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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The High Heart, by Basil King
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The High Heart
+
+Author: Basil King
+
+Release Date: March 3, 2011 [EBook #35463]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE HIGH HEART ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Barbara Watson, Ross Cooling and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Canada Team at
+http://www.pgdpcanada.net (This file was produced from
+images generously made available by The Internet
+Archive/Canadian Libraries)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Books by the
+ AUTHOR OF "THE INNER SHRINE"
+
+ [BASIL KING]
+
+ THE HIGH HEART. Illustrated.
+ THE LIFTED VEIL. Illustrated.
+ THE SIDE OF THE ANGELS. Illustrated.
+ THE LETTER OF THE CONTRACT. Illustrated.
+ THE WAY HOME. Illustrated.
+ THE WILD OLIVE. Illustrated.
+ THE INNER SHRINE. Illustrated.
+ THE STREET CALLED STRAIGHT. Illustrated.
+ LET NOT MAN PUT ASUNDER. Post 8vo.
+ IN THE GARDEN OF CHARITY. Post 8vo.
+ THE STEPS OF HONOR. Post 8vo.
+ THE GIANT'S STRENGTH. Post 8vo.
+
+
+ HARPER & BROTHERS, NEW YORK
+ Established 1817
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: "I've been thinking a good deal during the past few weeks
+of your law of Right"]
+
+
+
+
+ THE HIGH HEART
+
+ BY
+ BASIL KING
+
+ AUTHOR OF
+ "_The Inner Shrine_" "_The Lifted Veil_" _Etc._
+
+ ILLUSTRATED
+
+
+
+ HARPER & BROTHERS PUBLISHERS
+ NEW YORK AND LONDON
+
+
+
+
+ The High Heart
+
+ Copyright, 1917, by Harper & Brothers
+ Printed in the United States of America
+ Published September, 1917
+
+
+
+
+ ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+
+ "I've Been Thinking a Good Deal During the
+ Past Few Weeks of Your Law of Right" _Frontispiece_
+
+ The Marriage She Had Missed Was on Her Mind.
+ It Created an Obsession or a Broken Heart,
+ I Wasn't Quite Sure Which _Facing p._ 118
+
+ I Saw a Man and a Woman Consumed with Longing
+ for Each Other " 192
+
+ "I've Had Great Trials . . . I've Always Been
+ Misjudged. . . . They've Put Me Down as
+ Hard and Proud" " 410
+
+
+
+
+ THE HIGH HEART
+
+
+ CHAPTER I
+
+
+I could not have lived in the Brokenshire circle for nearly a year
+without recognizing the fact that in the eyes of his family J. Howard,
+as he was commonly called by the world, was the Great Dispenser; but my
+first intimation that he meant to act in that capacity toward me came
+from Larry Strangways, on a bright July morning during the summer of
+1913, when we were at Newport.
+
+I was crossing the lawn, going toward the sea, with little Gladys
+Rossiter, to whom I acted as companion in the hours when she was out of
+the nursery, with a specific duty to speak French. Larry Strangways was
+tutor to the Rossiter boy, and in our relative positions we were bound
+to exercise toward each other a good deal of discretion. We fraternized
+with constraint. We fraternized because--well, chiefly because we
+couldn't help it. In the mocking flare of his eye, which contradicted
+the assumed young gravity of his manner, I read an opinion of the
+Rossiter household and of the Brokenshire family in general similar to
+my own. That would have been enough for mutual comprehension had there
+been no instinctive sympathies between us; but there were. Allowing for
+the fact that we were of different nationalities, we had the same kind
+of antecedents; we spoke the same kind of social language; we had the
+same kind of aims in life. Neither of us regarded the position in the
+Rossiter establishment as a permanent status. He was a tutor merely for
+the minute, while feeling his way to that first rung of the ladder which
+I was convinced would lead him to some high place in American life. I
+was a nursery governess only on the way to getting married. Matrimony
+was the continent toward which more or less consciously I had been
+traveling for five or six years, without having actually descried a
+port. In this connection I may relate a little incident which had taken
+place between myself and Mrs. Rossiter after I had accepted my situation
+in her family. It will retard my meeting with Larry Strangways on the
+lawn, but it will throw light on it when it comes.
+
+I had met Mrs. Rossiter, who was J. Howard Brokenshire's daughter, in
+the way that is known as socially. I never understood why she should
+have taken a house for the summer in our quiet old town of Halifax,
+unless she was urged to it by the vague restlessness which was one of
+her characteristics. But there she was in a roomy old brick mansion I
+had known all my life, with gardens and conservatories and lawns running
+down to the fiord or back-harbor which we call the Northwest Arm, and a
+fine English air of seclusion. In our easy, neighborly way she was well
+received, and made herself agreeable. She flirted with the officers of
+both Army and Navy enough to create talk without raising scandal; and
+she was sufficiently good-natured to be civil to us girls, among whom
+she singled me out for attentions. I attributed this kindness to our
+recent bereavement and financial crash, which had left me poor after
+twenty-four years of comfort, and was proportionately grateful. It was
+partly gratitude, and partly a natural love of children, and partly a
+special affection for the exquisite thing herself, that drew me to
+little Gladys Rossiter, to playing with her on the lawns, and rowing her
+on the Arm, and--as I had been for three or four years at school in
+Paris--dropping into a habit of lisping French to her. As the child
+liked me the mother left her more and more to my care, gaining thus the
+greater scope for her innocuous flirtations.
+
+It was toward the end of the summer that Mrs. Rossiter began to sigh, "I
+don't know how I shall ever tear Gladys away from you," and, "I do wish
+you were coming with us."
+
+I wished it in a way myself, since I was rather at a loss as to what to
+do. I had never expected to have to earn a living; I had expected to get
+married. My two elder sisters, Louise and Victoria, had married easily
+enough, the one in the Navy, the other in the Army; but with me suitors
+seemed to lag. They came and saw--but they never went far enough for
+conquest. I couldn't understand it. I was not stupid; I was not ugly;
+and I was generally spoken of as having charm. But there was the fact
+that I was twenty-four, with scarcely a penny, and drawing nearer and
+nearer to the end of my expedients. I was not without some social
+experience, having kept house in a generous way for my widowed father,
+till his death, some two years before the summer when I met Mrs.
+Rossiter, brought with it our financial collapse. If he hadn't left a
+lot of old books--_Canadiana_, the pamphlets were called--and rare first
+editions of all kinds, which I took over to London and sold at
+Sothbey's, I shouldn't have had enough on which to dress. This business
+being settled, I stayed as long as I decently could with Louise at
+Southsea and Victoria at Gibraltar; but no man asked me to marry him
+during the course of either visit. Had there been a sign of any such
+possibility the sisters would have put themselves out to keep me; but as
+nothing warranted them in doing so they let me go. An uncle and aunt
+having offered to give me shelter for a time at Halifax, there was
+nothing left for it but to go back and renew the search for my fortunes
+in my native town.
+
+When, therefore, Mrs. Rossiter, in her pretty, helpless way said to me
+one day, "Why shouldn't you come with me, dear Miss Adare?" I jumped
+inwardly at the opportunity, though I smiled and replied in an offhand
+manner, "Oh, that would have to be discussed."
+
+Mrs. Rossiter admitted the truth of this observation somewhat pensively.
+I know now that I took her up with too much promptitude.
+
+"Yes, of course," she returned, absently, and the subject was dropped.
+
+It was taken up again, however, and our bargain made. On Mrs. Rossiter's
+part it was made astutely, not in the matter of money, but in the way in
+which she shifted me from the position of a friend into that of a
+retainer. It was done with the most perfect tact, but it was done. I had
+no complaint to make. What she wanted was a nursery governess. My own
+first preoccupations were food and shelter for which I should not be
+dependent on my kin. We came to the incident I am about to relate very
+gradually; but when we did come to it I had no difficulty in seeing that
+it had been in the back of Mrs. Rossiter's mind from the first. It had
+been the cause of that second thought on the day when I had taken her up
+too readily.
+
+She began by telling me about her father. Beyond the fact that some man
+who seemed to be specially well informed would occasionally say with
+awe, "She's J. Howard Brokenshire's daughter," I knew nothing whatever
+about him. But I began to see him now as the central sun round whom all
+the Brokenshires revolved. They revolved round him, not so much from
+adoration or even from natural affection as from some tremendous rotary
+force to which there was no resistance.
+
+Up to this time I had heard no more of American life than American life
+had heard of me. The great country south of our border was scarcely on
+my map. The Halifax in which I was born and grew up was not the bustling
+Canadian port, dependent on its hinterland, it is to-day; it was an
+outpost of England, with its face always turned to the Atlantic and the
+east. My own face had been turned the same way. My home had been
+literally a jumping-off place, in that when we left it we never expected
+to go in any but the one direction. I had known Americans when they came
+into our midst as summer visitors, but only in the way one knows the
+stars which dawn and fade and leave no trace of their passage on actual
+happenings.
+
+In the course of Mrs. Rossiter's confidences I began to see a vast
+cosmogony beyond my own personal sun, with J. Howard Brokenshire as the
+pivot of the new universe. With a curious little shock of surprise I
+discovered that there could be other solar systems besides the one to
+which I was accustomed, and that Canada was not the whole of North
+America. It was like looking through a telescope which Mrs. Rossiter
+held to my eye, a telescope through which I saw the nebular evidence of
+an immense society, wealthy, confused, more intellectual than our own,
+but more provincial too, perhaps; more isolated, more timid, more
+conservative, less instinct with the great throb of national and
+international impulse which all of us feel who live on the imperial red
+line and, therefore, less daring, but interesting all the same. I began
+to glow with the spirit of adventure. My position as a nursery governess
+presented the opportunities not merely of a Livingstone or a Stanley,
+but of a Galileo or a Copernicus.
+
+I learned that Mrs. Rossiter's mother had been a Miss Brew, and that the
+Brews were a great family in Boston. She was the mother of all Mr.
+Brokenshire's children. By looks and hints and sighs I gathered from
+Mrs. Rossiter that her father's second marriage had been a trial to his
+family. Not that there had been any social descent. On the contrary, the
+present Mrs. Brokenshire had been Editha Billing, of Philadelphia, and
+there could be nothing better than that. It was a question of fitness,
+of necessity, of age. "There was no need for him to marry again at all,"
+Mrs. Rossiter complained. "If she'd only been a middle-aged woman," she
+said to me later, "we might not have felt. . . . But she's younger than
+Mildred and only a year or two older than I am." "Oh yes," was another
+remark, "she's pretty; very pretty . . . but I often--wonder."
+
+She described her brothers and her sister by degrees. One day she told
+me about Mildred, another about Jack, so coming toward her point.
+Mildred was the eldest of the family, a great invalid. She had been
+thrown from her horse years before while hunting in England, and had
+injured her spine. Jack had just gone into business with his father, and
+had married Pauline Gray, of Baltimore. Though she didn't say it in so
+many words I judged that it was not a happy marriage in the highest
+sense--that Jack was somewhat light of love, while Pauline "went her own
+way" to a degree that made her talked about. It was not till the day
+before her departure for New York that Mrs. Rossiter mentioned her
+younger brother, Hugh.
+
+I was helping her to pack--that is, I was helping the maid while Mrs.
+Rossiter directed. Just at that minute, however, she was standing up,
+shaking out the folds of an evening dress. She seemed to peep at me
+round its garnishings as she said, apropos of nothing:
+
+"There's my brother Hugh. He's the youngest of us all--just twenty-six.
+He has no occupation as yet--he's just studying languages and things. My
+father wants him to go into diplomacy." As I caught her eye there was a
+smile in it, but a special kind of smile. It was the smile to go with
+the sensible, kindly, coaxing inflection with which she said, "You'll
+leave him alone, won't you?"
+
+I took the dress out of her hand to carry it to the maid in the next
+room.
+
+"Leave him alone--how?"
+
+She flushed to a lovely pink.
+
+"Oh, you know what I mean. I don't have to explain."
+
+"You mean that in my position in the household it will be for me to--to
+keep out of his way?"
+
+"It's you who put it like that, dear Miss Adare--"
+
+"But it's the way you want me to put it?"
+
+"Well, if I admit that it is?"
+
+"Then I don't think I care for the place."
+
+"What?"
+
+I stated my position more simply.
+
+"If I'm to have nothing to do with your brother, Mrs. Rossiter, I don't
+want to go."
+
+In the audacity of this response she saw something that amused her, for,
+snatching the dress from my hand, she ran with it into the next room,
+laughing.
+
+During the following winter in New York and the early summer of the next
+year in Newport I saw a good deal of Mr. Hugh Brokenshire, but never
+with any violent restriction on the part of Mrs. Rossiter. I say
+violent with intention, for she did intervene when she could do so. Only
+once did I hear that she knew he was kind to me, and that was from Larry
+Strangways. It was an observation he had overheard as it passed from
+Mrs. Rossiter to her husband, and which, in the spirit of our silent
+_camaraderie_, he thought it right to hand along.
+
+"I can't be responsible for Hugh!" Mrs. Rossiter had said. "He's old
+enough to look after himself. If he wants a row with father he must have
+it; and he seems to me in a fair way to get it. If he does it will be
+his own fault; it won't be Miss Adare's."
+
+Fortified by this acquittal, I went on my way as quietly as I could,
+though I cannot say I was free from perturbation.
+
+Perturbation caught me like a whiff of wind as I saw Larry Strangways
+deflect from his course across the lawn and come in my direction. I knew
+he wouldn't have done that unless he felt himself authorized; and
+nothing could give him the authorization but something in the way of a
+message or command. To all observers we were strangers. We should have
+been strangers even to each other had it not been for that freemasonry
+of caste, that secret mutual comprehension, which transcends speech and
+opportunities of meeting, and which, on our part, at least, had little
+expression beyond smiles and flying glances.
+
+Of course he was good-looking. It has often seemed to me the privilege
+of ineligible men to be tall and slim and straight, with just such a
+flash in the eye and just such a beam about the mouth as belonged to
+Larry Strangways. Instinct had told me from the first that it would be
+wise for me to avoid him, while prudence, as I have hinted, gave him the
+same indication to keep at a distance from me. Luckily he didn't live
+in the house, but in lodgings in the town. We hardly ever met face to
+face, and then only under the eye of Mrs. Rossiter when each of us
+marshaled a pupil to lunch or to tea.
+
+As the collie at his heels and the wire-haired terrier at ours made a
+bee-line for each other the children kept them company, which gave us
+space for those few minutes of privacy the occasion apparently demanded.
+Though he lifted his hat formally, and did his best to preserve the
+decorum of our official situations, the prank in his eye flung out that
+signal to which I could never do anything but respond.
+
+"I've a message for you, Miss Adare."
+
+I managed to stammer out the word "Indeed?" I couldn't be surprised, and
+yet I could hardly stand erect from fear.
+
+He glanced at the children to make sure they were out of earshot.
+
+"It's from the great man himself--indirectly."
+
+I was so near to collapse that I could only say, "Indeed?" again, though
+I rallied sufficiently to add, "I didn't know he was aware of my
+existence."
+
+"Apparently he wasn't--but he is now. He desires you--I give you the
+verb as Spellman, the secretary, passed it on to me--he desires you to
+be in the breakfast loggia here at three this afternoon."
+
+I could barely squeak the words out:
+
+"Does he mean that he's coming to see me?"
+
+"That, it seems, isn't necessary for you to know. Your business is to be
+there. There's quite a subtle point in the limitation. Being there,
+you'll see what will happen next. It isn't good for you to be told too
+much at a time."
+
+My spirit began to revive.
+
+"I'm not his servant. I'm Mrs. Rossiter's. If he wants anything of me
+why doesn't he say so through her?"
+
+"'Sh, 'sh, Miss Adare! You mustn't dictate to God, or say he should act
+in this way or in that."
+
+"But he's not God."
+
+"Oh, as to that--well, you'll see." He added, with his light laugh,
+"What will you bet that I don't know what it's all about?"
+
+"Oh, I bet you do."
+
+"Then," he warned, "you're up against it."
+
+I was getting on my mettle.
+
+"Perhaps I am--but I sha'n't be alone."
+
+"No; but you'll be made to feel alone."
+
+"Even so--"
+
+As I was anxious to keep from boasting beforehand, I left the sentence
+there.
+
+"Yes?" he jogged. "Even so--what?"
+
+"Oh, nothing. I only mean that I'm not afraid of him--that is," I
+corrected, "I'm not afraid of him fundamentally."
+
+He laughed again. "Not afraid of him fundamentally! That's fine!"
+Something in his glance seemed to approve of me. "No, I don't believe
+you are; but I wonder a little why not."
+
+I reflected, gazing beyond his shoulder, down the velvety slopes of the
+lawn, and across the dancing blue sea to the islets that were mere
+specks on the horizon. In the end I decided to speak soberly. "I'm not
+afraid of him," I said at last, "because I've got a sure thing."
+
+"You mean him?"
+
+I knew the reference was to Hugh Brokenshire. "If I mean him," I
+replied, after a minute's thinking, "it's only as the greater includes
+the less, or as the universal includes everything."
+
+He whistled under his breath.
+
+"Does that mean anything? Or is it just big talk?"
+
+Half shy and half ashamed of going on with what I had to say, I was
+obliged to smile ruefully.
+
+"It's big talk because it's a big principle. I don't know how to manage
+it with anything small." I tried to explain further, knowing that my
+dark skin flushed to a kind of dahlia-red while I was doing so. "I don't
+know whether I've read it--or whether I heard it--or whether I've just
+evolved it--but I seem to have got hold of--of--don't laugh too hard,
+please--of the secret of success."
+
+"Good for you! I hope you're not going to be stingy with it."
+
+"No; I'll tell you--partly because I want to talk about it to some one,
+and just at present there's no one else."
+
+"Thanks!"
+
+"The secret of success, as I reason it out, must be something that will
+protect a weak person against a strong one--me, for instance, against J.
+Howard Brokenshire--and work everything out all right. There," I cried,
+"I've said the word."
+
+"You've said a number. Which is the one?"
+
+Anxiety not to seem either young or didactic or a prig made my tone
+apologetic.
+
+"There's such a thing as Right, written with a capital. If I persist in
+doing Right--still with a capital--then nothing but right can come of
+it."
+
+"Oh, can't it!"
+
+"I know it sounds like a platitude--"
+
+"No, it doesn't," he interrupted, rudely, "because a platitude is
+something obviously true; and this isn't."
+
+I felt some relief.
+
+"Oh, isn't it? Then I'm glad. I thought it must be."
+
+"You won't go on thinking it. Suppose you do right and somebody else
+does wrong?"
+
+"Then I should be willing to back my way against his. Don't you see?
+That's the point. That's the secret I'm telling you about. Right works;
+wrong doesn't."
+
+"That's all very fine--"
+
+"It's all very fine because it's so. Right is--what's the word William
+James put into the dictionary?"
+
+He suggested pragmatism.
+
+"That's it. Right is pragmatic, which I suppose is the same thing as
+practical. Wrong must be impractical; it must be--"
+
+"I shouldn't bank too confidently on that in dealing with the great J.
+Howard."
+
+"But I'm going to bank on it. It's where I'm to have him at a
+disadvantage. If he does wrong while I do right, why, then I'll get him
+on the hip."
+
+"How do you know he's going to do wrong?"
+
+"I don't. I merely surmise it. If he does right--"
+
+"He'll get you on the hip."
+
+"No, because there can't be a right for him which isn't a right for me.
+There can't be two rights, each contrary to the other. That's not in
+common sense. If he does right then I shall be safe--whichever way I
+have to take it. Don't you see? That's where the success comes in as
+well as the secret. It can't be any other way. Please don't think I'm
+talking in what H. G. Wells calls the tin-pot style--but one must
+express oneself somehow. I'm not afraid, because I feel as if I'd got
+something that would hang about me like a magic cloak. Of course for
+you--a man--a magic cloak may not be necessary; but I assure you that
+for a girl like me, out in the world on her own--"
+
+He, too, sobered down from his chaffing mood.
+
+"But in this case what is going to be Right--written with a capital?"
+
+I had just time to reply, "Oh, that I shall have to see!" when the
+children and dogs came scampering up and our conversation was over.
+
+On returning from my walk with Gladys I informed Mrs. Rossiter of the
+order I had received. I could see her distressed look in the mirror
+before which she sat doing something to her hair.
+
+"Oh, dear!" she sighed, "it's just what I was afraid of. Now I suppose
+he'll want you to leave."
+
+"That is, he'll want you to send me away."
+
+"It's the same thing," she said, fretfully, and sat with hands lying
+idly in her lap.
+
+She stared out of the window. It was a large bow window, with a
+window-seat cushioned in flowered chintz. Couch, curtains, and
+easy-chairs reproduced this Enchanted Garden effect, forming a
+paradisiacal background for her intensely modern and somewhat neurotic
+prettiness. I had seen her sit by the half-hour like this, gazing over
+the shrubberies, lawns, and waves, with a yearning in her eyes like that
+of some twentieth-century Blessed Damozel.
+
+It was her unhappy hour of the day. Between getting up at nine or ten
+and descending languidly to lunch, life was always a great load to her.
+It pressed on one too weak to bear its weight and yet too conscientious
+to throw it off, though, as a matter of fact, this melancholy was only
+the reaction of her nerves from the mild excitements of the night
+before. I was generally with her during some portion of this forenoon
+time, reading her notes and answering them, speaking for her at the
+telephone, or keeping her company and listening to her confidences while
+she nibbled without appetite at a bit of toast and sipped her tea.
+
+To put matters on the common footing I said:
+
+"Is there anything you'd like me to do, Mrs. Rossiter?"
+
+She ignored this question, murmuring in a way she had, through
+half-closed lips, as if mere speech was more than she was equal to: "And
+just when we were getting on so well--and the way Gladys adores you--"
+
+"And the way I adore Gladys."
+
+"Oh, well, you don't spoil the child, like that Miss Phips. I suppose
+it's your sensible English bringing up."
+
+"Not English," I interrupted.
+
+"Canadian then. It's almost the same thing." She went on without
+transition of tone: "Mr. Millinger was there again last night. He was on
+my left. I do wish they wouldn't keep putting him next to me. It makes
+everything look so pointed--especially with Harry Scott glowering at me
+from the other end of the table. He hardly spoke to Daisy Burke, whom
+he'd taken in. I must say she was a fright. And Mr. Millinger so
+imprudent! I'm really terrified that Jim will hear gossip when he comes
+down from New York--or notice something." There was the slightest
+dropping of the soft fluting voice as she continued: "I've never
+pretended to love Jim Rossiter more than any man I've ever seen. That
+was one of papa's matches. He's a born match-maker, you know, just as
+he's a born everything else. I suppose you didn't think of that. But
+since I am Jim's wife--"
+
+As I was the confidante of what she called her affairs--a rôle for which
+I was qualified by residence in British garrison towns--I interposed
+diplomatically, "But so long as Mr. Millinger hasn't said anything, not
+any more than Mr. Scott--"
+
+"Oh, if I were to allow men to say things, where should I be? You can go
+far with a man without letting him come to that. It's something I should
+think you'd have known--with your sensible bringing up--and the heaps of
+men you had there in Halifax--and I suppose at Southsea and Gibraltar,
+too." It was with a hint of helpless complaint that she added, "You
+remember that I asked you to leave him alone, now don't you?"
+
+"Oh, I remember--quite. And suppose I did--and he didn't leave me
+alone?"
+
+"Of course there's that, though it won't have any effect on papa. You
+are unusual, you know. Only one man in five hundred would notice it; but
+there always is that man. It's what I was afraid of about Hugh from the
+first. You're different--and it's the sort of thing he'd see."
+
+"Different from what?" I asked, with natural curiosity.
+
+Her reply was indirect.
+
+"Oh, well, we Americans have specialized too much on the girl. You're
+not half as good-looking as plenty of other girls in Newport, and when
+it comes to dress--"
+
+"Oh, I'm not in their class, I know."
+
+"No; it's what you seem not to know. You aren't in their class--but it
+doesn't seem to matter. If it does matter, it's rather to your
+advantage."
+
+"I'm afraid I don't see that."
+
+"No, you wouldn't. You're not sufficiently subtle. You're really not
+subtle at all, in the way an American girl would be." She picked up the
+thread she had dropped. "The fact is we've specialized so much on the
+girl that our girls are too aware of themselves to be wholly human.
+They're like things wound up to talk well and dress well and exhibit
+themselves to advantage and calculate their effects--and lack character.
+We've developed the very highest thing in exquisite girl-mechanics--a
+work of art that has everything but a soul." She turned half round to
+where I stood respectfully, my hands resting on the back of an
+easy-chair. She was lovely and pathetic and judicial all at once. "The
+difference about you is that you seem to spring right up out of the soil
+where you're standing--just like an English country house. You belong to
+your background. Our girls don't. They're too beautiful for their
+background, too expensive, too produced. Take any group of girls here in
+Newport--they're no more in place in this down-at-the-heel old town than
+a flock of parrakeets in a New England wood. It's really inartistic,
+though we don't know it. You're more of a woman and less of a lovely
+figurine. But that won't appeal to papa. He likes figurines. Most
+American men do. Hugh is an exception, and I was afraid he'd see in you
+just what I've seen myself. But it won't go down with papa."
+
+"If it goes down with Hugh--" I began, meekly.
+
+"Papa is a born match-maker, which I don't suppose you know. He made my
+match and he made Jack's. Oh, we're--we're satisfied now--in a way; and
+I suppose Hugh will be, too, in the long run." I wanted to speak, but
+she tinkled gently on: "Papa has his designs for him, which I may as
+well tell you at once. He means him to marry Lady Cissie Boscobel. She's
+Lord Goldborough's daughter, and papa and he are very intimate. Papa
+knew him when we lived in England before grandpapa died. Papa has done
+things for him in the American money-market, and when we're in England
+he does things for us. Two or three of our men have married earls'
+daughters during the last few years, and it hasn't turned out so badly.
+Papa doesn't want not to be in the swim."
+
+"Does"--I couldn't pronounce Hugh's name again--"does your brother know
+of Mr. Brokenshire's intentions?"
+
+"Yes. I told him so. I told him when I began to see that he was noticing
+you."
+
+"And may I ask what he said?"
+
+"It would be no use telling you that, because, whatever he said, he'd
+have to do as papa told him in the end."
+
+"But suppose he doesn't?"
+
+"You can't suppose he doesn't. He will. That's all that can be said
+about it." She turned fully round on me, gazing at me with the largest
+and sweetest and tenderest eyes. "As for you, dear Miss Adare," she
+murmured, sympathetically, "when papa comes to see you this afternoon,
+as apparently he means to do, he'll grind you to powder. If there's
+anything smaller than powder he'll grind you to that. After he's gone we
+sha'n't be able to find you. You'll be dust."
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER II
+
+
+At five minutes to three, precisely, I took my seat in the breakfast
+loggia.
+
+The front of the house with the garden looked toward Ochre Point Avenue.
+The so-called breakfast loggia was thrown out from the dining-room in
+the direction of the sea. Here the family and their guests could gather
+on warm evenings, and in fine weather eat in the open air. Paved with
+red tiles, it was furnished with a long oak table, ornately carved, and
+some heavy old oak chairs that might have come from a monastery. Steamer
+chairs and wicker easy-chairs were scattered on the grass outside. On
+the left the loggia was screened from the neighboring property by a
+hedge of rambler roses that now ran the gamut of shades from crimson to
+sea-shell pink, while on the right it commanded a view of the two
+terraces supporting the house, with their long straight lines of
+flowers. The house itself had been built piecemeal, and was now a low,
+rambling succession of pavilions or _corps de logis_, to which a series
+of rose-colored awnings gave the only unifying principle.
+
+Just now it was a house deserted by every one but the servants and
+myself. Mrs. Rossiter, having gone out to luncheon, had been careful not
+to return, and even the children had been sent over to Mrs. Jack
+Brokenshire, on the pretext of playing with her baby, but really to be
+out of the way. From Hugh I had had no sign of life since the previous
+afternoon. As to whether his father was coming as his enemy, his master,
+or his interpreter I could do nothing but conjecture.
+
+But as far as I could I kept myself from conjecturing; holding my
+faculties in suspense. I had enough to do in assuring myself that I was
+not afraid--fundamentally. Superficially I was terrified. I should have
+been terrified had the great man but passed me in the hall and cast a
+look at me. He had passed me in the hall on occasions, but as he had
+never cast the look I had escaped. He had struck me then as a master of
+that art of seeing without seeing which I had hitherto thought of as
+feminine. Even when he stopped and spoke to Gladys he seemed not to know
+that I occupied the ground I stood on. I cannot say I enjoyed this
+treatment. I was accustomed to being seen. Moreover, I had lived with
+people who were courteous to inferiors, however cavalier with equals.
+The great J. Howard was neither courteous nor cavalier toward me, for
+the reason that where I was he apparently saw nothing but a vacuum.
+
+Out to the loggia I took my work-basket and some sewing. Having no idea
+from which of the several approaches my visitor would come on me, I drew
+up one of the heavy arm-chairs and sat facing toward the sea. With the
+basket on the table beside me and my sewing in my hands I felt
+indefinably more mistress of myself.
+
+It was a still afternoon and hot, with scarcely a sound but the pounding
+of the surf on the ledges at the foot of the lawn. Though the sky was
+blue overhead, a dark low bank rose out of the horizon, foretelling a
+change of wind with fog. In the air the languorous scent of roses and
+honeysuckle mingled with the acrid tang of the ocean.
+
+I felt extraordinarily desolate. Not since hearing what the lawyer had
+told me on the afternoon of my father's funeral had I seemed so entirely
+alone. The fact that for nearly twenty-four hours Hugh had got no word
+to me threw me back upon myself. "You'll be made to feel alone," Mr.
+Strangways had said in the morning; and I was. I didn't blame Hugh. I
+had purposely left the matter in such a way that there was nothing he
+could say or do till after his father had spoken. He was probably
+waiting impatiently; I had, indeed, no doubt about that; but the fact
+remained that I, a girl, a stranger, in a certain sense a foreigner, was
+to make the best of my situation without help. J. Howard Brokenshire
+could grind me to powder--when he had gone away I should be dust.
+
+"If I do right, nothing but right can come of it."
+
+The maxim was my only comfort. By sheer force of repeating it I got
+strength to thread my needle and go on with my seam, till on the stroke
+of three the dread personage appeared.
+
+I saw him from the minute he mounted the steps that led up from the
+Cliff Walk to Mr. Rossiter's lawn. He was accompanied by Mrs.
+Brokenshire, while a pair of greyhounds followed them. Having reached
+the lawn, they crossed it diagonally toward the loggia. Because of the
+heat and the up-hill nature of the way, they advanced slowly, which gave
+me leisure to observe.
+
+Mrs. Brokenshire's presence had almost caused my heart to stop beating.
+I could imagine no motive for her coming but one I refused to accept. If
+the mission was to be unfriendly, she surely would have stayed away; but
+that it could be other than unfriendly was beyond my strength to hope.
+
+I had never seen her before except in glimpses or at a distance. I
+noticed now that she was a little thing, looking the smaller for the
+stalwart six-foot-two beside which she walked. She was in white and
+carried a white parasol. I saw that her face was one of the most
+beautiful in features and finish I had ever looked into. Each trait was
+quite amazingly perfect. The oval was perfect; the coloring was perfect;
+mouth and nose and forehead might have been made to a measured scale.
+The finger of personified Art could have drawn nothing more exquisite
+than the arch of the eyebrows, or more delicately fringed than the lids.
+It might have been a doll's face, or the face for the cover of an
+American magazine, had it not been saved by something I hadn't the time
+to analyze, though I was later to know what it was.
+
+As for him, he was as perfect in his way as she in hers. When I say that
+he wore white shoes, white-duck trousers, a navy-blue jacket, and a
+yachting-cap I give no idea of the something noble in his personality.
+He might have been one of the more ornamental Italian princes of
+immemorial lineage. A Jove with a Vandyke beard one could have called
+him, and if you add to that the conception of Jove the Thunderer, Jove
+with the look that could strike a man dead, perhaps the description
+would be as good as any. He was straight and held his head high. He
+walked with a firm setting of his feet that impressed you with the fact
+that some one of importance was coming.
+
+It is not my purpose to speak of this man from the point of view of the
+ordinary member of the public. Of that I know next to nothing. I was
+dimly aware that his wealth and his business interests made him
+something of a public character; but apart from having heard him
+mentioned as a financier I could hardly have told what his profession
+was. So, too, with questions of morals. I have been present when, by
+hints rather than actual words, he was introduced as a profligate and a
+hypocrite; and I have also known people of good judgment who upheld him
+both as man and as citizen. On this subject no opinion of mine would be
+worth giving. I have always relegated the matter into that limbo of
+disputed facts with which I have nothing to do. I write of him only as I
+saw him in daily life, or at least in direct intercourse, and with that
+my testimony must end. Other people have been curious with regard to
+those aspects of his character on which I can throw no light. To me he
+became interesting chiefly because he was one of those men who from a
+kind of naïve audacity, perhaps an unthinking audacity, don't hesitate
+to play the part of the Almighty.
+
+When they drew near enough to the loggia I stood up, my sewing in my
+hand. The two greyhounds, who had outdistanced them, came sniffing to
+the threshold and stared at me. I felt myself an object to be stared at,
+though I had taken pains with my appearance and knew that I was neat.
+Neatness, I may say in passing, is my strong point. Where many other
+girls can stand expensive dressing I am at my best when meticulously
+tidy. The shape of my head makes the simplest styles of doing the hair
+the most distinguished. My figure lends itself to country clothes and
+the tailor-made. In evening dress I can wear the cheapest and flimsiest
+thing, so long as it is dependent only on its lines. I was satisfied,
+therefore, with the way I looked, and when I say I felt myself an object
+to be stared at I speak only of my consciousness of isolation.
+
+I cannot affirm, however, that J. Howard Brokenshire stared at me. He
+stared; but only at the general effects in which I was a mere detail.
+The loggia being open on all sides, he paused for half a second to take
+it and its contents in. I went with the contents. I looked at him; but
+nothing in the glance he cast over me recognized me as a human being. I
+might have been the table; I might have been the floor; for him I was
+hardly in existence.
+
+I wonder if you have ever stood under the gaze of one who considered you
+too inferior for notice. The sensation is quite curious. It produces not
+humiliation or resentment so much as an odd apathy. You sink in your own
+sight; you go down; you understand that abjection of slaves which kept
+them from rising against their masters. Negatively at least you concede
+the right that so treats you. You are meek and humble at once; and yet
+you can be strong. I think I never felt so strong as when I saw that
+cold, deep eye, which was steely and fierce and most inconsistently
+sympathetic all in one quick flash, sweep over me and pay me no
+attention. _Ecce Femina_ I might have been saying to myself, as a
+pendant in expression to the _Ecce Homo_ of the Prætorium.
+
+He moved aside punctiliously at the lower of the two steps that led up
+to the loggia to let his wife precede him. As she came in I think she
+gave me a salutation that was little more than a quiver of the lids.
+Having closed her parasol, she slipped into one of the arm-chairs not
+far from the table.
+
+Now that he was at close quarters, with his work before him, he
+proceeded to the task at once. In the act of laying his hat and stick on
+a chair he began with the question, "Your name is--?"
+
+The voice had a crisp gentleness that seemed to come from the effort to
+despatch business with the utmost celerity and spend no unnecessary
+strength on words. The fact that he must have heard my name from Hugh
+was plainly to play no part in our discussion. I was so unutterably
+frightened that when I tried to whisper the word "Adare" hardly a sound
+came forth.
+
+As he raised himself from the placing of his cap and stick he was
+obliged to utter a sharp, "What?"
+
+"Adare."
+
+"Oh. Adare!"
+
+It is not a bad name as names go; we like to fancy ourselves connected
+with the famous Fighting Adares of the County Limerick; but on J. Howard
+Brokenshire's lips it had the undiscriminating commonness of Smith or
+Jones. I had never been ashamed of it before.
+
+"And you're one of my daughter's--"
+
+"I'm her nursery governess."
+
+"Sit down."
+
+As he took the chair at the end of the table I dropped again into that
+at the side from which I had risen. It was then that something happened
+which left me for a second in doubt as to whether to take it as comic or
+catastrophic. His left eye closed; his left nostril quivered; he winked.
+To avoid having to face this singular phenomenon a second time I lowered
+my eyes and began mechanically to sew.
+
+"Put that down!"
+
+I placed the work on the table and once more looked at him. The striking
+eyes were again as striking as ever. In their sympathetic hardness there
+was nothing either ribald or jocose.
+
+I suppose my scrutiny annoyed him, though I was unconscious of more than
+a mute asking for orders. He pointed to a distant chair, a chair in a
+corner, just within the loggia as you come from the direction of the
+dining-room.
+
+"Sit there."
+
+I know now that his wink distressed him. It was something which at that
+time had come upon him recently, and that he could neither control nor
+understand. A less imposing man, a man to whom personal impressiveness
+was less of an asset in daily life and work, would probably have been
+less disturbed by it; but to J. Howard Brokenshire it was a trial in
+more ways than one. Curiously, too, when the left eye winked the right
+grew glassy and quite terrible.
