too exacting? Perhaps she wasn’t
-coming back at all!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He rose, opened the door and looked out into the
-corridor. She was not coming. Tired out, probably
-.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. sick of her job! How could he make the work
-more interesting, he wondered? How could he show
-her greater consideration?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He found it difficult not to drive Azalea. She
-encouraged him to overtax her strength. “If she’d
-only tell me when she’s had enough,” he thought
-guiltily. “But she won’t stop .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. won’t take advantage
-of the scheduled periods of rest!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Dilling felt that he must put a stop to this sort of
-thing. For example, the girl must go out for lunch.
-He must see that she went. Anticipation of proposed
-tyranny sent an agreeable warmth over him. There
-were many Members who took their secretaries out to
-lunch .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. why should he not take Azalea?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A very sensible solution, so far as it went. He
-would see that she ate a proper meal in the middle of
-the day. He might take her at noon .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. if she would
-only come.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The sequence of his thoughts was shattered, and
-Dilling caught himself speculating upon a hitherto unconsidered
-problem—Azalea’s relations with other men.
-What were they? Had she any close friends? If so,
-which were the men, and if not, why? Had she ever
-been in love, and why had she not married?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Hastily, he discarded all the men he knew as unworthy
-of such a relationship, and then he fell to
-wondering how much she liked him. Was she capable
-of any depth of feeling, or was a sort of consistent
-cordiality, the expression of an intellectual glow that
-substituted for emotion?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But he made little headway. He found that the
-clear, cold reason that ate like an acid through the
-metal of ordinary barriers, was impotent to solve this
-subtler question .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. that he was slow and clumsy in
-considering the psychology of Romance.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Not that Dilling scented the least romantic element
-in his relationship with Azalea Deane. On the contrary!
-Never had he consciously admitted her
-femininity; never was he aware of the slightest exoteric
-appeal. Truly, did women say of him, “He’s a cold
-fish!” Azalea was, to him, a fine mind, a sort of disembodied
-intelligence, upon whose judgment he
-unconsciously leaned, and whose approbation he keenly
-desired.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As he drew the telephone towards him to put an
-end to his impatience, the door opened and she entered
-the room.</p>
-
-<hr class='stars'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“One might judge from your cheerful aspect, that
-the House would prorogue before lunch,” she smiled at
-him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No such luck! Although, as a matter of fact, I
-believe the end’s in sight. The Budget should be
-down this week. There won’t be much more after
-that.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“This week?” Azalea bent diligently over her desk,
-“Then it won’t be long before you start West, again.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Marjorie and the kids will probably go home.
-But I have no intention of accompanying them.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, what will you do?” asked Azalea, in surprise.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I shall stay around Ottawa and become a golf
-addict. I played eighteen holes yesterday afternoon.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Above the mad singing of her heart, she caught a
-strange note in his voice, a note she was at a loss to
-diagnose. “I shall stay in Ottawa .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” he said
-calmly, but in a peculiar way.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She dared not trust herself to look at him. Eyes
-are responsible for more betrayals than are the lips.
-She wondered, nervously, whether he was looking at
-her. “I shall stay in Ottawa .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” Surely, he had
-not meant .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. No, no! The thing was impossible!
-Never, by so much as a fleeting glance, had Raymond
-Dilling expressed anything more than friendliness
-towards her, and at that, it was the friendliness that
-man offers man. Had he not deplored the fact that
-she was born a woman? Hope that was as dear as it
-was unfounded, died under one smart blow of Reason
-and Azalea called herself a weak fool. She was
-ashamed.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You are singularly uninterested in the affairs
-pertaining to your Minister,” Dilling teased. “Why
-don’t you ask me some intelligent questions?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He looked at her with a sudden softening in his
-glance that was almost warm enough to be affectionate.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Very well. Why are you going to stay in
-Ottawa?” she asked, looking squarely at him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Ah, that’s the wrong question. I can’t tell you
-at this moment. But you may make a note and refer
-to it, again.” The same curious sombreness crept into
-his voice. A new intensity shone in his face. “Later,
-I will remind you that I <span class='it'>had</span> a reason! But ask
-another .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“With whom did you play golf?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“None other than His Royal Highness. Are you
-impressed?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Not a whit! I’m not even surprised.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No! I’ve already seen it in the papers.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You’re joking!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Really! It’s the first item in the Social Column.
-Only the reporter neglected to mention the score.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Dilling thanked heaven for that. The Duke, he
-thought, must be one of the best players in the United
-Kingdom. “He beat me”, he added. “Indeed, Pratt,
-who followed us round with fatuous insistence, called
-it a wallop.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Do you know,” said Azalea, “I can scarcely picture
-you being beaten. Somehow, one feels that you ought
-to do everything well.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Heaven forfend! You don’t understand me, Miss
-Deane! You think me always and inevitably serious—that
-my disposition will not permit me to do things
-by halves. Nothing is further from the truth.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But you don’t agree with Horace, do you? Remember,
-he said that it is pleasant to play the fool
-deliberately, and be silly now and then.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I do not! No one who recognises the thin line
-that divides sanity from its awful opposite, can ever
-willingly approach that line. On the other hand,
-however, I believe that it is an expedient of great
-psychonomic value to do things which one knows he
-does badly—or let us say inartistically—at times.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Golf certainly offers rare opportunities to many
-persons,” murmured Azalea.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And dancing! Look at me .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I dance as badly
-as I play golf, but candidly, I don’t <span class='it'>want</span> to do either
-of them well. My mind rests itself in the conviction
-that I am doing badly, and so I am refreshed.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What harm do you see in doing them well?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Speaking for myself—and myself alone, you
-understand—I should be ashamed of excelling in either
-of these arts, because excellence spells much long and
-arduous labour in acquiring perfection. You remember
-Herbert Spencer’s rebuke to the young man who beat
-him handily at billiards .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. ‘Your exceedingly great
-skill argues a mis-spent youth’, he said. That’s just it!
-Skill in trivial things is not worth while unless you are
-earning your bread thereby. For example, were I a
-golf pro. or a dancing master .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. No, Miss Deane, I
-despise the crack amateur.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s true, and having said so much, you will be
-prepared to hear me add that I dispute the sonorous
-counsel, ‘Whatsoever thy hand findeth to do, do it
-with all thy might’. Utter nonsense, I call it!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Alack, alack!” cried Azalea. “What shall we do
-for copybook mottoes?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’ll give you a better one .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. ‘What’s only worth
-doing once in a while, should be forgotten until the
-next time!’ Now for the foreign papers. This parcel?
-Thank you.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He glanced rapidly through half a dozen of them—English,
-French and German. Azalea, watching him,
-saw his expression darken into apprehension, the meaning
-of which she could not fathom. Nor was she able
-to interpret his increasing preoccupation until one
-August morning he called her to the telephone.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I can tell you now why I stayed in Ottawa,” he
-said. “Despatches have just arrived .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. England
-has declared war on Germany .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Canada will have
-to fight!”</p>
-
-<div><h1 id='Page_275'>PART THREE<br/> <span class='sub-head'>They Conquered</span></h1></div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER 21.</h2>
-
-<p class='noindent'><span class='dropcap'>D</span>estiny seemed to be setting the stage for
-Armageddon, the last tragic scene in the play of
-human life. Pandora’s box had been opened
-and every mortal ill loosed to the bonds of hate.
-For more than three years, the sword of War had
-maimed the body of civilisation. It was a time when
-the vision of young men was carnage, and the dream of
-old men, despair. Prussian frightfulness was still
-exacting dreadful tribute from Celt and Anglo-Saxon
-battlefields that had lost all trace of old-time chivalry.
-The virtue of sheer sacrifice was confined to the
-English-speaking Dominions, the flower of whose
-youth had gone forth against a foe that had not directly
-challenged them; gone forth with joy to build their
-splendid bodies into ramparts that might be shattered
-but never stormed.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Blond Beast was shaking the blood from his
-eyes and looking anxiously across the Atlantic. But
-America had not yet decided to step into the breach.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Thus with the men. Nor was the mettle of our
-women lacking in the hour of trial. Spartan mothers
-never sent their sons into battle with finer renunciation
-than did the mothers of the unconscripted youths who
-crowded the transports in the first two years of conflict.
-Women stepped into the gaping ranks of industry at
-home—into the farms and fields, and into factories
-originally designed for making ploughshares and pruning
-hooks, but now converted into plants for fashioning
-the panoplies of war. Thousands of these women clad
-themselves in the overalls of labour, and hundreds put
-on the uniform of the Red Cross. Life so lived was
-hard but it was intense, and “Carry on”, came to
-express one of the spiritual values of the ages.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This was one picture of the activities of women
-during the grim tourney of Might against Right.
-There was another, not so inspiring. It revealed the
-cocotte and the flapper. Birds of beautiful plumage,
-these, who thronged London, Paris, Ostend—God
-knows where they were not—and sang their siren
-songs into masculine ears echoing with the shriek of
-shot and shell .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. songs that offered forgetfulness,
-Nirvana, to men who came out of a stinking Hell
-where the form of Death stalked grinning at their side.
-These were they who filled the theatres, cabarets, and
-tea shops, providing fat profits for jewellers, modistes,
-motor liveries; the hotels and inconspicuous road-houses.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>How swiftly in our own land came the changes
-wrought by war! One grew inured to bobbed hair,
-knee-length skirts, universal smoking, Einstein, trousered
-women, camouflage, expensive economy and
-economical extravagance, unashamed macquillage,
-weddings à la volée, War Babies, and appetency for
-divorce.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The social limousine, as it sped on the road of
-Hysteria, was not alone in its responsiveness to the
-influences of the time. The car of politics was jolted
-from its accustomed track. Union Government was
-formed under the leadership of Sir Robert Borden, and
-both the great parties lost their distinctiveness, not so
-much from the deliberate fusion as from the departure
-of the pick of capable men from each. To complete
-the debacle of the Liberal Party, Sir Wilfrid Laurier—the
-thaumaturge of Canada’s peaceful days of growth—passed
-away, stupefied by the alarms of war. The
-nation lost its beautiful Parliament House by fire, set
-it was generally thought, by the myrmidons of the
-Kaiser.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the Dillings’ home, changes had also made their
-way. Marjorie found the top floor convenient as a
-meeting place for the dozen and one organisations over
-which she was asked to preside. Dilling had an office
-on the ground floor as well as at the Victoria Museum—whither
-the burnt-out Members of Parliament had
-been driven for refuge, and Azalea practically lived at
-the house.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mr. Sullivan was by no means an infrequent visitor
-and Lord Ronald Melville, the A.D.C., found a curious
-respite from Society’s kaleidoscopic demands upon him
-in the prim ugliness of Marjorie’s drawing-room.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I like him better than any man I ever knew,” she
-confided to Azalea, one evening as they sat waiting for
-the children to return from a masquerade at Government
-House. “He’s so old-fashioned.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Azalea laughed. “In what way?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Ever so many ways! He doesn’t like women who
-smoke or swear, and he’s so fond of children.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“That <span class='it'>is</span> old-fashioned!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Marjorie nodded. “I don’t think he likes Ottawa
-very much. He said that the Society here was like a
-blurred and microscopic reflection of London life.
-Wasn’t that pretty strong, Azalea?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, it certainly is a definite view.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I find it easy to get on with him,” Marjorie
-continued. “All the things I like to talk about seem
-interesting to him. With other people, no matter
-what I say, it doesn’t sound quite right, but with Their
-Excellencies and Lord Ronald, there is such a different
-feeling!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She sighed. Long ago, she had observed that
-famous people whose names she used to revere in
-Pinto Plains, neither talked nor acted like the sons of
-God; gradually, she discovered that age was not to be
-confused with sapience or high life with respectability.
-She realised that to succeed she must say daring
-things to people from whom she shrunk, and repeat
-the latest gossip freshened by a spraying of her own
-invention. She divined that in being kind to men and
-allowing them to talk frankly with her, she earned the
-enmity of their wives, and that if she held herself aloof,
-these same women considered her a stick and a fool.
-She could acquire neither the smart badinage of people
-of parts, nor the air of those who used ponderosity to
-cloak their native insipidities.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You should be very grateful for being clever,”
-Marjorie said. “If I were only a little bit cleverer, I
-shouldn’t have found Ottawa half so—so—difficult.”
-She blushed. “Do you know, Azalea, I used to think
-that everybody here would be like Lord Ronald, good
-and kind and friendly. I used to think Society was
-exactly like <span class='it'>that</span>!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Azalea’s mouth grew hard. She knew, without
-being told, that some one had inflicted a hurt upon
-Marjorie’s tender spirit, and all her love rose up in
-revolt.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Society!” she cried. “Can’t you see that what we
-dignify by that name is merely a mechanism devised
-to give a certain class of climbers and parasites the
-power to lead a comfortably otiose existence at the
-expense of the shrinking and the credulous?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’m afraid I don’t understand quite all of that,”
-confessed Marjorie. “But I know it’s clever. There
-are so many clever people, here. That is what makes
-me seem stupider than I really am, by comparison.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“They are not clever,” contradicted Azalea. “They
-are simply experts in the art of pretence. They
-succeed by bluff.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You have to be clever to do that,” argued Marjorie.