+
+Not knowing that he was sensitive in this respect, I took my retreat to
+the corner as a kind of symbolic banishment.
+
+"Hadn't I better stand up?" I asked, proudly, when I had reached my
+chair.
+
+"Be good enough to sit down."
+
+I seemed to fall backward. The tone had the effect of a shot. If I had
+ever felt small and foolish in my life it was then. I flushed to my
+darkest crimson. Angry and humiliated, I was obliged to rush to my maxim
+in order not to flash back in some indignant retort.
+
+And then another thing happened of which I was unable at the minute to
+get the significance. Mrs. Brokenshire sprang up with the words:
+
+"You're quite right, Howard. It's ever so much cooler over here by the
+edge. I never felt anything so stuffy as the middle of this place. It
+doesn't seem possible for air to get into it."
+
+While speaking she moved with incomparable daintiness to a chair
+corresponding to mine and diagonally opposite. With the length and width
+of the loggia between us we exchanged glances. In hers she seemed to
+say, "If you are banished I shall be banished too"; in mine I tried to
+express gratitude. And yet I was aware that I might have misunderstood
+both movement and look entirely.
+
+My next surprise was in the words Mr. Brokenshire addressed to me. He
+spoke in the soft, slightly nasal staccato which I am told had on his
+business associates the effect of a whip-lash.
+
+"We've come over to tell you, Miss--Miss Adare, how much we appreciate
+your attitude toward our boy, Hugh. I understand from him that he's
+offered to marry you, and that very properly in your situation you've
+declined. The boy is foolish, as you evidently see. He meant nothing; he
+could do nothing. You're probably not without experience of a similar
+kind among the sons of your other employers. At the same time, as you
+doubtless expect, we sha'n't let you suffer by your prudence--"
+
+It was a bad beginning. Had he made any sort of appeal to me, however
+unkindly worded, I should probably have yielded. But the tradition of
+the Fighting Adares was not in me for nothing, and after a smothering
+sensation which rendered me speechless I managed to stammer out:
+
+"Won't you allow me to say that--"
+
+The way in which his large, white, handsome hand went up was meant to
+impose silence upon me while he himself went on:
+
+"In order that you may not be annoyed by my son's folly in the future
+you will leave my daughter's employ, you'll leave Newport--you'll be
+well advised, indeed, in going back to your own country, which I
+understand to be the British provinces. You will lose nothing, however,
+by this conduct, as I've given you to understand. Three--four--five
+thousand dollars--I think five ought to be sufficient--generous, in
+fact--"
+
+"But I've not refused him," I was able at last to interpose. "I--I mean
+to accept him."
+
+There was an instant of stillness during which one could hear the
+pounding of the sea.
+
+"Does that mean that you want me to raise your price?"
+
+"No, Mr. Brokenshire. I have no price. If it means anything at all that
+has to do with you, it's to tell you that I'm mistress of my acts and
+that I consider your son--he's twenty-six--to be master of his."
+
+There was a continuation of the stillness. His voice when he spoke was
+the gentlest sound I had ever heard in the way of human utterance. If it
+were not for the situation it could have been considered kind:
+
+"Anything at all that has to do with me? You seem to attach no
+importance to the fact that Hugh is my son."
+
+I do not know how words came to me. They seemed to flow from my lips
+independently of thought.
+
+"I attach importance only to the fact that he's a man. Men who are never
+anything but their father's sons aren't men."
+
+"And yet a father has some rights."
+
+"Yes, sir; some. He has the right to follow where his grown-up children
+lead. He hasn't the right to lead and require his grown-up children to
+follow."
+
+He shifted his ground. "I'm obliged to you for your opinion, but at
+present it's not to the point--"
+
+I broke in breathlessly: "Pardon me, sir; it's exactly to the point. I'm
+a woman; Hugh's a man. We're--we're in love with each other; it's all we
+have to be concerned with."
+
+"Not quite; you've got to be concerned--with me."
+
+"Which is what I deny."
+
+"Oh, denial won't do you any good. I didn't come to hear your denials,
+or your affirmations, either. I've come to tell you what to do."
+
+"But if I know that already?"
+
+"That's quite possible--if you mean to play your game as doubtless
+you've played it before. I only want to warn you--"
+
+I looked toward Mrs. Brokenshire for help, but her eyes were fixed on
+the floor, on which she was drawing what seemed like a design with the
+tip of her parasol. The greyhounds were stretched at her feet. I could
+do nothing but speak for myself, which I did with a calmness that
+surprised me.
+
+"Mr. Brokenshire," I interrupted, "you are a man and I'm a woman. What's
+more, you're a strong man, while I'm a woman with no protection at all.
+I ask you--do you think you're playing a man's part in insulting me?"
+
+His tone grew kind almost to affection. "My dear young lady, you
+misunderstand me. Insult couldn't be further from my thoughts. I'm
+speaking entirely for your own sake. You're young; you're very pretty; I
+won't say you've no knowledge of the world because I see you have--"
+
+"I've a good deal of knowledge of the world."
+
+"Only not such knowledge as would warrant you in pitting yourself
+against me."
+
+"But I don't. If you'd leave me alone--"
+
+"Let us keep to what we're talking of. I'm sorry for you; I really am.
+You're at the beginning of what might euphemistically--do you know the
+meaning of the word?--be called a career. I should like to save you from
+it; that's all. It's why I'm speaking to you very plainly and using
+language that can't be misunderstood. There's nothing original in your
+proceeding, believe me. Nearly every family of the standing of mine has
+had to reckon with something of the sort. Where there are young men, and
+young women of--what do you want me to say?--young women who mean to do
+the best they can for themselves--let us put it in that way--"
+
+"I'm a gentleman's daughter," I broke in, weakly.
+
+He smiled. "Oh yes; you're all gentlemen's daughters. Neither is there
+anything original in that."
+
+"Mrs. Rossiter will tell you that my father was a judge in Canada--"
+
+"The detail doesn't interest me."
+
+"No, but it interests me. It gives me a sense of being equal to--"
+
+"If you please! We'll not go into that."
+
+"But I must speak. If I'm to marry Hugh you must let me tell you who I
+am."
+
+"It's not necessary. You're not to marry Hugh. Let that be absolutely
+understood. Once you've accepted the fact--"
+
+"I could only accept it from Hugh himself."
+
+"That's foolish. Hugh will do as I tell him."
+
+"But why should he in this case?"
+
+"That again is something we needn't discuss. All that matters, my dear
+young lady, is your own interest. I'm working for that, don't you see,
+against yourself--"
+
+I burst out, "But why shouldn't I marry him?"
+
+He leaned on the table, tapping gently with his hand. "Because we don't
+want you to. Isn't that enough?"
+
+I ignored this. "If it's because you don't know anything about me I
+could tell you."
+
+"Oh, but we do know something about you. We know, for example, since
+you compel me to say it, that you're a little person of no importance
+whatever."
+
+"My family is one of the best in Canada."
+
+"And admitting that that's so, who would care what constituted a good
+family in Canada? To us here it means nothing; in England it would mean
+still less. I've had opportunities of judging how Canadians are regarded
+in England, and I assure you it's nothing to make you proud."
+
+Of the several things he had said to sting me I was most sensitive to
+this. I, too, had had opportunities of judging, and knew that if
+anything could make one ashamed of being a British colonial of any kind
+it would be British opinion of colonials.
+
+"My father used to say--"
+
+He put up his large, white hand. "Another time. Let us keep to the
+subject before us."
+
+I omitted the mention of my father to insist on a theory as to which I
+had often heard him express himself: "If it's part of the subject before
+us that I'm a Canadian and that Canadians are ground between the upper
+and lower millstones of both English and American contempt--"
+
+"Isn't that another digression?"
+
+"Not really," I hurried on, determined to speak, "because if I'm a
+sufferer by it, you are, too, in your degree. It's part of the
+Anglo-Saxon tradition for those who stay behind to despise those who go
+out as pioneers. The race has always done it. It isn't only the British
+who've despised their colonists. The people of the Eastern States
+despised those who went out and peopled the Middle West; those in the
+Middle West despised those who went farther West." I was still quoting
+my father. "It's something that defies reason and eludes argument. It's
+a base strain in the blood. It's like that hierarchy among servants by
+which the lady's maid disdains the cook, and the cook disdains the
+kitchen-maid, and the proudest are those who've nothing to be proud of.
+For you to look down on me because I'm a Canadian, when the commonest of
+Englishmen, with precisely the same justification, looks down on you--"
+
+"Dear young lady," he broke in, soothingly, "you're talking wildly.
+You're speaking of things you know nothing about. Let us get back to
+what we began with. My son has offered to marry you--"
+
+"He didn't offer to marry me. He asked me--he begged me--to marry him."
+
+"The way of putting it is of no importance."
+
+"Ah, but it is."
+
+"I mean that, however he expressed it--however you express it--the
+result must be the same."
+
+I nerved myself to look at him steadily. "I mean to accept him. When he
+asked me yesterday I said I wouldn't give him either a Yes or a No till
+I knew what you and his family thought of it. But now that I do know--"
+
+"You're determined to try the impossible."
+
+"It won't be the impossible till he tells me so."
+
+He seemed for a second or two to study me. "Suppose I accepted you as
+what you say you are--as a young woman of good antecedents and honorable
+character. Would you still persist in the effort to force yourself on a
+family that didn't want you?"
+
+I confess that in the language Mr. Strangways and I had used in the
+morning, he had me here "on the hip." To force myself on a family that
+didn't want me would normally have been the last of my desires. But I
+was fighting now for something that went beyond my desires--something
+larger--something national, as I conceived of nationality--something
+human--though I couldn't have said exactly what it was. I answered only
+after long deliberation.
+
+"I couldn't stop to consider a family. My object would be to marry the
+man who loved me--and whom I loved."
+
+"So that you'd face the humiliation--"
+
+"It wouldn't be humiliation, because it would have nothing to do with
+me. It would pass into another sphere."
+
+"It wouldn't be another sphere to him."
+
+"I should have to let him take care of that. It's all I can manage to
+look out for myself--"
+
+There seemed to be some admiration in his tone.
+
+"Which you seem marvelously well fitted to do."
+
+"Thank you."
+
+"In fact, it's one of the ways in which you betray yourself. An innocent
+girl--"
+
+I strained forward in my chair. "Wouldn't it be fair for you to tell me
+what you mean by the word innocent?"
+
+"I mean a girl who has no special ax to grind--"
+
+I could hear my foot tapping on the floor, but I was too indignant to
+restrain myself. "Even that figure of speech leaves too much to the
+imagination."
+
+He studied me again. "You're very sharp."
+
+"Don't I need to be," I demanded, "with an enemy of your acumen?"
+
+"But I'm not your enemy. It's what you don't seem to see. I'm your
+friend. I'm trying to keep you out of a situation that would kill you if
+you got into it."
+
+I think I laughed. "Isn't death preferable to dishonor?" I saw my
+mistake in the quickness with which Mrs. Brokenshire looked up. "There
+are more kinds of dishonor than one," I explained, loftily, "and to me
+the blackest would be in allowing you to dictate to me."
+
+"My dear young woman, I dictate to men--"
+
+"Oh, to men!"
+
+"I see! You presume on your womanhood. It's a common American expedient,
+and a cheap one. But I don't stop for that."
+
+"You may not stop for womanhood, Mr. Brokenshire; but neither does
+womanhood stop for you."
+
+He rose with an air of weary patience. "I'm afraid we sha'n't gain
+anything by talking further--"
+
+"I'm afraid not." I, too, rose, advancing to the table. We confronted
+each other across it, while one of the dogs came nosing to his master's
+hand. I had barely the strength to gasp on: "We've had our talk and you
+see where I am. I ask nothing but the exercise of human liberty--and the
+measure of respect I conceive to be due to every one. Surely you, an
+American, a representative of what America is supposed to stand for,
+can't think of it as too much."
+
+"If America is supposed to stand for your marrying my son--"
+
+"America stands, so I've been told by Americans, for the reasonable
+freedom of the individual. If Hugh wants to marry me--"
+
+"Hugh will marry the woman I approve of."
+
+"Then that apparently is what we must put to the test."
+
+I was now so near to tears that I suppose he saw an opening to his own
+advantage. Coming round the table, he stood looking down at me with that
+expression which I can only describe as sympathetic. With all the
+dominating aggressiveness which either forced you to give in to him or
+urged you to fight him till you dropped, there was that about him which
+left you with a lingering suspicion that he might be right. It was the
+man who might be right who was presently sitting easily on the edge of
+the table, so that his face was on a level with my own, and saying in a
+kindly voice:
+
+"Now look here! Let's be reasonable. I don't want to be unfair to you,
+or to say anything a man isn't justified in saying to a woman. I'm
+willing to throw the whole blame on Hugh--"
+
+"I'm not," I declared, hotly.
+
+"That's generous; but I'm speaking of myself. I'm willing to throw the
+whole blame on Hugh, because he's my son. I'll absolve you, if you like,
+because you're a stranger and a girl, and consider you a victim--"
+
+"I'm not a victim," I insisted. "I'm only a human being, asking for a
+human being's rights."
+
+He shrugged his shoulders. "Oh, rights! Who knows what rights are?"
+
+"I do. That is," I corrected, "I know my own."
+
+"Oh, of course! One always knows one's own. One's own rights are
+everything one can get. Now you can't get Hugh; but you can get five
+thousand dollars. That's a lot of money. There are men all over the
+United States who'd cut off a hand for it. You won't have to cut off a
+hand. You only need to be a good, sensible little girl and--get out."
+Perhaps he thought I was yielding, for he tapped his side pocket as he
+went on speaking. "It won't take a minute. I've got a check-book here--a
+stroke of the pen--"
+
+My work was lying on the table a few inches away. Leaning forward
+deliberately I put it into the basket, which I tucked under my arm. I
+looked at Mrs. Brokenshire, who was leaning forward and looking at me. I
+inclined my head with a slight salutation, to which she did not respond,
+and turned away. Of him I took no notice.
+
+"So it's war."
+
+I was half-way to the dining-room when I heard him say that. As I paused
+to look back he was still sitting sidewise on the edge of the table,
+swinging a leg and staring after me.
+
+"No, sir," I said, quietly. "It takes two to fight, and I should never
+think of being one."
+
+"You know, of course, that I shall have no mercy on you."
+
+"No, sir; I don't."
+
+"Then you can know it now. I'm sorry for you; but I can't afford to
+spare you. Bigger things than you have come in my way--and have been
+blasted."
+
+Mrs. Brokenshire made a quick little movement behind his back. It told
+me nothing I understood then, though I was able to interpret it later. I
+could only say, in a voice that shook with the shaking of my whole body:
+
+"You couldn't blast me, sir, because--because--"
+
+"Yes? Because--what? I should like to know."
+
+There was a robin hopping on the lawn outside and I pointed to it. "You
+couldn't blast a little bird like that with a bombshell."
+
+"Oh, birds have been shot."
+
+"Yes, sir; with a fowling-piece; but not with a howitzer. The one is too
+big; the other is too small."
+
+I was about to drop him a little courtesy when I saw him wink. It was a
+grotesque, amusing wink that quivered and twisted till it finally
+closed the left eye. If he had been a less handsome man the effect would
+have been less absurd.
+
+I made my courtesy the deeper, bending my head and lowering my eyes so
+as to spare him the knowledge that I saw.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER III
+
+
+"He attacked my country. I think I could forgive him everything but
+that."
+
+It was an hour after Mr. and Mrs. Brokenshire had left me. I was half
+crying by this time--that is, half crying in the way one cries from
+rage, and yet laughing nervously, in flashes, at the same time. From the
+weakness of sheer excitement I had dropped to one of the steps leading
+down to the Cliff Walk, while Larry Strangways leaned on the stone post.
+I had met him there as I was going out and he was coming toward the
+house. We couldn't but stop to exchange a word, especially with his
+knowledge of the situation. He took what I had to say with the light,
+gleaming, non-committal smile which he brought to bear on everything. I
+was glad of that because it kept him detached. I didn't want him any
+nearer to me than he was.
+
+"Attacked your country? Do you mean England?"
+
+"No; Canada. England is my grandmother; but Canada's my mother. He said
+you all despised her."
+
+"Oh no, we don't. He was trying to put something over on you."
+
+"Your 'No, we don't' lacks conviction; but I don't mind you. I shouldn't
+mind him if I hadn't seen so much of it."
+
+"So much of what?"
+
+"Being looked down upon geographically. Of all the ways of being proud,"
+I declared, indignantly, "that which depends on your merely accidental
+position with regard to land and water strikes me as the most
+poor-spirited. I can't imagine any one dragging himself down to it who
+had another rag of a reason for self-respect. As a matter of fact, I
+don't believe any one ever does. The people I've heard express
+themselves on the subject--well, I'll give you an illustration: There
+was a woman at Gibraltar--a major's wife, a big, red-faced woman. Her
+name was Arbuthnot--her father was a dean or something--a big, red-faced
+woman, with one of those screechy, twangy English voices that cut you
+like a saw--you know there are some--a good many--and they don't know
+it. Well, she was saying something sneering about Canadians. I was
+sitting opposite--it was at a dinner-party--and so I leaned across the
+table and asked her why she didn't like them. She said colonials were
+such dreadful form. I held her with my eye"--I showed him how--"and made
+myself small and demure as I said, 'But, dear lady, how clever of you!
+Who would ever have supposed that you'd know that?' My sister Vic
+pitched into me about it after we got home. She said the Arbuthnot
+person didn't understand what I meant--nor any one else at the table,
+they're so awfully thick-skinned--and that it's better to let them
+alone. But that's the kind of person who--"
+
+He tried to comfort me. "They'll come round in time. One of these days
+England will see what she owes to her colonists and do them justice."
+
+"Never!" I declared, vehemently. "It will be always the same--till we
+knock the Empire to pieces. Then they'll respect us. Look at the Boer
+War. Didn't our men sacrifice everything to go out that long
+distance--and win battles--and lay down their lives--only to have the
+English say afterward--especially the army people--that they were more
+trouble than they were worth? It will be always the same. When we've
+given our last penny and shed our last drop of blood they'll still tell
+us we've been nothing but a nuisance. You may live to see it and
+remember that I said so. If when Shakespeare wrote that it's sharper
+than a serpent's tooth to have a thankless child he'd gone on to add
+that it's the very dickens to have a picturesque, self-satisfied old
+grandmother who thinks her children's children should give her
+everything and take kicks instead of ha'pence for their pay, he'd have
+been up to date. Mind you, we don't object to giving our last penny and
+shedding our last drop of blood; we only hate being abused and sneered
+at for doing it."
+
+I warmed to my subject as I dabbed fiercely at my eyes.
+
+"I'll tell you what the typical John Bull is like. He's like those
+men--big, flabby men they generally are--who'll be brutes to you so long
+as you're civil to them, but will climb down the minute you begin to hit
+back. Look at the way they treat you Americans! They can't do enough for
+you--because you snap your fingers in their faces and show them you
+don't care a hang about them. They come over here, and give you
+lectures, and marry your girls, and pocket your money, and adopt your
+bad form as delightful originality--and respect you. Now that earls'
+daughters are beginning to cast an eye on your millionaires--Mrs.
+Rossiter told me that--they won't leave you a rag to your back. But with
+us who've been faithful and loyal they're all the other way. I can
+hardly tell you the small pin-pricking indignities to which my sisters
+and I have been subjected for being Canadians. And they'll never change.
+It will never be otherwise, no matter what we do, no matter what we
+become, no matter if we give our bodies to be burned, as the Bible says.
+It will never be otherwise--not till we imitate you and strike them in
+the face. _Then_ you'll see how they'll come round."[1]
+
+He still smiled, with an aloofness in which there was a beam of
+sweetness. "I had no idea that you were such a little rebel."
+
+"I'm not a rebel. I'm loyal to the King. That is, I'm loyal to the great
+Anglo-Saxon ideal of which the King is the symbol--and I suppose he's as
+good a symbol as any other, especially as he's already there. The
+English are only partly Anglo-Saxon. 'Saxon and Norman and Dane are
+they'--didn't Tennyson say that? Well, there's a lot that's Norman, and
+a lot that's Dane, and a lot that's Scotch and Irish and rag-tag in
+them. But they're saved by the pure Anglo-Saxon ideal in so far as they
+hold to it--just as you'll be, with all your mixed bloods--and just as
+we shall be ourselves. It's like salt in the meat, it's like grace in
+the Christian religion--it's the thing that saves, and I'm loyal to
+that. My father used to say that it's the fact that English and
+Canadians and Australians are all devoted to the same principle that
+holds us together as an Empire, and not the subservience of distant
+lands to a Parliament sitting at Westminster. And so it is. We don't
+always like each other; but that doesn't matter. What does matter is
+that we should betray the fact that we don't like each other to
+outsiders--and so give them a handle against us."
+
+"You mean that J. Howard should be in a position to side with the
+English in looking down on you as a Canadian?"
+
+"Yes, and that the English should give him that position. He's an
+American and an enemy--every American is an enemy to England _au fond_.
+Oh yes, he is! You needn't deny it! It's something fundamental, deeper
+down than anything you understand. Even those of you who like England
+are hostile to her at heart and would be glad to see her in trouble. So,
+I say, he's an American and an enemy, and yet they hand me, their child
+and their friend, over to him to be trampled on. He's had opportunities
+of judging how Canadians are regarded in England, he says--and he
+assures me it's nothing to be proud of. That's it. I've had
+opportunities too--and I have to admit that he's right. Don't you see?
+That's what enrages me. As far as their liking us and our not liking
+them is concerned, why, it's all in the family. So long as it's kept in
+the family it's like the pick that Louise and Vic have always had on me.
+I'm the youngest and the plainest--"
+
+"Oh, you're the plainest, are you? What on earth are they like?"
+
+"They're quite good-looking, and they're awfully chic. But that's in
+parentheses. What I mean is that they're always hectoring me because I'm
+not attractive--"
+
+"Really?"
+
+"I'm not fishing for compliments. I'm too busy and too angry for that. I
+want to go on talking about what we're talking about."
+
+"But I want to know why they said you were unattractive."
+
+"Well, perhaps they didn't say it. What they have said is this, and it's
+what Mrs. Rossiter says--she said it to-day--that I'm only attractive to
+one man in five hundred--"
+
+"But very attractive to him?"
+
+"No; she didn't say that. She merely admitted that her brother Hugh was
+that man--"
+
+He interrupted with something I wished at the time he hadn't said, and
+which I tried to ignore:
+
+"He's the man in that five hundred--and I know another in another five
+hundred, which makes two in a thousand. You'd soon get up to a high
+percentage, when you think of all the men there are in the world."
+
+As he had never hinted at anything of the kind before, it gave me--how
+shall I put it?--I can only think of the word fright--it gave me a
+little fright. It made me uneasy. It was nothing, really. It was spoken
+with that gleaming smile of his which seemed to put distance between him
+and me--between him and everything else that was serious--and yet
+subconsciously I felt as one feels on hearing the first few notes, in an
+opera or a symphony, of that arresting phrase which is to work up into a
+great motive. I tried to get back to my original theme, rising to move
+on as I did so.
+
+"Good gracious!" I cried. "Isn't the world big enough for us all? Why
+should we go about saying unkind and untrue things of one other, when
+each of us is an essential part of a composite whole? Isn't it the foot
+saying to the hand I have no need of thee, and the eye saying the same
+thing to the nose? We've got something you haven't got, and you've got
+something we haven't got. Why shouldn't we be appreciative toward each
+other, and make our exchange with mutual respect as we do with trade
+commodities?"
+
+It was probably to urge me on to talk that he said, with a challenging
+smile: "What have you Canadians got that we haven't? Why, we could buy
+and sell you."
+
+"Oh no, you couldn't; because our special contribution toward the
+civilization of the American continent isn't a thing for sale. It can be
+given; it can be inherited; it can be caught; but it can't be
+purchased."
+
+"Indeed? What is this elusive endowment?"
+
+I answered frankly enough: "I don't know. It's there--and I can't tell
+you what it is. Ever since I've been living among you I've felt how much
+we resemble each other--what a difference. I think--mind you, I only
+think--that what it consists in is a sense of the _comme il faut_. We're
+simpler than you; and less intellectual; and poorer, of course; and
+less, much less, self-analytical; and yet we've got a knowledge of
+what's what that you couldn't command with money. None of the
+Brokenshires have it at all, and, as far as I can see, none of their
+friends. They command it with money, and the difference is like having a
+copy of a work of art instead of the original. It gives them the air of
+being--I'm using Mrs. Rossiter's word--of being produced. Now we
+Canadians are not produced. We just come--but we come the right
+way--without any hooting or tooting or beating of tin pans or
+self-advertisement. We just are--and we say nothing about it. Let me
+make an example of what Mrs. Rossiter was discussing this morning. There
+are lots of pretty girls in my country--as many to the hundred as you
+have here--but we don't make a fuss about them or talk as if we'd
+ordered a special brand from the Creator. We grow them as you grow
+flowers in a garden, at the mercy of the air and sunshine. You grow
+yours like plants in a hothouse, to be exhibited in horticultural shows.
+Please don't think I'm bragging--"
+
+He laughed aloud. "Oh no!"
+
+"Well, I'm not," I insisted. "You asked me a question and I'm trying to
+answer it--and incidentally to justify my own existence, which J. Howard
+has called into question. You've got lots to offer us, and many of us
+come and take it thankfully. What we can offer to you is a simpler and
+healthier and less self-conscious standard of life, with a great deal
+less talk about it--with no talk about it at all, if you could get
+yourselves down to that--and a willingness to be instead of an
+everlasting striving to become. You won't recognize it or take it, of
+course. No one ever does. Nations seem to me insane, and ruled by insane
+governments. Don't the English need the Germans, and the Germans the
+French, and the French the Austrians, and the Austrians the Russians,
+and so on? Why on earth should the foot be jealous of the nose? But
+there! You're simply making me say things--and laughing at me all the
+while--so I'm off to take my walk. We'll get even with J. Howard and all
+the first-class powers some day, and till then--_au revoir_."
+
+I had waved my hand to him and gone some paces into the fog that had
+begun to blow in when he called to me.
+
+"Wait a minute. I've something to tell you."
+
+I turned, without going back.
+
+"I'm--I'm leaving."
+
+I was so amazed that I retraced a step or two toward him. "What?"
+
+His smile underwent a change. It grew frozen and steely instead of being
+bright with a continuous play suggesting summer lightning, which had
+been its usual quality.
+
+"My time is up at the end of the month--and I've asked Mr. Rossiter not
+to expect me to go on."
+
+I was looking for something of the sort sooner or later, but now that it
+had come I saw how lonely I should be.
+
+"Oh! Where are you going? Have you got anything in particular?"
+
+"I'm going as secretary to Stacy Grainger."
+
+"I've some connection with that name," I said, absently, "though I can't
+remember what it is."
+
+"You've probably heard of him. He's a good deal in the public eye."
+
+"Have you known him long?" I asked, for the sake of speaking, though I
+was only thinking of myself.
+
+"Never knew him at all." He came nearer to me. "I've a confession to
+make, though it won't be of interest to you. All the while I've been
+here, playing with little Broke Rossiter, I've been--don't laugh--I've
+been contributing to the press--_moi qui vous parle_!"
+
+"What about?"
+
+"Oh, politics and finance and foreign policy and public things in
+general. Always had a taste that way. Now it seems that something I
+wrote for the _Providence Express_--people read it a good deal--has
+attracted the attention of the great Stacy. Yes, he's great, too--J.
+Howard's big rival for--"
+
+I began to recall something I had heard. "Wasn't there a story about him
+and Mr. Brokenshire and Mrs. Brokenshire?"
+
+"That's the man. Well, he's noticed my stuff, and written to the
+editor--and to me, and I'm to go to him."
+
+I was still thinking of myself and the loss of his _camaraderie_. "I
+hope he's going to pay you well."
+
+"Oh, for me it will be wealth."
+
+"It will probably be more than that. It will be the first long step up."
+
+He nodded confidently. "I hope so."
+
+I had again begun to move away when he stopped me the second time.
+
+"Miss Adare, what's your first name? Mine's Lawrence, as you know."
+
+If I laughed a little it was to conceal my discomfort at this abrupt
+approach to the intimate.
+
+"I'm rather sorry for my name," I said, apologetically. "You see my
+father was one of those poetically loyal Canadians who rather overdo the
+thing. My eldest sister should have been Victoria, because Victoria was
+the queen. But the Duchess of Argyll was in Canada at that time--and
+very nice to father and mother--and so the first of us had to be Louise.
+He couldn't begin on the queens till there was a second one. That's poor
+Vic; while I'm--I know you'll shout--I'm Alexandra. If there'd been a
+fourth she'd have been a Mary; but poor mother died and the series
+stopped."
+
+He shook hands rather gravely. "Then I shall think of you as Alexandra."
+
+"If you are going to think of me at all," I managed to say, with a
+little _moue_, "put me down as Alix. That's what I've always been
+called."
+
+[Footnote 1: This was said before the Great War. It is now supposed that
+when peace is made there will be a change in English opinion. With my
+knowledge of my country--the British Empire--I permit myself to doubt
+it. There is a proverb which begins, "When the devil was sick." I shall,
+however, be glad if I am proved wrong.--Alexandra Adare.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+
+I was glad of the fog. It was cool and refreshing; it was also
+concealing. I could tramp along under its protection with little or no
+fear of being seen. Wearing tweeds, thick boots, and a felt hat, I was
+prepared for wet, and as a Canadian girl I was used to open air in all
+weathers. The few stragglers generally to be seen on the Cliff Walk
+having rushed to their houses for shelter, I had the rocks and the
+breakers, the honeysuckle and the patches of dog-roses, to myself. In
+the back of my mind I was fortified, too, by the knowledge that dampness
+curls my hair into pretty little tendrils, so that if I did meet any one
+I should be looking at my best.
+
+The path is like no other in the world. I have often wondered why the
+American writer-up of picturesque bits didn't make more of it. Trouville
+has its _Plage_, and Brighton its King's Road, and Nice its Promenade
+des Anglais, but in no other kingdom of leisure that I know anything
+about will you find the combination of qualities, wild and subdued, that
+mark this ocean-front of the island of Aquidneck. Neither will you
+easily come elsewhere so near to a sense of the primitive human
+struggle, of the crude social clash, of the war of the rights of
+man--Fisherman's Rights, as this coast historically knows them--against
+encroachment, privilege, and seclusion. As you crunch the gravel, and
+press the well-rolled turf, and sniff the scent of the white and red
+clover and Queen Anne's lace that fringe the precipice leaning over the
+sea, you feel in the air those elements of conflict that make drama.
+
+In clinging to the edge of the cliff, in twisting round every curve of
+the shore line, in running up hill and down dale, under crags and over
+them, the path is, of course, not the only one of its kind. You will
+find the same thing anywhere on the south coast of England or the north
+coast of France. But in the sum of human interest it sucks into the
+three miles of its course I can think of nothing else that resembles it.
+As guaranteeing the rights of the fisherman it is, so I believe,
+inalienable public property. The fisherman can walk on it, sit on it,
+fish from it, right into eternity. So much he has secured from the past
+history of colony and state; but he has done it at the cost of making
+himself offensive to the gentlemen whose lawns he hems as a seamstress
+hems a skirt.
+
+It is a hem like a serpent, with a serpent's sinuosity and grace, but
+also with a serpent's hatefulness to those who can do nothing but accept
+it as a fact. Since, as a fact, it cannot be abolished it has to be put
+up with; and since it has to be put up with the means must needs be
+found to deal with it effectively. Effectively it has been dealt with.
+Money, skill, and imagination have been spent on it, to adorn it, or
+disguise it, or sink it out of sight. The architect, the landscape
+gardener, and the engineer have all been called into counsel. On
+Fisherman's Rights the smile and the frown are exercised by turns, each
+with its phase of ingenuity. Along one stretch of a hundred yards bland
+recognition borders the way with roses or spans the miniature chasms
+with decorative bridges; along the next shuddering refinement grows a
+hedge or digs a trench behind which the obtrusive wayfarer may pass
+unseen. But shuddering refinement and bland recognition alike withdraw
+into themselves as far as broad lawns and lofty terraces permit them to
+retire, leaving to the owner of Fisherman's Rights the enjoyment of
+ocher and umber rocks and sea and sky and grain-fields yellowing on far
+headlands.
+
+It gave me the nearest thing to glee I ever felt in Newport. It was
+bracing and open and free. It suggested comparisons with scrambles along
+Nova-Scotian shores or tramps on the moors in Scotland. I often hated
+the fine weather; it was oppressive; it was strangling. But a day like
+this, with its whiffs of wild wind and its handfuls of salt slashing
+against eyes and mouth and nostrils, was not only exhilarating, it was
+glorious. I was glad, too, that the prim villas and pretentious
+châteaux, most of them out of proportion to any scale of housekeeping of
+which America is capable, could only be descried like castles in a dream
+through the swirling, diaphanous drift. I could be alone to rage and
+fume--or fly onward with a speed that was in itself a relief.
+
+I could be alone till, on climbing the slope of a shorn and wind-swept
+bluff, I saw a square-shouldered figure looming on the crest. It was no
+more than a deepening of the texture of the fog, but I knew its lines.
+Skimming up the ascent with a little cry, I was in Hugh's arms, my head
+on his burly breast.
+
+I think it was his burliness that made the most definite appeal to me.
+He was so sturdy and strong, and I was so small and desolate. From the
+beginning, when he first used to come near me, I felt his presence, as
+the Bible says, like the shadow of a rock in a thirsty land. That was in
+my early homesick time, before I had seized the new way of living and
+the new national point of view. The fact, too, that, as I expressed it
+to myself, I was in the second cabin when I had always been accustomed
+to the first, inspired a discomfort for which unwittingly I sought
+consolation. Nobody thought of me as other than Mrs. Rossiter's
+retainer, but this one kindly man.
+
+I noticed his kindliness almost before I noticed him, just as, I think,
+he noticed my loneliness almost before he noticed me. He opened doors
+for me when I went in or out; he served me with things if he happened to
+be there at tea; he dropped into a chair beside me when I was the only
+member of a group whom no one spoke to. If Gladys was of the company I
+was of it too, with a nominal footing but a virtual exclusion. The men
+in the Rossiter circle were of the four hundred and ninety-nine to whom
+I wasn't attractive; the women were all civil--from a distance.
+Occasionally some nice old lady would ask me where I came from and if I
+liked my work, or talk to me of new educational methods in a way which,
+with my bringing up, was to me as so much Greek; but I never got any
+other sign of friendliness. Only this short, stockily built young
+fellow, with the small, blue eyes, ever recognized me as a human being
+with the average yearning for human intercourse.
+
+During the winter in New York he never went further than that. I
+remembered Mrs. Rossiter's recommendation and "let him alone." I knew
+how to do it. He was not the first man I had ever had to deal with, even
+if no one had asked me to marry him. I accepted his small, kindly acts
+with that shade of discretion which defined the distance between us. As
+far as I could observe, he himself had no disposition to cross the lines
+I set--not till we moved to Newport.
+
+There was a fortnight between our going there and his--a fortnight which
+seemed to work a change in him. The Hugh Brokenshire I met on one of my
+first rambles along the cliffs was not the Hugh Brokenshire I had last
+seen in Fifth Avenue. Perhaps I was not the same myself. In the new
+surroundings I had missed him--a little. I will not say that his absence
+had meant an aching void to me; but where I had had a friend, now I had
+none--since I was unable to count Larry Strangways. Had it not been for
+this solitude I should have been less receptive to his comings when he
+suddenly began to pursue me.
+
+Pursuit is the only word I can use. I found him everywhere, quiet,
+deliberate, persistent. If he had been ten or even five years older I
+could have taken his advances without uneasiness. But he was only
+twenty-six and a dependent. He had no work; apart from his allowance
+from his father he had no means. And yet when, on the day before my
+chronicle begins, he stole upon me as I sat in a sheltered nook below
+the cliffs to which I was fond of retreating when I had time--when he
+stole upon me there, and kissed me and kissed me and kissed me, I
+couldn't help confessing that I loved him.
+
+I must leave to some woman who has had to fend for herself the task of
+telling what it means when a man comes to offer her his heart and his
+protection. It goes without saying that it means more to her than to the
+sheltered woman, for it means things different and more wonderful. It is
+the expected unexpected come to pass; it is the impossible achieved. It
+is not only success; it is success with an aureole of glory.
+
+I suppose I must be parasitical by nature, for I never have conceived of
+life as other than dependent on some man who would love me and take care
+of me. Even when no such man appeared and I was forced out to earn my
+bread, I looked upon the need as temporary only. In the loneliest of
+times at Mrs. Rossiter's, at periods when I didn't see a man for weeks,
+the hero never seemed farther away than just behind the scenes. I
+confess to minutes when I thought he tarried unnecessarily long; I
+confess to terrified questionings as to what would happen were he never
+to come at all; I confess to solitary watches of the night in company
+with fears and tears; but I cannot confess to anything more than a low
+burning of that lamp of hope which never went out entirely.