-Then suddenly, “I hope you won’t mind my saying so,
-Azalea, but you know I’ve often thought how much
-better everything would have been for everybody if
-you had been married to Raymond!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Azalea raised startled eyes to see Dilling standing in
-the doorway. That he had overheard Marjorie’s
-words was obvious. He stood regarding her with a
-strange interest as if studying her in the light of a
-sudden revelation. With an onrush of knowledge, he
-became conscious of his soul, for the first time. He
-knew its needs and how Azalea had met them during
-the months they had worked together. He saw Azalea
-as a woman .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. as the luminous source of all his
-inspiration.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A moment passed .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. a moment that held an eternity
-of understanding. Soul met soul, disdaining the
-barriers of sense. The room was filled with the sound
-of Marjorie’s knitting needles. The clock began to
-chime .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The pell-mell entrance of the children shattered the
-spell that gripped them. Baby, drunk with excitement,
-staggered to Marjorie and climbed, a crumpled heap of
-tarltan and tinsel, into her lap. Besser, proudly wearing
-a jester’s cap over one ear, retrieved from his
-pocket, three sticky lumps that had once been cake,
-and laid them on the table. Althea, infected by the
-snobbery in which she had so lately been a participant,
-flipped up her skirts at the back, and wriggled decorously
-upon a chair.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, my treasures, and was the party boo-ti-fool?”
-demanded Marjorie.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A torrent of speech answered her.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And were you dear, good children?” she asked.
-“What of my tomboy, Althea?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I was the goodest one at the party,” replied that
-young person. “Mind you, Mummie, I was the <span class='it'>only
-child</span> what folded up my napkin!”</p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER 22.</h2>
-
-<p class='noindent'><span class='dropcap'>D</span>illing and Azalea met on the following morning,
-in all outward respects, exactly as they
-had met for nearly five years.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A third person watching them would have detected
-no change in their manner, no relaxing in their poise,
-no studied indifference. Neither was there discernible
-the strained control proclaiming a furtive curiosity—a
-hunger—to see how the other would behave.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Good morning,” said Dilling, finding her engrossed
-with the mail. “I hope you are well.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Azalea echoed this cliché and observed that their
-correspondence seemed to increase daily. It was the
-sort of thing they often said.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’ll be ready in just a moment,” he told her, and
-passed quickly behind the green baize door that gave
-into his private office.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>All this was as it had been many times before.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Azalea caught her breath in two fluttering little
-sighs. That was over; and without any of the embarrassments
-she had dreaded. It had been quite easy—almost
-disappointingly easy—but altogether fine.
-That was what she had prayed that Dilling should
-remain; it was what she knew he would always remain—fine!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At the same time, she wondered how he felt,
-exactly what minute little thoughts had come to him
-since he stood between the dull, fringed portieres and
-stared at her, stunned, yet with the light of a sublime
-revelation dawning in his eyes. She wondered with a
-hot stab of pain, if he felt himself duped, humbugged,
-betrayed.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She visualised the brief and pregnant scene again,
-imagining—or was it divining?—the thought that must
-have come to him as his eyes held hers in that sudden
-bond of understanding. “This is a piece of staggering
-news to me,” he must have said. “I am taken at a
-disadvantage .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. emotionally naked .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. but you knew
-.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. you knew .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And she saw herself mutely admitting the accusation,
-but with sadness, as a mother might have felt
-when some disturbing information could no longer be
-withheld from the child she loved. And she wondered
-if he suffered at losing the false serenity in which he
-had been living.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Did he resent the age-old wisdom that enabled her
-to see, while he groped and stumbled, fatuous in his
-blindness? Did he feel humiliation?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On her desk the buzzer sounded. His summons.
-For a moment, Azalea sat quite still, looking at the
-little instrument that had called her in exactly the
-same way countless times before. And yet, not quite
-the same. To-day, there was something different.
-No, it would never be the same again.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As she gathered up her notebook, pencil and a
-sheaf of papers, her heart ached for him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Why,” she asked herself, rebelliously, “why must
-the cup of knowledge be so bitter? Why must the
-coming of truth be so difficult and hard to bear?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He did not raise his eyes when she entered the
-room, but presently, he seemed to know that she was
-seated and ready.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Taking up the matter of the Quebec Bridge,” he
-began, “is the report down from Council, yet?” Then,
-without waiting for an answer, “But first, are there
-any Imperial despatches?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The routine of the morning progressed as usual.
-Reports to Council, petitions from small centres
-demanding votes from the Public Treasury out of all
-proportion to their possible returns, eternal complaints
-and criticisms from malcontents, applications for pensions
-from War Widows, enquiries from distracted
-mothers—all the departmental <span class='it'>acta-diurna</span> of a ministerial
-incumbency that had to be cleared away before
-he was free to undertake the pressing matters that fell
-to his especial talents to perform.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And he compelled his brain to function along its
-accustomed channels, while some inner chamber of his
-mind carried on a separate trend of thought—separate,
-and, at the same time, veiled, like the thinking that is
-part of a dream.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He wondered how Azalea felt, sitting there so
-composedly; and beautiful, like Lamb’s divinely plain
-<span class='it'>Miss Kelly</span>. Was there an element of pity, even
-contempt beneath her consistent consideration, for the
-man who was insentient to the message of his own
-heart? Dilling recoiled from the mawkish flavour of
-the phrase. He despised all sentimentality, and had
-he been called upon to debate the subject would have
-denied the heart the conspicuous place universally
-accorded it, in emotional relations between the sexes.
-Imbeciles and sensualists “fell in love”, because the
-world refuses to countenance the cruder, if more honest,
-passion. Dilling had never been in love—neither with
-Marjorie nor any other woman. Even now he refused
-to connect the term with Azalea. He had suddenly
-become aware of joy in her companionship, of his
-dependence upon the mental stimulation she provided,
-of a hitherto unsuspected peace in their spiritual
-communion. In her, he had found the priceless thing
-for which men seek throughout their lives—Understanding.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I couldn’t get along without her,” he said to
-himself. “She understands me.” And having thus
-spoken, he could say no more. It was the highest
-tribute he could pay—the highest tribute any man can
-pay to woman.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>With Azalea, he felt himself the man he wished to
-be; not smug and stodgily content, but rejoicing in the
-struggle towards an ideal which he believed was one
-that she approved.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Sitting opposite her, apparently engrossed in
-matters of a widely divergent nature, Dilling examined
-himself, detachedly. He had no desire to touch her .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-to cry to her, “I love you!” But the thought of losing
-her companionship, mental contact with her, produced
-a pain so intolerable that it dismayed him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And in that flash of utter wretchedness, he saw
-how completely he was wedded to Azalea; how sublime
-was this cold, pure marriage of the spirit. With
-Marjorie, mental companionship was absolutely non-existent.
-They were bound together by duty, habit,
-and the intimacies permitted those who have accepted
-man-made ritual as final .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. and Divine. They had
-no need of one another. Fondness expressed the
-extent of his emotion, and for several years, he had
-realised that a fierce maternalism on her part was
-substitute for the rarer ecstasy of love.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He was as free from connubial fetters as it is given
-man to be. Marjorie was never exacting, but even so,
-Dilling was conscious of restriction, bondage. He
-wanted to be free!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He thought of other married men, and saw for the
-first time how their wives crowded into their lives;
-they were like two snails trying to crowd into the same
-shell. Through no fault of hers, Marjorie often crowded
-him. Then his mind turned to Azalea, who never
-had provoked that sensation in all the years of their
-association. On the contrary, she always seemed to
-liberate his mind, to give him light and space and air.
-She was his mate, not his keeper or his charge.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He wondered when she first began to love him, and
-whether the knowledge had brought her pleasure or
-unrest. Had she felt humiliation at his unresponsiveness,
-perhaps? Had he ever hurt her? What a
-contrast between Azalea and Hebe Barrington! A
-gentle perspiration broke out on his brow, and he lost
-the trend of his thought for an instant. One was
-suggestive of the hot breath of the jungle; the other,
-the cool freshness of the open sea. Mentally, Dilling
-removed his sandals as he looked across the crowded
-desk, and reverently kneeled at Azalea’s feet.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’m glad I know .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” he said to himself. “Not
-that it will make the slightest difference. We will go
-on exactly as before. Thank God, she is sensible—not
-like other women!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It did not occur to him, however, that he was like
-other men—in one respect, at least; that this was a
-matter differing from any problem that had entered
-into his career. It would not be settled once and for
-all. It would not be laid away beyond the need of
-further consideration. He was soon to find that he
-could not ignore the insistency of this strange emotion
-that caught him at most unexpected, inconvenient
-moments. At first, such unaccustomed tyranny annoyed
-him. But gradually, he grew to like it, to seek
-the refreshment of it, as one who finds refreshment in
-the perfume of a flower.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mechanically, he selected a letter from the wire
-basket under his hand, and dictated,</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Dear Mr. Jackson,</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“(The Jackson case again. I’ll finish it this morning!)
-.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I have just had your letter, dated 22nd
-ultimo—now a week overdue, here—by this morning’s
-mail. It does not occur to me that carelessness caused
-your delay in sending it off. I note that it was posted
-only four days ago.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I am inclined to think that it was some evocation
-of your better judgment, I will even go so far as to say
-conscience, in this extremely unpleasant affair, that
-provoked a debate within yourself as to whether the
-letter should be mailed to me, at all.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It is necessary at times to speak plainly to one’s
-friends, and a moment’s reflection will convince you,
-I am sure, that this is such a time. Frankly, your
-letter and its suggestion that I should use my political
-influence to forward the project of the Moccasin Realty
-Co. Ltd., which is only the business name cloaking that
-of yourself and your son-in-law, to sell the jerry-built
-Cameron Terrace to the Dominion Government at five
-times the price for which you built it two years since,
-is a stark offence to me. I will have no part or lot in
-such an unpleasant—I speak euphemistically—transaction,
-and I ask you to consider this answer final.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The Terrace has twice been reported against by
-the Inspector of the Indian Department as quite unfit
-for the purpose of an Indian School. You, sir, are
-perfectly well aware that it is ill-drained and impossible
-to heat without being veneered, or stuccoed, at great
-additional cost.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I shall say no more about the matter, but if my
-refusal to aid your attempt upon the Treasury of this
-overburdened country costs me the loss of your support—if
-it should cost me the loss of my entire constituency—I
-shall accept the situation in the knowledge
-that, at least, I have done my duty. It is only upon
-such a footing that I can remain in public life .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He raised his eyes, hard and cold with anger, and
-asked,</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Do you think he’ll believe I’m sincere?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Azalea shook her head. “He’ll complain, as so
-many of them do.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“How’s that?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“He will say when in power the Liberals forget
-their principles and the Conservatives, their friends.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>They both sighed.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The banging of doors and quivering of beaver-board
-partitions that had converted the spaciousness of the
-Victoria Memorial Museum into cubicles wherein
-Canada’s Parliamentarians might be temporarily
-housed, the scurrying along corridors and clang of the
-elevator gate, told Azalea that noon had come. When
-immersed in work, Dilling was utterly oblivious to the
-flight of time.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What about lunch?” she asked, as soon as he
-paused. “The gun sounded some time ago.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>How often had she said exactly the same thing!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Are you so hungry?” he asked, astonished to miss
-the playful effect he had intended to convey. Dropping
-into the still room, the silly words had almost a nervous
-note.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Starving,” lied Azalea, easily, and knowing his
-unadmitted dependence upon food.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Very well. I’ll go, too. But I’m coming back
-early, to-day. We must unearth that Hansard before
-I go to Council. It will never do to let Bedford get
-away with his want-of-confidence Motion on the
-British Preference, in this high-handed fashion! We
-must make him eat his words .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. and while I think of it.
-Miss Deane, please don’t let anyone—<span class='it'>anyone</span>—disturb
-me.”</p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER 23.</h2>
-
-<p class='noindent'><span class='dropcap'>A</span>zalea lunched lightly, and then found herself
-an inconspicuous bench in the little park off
-Lewis Street. The sun was warm and golden;
-the air soft with the promise of approaching summer.
-The trees had already burst into leaf. Careless children
-had left their toys about on the moist walks.
-Gardeners, taking advantage of the dinner hour, had
-deserted the wire-fenced enclosures that would presently
-break into a melody of colour.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But Azalea saw none of these things. She was at
-variance with spring. More autumnal was her mood.