+
+When, therefore, Hugh Brokenshire offered me what he had to offer me I
+felt for a few minutes--ten, fifteen, twenty perhaps--that sense of the
+fruition of the being which I am sure comes to us but rarely in this
+life, and perhaps is a foretaste of eternity. I was like a creature that
+has long been struggling up to some higher state--and has reached it.
+
+I am ashamed to say, too, that my first consciousness came in pictures
+to which the dear young man himself was only incidental. Two scenes in
+particular that for ten years past had been only a little below the
+threshold of my consciousness came out boldly, like developed
+photographs. I was the center of both. In one I saw a dainty little
+dining-room, where the table was laid. The damask was beautiful; the
+silver rich; the glasses crystalline. Wearing an inexpensive but
+extremely chic little gown, I was seating the guests. The other picture
+was more dim, but only in the sense that the room was deliciously
+darkened. It had white furnishings, a little white cot, and toys. In its
+very center was a bassinet, and I was leaning over it, wearing a
+delicate lace peignoir.
+
+Ought I to blush to say that while Hugh stammered out his impassioned
+declarations I was seeing these two tableaux emerging from the state of
+only half-acknowledged dreams into real possibility? I dare say. I
+merely affirm that it was so. Since the dominant craving of my nature
+was to have a home and a baby, I saw the baby and the home before I
+could realize a husband or a father, or bring my mind to the definite
+proposals faltered by poor Hugh.
+
+But I did bring my mind to them, with the result of which I have already
+given a sufficient indication. Even in admitting that I loved him I
+thrust and parried and postponed. The whole idea was too big for me to
+grapple with on the spur of a sudden moment. I suggested his talking the
+matter over with his father chiefly to gain time.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But to rest in his arms had only a subordinate connection with the great
+issue I had to face. It was a joy in itself. It was a pledge of the
+future, even if I were never to take anything but the pledge. After my
+shifts and struggles and anxieties I could feel the satisfaction of
+knowing it was in my power to let them all roll off. If I were never to
+do it, if I were to go back to my uncertainties, this minute would
+mitigate the trial in advance. I might fight for existence during all
+the rest of my life, and yet I should still have the bliss of
+remembering that some one was willing to fight for me.
+
+He released me at last, since there might be people in Newport as
+indifferent to weather as ourselves.
+
+"What happened?" he asked then, with an eagerness which almost choked
+the question in its utterance. "Was it awful?"
+
+I was too nearly hysterical to enter on anything like a recital. "It
+might have been worse," I half laughed and half sobbed, trying to
+recover my breath and dry my eyes.
+
+His spirit seemed to leap at the answer. "Do you mean to say you got
+concessions from him--or anything like that?"
+
+I couldn't help clinging to the edge of his raincoat. "Did you expect me
+to?"
+
+"I didn't know but what, when he saw you--"
+
+"Oh, but he didn't see me. That was part of the difficulty. He looked
+where I was--but he didn't find anything there."
+
+He laughed, with a hint of disappointment. "I know what you mean; but
+you mustn't be surprised. He'll see you yet." He clasped me again. "I
+didn't see you at first, little girl; I swear I didn't. You're like
+that. A fellow must look at you twice before he knows that you're there;
+but when he begins to take notice--" I struggled out of his embrace,
+while he continued: "It's the same with all the great things--with
+pictures and mountains and cathedrals, and so on. Often thought about it
+when we've been abroad. See something once and pass it by. Next time you
+look at it a little. Third time it begins to grow on you. Fourth time
+you've found a wonder. You're a wonder, little Alix, do you know it?"
+
+"Oh no, I'm not. I must warn you, Hugh darling, that I'm very prosaic
+and practical and ordinary. You mustn't put me on a pedestal--"
+
+"Put you on a pedestal? You were born on a pedestal. You're the woman
+I've seen in hopes and dreams--"
+
+We began to walk on, coming to a little hollow that dipped near enough
+to the shore to allow of our scrambling over the rocks to where we could
+sit down among them. As we were here below the thickest belt of the fog
+line, I could see him in a way that had been impossible on the bluff.
+
+If he was good-looking it was only in the handsome-ugly sense. Mrs.
+Rossiter often said he was the one member of the family who inherited
+from the Brews of Boston, a statement I could verify from the first Mrs.
+Brokenshire's portrait by Carolus-Duran. Hugh's features were not
+ill-formed so much as they were out of proportion to each other,
+becoming thus a mere jumble of organs. The blue eyes were too small and
+too wide apart; the forehead was too broad for its height; the nose,
+which started at the same fine angle as his father's, changed in
+mid-course to a knob; the upper lip was intended to be long, but
+half-way in its descent took a notion to curve upward, making a hollow
+for a tender, youthful, fair mustache that didn't quite meet in the
+center and might have been applied with a camel's-hair brush; the lower
+lip turned outward with a little fullness that spilled over in a little
+fall, giving to the whole expression something lovably good-natured.
+
+Because the sea boiled over the ledges and scraped on the pebbles with a
+screechy sound we were obliged to sit close together in order to make
+ourselves heard. His arm about me was amazingly protective. I felt safe.
+
+The account of his interview with his father was too incoherent to give
+me more than the idea that they had talked somewhat at cross-purposes.
+To Hugh's statement that he wished to marry Miss Adare, the little
+nursery governess at Ethel's, his father had responded by reading a
+letter from Lord Goldborough inviting Hugh to his place in Scotland for
+the shooting.
+
+"It would be well for you to accept," the father commented, as he
+folded the letter. "I've cabled to Goldborough to say you'd sail on--"
+
+"But, father, how can I sail when I've asked Miss Adare to marry me?"
+
+To this the reply was the mention of the steamer and the date. He went
+on to say, however: "If you've asked any one to marry you it's absurd,
+of course. But I'll take care of that. If you go by that boat you'll
+reach London in plenty of time to fit out at your tailor's and still be
+at Strath-na-Cloid by the twelfth. In case you're short of money--"
+
+Apparently they got no further than that. To Hugh's assertions and
+objections his father had but one response. It was a response, as I
+understood, which confronted the younger man like a wall he had neither
+the force to break down nor the agility to climb over, and left him
+staring at a blank.
+
+Then followed another outburst which to my unaccustomed ear was as wild,
+sweet music. It wasn't merely that he loved me, he adored me; it wasn't
+merely that I was young and pretty and captivating with a sly,
+unobtrusive fascination that held you enchanted when it held you at all.
+I was mistress of the wisdom of the ages. Among the nice expensively
+dressed young girls with whom he danced and rode and swam and flirted,
+Hugh had never seen any one who could "hold a candle" to me in knowledge
+of human nature and the world. It wasn't that I had seen more than they
+or done more than they; it was that I had a mind through which every
+impression filtered and came out as something of my own. It was what he
+had always been looking for in a woman, and had given up the hope of
+finding. He spoke as if he was forty. He was serious himself, he
+averred; he had reflected, and held original convictions. Though a rich
+man's son, with corresponding prospects, his heart was with the masses
+and he labeled himself a Socialist.
+
+It was not the same thing to be a Socialist now, he explained to me, as
+it had been twenty years before, since so many men of education and
+position had adopted this system of opinion. In fact, his own conversion
+had been partly due to young Lord Ernest Hayes, of the British Embassy,
+who had spent the preceding summer at Newport, though his inclinations
+had gone in this direction ever since he had begun to think. It was
+because I was so open-eyed and so sincere that he had been drawn to me
+as soon as he had started in to notice me. It was true that he had
+noticed me first of all because I was in a subordinate position and
+alone, but, having done so, he had found a queen disguised as a working
+girl. I was a queen of the vital things in life, a queen of
+intelligence, of sympathy, of the defiance of convention, of everything
+that was great. I was the woman a Socialist could love, of whom a
+Socialist could make his star.
+
+"If father would only give me credit for being twenty-six and a man,"
+the dear boy went on earnestly, "with a man's responsibility to society
+and the human race! But he doesn't. He thinks I ought to quit being a
+Socialist because he tells me to--or else he doesn't think at all. Nine
+times out of ten, when I begin to say what I believe, he talks of
+something else--just as he did last night in bringing up the
+Goldboroughs."
+
+I found the opportunity for which I had been looking during his
+impassioned rhapsody. The mention of the Goldboroughs gave me that kind
+of chill about the heart which the mist imparted to the hands and face.
+
+"You know them all very well," I said, when I found an opening in which
+I could speak.
+
+"Oh yes," he admitted, indifferently. "Known them all my life. Father
+represented Meek & Brokenshire in England till my grandfather died.
+Goldborough used to be an impecunious chap, land poor, till he and
+father began to pull together. Father's been able to give him tips on
+the market, and he's given father-- Well, dad's always had a taste for
+English swells. Never could stand the Continental kind--gilt gingerbread
+he's called 'em--and so, well, you can see."
+
+I admitted that I could see, going on to ask what the Goldborough family
+consisted of.
+
+There was Lord Leatherhead, the eldest son; then there were two younger
+sons, one in the army and one preparing for the Church; and there were
+three girls.
+
+"Any of the daughters married?" I ventured, timidly.
+
+There was nothing forced in the indifference with which he made his
+explanations. Laura was married to a banker named Bell; Janet, he
+thought he had heard, was engaged to a chap in the Inverness Rangers;
+Cecilia--Cissie they usually called her--was to the best of his
+knowledge still wholly free, but the best of his knowledge did not go
+far.
+
+I pumped up my courage again. "Is she--nice?"
+
+"Oh, nice enough." He really didn't know much about her. She was
+generally away at school when he had been at Goldborough Castle. When
+she was there he hadn't seen more than a long-legged, gawky girl, rather
+good at tennis, with red hair hanging down her back.
+
+Satisfied with these replies, I went on to tell him of my interview with
+his father an hour or two before. Of this he seized on one point with
+some ecstasy.
+
+"So you told him you'd take me! Oh, Alix--gosh!"
+
+The exclamation was a sigh of relief as well as of rapture. I could
+smile at it because it was so boyish and American, especially as he
+clasped me again and held me in a way that almost stopped my breath.
+When I freed myself, however, I said, with a show of firmness:
+
+"Yes, Hugh; it's what I said to him; but it's not what I'm going to
+repeat to you."
+
+"Not what you're going to repeat to me? But if you said it to him--"
+
+"I'm still not obliged to accept you--to-day."
+
+"But if you mean to accept me at all--"
+
+"Yes, I mean to accept you--if all goes well."
+
+"But what do you mean by that?"
+
+"I mean--if your family should want me."
+
+I could feel his clasp relax as he said: "Oh, if you're going to wait
+for that!"
+
+"Hugh, darling, how can I not wait for it? I told him I couldn't stop to
+consider a family; but--but I see I must."
+
+"Oh, but why? We shall lose everything if you do that. To wait for my
+family to want you to marry me--"
+
+I detached myself altogether from his embrace, pretending to arrange my
+skirts about my feet. He leaned forward, his fingers interlocked, his
+elbows on his knees, his kind young face disconsolate.
+
+"When I talked to your father," I tried to explain, "I saw chiefly the
+individual's side of the question of marriage. There is that side; but
+there's another. Marriage doesn't concern a man and a woman alone; it
+concerns a family--sometimes two."
+
+His cry came out with the explosive force of a slowly gathering groan.
+"Oh, rot, Alix!" He went on to expostulate: "Can't you see? If we were
+to go now and buy a license--and be married by the first clergyman we
+met--the family couldn't say a word."
+
+"Exactly; it's just what I do see. Since you want it I could force
+myself on them--the word is your father's--and they'd have no choice but
+to accept me."
+
+"Well, then?"
+
+"Hugh, dear, I--I can't do it that way."
+
+"Then what way could you do it?"
+
+"I'm not sure yet. I haven't thought of it. I only know in advance that
+even if I told you I'd marry you against--against all their wishes, I
+couldn't keep my promise in the end."
+
+"That is," he said, bitterly, "you think more of them than you do of
+me."
+
+I put my hand on his clasped fingers. "Nonsense. I--I love you. Don't
+you see I do? How could I help loving you when you've been so kind to
+me? But marriage is always a serious thing to a woman; and when it comes
+to marriage into a family that would look on me as a great
+misfortune--Hugh, darling, I don't see how I could ever face it."
+
+"I do," he declared, promptly. "It isn't so bad as you think. Families
+come round. There was Tracy Allen. Married a manicure. The Allens kicked
+up a row at first--wouldn't see Tracy and all that; but now--"
+
+"Yes, but, Hugh, I'm not a manicure."
+
+"You're a nursery governess."
+
+"By accident--and a little by misfortune. I wasn't a nursery governess
+when I first knew your sister."
+
+"But what difference does that make?"
+
+"It makes this difference: that a manicure would probably not think of
+herself as your equal. She'd expect coldness at first, and be prepared
+for it."
+
+"Well, couldn't you?"
+
+"No, because, you see, I'm your equal."
+
+He hunched his big shoulders impatiently. "Oh, Alix, I don't go into
+that. I'm a Socialist. I don't care what you are."
+
+"But you see I do. I don't want to expose myself to being looked down
+upon, and perhaps despised, for the rest of my life, because my family
+is quite as good as your own."
+
+He turned slowly from peering into the fog-bank to fix on me a look of
+which the tenderness and pity and incredulity seemed to stab me. I felt
+the helplessness of a sane person insisting on his sanity to some one
+who believes him mad.
+
+"Don't let us talk about those things, darling little Alix," he begged,
+gently. "Let's do the thing in style, like Tracy Allen, without any
+flummery or fluff. What's family--once you get away from the idea? When
+I sink it I should think that you could afford to do it too. If I take
+you as Tracy Allen took Libby Jaynes--that was her name, I remember
+now--not a very pretty girl--but if I take you as he took her, and you
+take me as she took him--"
+
+"But, Hugh, I can't. If I were Libby Jaynes, it's possible I could; but
+as it is--"
+
+And in the end he came round to my point of view. That is to say, he
+appreciated my unwillingness to reward Mrs. Rossiter's kindness to me by
+creating a scandal, and he was not without some admiration for what he
+called my "magnanimity toward his old man" in hesitating to drive him to
+extremes.
+
+And yet it was Hugh himself who drove him to extremes, over questions
+which I hardly raised. That was some ten days later, when Hugh refused
+point-blank to sail on the steamer his father had selected to take him
+on the way to Strath-na-Cloid. I was, of course, not present at the
+interview, but having heard of it from Hugh, and got his account
+corroborated by Ethel Rossiter, I can describe it much as it took place.
+
+I may say here, perhaps, that I still remained with Mrs. Rossiter. My
+marching orders, expected from hour to hour, didn't come. Mrs. Rossiter
+herself explained this delay to me some four days after that scene in
+the breakfast loggia which had left me in a state of curiosity and
+suspense.
+
+"Father seems to think that if he insisted on your leaving it would make
+Hugh's asking you to marry him too much a matter of importance."
+
+"And doesn't he himself consider it a matter of importance?"
+
+Mrs. Rossiter patted a tress of her brown hair into place. "No, I don't
+think he does."
+
+Perhaps nothing from the beginning had made me more inwardly indignant
+than the simplicity of this reply. I had imagined him raging against me
+in his heart and forming deep, dark plans to destroy me.
+
+"It would be a matter of importance to most people," I said, trying not
+to betray my feeling of offense.
+
+"Most people aren't father," Mrs. Rossiter contented herself with
+replying, still occupied with her tress of hair.
+
+It was the confidential hour of the morning in her big chintzy room. The
+maid having departed, I had been answering notes and was still sitting
+at the desk. It was the first time she had broached the subject in the
+four days which had been to me a period of so much restlessness.
+Wondering at this detachment, I had the boldness to question her.
+
+"Doesn't it seem important to you?"
+
+She threw me a glance over her shoulder, turning back to the mirror at
+once. "What have I got to do with it? It's father's affair--and Hugh's."
+
+"And mine, too, I suppose?" I hazarded, interrogatively.
+
+To this she said nothing. Her silence gave me to understand what so many
+other little things impressed upon me--that I didn't count. What Hugh
+did or didn't do was a matter for the Brokenshires to feel and for J.
+Howard Brokenshire to deal with. Ethel Rossiter herself was neither for
+me nor against me. I was her nursery governess, and useful as an
+unofficial companion-secretary. As long as it was not forbidden she
+would keep me in that capacity; when the order came she would send me
+away. As for anything I had to suffer, that was my own lookout. Hugh
+would be managed by his father, and from that fate there was no appeal.
+There was nothing, therefore, to worry Mrs. Rossiter. She could dismiss
+the whole matter, as she presently did, to discuss her troubles over the
+rival attentions of Mr. Millinger and Mr. Scott, and to protest against
+their making her so conspicuous. She had the kindness to say, however,
+just as she was leaving the house for Bailey's Beach:
+
+"I don't talk to you about this affair of Hugh's because I really don't
+see much of father. It's his business, you see, and nothing for me to
+interfere with. With that woman there I hardly ever go to their house,
+and he doesn't often come here. Her mother's with them, too, just
+now--that's old Mrs. Billing--a harpy if ever there was one--and with
+all the things people are saying! If father only knew! But, of course,
+he'll be the last one to hear it."
+
+She was getting into her car by this time and I seized no more; but at
+lunch I had a few minutes in which to bring my searchings of heart
+before Larry Strangways.
+
+It was not often we took this repast alone with the children, but it had
+to happen sometimes. Mrs. Rossiter had telephoned from Bailey's that she
+had accepted the invitation of some friends and we were not to expect
+her. We should lunch, however, she informed me, in the breakfast loggia,
+where the open air would act as chaperon and insure the necessary
+measure of propriety.
+
+So long as Broke and Gladys were present we were as demure as if we had
+met by chance in the restaurant car of a train. With the coffee the
+children begged to be allowed to play with the dogs on the grass, which
+left us for a few minutes as man and woman.
+
+"How is everything?" he asked at once, taking on that smile which seemed
+to put him outside the sphere of my interests.
+
+I shrugged my shoulders and looked down at the spoon with which I was
+dabbling in my cup. "Oh, just the same," I glanced up to say. "Tell me.
+Have people in this country no other measure of your standing but that
+of money?"
+
+"Have they any such measure in any country?"
+
+I was beginning with the words, "Why, yes," when he interrupted me.
+
+"Think."
+
+"I am thinking," I insisted. "In England and Canada and the British
+Empire generally--"
+
+"You attach some importance to birth. Yes; so do we here--when it goes
+with money. Without the basis of that support neither you nor we give
+what is so deliciously called birth the honor of a second thought."
+
+"Oh yes, we do--"
+
+"When it's your only asset--yes; but you do it alone. No one else pays
+it any attention."
+
+I colored. "That's rather cruel--"
+
+"It's not a bit more cruel than the fact. Take your case and mine as an
+illustration. As the estimate of birth goes in this country, I'm as well
+born as the majority. My ancestors were New-Englanders, country doctors
+and lawyers and ministers--especially the ministers. But as long as I
+haven't the cash I'm only a tutor, and eat at the second table. Jim
+Rossiter's forebears were much the same as mine; but the fact that he
+has a hundred thousand dollars a year and I've hardly got two is the
+only thing that would be taken into consideration, by any one in either
+the United Kingdom or the United States. It would be the same if I
+descended from Crusaders. If I've got nothing but that and my character
+to recommend me--" He raised his hand and snapped his fingers with a
+scornful laugh. "Take your case," he hurried on as I was about to speak.
+"You're probably like me, sprung of a line of professional men--"
+
+"And soldiers," I interrupted, proudly. "The first of my family to
+settle in Canada was a General Adare in the middle of the seventeen
+hundreds. He'd been in the garrison at Halifax and chose to remain in
+Nova Scotia." Perhaps there was some boastfulness in my tone as I added,
+"He came of the famous Fighting Adares of the County Limerick."
+
+"And all that isn't worth a row of pins--except to yourself. If you
+were the daughter of a miner who'd struck it rich you'd be a candidate
+for the British peerage. You'd be received in the best houses in London;
+you could marry a duke and no one would say you nay. As it is--"
+
+"As it is," I said, tremulously, "I'm just a nursery governess, and
+there's no getting away from the fact."
+
+"Not until you get away from the condition."
+
+"So that when I told Hugh Brokenshire the other day that in point of
+family I was his equal--"
+
+"He probably didn't believe you."
+
+The memory of Hugh's look still rankled in me. "No, I don't think he
+did."
+
+"Of course he didn't. As the world counts--as we all count--no poor
+family, however noble, is the equal of any rich family, however base."
+There was that transformation of his smile from something sunny to
+something hard which I had noticed once before, as he went on to add,
+"If you want to marry Hugh Brokenshire--"
+
+"Which I do," I interposed, defiantly.
+
+"Then you must enter into his game as he enters into it himself. He
+thinks of himself as doing the big romantic thing. He's marrying a poor
+girl who has nothing but herself as guaranty. That your
+great-grandfather was a general and one of the--what did you call
+them?--Fighting Adares of the County Cork would mean no more to him than
+if you said you were descended from the Lacedæmonians and the dragon's
+teeth. As far as that goes, you might as well be an immigrant girl from
+Sweden; you might as well be a cook. He's stooping to pick up his
+diamond from the mire, instead of buying it from a jeweler's window.
+Very well, then, you must let him stoop. You mustn't try to
+underestimate his condescension. You mustn't tell him you were once in
+a jeweler's window, and only fell into the mire by chance--"
+
+"Because," I smiled, "the mire is where I belong, until I'm taken out of
+it."
+
+"We belong," he stated, judicially, "where the world puts us. If we're
+wise we'll stay there--till we can meet the world's own terms for
+getting out."
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER V
+
+
+I come at last to Hugh's defiance of his father. It took place not only
+without my incitement, but without my knowledge. No one could have been
+more sick with misgiving than I when I learned that the boy had left his
+father's house and gone to a hotel. If I was to blame at all it was in
+mentioning from time to time his condition of dependence.
+
+"You haven't the right to defy your father's wishes," I said to him. "so
+long as you're living on his money. What it comes to is that he pays you
+to do as he tells you. If you don't do as he tells you, you're not
+earning your allowance honestly."
+
+The point of view was new to him. "But if I was making a living of my
+own?"
+
+"Ah, that would be different."
+
+"You'd marry me then?"
+
+I considered this. "It would still have to depend," I was obliged to say
+at last.
+
+"Depend on what?"
+
+"On the degree to which you made yourself your own master."
+
+"I should be my own master if I earned a good income."
+
+I admitted this.
+
+"Very well," he declared, with decision. "I shall earn it."
+
+I didn't question his power to do that. I had heard so much of the
+American man's ability to make money that I took it for granted, as I
+did a bird's capacity for flight. As far as Hugh was concerned, it
+seemed to me more a matter of intention than of opportunity. I reasoned
+that if he made up his mind to be independent, independent he would be.
+It would rest with him. It was not of the future I was thinking so much
+as of the present; and in the present I was chiefly dodging his plea
+that we settle the matter by taking the law into our own hands.
+
+"It won't be as bad as you think," he kept urging. "Father would be sure
+to come round to you if you were my wife. He never quarrels with the
+accomplished fact. That's been part of the secret of his success. He'll
+fight a thing as long as he can; but when it's carried over his head no
+one knows better than he how to make the best of it."
+
+"But, Hugh, I don't want to have him make the best of it that way--at
+least, so long as you're not your own master."
+
+One day at the Casino he pointed out Libby Jaynes to me. I was there in
+charge of the children, and he managed to slip over from the tennis he
+was playing for a word:
+
+"There she is--that girl with the orange-silk sweater."
+
+The point of his remark was that Libby Jaynes was one of a group of half
+a dozen people, and was apparently received at Newport like anybody
+else. The men were in flannels; the women in the short skirts and easy
+attitudes developed by a sporting life. The silk sweater in its
+brilliant hues was to the Casino grounds as the parrot to Brazilian
+woods. Libby Jaynes wasn't pretty; her lips were too widely parted and
+her teeth too big; but her figure was adapted to the costume of the day,
+and her head to the slouching panama. She wore both with a decided
+_chic_. She was the orange spot where there was another of purple and
+another of pink and another of bright emerald-green. As far as I could
+see no one remembered that she had ever rubbed men's finger-nails in the
+barber's room of a hotel, and she certainly betrayed no sign of it. It
+was what Hugh begged me to observe. If I liked I could within a year be
+a member of this privileged troop instead of an outsider looking on.
+"You'd be just as good as she is," he declared with a naïveté I couldn't
+help taking with a smile.
+
+I was about to say, "But I don't feel inferior to her as it is," when I
+recalled the queer look of incredulity he had given me on the beach.
+
+And then one morning I heard he had quarreled with his father. It was
+Hugh who told me first, but Mrs. Rossiter gave me all the details within
+an hour afterward.
+
+It appeared that they had had a dinner-party in honor of old Mrs.
+Billing which had gone off with some success. The guests having left,
+the family had gathered in Mildred's sitting-room to give the invalid an
+account of the entertainment. It was one of those domestic reunions on
+which the household god insisted from time to time, so that his wife
+should seem to have that support from his children which both he and she
+knew she didn't have. The Jack Brokenshires were there, and Hugh, and
+Ethel Rossiter.
+
+It was exactly the scene for a tragi-comedy, and had the kind of setting
+theatrical producers liked before the new scene-painters set the note of
+allegorical simplicity. Mildred had the best corner room up-stairs,
+though, like the rest of the house, her surroundings suffered from her
+father's taste for the Italianate and over-rich. Heavy dark cabinets,
+heavy dark chairs, gilt candelabra, and splendidly brocaded stuffs threw
+the girl's wan face and weak figure into prominence. I think she often
+sighed for pretty papers and cretonnes, for Sèvres and colored prints,
+but she took her tapestries and old masters and majolica as decreed by a
+power she couldn't question. When everything was done for her comfort
+the poor thing had nothing to do for herself.
+
+The room had the further resemblance to a scene on the stage since, as I
+was given to understand, no one felt the reality of the friendliness
+enacted. To all J. Howard's children it was odious that he should
+worship a woman who was younger than Mildred and very little older than
+Ethel. They had loved their mother, who had been plain. They resented
+the fact that their father had got hold of her money for himself, had
+made her unhappy, and had forgotten her. That he should have become
+infatuated with a girl who was their own contemporary would have been a
+humiliation to them in any case; but when the story of his fight for her
+became public property, when it was the joke of the Stock Exchange and
+the subject of leading articles in the press, they could only hold their
+heads high and carry the situation with bravado. It was a proof of his
+grip on New York that he could put Editha Billing where he wished to see
+her, and find no authority, social or financial, bold enough to question
+him; it was equally a proof of his dominance in his family that neither
+son nor daughter could treat his new wife with anything but deference.
+She was the _maîtresse en tître_ to whom even the princes and princesses
+had to bow.
+
+They were bowing on this evening by treating old Mrs. Billing as if they
+liked her and counted her one of themselves. As the mother of the
+favorite she could reasonably claim this homage, and no one refused it
+but poor Hugh. He turned his back on it. Mildred being obliged to lie on
+a couch, he put himself at her feet, refusing thus to be witness of what
+he called a flattering hypocrisy that sickened him. That went on in the
+dimly, richly lighted room behind him, where the others sat about,
+pretending to be gay.
+
+Then the match went into the gunpowder all at once.
+
+"I'm the more glad the evening has been pleasant," J. Howard observed,
+blandly, "since we may consider it a farewell to Hugh. He's sailing
+on--"
+
+Hugh merely said over his shoulder, "No, father; I'm not."
+
+The startled silence was just long enough to be noticed before the
+father went on, as if he had not been interrupted:
+
+"He's sailing on--"
+
+"No, father; I'm not."
+
+There was no change in Hugh's tone any more than in his parent's. I
+gathered from Mrs. Rossiter that all present held their breaths as if in
+expectation that this blasphemer would be struck dead. Mentally they
+stood off, too, like the chorus in an opera, to see the great tragedy
+acted to the end without interference of their own. Jack Brokenshire,
+who was fingering an extinct cigar, twiddled it nervously at his lips.
+Pauline clasped her hands and leaned forward in excitement. Mrs.
+Brokenshire affected to hear nothing and arranged her five rows of
+pearls. Mrs. Billing, whom Mrs. Rossiter described as a condor with lace
+on her head and diamonds round her shrunken neck, looked from one to
+another through her lorgnette, which she fixed at last on her
+son-in-law. Ethel Rossiter kept herself detached. Knowing that Hugh had
+been riding for a fall, she expected him now to come his cropper.
+
+It caused some surprise to the lookers-on that Mr. Brokenshire should
+merely press the electric bell. "Tell Mr. Spellman to come here," he
+said, quietly, to the footman who answered his ring.
+
+Mr. Spellman appeared, a smooth-shaven man of indefinite age, with dark
+shadows in the face, and cadaverous. His master instructed him with a
+word or two. There was silence during the minute that followed the man's
+withdrawal, a silence ominous with expectation. When Spellman had
+returned and handed a long envelope to his employer and withdrawn again,
+the suspended action was renewed.
+
+Hugh, who was playing in seeming unconcern with the tassel of Mildred's
+dressing-gown, had given no attention to the small drama going on behind
+him.
+
+"Hugh, here's father," Mildred whispered.
+
+Her white face was drawn; she was fond of Hugh; she seemed to scent the
+catastrophe. Hugh continued to play with the tassel without glancing
+upward.
+
+It was not J. Howard's practice to raise his voice or to speak with
+emphasis except when the occasion demanded it. He was very gentle now as
+his hand slipped over Hugh's shoulder.
+
+"Hugh, here's your ticket and your letter of credit. I asked Spellman to
+see to them when he was in New York."
+
+The young man barely turned his head. "Thank you, father; but I don't
+want them. I can't go over--because I'm going to marry Miss Adare."
+
+As it was no time for the chorus of an opera to intervene, all waited
+for what would happen next. Old Mrs. Billing, turning her lorgnette on
+the rebellious boy, saw nothing but the back of his head. The father's
+hand wavered for a minute over the son's shoulder and let the envelope
+fall. Hugh continued to play with the tassel.
+
+For once Howard Brokenshire was disconcerted. Having stepped back a pace
+or two, he said in his quiet voice, "What did you say, Hugh?"
+
+The answer was quite distinct. "I said I was going to marry Miss Adare."
+
+"Who's that?"
+
+"You know perfectly well, father. She's Ethel's nursery governess.
+You've been to see her, and she's told you she's going to marry me."
+
+"Oh, but I thought that was over and done with."
+
+"No, you didn't, father. Please don't try to come that. I told you
+nearly a fortnight ago that I was perfectly serious--and I am."
+
+"Oh, are you? Well, so am I. The Goldboroughs are expecting you for the
+twelfth--"
+
+"The Goldboroughs can go to--"
+
+"Hugh!" It was Mildred who cut him short with a cry that was almost a
+petition.
+
+"All right, Milly," he assured her under his breath. "I'm not going to
+make a scene."
+
+That J. Howard expected to become the principal in a duel, under the
+eyes of excited witnesses, I do not think. If he had chosen to speak
+when witnesses were present, it was because of his assumption that
+Hugh's submission would be thus more easily secured. As it was his
+policy never to enter into a conflict of authorities, or of will against
+will, he was for the moment nonplussed. I have an idea he would have
+retired gracefully, waiting for a more convenient opportunity, had it
+not been for old Mrs. Billing's lorgnette.
+
+It will, perhaps, not interrupt my narrative too much if I say here that
+of all the important women he knew he was most afraid of her. She had
+coached him when he was a beginner in life and she an established young
+woman of the world. She must then have had a certain _beauté du diable_
+and that nameless thing which men find exciting in women. I have been
+told that she was an example of the modern Helen of Troy, over whom men
+fight while she holds the stakes, and I can believe it. Her history was
+said to be full of dramatic episodes, though I never knew what they
+were. Even at sixty, which was the age at which I saw her, she had that
+kind of presence which challenges and dares. She was ugly and hook-nosed
+and withered; but she couldn't be overlooked. To me she suggested that
+Madame Poisson who so carefully prepared her daughter to become the
+Marquise de Pompadour. Stacy Grainger, I believe, was the Louis XV. of
+her earlier plans, though, like a born strategist, she changed her
+methods when reasons arose for doing so. I shall return to this later in
+my story. At present I only want to say that I do not believe that Mr.
+Brokenshire would have pushed things to an issue that night had her
+lorgnette not been there to provoke him.
+
+"Has it occurred to you, Hugh," he asked, in his softest tones, on
+reaching a stand before the chimney which was filled with dwarfed potted
+palms, "that I pay you an allowance of six thousand dollars a year?"
+
+Hugh continued to play with the tassel of Mildred's gown. "Yes, father;
+and as a Socialist I don't think it right. I've been coming to the
+decision that--"
+
+"You'll spare us your poses and let the Socialist nonsense drop. I
+simply want to remind you--"
+
+"I can't let the Socialist nonsense drop, father, because--"
+
+The tartness of the tone betrayed a rising irritation.
+
+"Be good enough to turn round this way. I don't understand what you're
+saying. Perhaps you'll take a chair, and leave poor Mildred alone."
+
+Mildred whispered: "Oh, Hugh, be careful. I'll do anything for you if
+you won't get him worked up. It'll hurt his face--and his poor eye."
+
+Hugh slouched--the word is Mrs. Rossiter's--to a nearby chair, where he
+sat down in a hunched position, his hands in his trousers pockets and
+his feet thrust out before him. The attitude was neither graceful nor
+respectful to the company.
+
+"It's no use talking, father," he declared, sulkily, "because I've said
+my last word."
+
+"Oh no, you haven't, for I haven't said my first."
+
+In the tone in which Hugh cried out there must have been something of
+the plea of a little boy before he is punished:
+
+"Please don't give me any orders, father, because I sha'n't be able to
+obey them."
+
+"Hugh, your expression 'sha'n't be able to obey' is not in the
+vocabulary with which I'm familiar."
+
+"But it's in the one with which I am."
+
+"Then you've probably learnt it from Ethel's little servant--I've
+forgotten the name--"
+
+Hugh spoke with spirit. "She's not a servant; and her name is Alexandra
+Adare. Please, dad, try to fix it in your memory. You'll find you'll
+have a lot of use for it."
+
+"Don't be impertinent."
+
+"I'm not impertinent. I'm stating a fact. I ask every one here to
+remember that name--"
+
+"We needn't bring any one else into this foolish business. It's between
+you and me. Even so, I wish to have no argument."
+
+"Nor I."
+
+"Then in that case we understand each other. You'll be with the
+Goldboroughs for the twelfth--"
+
+Hugh spoke very distinctly: "Father--I'm--not--going."
+
+In the silence that followed one could hear the ticking of the
+mantelpiece clock.
+
+"Then may I ask where you are going?"
+
+Hugh raised himself from his sprawling attitude, holding his bulky young
+figure erect. "I'm going to earn a living."
+
+Some one, perhaps old Mrs. Billing, laughed. The father continued to
+speak with great if dangerous courtesy.
+
+"Ah? Indeed! That's interesting. And may I ask at what?"
+
+"At what I can find."
+
+"That's more interesting still. Earning a living in New York is like the
+proverbial looking for the needle in the haystack. The needle is there,
+but it takes--"
+
+"Very good eyesight to detect it. All right, dad. I shall be on the
+job."
+
+"Good! And when do you propose to begin?"
+
+It had not been Hugh's intention to begin at any time in particular,
+but, thus challenged, he said, boldly, "To-morrow."
+
+"That's excellent. But why put it off so long? I should think you'd
+start out--to-night."
+
+Mrs. Billing's "Ha-a!" subdued and prolonged, was like that tense
+exclamation which the spectators utter at some exiting moment of a game.
+It took no sides, but it did justice to a sporting situation. As Hugh
+told me the story on the following day he confessed that more than any
+other occurrence it put the next move "up to him." According to Ethel
+Rossiter he lumbered heavily to his feet and crossed the room toward his
+father. He began to speak as he neared the architectural chimneypiece,
+merely throwing the words at J. Howard as he passed.
+
+"All right, father. Since you wish it--"
+
+"Oh no. My wishes are out of it. As you defy those I've expressed,
+there's no more to be said."
+
+Hugh paused in his walk, his hands in the pockets of his dinner-jacket,
+and eyed his father obliquely. "I don't defy your wishes, dad. I only
+claim the right, as a man of twenty-six, to live my own life. If you
+wouldn't make yourself God--"
+
+The handsome hand went up. "We'll not talk about that, if you please.
+I'd no intention of discussing the matter any longer. I merely thought
+that if I were in the situation in which you've placed yourself, I
+should be--getting busy. Still, if you want to stay the night--"
+
+"Oh, not in the least." Hugh was as nonchalant as he had the power to
+make himself. "Thanks awfully, father, all the same." He looked round on
+the circle where each of the chorus sat with an appropriate expression
+of horror--that is, with the exception of the old lady Billing, who,
+with her lorgnette still to her eyes, nodded approval of so much spirit.
+"Good night, every one," Hugh continued, coolly, and made his way toward
+the door.
+
+He had nearly reached it when Mildred cried out: "Hugh! Hughie! You're
+not going away like that!"