-She sat quite still, unfidgetting, yet with the air of one
-who is tense, who is waiting for the storm that is bound
-to break.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“How long can this go on?” she was thinking.
-“He won’t continue the pretence that things are the
-same. He is too honest. But what will he do, then?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A wave of exultation surged over her. It wouldn’t
-be easy for him to find another secretary, she said.
-He would miss her in the office, to say the least. And
-not only in the office. His eyes had betrayed so much.
-Why could they not go on, she asked herself, with
-passionate vehemence?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>They could. The whole thing rested upon her.
-The type of relationship that exists between men and
-women, always rests upon the determination of the
-woman. In this case, Azalea knew that she must keep
-Dilling from being too conscious of her. She must
-make none of the unspoken demands that even the
-least exacting woman makes upon the man who has
-confessed himself in love. Neither must she allow him
-to feel that a secret bond was held between them.
-Above all, she must keep his emotional temperature
-at its accustomed low ebb. Any suggestion of coquetry
-on her part, now, would disturb his tranquility, and
-remind him that he had violated the spirit of the
-narrow law governing his moral code.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Could she do all this? If so, she knew they could
-go on.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Azalea believed that love could exist between a
-man and a woman without emotional gratification and
-without expression save in the terms of friendship.
-She believed that it can be fed freely, by the mind and
-by the spirit, just as the body can be fed sanely without
-the bizarre concoctions demanded by self-encouraged
-neurasthenics. The secret lies in a woman’s power,
-and wish, to keep the association free from the tempering
-of passion. It is not enough to control it, argued
-Azalea. It must never be aroused. And this is rare,
-but not impossible.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She was not a vain woman. There was no conceit
-in her, and illusions had long since flown on the wings
-of dreams that were unfulfilled. She knew that she
-was plain, unlovely, unmagnetic; that never since
-adolescence had she awakened the readily distinguishable
-expression in man’s eyes that proclaims his discovery
-of the femaleness in his companion. But it
-was because she hadn’t tried!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>According to her theory, the physical envelope
-matters comparatively little. The mysterious force
-that is called attraction, magnetism, passion, what
-you will, exists in plain and beautiful alike, and can
-be projected at will. Therefore, she possessed the
-female’s instinctual power to project this force—this
-beam that is like a shaft of light, and blinds the man
-upon whom it is thrown. He beholds the woman in a
-flame of radiance, unmindful of her lack of pulchritude.
-And not only is his physical sight impaired, but his
-mental eye loses its clarity of vision, and he invests
-this uncompanionable female with every quality he
-thinks desirable. He wants her. He starves for her.
-He will not be denied. And after marrying her, what
-happens?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The woman, having acquired the man upon whom
-she has fixed her choice, grows careless, indifferent,
-lazy. She no longer lights the shaft that dazzled him;
-she no longer projects it in his direction. He blinks,
-looks, and rubs his eyes; half the time, he doesn’t
-understand .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Where is the woman he loved and
-married? Who is this creature, this unattractive
-stranger who pushes herself into his life, and tries to
-dominate, absorb it? There has been some hideous
-mistake .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Steeped in the delusion that man is the
-determining factor in the mockery of emotional
-marriage, he takes the blame upon himself, persuaded
-that the fault is his. At first, he tries to hide his disenchantment.
-He says nothing .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. He determines
-to do nothing .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. just go on .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. They both go on .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-spiritually too far apart, physically too close together
-.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. bound by Church and State, and accustoming
-themselves to the functioning of two persons who live
-in that abominable intimacy—ironically termed the
-bonds of Holy Wedlock!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Azalea believed that the bond of wedlock could
-only be holy when it is not artificially constructed by
-predative females in search of economic ease, with a
-possible thrill or two, to boot. She agreed with the
-cynicism that marriage is man’s after-thought and
-woman’s first intention. She further believed that by
-continuing the rigid control of herself—control that
-neutralised and de-natured her—she and Dilling could
-maintain a relationship that not only was free from
-irregularity, but embarrassment.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mingling with the stream of Civil Servants that
-flowed in and out of the Museum, Azalea’s mind was
-still concerned with the relationships between men and
-women, married and single. She thought of her sisters
-with something very like disgust; of Lady Elton, Eva
-Leeds, Mrs. Pratt, Mrs. Blaine, Mrs. Hudson, Mme.
-Valleau .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. what real comradeship did they offer their
-husbands? Swift’s words came to her as being
-especially applicable. “There would be fewer unhappy
-marriages in the world,” he said, “if women thought
-less of making nets, and more of making cages.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She had never tried to make a net, not even for
-Raymond Dilling. She loved him too deeply to trap—to
-ensnare him. And if she longed to make a cage for
-him, it was as a means of protection, safety, refuge;
-not the terrible gilt-barred thing in which he would
-feel a sense of shame at his imprisonment.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She could hear him pacing about his little room,
-muttering fragmentary sentences now and then. The
-sound disturbed her. He was not, as a rule, stimulated
-to intensive thought by prowling. Was she already
-responsible for disorganising the methodical workings
-of his mind?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Poise, control, fell from her. She turned the pages
-of Hansard feverishly and without intelligence. She
-longed to go to him, to take his frail body in her arms,
-to soothe him in her self-effacing renunciatory way.
-She longed to whisper to him, “There, my dear, you
-needn’t dread me. You needn’t be afraid.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Instead, she sat at her desk and fluttered the leaves
-of Hansard, and suffered the anguish of one who cannot
-take on the suffering of that beloved other .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A knock on the door startled her. She turned to
-see Hebe Barrington advancing into the room.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh! <span class='it'>You</span> are still here?” was her greeting.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I find the work congenial,” returned Azalea.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The two women faced one another, understood one
-another. Neither made a pretence of concealing the
-animosity that had always existed between them.
-Azalea resented Hebe’s habit of establishing herself,
-taking complete possession of situations and people,
-and ordering the destiny of all with whom she came
-in contact. Hebe hated Azalea for the calm tenacity
-and cold superiority that had thwarted her so many
-times in the past. She had just returned from England,
-whither patriotic fervour and the personal attractions
-of a certain fulgid major had drawn her. The zest
-with which she had undertaken a particular form of
-War Work had strained even Toddles’ indulgence, until
-the only way they could live together was to live apart.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Hebe had abandoned her pursuit of Dilling, and
-renounced all complicity in Sullivan’s plans after a
-stormy interview with that gentleman. What she
-demanded, grandly, were his nugatory projects compared
-with the clarion call of Empire? He felt very
-bitterly towards her, blaming her for the miscarriage
-of his schemes. Had he foreseen the outbreak of the
-War, or Hebe’s defection, he never in the world would
-have assisted Dilling to a position of prominence where
-his public record commanded respectful admiration
-and where his private life was above reproach.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Isn’t this a killing little hole?” Hebe observed,
-alert to every detail. “Sordid, undignified. You
-should see the quarters of the British politicians .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-and the War Offices .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Tiny flames of anger gathered in Azalea’s eyes.
-There was something in the insolence of the other
-woman that suggested a personal criticism—as though
-she could have arranged the room more fittingly,
-prevented its sordidness, its displeasing atmosphere.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“A few flowers would make a difference,” she went
-on, appraising Azalea’s coat and hat that hung near
-the door.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“We don’t spend much money on flowers, now,
-merely for decorative purposes,” answered the other.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What a pity! I always think that’s what they’re
-for. Is Raymond—Mr. Dilling—in there?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Yes, but he’s too busy to be disturbed.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Their eyes met in open hostility.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I object to the word ‘disturbed’,” said Hebe.
-“My visit is supposed to have exactly the opposite
-effect.” She smiled, a brilliantly ugly smile.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Azalea lifted her shoulders almost imperceptibly.
-“Mr. Dilling gave me definite instructions to allow no
-one to see him. I’m sorry, but I can’t make an exception,
-even in your favour.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What fidelity to duty,” mocked Hebe.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You are very kind,” bowed Azalea, as though
-receiving a compliment.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You know very well that your employer would
-not refuse to admit me,” cried Hebe. “Don’t you
-think I can see the vicious pleasure behind this rigid
-adherence to your instructions? Let me pass!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You are making a ridiculous scene,” said Azalea,
-white to the lips. “I am treating you just as I would
-treat anybody else—the Prime Minister, himself.
-You are not going to disturb—interrupt—Mr. Dilling!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“How are you going to prevent me?” taunted Hebe.
-“Lay violent hands upon me and fling me to the
-floor?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I shan’t touch you,” retorted Azalea, her voice
-trembling with cold anger. “But I shall regard intrusion
-upon Mr. Dilling as a personal attack, and shall
-not have the slightest hesitation in ordering the policeman
-to protect his privacy.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She stretched out her hand towards the telephone
-and held it ready for use.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Hebe burst into a peal of derisive laughter. She
-advanced with an air of high daring. Then an expression
-of cunning crept into her fire-shot eyes. Azalea
-had threatened to call a policeman. He would lay
-restraining hands upon her. She would struggle upon
-the very threshold of the young Minister’s office. She
-would scream. People would rush from their rooms
-into the corridor to see .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A splendid scene! Magnificent! There would be
-a glorious scandal .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. “Two women fight over the Hon.
-Mr. Dilling. Shocking episode in the temporary
-House of Parliament.” She laughed again. Uncle
-Rufus would be not only placated; he would be
-grateful.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’ve warned you,” said Azalea.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You won’t dare!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Stop!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’m going in, I tell you!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Raising her hand to push open the door, Hebe
-found Azalea directly in her path. But it was too late
-to change her intention, and she struck the girl a
-smart blow in the face. Exactly at that moment,
-Dilling stepped into the room.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There was a painful silence. Of the three, the
-Minister felt the greatest embarrassment. He could
-readily guess what had happened.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Hebe spoke,</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“In another moment, we should have been almost
-angry, Raymond,” she cried. “I couldn’t make this
-dear girl see that I was an exception to your iron-bound
-rule covering the ordinary visitor.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“When did you come back?” asked Dilling, allowing
-his hand to lie limply between hers for an instant.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Only this morning. Half past twelve, from
-Montreal. Landed yesterday, and here I am to pay
-my respects. And your faithful secretary wanted to
-turn me out. Scold her, Raymond,” she cried, archly.
-“Please do!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’m afraid I haven’t time, just now,” replied
-Dilling. Then, as he passed the desk to which Azalea
-had returned with a fine show of absorption in Hansard,
-he said, “Can you stay after five? We must
-consult together as to my future policy following to-day’s
-eventful meeting.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“We?” echoed Hebe, with a noticeable touch of
-derision. “La, la! <span class='it'>Que c’est charmant!</span> I’ve heard
-that a successful politician is merely a matter of having
-a clever secretary, but I never credited the statement
-until now.” She turned directly to Dilling. “You are
-going out?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I will come with you—as far as you go.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Thank you,” said Dilling. “We meet in this
-building.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He opened the door, started to pass through, then,
-remembering the conventions, waited for Hebe to
-precede him. Azalea did not raise her eyes, but she
-knew without looking that he did not glance behind
-him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She sat motionless after they had gone, while her
-heart stilled its wild plunging, and the air cleared of
-crimson-hot vibrations. She did not think of herself
-or review the part she had played in the absurd drama
-of Hebe’s making. She did not ask herself whether
-her attitude had been convincing or ridiculous.
-Strangely enough, she did not think, “I might have
-said .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” Her concern was for Raymond Dilling.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She knew that he did not, never could, love Hebe
-Barrington. Jealousy was far removed from her
-considerations. But a slow, cold fear crawled through
-her as she thought of another contingency. Dilling’s
-balance had shifted. He had become conscious of new
-and disturbing emotions. He was like an instrument
-tuned by a gentle hand and therefore prepared to
-respond even to the coarsest touch. Would not the
-very fact of his awakened love for her, make him an
-easier victim of Hebe’s seductive beleaguerment?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The thought racked her throughout the afternoon.
-She could not keep her mind on her work. She spent
-herself in a sort of helpless passion of protection,
-feeling that she would give her very life to save him
-from the toils of the other woman. She had set him
-on a lofty pedestal, high above the ruck of mud and
-slime. Her pride in him was renunciatory, fiercely
-maternal. She wanted to keep him fair and pure for
-himself .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. not in the slightest sense for her.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She had grown strong in a fanatical belief that one
-of the chief elements of Britain’s power is the moral
-weight behind it; that her statesmen are clean,
-straight-forward and honourable, on the whole, and
-that intrigue and deception are alien to their nature.