+
+He retraced his steps to the couch, where he stooped, pressed his
+sister's thin fingers, and kissed her. In doing so he was able to
+whisper:
+
+"Don't worry, Milly dear. Going to be all right. Shall be a man now. See
+you soon again." Having raised himself, he nodded once more. "Good
+night, every one."
+
+Mrs. Rossiter said that he was so much like a young fellow going to his
+execution that she couldn't respond by a word.
+
+Hugh then marched up to his father and held out his hand. "Good night,
+dad. We needn't have any ill-feeling even if we don't agree."
+
+But the Great Dispenser didn't see him. An imposing figure standing with
+his hands behind his back, he kept his fingers clasped. Looking through
+his son as if he was no more than air, he remarked to the company in
+general:
+
+"I don't think I've ever seen Daisy Burke appear better than she did
+to-night. She's usually so badly dressed." He turned with a little
+deferential stoop to where Mrs. Brokenshire--whom Ethel Rossiter
+described as a rigid, exquisite thing staring off into vacancy--sat on a
+small upright chair. "What do you think, darling?"
+
+Hugh could hear the family trying to rally to the hint that had thus
+been given them, and doing their best to discuss the merits and demerits
+of Daisy Burke, as he stood in the big, square hall outside, wondering
+where he should seek shelter.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VI
+
+
+What Hugh did in the end was simple. Finding the footman who was
+accustomed to valet him, he ordered him to bring a supply of linen and
+some suits to a certain hotel early on the following morning. He then
+put on a light overcoat and a cap and left the house.
+
+The first few steps from the door he closed behind him gave him, so he
+told me next day, the strangest feeling he had ever experienced. He was
+consciously venturing forth into life without any of his usual supports.
+What those supports had been he had never realized till then. He had
+always been stayed by some one else's authority and buoyed all round by
+plenty of money. Now he felt, to change the simile as he changed it
+himself, as if he had been thrown out of the nest before having learnt
+to fly. As he walked resolutely down the dark driveway toward Ochre
+Point Avenue he was mentally hovering and balancing and trembling, with
+a tendency to flop. There was no longer a downy bed behind him; no
+longer a parent bill to bring him his daily worm. The outlook which had
+been one thing when he was within that imposing, many-lighted mansion
+became another now that he was turning his back on it permanently and in
+the dark.
+
+This he confessed when he had surprised me by appearing at the breakfast
+loggia, where I was having my coffee with little Gladys Rossiter
+somewhere between half past eight and nine. He was not an early riser,
+except when the tide enticed him to get up at some unusual hour to take
+his dip, and even then he generally went back to bed. To see him coming
+through the shrubbery now, carefully dressed, pallid and grave, half
+told me his news before he had spoken.
+
+Luckily Gladys was too young to follow anything we said, so that after
+having joyfully kissed her uncle Hugh she went on with her bread and
+milk. Hugh took a cup of coffee, sitting sidewise to the table of which
+only one end was spread, while I was at the head. It was the hour of the
+day when we were safest. Mrs. Rossiter never left her room before eleven
+at earliest, and no one else whom we were afraid of was likely to be
+about.
+
+"Well, the fat's all in the fire, little Alix," were the words in which
+he announced his position. "I'm out on my own at last."
+
+I could risk nothing in the way of tenderness, partly because of the
+maid who was coming and going, and partly because that was something
+Gladys would understand. I tried to let him see by my eyes, however, the
+sympathy I felt. I knew he was taking the new turn of events soberly,
+and soberly, with an immense semi-maternal yearning over him, I couldn't
+help taking it myself.
+
+He told his tale quietly, with almost no interruption on my part. I was
+pleased to note that he expressed nothing in the way of recrimination
+toward his father. With the exception of an occasional fling at old Mrs.
+Billing, whom he seemed to regard as a joss or a bottle imp, he was
+temperate, too, in his remarks about everybody else. I liked his
+sporting attitude and told him so.
+
+"Oh, there's nothing sporting in it," he threw off with a kind of
+serious carelessness. "I'm a man; that's all. As I look back over the
+past I seem to have been a doll."
+
+I asked him what were his plans. He said he was going to apply to his
+cousin, Andrew Brew, of Boston, going on to tell me more about the Brews
+than I had ever heard. He was surprised that I knew nothing of the
+important house of Brew, Borrodaile & Co., of Boston, who did such an
+important business with England and Europe in general. I replied that in
+Canada all my connections had been with the law, and with Service people
+in England. I noticed, as I had noticed before in saying things like
+that, that, in common with most American business men, he looked on the
+Army and Navy as inferior occupations. There was no money in either.
+That in itself was sufficient to condemn them in the eyes of a
+gentleman.
+
+I forgot to be nettled, as I sometimes had been, because of finding
+myself so deeply immersed in his interests. Up to that minute, too, I
+had had no idea that he had so much pride of birth. He talked of the
+Brews and the Brokenshires as if they had been Bourbons and
+Hohenzollerns, making me feel a veritable Libby Jaynes never to have
+heard of them. Of the Brews in particular he spoke with reverence. There
+had been Brews in Boston, he said, since the year one. Like all other
+American families, as I came to know later, they were descended from
+three brothers. In Norfolk and Suffolk they had been, so I
+guessed--though Hugh passed the subject over with some vagueness--of
+comparatively humble stock, but under the American flag they had
+acquired money, a quasi-nobility and coats of arms. To hear a man
+boasting, however modestly--and he was modest--of these respectable
+nobodies, who had simply earned money and saved it, made me blush
+inwardly in such a way that I vowed never to mention the Fighting Adares
+again.
+
+I could do this with no diminution of my feeling for poor Hugh. His
+artless glory in a line of ancestry of which the fame had never gone
+beyond the shores of Massachusetts Bay was, after all, a harmless bit of
+vanity. It took nothing away from his kindness, his good intentions, or
+his solid worth. When he asked me how I should care to live in Boston I
+replied that I should like it very much. I had always heard of it as a
+pleasant city of English characteristics and affiliations.
+
+Wherever he was, I told him, I should be at home--if I made up my mind
+to marry him.
+
+"But you have made up your mind, haven't you?" he asked, anxiously.
+
+I was obliged to reply with frankness, "Not quite, Hugh, because--"
+
+"Then what's the use of my getting into this hole, if it isn't to be
+with you?"
+
+"You mean by the hole the being, as you call it, out on your own? But I
+thought you did that to be a Socialist--and a man."
+
+"I've done it because father won't let me marry you any other way."
+
+"Then if that's all, Hugh--"
+
+"But it isn't all," he interrupted, hastily. "I don't say but what if
+father had given us his blessing, and come down with another six
+thousand a year--we could hardly scrub along on less--I'd have taken it
+and been thankful. But now that he hasn't--well, I can see that it's
+all for the best. It's--it's brought me out, as you might say, and
+forced me to a decision."
+
+I harked back to the sentence in which he had broken in on me. "If it
+was all, Hugh, then that would oblige me to make up my mind at once. I
+couldn't be the means of compelling you to break with your family and
+give up a large income."
+
+He cried out impatiently, "Alix, what the dickens is a family and a
+large income to me in comparison with you?"
+
+I must say that his intensity touched me. Tears sprang into my eyes. I
+risked Gladys's presence to say: "Hugh, darling, I love you. I can't
+tell you what your generosity and nobleness mean to me. I hadn't
+imagined that there was a man like you in the world. But if you could be
+in my place--"
+
+He pushed aside his coffee-cup to lean with both arms on the table and
+look me fiercely in the eyes. "If I can't be in your place, Alix, I've
+seen women who were, and who didn't beat so terribly about the bush.
+Look at the way Libby Jaynes married Tracy Allen. She didn't talk about
+his family or his giving up a big income. She trusted him."
+
+"And I trust you; only--" I broke off, to get at him from another point
+of view. "Do you know Libby Jaynes personally?"
+
+He nodded.
+
+"Is she--is she anything like me?"
+
+"No one is like you," he exclaimed, with something that was almost
+bitterness in the tone. "Isn't that what I'm trying to make you see?
+You're the one of your kind in the world. You've got me where a woman
+has never got a man before. I'd give up everything--I'd starve--I'd
+lick dust--but I'd follow you to the ends of the earth, and I'd cling to
+you and keep you." He, too, risked Gladys's presence. "But you're so
+damn cool, Alix--"
+
+"Oh no, I'm not, Hugh, daring," I pleaded on my own behalf. "I may seem
+like that on the outside, because--oh, because I've such a lot to think
+of, and I have to think for us two. That's why I'm asking you if you
+found Libby Jaynes like me."
+
+He looked puzzled. "She's--she's decent." he said, as if not knowing
+what else to say.
+
+"Yes, of course; but I mean--does she strike you as having had my kind
+of ways? Or my kind of antecedents?"
+
+"Oh, antecedents! Why talk about them?"
+
+"It's what you've been doing, isn't it, for the past half-hour?"
+
+"Oh, mine, yes; because I want you to see that I've got a big asset in
+Cousin Andrew Brew. I know he'll do anything for me, and if you'll trust
+me, Alix--"
+
+"I do trust you, Hugh, and as soon as you have anything like what would
+make you independent, and justified in braving your family's
+disapproval--"
+
+He took an apologetic tone. "I said just now that we couldn't scrape
+along on less than twelve thousand a year--"
+
+To me the sum seemed ridiculously enormous. "Oh, I'm sure we could."
+
+"Well, that's what I've been thinking," he said, wistfully. "That figure
+was based on having the Brokenshire position to keep up. But if we were
+to live in Boston, where less would be expected of us, we could manage,
+I should think, on ten."
+
+Even that struck me as too much. "On five, Hugh," I declared, with
+confidence. "I know I could manage on five, and have everything we
+needed."
+
+He smiled at my eagerness. "Oh, well, darling, I sha'n't ask you to come
+down to that. Ten will be the least."
+
+To me this was riches. I saw the vision of the dainty dining-room again,
+and the nursery with the bassinet; but I saw Hugh also in the
+background, a little shadowy, perhaps, a little like a dream as an
+artist embodies it in a picture, and yet unmistakably himself. I spoke
+reservedly, however, far more reservedly than I felt, because I hadn't
+yet made my point quite clear to him.
+
+"I'm sure we could be comfortable on that. When you get it--"
+
+I hadn't realized that this was the detail as to which he was most
+sensitive.
+
+"There you go again! When I get it! Do you think I sha'n't get it?"
+
+I felt my eyebrows going up in surprise. "Why, no, Hugh, dear. I suppose
+you know what you can get and what you can't. I was only going to say
+that when you do get it I shall feel as if you were free to give
+yourself away, and that I shouldn't have"--I tried to smile at him--"and
+that I shouldn't have the air of--of stealing you from your family.
+Can't you see, dear? You keep quoting Libby Jaynes at me; but in my
+opinion she did steal Tracy Allen. That the Allens have made the best of
+it has nothing to do with the original theft."
+
+"Theft is a big word."
+
+"Not bigger than the thing. For Libby Jaynes it was possibly all right.
+I'm not condemning her. But it wouldn't be all right for me."
+
+"Why not? What's the difference?"
+
+"I can't explain it to you, Hugh, if you don't see it already. It's a
+difference of tradition."
+
+"But what's difference of tradition got to do with love? Since you admit
+that you love me, and I certainly love you--"
+
+"Yes, I admit that I love you, but love is not the only thing in the
+world."
+
+"It's the biggest thing in the world."
+
+"Possibly; and yet it isn't necessarily the surest guide in conduct.
+There's honor, for instance. If one had to take love without honor, or
+honor without love, surely one would choose the latter."
+
+"And what would you call love without honor in this case?"
+
+I reflected. "I'd call it doing this thing--getting engaged or married,
+whichever you like--just because we have the physical power to do it,
+and making the family, especially the father, to whom you're indebted
+for everything you are, unhappy."
+
+"He doesn't mind making you and me unhappy."
+
+"But that's his responsibility. We haven't got to do what's right for
+him; we've only got to do what's right for ourselves." I fell back on my
+maxim, "If we do right, only right will come of it, whatever the wrong
+it seems to threaten now."
+
+"But if I made ten thousand a year of my own--"
+
+"I should consider you free. I should feel free myself. I should feel
+free on less than so big an income."
+
+His spirits began to return.
+
+"I don't call that big. We should have to pinch like the devil to keep
+our heads above water--no motor--no butler--"
+
+"I've never had either," I smiled at him, "nor a lot of the things that
+go with them. Not having them might be privations to you--"
+
+"Not when you were there, little Alix. You can bet your sweet life on
+that."
+
+We laughed together over the expression, and as Broke came bounding out
+to his breakfast, with the cry, "Hello, Uncle Hughie!" we lapsed into
+that language of signs and nods and cryptic things which we mutually
+understood to elude his sharp young wits. By this method of _double
+entendre_ Hugh gave me to understand his intention of going to Boston by
+an afternoon train. He thought it possible he might stay there. The
+friendliness of Cousin Andrew Brew would probably detain him till he
+should go to work, which was likely to be in a day or two. Even if he
+had to wait a week he would prefer to do so at Boston, where he had not
+only ties of blood, but acquaintances and interests dating back to his
+Harvard days, which had ended three years before.
+
+In the mean time, my position might prove to be precarious. He
+recognized that, making it an excuse for once more forcing on me his
+immediate protection. Marriage was not named by word on Broke's account,
+but I understood that if I chose we could be marred within an hour or
+two, go to Boston together, and begin our common life without further
+delays.
+
+My answer to this being what it had been before, we discussed, over the
+children's heads, the chances that could befall me before night. Of
+these the one most threatening was that I might be sent away in
+disgrace. If sent away in disgrace I should have to go on the instant. I
+might be paid for a month or two ahead; it was probable I should be. It
+was J. Howard's policy to deal with his cashiered employees with that
+kind of liberality, so as to put himself more in the right. But I
+should have to go with scarcely the time to pack my boxes, as Hugh had
+gone himself, and must know of a place where I could take shelter.
+
+I didn't know of any such refuge. My sojourn under Mrs. Rossiter's roof
+had been remarkably free from contacts or curiosities of my own. Hugh
+knew no more than I. I could, therefore, only ask his consent to my
+consulting Mr. Strangways, a proposal to which he agreed. This I was
+able to do when Larry came for Broke, not many minutes after Hugh had
+taken his departure.
+
+I could talk to him the more freely because of his knowledge of my
+relation to Hugh. With the fact that I was in love with another man kept
+well in the foreground between us, he could acquit me of those ulterior
+designs on himself the suspicion of which is so disturbing to a woman's
+friendship with a man. As the maid was clearing the table, as Broke had
+to go to his lessons, as Gladys had to be remanded to the nursery while
+I attended to Mrs. Rossiter's telephone calls and correspondence, our
+talk was squeezed in during the seconds in which we retreated through
+the dining-room into the main part of the house.
+
+"The long and short of it is," Larry Strangways summed up, when I had
+confided to him my fears of being sent about my business as soon as Hugh
+had left for Boston--"the long and the short of it is that I shall have
+to look you up another job."
+
+It is almost absurd to point out that the idea was new to me. In going
+to Mrs. Rossiter I had never thought of starting out on a career of
+earning a living professionally, as you might say. I clung to the
+conception of myself as a lady, with all sorts of possibilities in the
+way of genteel interventions of Providence coming in between me and a
+lifetime of work. I had always supposed that if I left Mrs. Rossiter I
+should go back to my uncle and aunt at Halifax. After all, if Hugh was
+going to marry me, it would be no more than correct that he should do it
+from under their wing. Larry Strangways's suggestions of another job
+threw open a vista of places I should fill in the future little short of
+appalling to a woman instinctively looking for a man to come and support
+her.
+
+I shelved these considerations, however, to say, as casually as I could:
+"Why should you do it? Why shouldn't I look out for myself?"
+
+"Because when I've gone to Stacy Grainger it may be right in my line."
+
+"But I'd rather you didn't have me on your mind."
+
+He laughed--uneasily, as it seemed to me. "Perhaps it's too late for
+that."
+
+It was another of the things I was sorry to hear him say. I could only
+reply, still on the forced casual note: "But it's not too late for me to
+look after my own affairs. What I'm chiefly concerned with is that if I
+have to leave here--to-night, let us say--I sha'n't in the least know
+where to go."
+
+He was ready for me in the event of this contingency. I suspected that
+he had already considered it. He had a married sister in New York, a
+Mrs. Applegate, a woman of philanthropic interests, a director on the
+board of a Home for Working-Girls. Again I shied at the word. He must
+have seen that I did, for he went on, with a smile in which I detected a
+gleam of mockery:
+
+"You are a working-girl, aren't you?"
+
+I answered with the kind of humility I can only describe as spirited,
+and which was meant to take the wind out of his sails:
+
+"I suppose so--as long as I'm working." But I gave him a flying upward
+glance as I asked the imprudent question, "Is that how you've thought of
+me?"
+
+I was sorry to have said it as soon as the words were out. I didn't want
+to know what he thought of me. It was something with which I was so
+little concerned that I colored with embarrassment at having betrayed so
+much futile curiosity. Apparently he saw that, too, hastening to come to
+my relief.
+
+"I've thought of you," he laughed, when we had reached the main
+stairway, "as a clever little woman, with a special set of aptitudes,
+who ought to be earning more money than she's probably getting here; and
+when I'm with Stacy Grainger--"
+
+Grateful for this turning of the current into the business-like and
+commonplace, I called Gladys, who was lagging in the dining-room with
+Broke, and went on my way up-stairs.
+
+Mrs. Rossiter was sitting up in bed, her breakfast before her on a light
+wicker tray that stood on legs. It was an abstemious breakfast,
+carefully selected from foods containing most nutrition with least
+adipose deposit. She had reached the age, within sight of the thirties,
+when her figure was becoming a matter for consideration. It was almost
+the only personal detail as to which she had as yet any cause for
+anxiety. Her complexion was as bright as at eighteen; her brown hair,
+which now hung in a loose, heavy coil over her left shoulder, was thick
+and silky and long; her eyes were clear, her lips ruby. I always noticed
+that she waked with the sleepy softness of a flower uncurling to the
+sun. In the great walnut bed, of which the curves were gilded _à la_
+Louis Quinze, she made me think of that Jeanne Bécu who became Comtesse
+du Barry, in the days of her indolence and luxury.
+
+Having no idea as to how she would receive me, I was not surprised that
+it should be as usual. Since I had entered her employ she was never what
+I should call gracious, but she was always easy and familiar. Sometimes
+she was petulant; often she was depressed; but beyond a belief that she
+inspired tumultuous passions in young men there was no pose about her
+nor any haughtiness. I was not afraid of her, therefore; I was only
+uneasy as to the degree in which she would let herself be used against
+me as a tool.
+
+"The letters are here on the bed," was her response to my greeting,
+which I was careful to make in the form in which I made it every day.
+
+Taking the small arm-chair at the bedside, I sorted the pile. The notes
+she had not glanced at for herself I read aloud, penciling on the
+margins the data for the answers. Some I replied to by telephone, which
+stood within her reach on the _table de nuit_; for a few I sat down at
+the desk and wrote. I was doing the latter, and had just scribbled the
+words "Mrs. James Worthington Rossiter will have much pleasure in
+accepting--" when she said, in a slightly querulous tone:
+
+"I should think you'd do something about Hugh--the way he goes on."
+
+I continued to write as I asked, "How does he go on?"
+
+"Like an idiot."
+
+"Has he been doing anything new?"
+
+My object being to get a second version of the story Hugh had told me, I
+succeeded. Mrs. Rossiter's facts were practically the same as her
+brother's, only viewed from a different angle. As she presented the case
+Hugh had been merely preposterous, dashing his head against a stone
+wall, with nothing he could gain by the exercise.
+
+"The idea of his saying he'll not go to the Goldboroughs for the
+twelfth! Of course he'll go. Since father means him to do it, he will."
+
+I was addressing an envelope, and went on with my task. "But I thought
+you said he'd left home?"
+
+"Oh, well, he'll come back."
+
+"But suppose he doesn't? Suppose he goes to work?"
+
+"Pff! The idea! He won't keep that up long."
+
+I was glad to be sitting with my back to her. To disguise the quaver in
+my voice I licked the flap of the envelope as I said:
+
+"But he'll have to if he means to support a wife."
+
+"Support a wife? What nonsense! Father means him to marry Cissie
+Boscobel, as I've told you already--and he'll fix them up with a good
+income."
+
+"But apparently Hugh doesn't see things that way. He's told me--"
+
+"Oh, he'd tell you anything."
+
+"He's told me," I persisted, boldly, "that he--he loves me; and he's
+made me say that--that I love him."
+
+"And that's where you're so foolish, dear Miss Adare. You let him take
+you in. It isn't that he's not sincere; I don't say that for a minute.
+But people can't go about marrying every one they love, now can they? I
+should think you'd have seen that--with the heaps of men you had there
+at Halifax--hardly room to step over them."
+
+I said, slyly, "I never saw them that way."
+
+"Oh, well, I did. And by the way, I wonder what's become of that Captain
+Venables. He was a case! He could take more liberties in a
+half-hour--don't you think?"
+
+"He never took any liberties with me."
+
+"Then that must have been your fault. Talk about Mr. Millinger! Our men
+aren't in it with yours--not when it comes to the real thing."
+
+I got back to the subject in which I was most interested by saying, as I
+spread another note before me:
+
+"It seems to be the real thing with Hugh."
+
+"Oh, I dare say it is. It was the real thing with Jack. I don't
+say"--her voice took on a tender tremolo--"I don't say that it wasn't
+the real thing with me. But that didn't make any difference to father.
+It was the real thing with Pauline Gray--when she was down there at
+Baltimore; but when father picked her out for Jack, because of her money
+and his relations with old Mr. Gray--"
+
+I couldn't help half turning round, to cry out in tones of which I was
+unable to conceal the exasperation: "But I don't see how you can all let
+yourselves be hooked by the nose like that--not even by Mr.
+Brokenshire!"
+
+Her fatalistic resignation gave me a sense of helplessness.
+
+"Oh, well, you will before father has done with you--if Hugh goes on
+this way. Father's only playing with you so far."
+
+"He can't touch me," I declared, indignantly.
+
+"But he can touch Hugh. That's all he needs to know, as far as you're
+concerned." She asked, in another tone, "What are you answering now?"
+
+I told her it was the invitation to Mrs. Allen's dance.
+
+"Then tear it up and say I can't go. Say I've a previous engagement. I'd
+forgotten that they had that odious Mrs. Tracy Allen there."
+
+I tore up the sheet slowly, throwing the fragments into the waste-paper
+basket.
+
+"Why is she odious?"
+
+"Because she is." She dropped for a second into the tone of the early
+friendly days in Halifax. "My dear, she was a shop-girl--or worse. I've
+forgotten what she was, but it was awful, and I don't mean to meet her."
+
+I began to write the refusal.
+
+"She goes about with very good people, doesn't she?"
+
+"She doesn't go about with me, nor with some others I know, I can tell
+you that. If she did it would queer us."
+
+In the hope of drawing out some such repudiation as that which I felt
+myself, I said, dryly: "Hugh tells me that if I married him I could be
+as good as she is--by this time next year."
+
+I got nothing for my pains.
+
+"That wouldn't help you much--not among the people who count."
+
+There was white anger underneath my meekness.
+
+"But perhaps I could get along with the people who don't count."
+
+"Yes, you might--but Hugh wouldn't."
+
+She dismissed the subject as one in which she took only a secondary
+interest to say that old Mrs. Billing was coming to lunch, and that
+Gladys and I should have to take that repast up-stairs. She was never
+direct in her denunciations of her father's second marriage. She brought
+them in by reference and innuendo, like a prisoner who keeps in mind the
+fact that walls have ears. She gave me to understand, however, that she
+considered Mrs. Billing a witch out of "Macbeth" or a wicked old
+vulture--I could take my choice of comparisons--and she hated having her
+in the house. She wouldn't do it only that, in ways she could hardly
+understand, Mrs. Billing was the power behind the throne. She didn't
+loathe her stepmother, she said in effect, so much as she loathed her
+father's attitude toward her. I have never forgotten the words she used
+in this connection, dropping her voice and glancing about her, afraid
+she might be overheard. "It's as if God himself had become the slave of
+some silly human woman just because she had a pretty face." The sentence
+not only betrayed the Brokenshire attitude of mind toward J. Howard, but
+sent a chill down my back.
+
+Having finished my notes and addressed them I rose to return to Gladys;
+but there was still an unanswered question in my mind. I asked it,
+standing for a minute beside the bed:
+
+"Then you don't want me to go away?"
+
+She arched her lovely eyebrows. "Go away? What for?"
+
+"Because of the danger of my marrying Hugh."
+
+She gave a little laugh. "Oh, there's no danger of that."
+
+"But there is," I insisted. "He's asked me a number of times to go with
+him to the nearest clergyman, and settle the question once for all."
+
+"Only you don't do it. There you are! What father doesn't want doesn't
+happen; and what he does want does. That's all there is to be said."
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VII
+
+
+As a matter of fact, that was all Mrs. Rossiter and I did say. I was so
+relieved at not being thrown out of house and home on the instant that I
+went back to Gladys and her lisping in French almost cheerily. You will
+think me pusillanimous--and I was. I didn't want to go to Mrs. Applegate
+and the Home for Working-Girls. As far as food and shelter were
+concerned I liked them well enough where I was. I liked Mrs. Rossiter
+too. I should be sorry to give the impression that she was supercilious
+or unkind. She was neither the one nor the other. If she betrayed little
+sentiment or sympathy toward me, it was because of admitting me into
+that feminine freemasonry in which the emotional is not called for. I
+might suffer while she remained indifferent; I might be killed on the
+spot while she wouldn't shed a tear; and yet there was a heartless,
+good-natured, live-and-let-live detachment about her which left me with
+nothing but good-will.
+
+Then, too, I knew that when I married Hugh she would do nothing of her
+own free will against me. She would not brave her father's decree, but
+she wouldn't be intolerant; she might think Hugh had been a fool, but
+when she could do so surreptitiously she would invite him and me to
+dinner.
+
+As this was a kind of recognition in advance, I could not be otherwise
+than grateful.
+
+It made waiting for Hugh the easier. I calculated that if he entered
+into some sort of partnership with his cousin Andrew Brew--I didn't in
+the least know what--we might be married within a month or two. At
+furthest it might be about the time when Mrs. Rossiter removed to New
+York, which would make it October or November. I could then slip quietly
+back to Halifax, be quietly married, and quietly settle with Hugh in
+Boston. In the mean time I was glad not to be disturbed.
+
+I spent, therefore, a pleasant morning with my pupil, and ate a pleasant
+lunch, watching from the gable window of the school-room the great
+people assemble in the breakfast loggia in honor of the Marquise de
+Pompadour's mother. I am not sure that old Madame Poisson ever went to
+court; but if she did I know the courtiers must have shown her just such
+deference as that which Mrs. Rossiter's guests exhibited to this
+withered old lady with the hooked nose and the lorgnette.
+
+I was curious about the whole entertainment. It was not the only one of
+the kind I had seen from a distance since coming to Mrs. Rossiter, and I
+couldn't help comparisons with the same kind of thing as done in the
+ways with which I was familiar. Here it was less a luncheon than it was
+an exquisite thing on the stage, rehearsed to the last point. In
+England, in Canada, luncheon would be something of a friendly haphazard,
+primarily for the sake of getting food, secondly as a means to a
+scrambling, jolly sort of social intercourse, and hardly at all a
+ceremonial. Here the ceremonial came first. Hostess and guests seemed
+alike to be taking part in a rite of seeing and being seen. The food,
+which was probably excellent, was a matter of slight importance. The
+social intercourse amounted to nothing, since they all knew one another
+but too well, and had no urgent vitality of interests in any case. The
+rite was the thing. Every detail was prepared for that. Silver,
+porcelain, flowers, doilies, were of the most expensive and the most
+correct. The guests were dressed to perfection--a little too well,
+according to the English standard, but not too well for a function. As a
+function it was beautiful, an occasion of privilege, a proof of
+attainment. It was the best thing of its kind America could show. Those
+who had money could alone present the passport that would give the right
+of admission.
+
+If I had a criticism to make, it was that the guests were too much
+alike. They were all business men, and the wives or widows of business
+men. The two or three who did nothing but live on inherited incomes were
+business men in heart and in blood. Granted that in the New World the
+business man must be dominant, it was possible to have too much of him.
+Having too much of him lowered the standard of interest, narrowed the
+circle of taste. In the countries I knew the business man might be
+present at such a festivity, but there would be something to give him
+color, to throw him into relief. There would be a touch of the creative
+or the intellectual, of the spiritual or the picturesque. The company
+wouldn't be all of a gilded drab. There would be a writer or a painter
+or a politician or an actor or a soldier or a priest. There would be
+something that wasn't money before it was anything else. Here there was
+nothing. Birds of a feather were flocking together, and they were all
+parrots or parrakeets. They had plumage, but no song. They drove out the
+thrushes and the larks and the wild swans. Their shrill screeches and
+hoarse shouts came up in a not wholly pleasant babel to the open window
+where I sat looking down and Gladys hovered and hopped, wondering if
+Thomas, the rosy-cheeked footman, would remember to bring us some of the
+left-over ice-cream.
+
+I thought it was a pity. With elements as good as could be found
+anywhere to form a Society--that fusion of all varieties of achievement
+to which alone the word written with a capital can be applied--there was
+no one to form it. It was a woman's business; and for the rôle of
+hostess in the big sense the American woman, as far as I could judge,
+had little or no aptitude. She was too timid, too distrustful of
+herself, too much afraid of doing the wrong thing or of knowing the
+wrong people. She was so little sure of her standing that, as Mrs.
+Rossiter expressed it, she could be "queered" by shaking hands with
+Libby Jaynes. She lacked authority. She could stand out in a throng by
+her dress or her grace, but she couldn't lead or combine or co-ordinate.
+She could lend a charming hand where some one else was the Lady Holland
+or the Madame de Staël, but she couldn't take the seemingly
+heterogeneous types represented by the writer, the painter, the
+politician, the actor, the soldier, the priest, and the business man and
+weld them into the delightful, promiscuous, entertaining whole to be
+found, in its greater or lesser degree, according to size or importance
+of place, almost anywhere within the borders of the British Empire. I
+came to the conclusion that this was why there were few "great houses"
+in America and fewer women of importance.
+
+It was why, too, the guests were subordinated to the ceremonial. It
+couldn't be any other way. With flint and steel you can get a spark; but
+where you have nothing but flint or nothing but steel, friction produces
+no light. The American hostess, in so far as she exists, rarely hopes
+for anything from the clash of minds, and therefore centers her
+attention on her doilies. It must be admitted that she has the most
+tasteful doilies in the world. There is a pathos in the way in which,
+for want of the courage to get interesting human specimens together, she
+spends her strength on the details of her rite. It is like the instinct
+of women who in default of babies lavish their passion on little dogs.
+One can say that it is _faute de mieux_. _Faute de mieux_ was, I am
+sure, the reason why Ethel Rossiter took her table appointments with
+what seemed to me such extraordinary seriousness. When all was said and
+done it was the only real thing to care about.
+
+I repeat that I thought it was a pity. I had dreams, as I looked down,
+of what I could do with the same use of money, the same position of
+command. I had dreams that the Brokenshires accepted me, that Hugh came
+into the means that would be his in the ordinary course. I saw myself
+standing at the head of the stairway of a fine big house in Washington
+or New York. People were streaming upward, and I was shaking hands with
+a delightful, smiling _désinvolture_. I saw men and women of all the
+ranks and orders of conspicuous accomplishment, each contributing a
+gift--some nothing but beauty, some nothing but wit, some nothing but
+money, some nothing but position, some nothing but fame, some nothing
+but national importance. The Brokenshire clan was there, and the
+Billings and the Grays and the Burkes; but statesmen and diplomatists,
+too, were there, and those leaders in the world of the pen and the brush
+and the buskin of whom, oddly enough, I saw Larry Strangways, with his
+eternal defensive smile, emerging from the crowd as chief. I was wearing
+diamonds, black velvet, and a train, waving in my disengaged hand a
+spangled fan.
+
+From these visions I was roused by Gladys, who came prancing from the
+stair-head.
+
+"_V'là, Mademoiselle! V'là Thomas et le ice-cream!_"
+
+Having consumed this dainty, we watched the company wander about the
+terraces and lawns and finally drift away. I was getting Gladys ready
+for her walk when Thomas, with a pitying expression on his boyish face,
+came back to say that Mr. Brokenshire would like to speak with me
+down-stairs.
+
+I was never so near fainting in my life. I had barely the strength to
+gasp, "Very well, Thomas, I'll come," and to send Gladys to her nurse.
+Thomas watched me with his good, kind, sympathetic eyes. Like the other
+servants, he must have known something of my secret and was on my side.
+I called him the _bouton de rose_, partly because his clean, pink cheeks
+suggested a Killarney breaking into flower, and partly because in his
+waiting on Gladys and me he had the yearning, care-taking air of a
+fatherly little boy. Just now he could only march down the passage ahead
+of me, throw open the door of my bedroom as if he was lord chamberlain
+to a queen, and give me a look which seemed to say, "If I can be your
+liege knight against this giant, pray, dear lady, command me." I threw
+him my thanks in a trumped-up smile, which he returned with such sweet
+encouragement as to nearly unman me.
+
+I stayed in my room only long enough to be sure that I was neat,
+smoothing my hair and picking one or two threads from my white-linen
+suit. The suit had scarlet cuffs and a scarlet belt, and as there was a
+scarlet flush beneath my summer tan, like the color under the glaze of a
+Chinese jar, I could see for myself that my appearance was not
+ineffective.
+
+The _bouton de rose_ was in waiting at the foot of the stairs as I came
+down. Through the hall and the dining-room he ushered me royally; but as
+I came out on the breakfast loggia my royalty stopped with what I can
+only describe as a bump.
+
+The guests had gone, but the family remained. The last phase of the
+details of the rite were also on the table. All the doilies were there,
+and the magnificent lace centerpiece which Mrs. Rossiter had at various
+times called on me to admire. The old Spode dessert service was the more
+dimly, anciently brilliant because of the old polished oak, and so were
+the glasses and finger-bowls picked out in gold.
+
+Mr. Brokenshire, whom I had seen from my window strolling with some
+ladies on the lawn, had returned to the foot of the table, opposite to
+the door by which I came out, where he now sat in a careless, sidewise
+attitude, fingering his cigar. Old Mrs. Billing, who was beside him on
+his right, put up her lorgnette immediately I appeared in the entrance.
+Mrs. Rossiter had dropped into a chance chair half-way down the table on
+the left; but Mrs. Brokenshire, oddly enough, was in that same seat in
+the far corner to which she had retreated on the occasion of my
+summoning ten days before. I wondered whether this was by intention or
+by chance, though I was presently to know.
+
+Terrified though I was, I felt salvation to lie in keeping a certain
+dignity. I made, therefore, something between a bow and a courtesy,
+first to Mr. Brokenshire, then to Mrs. Billing, then to Mrs. Rossiter,
+and lastly to Mrs. Brokenshire, to whom I raised my eyes and looked all
+the way diagonally across the loggia. I took my time in making these
+four distinct salutations, though in response I was only stared at.
+After that there was a space of some seconds in which I merely stood, in
+my pose of _Ecce Femina_!
+
+"Sit down!"
+
+The command came, of course, from J. Howard. The chair to which I had
+once before been banished being still in its corner, I slipped into it.
+
+"I wished to speak to you, Miss--a--Miss--"
+
+He glanced helplessly toward his daughter, who supplied the name.
+
+"Ah yes. I wished to speak to you, Miss Adare, because my son has been
+acting very foolishly."
+
+I made my tone as meek as I could, scarcely daring to lift my eyes from
+the floor. "Wouldn't it be well, sir, to talk to him about that?"
+
+Mrs. Billing's lorgnette came down. She glanced toward her son-in-law as
+though finding the point well taken.
+
+He went on imperturbably. "I've said all I mean to say to him. My
+present appeal is to you."
+
+"Oh, then this is an--appeal?"
+
+He seemed to hesitate, to reflect. "If you choose to take it so," he
+admitted, stiffly.
+
+"It surely isn't as I choose to take it, sir; it's as you choose to
+mean."
+
+"Don't bandy words."
+
+"But I must use words, sir. I only want to be sure that you're making an
+appeal to me, and not giving me commands."
+
+He spoke sharply. "I wish you to understand that you're inducing a young
+man to act in a way he is going to find contrary to his interests."
+
+I could barely nerve myself to look up at him. "If by the 'young man'
+you mean Mr. Hugh Brokenshire, then I'm inducing him to do nothing
+whatever; unless," I added, "you call it an inducement that I--I"--I was
+bound to force the word out--"unless you call it an inducement that I
+love him."
+
+"But that's it," Mrs. Rossiter broke in. "That's what my father means.
+If you'd stop caring anything about him you wouldn't give him
+encouragement."
+
+I looked at her with a dim, apologetic smile. It was a time, I felt, to
+speak not only with more courage, but with more sentiment than I was
+accustomed to use in expressing myself.
+
+"I'm afraid I can't give my heart, and take it back, like that."
+
+"I can," she returned, readily. She spoke as if it was a matter of
+cracking her knuckles or wagging her ears. "If I don't want to like a
+person I don't do it. It's training and self-command."
+
+"You're fortunate," I said, quietly. Why I should have glanced again at
+Mrs. Brokenshire I hardly know; but I did so, as I added: "I've had no
+training of that kind--and I doubt if many women have."
+
+Mrs. Brokenshire, who was gazing at me with the same kind of fascinated
+stare as on the former occasion, faintly, but quite perceptibly,
+inclined her head. In this movement I was sure I had the key to the
+mystery that seemed to surround her.
+
+"All this," J. Howard declared, magisterially, "is beside the point. If
+you've told my son that you'd marry him--"
+
+"I haven't."
+
+"Or even given him to understand that you would--"
+
+"I've only given him to understand that I'd marry him--on conditions."
+
+"Indeed? And would it be discreet on my part to inquire the terms you've
+been kind enough to lay down?"
+
+I pulled myself together and spoke firmly. "The first is that I'll marry
+him--if his family come to me and express a wish to have me as a sister
+and a daughter."
+
+Old Mrs. Billing emitted the queer, cracked cackle of a hen when it
+crows, but she put up her lorgnette and examined me more closely. Ethel
+Rossiter gasped audibly, moving her chair a little farther round in my
+direction. Mrs. Brokenshire stared with concentrated intensity, but
+somehow, I didn't know why, I felt that she was backing me up.
+
+The great man contented himself with saying, "Oh, you will!"
+
+I ignored the tone to speak with a decision and a spirit I was far from
+feeling.
+
+"Yes, sir, I will. I shall not steal him from you--not so long as he's
+dependent."
+
+"That's very kind. And may I ask--"
+
+"You haven't let me tell you my other condition."
+
+"True. Go on."
+
+I panted the words out as best I could. "I've told him I'd marry him--if
+he rendered himself independent; if he earned his own money and became a
+man."
+
+"Ah! And you expect one or the other of these miracles to take place?"
+
+"I expect both."
+
+Though the words uttered themselves, without calculation or expectation
+on my part, they gave me so much of the courage of conviction that I
+held up my head. To my surprise Mrs. Billing didn't crow again or so
+much as laugh. She only gasped out that long "Ha-a!" which proclaims
+the sporting interest, of which both Hugh and Ethel Rossiter had told me
+in the morning.
+
+Mr. Brokenshire seemed to brace himself, leaning forward, with his elbow
+on the table and his cigar between the fingers of his raised right hand.
+His eyes were bent on me--fine eyes they were!--as if in kindly
+amusement.
+
+"My good girl," he said, in his most pitying voice, "I wish I could tell
+you how sorry for you I am. Neither of these dreams can possibly come
+true--"
+
+My blood being up, I interrupted with some force. "Then in that case,
+Mr. Brokenshire, you can be quite easy in your mind, for I should never
+marry your son." Having made this statement, I followed it up by saying,
+"Since that is understood, I presume there's no object in my staying any
+longer." I was half rising when his hand went up.
+
+"Wait. We'll tell you when to go. You haven't yet got my point. Perhaps
+I haven't made it clear. I'm not interested in your hopes--"
+
+"No, sir; of course not; nor I in yours."
+
+"I haven't inquired as to that--but we'll let it pass. We're both
+apparently interested in my son."
+
+I gave a little bow of assent.
+
+"I said I wished to make an appeal to you."
+
+I made another little bow of assent.
+
+"It's on his behalf. You could do him a great kindness. You could make
+him understand--I gather that he's under your influence to some degree;
+you're a clever girl, I can see that--but you could make him understand
+that in fancying he'll marry you he's starting out on a task in which
+there's no hope whatever."
+
+"But there is."
+
+"Pardon me, there isn't. By your own showing there isn't. You've laid
+down conditions that will never be fulfilled."
+
+"What makes you say that?"
+
+"My knowledge of the world."
+
+"Oh, but would you call that knowledge of the world?" I was swept along
+by the force of an inner indignation which had become reckless.
+"Knowledge of the world," I hurried on, "implies knowledge of the human
+heart, and you've none of that at all." I could see him flush.
+
+"My good girl, we're here to speak of you, not of me--"
+
+"Surely we're here to speak of us both, since at any minute I choose I
+can marry your son. If I don't marry him it's because I don't choose;
+but when I do choose--"
+
+Again the hand went up. "Yes, of course; but that's not what we want
+specially to hear. Let us assume, as you say, that you can marry my son
+at any time you choose. You don't choose, for the reason that you're
+astute enough to see that your last state would be worse than the first.
+To enter a family that would disown you at once--"
+
+I kept down my tone, though I couldn't master my excitement. "That's not
+my reason. If I don't marry him it's precisely because I have the power.
+There are people--cowards they are at heart, as a rule--who because they
+have the power use it to be insolent, especially to those who are
+weaker. I'm not one of those. There's a _noblesse oblige_ that compels
+one in spite of everything. In dealing with an elderly man, who I
+suppose loves his son, and with a lady who's been so kind to me as Mrs.
+Rossiter--"
+
+"You've been hired, and you're paid. There's no special call for
+gratitude."
+
+"Gratitude is in the person who feels it; but that isn't what I
+specially want to say."
+
+"What you specially want to say apparently is--"
+
+"That I'm not afraid of you, sir; I'm not afraid of your family or your
+money or your position or anything or any one you can control. If I
+don't marry Hugh, it's for the reason that I've given, and for no other.
+As long as he's dependent on your money I shall not marry him till you
+come and beg me to do it--and that I shall expect of you."
+
+He smiled tolerantly. "That is, till you've brought us to our knees."
+
+I could barely pipe, but I stood to my guns. "If you like the
+expression, sir--yes. I shall not marry Hugh--so long as you support
+him--till I've brought you to your knees."
+
+If I expected the heavens to fall at this I was disappointed. All J.
+Howard did was to lean on his arm toward Mrs. Billing and talk to her
+privately. Mrs. Rossiter got up and went to her father, entering also
+into a whispered colloquy. Once or twice he glanced backward to his
+wife, but she was now gazing sidewise in the direction of the house and
+over the lines of flowers that edged the terraces.
+
+When Mrs. Rossiter had gone back to her seat, and J. Howard had raised
+himself from his conversation with Mrs. Billing, he began again to
+address me tranquilly:
+
+"I hoped you might have sympathized with my hopes for Hugh, and have
+helped to convince him how useless his plans for a marriage between him
+and you must be."
+
+I answered with decision: "No; I can't do that."
+
+"I should have appreciated it--"
+
+"That I can quite understand."
+
+"And some day have shown you that I'm acting for your good."
+
+"Oh, sir," I cried, "whatever else you do, you'll let my good be my own
+affair, will you not?"
+
+I thought I heard Mrs. Billing say, "Brava!" At any rate, she tapped her
+fingers together as if in applause. I began to feel a more lenient
+spirit toward her.
+
+"I'm quite willing to do that," my opponent said, in a moderate,
+long-suffering tone, "now that I see that you refuse to take Hugh's good
+into consideration. So long as you encourage him in his present
+madness--"
+
+"I'm not doing that."
+
+He took no notice of the interruption. "--I'm obliged to regard him as
+nothing to me."
+
+"That must be between you and your son."
+
+"It is. I'm only asking you to note that you--ruin him."
+
+"No, no," I began to protest, but he silenced me with a movement of his
+hand.
+
+"I'm not a hard man naturally," he went on, in his tranquil voice, "but
+I have to be obeyed."
+
+"Why?" I demanded. "Why should you be obeyed more than any one else?"
+
+"Because I mean to be. That must be enough--"
+
+"But it isn't," I insisted. "I've no intention of obeying you--"
+
+He broke in with some haste: "Oh, there's no question of you, my dear
+young lady. I've nothing to do with you. I'm speaking of my son. He must
+obey me, or take the consequences. And the consequences will last as
+long as he lives. I'm not one to speak rashly, or to speak twice. So
+that's what I'm putting to you. Do you think--do you honestly
+think--that you're improving your position by ruining a man who sooner
+or later--sooner rather than later--will lay his ruin at your door and
+loathe you? Come now! You're a clever girl. The case is by no means
+beyond you. Think, and think straight."
+
+"I am thinking, sir. I'm thinking so straight that I see right through
+you. My father used to say--"
+
+"No reminiscence, please."
+
+"Very well, then; we'll let the reminiscence go. But you're thinking of
+committing a crime, a crime against Hugh, a crime against yourself, a
+crime against love, every kind of love--and that's the worst crime of
+all--and you haven't the moral courage to shoulder the guilt yourself;
+you're trying to shuffle it off on me."
+
+"My good woman--"
+
+But nothing could silence me now. I leaned forward, with hands clasped
+in my lap, and merely looked at him. My voice was low, but I spoke
+rapidly:
+
+"You're talking to bewilder me, to throw dust in my eyes, to snare me
+into taking the blame for what you're doing of your own free act. It's a
+kind of reasoning which some girls would be caught by, but I'm not one
+of them. If Hugh is ruined in the sense you mean, it's his father who
+will ruin him--but even that is not the worst. What's worst, what's
+dastardly, what's not merely unworthy of a man like you but unworthy of
+any man--of anything that calls itself a male--is that you, with all
+your resources of every kind, should try to foist your responsibilities
+off on a woman who has no resources whatever. That I shouldn't have
+believed of any of your sex--if it hadn't happened to myself."
+
+But my eloquence left him as unmoved as before. He whispered with Mrs.
+Billing. The old lady was animated, making beats and lunges with her
+lorgnette.
+
+"So that what it comes to," he said to me at last, lifting himself up
+and speaking in a tired voice, "is that you really mean to pit yourself
+against me."
+
+"No, sir; but that you mean to pit yourself against me." Something
+compelled me to add: "And I can tell you now that you'll be beaten in
+the end."
+
+Perhaps he didn't hear me, for he rose and, stooping, carried on his
+discussion with Mrs. Billing. There was a long period in which no one
+paid any further attention to my presence; in fact, no one paid any
+attention to me any more. To my last words I expected some retort, but
+none came. Ethel Rossiter joined her father at the end of the table, and
+when Mrs. Billing also rose the conversation went on _à trois_. Mrs.
+Brokenshire alone remained seated and aloof.
+
+But the moment came when her husband turned toward her. Not having been
+dismissed, I merely stood and looked on. What I saw then passed quickly,
+so quickly that it took a minute of reflection before I could put two
+and two together.
+
+Having taken one step toward his wife, Howard Brokenshire stood still,
+abruptly, putting his hand suddenly to the left side of his face. His
+wife, too, put up her hand, but palm outward and as if to wave him back.
+At the same time she averted her face--and I knew it was his eye.
+
+It was over before either of the other two women perceived anything.
+Presently, all four were out on the grass, strolling along in a little
+chattering group together. My dismissal having come automatically, as
+you might say, I was free to go.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VIII
+
+
+An hour later I had what up to then I must call the greatest surprise of
+my life.
+
+I was crying by myself on the shore, in that secluded corner among the
+rocks where Hugh had first told me that he loved me. As a rule, I don't
+cry easily. I did it now chiefly from being overwrought. I was desolate.
+I missed Hugh. The few days or few weeks that must pass before I could
+see him again stretched before me like a century. All whom I could call
+my own were so far away. Even had they been near, they would probably,
+with the individualism of our race, have left me to shift for myself.
+Louise and Victoria had always given me to understand that, though they
+didn't mind lending me an occasional sisterly hand, my life was my own
+affair. It would have been a relief to talk the whole thing out
+philosophically with Larry Strangways. As I came from the house I tried,
+for the first time since knowing him, to throw myself in his path; but,
+as usual when one needs a friend, he was nowhere to be seen.
+
+I could, therefore, only scramble down to my favorite corner among the
+rocks. Not that it was really a scramble. As a matter of fact, the path
+was easy if you knew where to find it; but it was hidden from the
+ordinary passer on the Cliff Walk, first by a boulder, round which you
+had to slip, and then by a tangle of wild rosebines, wild raspberries,
+and Queen Anne's lace. It was something like a secret door, known only
+to the Rossiter household, their servants, and their friends. Once you
+had passed it you had a measure of the public privacy you get in a box
+at the theater or the opera. You had space and ease and a wide outlook,
+with no fear of intrusion.
+
+I cannot say that I was unhappy. I was rather in that state of mind
+which the American people, with its gift for the happy, unexpected word,
+have long spoken of as "mad." I was certainly mad. I was mad with J.
+Howard Brokenshire first of all; I was mad with his family for having
+got up and left me without so much as a nod; I was mad with Hugh for
+having made me fall in love with him; I was mad with Larry Strangways
+for not having been on the spot; and I was most of all mad with myself.
+I had been boastful and bumptious; I had been disrespectful and absurd.
+It was foolish to make worse enemies than I had already. Mrs. Rossiter
+wouldn't keep me now. There would be no escape from Mrs. Applegate and
+the Home for Working-Girls.
+
+The still summer beauty of the afternoon added to my wretchedness. All
+round and before me there was luxury and joyousness and sport. The very
+sea was in a playful mood, lapping at my feet like a tamed, affectionate
+leviathan, and curling round the ledges in the offing with delicate
+lace-like spouts of spume. Sea-gulls swooped and hovered with hoarse
+cries and a lovely effect of silvery wings. Here and there was a sail on
+the blue, or the smoke of a steamer or a war-ship. Eastons Point, some
+two or three miles away, was a long, burnished line of ripening wheat.
+To right and to left of me were broken crags, red-yellow, red-brown,
+red-green, where lovers and happy groups could perch or nestle
+carelessly, thrusting trouble for the moment to a distance. I had to
+bring my trouble with me. If it had not been for trouble I shouldn't
+have been there. There wasn't a soul in the world who would fight to
+take my part but Hugh, and I was, in all my primary instincts, a
+clinging, parasitic thing that hated to stand alone.
+
+There was nothing for it then but crying, and I did that to the best of
+my ability; not loudly, of course, or vulgarly, but gently and
+sentimentally, with an immense pity for myself. I cried for what had
+happened that day and for what had happened yesterday. I cried for
+things long past, which I had omitted to cry for at the time. When I had
+finished with these I went further back to dig up other ignominies, and
+I cried for them. I cried for my father and mother and my orphaned
+condition; I cried for the way in which my father--who was a good, kind
+man, _du reste_--had lived on his principal, and left me with scarcely a
+penny to my name; I cried for my various disappointments in love, and
+for the girl friends who had predeceased me. I massed all these motives
+together and cried for them in bulk. I cried for Hugh and the brilliant
+future we should have on the money he would make. I cried for Larry
+Strangways and the loneliness his absence would entail on me. I cried
+for the future as well as for the past and if I could have thought of a
+future beyond the future I should have cried for that. It was delicious
+and sad and consoling all at once; and when I had no more tears I felt
+almost as if Hugh's strong arm had been about me, and I was comforted.
+
+I was just wiping my eyes and wondering whether at the moment of going
+homeward my nose would be too red, when I heard a quiet step. I thought
+I must be mistaken. It was so unlikely that any one would be there at
+this hour of the day--the servants generally came down at night--that
+for a minute I didn't turn. It was the uncomfortable sense that some one
+was behind me that made me look back at last, when I caught the flutter
+of lace and the shimmer of pale-rose taffeta. Mrs. Brokenshire had worn
+lace and pale-rose taffeta at the lunch.
+
+Fear and amazement wrestled in my soul together. Struggling to my feet,
+I turned round as slowly as I could.
+
+"Don't get up," she said in a sweet, quiet voice. "I'll come and sit
+down beside you, if I may." She had already seated herself on a low flat
+rock as she said, "I saw you were crying, so I waited."
+
+I am not usually at a loss for words, but I was then. I stuttered and
+stammered and babbled, without being able to say anything articulate.
+Indeed, I had nothing articulate to say. The mind had suspended its
+action.
+
+My impressions were all subconscious, but registered exactly. She was
+the most exquisite production I had ever seen in human guise. Her
+perfection was that of some lovely little bird in which no color fails
+to shade harmoniously into some other color, in which no single feather
+is out of place. The word I used of her was _soignée_--that which is
+smoothed and curled and polished and caressed till there is not an
+eyelash which hasn't received its measure of attention. I don't mean
+that she was artificial, or that her effects were too thought out. She
+was no more artificial than a highly cultivated flower is artificial, or
+a many-faceted diamond, or a King Charles spaniel, or anything else that
+is carefully bred or cut or shaped. She was the work of some specialist
+in beauty, who had no aim in view but to give to the world the loveliest
+thing possible.
+
+When I had mastered my confusion sufficiently I sat down with the words,
+rather lamely spoken:
+
+"I didn't know any one was here. I hope I haven't kept you standing
+long."
+
+"No; but I was watching you. I came down only a few minutes after you
+did. You see, I was afraid--when we came away from Mrs. Rossiter's--that
+you might be unhappy."
+
+"I'm not as unhappy as I was," I faltered, without knowing what I said,
+and was rewarded to see her smile.
+
+It was an innocent smile, without glee, a little sad in fact, but full
+of unutterable things like a very young child's. I had never seen such
+teeth, so white, so small, so regular.
+
+"I'm glad of that," she said, simply. "I thought if some--some other
+woman was near you, you mightn't feel so--so much alone. That's why I
+watched round and followed you."
+
+I could have fallen at her feet, but I restricted myself to saying:
+
+"Thank you very much. It does make a difference." I got courage to add,
+however, with a smile of my own, "I see you know."
+
+"Yes, I know. I've thought about you a good deal since that day about a
+fortnight ago--you remember?"
+
+"Oh yes, I remember. I'm not likely to forget, am I? Only, you see, I
+had no idea--if I had, I mightn't have felt so--so awfully forlorn."
+
+Her eyes rested upon me. I can only say of them that they were sweet and
+lovely, which is saying nothing at all. Sweet and lovely are the words
+that come to me when I think of her, and they are so lamentably
+overworked. She seemed to study me with a child-like unconsciousness.
+
+"Yes," she said at last, "I suppose you do feel forlorn. I didn't think
+of that or--or I might have managed to come to you before."
+
+"That you should have come now," I said, warmly, "is the kindest thing
+one human being ever did for another."
+
+Again there was the smile, a little to one side of the mouth, wistful,
+wan.
+
+"Oh no, it isn't. I've really come on my own account." I waited for some
+explanation of this, but she only went on: "Tell me about yourself. How
+did you come here? Ethel Rossiter has never really said anything about
+you. I should like to know."
+
+Her manner had the gentle command that queens and princesses and very
+rich women unconsciously acquire. I tried to obey her, but found little
+to say. Uttered to her my facts were so meager. I told her of my father
+and mother, of my father's mania for old books, of Louise and Victoria
+and their husbands, of my visits abroad; but I felt her attention
+wandering. That is, I felt she was interested not in my data, but in me.
+Halifax and Canada and British army and navy life and rare first
+editions were outside the range of her ken. Paris she knew; and London
+she knew; but not from any point of view from which I could speak of
+them. I could see she was the well-placed American who knows some of the
+great English houses and all of the great English hotels, but nothing of
+that Britannic backbone of which I might have been called a rib. She
+broke in presently, not apropos of anything I was saying, with the
+words:
+
+"How old are you?"
+
+I told her I was twenty-four.
+
+"I'm twenty-nine."
+
+I said I had understood as much from Mrs. Rossiter, but that I could
+easily have supposed her no older than myself. This was true. Had there
+not been that something mournful in her face which simulates maturity I
+could have thought of her as nothing but a girl. If I stood in awe of
+her it was only of what I guessed at as a sorrow.
+
+She went on to give me two or three details of her life, with nearly all
+of which I was familiar through hints from Hugh and Ethel Rossiter.
+
+"We're really Philadelphians, my mother and I. We've lived a good deal
+in New York, of course, and abroad. I was at school in Paris, too, at
+the Convent des Abeilles." She wandered on, somewhat inconsequentially,
+with facts of this sort, when she added, suddenly: "I was to have
+married some one else."
+
+I knew then that I had the clue to her thought. The marriage she had
+missed was on her mind. It created an obsession or a broken heart, I
+wasn't quite sure which. It was what she wanted to talk about, though
+her glance fell before the spark of intelligence in mine.
+
+[Illustration: THE MARRIAGE SHE HAD MISSED WAS ON HER MIND. IT CREATED
+AN OBSESSION OR A BROKEN HEART, I WASN'T QUITE SURE WHICH]
+
+Since there was nothing I could say in actual words, I merely murmured
+sympathetically. At the same time there came to me, like the slow
+breaking of a dawn, an illuminating glimpse of the great J. Howard's
+life. I seemed to be admitted into its secret, into a perception of its
+weak spot, more fully than his wife had any notion of. She would never,
+I was sure, see what she was betraying to me from my point of view. She
+would never see how she was giving him away. She wouldn't even see how
+she was giving away herself--she was so sweet, and gentle, and
+child-like, and unsuspecting.
+
+I don't know for how many seconds her quiet, inconsequential speech
+trickled on without my being able to follow it. I came to myself again,
+as it were, on hearing her say:
+
+"And if you do love him, oh, don't give him up!"
+
+I grasped the fact then that I had lost something about Hugh, and did my
+best to catch up with it.
+
+"I don't mean to, if either of my conditions is fulfilled. You heard
+what they were."
+
+"Oh, but if I were you I wouldn't make them. That's where I think you're
+wrong. If you love him--"
+
+"I couldn't steal him from his family, even if I loved him."
+
+"Oh, but it wouldn't be stealing. When two people love each other
+there's nothing else to think about."
+
+"And yet that might sometimes be dangerous doctrine."
+
+"If there was never any danger there'd never be any courage. And courage
+is one of the finest things in life."
+
+"Yes, of course; but even courage can carry one very far."
+
+"Nothing can carry us so far as love. I see that now. It's why I'm
+anxious about poor Hugh. I--I know a man who--who loves a woman whom
+he--he couldn't marry, and--" She caught herself up. "I'm fond of Hugh,
+you see, even though he doesn't like me. I wish he understood, that they
+all understood--that--that it isn't my fault. If I could have had my
+way--" She righted herself here with a slight change of tense. "If I
+could have my way, Hugh would marry the woman he's in love with and
+who's in love with him."
+
+I tried to enroll her decisively on my side.
+
+"So that you don't agree with Mr. Brokenshire."
+
+Her immediate response was to color with a soft, suffused rose-pink like
+that of the inside of shells. Her eyes grew misty with a kind of
+helplessness. She looked at me imploringly, and looked away. One might
+have supposed that she was pleading with me to be let off answering.
+Nevertheless, when she spoke at last, her words brought me to a new
+phase of her self-revelation.
+
+"Why aren't you afraid of him?"
+
+"Oh, but I am."
+
+"Yes, but not like--" Again she saved herself. "Yes, but not like--so
+many people. You may be afraid of him inside, but you fight."
+
+"Any one fights for right."
+
+There was a repetition of the wistful smile, a little to the left corner
+of the mouth.
+
+"Oh, do they? I wish I did. Or rather I wish I had."
+
+"It's never too late," I declared, with what was meant to be
+encouragement.
+
+There was a queer little gleam in her eye, like that which comes into
+the pupil of a startled bird.
+
+"So I've heard some one else say. I suppose it's true--but it frightens
+me."
+
+I was quite strangely uneasy. Hints of her story came back to me, but I
+had never heard it completely enough to be able to piece the fragments
+together. It was new for me to imagine myself called on to protect any
+one--I needed protection so much for myself!--but I was moved with a
+protective instinct toward her. It was rather ridiculous, and yet it was
+so.
+
+"Only one must be sure one is right before one fights, mustn't one?" was
+all I could think of saying.
+
+She responded dreamily, looking seaward.
+
+"Don't you think there may be worse things than wrong?"
+
+This being so contrary to my pet principles, I answered, emphatically,
+that I didn't think so at all. I brought out my maxim that if you did
+right nothing but right could come of it; but she surprised me by
+saying, simply, "I don't believe that."
+
+I was a little indignant.
+
+"But it's not a matter of believing; it's one of proving, of
+demonstration."
+
+"I've done right, and wrong came of it."
+
+"Oh, but it couldn't--not in the long run."
+
+"Well, then I did wrong. That's what I've been afraid of, and what--what
+some one else tells me." If a pet bird could look at you with a
+challenging expression it was the thing she did. "Now what do you say?"
+
+I really didn't know what to say. I spoke from instinct, and some common
+sense.
+
+"If one's done wrong, or made a mistake, I suppose the only way one can
+rectify it is to begin again to do right. Right must have a rectifying
+power."
+
+"But if you've made a mistake the mistake is there, unless you go back
+and unmake it. If you don't, isn't it what they call building on a bad
+foundation?"
+
+"I dare say it is; and yet you can't push a material comparison too far
+when you're thinking of spiritual things. This is spiritual, isn't it? I
+suppose one can't really do evil and expect good to come of it; but one
+can overcome evil with good."
+
+She looked at me with a sweet mistiness.
+
+"I've no doubt that's true, but it's very deep. It's too deep for me."
+She rose with an air of dismissing the subject, though she continued to
+speak of it allusively. "You know so much about it. I could see you did
+from the first. If I was to tell you the whole story--but, of course, I
+can't do that. No, don't get up. I have to run away, because we're
+expecting people to tea; but I should have liked staying to talk with
+you. You're awfully clever, aren't you? I suppose it must be living
+round in those queer places--Gibraltar, didn't you say? I've seen
+Gibraltar, but only from the steamer, on the way to Naples. I felt that
+I was with you from that very first time I saw you. I'd seen you before,
+of course, with little Gladys, but not to notice you. I never noticed
+you till I heard that Hugh was in love with you. That was just before
+Mr. Brokenshire took me over--you remember!--that day. He wanted me to
+see how easily he could deal with people who opposed him; but I didn't
+think he succeeded very well. He made you go and sit at a distance. That
+was to show you he had the power. Did you notice what I did? Oh, I'm
+glad. I wanted you to understand that if it was a question of love I
+was--I was with you. You saw that, didn't you? Oh, I'm glad. I must run
+away now. We've people to tea; but some time, if I can manage it, I'll
+come again."
+
+She had begun slipping up the path, like a great rose-colored moth in
+the greenery, when she turned to say:
+
+"I can never do anything for you, I'm too afraid of him; but I'm on your
+side."
+
+After she had gone I began putting two and two together. What her visit
+did for me especially was to distract my mind. I got a better
+perspective on my own small drama in seeing it as incidental to a larger
+one. That there was a large one here I had no doubt, though I could
+neither seize nor outline its proportions. As far as I could judge of my
+visitor I found her dazed by the magnitude of the thing that had
+happened to her, whatever that was. She was good and kind; she hadn't a
+thought that wasn't tender; normally she would have been the devoted,
+clinging type of wife I longed to be myself; and yet some one's passion,
+or some one's ambition, or both in collusion, had caught her like a bird
+in a net.
+
+It was perhaps because she was a woman and I was a woman and J. Howard
+was a man that my reactions concerned themselves chiefly with him. I
+thought of him throughout the afternoon. I began to get new views of
+him. I wondered if he knew of himself what I knew. I supposed he did. I
+supposed he must. He couldn't have been married two or three years to
+this sweet stricken creature without seeing that her heart wasn't his.
+Furthermore, he couldn't have beheld, as he and I had beheld that
+afternoon, the hand that went up palm outward, without divining a horror
+of his person that was more than a shrinking from his poor contorted
+eye. For love the contorted eye would have meant more love, since it
+would have been love with its cognate of pity; but not so that uplifted
+hand and that instinctive waving of him back. There was more than an
+involuntary repulsion in that, more than an instant of abhorrence. What
+there was he must have discovered, he must have tasted, from the minute
+he first took her in his arms.
+
+I was sorry for him. I could throw enough of the masculine into my
+imagination to know how he must adore a creature of such perfected
+charm. She was the sort of woman men would adore, especially the men
+whose ideal lies first of all in the physical. For them it would mean
+nothing that she lacked mentality, that the pendulum of her nature had
+only a limited swing; that she was as good as she looked would be
+enough, seeing that she looked like an angel straight out of heaven. In
+spite of poor J. Howard's kingly suavity I knew he must have minutes of
+sheer animal despair, of fierce and bitter suffering.
+
+Mrs. Rossiter spoke to me that evening with a suggestion of reprimand,
+which was letting me off easily. I was so sure of my dismissal, that
+when I returned to the house from the shore I expected some sort of
+_lettre de congé_; but I found nothing. I had had supper with Gladys and
+put her to bed when the maid brought me a message to say that Mrs.
+Rossiter would like me to come down and see her dress, as she was going
+out to dinner.
+
+I was admiring the dress, which was a new one, when she said, rather
+fretfully:
+
+"I wish you wouldn't talk like that to father. It upsets him so."
+
+I was adjusting a slight fullness at the back, which made it the easier
+for me to answer.
+
+"I wouldn't if he didn't talk like that to me. What can I do? I have to
+say something."
+
+She was peering into the cheval glass over her shoulder, giving her
+attention to two things at once.
+
+"I mean your saying you expected both of those preposterous things to
+happen. Of course, you don't--nor either of them--and it only rubs him
+up the wrong way."
+
+I was too meek now to argue the point. Besides, I was preoccupied with
+the widening interests in which I found myself involved. To probe the
+security of my position once more, I said:
+
+"I wonder you stand it--that you don't send me away."
+
+She was still twisting in front of the cheval glass.
+
+"Don't you think that shoulder-strap is loose? It really looks as if the
+whole thing would slip off me. If he can stand it I can," she added, as
+a matter of secondary concern.
+
+"Oh, then he can stand it." I felt the shoulder-strap. "No, I think it's
+all right, if you don't wriggle too much."
+
+"I'm sure it's going to come down--and there I shall be. He has to stand
+it, don't you see, or let you think that you wound him?"
+
+I was frankly curious.
+
+"Do I wound him?"
+
+"He'd never let you know it if you did. The fact that he ignores you and
+lets you stay on with me is the only thing by which I can judge. If you
+didn't hurt him at all he'd tell me to send you about your business."
+She turned from the glass. "Well, if you say that strap is all right I
+suppose it must be, but I don't feel any too sure." She was picking up
+her gloves and her fan which the maid had laid out, when she said,
+suddenly: "If you're so keen on getting married, for goodness' sake why
+don't you take that young Strangways?"
+
+My sensation can only be compared to that of a person who has got a
+terrific blow on the head from a trip-hammer. I seemed to wonder why I
+hadn't been crushed or struck dead. As it was, I felt that I could never
+move again from the spot on which I stood. I was vaguely conscious of
+something outraged within me and yet was too stunned to resent it. I
+could only gasp, feebly, after what seemed an interminable time: "In the
+first place, I'm not so awfully keen on getting married--"
+
+She was examining her gloves.
+
+"There, that stupid Séraphine has put me out two lefts. No, she hasn't;
+it's all right. Stuff, my dear! Every girl is keen on getting married."
+
+"And then," I stammered on, "Mr. Strangways has never given me the
+chance."
+
+"Oh, well, he will. Do hand me my wrap, like a love." I was putting the
+wrap over her shoulders as she repeated: "Oh, well, he will. I can tell
+by the way he looks at you. It would be ever so much more suitable. Jim
+says he'll be a first-class man in time--if you don't rush in like an
+idiot and marry Hugh."
+
+"I may marry Hugh," I tried to say, loftily, "but I hope I sha'n't do it
+like an idiot."
+
+She swept toward the stairway, but she had left me with subjects for
+thought not only for that evening, but for the next day and the next.
+Now that the first shock was over I managed to work up the proper sense
+of indignity. I told myself I was hurt and offended. She shouldn't have
+mentioned such a thing. I wouldn't have stood it from one of my own
+sisters. I had never thought of Larry Strangways in any such way, and to
+do so disturbed our relations. To begin with, I wasn't in love with him;
+and to end with, he was too poor. Not that I was looking for a rich
+husband; but neither was I a lunatic. It would be years before he could
+think of marrying, if there were no other consideration; and in the mean
+time there was Hugh.
+
+There was Hugh with his letters from Boston, full of high ambitious
+hopes. Cousin Andrew Brew had written from Bar Harbor that he was coming
+to town in a day or two and would give him the interview he demanded.
+Already Hugh had his eye on a little house on Beacon Hill--so like a
+corner of Mayfair, he wrote, if Mayfair stood on an eminence--in which
+we could be as snug as two love-birds. I was composing in my mind the
+letter I should write to my aunt in Halifax, asking to be allowed to
+come back for the wedding.
+
+I filled in the hours wondering how Larry Strangways looked at me when
+there was only Mrs. Rossiter as spectator. I knew how he looked at me
+when I was looking back--it was with that gleaming smile which defied
+you to see behind it, as the sun defies you to see behind its rays. But
+I wanted to know how he looked at me when my head was turned another
+way; to know how the sun appears when you view it through a telescope
+that nullifies its defensive. For that I had only my imagination, since
+he had obtained two or three days' leave to go to New York to see his
+new employer. He had warned me to betray no hint as to the new
+employer's name, since there was a feud between the Brokenshire clan and
+Stacy Grainger which I connected vaguely with the story I had heard of
+Mrs. Brokenshire.
+
+Then on the fourth day Hugh came back. He appeared as he had on saying
+good-by, while I was breakfasting with Gladys in the open air and Broke
+was with his mother. Hugh was more pallid than when he went away; he was
+positively woe-begone. Everything that was love in me leaped into flame
+at sight of his honest, sorry face.
+
+I think I can tell his story best by giving it in my own words, in the
+way of direct narration. He didn't tell it to me all at once, but bit by
+bit, as new details occurred to him. The picture was slow in printing
+itself on my mind, but when I got it it was with satisfactory
+exactitude.
+
+He had been three days at the hotel in Boston before learning that
+Cousin Andrew Brew was actually in town and would see him at the bank at
+eleven on a certain morning. Hugh was on the moment. The promptitude
+with which his relative sprang up in his seat, somewhat as if impelled
+by a piece of mechanism, was truly cordial. Not less was the handshake
+and the formula of greeting. The sons of J. Howard Brokenshire were
+always welcome guests among their Boston kin, on whom they shed a
+pleasant luster of metropolitan glory. While the Brews and Borrodailes
+prided themselves on what they called their Boston provinciality and
+didn't believe to be provinciality at all, they enjoyed the New York
+connection.
+
+"Hello, Hugh! Glad to see you. Come in. Sit down. Looking older than
+when I saw you last. Growing a mustache. Not married yet? Sit down and
+tell us all about it. What can I do for you? Sit down."
+
+Hugh took the comfortable little upright arm-chair that stood at the
+corner of his cousin's desk, while the latter resumed the seat of honor.
+Knowing that the banker's time was valuable, and feeling that he would
+reveal his aptitude for business by going to the point at once, the
+younger man began his tale. He had just reached the fact that he had
+fallen in love with a little girl on whose merits he wouldn't enlarge,
+since all lovers had the same sort of things to say, though he was surer
+of his data than others of his kind, when there was a tinkle at the desk
+telephone.
+
+"Excuse me."
+
+During the conversation in which Cousin Andrew then engaged Hugh was
+able to observe the long-established, unassuming comfort of this
+friendly office, which suggested the cozy air that hangs about the
+smoking-rooms of good old English inns. There was a warm worn carpet on
+the floor; deep leather arm-chairs showed the effect of contact with two
+generations of moneyed backs; on the walls the lithographed heads of
+Brews and Borrodailes bore witness to the firm's respectability. In the
+atmosphere a faint odor of tobacco emphasized the human associations.
+
+Cousin Andrew emphasized them, too. "Now!" He put down the receiver and
+turned to Hugh with an air of relief at being able to give him his
+attention. He was a tall, thin man with a head like a nut. It would have
+been an expressionless nut had it not been for a facile tight-lipped
+smile that creased his face as stretching creases rubber. Coming and
+going rapidly, it gave him the appearance of mirth, creating at each end
+of a long, mobile mouth two concentric semicircles cutting deep into the
+cheeks that would have been of value to a low comedian. A slate-colored
+morning suit, a white piqué edge to the opening of the waistcoat, a
+slate-colored tie with a pearl in it, emphasized the union of dignity
+and lightness which were the keynotes to Cousin Andrew's character.
+Blended as they were, they formed a delightfully debonair combination,
+bringing down to your own level a man who was somebody in the world of
+finance. It was part of his endearing quality that he liked you to see
+him as a jolly good fellow no whit better than yourself. He was fond of
+gossip and of the lighter topics of the moment. He was also fond of
+dancing, and frequented most of the gatherings, private and public, for
+the cultivation of that art which was the vogue of the year before the
+Great War. With his tall, limber figure he passed for less than his age
+of forty-three till you got him at close quarters.
+
+On the genial "Now!" in which there was an inflection of command Hugh
+went on with his tale, telling of his breach with his father and his
+determination to go into business for himself.
+
+"I ought to be independent, anyhow, at my age," he declared. "I've my
+own views, and it's only right to confess to you that I'm a bit of a
+Socialist. That won't make any difference, however, to our working
+together, Cousin Andrew, for, to make a long story short, I've looked in
+to tell you that I've come to the place where I should like to accept
+your kind offer."