-Furthermore, she felt that now, in the Empire’s hour
-of supreme trial, it was upon the power and pressure
-of this conviction throughout the world, that the
-future of England must depend.</p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER 24.</h2>
-
-<p class='noindent'><span class='dropcap'>T</span>he Premier’s health had been sadly broken
-by the War. This pandemic scourge had come
-into being while Canada was still in her nonage,
-and what she needed most in leadership throughout the
-conflict, was what he had most to give, namely, a fine
-obstinacy of purpose. Possessing this, the lack of
-dramatic picturesqueness was forgiven him by a
-spectacle-loving people.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But inflexibility is always a target and a challenge
-for assault, and when not engaged in repelling his foes
-on Mr. Speaker’s Left, Sir Robert was called upon to
-reckon with the mutiny of his colleagues whose sense
-of honour was not inconveniently high. Throughout
-the actual ordeal of battle, the edge of the weapons
-of menace found him adamant. But towards the end
-of the four years’ darkness, the strain became too heavy,
-and several months before the world settled to enjoy
-the hostility of peace, rumours of his impending
-resignation drifted along the currents of the House.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The break came later—after he had gone to France
-to sign the Treaty of Versailles on our behalf—a
-glorious mission, truly, and significant of Canada’s
-entry into the Council of the Nations. It was then
-that the burden of his great labour and achievement
-levied a heavier toll than he could pay. Atropos
-threatened him with her shears. He sank into the
-relaxation of a profound collapse, and offered his
-resignation as Prime Minister. Holding the Rudder
-of the Ship of State with a world in arms, had broken
-him, as it broke the great Commoner, Pitt. That the
-parallel was not completed by his death, was a matter
-of national rejoicing, and he lived to know that his
-purity of conduct, his strength of purpose and his
-courage in the supreme crisis of civilisation, marked
-him as one of the real forces in history.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And so it happened that in Canada there was no
-man like Lloyd George who held his position unchallenged
-throughout the duration of the War. Political
-and military scandals had their ugly day. Heroes
-were exalted and overthrown almost within the same
-hour.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Dilling offered the closest analogy, perhaps, to the
-great British statesman. He retained not only his own
-portfolio, but undertook the directing of several others,
-while an interregnum occurred and there had been
-discovered no incumbent to fill the office. He had
-“acted” as Prime Minister on more than one occasion,
-and when these resignation rumours began to float
-about, his name was mentioned as a possible successor.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Public Works were paralyzed. The gargantuan
-ambitions of Eastlake and Donahue hung in abeyance.
-They dared not intrude their demands for further
-subsidies while war taxes bled the country white.
-Dilling turned his eyes from the elevators, and saw
-only the Empire’s present need. Grain moved heavily
-eastward, but the great driving power of the West was
-crippled. The hand that rocked her cradle was
-engaged in destroying the very manhood she had
-suckled at her prairie breast. Capable of producing
-food for more than half the world, she was starving for
-sustenance to keep herself alive.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Never had the Hon. Member for Morroway been
-so deeply engrossed in the business of politics. Never
-had he applied himself so sedulously to the successful
-culmination of his vast schemes and secret projects, or
-neglected for so lengthy a period the gentler pursuits
-that so intrigued him. It was rumoured in some
-quarters that he had reformed. The rumour was not
-received with universal satisfaction, for the penitent
-has only the applause of the devotee who reclaims him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Howarth and Turner watched him with mingled
-concern and respect, and wondered as to the nature of
-his game. After the entry of the United States into
-the War, and when the outcome was a foregone conclusion,
-these two gentlemen became somewhat apprehensive
-as to the future of the Party (and incidentally
-their own place in the political sun). The rumours of
-Sir Robert’s resignation moved them profoundly.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Of course,” said Turner, as the three sat in Mr.
-Sullivan’s cheerful office, “Sir Adrian Grant will be a
-candidate, but I don’t believe he has the ghost of a
-chance. It looks to me like a walk-over for Dilling.
-He’ll march to the seat of honour, terrible as an army
-with banners.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Yes,” agreed Howarth. “I don’t know who’s
-going to stop him. That damned silly boost of yours,
-Sullivan, has done us in the eye, if you ask me.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mr. Sullivan examined the contents of his glass
-against the pale spring twilight, and remarked that he
-was always glad to hear the opinions of his friends,
-even though he had not asked for them. In the
-present instance, however, he seemed to detect some
-thing monstrous and repetitive.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Sure, I’ve said it before, and I’ll say it again,”
-announced Howarth, warmly. “What’s going to keep
-him from stepping into the P. M.’s shoes, if we have
-to go to the country? Hasn’t he made good! Don’t
-the people think he’s a little tin god? Hasn’t he got
-a lot of useful experience out of the last few years?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“All because of this Minister business,” supplemented
-Turner. “Except for that, we could have kept
-him down. He wouldn’t have had a chance.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But now, as matters stand, he’ll walk in, put over
-the Elevator project, and .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. the E. D. Company will flourish like a green
-bay tree, and where will our little plans come in?”
-demanded Turner, bitterly. “If you want to eat
-honey in peace, say the Russians, you must first kill
-all the bees.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mr. Sullivan nodded, but preserved an inscrutable
-silence.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Have you got something up your sleeve, old man?”
-asked Howarth, in a foolish, coaxing tone. “There’s
-no denying you’re a pretty shrewd lad in your own way,
-Rufus, and you don’t often make mistakes. Personally,
-I rely absolutely upon your judgment, and am
-ready to follow—oh, <span class='it'>absolutely</span>,” he insisted, conscious
-of a slight twitching at the corners of Mr. Sullivan’s
-full lips. “At the same time, there are occasions
-recorded in history, when the most astute persons
-have been misled, when the best-laid schemes have
-taken a most unprecedented and disastrous twist.
-If you have a plan, why not take us into your confidence,
-Rufus? Why not discuss your ideas .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. three
-heads, you know .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Reminiscent of Cerberus”, cut in Turner.
-“Pretty good watch dog, eh?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Sure,” assented Howarth. “Three heads .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. as I
-say. And besides, I’m just restless in my desire to
-help.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But it was Marjorie who was the Hon. Member’s
-first confidante. She neither realised the importance
-of this, nor appreciated the honour that he did her.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He had begged for an uninterrupted moment—a
-moment clipped from her over-full days, when appointment
-followed appointment in a continuous, dizzying
-succession—and, because he had said it was urgent,
-she agreed to receive him one night at ten o’clock.
-An earlier release was impossible from the pandemonium
-advertised as a Patriotic Bazaar.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The dear little woman looks tired,” he said, taking
-her hand. “Isn’t she trying to push a great heavy
-Mercedes up a very steep hill, with a Ford engine?
-Aren’t you doing far too much of this hysterical War
-Work, little Marjorie?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Wednesday is my worst day,” she told him, and
-tried to withdraw her hand .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. “not the actual work,
-but going to things. You see,” she explained, “it
-makes such a difference .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I can’t understand it,
-really .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. If we go to these patriotic things .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. the
-Ministers’ wives, I mean. We don’t do anything but
-walk around, and have people introduced to us, and
-it’s <span class='it'>so</span> useless and tiring!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“My dear .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. my dear!” murmured the sympathetic
-Member.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I don’t mind the work, a bit,” Marjorie continued,
-trying to force a note of weariness out of her voice.
-“The sewing and sorting of donations and that kind of
-thing. I feel as though—as though, well, I feel that I
-am really doing something for our boys over there,
-whereas walking around these bazaars and sitting idle
-at Executive meetings—” she shook her head and left
-the sentence unfinished. “But you wanted to see me
-about something in particular, you said.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Hon. Member for Morroway assumed his most
-charmingly avuncular air. Little by little, he overcame
-Marjorie’s instinctive resistance. She was always
-so eager to like people, to believe in them and find them
-good. He asked if she could keep a secret—even from
-her husband, and gaining a somewhat hesitant answer,
-whispered,</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“How would you like to see him Prime Minister,
-my dear?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Marjorie’s tired brain reeled. She couldn’t grasp
-the thought, at all. Prime Minister .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Raymond .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-so soon to see the fulfilment of his heart’s desire? No,
-no! She shrunk away from the idea. There must be
-some mistake. They were so young, so inexperienced.
-They were not properly prepared, not sufficiently
-worthy. She felt an overwhelming pity for all those
-women whose lives were broken, and whose hearts
-were torn by the War. It shadowed the satisfaction,
-the joyousness she might have taken for herself.
-Prime Minister!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Sullivan sat quiet, watching her, and the changing
-expressions that sped across her haggard face. He
-read them as easily as though they had been printed
-there, and he waited.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Do you want Raymond to be Prime Minister?”
-Marjorie finally whispered. “Do you think he <span class='it'>ought</span>
-to be?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“There is little doubt on either score.” Mr.
-Sullivan was soothing, reassuring. “As you know, I
-am only an inconspicuous cog in the political machine,
-but even the smallest cog can control the working of
-the whole. Just as it can obstruct,” he added, lightly.
-“Without meaning to boast, I believe that my influence
-is sufficient to secure him the Premiership—just as I
-was somewhat instrumental in putting him into the
-Cabinet.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, Mr. Sullivan—Uncle Rufus, do you really
-mean to help?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“With all my heart, little woman,” he replied,
-“and so must you.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I?” Her confused mind translated the assistance
-he suggested into a need for increasing “stiffness”.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Of course! Why not?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What must I do?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mr. Sullivan became affectionately confidential.
-The most important thing, he assured her, was persuading
-Dilling how ardently she wanted him to accept the
-position.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But he won’t refuse .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. will he?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“There is just that little possibility .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. yes, it is
-conceivable that he might. I mustn’t tire you with
-an exposition of the complicated question,” he went on,
-“but to secure the support he needs, would require a
-slight change of policy .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. not quite superficially,
-either. I might go so far as to say <span class='it'>ab imo pectore</span>, if
-you know what I mean.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He watched the strained bewilderment in her eyes
-with something akin to brutal pleasure.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Raymond is a strong man, determined almost to
-stubbornness, may I say? He is guided—er misguided,
-many of the older parliamentarians think—by an idée
-fixe. If I know him as I think I do, it will be hard to
-convince him that relinquishing it will be a sign not of
-weakness, but of strength.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’m afraid I don’t understand all of this .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Don’t bother your lovely head with it! I did not
-come here to worry you with tedious politics, but I do
-want you to understand me .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. so that we can work
-together in this most momentous matter. Raymond
-must be made to see that all previous measures now
-require adjustment to the changed times. The end of
-War is in sight, thank God, but we can’t delude ourselves
-with the thought that the world will find immediate
-peace, that it will pick up its burdens and its
-pleasures where it left them off, and that the policies
-we followed prior to 1914 are those to take us forward
-to-day. He must change. Can’t you persuade him?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I never interfere,” said Marjorie, in a low voice.
-“He would think I was crazy to suggest anything
-about politics. I’m so stupid, you know.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But you can plead your own cause—convince him
-of the happiness this promotion would mean to you .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-and,” he hurried on, “you realise what it would mean
-for him, for the children, for the country! Why, he
-would be the youngest, the most brilliant Prime
-Minister in the world! Think of it, little Marjorie .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-our own splendid Raymond, of Pinto Plains!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He rose to take his leave. Marjorie got rather
-dizzily to her feet. The room heaved in gentle waves,
-and the harsh lights suddenly went dim. An awful
-sickness attacked her, and out of the curious amethyst
-fog, the face of Mr. Sullivan advanced upon her, huge,
-satyric, terrible.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What is it?” she whispered. “Oh, dear, what is
-the matter?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Aren’t you going to kiss me?” he asked, in a voice
-that scorched her.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. please .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Marjorie escaped from the hand that came towards
-her. She slipped behind the table. Mr. Sullivan
-followed. She ran to the Morris chair and took refuge
-on the other side of it, for a moment. Her knees would
-scarcely support her. This cloud threatened to blind
-her. The room was filled with a noise as of some one’s
-heavy breathing. It occurred to her that Althea must
-be sobbing, upstairs.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Come on, child! Don’t be silly!” The voice of
-the Hon. Member sounded husky, but very loud. It
-thumped against her consciousness. “Aren’t you going
-to give me one little kiss in return for the help I’m
-giving Raymond?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No, no! Please .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” She circled unsteadily
-around the table, again.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, by God, you will, then!” cried Mr. Sullivan.
-“I’ve had just about enough of this catch-as-catch-can.
-You come here!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. oh, no .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Marjorie crumpled in a heap on the floor, and burst
-into wild sobbing. She was beside herself with terror.
-Never again in his gentlest moments, would the Hon.
-Member deceive her with his avuncular air. Always,
-she would see him as a beast of prey, his eyes flaming,
-his hands searching for her.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Quite unconsciously, she began to pray.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, God, please .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Dear God .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mr. Sullivan paused in his advance. He looked at
-the disordered heap on the floor. A revulsion of feeling
-came over him, and he turned away.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Bah!” he said, angrily. “<span class='it'>Women!</span>” and, seizing
-his hat, he left the house.</p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER 25.</h2>
-
-<p class='noindent'><span class='dropcap'>T</span>he Cathedral was palpitant with Fashion.