+
+The statement was received with cheerful detachment, while Cousin Andrew
+threw himself forward with his arms on his desk, rubbing his long, thin
+hands together.
+
+"My kind offer? What was that?"
+
+Hugh was slightly dashed.
+
+"About my coming to you if ever I wanted to go into business."
+
+"Oh! You're going into business?"
+
+Hugh named the places and dates at which, during the past few years,
+Cousin Andrew had offered his help to his young kinsman if ever it was
+needed.
+
+Cousin Andrew tossed himself back in his chair with one of his brisk,
+restless movements.
+
+"Did I say that? Well, if I did I'll stick to it." There was another
+tinkle at the telephone. "Excuse me."
+
+Hugh had time for reflection and some irritation. He had not expected to
+be thrust into the place of a petitioner, or to have to make
+explanations galling to his pride. He had counted not only on his
+cousinship, but on his position in the world as J. Howard Brokenshire's
+son. It seemed to him that Cousin Andrew was disposed to undervalue
+that.
+
+"I don't want to hold you to anything you don't care for, Cousin
+Andrew," he began, when his relative had again put the receiver aside,
+"but I understood--"
+
+"Oh, that's all right. I've no doubt I said it. I do recall something of
+the sort, vaguely, at a time when I thought your father might want-- In
+any case we can fix you up. Sure to be something you can do. When'd you
+like to begin?"
+
+Hugh expressed his willingness to be put into office at once.
+
+"Just so. Turn you over to old Williamson. He licks the young ones into
+shape. Suppose your father'll think it hard of us to go against him. But
+on the other hand he may be pleased--he'll know you're in safe hands."
+
+It was a delicate thing for Hugh to attempt, but as he was going into
+business not from an irresistible impulse toward a financial career, but
+in order to make enough money to marry on, he felt obliged to ask, in
+such terms as he could command, how much money he should make.
+
+"Just so!" Cousin Andrew took up the receiver again. "Want to speak to
+Mr. Williamson. . . . Oh, Williamson, how much is Duffers getting now?
+. . . And how much before that? . . . Good! Thanks!"
+
+The result of these investigations was communicated to Hugh. He should
+receive Duffers's pay, and when he had earned it should come in for
+Duffers's promotion. The immediate effect was to make him look startled
+and blank. "What?" was his only question; but it contained several
+shades of incredulity.
+
+Cousin Andrew took this dismay in good part.
+
+"Why, what did you expect?"
+
+Hugh could only stammer:
+
+"I thought it would be more."
+
+"How much more?"
+
+Hugh sought an answer that wouldn't betray the ludicrous figure of his
+hopes.
+
+"Well, enough to live on as a married man at least."
+
+The banker's good nature was proved by the creases of his rubber smile.
+
+"What did you think you'd be worth to us--with no backing from your
+father?"
+
+The question was of the kind commonly called a poser. Hugh had not, so I
+understood from him, hitherto thought of his entering his kinsfolks'
+banking-house as primarily a matter of earning capacity. It wasn't to be
+like working for "any old firm." He had prefigured it as becoming a
+component part of a machine that turned out money of which he would get
+his share, that share being in proportion to the dignity of the house
+itself and bearing a relation to his blood connection with the
+dominating partners. When Cousin Andrew had repeated his question Hugh
+was obliged to reply:
+
+"I wasn't thinking of that so much as of what you'd be worth to me."
+
+"We could be worth a good deal to you in time."
+
+There was a ray of hope.
+
+"How long a time?"
+
+"Oh, twenty or thirty years, perhaps, if you work and save. Of course,
+if you had capital to bring in--but you haven't, have you? Didn't Cousin
+Sophy, your mother, leave everything to your father? I thought so. Mind
+you, I'm putting out of the question all thought of your father's coming
+round and putting money in for you. I'm talking of the thing on the
+ground on which you've put it."
+
+Hugh had no heart to resent the quirks and grimaces in Cousin Andrew's
+smile. He had all he could do in taking his leave in a way to save his
+face and cast the episode behind him. The banker lent himself to this
+effort with good-humored grace, accompanying his relative to the door of
+the room, where he shook him by the shoulder as he turned the knob.
+
+"Thought you'd go right in as a director? Not the first youngster who's
+had that idea, and you'll not be the last. Good-by. Let me hear from you
+if you change your mind." He called after him, as the door was about to
+close: "Best try to fix it up with your father, Hugh. As for the
+girl--well, there'll be others, and more in your line."
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER IX
+
+
+On that first morning I got no more than the gist of what had happened
+during Hugh's visit to his cousin Andrew Brew. Hugh announced it in fact
+by a metaphor as soon as we had exchanged greetings and he had sat down
+at the table with his arm over Gladys's shoulder.
+
+"Well, little Alix, I got it where the chicken got the ax."
+
+"Where was that?" I asked, innocently, for the figure of speech was new
+to me.
+
+"In the neck."
+
+Neither of us laughed. His tone was so lugubrious as to preclude
+laughing. But I understood. I may say that by the time he had given me
+the outline of what he had to say I understood more than he. I might
+have seen poor Hugh's limitations before; but I never had. During the
+old life in Halifax I had known plenty of young men brought up in
+comfort who couldn't earn a living when the time came to do it. If I had
+never classed Hugh among the number, it was because the Brokenshires
+were all so rich that I supposed they must have some secret prescription
+for wringing money from the air. Besides, Hugh was an American; and
+American and money were words I was accustomed to pronounce together. I
+never questioned his ability to have any reasonable income he
+named--till now. Now I began to see him as he must have seen himself
+during those first few minutes after turning his back on the parental
+haven, alone and in the dark.
+
+I cannot say that for the moment I had any of the qualms of fear. My
+yearning over him was too motherly for that. I wanted to comfort and, as
+far as possible, to encourage him. Something within me whispered, too,
+the words, "It's going to be up to me." I meant--or that which spoke in
+me meant--that the whole position was reversed. I had been taking my
+ease hitherto, believing that the strong young man who had asked me to
+marry him would do the necessary work. It was to be up to him. My part
+was to be the passive bliss of having some one to love me and maintain
+me. That Hugh loved me I knew; that in one way or another he would be
+able to maintain me I took for granted. With a Brokenshire, I assumed,
+that would be the last of cares. And now I saw in a flash that I was
+wrong; that I who was nothing but a parasite by nature would somehow
+have to give my strong young man support.
+
+When all was said that he could say at the moment I took the
+responsibility of sending Gladys indoors with the maid who was waiting
+on the table, after which I asked Hugh to walk down the lawn with me. A
+stone balustrade ran above the Cliff Walk, and here was a bit of
+shrubbery where no one could observe us from the house, while passers on
+the Cliff Walk could see us only by looking upward. At that hour in the
+morning even they were likely to be rare.
+
+"Hugh, darling," I said, "this is becoming very, very serious. You're
+throwing yourself out of house and home and your father's good-will for
+my sake. We must think about it, Hugh--"
+
+His answer was to seize me in his arms--we were sufficiently screened
+from view--and crush his lips against mine in a way that made speech
+impossible.
+
+Again I must make a confession. It was his doing that sort of thing that
+paralyzed my judgment. You will blame me, perhaps, but, oh, reader, have
+you any idea of what it is never to have had a man wild to kiss you
+before? Never before to have had any one adore you? Never before to have
+been the greatest of all blessings to so much as the least among his
+brethren? The experience was new to me. I had no rule of thumb by which
+to measure it. I could only think that the man who wanted me with so mad
+a desire must have me, no matter what reserves I might have preferred to
+make on my own account.
+
+I struggled, however, and with some success. For the first time I
+clearly perceived that occasions might arise in which, between love and
+marriage, one might have to make a distinction. Ethel Rossiter's dictum
+came back to me: "People can't go about marrying every one they love,
+now can they?" It came to me as a terrible possibility that I might be
+doomed to love Hugh all my life, and equally doomed to refuse him. If I
+didn't, the responsibilities would be "up to me." If besides loving him
+I were to accept him and marry him, it would be for me to see that the
+one possible condition was fulfilled. I should have to bring J. Howard
+to his knees.
+
+When he got breath to say anything it was with a mere hot muttering into
+my face, as he held me with my head thrown back:
+
+"I know what I'm doing, little Alix. You mustn't ask me to count the
+cost. The cost only makes you the more precious. Since I have to suffer
+for you I'll suffer, but I'll never give you up. Do you take me for a
+fellow who'd weigh money or comfort in the balances with you?"
+
+"No, Hugh," I whispered. His embrace was enough to strangle me.
+
+"Well, then, never ask me to think about this thing again, I've thought
+all I'm going to. As I mean to get you anyhow, little Alix, you may as
+well promise now, this very minute, that whatever happens you'll be my
+wife."
+
+But I didn't promise. First I got him to release me on the ground that
+some bathers, after a dip at Eastons Beach, were going by, with their
+heads on a level with our feet. Then I asked the natural question:
+
+"What do you think of doing now?"
+
+He said he was going to let no mushrooms spring in his footsteps, and
+that he was taking a morning train for New York. He talked about bankers
+and brokers and moneyed things in general in a way I couldn't follow,
+though I could see that in spite of Cousin Andrew Brew's rejection he
+still expected great things of himself. Like me, he seemed to feel that
+there was a faculty for conjuring money in the very name of Brokenshire.
+Never having known what it was to be without as much money as he wanted,
+never having been given to suppose that such an eventuality could come
+to pass, it was perhaps not strange that he should consider his power of
+commanding a large income to be in the nature of things. Bankers and
+brokers would be glad to have him as their associate from the mere fact
+that he was his father's son.
+
+I endeavored to throw a cup of cold water on too much certainty, by
+saying:
+
+"But, Hugh, dear, won't you have to begin at the beginning? Wasn't that
+what your cousin Andrew Brew--?"
+
+"Cousin Andrew Brew is an ass. He's one great big Boston
+stick-in-the-mud. He wouldn't know which side his bread was buttered on,
+not if it was buttered on both."
+
+"Still," I persisted, "you'll have to begin at the beginning."
+
+"Well, I shouldn't be the first."
+
+"No, but you might be the first to do it with a clog round his feet in
+the shape of a person like me. How many years did your cousin
+say--twenty or thirty, wasn't it?"
+
+"R-rot, little Alix!" He brought out the interjection with a
+contemptuous roll. "It might be twenty or thirty years for a numskull
+like Duffers, but for me! There are ways by which a man who's in the
+business already, as you might say, goes skimming over the ground the
+common herd have to tramp. Look at the gentlemen-rankers in your own
+army. They enlist as privates, and in two or three years they're in the
+officers' mess with a commission. That comes of their education and--"
+
+"That's often true, I admit. I've known of several cases in my own
+experience. But even two or three years--"
+
+"Wouldn't you wait for me?"
+
+He asked the question with a sharpness that gave me something like a
+stab.
+
+"Yes, of course, Hugh, if I promised you. And yet to bind you by such a
+promise doesn't seem to me fair."
+
+"I'll take care of that," he declared, manfully. "As a matter of fact,
+when father sees how determined I am, he'll only be too happy to do the
+handsome thing and come down with the brass."
+
+"You think he's bluffing then?" I threw some conviction into my tone as
+I added, "I don't."
+
+"He's not bluffing to his own knowledge; but he is--"
+
+"To yours. But isn't it his knowledge that we've got to go by? We must
+expect the worst, even if we hope for the best."
+
+"And what it all comes to is--"
+
+"Is that you're facing a very hard time, Hugh, and I don't feel that I
+can accept the responsibility of encouraging you to do it."
+
+"But, good Lord, Alix, you're not encouraging me. It's the other way
+round. You're a perfect wet blanket; you're an ice-water shower. I'm
+doing this thing on my own--"
+
+"You know, Hugh, I've seen your father since you went away."
+
+His face brightened.
+
+"Good! And did he show any signs of tacking to the wind?"
+
+"Not a bit. He said you would be ruined, and that I should ruin you."
+
+"The deuce you will! That's where he's got the wrong number, poor old
+dad! I hope you told him you would marry me--and let him have it
+straight."
+
+I made no reply to that, going on to tell him all that was said as to
+bringing J. Howard to his knees.
+
+He roared with ironic laughter.
+
+"You did have the gall!"
+
+"Then you think they'll never, never accept me?"
+
+"Not that way; not beforehand."
+
+Hot rage rose within me, against him and them and this scorn of my
+personality.
+
+"I think they will."
+
+"Not on your life! Dad wouldn't do it, not if I was on my death-bed and
+needed you to come and raise me up. Milly is the only one; and even she
+thinks I'm the craziest idiot--"
+
+"Very well, then, Hugh," I said, quickly; "I'm afraid we must consider
+it all--"
+
+He gathered me into his arms as he had done before, and once more
+stopped my protests. Once more, too, I yielded to this masculine
+argument.
+
+"For you and me there's nothing but love," he murmured, with his cheek
+pressed close against mine.
+
+"Oh no, Hugh," I managed to say, when I had struggled free. "There's
+honor--and perhaps there's pride." It gave some relief to what I
+conceived of as the humiliation he unconsciously heaped on me to be able
+to add: "As a matter of fact, pride and honor, in me, are as inseparable
+as the oxygen and hydrogen that go to make up water."
+
+He was obliged to leave it there, since he had no more than the time to
+catch his train for New York. It was, however, the sense of pride and
+honor that calmed my nerves when Mrs. Rossiter asked me to take little
+Gladys to see her grandfather in the afternoon. I had done it from time
+to time all through the summer, but not since Hugh had declared his love
+for me. If I went now, I reasoned, it would have to be on a new footing;
+and if it was on a new footing something might come of the visit in
+spite of my fears.
+
+We started a little after three, as Gladys had to be back in time for
+her early supper and bed. Chips, the wire-haired terrier, was nominally
+at our heels, but actually nosing the shrubbery in front of us, or
+scouring the lawns on our right with a challenging bark to any of his
+kind who might be within earshot to come down and contest our passage.
+
+"_Qu'il est drôle, ce Chips! N'est-ce-pas, mademoiselle?_" Gladys would
+exclaim from time to time, to which I would make some suitable and
+instructive rejoinder.
+
+Her hand was in mine; her eyes as they laughed up at me were of the
+color of the blue convolvulus. In her little smocked liberty silk, with
+a leghorn hat trimmed with a wreath of tiny roses, she made me yearn for
+that bassinet between which and myself there were such stormy seas to
+cross. Everything was to be up to me. That was the great solemnity from
+which my mind couldn't get away. I was to be the David to confront
+Goliath, without so much as a sling or a stone. What I was to do, and
+how I was to do it, I knew no more than I knew of commanding an army. I
+could only take my stand on the maxim of which I was making a
+foundation-stone. I went so far as to believe that if I did right more
+right would unfold itself. It would be like following a trail through a
+difficult wood, a trail of which you observe all the notches and steps
+and signs, sometimes with misgivings, often with the fear that you're
+astray, but on which a moment arrives when you see with delight that
+you're coming out to the clearing. So I argued as I prattled with Gladys
+of such things as were in sight, of ships and lobster-pots and little
+dogs, giving her a new word as occasion served, and trying to keep my
+mind from terrors and remote anticipations.
+
+If you know Newport at all you know J. Howard Brokenshire's place in the
+neighborhood of Ochre Point. Anyone would name it as you passed by. J.
+Howard didn't build the house; he bought it from some people who, it
+seemed, hadn't found in Newport the hospitality of which they were in
+search. It is gloomy and fortress-like, as if the architect had planned
+a Palazzo Strozzi which he hadn't the courage to carry out. That it is
+incongruous with its surroundings goes without saying; but then it is
+not more incongruous than anything else. I had been long enough in
+America to see that for the man who could build on American soil a house
+which would have some relation to its site--as they can do in Mexico,
+and as we do to a lesser degree in Canada--fame and fortune would be in
+store.
+
+The entrance hall was baronial and richly Italianate. One's first
+impressions were of gilding and red damask. When one's eye lighted on a
+chest or settle, one could smell the stale incense in a Sienese or Pisan
+sacristy. At the foot of the great stairway ebony slaves held gilded
+torches in which were electric lights.
+
+Both the greyhounds came sniffing to meet Chips, and J. Howard, who had
+seen our approach across the lawn as we came from the Cliff Walk,
+emerged from the library to welcome his grandchild. He wore a suit of
+light-gray check, and was as imposingly handsome as usual. Gladys ran to
+greet him with a childish cry. On seizing her he tossed her into the air
+and kissed her.
+
+I stood in the middle of the hall, waiting. On previous occasions I had
+done the same thing; but then I had not been, as one might say,
+"introduced." I wondered if he would acknowledge the introduction now or
+give me a glance. But he didn't. Setting Gladys down, he took her by the
+hand and returned to the library.
+
+There was nothing new in this. It had happened to me before. Left like
+an empty motor-car till there was need for me again, I had sometimes
+seated myself in one of the huge ecclesiastical hall chairs, and
+sometimes, if the door chanced to be open, had wandered out to the
+veranda. As it was open this afternoon, I strolled toward the glimpse of
+green lawn, and the sparkle of blue sea which gleamed at the end of the
+hall.
+
+It was a possibility I had foreseen. Mrs. Brokenshire might be there. I
+might get into further touch with the mystery of her heart.
+
+Mrs. Brokenshire was not on the veranda, but Mrs. Billing was. She was
+seated in a low easy-chair, reading a French novel, and had been smoking
+cigarettes. An inlaid Oriental taboret, on which were a gold
+cigarette-case and ash-tray, stood beside her on the red-tiled floor.
+
+I had forgotten all about her, as seemingly she had forgotten about me.
+Her surprise in seeing me appear was not greater than mine at finding
+her. Instinctively she took up her lorgnette, which was lying in her
+lap, but put it down without using it.
+
+"So it's you," was her greeting.
+
+"I beg your pardon, madam," I stammered, respectfully. "I didn't know
+there was anybody here."
+
+I was about to withdraw when she said, commandingly:
+
+"Wait." I waited, while she went on: "You're a little spitfire. Did you
+know it?"
+
+The voice was harsh, with the Quaker drawl I have noticed in the older
+generation of Philadelphians; but the tone wasn't hostile. On the
+contrary, there was something in it that invited me to play up. I played
+up, demurely, however, saying, with a more emphatic respectfulness:
+
+"No, madam; I didn't."
+
+"Well, you can know it now. Who are you?" She made the quaint little
+gesture with which I have seen English princesses summon those they
+wished to talk to. "Come over here where I can get a look at you."
+
+I moved nearer, but she didn't ask me to sit down. In answer to her
+question I said, simply, "I'm a Canadian."
+
+"Oh, a Canadian! That's neither fish, flesh, nor fowl. It's nothing."
+
+"No, madam, nothing but a point of view."
+
+"What do you mean by that?"
+
+I repeated something of my father's:
+
+"The point of view of the Englishman who understands America or of the
+American who understands England, as one chooses to put it. The Canadian
+is the only person who does both."
+
+"Oh, indeed? I'm not a Canadian--and yet I flatter myself I know my
+England pretty well."
+
+I made so bold as to smile dimly.
+
+"Knowing and understanding are different things, madam, aren't they? The
+Canadian understands America because he is an American; he understands
+England because he is an Englishman. It's only of him that that can be
+said. You're quite right when you label him a point of view rather than
+a citizen or a subject."
+
+"I didn't label him anything of the kind. I don't know anything about
+him, and I don't care. What are you besides being a Canadian?"
+
+"Nothing, madam," I said, humbly.
+
+"Nothing? What do you mean?"
+
+"I mean that there's nothing about me, that I have or am, that I don't
+owe to my country."
+
+"Oh, stuff! That's the way we used to talk in the United States forty
+years ago."
+
+"That's the way we talk in Canada still, madam--and feel."
+
+"Oh, well, you'll get over it as we did--when you're more of a people."
+
+"Most of us would prefer to be less of a people, and not get over it."
+
+She put up her lorgnette.
+
+"Who was your father? What sort of people do you come from?"
+
+I tried to bring out my small store of personal facts, but she paid them
+no attention. When I said that my father had been a judge of the
+Supreme Court of Nova Scotia I might have been calling him a voivode of
+Montenegro or the president of a zemstvo. It was too remote from herself
+for her mind to take in. I could see her, however, examining my
+features, my hands, my dress, with the shrewd, sharp eyes of a
+connoisseur in feminine appearance.
+
+She broke into the midst of my recital with the words:
+
+"You can't be in love with Hugh Brokenshire."
+
+Fearing attack from an unexpected quarter, I clasped my hands with some
+emotion.
+
+"Oh, but, madam, why not?"
+
+The reply nearly knocked me down.
+
+"Because you're too sensible a girl. He's as stupid as an owl."
+
+"He's very good and kind," was all I could find to say.
+
+"Yes; but what's that? A girl like you needs more than a man who's only
+good and kind. Heavens above, you'll want some spice in your life!"
+
+I maintained my meek air as I said:
+
+"I could do without the spice if I could be sure of bread and butter."
+
+"Oh, if you're marrying for a home let me tell you you won't get it.
+Hugh'll never be able to offer you one, and his father wouldn't let him
+if he was."
+
+I decided to be bold.
+
+"But you heard what I said the other day, madam. I expect his father to
+come round."
+
+She uttered the queer cackle that was like a hen when it crows.
+
+"Oh, you do, do you? You don't know Howard Brokenshire. You could break
+him more easily than you could bend him--and you can't break him. Good
+Lord, girl, I've tried!"
+
+"But I haven't," I returned, quietly. "Now I'm going to."
+
+"How? What with? You can't try if you've nothing to try on."
+
+"I have."
+
+"For Heaven's sake--what?"
+
+I was going to say, "Right"; but I knew it would sound sententious. I
+had been sententious enough in talking about my country. Now I only
+smiled.
+
+"You must let me keep that as a secret," I answered, mildly.
+
+She gave herself what I can only call a hitch in her chair.
+
+"Then may I be there to see."
+
+"I hope you may be, madam."
+
+"Oh, I'll come," she cackled. "Don't worry about that. Just let me know.
+You'll have to fight like the devil. I suppose you know that."
+
+I replied that I did.
+
+"And when it's all over you'll have got nothing for your pains."
+
+"I shall have had the fight."
+
+She looked hard at me before speaking.
+
+"Good girl!" The tone was that of a spectator who calls out, "Good hit!"
+or, "Good shot!" at a game. "If that's all you want--"
+
+"No; I want Hugh."
+
+"Then I hope you won't get him. He's as big a dolt as his father, and
+that's saying a great deal." Terrified, I glanced over my shoulder at
+the house, but she went on imperturbably: "Oh, I know he's in there; but
+what do I care? I'm not saying anything behind his back that I haven't
+said to his face. He doesn't bear me any malice, either, I'll say that
+for him."
+
+"Nobody could--" I began, deferentially.
+
+"Nobody had better. But that's neither here nor there. All I'm telling
+you is to have nothing to do with Hugh Brokenshire. Never mind the
+money; what you need is a husband with brains. Don't I know? Haven't I
+been through it? My husband was kind and good, just like Hugh
+Brokenshire--and, O Lord! The sins of the father are visited on the
+children, too. Look at my daughter--pretty as a picture and not the
+brains of a white mouse." She nodded at me fiercely, "You're my kind. I
+can see that. Mind what I say--and be off."
+
+She turned abruptly to her book, hitching her chair a little away from
+me. Accepting my dismissal, I said in the third person, as though I was
+speaking to a royalty:
+
+"Madam flatters me too much; but I'm glad I intruded, for the minute,
+just to hear her say that."
+
+I had made my courtesy and reached the door leading inward when she
+called after me:
+
+"You're a puss. Do you know it?"
+
+Not feeling it necessary to respond in words, I merely smiled over my
+shoulder and entered the house.
+
+In one of the big chairs I waited a half-hour before J. Howard came out
+of the library with his grandchild. He had given her a doll which she
+hugged in her left arm, while her right hand was in his. The farewell
+scene was pretty, and took place in the middle of the hall.
+
+"Now run away," he said, genially, after much kissing and petting, "and
+give my love to mamma."
+
+He might have been shooing the sweet thing off into the air. There was
+no reference whatever to any one to take care of her. His eyes rested on
+me, but only as they rested on the wall behind me. I must say it was
+well done--if one has to do that sort of thing at all. Feeling myself,
+as his regard swept me, no more than a part of the carved
+ecclesiastical chair to which I stood clinging, I wondered how I was
+ever to bring this man to seeing me.
+
+I debated the question inwardly while I chatted with Gladys on the way
+homeward. I was obliged, in fact, to brace myself, to reason it out
+again that right was self-propagating and wrong necessarily sterile.
+Right I figured as a way which seemed to finish in a blind alley or
+cul-de-sac, but which, as one neared what seemed to be its end, led off
+in a new direction. Nearing the end of that there would be still a new
+lead, and so one would go on.
+
+And, sure enough, the new lead came within the next half-hour, though I
+didn't recognize it for what it was till afterward.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER X
+
+
+As we passed the Jack Brokenshire cottage, Larry Strangways and Broke,
+with Noble, the collie, bounding beside them, came racing down the lawn
+to overtake us. It was natural then that for the rest of the way Chips
+and Noble should form one company, Broke and his sister another, while
+we two elders strolled along behind them.
+
+It was the hour of the day for strolling. The mellow afternoon light was
+of the kind that brings something new into life, something we should be
+glad to keep if we knew how to catch it. It was not merely that grass
+and leaf and sea had a shimmer of gold on them. There was a sweet
+enchantment in the atmosphere, a poignant wizardry, a suggestion of
+emotions both higher and lower than those of our poor mortal scale. They
+made one reluctant to hurry one's footsteps, and slow in the return to
+that sheerly human shelter we call home. All along the path, down among
+the rocks, out in the water, up on the lawns, there were people, gentle
+and simple alike, who lingered and idled and paused to steep themselves
+in this magic.
+
+I have to admit that we followed their example. Anything served as an
+excuse for it, the dogs and the children doing the same from a similar
+instinct. I got the impression, too, that my companion was less in the
+throes of the discretion we had imposed upon ourselves, for the reason
+that his term as a mere educational lackey was drawing to a close. It
+had, in fact, only two more days to run. Then August would come and he
+would desert us.
+
+As it might be my last opportunity to surprise him into looking at me in
+the way Mrs. Rossiter had observed, I kept my eye on him pretty closely.
+I cannot say that I detected any change that flattered me. Tall and
+straight and splendidly poised, he was as smilingly impenetrable as
+ever. Like Howard Brokenshire, he betrayed no wound, even if I had
+inflicted one. It was a little exasperating. I was more than piqued.
+
+I told him I hadn't heard of his return from New York and asked how he
+had fared. His reply was enthusiastic. He had seen Stacy Grainger and
+was eager to be his henchman.
+
+"He's got that about him," he declared, "that would make anybody glad to
+work for him."
+
+He described his personal appearance, brawny and spare with the
+attributes of race. It was an odd comment on the laws of heredity that
+his grandfather was said to have begun life as a peddler, and yet there
+he was a _grand seigneur_ to the finger-tips. I said that Howard
+Brokenshire was also a _grand seigneur_, to which he replied that Howard
+Brokenshire was a monument. American conditions had raised him, and on
+those conditions he stood as a statue on its pedestal. His position was
+so secure that all he had to do was stand. It was for this reason that
+he could be so dictatorial. He was safely fastened to his base; nothing
+short of seismic convulsion of the whole economic world was likely to
+knock him off. In the course of that conversation I learned more of the
+origin of the Brokenshire fortunes than I had ever before heard.
+
+It was the great-grandfather of J. Howard who apparently had laid the
+foundation-stone on which later generations built so well. That
+patriarch, so I understood, had been a farmer in the Connecticut Valley.
+His method of finance was no more esoteric than that of lending out
+small sums of money at a high rate of interest. Occasionally he took
+mortgages on his neighbors' farms, with the result that he became in
+time something of a landed proprietor. When the suburbs of a city had
+spread over one of the possessions thus acquired, the foundation-stone
+to which I have referred might have been considered well and truly laid.
+
+About the year 1830, his son migrated to New York. The firm of Meek &
+Brokenshire, of which the fame was to go through two continents, was
+founded when Van Buren was in the presidential seat and Victoria just
+coming to the throne. It seems there was a Meek in those days, though at
+the time of which I am writing nothing remained of him but a syllable.
+
+It was after the Civil War, however, when the grandson of the
+Connecticut Valley veteran was in power, that the house of Meek &
+Brokenshire forged to the front rank among financial agencies. It formed
+European affiliations. It became the financial representative of a great
+European power. John H. Brokenshire, whose name was distinguished from
+that of his more famous son only by a distribution of initials, had a
+house at Hyde Park Corner as well as one in New York. He was the first
+American banker to become something of an international magnate. The
+development of his country made him so. With the vexed questions of
+slavery and secession settled, with the phenomenal expansion of the
+West, with the freer uses of steam and electricity, with the tightening
+of bonds between the two hemispheres, that pedestal was being raised on
+which J. Howard was to pose with such decorative effectiveness.
+
+His posing began on his father's death in the year 1898. Up to that time
+he had represented the house in England, the post being occupied now by
+his younger brother James. Polished manners, a splendid appearance, and
+an authoritative air imported to New York a touch of the Court of St.
+James's. Mrs. Billing had called him a dolt. Perhaps he was one. If so
+he was a dolt raised up and sustained by all that was powerful in the
+United States. It was with these vast influences rather than with the
+man himself that, as Larry Strangways talked, I began to see I was in
+conflict.
+
+In Stacy Grainger, I gathered, the contemporaneous development of the
+country had produced something different, just as the same piece of
+ground will grow an oak or a rose-bush, according to the seed. People
+with a taste for social antithesis called him the grandson of a peddler.
+Mr. Strangways considered this description below the level of the
+ancestral Grainger's occupation. In the days of scattered farms and
+difficult communications throughout Illinois, Wisconsin, and Minnesota
+he might better have been termed an itinerant merchant. He was the
+traveling salesman who delivered the goods. His journeys being made by
+river boats and ox-teams, he began to see the necessity of steam. He was
+of the group who projected the system of railways, some of which failed
+and some of which succeeded, through the regions west of Lake Superior.
+Later he forsook the highways for a more feverish life in the incipient
+Chicago. His wandering years having given him an idea of the value of
+this focal point, he put his savings into land. The phoenix rise of the
+city after the great fire made him a man of some wealth. Out of the
+financial crash of 1873 he became richer. His son grew richer still on
+the panic of 1893, when he, too, descended on New York. It was he who
+became a power on the Stock Exchange and bought the big house with which
+parts of my narrative will have to do.
+
+All I want to say now is that as I strolled with Larry Strangways along
+that sunny walk, and as he ran on about Brokenshires and Graingers, I
+got my first bit of insight into the immense American romance which the
+nineteenth century unfolded. I saw it was romance, gigantic, race-wide.
+For the first time in my life I realized that there were other tales to
+make men proud besides the story of the British Empire.
+
+I could see that Larry Strangways was proud--proud and anxious. I had
+never seen this side of him before. Pride was in the way in which he
+held his fine young head; there was anxiety in his tone, and now and
+then in the flash of his eye, in spite of his efforts not to be too
+serious.
+
+It was about the country that he talked--its growth, its vastness. Even
+as recently as when he was a boy it was still a manageable thing, with a
+population reckoned at no more than seventy or eighty millions. It had
+been homogeneous in spirit if not in blood, and those who had come from
+other lands, and been welcomed and adopted, accepted their new situation
+with some gratitude. Patriotism was still a word with a meaning, and if
+it now and then became spread-eagleism it was only as the waves when
+thrown too far inland become froth. The wave was the thing and it hadn't
+ebbed.
+
+"And do you think it has ebbed now?" I asked.
+
+He didn't answer this question directly.
+
+"We're becoming colossal. We shall soon count our people by the hundred
+million and more. Of these relatively few will have got our ideals.
+Some will reject them. There are mutterings already of other standards
+to which we must be taught to conform. Some of our own best people of
+pure Anglo-Saxon descent are losing heart and renouncing and denouncing
+the democratic tradition, though they've nothing to put in its place.
+And we're growing so huge--with a hugeness that threatens to make us
+lethargic."
+
+I tried to be encouraging.
+
+"You seem to me anything but that."
+
+"National lethargy can easily exist side by side with individual energy.
+Take China, for instance. There are few peoples in the world more
+individually diligent than the Chinese; and yet when it comes to
+national stirring it's a country as difficult to move as an unwieldy
+overfed giant. It's flabby and nerveless and inert. It's spread half
+over Asia, and it has the largest and most industrious population in the
+world; and yet it's a congeries of inner weaknesses, and a prey to any
+one who chooses to attack it."
+
+"And you think this country is on the way to being the China of the
+west?"
+
+"I don't say on the way. There's danger of it. In proportion as we too
+become unwieldy and overfed, the circulation of that national impulse
+which is like blood grows slower. The elephant is a heavily moving beast
+in comparison with the lion."
+
+"But it's the more intelligent," I argued, still with a disposition to
+be encouraging.
+
+"Intelligence won't save it when the lion leaps on its back."
+
+"Then what will?"
+
+"That's what we want to find out."
+
+"And how are you going to do it?"
+
+"By men. We've come to a time when the country is going to need stronger
+men than it ever had, and more of them."
+
+I suppose it is because I am a woman that I have to bring all questions
+to the personal.
+
+"And is your Stacy Grainger going to be one?"
+
+He walked on a few paces without replying, his head in the air.
+
+"No," he said, at last, "I don't think so. He's got a weakness."
+
+"What kind of weakness?"
+
+"I'm not going to tell you," he laughed. "It's enough to say that it's
+one which I think will put him out of commission for the job." He gave
+me some inkling, however, of what he meant when he added: "The country's
+coming to a place where it will need disinterested men, and
+whole-hearted men, and clean-hearted men, if it's going to pull through.
+It's extraordinary how deficient we've been in leaders who've had any of
+these characteristics, to say nothing of all three."
+
+"Is the United States singular in that?"
+
+He spoke in a half-jesting tone probably to hide the fact that he was so
+much in earnest.
+
+"No; perhaps not. But it's got to have them if it's going to be saved.
+Moreover," he went on, "it must find them among the young men. The older
+men are all steeped and branded and tarred and feathered with the
+materialism of the nineteenth century. They're perfectly sodden. They
+see no patriotism except in loyalty to a political machine; and no
+loyalty to a political machine except for what they can get out of it.
+From our Presidents down most of them will sacrifice any law of right
+to the good of a party. They don't realize that nine times out of ten
+the good of a party is the evil of the common weal; and our older men
+will never learn the fact. If we can't wake the younger men, we're done
+for."
+
+"And are you going to wake them?"
+
+"I'm going to be awake myself. That's all I can be responsible for. If I
+can find another fellow who's awake I'll follow him."
+
+"Why not lead him? I should think you could."
+
+He turned around on me. I shall never forget the gleam in his eye.
+
+"No one is ever going to get away with this thing who thinks of
+leadership. There are times in the history of countries when men are
+called on to give up everything and be true to an ideal. I believe that
+time is approaching. It may come into Europe in one way and to America
+in another; but it's coming to us all. There'll be a call for--for--" he
+hesitated at the word, uttering it only with an apologetic laugh--"for
+consecration."
+
+I was curious.
+
+"And what do you mean by that--by consecration?"
+
+He reflected before answering.
+
+"I suppose I mean knowing what this country stands for, and being true
+to it oneself through thick and thin. There'll be thin and there'll be
+thick--plenty of them both--but it will be a question of the value of
+the individual. If there had been ten righteous men in Sodom and
+Gomorrah, they wouldn't have been destroyed. I take that as a kind of
+figure. A handful of disinterested, whole-hearted, clean-hearted, and
+perhaps I ought to add stout-hearted Americans, who know what they
+believe and live by it, will hold the fort against all efforts, within
+and without, to pull it down." He paused in his walk, obliging me to do
+the same. "I've been thinking a good deal," he smiled, "during the past
+few weeks of your law of Right--with a capital. I laughed at it when you
+first spoke of it--"
+
+"Oh, hardly that," I interposed.
+
+"But I've come to believe that it will work."
+
+"I'm so glad."
+
+"In fact, it's the only thing that will work."
+
+"Exactly," I exclaimed, enthusiastically.
+
+"We must stand by it, we younger men, just as the younger men of the
+late fifties stood by the principles represented by Lincoln. I believe
+in my heart that the need is going to be greater for us than it was for
+them, and if we don't respond to it, then may the Lord have mercy on our
+souls."
+
+I give this scrap of conversation because it introduced a new note into
+my knowledge of Americans. I had not supposed that any Americans felt
+like that. In the Rossiter circle I never saw anything but an immense
+self-satisfaction. Money and what money could do was, I am sure, the
+only topic of their thought. Their ideas of position and privilege were
+all spuriously European. Nothing was indigenous. Except for their sense
+of money, their aims were as foreign to the soil as their pictures,
+their tapestries, their furniture, and their clothes. Even stranger I
+found the imitation of Europe in tastes which Europe was daily giving
+up. But in Larry Strangways, it seemed to me, I found something native,
+something that really lived and cared. It caused me to look at him with
+a new interest.