-For the moment, its dim religious light was lost
-in the flamboyance of smart Society’s glare.
-Its serene atmosphere was fractured by cross-currents
-that blew in from an impious world. The Flesh and
-the Devil walked on the feet that pressed the red
-carpet to save from pollution the soles of those who
-were bidden to the Sloane-Carmichael wedding. And
-there were many, for Mona Carmichael was a Minister’s
-daughter and the moving spirit of the Naughty Nine.
-Also, she was a bride extremely good to look upon.
-She possessed the slender body of the <span class='it'>jeune fils</span>, and an
-age-old wisdom in the advantageous exhibition of it.
-When not engaged in devising spectacular “stunts” for
-her eight disciples, she was usually enjoying masculine
-approbation expressed in terms that described the
-speaker as being simply crazy about her. She had
-reached the point when a modest man was the most
-boresome thing on earth.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>No sermon that was ever preached from the pulpit
-of the sacred fane would have exposed the mephistophelean
-cynicism of the present day in its attitude
-towards the Solemnization of Matrimony by the
-Church, as did this particular wedding. It might have
-been a deliberate revival of some medieval mystery
-play, staged for the purpose of provoking a recreant
-world to repentance. Men in youth and age were
-there, whose thoughts throughout the ceremony were
-never lifted above the level of lubricity. Their
-presence at any of the matrimonial pageants of that
-gallant Defender of the Faith, Henry the Eighth,
-would have lent a distinct flavour to the atmosphere.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The younger married women among the guests
-recalled their own weddings, and endeavoured to convey
-the impression that they had relinquished themselves
-to their husbands with protest, if not martyrdom.
-They wore an unconvincingly pensive air.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The spinsters betrayed a touch of malice, although
-they tried to look as though feeling that any woman
-who married was a fool. Bitterly, they realised the
-transparency of their attitude, and that here and there,
-people were saying,</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, there’s So-and-so. Isn’t it a pity <span class='it'>she</span> never
-married?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Over all the Church, there was a restlessness, a
-strange suppression, louder and more definite than the
-syllabub of broken conversation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Ushers, khaki-clad, passed ceaselessly up and down
-the aisles, wearing a manner of mixed hauteur and
-nervousness. They showed the effect of too much prenuptial
-and anti-prohibition entertainment. Groups
-of guests gathered, argued, accepted the places provided
-with scantily veiled distaste, and became part of the
-general unrest. Few there were who regarded marriage
-in the light of a spiritual concept, nor was it easy to
-see in these exotic social episodes any striving towards
-an æsthetic ideal. On the contrary, two young people
-came together, drained the moment of its last dram of
-pleasure, and separated—if not in a physical sense,
-certainly in a spiritual one, seeking amusement elsewhere,
-and with hectic sedulousness.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The family of the bride persistently referred to the
-spectacle as “simple”, and endeavoured to preserve the
-illusion of economy throughout. This was a War
-Wedding.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A jungle of palms crowded the chancel and reared
-their feathered heads against the pillars of the Church.
-Masses of yellow tulips and daffodils suggested the
-simplicity of spring. Some twenty pews on either side
-of the centre aisle were barricaded against intrusion
-by plain silken cords instead of the richer bands of
-ribbon that ordinarily would have been used to separate
-those who had presented gifts in ridiculous excess
-of their means and affection, from those who had
-blessed the happy pair with sugar spoons and bon-bon
-dishes. Even the gowns of the women—according to
-their own description—harmonised with the note of
-rigid simplicity that prevailed. Mrs. Long, securely
-imprisoned by the yellow silken cord, smiled as she
-watched the procession, for she had seen—by the
-merest accident—Miss Caplin’s advance copy on the
-function. Miss Caplin was the Society editress of
-<span class='sc'>The Chronicle</span>. “The mother of the bride wore a
-rich but simple creation of dove-grey radium satin,
-panelled with bands of solid grey pearls. The sleeves
-were formed of wings that fell to the hem of the gown
-and were made of dyed rose point. Mrs. Carmichael’s
-hat was of grey tulle with no trimming save a simple
-bird of Paradise.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That was the sort of thing she had been instructed
-to say.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mrs. Blaine passed in review. She was gowned in a
-black crepe meteor, with bands of rhinestones forming the
-corsage, and she wore a hat of uncurled ostrich feathers.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mrs. Pratt’s idea of economy was expressed by a
-royal purple chiffon velvet, trimmed with ornaments of
-amethyst and pearl.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Lady Elton had managed to pick up an imported
-creation at a figure that was reduced no more than her
-own, but she called it a “simple frock” of Delft georgette
-over silver cloth. Owing to some unfortunate
-confusion in the composing room, a few lines reporting
-work on the Civic Playgrounds crept into the account
-of the wedding, and the following extraordinary
-announcement appeared:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Lady Elton looked exceptionally charming in a dull blue chiffon
-over three lavatories and two swimming baths.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A trembling usher, green-white from fatigue and
-dissipation, bowed Mr. and Mrs. Hudson into the pew.
-Mrs. Long’s practised eye noted that the latter wore a
-sapphire charmeuse, relieved by old Honiton and showing
-a motif of fleur-de-lys done in hand embroidery.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I don’t know whether I’m all here or not,” panted
-Mrs. Hudson. “Such a scramble at the last minute!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“There doesn’t seem to be any of you missing,”
-murmured Mrs. Long.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, how do you do?” she bowed, as Sir Eric and
-Lady Denby crowded in.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Commonplaces were exchanged.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I haven’t seen you for some time,” observed Lady
-Denby, leaning across the Hudsons.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’ve been keeping very quiet,” returned Mrs. Long.
-“In fact, I’m going into the hospital to-morrow for
-rather a beastly operation.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Vague expressions of sympathy were dropped into
-the subdued noise about them. “I’m so sorry .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-No, you don’t look well .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Oh, there’s Mrs.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-I hope it’s nothing serious .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. What <span class='it'>has</span> Eva Leeds
-got on?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“That’s the dress Haywood made for Lady Elton
-and she wouldn’t accept,” volunteered Mrs. Hudson.
-“They say he gave it to her.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Lady Denby interrupted. “What hospital have
-you chosen?” she asked, making a mental note of the
-fact that the event called for floral recognition.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“St. Christopher’s.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, how perfect!” breathed Mrs. Hudson, indifferently.
-“You’ll love it, there. The nurses are <span class='it'>so</span> good
-to your flowers!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The recently-created knight, Sir Enoch Cunningham,
-lumbered up the aisle in the wake of his wife.
-Sir Enoch had established a record for patriotic service
-by charging the Government only four times a reasonable
-profit on the output of his mill. He was prominently
-listed in the Birthday Honours and on this, his
-first public appearance, was profoundly self-conscious.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“There go the Cunninghams,” whispered Lady
-Elton from the pew behind Mrs. Long. “Aren’t they
-sickening?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“When Knighthood was in Flour,” murmured
-Lady Denby, over her shoulder.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“He always reminds me of a piece of underdone
-pastry,” said Mrs. Long.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well,” remarked Mrs. Hudson, with a giggle,
-“they’ll be pie for everyone now.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Across the aisle, Pamela de Latour was agitating
-herself over the fact that Major and Mrs. Beverley
-were sitting amongst the intimate friends of the groom.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Why, in heaven’s name, do you suppose <span class='it'>they</span> have
-been put <span class='it'>there</span>?” she demanded of Miss Tyrrell and
-the Angus-McCallums, who shared her pew.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Didn’t he and Sloane fly together?” suggested one
-of the latter. “Or did he save his life .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. or something?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I don’t know. But it seems odd to put them away
-up there. I heard he’d lost his job,” said Miss de
-Latour.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I heard that, too,” agreed Miss Mabel Angus-McCallum.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Miss Tyrrell couldn’t believe it. She urged her
-companions to recall everything that looked like
-corroborative evidence, and even then cried skeptically,</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But are you <span class='it'>sure</span>? May he not have taken on
-something else?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Miss Latour didn’t think so. She had the news
-on pretty good authority. She regretted, however, to
-have caused Miss Tyrrell such acute distress, and
-hoped the report might be incorrect.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Although I doubt it,” she said. “Colonel Mayhew
-told me that they were going back to England.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I had no idea they were such great friends of yours,
-Lily,” whispered Miss Mabel Angus-McCallum. “In
-most quarters they were not very popular.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Friends?” echoed Miss Tyrrell, indignantly.
-“They were no friends of mine, I assure you!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Then why—” began the other three “—why are
-you so upset by hearing that he’s lost his job?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Because,” answered Miss Tyrrell. “I was afraid
-it wasn’t so!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Several rows behind them, Azalea Deane sat crushed
-against the ample folds of Miss Leila Brant. She had
-refused to accompany Marjorie Dilling, despite the
-latter’s threat that she would stay at home rather than
-go alone.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I know you are not serious,” returned Azalea, in her
-gently insistent way, “for, of course, you should be there.
-A special seat will be reserved for you, and you must
-pretend to enjoy hob-snobbing with the notables.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Miss Brant fidgetted, fretting at her failure to
-impress Azalea with a sense of her importance. Like
-Mr. Sullivan, her activities were conducted largely
-and with a certain grandeur that was pleasing even to
-those who recognised its intense untruth. She adorned
-the cheap and commonplace, and had really a shrewd
-eye for transforming simple articles into pieces of
-expensive and decorative uselessness. Furthermore,
-she shared with Dilling a perfect genius for discovering
-clever assistants—artisans—whose ideas were better
-than her own, and whom she never tried to lead, but
-was content to follow. Moreover, she learned long ago
-to cultivate none but the wealthiest of patrons. Her
-shop, her wares, even she, herself, exuded an atmosphere
-of opulent exclusiveness. To be a regular patron
-of the Ancient Chattellarium was to attain a certain
-social eminence, to share the air breathed by Millionaires,
-Knights and Ladies—by Government House.
-One never stepped into the shop without meeting
-somebody of importance.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At the moment, however, she was not entirely
-happy. She had a vast respect for Azalea, but didn’t
-like her. Azalea always made her uncomfortable.
-She was conscious of secret amusement, perhaps a
-tinge of contempt behind the enigmatic expression in
-her etiolated eyes. Whereas Dilling, in Azalea’s
-presence, felt himself the man he wished to be, Miss
-Brant recognised a very inferior person hiding behind
-the arras of her very superior manner, and she felt
-that Azalea saw this creature plainly, penetrating its
-insincerity, its petty ambitions; in short, that she perceived
-all the weaknesses that Miss Brant hoped none
-would suspect.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“There’s So-and-So,” she cried, incessantly. “In
-strict confidence, I will tell you that they have just
-given me rather a nice commission to do their—Oh,
-and there’s So-and-So! Where in the world, <span class='it'>do</span> you
-suppose they will seat all these people?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Azalea smiled and shrugged. Miss Brant felt
-snubbed, as though her companion had said, “Why
-bother? It’s not your affair. You always take such
-delight in meddling in other people’s business.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She took refuge in that too-little used harbour,
-Silence. But briefly. She left it to remark,</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, there go the Prendergasts! How do you do?”
-she bowed, with extreme affability, catching Mrs.
-Prendergast’s eye. Then she flushed. Azalea was
-regarding her with a smile that seemed to strip every
-particle of cordiality from her salutation and reduce it
-to a medium of barter exchanged for the extremely
-expensive gift Mrs. Prendergast had been cajoled into
-buying for the bridal pair. Miss Brant felt somehow
-that Azalea was thinking,</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If she hadn’t made a satisfactory purchase, you
-wouldn’t even bother to nod your head. You never
-used to.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You may not believe it, Azalea,” she said, as
-though moved to self-justification, “but Mrs. Prendergast
-is <span class='it'>really</span> rather a dear. It sounds stupid, but one
-can’t help seeing that her intentions are good.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Really! Aristotle said that Nature’s intentions
-were always good. The trouble was that she couldn’t
-carry them out.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But they really <span class='it'>are</span> getting on,” protested Miss
-Brant, watching the ostentatious progress of her patron
-down the aisle. “Don’t you think they are acquiring
-<span class='it'>quite</span> an air?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I think the Dawkter is acquiring quite a pragmatic
-walk. And it’s especially conspicuous in church.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Yes, isn’t it?” assented Miss Brant, hastily, and
-wondering if Azalea referred to some physical disability
-that had resisted the effects of <span class='sc'>Anti-Agony</span>. “There!
-They’ve been put with the Pratts. Confidentially,
-I’ll tell you that <span class='it'>she</span> bought rather a good bit, too .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-didn’t want to be eclipsed by the Prendergasts, you
-know. <span class='it'>Isn’t</span> their rivalry amusing?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And lucrative, I should say.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Miss Brant veered away from the sordid business
-angle. “Look at them, now,” she cried. “Mrs.
-Pratt has the floor. She doesn’t even pause for breath.
-Azalea, what <span class='it'>can</span> she be saying?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Words—words—words! I’m afraid Mr. Pratt
-frequently regrets ignoring Nietzsche’s advice.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Whose?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Nietzsche’s. Don’t you remember, he said, ‘Before
-marriage this question should be put—Will you
-continue to be satisfied with this woman’s conversation
-until old age? Everything else in marriage is transitory’.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Miss Brant cast an inward glance upon her own
-conversational powers, and wondered if there was
-anything personal behind Azalea’s remark. Aloud,
-she said,</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“How clever of you to remember all those quotations,
-my dear! I always wish—Oh, there goes
-Mrs. Dilling! Heavens, doesn’t she look like a ghost?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Azalea had already noted the haggardness of
-Marjorie’s appearance, and, knowing nothing of her
-encounter with Mr. Sullivan, attributed it solely to
-the over-strain of War Work.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“She doesn’t know how to save herself,” she said.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Yes, she really has been rather splendid, hasn’t
-she?” assented Miss Brant. “<span class='it'>Everyone</span> says so .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I
-remember the first time I ever saw her. She wanted
-a terrible what-not-thing repaired. Little did I
-imagine, then, that some day she would be the wife
-of a Minister of the Crown. And have you heard a
-rumour about the Premiership? It makes me feel
-<span class='it'>quite</span> weepy. Only—only—I <span class='it'>wish</span> she wouldn’t wear
-such <span class='it'>awful</span> hats!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What do people say?” asked Azalea, ignoring the
-latter remark.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, <span class='it'>you</span> know the sort of thing—that she has
-done so much more than lend her name to patriotic
-functions and sit on platforms; that she has actually
-worked in the War Gardens, packed boxes, sewed,
-cooked and visited the soldiers’ wives. You know, it
-<span class='it'>is</span> rather splendid!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Azalea nodded and raised her eyes to the stained
-glass window memorialising another Gentle Spirit who
-found His happiness in ministering to the needs of the
-humbler folk. “It <span class='it'>is</span> rather splendid,” she agreed.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It must be very late,” said Miss Brant. “I
-wonder if that little minx, Mona, has been up to some
-of her tricks. By the way, have you heard about the
-Trevelyans?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Mercy, no! Not already?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Positively!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Why, it seems only last week since we were
-watching them get married. Is it a boy or a girl?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Both! And the screaming part of it is that the
-instant Mona heard the news, she <span class='it'>had herself insured
-against twins</span>!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You’re joking!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s a fact. Lloyd’s took her on. I say, Azalea,
-doesn’t Mrs. Dilling look ghastly?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Marjorie sat next Mrs. Blaine and Lady Fanshawe,
-feeling more ghastly than she looked. She had never
-been ill in her life, save when the babies came and
-that, of course, didn’t count. One just naturally had
-babies and made no fuss about it. But this was
-different. She had no particular pain. She wasn’t
-quite sure that her head ached. But she felt strangely
-weak and uncertain of herself.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Lady Fanshawe and Mrs. Blaine were complaining
-of their servants. Neither would admit the other’s
-supremacy in having the worst the Dominion afforded.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But you have a very good cook,” Mrs. Blaine
-protested.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“My dear, how <span class='it'>can</span> you say so?” cried Lady Fanshawe.
-“Twice, she has nearly poisoned us!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, the dinner I ate last Thursday at your house
-couldn’t have been better.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“A happy exception, I assure you.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Why don’t you get rid of her?” asked Mrs. Blaine.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I shall .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. but not at once—not until I have some
-one else in view. However, if you need a cook, dear,”
-she went on, “why not try Mrs. Hudson’s Minnie?
-<span class='it'>She</span> is really an excellent woman, and can always be
-tempted with higher wages.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mrs. Blaine turned away with a fine assumption of
-indifference, and Marjorie ventured a sympathetic
-word in Lady Fanshawe’s ear.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s very bothersome, isn’t it?” she murmured,
-“especially when one does so much entertaining.
-You always seem to have such bad luck with your
-servants. I believe I could send you a cook.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The older woman flung a peculiar look at her, and
-whispered, “You dear, simple soul! I’ve a perfect
-<span class='it'>treasure</span>! But I don’t dare say so; every one of my
-friends would try to take her from me!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Outside, the handsome departmental car drew
-smartly to a standstill, and the Hon. Peter Carmichael
-assisted his daughter to alight. She tripped up the
-carpeted stairs with no more concern than though she
-were going to a Golf Club Tea.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The trembling, green-white usher came forward to
-meet her. A group of bridesmaids stood near the door.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, old thing,” cried Mona, “how’s the silly
-show, anyway?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Full house,” returned the usher. “S.R.O. as the
-theatres say. At five dollars a head, you’d have quite
-a tidy nest egg, y’know!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Rotten business—ushing,” cried Mona. “You
-look all in, young fella me lad.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I am. A company of duds, I call ’em. Balky as
-mules. Nobody wants to sit with anybody else.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Do you blame them?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“My God, no! As the poet sang, ‘I’d rather live
-in vain than live in Ottawa’!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Come, daughter,” said the Hon. Peter, fussily
-crooking his elbow.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The lovely bride entered the church on the arm
-of her father,” simpered Mona, pinching his ear.
-“Forward, everybody. We’re off!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Four little flower girls led the way, four being a
-simple number, much less intricate than forty-four or
-ninety-four and a fraction. Their costumes were
-beautifully simple—flesh-coloured tights and a pair of
-wings, in cunning imitation of Dan Cupid. They
-carried bows and a quiver full of arrows, the latter
-tipped with yellow daffodils.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>They were followed by the six bridesmaids, who
-also carried out this note of extreme simplicity. Their
-costumes were composed of yellow tulle, sprinkled with
-a profusion of brilliants, and were supposed to suggest
-early morning dew upon a field of tulips. In place of
-flowers, they carried simple parasols of chiffon, and
-each wore the gift of the groom—a gold vanity box
-bearing a simple monogram in platinum.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The bride was gowned in plainest ivory satin. She
-had dispensed with the conventional wreath of orange
-blossoms, and her brow was crowned with a simple
-rose-point cap, whose billowy streamers fell to the tip
-of her slender train. She wore no ornaments save the
-gift of the groom—a simple bar of platinum supporting
-thirty-two plain diamonds.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At the sight of her, a ripple of admiration ran
-through the crowd. She felt it and was pleased in her
-youthfully insolent fashion. She bore herself with
-none of the modesty that characterised the bride of
-fifty years ago. Rather was she suggestive of the
-mannequin on parade.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The bridal party was just turning from the altar to
-the inspiriting strains from Mendelssohn, when Hebe
-Barrington entered the church with Mr. Sullivan.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, Lord, we’re late,” she muttered, pulling him
-quickly along the aisle. “We’ll have to find seats
-somewhere before the parade reaches us.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Not so far forward,” protested the Hon. Rufus,
-trying to hang back.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Don’t be so bashful,” returned Hebe. “We’re
-creating quite a sensation and stealing some of the
-limelight from the bride. ‘<span class='it'>La vice appuyé sur la bras
-de crime</span>,’ ” she whispered, enjoying herself enormously.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“This is a damned awkward mess,” growled Mr. Sullivan,
-under his breath. “I can’t see a seat, anywhere.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Nor I, and they’re nearly upon us. We’ll have to
-stop here.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The location selected for the enforced halt was not
-a happy one for Lady Denby—nor, indeed, for any of
-the occupants of that pew. In order to prevent confusion
-and a disarrangement of the procession, Mrs.
-Barrington and her escort were obliged to disregard
-the silken cord and squeeze in beside Sir Eric, and
-thus cut off quite successfully the view of the spectacle
-from his diminutive and enraged wife.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She accepted their apologies frostily, and made an
-obvious effort to escape from the offending pair, but
-the density of the crowd frustrated her design. She
-found herself impinged upon Mrs. Barrington’s scented
-shoulder, and absolutely unable to free herself. The
-colour mounted hotly to her delicate cheeks. Her eyes
-sparkled dangerously.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You <span class='it'>must</span> come to some of my parties, dear Lady
-Denby,” Hebe said, sweetly. “You, and Sir Eric .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-just simple affairs, you know, where we can snatch an
-hour’s relaxation. A little drink .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. a cigarette, a
-game of cards—er—do you dance?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I do not,” said Lady Denby.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Ah! What a pity!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Nor do I smoke.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Nor drink, nor gamble.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Perhaps you swear,” suggested Hebe, with elaborate
-mischievousness. “One must have some vices.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I don’t agree with you,” snapped Lady Denby,
-relieved to find that they had almost reached the door.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, what <span class='it'>do</span> you do, then?” queried Hebe, in a
-tone that was louder than was at all necessary.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Lady Denby stepped into the vestibule. In a space
-momentarily cleared, she turned and faced her tormentor.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What do I do?” she repeated. “I mind my own
-business .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. wear untransparent petticoats, and .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-sleep in my <span class='it'>own</span> husband’s bed!”</p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER 26.</h2>
-
-<p class='noindent'><span class='dropcap'>D</span>illing had refused to go to the wedding.
-Work was his excuse. He intended to clear up
-the accumulation of departmental business that
-lay massed in an orderly disarray upon his desk.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But he didn’t work. Each attempt proved to be a
-failure. He was conscious of fatigue—or, if not precisely
-that—of the ennui one feels when work is
-universally suspended, as on a rainy, dispiriting holiday.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The outer office was hushed and empty. That
-Azalea’s absence could so utterly bereave the atmosphere,
-struck him as preposterous, an incomprehensible
-thing. He struggled against it, but without success.
-He was lapped about by a feeling of isolation, of stark
-desolation. Staring at Azalea’s vacant chair, it seemed
-as if he stood in the midst of a dead and frozen world.
-With an effort at pulling himself together, he closed
-the door and returned to his position by the window.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He looked with blind eyes towards the southern
-sky, where pennons of smoke followed the locomotive
-that crossed and re-crossed the little subway bridge.
-Winter had been industrious during the past months
-and seemed loath, even now, to relinquish her supremacy
-to Spring. Tall pyramids of snow still clung to
-the corners of the Museum where abutments of the
-building shut off the warmth of a pale gold sun. The
-ground was black and spongy, and in every gutter,
-rivulets of water stirred the urge of the sea in the minds
-of swarms of children.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But Dilling saw none of these things. He was
-fighting the oppression of this curious lassitude and
-striving to recapture his ardour for work. The effect
-was not noticeably successful. He felt tired, stupid,
-drugged, as though some vital part of him was imprisoned
-and inert. He longed to be free, to abandon himself
-to a riot of emotion, to feel as acutely with his
-body as with his mind. He longed to overcome this
-numbness, this nostalgia of the senses, and to taste
-the fruits that gave to life its pungent tang and flavour.
-For the first time he saw himself emotionally shrivelled,
-inappetent of joy, and he veered away from the knowledge,
-wishing that he could remodel himself to love
-and suffer and hunger like other men.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He forced himself to a perception of the panorama
-at which he had been staring, the clumps of bushes
-heavy with uncurled buds, the gay costumes of the
-children playing in the icy gutters opposite, a sharp
-red tulip bravely facing the frosty air. He knew now
-that never had he taken into account the vital force
-behind living objects—cattle, flowers, trees, even the
-wheat itself, and he began to feel that all these and
-even inanimate things, such as the chair and desk in
-the desolate outer office, were instinct with life;
-Azalea’s life! How pitiful his limitations!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He loved her. He wanted her. He needed her.
-Life was without form and void lacking the stimulation,
-the inspiration of her presence. She was his <span class='it'>alter ego</span>,
-upon whom his mind and spirit depended as did his
-frail body upon food. Thinking upon her made him
-free of the hitherto remote pleasance of comradeship
-between the sexes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What torment,” he muttered, repeatedly. “What
-torment to know this joy and be unable to possess it!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The telephone rang. He turned impatiently to the
-instrument.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Sullivan?” he echoed. “No—not too busy. I’ll
-be up there shortly.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>During the week preceding his conversation with
-Marjorie, the Hon. Member for Morroway had busied
-himself in a cautious testing of the extent of his influence.
-He found that a majority of the Western
-Members needed no incentive from him to support
-Raymond Dilling, and from them he withheld all
-mention of the proposed change in policy he had
-suggested to Dilling’s wife. With the Maritime
-Members, however, he employed slightly different
-tactics, approaching them as one entrusted with
-confidential information, and hinting that in exchange
-for the premiership, Dilling would be willing to foreswear
-his platform, betray his original sponsors, and
-stand forth as a defender of Eastern interests, with
-especial emphasis upon those concerned in the annihilation
-of the Freight Bill, the abandonment of the
-Elevator project, and the indefinite postponement of
-the Eastlake and Donahue railway measures.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>With but an odd exception or two, his self-imposed
-mission was entirely successful. He called on Marjorie.