+
+His jesting tone allowed me to take my cue in the same vein.
+
+"I'm tremendously flattered, Mr. Strangways, that you should have found
+anything in my ideas that could be turned to good account."
+
+He laughed shortly and rather hardly.
+
+"Oh, if it was only that!"
+
+It was another of the things I wished he hadn't said, but with the words
+he started on again, walking so fast for a few paces that I made no
+effort to keep up with him. When he waited till I rejoined him we fell
+again to talking of Stacy Grainger. At the first opportunity I asked the
+question that was chiefly on my mind.
+
+"Wasn't there something at one time between him and Mrs. Brokenshire?"
+
+He marched on with head erect.
+
+"I believe so," he admitted, reluctantly, but not till some seconds had
+passed.
+
+"There was a big fight, wasn't there," I persisted, "between him and Mr.
+Brokenshire--over Editha Billing--on the Stock Exchange--or something
+like that?"
+
+Again he allowed some seconds to go by.
+
+"So I've heard."
+
+I fished out of my memory such tag ends of gossip as had reached me, I
+could hardly tell from where.
+
+"Didn't Mr. Brokenshire attack his interests--railways and steel and
+things--and nearly ruin him?"
+
+"I believe there was some such talk."
+
+I admired the way in which he refused to lend himself to the spread of
+the legend; but I insisted on going on, because the idea of this
+conflict of modern giants, with a beautiful maiden as the prize,
+appealed to my imagination.
+
+"And didn't old Mrs. Billing shift round all of a sudden from the man
+who seemed to be going under to--?"
+
+He cut the subject short by giving it another twist.
+
+"Grainger's been unlucky. His whole family have been unlucky. It's an
+instance of tragedy haunting a race such as one reads of in mythology
+and now and then in modern history--the house of Atreus, for example,
+and the Stuarts, and the Hapsburgs, and so on."
+
+I questioned him as to this, only to learn of a series of accidents,
+suicides, and sudden deaths, leaving Stacy as the last of his line,
+lonely and picturesque.
+
+At the foot of the steps leading up to the Rossiter lawn Larry
+Strangways paused again. The children and dogs having preceded us and
+being safe on their own grounds, we could consider them off our minds.
+
+"What do you know about old books?" he asked, suddenly.
+
+The question took me so much by surprise that I could only say:
+
+"What makes you think I know anything?"
+
+"Didn't your father have a library full of them? And didn't you
+catalogue them and sell them in London?"
+
+I admitted this, but added that even that undertaking had left me very
+ignorant of the subject.
+
+"Yes; but it's a beginning. If you know the Greek or Russian alphabet
+it's a very good point from which to go on and learn the language."
+
+"But why should I learn that language?"
+
+"Because I know a man who's going to have a vacancy soon for a
+librarian. It's a private library, rather a famous one in New York, and
+the young lady at present in command is leaving to be married."
+
+I smiled pleasantly.
+
+"Yes; but what has that got to do with me?"
+
+"Didn't I tell you I was going to look you up another job?"
+
+"Oh! And so you've looked me up this!"
+
+"No, I didn't. It looked me up. The owner of the library mentioned the
+fact as a great bore. It was his father who made the collection in the
+days of the first great American splurge. Stacy Grainger has added a rug
+or a Chinese jar from time to time, but he doesn't give a hang for the
+lot."
+
+"Oh, so it's his."
+
+"Yes; it's his. He says he feels inclined to shut the place up; but I
+told him it was a pity to do that since I knew the very young lady for
+the post."
+
+I dropped the subject there, because of a new inspiration.
+
+"If Mr. Grainger has places at his command, couldn't he do something for
+poor Hugh?"
+
+"Why poor Hugh? I thought he was--"
+
+I gave him a brief account of the fiasco in Boston, venturing to betray
+Hugh's confidence for the sake of some possible advantage. Mr.
+Strangways only shrugged his shoulders.
+
+"Of course," he said. "What could you expect?" I was sure he was looking
+down on me with the expression Mrs. Rossiter had detected, though I
+didn't dare to lift an eye to catch him in the act. "You really mean to
+marry him?"
+
+"Mean to marry him is not the term," I answered, with the decision which
+I felt the situation called for. "I mean to marry him only--on
+conditions."
+
+"Oh, on conditions! What kind of conditions?"
+
+I named them to him as I had named them to others. First that Hugh
+should become independent.
+
+He repeated his short, hard laugh.
+
+"I don't believe you had better bank on that."
+
+"Perhaps not," I admitted. "But I've another string to my bow. His
+family may come and ask me."
+
+He almost shouted.
+
+"Never!"
+
+It was the tone they all took, and which especially enraged me. I kept
+my voice steady, however, as I said, "That remains to be seen."
+
+"It doesn't remain to be seen, because I can tell you now that they
+won't."
+
+"And I can tell you now that they will," I said, with an assurance that,
+on the surface at least, was quite as strong as his own.
+
+He laughed again, more shortly, more hardly.
+
+"Oh, well!"
+
+The laugh ended in a kind of sigh. I noted the sigh as I noted the
+laugh, and their relation to each other. Both reached me, touching
+something within me that had never yet been stirred. Physically it was
+like the prick of the spur to a spirited animal, it sent me bounding up
+the steps. I was off as from a danger; and though I would have given
+much to see the expression with which he stood gazing after me, I would
+not permit myself so much as to glance back.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XI
+
+
+The steps by which I came to be Stacy Grainger's librarian could easily
+be traced, though to do so with much detail would be tedious.
+
+After Hugh's departure for New York my position with Mrs. Rossiter soon
+became untenable. The reports that reached Newport of the young man's
+doings in the city were not merely galling to the family pride, but
+maddening to his father's sense of pre-eminence. Hugh was actually going
+from door to door, as you might say, in Wall Street and Broad Street,
+only to be turned away.
+
+"He's making the most awful fool of himself," Mrs. Rossiter informed me
+one morning, "and papa's growing furious. Jim writes that every one is
+laughing at him, and, of course, they know it's all about some girl."
+
+I held my tongue at this. That they should be laughing at poor Hugh was
+a new example of the world's falsity. His letters to me were only a
+record of half-promises and fair speeches, but he found every one of
+them encouraging. Nowhere had he met with the brutal treatment he had
+received at the hands of Cousin Andrew Brew. The minute his card went in
+to never so great a banker or broker, he was received with a welcome. If
+no one had just the right thing to offer him, no one had turned him
+down. It was explained to him that it was largely a matter of the off
+season--for his purpose August was the worst month in the year--and of
+the lack of an opening which it would be worth the while of a man of his
+quality to fill. Later, perhaps! The two words, courteously spoken, gave
+the gist of all his interviews. He had every reason to feel satisfied.
+
+In the mean while he was comfortable at his club--his cash in hand would
+hold out to Christmas and beyond--and in the matter of energy, he wrote,
+not a mushroom was springing in his tracks. He was on the job early and
+late, day in and day out. The off season which was obviously a
+disadvantage in some respects had its merits in others, since it would
+be known, when things began to look up again, that he was available for
+any big house that could get him. That there would be competition in
+this respect every one had given him to understand. All this he told me
+in letters as full of love as they were of business, written in a great,
+sprawling, unformed, boyish hand, and with an occasional bit of phonetic
+spelling which made his protestations the more touching.
+
+But Jim Rossiter's sources of information were of another kind.
+
+"Get your father to do something to stop him," he wrote to his wife.
+"He's making the whole house of Meek & Brokenshire a laughing-stock."
+
+There came, in fact, a Saturday when Mr. Rossiter actually appeared for
+the week-end.
+
+"He wouldn't be doing that," Mrs. Rossiter almost sobbed to me, on
+receipt of the telegram announcing his approach, "unless things were
+pretty bad."
+
+Though I dreaded his coming, I was speedily reassured. Whatever the
+object of Mr. Rossiter's visit, I, in my own person, had nothing to do
+with it. On the afternoon of his arrival he came out to where I was
+knocking the croquet balls about with Gladys on the lawn, and was as
+polite as he had been through the winter in New York. He was always
+polite even to the maids, to whom he scrupulously said good-morning. His
+wistful desire to be liked by every one was inspired by the same sort of
+impulse as the jovial _bonhomie_ of Cousin Andrew Brew. He was a little,
+weazened man, with face and legs like a jockey, which I think he would
+gladly have been. Racin' and ridin', as he called them, were the
+amusements in which he found most pleasure, while his health was his
+chief preoccupation. He took pills before and after all his meals and a
+variety of medicinal waters. During the winter under his roof my own
+conversation with him had been entirely on the score of his complaints.
+
+In just the same way he sauntered up now. He talked of his lack of
+appetite and the beastly cooking at clubs. Expecting him to broach the
+subject of Hugh, I got myself ready; but he did nothing of the kind. He
+was merely amiable and, as far as I could judge, indifferent. Within ten
+minutes he had sauntered away again, leading Gladys by the hand.
+
+I saw then that in common with the other Brokenshires he considered that
+I didn't count. Hugh could be dealt with independently of me. So long as
+I was useful to his wife, there was no reason why I should be disturbed.
+I was too light a thing to be weighed in their balances.
+
+Next day there was a grand family council and on Monday Jack Brokenshire
+accompanied his brother-in-law to New York. Hugh wrote me of their
+threats and flatteries, their beseechings and cajoleries. He was to come
+to his senses; he was to be decent to his father; he was to quit being a
+fool. I gathered that for forty-eight hours they had put him through
+most of the tortures known to fraternal inquisition; but he wrote me he
+would bear it all and more, for the sake of winning me.
+
+Nor would he allow them to have everything their own way. That he wrote
+me, too. When it came to the question of marriage he bade them look at
+home. Each of them was an instance of what J. Howard could do in the
+matrimonial line, and what a mess he and they had made of it! He asked
+Jack in so many words how much he would have been in love with Pauline
+Gray if she hadn't had a big fortune, and, now that he had got her money
+and her, how true he was to his compact. Who were Trixie Delorme and
+Baby Bevan, he demanded, with a knowledge of Jack's affairs which
+compelled the elder brother to tell him to mind his own business.
+
+Hugh laughed scornfully at that.
+
+"I can mind my own business, Jack, and still keep an eye on yours,
+seeing that you and Pauline are the talk of the town. If she doesn't
+divorce you within the next five years, it will be because you've
+already divorced her. Even that won't be as big a scandal as your going
+on living together."
+
+Mr. Rossiter intervened on this and did his best to calm the younger
+brother down:
+
+"Ah, cut that out now, Hugh!"
+
+But Hugh rounded on him, shaking off the hand that had been laid on his
+arm.
+
+"You're a nice one, Jim, to come with your mealy-mouthed talk to me.
+Look at Ethel! If I'd married a woman as you married her--or if I'd been
+married as she married you--just because your father was a partner in
+Meek & Brokenshire and it was well to keep the money in the family--if
+I'd done that I'd shut up. I'd consider myself too low-down a cur to be
+kicked. What kind of a wife is Ethel to you? What kind of a husband are
+you to her? What kind of a father do you make to the children who hardly
+know you by sight? And now, just because I'm trying to be a man, and
+decent, and true to the girl I love, you come sneaking round to tell me
+she's not good enough. What do I care whether she's good enough or not,
+so long as she isn't like Ethel and Pauline? You can go back and tell
+them so."
+
+Jack Brokenshire came back, but I think he kept this confidence to
+himself. What he told, however, was enough to produce a good deal of
+gloom in the family. Though Mrs. Rossiter didn't cease to be nice to me
+in her non-committal way, I began to reason that there were limits even
+to indifference. I had made up my mind to go and was working out some
+practical way of going, when an incident hastened my departure.
+
+Doing an errand one day for Mrs. Rossiter in the shopping part of
+Bellevue Avenue, I saw old Mrs. Billing going by in an open motor
+landaulette. She signaled to me to stop, and, poking the chauffeur in
+the back through the open window, made him draw up at the curb.
+
+"I've got something for you," she said, without other form of greeting.
+She began to stir things round in her bag. "I thought you'd like it.
+I've been carrying it about with me for the last three or four
+days--ever since Jack Brokenshire got back from New York. Where the
+dickens is the thing? Ah, here!" She handed me out a crumpled card.
+"That's all, Antoine," she continued to the man. "Drive on."
+
+I was left with the card in my hand, finding it to be an advertisement
+for the Hotel Mary Chilton, a place of entertainment for women alone, in
+a central and reputable part of New York.
+
+By the time I got back to Mrs. Rossiter's I had solved what had at first
+been a puzzle, and, having reported on my errand, I gave my resignation
+verbally. I saw then--what old Mrs. Billing had also seen--that it was
+time. Mrs. Rossiter expressed no relief, but she made no attempt to
+dissuade me. That she was sorry she allowed me to see. She didn't speak
+of Hugh; but on the morning when I went she gave up her engagements to
+stay at home with me. As I said good-by she threw her arms round my neck
+and kissed me. I could feel on my cheek tears of hers as well as tears
+of my own, as I drew down my veil.
+
+Hugh met me at the station in New York, and we dined at a restaurant
+together. He came for me next morning, and we lunched and dined at
+restaurants again. When we did the same on the third day that sense of
+being in a false position which had been with me from the first, and
+which argument couldn't counteract, began to be disquieting. On the
+fourth day I tried to make excuses and remain at the hotel, but when he
+insisted I was obliged to let him take me out once more. The people at
+the Mary Chilton were kindly, but I was afraid they would regard me with
+suspicion. I was afraid of some other things, besides.
+
+For one thing I was afraid of Hugh. He began again to plead with me to
+marry him. Even he admitted that we couldn't continue to "go round
+together like that." We went to the most expensive restaurants, he
+argued, where there were plenty of people who would know him. When they
+saw him every day with a girl they didn't know, they would draw their
+own conclusions. As in a situation similar to theirs I would have drawn
+my own, I brought my bit of Bohemianism to a speedy end.
+
+There followed some days during which it seemed to me I was deprived of
+any outlook. I could hardly see what I was there for. I could hardly see
+what I was living for. Never till then had I realized how, in normal
+conditions, each day is linked to the day before as well as to the
+morrow. Here the link was gone. I left nothing undone when I went to
+bed; I had nothing to get up for in the morning. My reason for existing
+had suddenly been snuffed out.
+
+It was a time for the testing of my faith. I was near the end of my
+_cul-de-sac_, and yet I saw no further development ahead. If the
+continuous unfolding of right on which, to use Larry Strangways's
+expression, I had banked, were to come to a stop, I should be left not
+only without a duty, but without a law. Of the two possibilities it was
+the latter I dreaded most. One can live if one has a motive theory
+within one; without it-- And then, just as I was coming to the last
+stretches of what seemed a blind alley and no more, my confidence was
+justified. Larry Strangways called on me.
+
+I have not said that on coming to New York I had decided to let my
+acquaintance with him end. He made me uneasy. I was terrified by the
+thought that he might be in love with me. Why I was terrified I didn't
+know; I only knew I was. I did not tell him, therefore, when I left Mrs.
+Rossiter; and in the whirlpool of New York I considered that I was
+swallowed up. But here was his card, and he himself waiting in the
+drawing-room below.
+
+Naturally my first question was as to how he had found me out. This he
+laughed off, pretending to be annoyed with me for coming to the city
+without telling him. I could see, however, that he was in spirits much
+too high to allow of his being seriously annoyed with anything. Life
+promised well with him. He enjoyed his work, and for his employer he
+had that eager personal devotion which is always a herald of success.
+After having run away from him, as it were, I was now a little irritated
+at seeing that he hadn't missed me.
+
+But he did not take his leave without a bit of information that puzzled
+me beyond expression. He was going out of Mr. Grainger's office that
+morning, he said, with a bundle of letters which he was to answer, when
+his master observed, casually:
+
+"The young lady of whom you spoke to me as qualified to take Miss
+Davis's place is at the Hotel Mary Chilton. Go and see her and get her
+opinion as to accepting the job!"
+
+I was what the French call _atterrée_--knocked flat.
+
+"But how on earth could he know?"
+
+Larry Strangways laughed.
+
+"Oh, don't ask me. He knows anything he wants to know. He's got the
+flair of a detective. I don't try to fathom him. But the point is that
+the position is there for you to take or to leave."
+
+I tried to bring my mind back from the fact that this important man, a
+total stranger to me, was in some way interested in my destiny.
+
+"What can I do but leave it, when I know no more about it than I do of
+sailing a ship?"
+
+"Oh yes, you do. You know what books are, and you know what rare books
+are. For the rest, all you'd have to do would be to consult the
+catalogue. I don't know what the duties are; but if Miss Davis is up to
+them I guess you would be, too. She's a sweet, pretty kitten of a
+thing--daughter of one of Stacy Grainger's old pals who came to
+grief--but I don't believe she knows much more about a book than the
+cover from the print. Anyhow, I've given you the message with neither
+more nor less than he said. Look here!" he exclaimed, suddenly. "Why
+shouldn't you put on your hat and walk down the street with me, so that
+I could show you where the library is? It's not ten minutes away. I've
+never been inside it, but every one knows what it looks like."
+
+Consulting my wrist-watch, I objected that it was but twenty minutes to
+the time when Hugh was due to come and take me to walk in Central Park,
+returning to the hotel to tea.
+
+"Oh, let him go to the deuce! We can be there and back in twenty
+minutes, and you can leave a message for him at the office."
+
+So we started. The Mary Chilton is in one of the cross-streets between
+Fifth and Sixth Avenues. I discovered that Stacy Grainger's house was on
+the corner of Fifth Avenue and a corresponding cross-street a little
+farther down-town. It is a big brownstone house, in the eighteen-seventy
+style, of the type which all round it has been turned into offices and
+shops. All its many windows were blinded in a yellowish holland staff,
+giving to the whole building an aspect sealed and dead.
+
+I shuddered.
+
+"I hope I shouldn't have to work there."
+
+"No. The house has been shut up for years." He named the hotel
+overlooking the Park at which Stacy Grainger actually lived. "Anybody
+else would have sold the place; but he has a lot of queer sentiment
+about him. Of the two or three devotions in his life one of the most
+intense is to his father's memory. I believe the old fellow committed
+suicide in that house, and the son hallows it as he would a grave."
+
+"Cheerful!"
+
+"Oh, cheerful isn't the word one would associate with him first--"
+
+"Or last, apparently."
+
+"No, or last; but he's got other qualities to which cheerfulness is as
+small change to gold. All I want you to see is that he keeps this
+property, which is worth half a million at the least, from motives which
+the immense majority wouldn't understand. It gives you a clue to the
+man."
+
+"But what I want," I said, with nervous flippancy, for I was afraid of
+meeting Hugh, "is a clue to the library."
+
+"There it is."
+
+"That?"
+
+He had pointed to a small, low, rectangular building I had seen a
+hundred times, without the curiosity to wonder what it was. It stood
+behind the house, in the center of a grass-plot, and was approached from
+the cross-street, through a small wrought-iron gate. Built of
+brownstone, without a window, and with no other ornament than a frieze
+in relief below the eave, it suggested a tomb. At the back was a kind of
+covered cloister connecting with the house.
+
+"If I had to sit in there all day," I commented, as we turned back
+toward the hotel, "I should feel as if I were buried alive. I know that
+strange things would happen to me!"
+
+"Oh no, they wouldn't. It's sure to be all right or a pretty little
+thing like Miss Davis couldn't have stood it for three years. It's
+lighted from the top, and there are a lot of fine things scattered
+about."
+
+He gave me a brief history of how the collection had been formed. The
+elder Grainger on coming to New York had bought up the contents of two
+or three great European sales _en bloc_. He knew little about the
+objects he had thus acquired, and cared less. His motive was simply that
+of the rich American to play the nobleman.
+
+He was still talking of this when Hugh passed us and turned round.
+Between the two men there was a stiff form of greeting. That is, it was
+stiff on Larry Strangways's side, while on Hugh's it was the nearest
+thing to no greeting at all. I could see he considered the tutor of his
+sister's son beneath him.
+
+"What the devil were you walking with that fellow for?" he asked, after
+Mr. Strangways had left us and while we were continuing our way up-town.
+He spoke, wonderingly rather than impatiently.
+
+"Because he had come from a gentleman who had offered me employment. I
+had just gone down with him to look at the outside of the house."
+
+I could hardly be surprised that Hugh should stop abruptly, forcing the
+stream of foot-passengers to divide into two currents about us.
+
+"The impertinent bounder! Offer employment--to you--my--my wife!"
+
+I walked on with dignity.
+
+"You mustn't call me that, Hugh. It's a word only to be used in its
+exact signification." He began to apologize, but I interrupted. "I'm not
+only not your wife, but as yet I haven't even promised to marry you. We
+must keep that fact unmistakably clear before us. It will prevent
+possible complications in the end."
+
+He spoke humbly:
+
+"What sort of complications?"
+
+"I don't know; but I can see they might arise. And as for the matter of
+employment, I must have it for a lot of reasons."
+
+"I don't see that. Give me two or three months, Alix!"
+
+"But it's precisely during those two or three months, Hugh, that I
+should be left high and dry. Unless I have something to do I have no
+motive for staying here in New York."
+
+"What about me?"
+
+"I can't stay just to see you. That's the difference between a woman and
+a man. The situation is awkward enough as it is; but if I were to go on
+living here for two or three months, merely for the sake of having a few
+hours every day with you--"
+
+Before we reached the Park he saw the justice of my argument.
+Remembering what Larry Strangways had once said as to Hugh's belief that
+he was stooping to pick his diamond out of the mire, I reasoned that
+since he was marrying a working-girl it would best preserve the
+decencies if the working-girl were working. For this procedure Hugh
+himself was able to establish precedent, since we were in sight of the
+very hotel where Libby Jaynes had rubbed men's nails up to within an
+hour or two of her marriage to Tracy Allen. He pointed it out as if it
+was an historic monument, and in the same spirit I gazed at it.
+
+That matter settled, I attacked another as we advanced farther into the
+Park.
+
+"And Mr. Strangways is not a bounder, Hugh, darling. I wish you wouldn't
+call him that."
+
+His response was sufficiently good-natured, but it expressed that
+Brokenshire disdain for everything that didn't have money which
+specially enraged me.
+
+"Well, I won't," he conceded. "I don't care a hang what he is."
+
+"I do," I declared, with some tartness. "I care that he's a gentleman
+and that he's treated as one."
+
+"Oh, every one's a gentleman."
+
+"No, Hugh, every one isn't. I know men right here in New York who could
+buy and sell Mr. Strangways a thousand times, perhaps a million times
+over, and who wouldn't be worthy to valet him."
+
+His small wide-apart blue eyes were turned on me questioningly.
+
+"You don't know many men right here in New York. Who do you mean?"
+
+I saw that he had me there and, not wishing to be driven into a corner,
+I beat a shuffling retreat.
+
+"I don't mean any one in particular. I'm speaking in general." As we had
+reached an empty bench and the afternoon was hot, I suggested that we
+sit down.
+
+We had been silent a little while, when he asked the question I had been
+expecting.
+
+"Who was the person who offered you the--the--" I saw how he hated the
+word--"the employment?"
+
+I had already decided to betray no knowledge of matters which didn't
+concern me.
+
+"It's a Mr. Grainger," I said, as casually as I could.
+
+As he sat close to me I could feel him start.
+
+"Not Stacy Grainger?"
+
+I maintained my tone of indifference.
+
+"I think that is his name. Do you know him? He seems to be some one of
+importance."
+
+"Oh, he is."
+
+"Mr. Strangways has gone to him as secretary and, I suppose, knowing
+that I was out of a situation, he must have mentioned me."
+
+"For what?"
+
+"As I understand it, it's librarian. It seems that this Mr. Grainger has
+quite a collection--"
+
+"Oh yes, I know." As he remained silent for some time I waited for him
+to raise objections, but he only said at last: "In that case you
+wouldn't have much to do with him. He's never there."
+
+"No, I fancy not," I hastened to agree, and Hugh said no more.
+
+He said no more, but I could see that it was because he was wrestling
+with a subject of which he couldn't perceive the bearings. As far as I
+was concerned he plainly considered it wise not to tell me that which,
+as a stranger and a foreigner, I wouldn't be likely to know. He
+consequently dropped the topic, and when he talked again it was of
+trivial things.
+
+A half-hour later, as we were on our way homeward, he exclaimed,
+suddenly, and apropos of nothing at all:
+
+"Little Alix, if you were to love anybody else I'd--I'd shoot myself."
+
+His innocent, boyish, inexperienced face wore such a look of misery that
+I laughed. I laughed to conceal the fact that I was near to crying.
+
+"Oh no, you wouldn't, Hugh. Besides, you don't see any likelihood of my
+doing it."
+
+"I'm not so sure about that," he grumbled.
+
+"Well, I am, Hugh, dear." I laughed again. "I've no intention of loving
+any one else--till I've settled my account with your father."
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XII
+
+
+Nearly a week later, in the middle of a hot afternoon, I came back from
+some shopping to wait for Hugh at the hotel. Though it was a half-hour
+before I expected him, I was too tired to go up-stairs and so went
+directly to the reception-room. It was not only cool and restful there,
+but after the glare of the streets outside, it was so dim that I took
+the place to be empty. Having gone to a mirror for a moment to
+straighten my hat and smooth the wayward tendrils of my hair, so that I
+shouldn't look disheveled when Hugh arrived, I threw myself into an
+arm-chair.
+
+I remember that my attitude was anything but graceful, and that I
+sighed. I sighed more than once and somewhat loudly. I was depressed,
+and as usual when depressed I felt small and desolate. It would have
+been a relief to cry; but I couldn't cry when I was expecting Hugh. I
+could only toss about in my big chair and give utterance to my pent-up
+heart a little too explosively.
+
+It was five or six days since Larry Strangways's call, and no real
+development of my blind alley was in sight. He had not returned, nor had
+I heard from him. On the previous evening Hugh had said, "I thought
+nothing would come of that," in a tone which carried conviction. It
+wasn't that I was eager to be Stacy Grainger's librarian; it was only
+that I wanted something to happen, something that would justify my
+staying in New York. August had passed, and with the coming in of
+September I saw the stirring of a new life in the streets; but there was
+no new life for me.
+
+Nor, for the matter of that, did I see any new life for Hugh. He had
+entered now on that stage of waiting on the postman which a good many
+people have found sickening. Bankers and brokers having promised to
+write when they knew of anything to suit him, he was expecting a summons
+by every delivery of letters. On his dear face I began to read the
+evidence of hope deferred. He was cheery enough; he could find fifty
+explanations to account for the fact that he hadn't yet been called; but
+brave words couldn't counteract the look of disquietude that was
+creeping day by day into his kindly eyes. On the previous evening he had
+informed me, too, that he had left his club and installed himself in a
+small hotel, not far from my own neighborhood. When I asked him why he
+had done that he said it was "to get away from a lot of the fellows who
+were always chewing the rag," but I suspected the motive of economy. For
+the motive of economy I should have had nothing but respect, if it
+hadn't been so incongruous with everything I had known of him.
+
+It was probably because my eyes had grown accustomed to the gloom in the
+reception-room that I noticed, suddenly, two other eyes. They were in a
+distant corner and seemed to be looking at me with the detached and
+burning stare of motor-lamps at night. For a minute I could discern no
+personality, the eyes themselves were so lustrous.
+
+I was about to be frightened when a man arose and restlessly moved
+toward the chimneypiece, not because there was anything there he desired
+to see, but because he couldn't continue to sit still. He was a striking
+figure, tall, spare, large-boned and powerful. The face was of the type
+which for want of a better word I can only speak of as masculine. It was
+long and lean and strong; if it was handsome it was only because every
+feature and line was cut to the same large pattern as the frame.
+Sweeping mustaches, of the kind school-girls are commonly supposed to
+love, concealed a mouth which I could have wagered would be hard, while
+the luminosity of the gaze suggested a rather hungry set of human
+qualities and passions.
+
+We were now two restless persons instead of one, and I was about to
+leave the room when a page came in.
+
+"Sorry, sir," said the honest-faced little boy, with an amusingly
+uncouth accent I find it impossible to transcribe, "but number
+four-twenty-three ain't in, so I guess she must be out."
+
+Startled, I rose to my feet.
+
+"But I'm number four-twenty-three."
+
+The boy turned toward me nonchalantly.
+
+"Didn't know you was here! That gentleman wants you."
+
+With this introduction he dashed away, and I was once more conscious of
+the luminous eyes bent upon me. The tall figure, too, advanced a few
+paces in my direction.
+
+"I asked for Miss Adare." The voice was deep and grave and harsh and
+musical all at once.
+
+"That's my name."
+
+"Mine's Grainger."
+
+I gasped silently, like a dying fish, before I could stammer the
+words--
+
+"Won't you sit down?"
+
+As he seated himself near me and in a good light, I saw that his skin
+was tanned, as if he lived on the sea or in the open air. I learned
+later from Larry Strangways that he had just come from a summer's
+yachting. His gaze studied me--not as a man studies a woman, but as a
+workman inspects a tool.
+
+"You probably know my errand."
+
+"Mr. Strangways--"
+
+"Yes, I told him to sound you."
+
+"But I'm afraid I wouldn't do."
+
+"Why do you think so?"
+
+"Because I don't know anything about the work."
+
+"There's no work to know anything about. All you'd have to do would be
+to sit still. You'd never have more than two or three visitors in a
+day--and most days none at all."
+
+"But what should I do when visitors came?"
+
+"Show them what they asked to see. You'd find that in the catalogue.
+You'd soon get the hang of the place. It's small. There's not much in it
+when you come to sum it up. Miss Davis will show you the ropes before
+she leaves on the first of October. I'll give you the same salary I've
+been paying her."
+
+He named a sum the munificence of which almost took my breath away.
+
+"Oh, but I shouldn't be worth that."
+
+"It's the salary," he said, briefly, as he rose. "You can arrange with
+my secretary, Strangways, when you would like to begin. The sooner the
+better, as I understand that Miss Davis would like to get off."
+
+He was on his way to the door when, thinking of the tomb-like aspect of
+the place, I asked, desperately:
+
+"Should I be all alone?"
+
+He turned.
+
+"There's a man and his wife in the house. One of them would be always
+within call. The woman will bring you tea at half past four."
+
+I could hardly believe my ears. I had never heard of such solicitude.
+"But I shouldn't need tea!" I began to assure him.
+
+He paused for a moment, looking at me searchingly.
+
+"You'll have callers--"
+
+"Oh no, I sha'n't."
+
+"You'll have callers," he repeated, as if I hadn't spoken, "and there'll
+be tea every day at four-thirty."
+
+He was gone before I could protest further, or ask any more questions.
+
+Hugh's explanation, when I laid the matter before him, was that Mr.
+Grainger was trying to play into the hands of that fellow, Strangways.
+
+"But why?" I demanded.
+
+"He thinks there's something between him and you."
+
+"But there isn't."
+
+"I should hope not; but, evidently, Strangways has made him think--"
+
+"Oh no, he hasn't, Hugh. Mr. Strangways is not that kind of man. Mr.
+Grainger has some other reason for wanting me there, but I can't think
+what it is."
+
+"Then I shouldn't go till I knew," Hugh counseled, moodily.
+
+But I did. I went the next week. Larry Strangways made the arrangements,
+and, after a fortnight under Miss Davis's instructions, I found myself
+alone.
+
+It was not so trying as I feared, though it was monotonous. It was
+monotonous because there was so little to do. I was there each morning
+at half past nine. From one to two I had an hour for lunch. At six I
+came away. On Saturdays I had the afternoon. It was a little like being
+a prisoner, but a prisoner in a palace, a prisoner who is well paid.
+
+The place consisted of one big, handsome room, some sixty feet by
+thirty, resembling the libraries of great houses I had seen abroad. That
+in this case it was detached from the dwelling was, I suppose, a matter
+of architectural convenience. Book-shelves lined the walls right up to
+the cornice. The dull reds and browns and blues and greens of the
+bindings carried out the mellow effects of the Oriental rugs on the
+floor. Under the shelves there were cupboards, some of them empty,
+others stocked with portfolios of prints, European and Japanese. There
+were no pictures, but a few large pieces of old porcelain and faïence,
+Persian, Spanish, and Chinese, stood on the mantelpiece and tables. For
+the rest, the furnishings consisted of a bust or two, a desk or two, and
+some decorative tables and chairs.
+
+My chief objection to the life was its seeming pointlessness. I was hard
+at work doing nothing. The number of visitors was negligible. Once
+during the autumn an old gentleman brought some engravings to compare
+with similar examples in Mr. Grainger's collection; once a lady student
+of Shakespeare came to examine his early editions; perhaps as often as
+twice a week some wandering tourist in New York would enter and stare
+vacantly, and go as he arrived. To while away the time I read and wrote
+and did knitting and fancy-work, and at half past four every day, as
+regularly as the hands of the clock came round, I solemnly had my tea.
+It was very good tea, with cake and bread and butter in the orthodox
+style, and was brought by Mrs. Daly, the motherly old Irish caretaker of
+the house, who stumped in and stumped out, giving me, while she stayed,
+a good deal of detail as to her "sky-attic" nerves and swollen
+"varikiss" veins.
+
+I am bound to admit that the tea ceremony oppressed me--not that I
+didn't enjoy it in its way but because its generosity seemed overdone.
+It was not in the necessities of the case; it was, above all, not
+American. On both the occasions when Mr. Grainger honored the library
+with a call I tried to screw up my courage to ask him to let me off this
+hospitality, but I couldn't reach the point. I was not so much afraid of
+him as I was overawed. He was perfectly civil; he never treated me as
+the dust beneath his feet, like Howard Brokenshire; but any one could
+see that he was immensely and perhaps tragically preoccupied.
+
+I was having tea all alone on a cold afternoon in November, when the
+sound of the opening of the outer door attracted my attention. At first
+one came into a vestibule from which there was no entrance, till on my
+side I touched the spring of a closed wrought-iron grille. I had gone
+forward to see who was there and, if necessary, give the further
+admission, when to my astonishment I saw Mrs. Brokenshire.
+
+She was in a walking-dress with furs. The color in her cheeks might have
+been due to the cold wind, but the light in her eyes was that of
+excitement.
+
+"I heard you were here," she whispered, as she fluttered in, "and I've
+come to see you."
+
+My sense of the imprudence of this step was such that I could hardly
+welcome her. That feeling of protection which I had once before on her
+behalf came back to me.
+
+"Who told you?" I asked, as soon as she was seated and I was pouring her
+out a cup of tea. For the first time since taking the position I was
+glad the ceremony had not been suppressed.
+
+She answered, while glancing into the shadows about her.
+
+"Mildred told me. Hugh wrote it to her. He does write to her, you know.
+She's the only one with whom he is still in communication. She seems to
+think the poor boy is in trouble. I came to--to see if there was
+anything I could do."
+
+I told her I was living at the Hotel Mary Chilton and that, if necessary
+at any time, she could see me there.
+
+She repeated the address, but I knew it took no hold on her memory.
+
+"Ah yes; the Hotel Mary Chilton. I think I've heard of it. But I haven't
+many minutes, and you must tell me all you can about dear Hugh."
+
+As my anxiety on Hugh's account was deepening, I was the more eager to
+do as I was bid. I said he had found no employment as yet, and that in
+my opinion employment would be hard to secure. If he was willing to work
+for a year or two for next to nothing, as he would consider the salary,
+he might eventually learn the financial trade; but to expect that his
+name would be a key to open the door of any bank at which he might
+present himself was preposterous. I hadn't been able to convince him of
+that, however, and he was still hoping. But he was hoping with a sad,
+worried face that almost broke my heart.
+
+"And how is he off for money?"
+
+I said I thought his bank-account was running low. He made no complaint
+of that to me, but I noticed that he rarely now went to any of his
+clubs, and that he took his meals at the more inexpensive places. In
+taxis, too, he was careful, and in tickets for the theater. These were
+the signs by which I judged.
+
+Her eyes had the sweet mistiness I remembered from our last meeting.
+
+"I can let him have money--as much as he needs."
+
+I considered this.
+
+"But it would be Mr. Brokenshire's money, wouldn't it?"
+
+"It would be money Mr. Brokenshire gives me."
+
+"In that case I don't think Hugh could accept it. You see, he's trying
+to make himself independent of his father, so as to do what his father
+doesn't like."
+
+"But he can't starve."
+
+"He must either starve, or earn a living, or go back to his father
+and--give up."
+
+"Does that mean that you won't marry him unless he has money of his
+own?"
+
+"It means what I've said more than once before--that I can't marry him
+if he has no money of his own, unless his family come and ask me to do
+it."
+
+There was a little furrow between her brows.
+
+"Oh, well, they won't do that. I would," she hastened to add,
+"because--" she smiled, like an angel--"because I believe in love; but
+they wouldn't."
+
+"I think Mrs. Rossiter would," I argued, "if she was left free."
+
+"She might; and, of course, there's Mildred. She'd do anything for Hugh,
+though she thinks . . . but neither Jack nor Pauline would give in; and
+as for Mr. Brokenshire--I believe it would break his heart."