-He arranged for an interview with Dilling.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Five men rose as the youthful Minister entered the
-room: Howarth, Turner, young Gilbert, the Radical,
-the Hon. Gordon Blaine, who administered his Ministerial
-office—without portfolio—with unbroken suavity
-and bonhomie, and Mr. Sullivan, himself.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Good afternoon, gentlemen,” said Dilling. “No,
-I won’t drink, if you will excuse me.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He accepted the chair that Howarth offered, and
-waited for some one to speak.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>What a scene it was, and what an episode for the
-Muse of History .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Over in France, the flower of
-Canada’s youth—the heirs of the ages—were freely
-offering their splendid bodies upon the altar of War
-in testimony of the eternal need of human sacrifice for
-things that transcend all human values. Over there,
-the spirit of the young nation was responding magnificently
-to a supreme test of its fineness. Here at home,
-within the very walls of the buildings dedicated to the
-purpose of moulding and directing the welfare of the
-nation, men of mature years were not ashamed, by
-plot and intrigue, to make of Canada a scorn and a byword.
-A man of the highest instincts for public
-service was being tempted by his political associates to
-foreswear his ideals by a sordid bargaining for power.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Hon. Member for Morroway was the first to
-break the silence.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Mr. Dilling,” he began, “we are all men of plain
-speech, here, and there is nothing to be gained by
-euphemisms or beating about the bush. In a word,
-then, we wish to sound you on this question of the
-Premiership, and to offer you an option—let us call it—on
-the post.”</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'>So, and in this wise, the supreme moment of his
-career had come to Raymond Dilling.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The shock was such that his mind refused for a
-moment to function. The Premiership! The goal for
-which he had striven! The pinnacle of his ambition!
-And to be reached so soon!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>What would Azalea say? .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. and poor little
-Marjorie?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You—er—take me at a disadvantage, gentlemen,”
-he said. “I am unprepared for this .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” and he
-turned again to the spokesman.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mr. Sullivan felt his way after the manner of a
-cautious pachyderm,</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“This offer,” he said, “is contingent upon a slight
-change of policy. You would, no doubt, be willing to
-reverse your attitude on what I may describe as the
-Wheat and Railway proposals. I need not say,” he
-continued, smoothly, “that this can be done without
-any forfeiture of your honesty of purpose, or any
-reflection upon your acumen as a statesman. Understand
-that we approach you in the true and best
-interest of the Canadian people. Once understand
-that, Mr. Dilling, and I am convinced that you will
-allow no consideration of personal disadvantage to
-weigh against your compliance with our wishes.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Dilling made no reply, but a pungent French
-phrase that he had read somewhere, welled up to him
-curiously from the subconscious .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. “<span class='it'>Il faut faire tout le
-rebours de ce qu’il dit.</span>” This gave him pause, the
-instinct for caution was touched. Was this his cue
-for the answer he should ultimately give? Did this
-not warn him to take the very opposite course to that
-pointed out to him? He must have no illusions as to
-the right of the matter.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then temptation gripped him. His soul was in
-tumult. Principle cried out, “Abhor that which is
-evil,” while the Will to Power smote him with the
-reminder that “Opportunity knocks but once at the
-door of kings”. What could he not accomplish for his
-beloved country with sovereign power in his hands
-and his talents in the very flower of their prime! How
-subtle was the lure.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Must he not recognise in this offer the call of destiny
-to complete the work of nation-building begun by those
-fathers of Confederation—Macdonald, and Cartier
-and Tupper? These were names never to be erased
-from the scroll of Fame, and why should not he be
-numbered of their immortal company?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The torch of constructive patriotism lighted by
-them, had burned low. Let it be his to revive the
-waning flame. Was this not the vision that had
-inspired him, that had drawn him from the Last Great
-West?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That Dilling was powerfully moved was patent to
-those who had come to tempt him. His frail body
-quivered with the strain, and Sullivan was too astute
-a politician to neglect this fleeting advantage. He
-pressed for an answer before sober second-thought
-could evoke for Dilling a suspicion of the duplicity
-underlying the offer.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What do you think of the idea, Dilling?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This challenge to a swift decision served to impress
-him with the danger of the situation, and Dilling’s
-mind reacted with fine discernment. No matter how
-he decided, he would not be swayed by impulse.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What do I think of the idea? I think your
-proposal is most generous in its implication of my fitness
-for so tremendous a post. I am overwhelmed by
-the honour you would do me, deeply grateful to you
-and your influential friends for this frank appreciation
-of my efforts in public life. But I fear you estimate
-them too highly.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Nothing of the kind,” the Hon. Gordon Blaine
-interrupted, amiably.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The only man for the job,” muttered Turner.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Be that as it may,” Dilling continued, “I must
-take time to consider. For you, as well as for the
-country and myself, my decision must not be arrived
-at on the low plane of personal advantage. But I
-shall not delay you longer than to-morrow morning,
-gentlemen. There is need, I see, for prompt decision.
-Meanwhile, accept my assurance of obligation, and
-allow me to bid you good afternoon.”</p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER 27.</h2>
-
-<p class='noindent'><span class='dropcap'>I</span>t was only natural perhaps, that Dilling should
-suffer the full and terrible force of Sullivan’s
-temptation after he thought he had conquered it,
-for it was only then that he permitted himself the
-dangerous pleasure of examining its possibilities. In
-his silent office, surrounded by the hush of a building
-deserted now save by the Dominion Police who never
-relaxed their vigilance, he considered the might-have-beens,
-and wrestled with beasts that threatened to rise
-up and devour him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Sullivan’s implications recurred in their most convincing
-aspect. Sullivan was so nearly right. Must
-not a statesman possess flexibility of mind as well as
-rigidity of principle? Must not he be able to adapt
-himself to the exigencies of the time? Dilling required
-none to remind him that the whole fabric of Canada’s
-political life was changed, that the policy in ante-bellum
-days was, in many cases, inimical to the public
-good, to-day. He saw, clearly, that concentration of
-the Dominion’s resources upon Returned Soldiers and
-their re-establishment was an inevitable consequence
-of War. He knew that Freight, Elevator and Railway
-projects must be postponed. And he was in favour of
-postponing them. But Sullivan asked more. He
-asked that the very principles that had inspired his
-support be abandoned in exchange for a post of power.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Ambition’s seductive voice whispered of compromise.
-What else is diplomacy, indeed? Supreme
-issues have been won by a trick; statesmanship is
-permitted greater latitude than is allowed the private
-individual.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He had learned that a sensitive conscience is a disability
-in political life. If a man is revolted by the
-corruptness of his Party, he can not lead it with spirit,
-nor can he justify it as a medium for serving the State.
-It is sadly true that rather to his imperfections than
-to the fineness of his qualities is the success of the
-statesman due.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the other hand, public men of genius, in these
-days, are not excused for their <span class='it'>dulcia vitia</span> as they used
-to be. “I would be damned,” he reflected, “for the
-frailties that seemed to endear Pitt to the populace.
-So long as a leader is chaste and sober, he may be
-unscrupulous with impunity.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>His spirit cried out in anguish, and he was tortured
-by the whirling orb of thought that compels great
-minds to suffer the perturbation of a common life-time
-in the space of a moment. He raised his eyes to the
-window, unconsciously seeking strength from the glory
-framed there. Suddenly, his soul was quickened; he
-became alive to the wonder of God in Nature .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. the
-sun was setting in amber dust .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. pale greenish streaks
-stretched overhead and dissolved in a pansy mist.
-Upon the horizon, masses of heavy cloud lay banked
-like a mountain range bathed in violet rain.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The words of the psalmist flashed across Dilling’s
-mind and he murmured, “ ‘I will lift up mine eyes unto
-the hills, from whence cometh my help.’ If God can
-pour strength into a frail vessel, may He pour it
-generously into me.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There was a light tap on the door, and Azalea
-entered the room.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Dilling stared at her without speaking. He had
-never attached much importance to coincidences.
-They were, he thought, significant only in the world of
-fiction. When they occurred in reality, they only
-emphasised the incoherency of the substance. But
-Azalea’s coming was like an answer to prayer. He
-could think of nothing to say.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Marjorie told me you had not come home,” she
-began, “and I thought that perhaps the work—Why,
-what is it?” Her tone changed. “What is the
-matter?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Briefly, he told her. “They have given me until
-to-morrow morning to make up my mind.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Perhaps I’d better go,” she said.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No, no! Stay and help me. I don’t feel as if I
-could fight this thing out alone.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Heavily, he threw himself into a chair. His thinness,
-his pallor, his general air of frailness, made
-Azalea faint with pity for him. Sitting in the half-tone
-of departing daylight, his hair seemed silvered
-with frost, his face was drawn, his body sagged like
-that of an old man.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What do you think I should do?” he asked her.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What you know is right.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But if I don’t know what is right?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Ah, but you must! None knows it better.
-Education is only a matter of knowing what is right
-and then having the courage to do it.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He objected almost petulantly, supposing that he
-lacked the necessary courage. Azalea smiled, and there
-was pride behind the gesture.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“That, above all others, is the virtue you possess.
-It is the foundation upon which all the rest are built.
-It is that which helps them to endure .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Dilling listened to the quiet confident voice with an
-emotion so profound that it was like a deep-bosomed
-bell ringing in his soul. He was conscious of a curious
-sensation, as though his spirit had escaped a crushing
-weight—(a weight that still cramped his body)—as
-though it had been set free.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In a low voice, and in phrases that were disjointed
-and but half spoken, he began to talk about himself,
-his ambitions, his career; and Azalea listened feeling
-that part of him had died, and that she was hearing
-but the echo of his voice.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It never occurred to me that my life was barren,”
-she heard him say, “barren and grim .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. just a brain .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-a machine that, given direction, could drive on with
-peculiar force and vanquish those of different constitution
-.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Never felt the need of friends .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. nor the
-lack of them .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Alone and grim .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. But I loved
-Canada!” A suggestion of warmth stole into his voice.
-“I loved the West .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I asked for nothing better than
-to serve my country—it may be that some men serve
-women that way .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I wanted to get into the heart of it,
-to feel the throb, the life-waves beating out across the
-land .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Then the Capital .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. so different .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. The
-men, the administration .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Bewildering to find that
-I could take my place with those upon whom I had
-looked as gods .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Poor Marjorie! This would mean
-much to her .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“When the facts are known, you will go down in
-history,” Azalea told him, “as a shining example of
-political integrity.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’m not so sure. More likely, I will be held up to
-illustrate the failure of Success. My God,” he cried,
-suddenly, “why can’t I live .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. why can’t I live?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>His suffering was terrible for her to bear. Yet, she
-held herself in strict control. “Success has become an
-odious word to me,” she said, “a juggernaut to which
-Truth and Justice are too often sacrificed. You have
-achieved .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. there is achievement even in failure .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Her words filled him with bleak despair. He had
-hoped that she would argue his decision, try to persuade
-him to alter it, show him that he was wrong. For a
-fleeting second, he was guilty of resentment, doubting
-that she divined his pain at relinquishing his career.
-But he looked into her face and was ashamed.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Azalea!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Raymond!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A flame of delight ran through his being. It was
-as though his whole body had been transfused with the
-ultimate beauty of life. “Do you think I have
-achieved?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Yes .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. the expression of a great spiritual truth,”
-she answered. “No compromise, no diplomacy—another
-name for deceit. That you have been misunderstood
-and defamed was only to have been expected.
-It is the price men pay for putting forth the
-truth. But you, who have been so fearless—you are
-not weakening now?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No,” he said. “I cannot weaken with you to
-help me. I will go back. There is no other way.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Go back?” she echoed. “Go back to the West?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Life would be intolerable here—especially for
-Marjorie.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You will leave Ottawa altogether?” The words
-were scarcely audible. She had not anticipated this.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Not altogether. Part of me will remain. This is
-my soul’s graveyard, Azalea .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. They say a soul
-cannot die, but never was there a more soothing
-untruth spread abroad for the peace of the credulous.
-Mine died to-day—only a few hours after it was born.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“My dear, my dear,” she whispered, trying to keep
-her voice free from the coldness of death that lay upon
-her own spirit.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>They sat in silence a space, while waves of misery
-welled up about them. Then Azalea’s control broke.
-She covered her face with her hands.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Don’t!” cried Dilling, sharply. “Don’t! Tell me
-the truth—do you want me to stay?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Suddenly, he left his chair and knelt beside her,
-burying his face in the folds of her dress, and groping
-for her hand. For a time, he could not speak, could
-not tell how much he loved her, could not articulate
-the thought that hers was the power to make vocative
-his life’s stern purpose. He could only cling to her
-and suffer.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Azalea,” he cried, at last, “how can I go? I can’t
-live without you—I’m not even sure that I can die!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She felt strangled and heard words falling from her
-lips without understanding how she spoke them.
-“Are you forgetting the needs of the West—the opportunity
-for your talents, there? Will you close your
-ears to the call of your ambition?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He denied the existence of ambition. It had died
-when life was stricken from his soul.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She raised his head between her hands. They
-trembled and were cold.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Raymond, do you love me?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You know it.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Then pick up the standard once more! Carry on!
-Respond to that inner voice that presently will cry out
-to you. Ambition is inspired by emotion rather than
-intellect. If you love me, don’t fling down the torch!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But I need you,” he protested. “You are the
-fount, the source of all my power. You are my torch.
-Without you, the world is plunged in darkness. I can
-see to do nothing.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“There is an inextinguishable beam of friendship.
-More .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. When one achieves an understanding such
-as ours, one enters into a spiritual romance.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He bowed his head against her breast. Gently, she
-encircled his body with her arms. Twilight quivered
-in the still room.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Presently, he looked up.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And what of you, my dear? Yours is the harder
-part .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Will you suffer very much, Azalea?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She closed her eyes to hide from him her agony.
-“Emotions, even the most happy ones, are shot with
-pain,” she said.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Yes, I’m learning that, myself, God pity me! But
-I don’t want you to suffer through my love. Oh,
-Azalea .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. woman .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. you have been my white angel,
-my guiding star, that I took for granted as naturally
-as that one, in the sky! You have been for me the
-Truth and the Light, the balm for which I cried in all
-my agony and strife. You have accepted me as I am,
-nor asked a profession of my love in any way that was
-not <span class='it'>me</span>. And I leave you, never having served you.
-What is there of me that can hold a place in your life?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She thought a moment, then,</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Listen,” she whispered. “Here is my answer.
-I wrote it yesterday .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“Sometimes I wake and say, ‘I love him!’</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;And sometimes, ‘He loves me!’</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;But whichever way it is</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;The day is filled with a finer purpose.”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Azalea, let me kneel at your feet!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No, no! Kiss me .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Oh, my dear love, kiss
-me .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>For a time, they clung to one another, and when at
-last she withdrew from him, the room was plunged in
-utter darkness.</p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER 28.</h2>
-
-<p class='noindent'><span class='dropcap'>O</span>f the five men who were left in Mr. Sullivan’s
-office, the Hon. Member for Morroway was not
-the least abashed. He had never confronted a
-moral quality like this in his whole experience. After
-all, he thought, recalling the sheer fineness of the man,
-men are something more than a mere merchantable
-commodity in the market of politics. Possibly, there
-are others who, like Dilling, disproved Walpole’s <span class='it'>mot</span>,
-that every man has his price .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was not, however, on the knees of the gods that
-Mr. Sullivan should be diverted from his purpose by
-considerations such as these. He felt that Dilling was
-the only man to play the lead in the interesting drama
-he desired to stage, that he must win him beyond all
-doubt, and soon. Nothing but a refusal could be
-expected if so lofty and withal so astute a mind had
-time for reflection.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Dilling had just finished a solitary dinner—Marjorie
-served in a canteen every Wednesday evening—when
-his visitor was announced. The Hon. Member for
-Morroway was conscious of a change in him; there
-was the rapture of a seer in his eyes, and a bearing of
-victory—a jocund note of heroism in him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Why did you follow me, Mr. Sullivan?” were his
-words of greeting. “I thought I said I needed time
-for my decision.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Indeed, you did, Mr. Dilling. But it is important
-that I should have your answer at once, and besides,
-you gave me no chance to persuade you that you would
-be right in accepting the Premiership at this juncture
-in our history. Will you consent to hear what I would
-like to say?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Dilling led the way into his study and motioned
-the Hon. Member to a chair. He stood.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Proceed, Mr. Sullivan. I shall need much encouragement
-if I am to meet your views.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Hang it all, Dilling, let’s get off our high horses
-and down to brass tacks—if you will allow me to mix
-my metaphors! You left us before I had a chance to
-show you, as I had intended, that the interests of
-Canada imperatively demand that no more money be
-spent at this time in facilitating the marketing of
-wheat—for that is what your Elevator and Railway
-policy means in the last analysis. First and foremost
-the Returned Soldiers are to be considered if we are to
-shut off Bolshevism from rearing its ugly head here.
-Are you in accord with me, so far?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Quite,” returned Dilling. “What then?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The inevitable. The Governmental money bags
-will be kept lean for some years in meeting the just
-demands of the returned men, and the sentiment of
-the whole community will be behind them. Not only
-will the bankers of Eastern Canada put a spoke in
-your wheel—for they are spiteful over losing so much
-money in the West—but you will find it difficult to
-borrow money in the States when the people recognise
-that an extension of Canadian railroads means hostility
-to the pet scheme of many of their financiers.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Financiers are traditionally hostile,” said Dilling.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“True, but the situation here is particularly acute, for
-these men to whom I refer have sought to obtain the sanction
-of this country to a greater utilisation of the Great
-Lakes and St. Lawrence waterways for transportation.
-They can scarcely be expected to lend money for a
-diverting project .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. and you can wring blood from a
-turnip as easily as you can borrow money in England!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’m afraid your last observation is only too true,
-Mr. Sullivan.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’m sure of it. I don’t think I need elaborate the
-national argument in favour of your change of front,
-I’ve said enough on that head. Coming to the more
-personal side of things, every statesman from Julius
-Cæsar to George Washington has had to compromise.
-You can’t be stiff in your adherence to principle even
-in appointments to government posts! Sir John Macdonald,
-Laurier—all of them—have had to appoint
-incompetent persons to the Civil Service over the
-heads of men thoroughly qualified in ability and
-character to serve the State in the finest way .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. a
-matter of expediency .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. expediency .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Dilling said nothing, so Sullivan went on.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What’s the use of quoting Lincoln as a model of
-probity in dispensing offices—Lincoln was the only
-man in the world who could be prophet, priest and
-king in politics at one and the same time—and <span class='it'>he</span>
-couldn’t save his face, to-day!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Somewhere, a door closed, and the treble of childish
-voices blended in happy confusion.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Think of your wife and children, Dilling .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-Marjorie .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I use her Christian name by right of a
-deep and esteemed friendship .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Marjorie has suffered
-greatly from the snobocracy of Ottawa. She has
-confided much to me, that out of respect for your busy
-life, has been withheld from—er—her natural confidant,
-and it is only to be expected that you should seize the
-opportunity to furnish her the pleasure of playing a
-supreme stellar role in the social life of the nation.
-Moreover .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Stop, Mr. Sullivan! You have said enough .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-more than enough! You have offended me by the
-casuistry of your argument on behalf of the public
-need for my desertion of the policies I have proclaimed.
-Your appeal on the personal side is a gross insult to me.
-However I may have seemed to waver until this
-moment, I now unhesitatingly and absolutely decline
-to accept your overtures. More than that, you have
-persuaded me that I must leave public life. No, I
-beg of you, say nothing further! Let me bid you
-good night, Mr. Sullivan—but do not leave me
-without the conviction that you have done me a real
-service.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Sullivan lowered his head as he left the room.
-A curious aching had taken possession of his throat.
-He had been accustomed to swear after unsuccessful
-interviews with politicians .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Just now, profanity
-refused to rise at his command.</p>
-
-<hr class='stars'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Marjorie’s tired voice roused him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s very late, dearie,” she said. “Won’t you try
-to get some rest?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Presently. I’ve something to tell you, first.
-Will you come in and sit down?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>With unaccustomed gentleness, he arranged a chair
-for her. She dropped into it as though suddenly
-bereft of the power to stand. Her eyes were feverishly
-bright, and fixed upon him with apprehension that
-amounted almost to fear.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Dilling was conscious of intense pity for her. How
-unequal she was to the demand he—his life—imposed!
-How gamely she had borne the strain!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He hated her appearance to-night. Evidently, she
-had returned from the canteen only in time to dress
-for some more brilliant function. She wore a peach-coloured
-satin, covered with a sort of iridescent lace—a
-hideously sophisticated dress, too low and too light;
-it bedizened her, overlaid all her native simplicity.
-Dilling was, as a rule, oblivious to the details of women’s
-clothes, but to-night his perceptions were sharpened,
-and he examined his wife critically.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As he did so, a horrid thought took possession of
-his mind. He saw her dress, her manner—her barricade
-of behavior—as something degrading, detestable,
-utterly foreign to her. A more imaginative man
-would have fallen back upon the fancy that the pure
-gold of her nature was being covered with the whitewash
-of social pretense. So deeply did it offend him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I have been offered the Premiership,” he announced.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That was all she could say. Months ago she had
-arrived at the point where she stood on guard over
-every act and utterance, fearing to proceed lest she
-should violate some sacred creed and call forth criticism
-and disdain. And now, when she wanted to speak,
-she could not. Inarticulate and frightened, she sat,
-like a person paralysed by nightmare.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Yes, this afternoon,” Dilling continued, and then
-as he had told Azalea, “they have given me until to-morrow
-morning to decide.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s splendid,” said Marjorie. “It’s wonderful .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-but then you deserve it, dearie. You’ve worked so
-hard!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“So have you, Marjorie!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Exactly what will it mean?” she questioned,
-timidly. “Will we have to move again, and do more
-entertaining?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You take it for granted that I’ll accept?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh! You <span class='it'>can’t</span> refuse?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Why not?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well—well—” Mr. Sullivan’s promptings eluded
-her entirely. “The premiership? .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Oh, Raymond,
-you mustn’t refuse!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She began to argue, falteringly, but with a desperate
-earnestness that betrayed her own lack of conviction.
-And as he listened, an odious suspicion crept into
-Dilling’s mind.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Who’s been putting you up to this?” he demanded.
-“You are voicing arguments that are not your own.
-Tell me, Marjorie, who has been putting words into
-your mouth?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Marjorie refused to meet his eyes, but her lips
-framed the name “Sullivan”.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was her manner more than her speech that caused
-the dawn of a slow horror. Dilling recalled evidences
-of the man’s frequent visits—books, flowers, chocolates,
-games for the children—Yes, he remembered now,
-that the children called him “Uncle Rufus” .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. and
-hadn’t Sullivan, himself, hinted at an unsuspected
-intimacy? Had he not boasted of being Marjorie’s
-close confidant?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“How long has this been going on?” he asked,
-pursuing his own line of thought.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Ever since we first came,” whispered his wife,
-failing wholly to follow him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You don’t mean <span class='it'>years</span>?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She bowed her head.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Why did I never know?” He put the query more
-to himself than to her.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I never tried to keep it from you, Raymond!” she
-was stung into making a defence. “The very first
-night .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. you were right in the house. No, not this
-house—the other one. I should think you would have
-heard us coming downstairs .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Always, I have tried
-not to bother you!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Coming downstairs?” he echoed. “My God .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-my God!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A sudden blackness enshrouded him. He was
-swallowed up in the wreckage of a too-long life, lived
-in too short a span. His career had been swept away
-his love was denied him, and now he had lost his wife .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“My God,” he said again—elemental words wrung
-by elemental anguish.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A cry, low and terrible, penetrated his misery.
-Marjorie flung herself at his feet, and gasped,</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No—no—not <span class='it'>that</span>, Raymond .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Are you listening
-to me? Not <span class='it'>that</span>!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What, then?” he muttered.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, how could you, Raymond? You couldn’t
-think I would do a thing like that?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Then what do you mean?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The story of her association with the Hon. Member
-for Morroway fell in broken sentences, often misleading,
-by reason of the very shame she felt in its avowal.
-As he listened to the innocent little tale, Dilling’s
-heart was torn with pity, and more clearly than before
-he saw the futility of attempting to mould their
-simplicity to the form of conduct required by their
-position. He thought of the West—his West—of a
-rugged people who were still alive to the practical
-advancement of idealism, divorced from stultifying
-subservience to convention. He felt an overpowering
-urge to return, to identify himself once again with
-those sturdy people, whom, he believed, would answer
-the guidance of his hand. He was theirs. They were
-his. The West was his kingdom, and there he would
-be content to reign.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A crushing weight seemed lifted from his spirit.
-Shackles fell away.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Would you like to go home,” he asked Marjorie,
-“to go home for good and all, I mean?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The light in her face answered him. It is abundantly
-true that experiences realised, are a glorified
-incarnation of dead wishes. The promised return to
-Pinto Plains was, for Marjorie, a dream that was
-coming true. She knew the exquisite pain of seeing
-the complete fulfilment of a passionate desire. No
-words could translate her feeling.</p>
-
-<hr class='stars'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And so, with gratulation that was void of all regret,
-they went back to happy mediocrity, far from The
-Land of Afternoon.</p>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;margin-top:2em;font-size:1.5em;'>THE END</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
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