+
+"Why should he feel toward me like that?" I demanded, bitterly. "How am
+I inferior to Pauline Gray, except that I have no money?"
+
+"Well, I suppose in a way that's it. It's what Mr. Brokenshire calls the
+solidarity of aristocracies. They have to hold together."
+
+"But aristocracy and money aren't one."
+
+As she rose she smiled again, distantly and dreamily. "If you were an
+American, dear Miss Adare, you'd know."
+
+Before she said good-by she looked deliberately about the room. It was
+not the hasty inspection I should have expected; it was tranquil, and I
+could even say that it was thorough. She made no mention of Mr.
+Grainger, but I couldn't help thinking he was in her mind.
+
+At the door to which I accompanied her, however, her manner changed.
+Before trusting herself to the few paces of walk running from the
+entrance to the wrought-iron gate, she glanced up and down the street.
+It was dark by this time, and the lamps were lit, but not till the
+pavement was tolerably clear did she venture out. Even then she didn't
+turn toward Fifth Avenue, which would have been her natural direction;
+but rapidly and, as I imagined, furtively, she walked the other way.
+
+I mentioned to no one that she had come to see me. Her kind thought of
+Hugh I was sorry to keep to myself; but I knew of no purpose to be
+served in divulging it. With my maxim to guide me it was not difficult
+to be sure that in this case right lay in silence.
+
+A few days later I got Hugh's doings from a new point of view. As I was
+going back to my lunch at the hotel, Mrs. Rossiter called to me from her
+motor and made me get in. The distance I had to cover being slight, she
+drove me up to Central Park and back again to have the time to talk.
+
+"My dear, he's crazy. He's going round to all the offices that
+practically turned him out six or eight weeks ago and begging them to
+find a place for him. Two or three of papa's old friends have written to
+ask what they could really do for him--for papa, that is--and he's sent
+them word that he'd take it as a favor if they'd show Hugh to the door."
+
+"Of course, if his father makes himself his enemy--"
+
+"He only makes himself his enemy in order to be his friend, dear Miss
+Adare. He's your friend, too, papa is, if you only saw it."
+
+"I'm afraid I don't," I said, dryly.
+
+"Oh, you will some day, and do him justice. He's the kindest man when
+you let him have his own way."
+
+"Which would be to separate Hugh and me."
+
+"But you'd both get over that; and I know he'd do the handsome thing by
+you, as well as by him."
+
+"So long as we do the handsome thing by each other--"
+
+"Oh, well, you can see where that leads to. Hugh'll never be in a
+position to marry you, dear Miss Adare."
+
+"He will when your father comes round."
+
+"Nonsense, my dear! You know you're not looking forward to that, not any
+more than I am."
+
+Later, as I was getting out at my door, she said, as if it was an
+afterthought:
+
+"Oh, by the way, you know papa has made me write to Lady Cissie
+Boscobel?"
+
+I looked up at her from the pavement.
+
+"What for?"
+
+"To ask her to come over and spend a month or two in New York. She says
+she will if she can. She's a good deal of a girl, Cissie is. If you're
+going to keep your hold on Hugh-- Well, all I can say is that Cissie
+will give you a run for your money. Of course, it's nothing to me. I
+only thought I'd tell you."
+
+This, too, I kept from Hugh; but I seized an early opportunity to paint
+the portrait of the imaginary charming girl he could have for a wife,
+with plenty of money to support himself and her, if he would only give
+me up. This was as we walked home one night from the theater--I was
+obliged from time to time to let him take me so that we might have a
+pretext for being together--and we strolled in the shadows of the narrow
+cross-streets.
+
+"Little Alix," he declared, fervently, "I could no more give you up than
+I could give up my breath or my blood. You're part of me. You're the
+most vital part of me. If you were to fail me I should die. If I were to
+fail you--But that's not worth thinking of. Look here!" He paused in a
+dark spot beside a great silent warehouse. "Look here. I'm having a
+pretty tough time. I'll confess it. I didn't mean to tell you, but I
+will. When I go to see certain people now--men I've met dozens of times
+at my father's table--what do you think happens? They have me shown to
+the door, and not too politely. These are the chaps who two months ago
+were squirming for joy at the thought of getting me. What do you think
+of that? How do you suppose it makes me feel?" I was about to break in
+with some indignant response when he continued, placidly: "Well, it all
+turns to music the minute I think of you. It's as if I'd drunk some
+glowing cordial. I'm kicked out, let us say--and it's not too much to
+say--and I'm ready to curse for all I'm worth, but I think of you. I
+remember I'm doing it for you and bearing it for you, so that one day I
+may strike the right thing and we may be together and happy forever
+afterward, and I swear to you it's as if angels were singing in the
+sky."
+
+I had to let him kiss me there in the shadow of the street, as if we
+were a footman and a housemaid. I had to let him kiss away my tears and
+soothe me and console me. I told him I wasn't worthy of such love, and
+that, if he would consider the fitness of things, he would go away and
+leave me, but he only kissed me the more.
+
+Again I was having my tea. It had been a lifeless day, and I was
+wondering how long I could endure the lifelessness. Not a soul had come
+near the place since morning, and my only approach to human intercourse
+had been in discussing Mrs. Daly's "varikiss" veins. Even that interlude
+was over, for the lady would not return for the tea things till after my
+departure. I was so lonely--I felt the uselessness of what I was doing
+so acutely--that in spite of the easy work and generous pay I was
+thinking of sending my resignation in to Mr. Grainger and looking for
+something else.
+
+The outer door opened swiftly and silently, and I knew some one was
+inside. I knew, too, before rising from my place, that it was Mrs.
+Brokenshire. Subconsciously I had been expecting her, though I couldn't
+have said why. Her lovely face was all asparkle.
+
+"I've come to see you again," she whispered, as I let her in. "I hope
+you're alone."
+
+I replied that I was and, choosing my words carefully, I said it was
+kind of her to keep me in mind.
+
+"Oh yes, I keep you in mind, and I keep Hugh. What I've really come for
+is to beg you to hand him the money of which I spoke the other day."
+
+She seated herself, but not before glancing about the room, either
+expectantly or fearfully. As I poured out her tea I repeated what I had
+said already on the subject of the money. She wasn't listening, however.
+When she made replies they were not to the point. All the while she
+sipped her tea and nibbled her cake her eyes had the shifting alertness
+of a watchful little bird's.
+
+"Oh, but what does it all matter when it's a question of love?" she
+said, somewhat at a venture. "Love is the only thing, don't you think?
+It must make its opportunities as it can."
+
+"You mean that love can be--unscrupulous?"
+
+"Oh, I shouldn't use that word."
+
+"It isn't the word I'm thinking of. It's the act."
+
+"Love is like war, isn't it? All's fair!"
+
+"But is it?"
+
+Her eyes rested on mine, not boldly, but with a certain daring.
+
+"Why--yes."
+
+"You believe that?"
+
+She still kept her eyes on mine. Her tone was that of a challenge.
+
+"Why--yes." She added, perhaps defiantly, "Don't you?"
+
+I said, decidedly:
+
+"No, I don't."
+
+"Then you don't love. You can't love. Love is reckless. Love--" There
+was a long pause before she dropped the two concluding words, spacing
+them apart as if to emphasize her deliberation. "Love--risks--all."
+
+"If it risks all it may lose all."
+
+The challenge was renewed.
+
+"Well? Isn't that better than--?"
+
+"It's not better than doing right," I hastened to say, "however hard it
+may be."
+
+"Ah, but what is right? A thing can't be right if--if--" she sought for
+a word--"if it's killing you."
+
+As she said this there was a sound along the corridor leading from the
+house. I thought Mrs. Daly had forgotten something and was coming back.
+But the tread was different from her slow stump, and my sense of a
+danger at hand was such as the good woman never inspired.
+
+Mrs. Brokenshire made no attempt to play a part or to put me off the
+scent. She acted as if I understood what was happening. Her teacup
+resting in her lap, she sat with eyes aglow and lips slightly apart in
+a look of heavenly expectation. I could hardly believe her to be the
+dazed, stricken little creature I had seen three months ago. As the
+footsteps approached she murmured, "He's coming!" or, "Who's coming?" I
+couldn't be sure which.
+
+Mr. Grainger entered like a man who is on his own ground and knows what
+he is about to find. There was no uncertainty in his manner and no
+apparent sense of secrecy. His head was high and his walk firm as he
+pushed his way amid tables and chairs to where we were sitting in the
+glow of a shaded light.
+
+I stood up as he approached, but I had time to appraise my situation. I
+saw all its little mysteries illumined as by a flash. I saw why Stacy
+Grainger had kept track of me; I saw why, in spite of my deficiencies,
+he had taken me on as his librarian; but I saw, too, that the Lord had
+delivered J. Howard Brokenshire into my hands, as Sisera into those of
+Jael, the wife of Heber the Kenite.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XIII
+
+
+I was relieved of some of my embarrassment by the fact that Mr. Grainger
+took command.
+
+Having bowed over Mrs. Brokenshire's hand with an empressement he made
+no attempt to conceal, he murmured the words, "I'm delighted to see you
+again." After this greeting, which might have been commonplace and was
+not, he turned to me. "Perhaps Miss Adare will give me some tea."
+
+I could carry out this request, listen to their scraps of conversation,
+and think my own thoughts all at the same time.
+
+Thinking my own thoughts was the least easy of the three, for the reason
+that thought stunned me. The facts knocked me on the head. Since before
+my engagement as Mr. Grainger's librarian this situation had been
+planned! Mrs. Brokenshire had chosen me for my part in it! She had given
+Mr. Grainger my address, which she could have learned from her mother,
+and recommended me as one with whom they would be safe!
+
+Their talk was only of superficial things; but it was not the clue to
+their emotions. That was in the way they talked--haltingly, falteringly,
+with glances that met and shifted and fell, or that rested on each other
+with long, mute looks, and then turned away hurriedly, as if something
+in the spirit reeled. As she gave him bits of information concerning
+the summer at Newport, she stumbled in her words, because there was no
+correlation between the sentences she formed and her fundamental
+thought. The same was true of his account of yachting on the coast of
+Maine, of Gloucester, Islesboro, and Bar Harbor. He stuttered and
+stammered and repeated himself. It was like one of those old Italian
+duets in which stupid words are sung to a passionate, heartbreaking
+melody. Nevertheless, I had enough sympathy with love, even with a
+guilty love, to have some mercy in my judgments.
+
+Not that I believed it to be a guilty love--as yet. That, too, I was
+obliged to think over and form my opinion about it. It was not a guilty
+love as yet; but it might easily become a guilty love. I remembered that
+Larry Strangways, with all his admiration for his employer, had refused
+him a place in his list of whole-hearted, clean-hearted men because he
+had a weakness; and I reflected that on the part of Mrs. Billing's
+daughter there might be no rigorous concept of the moralities. What I
+saw, therefore, was a man and a woman so consumed with longing for each
+other that guilt would be chiefly a matter of opportunity. To create
+that opportunity I had been brought upon the scene.
+
+[Illustration: I SAW A MAN AND A WOMAN CONSUMED WITH LONGING FOR EACH
+OTHER]
+
+I could see, of course, how admirably I was suited to the purpose I was
+meant to serve. In the first place, I was young, and might but dimly
+perceive--might not perceive at all--what was being done with me. In the
+next place, I was presumably too inexperienced to take a line of my own
+even if I suspected what was not for me to know. Then, I was poor and a
+stranger, and too glad of the easy work for which I was liberally paid
+not to be willing to take its bitter with its sweet. Lastly, I, too,
+was in love; and I, too, was a victim of Howard Brokenshire. If I
+couldn't approve of what I might see and hear, at least I might be
+reckoned on not to speak of it. Once more I was made to feel that,
+though I might play a subordinate rôle of some importance, my own wishes
+and personality didn't count.
+
+It was obviously a minute at which to bring my maxim into operation. I
+had to do what was Right--with a capital. For that I must wait for
+inspiration, and presently I got it.
+
+That is, I got it by degrees. I got it first by noting in a puzzled way
+the glances which both my companions sent in my direction. They were
+sidelong glances, singularly alike, whether they came from Stacy
+Grainger's melancholy brown eyes or Mrs. Brokenshire's sweet, misty
+ones. They were timid glances, pleading, uneasy. They asked what words
+wouldn't dare to ask, and what I was too dense to understand. I sat
+sipping my tea, running hot and cold as the odiousness of my position
+struck me from the various points of view; but I made no attempt to
+move.
+
+They were still talking of people of whom I knew nothing, but talking
+brokenly, futilely, for the sake of hearing each other's voice, and yet
+stifling the things which it would have been fatal to them both to say,
+when Mr. Grainger got up and brought me his cup.
+
+"May I have another?"
+
+I looked up to take the cup, but he held it in his hands. He held it in
+his hands and gazed down at me. He gazed down at me with an expression
+such as I have never seen in any eyes but a dog's. As I write I blush to
+remember that, with such a mingling of hints and entreaties and
+commands, I didn't know what he was trying to convey to me. I took the
+cup, poured out his tea, handed the cup back to him--and sat.
+
+But after he had reached his seat the truth flashed on me. I was in the
+way; I was _de trop_. I had done part of my work in being the pretext
+for Mrs. Brokenshire's visit; now I ought, tactfully, to absent myself.
+I needn't go far; I needn't go for long. There was an alcove at the end
+of the room where one could be out of sight; there was also the corridor
+leading to the house. I could easily make an excuse; I could get up and
+move without an excuse of any kind. But I sat.
+
+I hated myself; I despised myself; but I sat. I drank my tea without
+knowing it; I ate my cake without tasting it--and I sat.
+
+The talk between my companions grew more fitful. Silence was easier for
+them--silence and that dumb interchange of looks which had the sympathy
+of something within myself. I knew that in their eyes I was a nuisance,
+a thing to be got rid of. I was so in my own--but I went on eating and
+drinking stolidly--and sat.
+
+It was in my mind that this was my chance to be avenged on Howard
+Brokenshire; but I didn't want my vengeance that way. I have to confess
+that I was so poor-spirited as to have little or no animosity against
+him. I could see how easy it was for him to think of me as an
+adventuress. I wanted to convince and convert him, but not to make him
+suffer. If in any sense I could be called the guardian of his interests
+I would rather have been true to the trust than not. As I sat,
+therefore, gulping down my tea as if I relished it, it was partly
+because of my protective instinct toward the exquisite creature before
+me who might not know how to protect herself--and partly because I
+couldn't help it. Mr. Grainger could order me to go, but until he did I
+meant to go on eating.
+
+Probably because of the insistence of my presence Mrs. Brokenshire felt
+obliged to begin to talk again. I did my best not to listen, but
+fragments of her sentences came to me.
+
+"My mother spent a few weeks with us in August. I--I don't think she
+and--and Mr. Brokenshire get on so well."
+
+Almost for the first time he was interested in what she said rather than
+in her.
+
+"What's the trouble?"
+
+"Oh, I don't know--the whole thing." A long pause ensued, during which
+their eyes rested on each other in mute questioning. "She's changed,
+mamma is."
+
+"Changed in what way?"
+
+"Oh, I don't know. I--I suppose she sees that she--she--miscalculated."
+
+It was his turn to ruminate silently, and when he spoke at last it was
+as if throwing up to the surface but one of a deep undercurrent of
+thoughts.
+
+"After the pounding I got three years ago she didn't believe I'd come
+back."
+
+She accepted this without comment. Before speaking again she sent me
+another of her frightened, pleading looks.
+
+"She always liked you better than any one else."
+
+He seconded the glance in my direction as he said, with a grim smile:
+
+"Which didn't prevent her going to the highest bidder."
+
+She colored and sighed.
+
+"You wouldn't be so hard on her if you knew what a fight she had to make
+during papa's lifetime. We were always in debt. You knew that, didn't
+you? Poor mamma used to say she'd save me from that if she never--"
+
+I lost the rest of the sentence by deliberately rattling the tea things
+in pouring myself a third or a fourth cup of tea. Nothing but
+disconnected words reached me after that, but I caught the name of
+Madeline Pyne. I knew who she was, having heard her story day by day as
+it unfolded itself during my first weeks with Mrs. Rossiter. It was a
+simple tale as tales go in the twentieth century. Mrs. Pyre had been
+Mrs. Grimshaw. While she was Mrs. Grimshaw she had spent three days at a
+seaside resort with Mr. Pyne. The law having been invoked, she had
+changed her residence from the house of Mr. Grimshaw in Seventy-fifth
+Street to that of Mr. Pyne in Seventy-seventh Street, and likewise
+changed her name. Only a very discerning eye could now have told that in
+the opinion of society there was a difference between her and Cæsar's
+wife. The drama was sufficiently recent to make the topic a natural one
+for an interchange of confidences. That confidences were being
+interchanged I could see; that from those confidences certain
+terrifying, passionate deductions were being drawn silently I could also
+see. I could see without hearing; I didn't need to hear. I could tell by
+her pallor and his embarrassment how each read the mind of the other,
+how each was tempted and how each recoiled. I knew that neither pointed
+the moral of the parable, for the reason that it stared them in the
+face.
+
+Because that subject, too, was exhausted, or because they had come to a
+place where they could say no more, they sat silent again. They looked
+at each other; they looked at me; neither would take the responsibility
+of giving me a further hint to go. Much as they desired my going, I was
+sure they were both afraid of it. I might be a nuisance and yet I was a
+safeguard. They were too near the brink of danger not to feel that,
+after all, there was something in having the safeguard there.
+
+A few minutes later Mrs. Brokenshire flew to shelter herself behind this
+protection. She fluttered softly to my side, beginning again to talk of
+Hugh. Knowing by this time that her interest in him was only a blind for
+her frightened essays in passion, I took up the subject but
+half-heartedly.
+
+"I've the money here," she confided to me, "if you'll only take charge
+of it."
+
+When I had declined to do this, for the reasons I had already given, her
+face brightened.
+
+"Then we can talk it over again." She rose as she spoke. "I can't stay
+any longer now--but we'll talk it over again. Let me see! This is
+Tuesday. If I came--"
+
+"I'm always at the Hotel Mary Chilton after six," I said, significantly.
+
+I smiled inwardly at the way in which she took this information.
+
+"Oh, I'll come before that--and I sha'n't keep you--just to talk about
+Hugh--and see he won't take the money--perhaps on--on Thursday."
+
+As nominally she had come to see me, nominally it was my place to
+accompany her to the door. In this at least I got my cue, walking the
+few paces with her, while she held my hand. I gathered that, the minutes
+of temptation being past, she bore me some gratitude for having helped
+her over them. At any rate, she pressed my fingers and gave me wistful,
+teary smiles, till at last she was out in the lighted street and I had
+closed the door behind her.
+
+It was only half past five, and I had still thirty minutes to fill in.
+As I turned back into the room I found Mr. Grainger walking aimlessly up
+and down, inspecting a bit of lustrous faïence or the backs of a row of
+books, and making me feel that there was something he wished to say. His
+movements were exactly those of a man screwing up his courage or trying
+to find words.
+
+The simplest thing I could do was to sit down at my desk and make a
+feint at writing. I seemed to be ignoring my employer's presence, but in
+reality, as I watched him from under my lids, I was getting a better
+impression of him than on any previous occasion.
+
+There was nothing Olympian about him as there was about Howard
+Brokenshire. He was too young to be Olympian, being not more than
+thirty-eight. He struck me, indeed, as just a big, sinewy man of the
+type which fights and hunts and races and loves, and has dumb,
+uncomprehended longings which none of these pursuits can satisfy. In
+this he was English more than American, and Scottish more than English.
+He was certainly not the American business man as seen in hotel lobbies
+and on the stage. He might have been classed as the American
+romantic--an explorer, a missionary, or a shooter of big game, according
+to taste and income. Larry Strangways said that among Americans you most
+frequently met his like in East Africa, Manchuria, or Brazil. That he
+was in business in New York was an accident of tradition and
+inheritance. Just as an Englishman who might have been a soldier or a
+solicitor is a country gentleman because his father has left him landed
+estates, so Stacy Grainger had become a financier.
+
+As a financier, I understood he helped to furnish the money in
+undertakings in which other men did the work. In this respect the
+direction his interests took was what might have been expected of so
+virile a character--steel, iron, gunpowder, shells, the founding of
+cannon, the building of war-ships; the forceful, the destructive. I
+gathered from Mr. Strangways that he was forever making journeys to
+Washington, to Pittsburg, to Cape Breton, wherever money could be
+invested in mighty conquering things. It was these projects that Howard
+Brokenshire had attacked so savagely as almost to bring him to ruin,
+though he had now re-established himself as strongly as before.
+
+Being as terrified of him as of his rival, I prayed inwardly that he
+would go away. Once or twice in marching up and down he paused before my
+desk, and the pen almost dropped from my hand. I knew he was trying to
+formulate a hint that when Mrs. Brokenshire came again--But even on my
+part the thought would not go into words. Words made it gross, and it
+was what he must have discovered each time he approached me. Each time
+he approached me I fancied that his poetic eye grew apologetic, that his
+shoulders sagged, and that his hard, strong mouth became weak before
+syllables that would not pass the lips. Then he would veer away,
+searching doubtless some easier phrase, some more delicate suggestion,
+only to fail again.
+
+It was a relief when, after a last attempt, he passed into the corridor
+leading to the house. I could breathe, I could think; I could look back
+over the last half-hour and examine my conduct. I was not satisfied with
+it, because I had frustrated love--even that kind of love; and yet I
+asked myself how I could have acted differently.
+
+In substance I asked the same of Larry Strangways when he came to dine
+with me next day. Hugh being in Philadelphia on one of his pathetic
+cruises after work, I had invited Mr. Strangways by telephone, begging
+him to come on the ground that, having got me into this trouble, he must
+advise me as to getting out.
+
+"I didn't get you into the trouble," he smiled across the table. "I only
+helped to get you the job."
+
+"But when you got me the job, as you call it--"
+
+"I knew you would be able to do the work."
+
+"And did you think the work would be--this?"
+
+"I couldn't tell anything about that. I simply knew you could do the
+work--from all the points of view."
+
+"And do you think I've done it?"
+
+"I know you've done it. You couldn't do anything else. I won't go back
+of that."
+
+If my heart gave a sudden leap at these words it was because of the
+tone. It betrayed that quality behind the tone to which I had been
+responding, and of which I had been afraid, ever since I knew the man.
+By a great effort I kept my words on the casual, friendly plane, as I
+said:
+
+"Your confidence is flattering, but it doesn't help me. What I want to
+know is this: Assuming that they love each other, should I allow myself
+to be used as the pretext for their meetings?"
+
+"Does it do you any harm?"
+
+"Does it do them any good?"
+
+"Couldn't you let that be their affair?"
+
+"How can I, when I'm dragged into it?"
+
+"If you're only dragged into it to the extent of this afternoon--"
+
+"Only! You can use that word of a situation--"
+
+"In which you played propriety."
+
+"Oh, it wasn't playing."
+
+"Yes, it was; it was playing the game--as they only play it who aren't
+quitters but real sports."
+
+"But I'm not a sport. I've the quitter in me. I'm even thinking of
+flinging up the position--"
+
+"And leaving them to their fate."
+
+I smiled.
+
+"Couldn't I let that be their affair?"
+
+He, too, smiled, his head thrown back, his white teeth gleaming.
+
+"You think you've caught me, don't you? But you've got the shoe on the
+wrong foot. I said just now that it might be their affair as to whether
+or not it did them any good to have you as the pretext of their
+meetings; but it's surely your affair when you say they sha'n't. Their
+meetings will be one thing so long as they have you; whereas without
+you--"
+
+"Then you think they'll keep meeting in any case?"
+
+"I've nothing to say about that. I limit myself to believing that in any
+situation that requires skilful handling your first name is
+resourcefulness."
+
+I shifted my ground.
+
+"Oh, but when it's such an odious situation!"
+
+"No situation is odious in which you're a participant, just as no view
+is ugly where there's a garden full of flowers."
+
+He went on with his dinner as complacently as if he had not thrown me
+into a state of violent inward confusion. All I could do was to summon
+Hugh's image from the shades of memory into which it had withdrawn, and
+beg it to keep me true to him. The thought of being false to the man to
+whom I had actually owned my love outraged in me every sentiment akin to
+single-heartedness. In a kind of desperation I dragged Hugh's name into
+the conversation, and yet in doing so I merely laid myself open to
+another shock.
+
+"You can't be in love with him!"
+
+The words were the same as Mrs. Billing's; the emphasis was similar.
+
+"I am," I declared, bluntly, not so much to contradict the speaker as to
+fortify myself.
+
+"You may think you are--"
+
+"Well, if I think I am, isn't it the same thing as--"
+
+"Lord, no! not with love! Love is the most deceptive of the emotions--to
+people who haven't had much experience of its tricks."
+
+"Have you?"
+
+He met this frankly.
+
+"No; nor you. That's why you can so easily take yourself in."
+
+I grew cold and dignified.
+
+"If you think I'm taking myself in when I say that I'm in love with Hugh
+Brokenshire--"
+
+"That's certainly it."
+
+Though I knew my cheeks were flaming a dahlia red, I forced myself to
+look him in the eyes.
+
+"Then I'm afraid it would be useless to try to convince you--"
+
+He nodded.
+
+"Quite!"
+
+"So that we can only let the subject drop."
+
+He looked at me with mock gravity.
+
+"I don't see that. It's an interesting topic."
+
+"Possibly; but as it doesn't lead us any further--"
+
+"But it does. It leads us to where we see straighter."
+
+"Yes, but if I don't need to see straighter than I do?"
+
+"We all need to see as straight as we can."
+
+"I'm seeing as straight as I can when I say--"
+
+"Oh, but not as straight as I can! I can see that a noble character
+doesn't always distinguish clearly between love and kindness, or between
+kindness and loyalty, or between loyalty and self-sacrifice, and that
+the higher the heart, the more likely it is to impose on itself. No one
+is so easily deceived as to love and loving as the man or the woman
+who's truly generous."
+
+"If I was truly generous--"
+
+"I know what you are," he said, shortly.
+
+"Then if you know what I am you must know, too, that I couldn't do other
+than care for a man who's given up so much for my sake."
+
+"You couldn't do other than admire him. You couldn't do other than be
+grateful to him. You probably couldn't do other than want to stand by
+him through thick and thin--"
+
+"Well, then?"
+
+"But that's not love."
+
+"If it isn't love it's so near to it--"
+
+"Exactly--which is what I'm saying. It's so near it that you don't know
+the difference, and won't know the difference till--till the real thing
+affords you the contrast."
+
+I did my best to be scornful.
+
+"Really! You speak like an expert."
+
+"Yes; an expert by intuition."
+
+I was still scornful.
+
+"Only that?"
+
+"Only that. You see," he smiled, "the expert by experience has learnt a
+little; but the expert by intuition knows it all."
+
+"Then, when I need information on the subject, I'll come to you."
+
+"And I'll promise to give it to you frankly."
+
+"Thanks," I said, sweetly. "But you'll wait till I come, won't you? And
+in the mean time, you'll not say any more about it."
+
+"Does that mean that I'm not to say any more about it ever--or only for
+to-night?"
+
+I knew, suddenly, what the question meant to me. I took time to see that
+I was shutting a door which my heart cried out to have left open. But I
+answered, still sweetly and with a smile:
+
+"Suppose we make it that you won't say any more about it--ever?"
+
+He gazed at me; I gazed at him. A long half-minute went by before he
+uttered the words, very slowly and deliberately:
+
+"I won't say any more about it--for to-night."
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XIV
+
+
+On Thursday Mr. Grainger came to the library to tea, but notwithstanding
+her suggestion Mrs. Brokenshire did not. She came, however, on Friday
+when he did not. For some time after that he came daily.
+
+Toward me his manner had little variation; he was courteous and distant.
+I cannot say that he ever had tea with me, for even if he accepted a
+cup, which he did from time to time, as if keeping up a rôle, he carried
+it to some distant corner of the room where he was either examining the
+objects or making their acquaintance. He came about half past four and
+went about half past five, always appearing from the house and retiring
+by the same way. In the house itself, as I understood from Mrs. Daly, he
+displayed an interest he had not shown for years.
+
+"It's out of wan room and into another, and raisin' the shades and
+pushin' the furniture about, till you'd swear he was goin' to be
+married."
+
+I thought of Mr. Pyne, wondering if, before his trip to Atlantic City
+with Mrs. Grimshaw, he, too, had wandered about his house, appraising
+its possibilities from the point of view of a new mistress.
+
+On the Friday when Mrs. Brokenshire came and Mr. Grainger did not she
+made no comment on his non-appearance. She even sustained with some
+success the fiction that her visit was on my account. Only her soft
+eyes turned with a quick light toward the door leading to the house at
+every sound that might have been a footstep.
+
+When she talked it was chiefly about Mr. Brokenshire.
+
+"It's telling on him--all this trouble about Hugh."
+
+I was curious.
+
+"Telling on him in what way?"
+
+"It's made him older--and grayer--and the trouble with his eye comes
+oftener."
+
+It seemed to me that I saw an opportunity.
+
+"Then why doesn't he give in?"
+
+"Give in? Mr. Brokenshire? Why, he never gave in in his life."
+
+"But if he suffers?"
+
+"He'd rather suffer than give in. He's not an unkind man, not really, so
+long as he has his own way; but once he's thwarted--"
+
+"Every one has to be thwarted some time."
+
+"He'd agree to that; but he'd say every one but him. That's why, when he
+first met--met me--and my mother at that time meant to have me--to have
+me marry some one else-- You knew that, didn't you?"
+
+I reminded her that she had told me so among the rocks at Newport.
+
+"Did I? Perhaps I did. It's--it's rather on my mind. I had to change
+so--so suddenly. But what I was going to say was that when Mr.
+Brokenshire saw that mamma meant me to marry some one else, and that
+I--that I wanted to, there was nothing he didn't do. It was in the
+papers--and everything. But nothing would stop him till he'd got what he
+wanted."
+
+I pumped up my courage to say:
+
+"You mean, till you gave it to him."
+
+She bit her lip.
+
+"Mamma gave it to him. I had to do as I was told. You'd say, I suppose,
+that I needn't have done it, but you don't know." She hesitated before
+going on. "It--it was money. We--we had to have it. Mamma thought that
+Mr.--the man I was to have married first--would never have any more. It
+was all sorts of things on the Stock Exchange--and bulls and bears and
+things like that. There was a whole week of it--and every one knew it
+was about me. I nearly died; but mamma didn't mind. She enjoyed it. It's
+the sort of thing she would enjoy. She made me go with her to the opera
+every night. Some one always asked us to sit in their box. She put me in
+the front where the audience watched me through their opera-glasses more
+than they did the stage--and I was a kind of spectacle. There was one
+night--they were singing the 'Meistersinger'--when I felt just like Eva,
+put up as a prize for whoever could win me. But I was talking of Mr.
+Brokenshire, wasn't I? Do you think his eye will ever be any better?"
+
+She asked the question without change of tone. I could only reply that I
+didn't know.
+
+"The doctor says--that is, he's told me--that in a way it's mental. It's
+the result of the strain he's put upon his nerves by overwork and awful
+tempers. Of course, his responsibilities have been heavy, though of late
+years he's been able to shift some of them to other people's shoulders.
+And then," she went on, in her sweet, even voice, "what happened about
+me--coming to him so late in life--and--and tearing him to pieces more
+violently than if he'd been a younger man--young men get over
+things--that made it worse. Don't you see it would?"
+
+I said I could understand that that might be the effect.
+
+"Of course, if I could really be a wife to him--"
+
+"Well, can't you?"
+
+She shuddered.
+
+"He terrifies me. When he's there I'm not a woman any more; I'm a
+captive."
+
+"But since you've married him--"
+
+"I didn't marry him; he married me. I was as much a bargain as if I had
+been bought. And now mamma sees that--that she might have got a better
+price."
+
+I thought it enough to say:
+
+"That must make it hard for her."
+
+A sigh bubbled up, like that of a child who has been crying.
+
+"It makes it hard for me." She eyed me with a long, oblique regard.
+"Don't you think it's awful when an elderly man falls in love with a
+young girl who herself is in love with some one else?"
+
+I could only dodge that question.
+
+"All unhappiness is awful."
+
+"Ah, but this! An elderly man!--in love! Madly in love! It's not
+natural; it's frightful; and when it's with yourself--"
+
+She moved away from me and began to inspect the room. In spite of her
+agitation she did this more in detail than when she had been there
+before, making the round of the book-shelves much as Mr. Grainger
+himself was in the habit of doing, and gazing without comment on the
+Persian and Italian potteries. It was easy to place her as one of those
+women who live surrounded by beautiful things to which they pay no
+attention. Mr. Brokenshire's richly Italianate dwelling was to her just
+a house. It would have been equally just a house had it been Jacobean or
+Louis Quinze or in the fashion of the Brothers Adam, and she would have
+seen little or no difference in periods and styles. The books she now
+looked at were mere backs; they were bindings and titles. Since they
+belonged to Stacy Grainger she could look at them with soft, unseeing
+eyes, thinking of him. That was all. Without comment of my own I
+accompanied her, watching the quick, bird-like turnings of her head
+whenever she thought she heard a step.
+
+"It's nice for you here," she said, when at last she gave signs of
+going. "I--I love it. It's so quiet--and--and safe. Nobody knows I come
+to--to see you."
+
+Her stammering emboldened me to take a liberty.
+
+"But suppose they found out?"
+
+She was as innocent as a child as she glanced up at me and said:
+
+"It would still be to see you. There's no harm in that."
+
+"Even so, Mr. Brokenshire wouldn't approve of it."
+
+"But he'll never know. It's not the sort of thing any one would think
+of. I leave the motor down at Sixth Avenue, and this time of year it's
+so dark. As soon as I heard Miss Davis was leaving I thought how nice
+the place would be for you."
+
+Since it was useless to make the obvious correction here, I thanked her
+for her kindness, going on to add:
+
+"But I don't want to get into any trouble."
+
+"No, of course not." She began moving toward the door. "What kind of
+trouble were you thinking of?"
+
+I wondered whether or not, having taken one liberty, I could take
+another.
+
+"When I see my boat being caught in the rapids I'm afraid there's a
+cataract ahead."
+
+It took her some thirty seconds to seize the force of this. Having got
+it her eyes fell.
+
+"Oh, I see! And does that mean," she went on, her bosom heaving, "that
+you're afraid of the cataract on your own account--or on mine?"
+
+I paused in our slow drifting toward the door. She was a great lady in
+the land, and I was nobody. I had much to risk, and I risked it.
+
+"Should I offend you," I asked, deferentially, "if I said--on yours?"
+
+For an instant she became as haughty as so sweet a nature knew how to
+be, but the prompting passed.
+
+"No; you don't offend me," she said, after a brief pause. "We're
+friends, aren't we, in spite of--"
+
+As she hesitated I filled in the phrase.
+
+"In spite of the difference between us."
+
+Because she was pursuing her own thoughts she allowed that to pass.
+
+"People have gone over cataracts--and still lived."
+
+"Ah, but there's more to existence than life," I exclaimed, promptly.
+
+"There was a friend of my own," she continued, without immediate
+reference to my observation; "at least she was a friend--I suppose she
+is still--her name was Madeline Grimshaw--"
+
+"Yes, Mrs. Pyne; but she wasn't Mrs. Brokenshire."
+
+"No; she never was so unhappy." She pressed her handkerchief against the
+two great tears that rolled down her cheeks. "She did love Mr. Grimshaw
+at one time, whereas I--"
+
+"But you say he's kind."
+
+"Oh yes. It isn't that. He's more than kind. He'd smother me with things
+I'd like to have. It's--it's when he comes near me--when he touches
+me--and--and his eye!"
+
+I knew enough of physical repulsion to be able to change my line of
+appeal. "But do you think you'd gain anything if you made him
+unhappy--now?"
+
+She looked at me wonderingly.
+
+"I shouldn't think you'd plead for him."
+
+I had ventured so far that I could go a little farther.
+
+"I don't think I'm pleading for him so much as for you."
+
+"Why do you plead for me? Do you think I should be--sorry?"
+
+"If you did what I imagine you're contemplating--yes."
+
+She surprised me by admitting my implication.
+
+"Even if I did, I couldn't be sorrier than I am."
+
+"Oh, but existence is more than joy and sorrow."
+
+"You said just now that it was more than life. I suppose you mean that
+it's love."
+
+"I should say that it's more than love."
+
+"Why, what can it be?"
+
+I smiled apologetically.
+
+"Mightn't it be--right?"
+
+She studied me with an air of angelic sweetness.
+
+"Oh no, I could never believe that."
+
+And she went more resolutely toward the door.
+
+Hugh returned in good spirits from Philadelphia. He had been well
+received. His name had secured him much the same welcome as that
+accorded him on his first excursions into Wall Street. I didn't tell him
+I feared that the results would be similar, for I saw that he was
+cheered.
+
+To verify the love I had acknowledged to him more than once, I was eager
+to look at him again. I found a man thinner and older and shabbier than
+the Hugh who first attracted my attention by being kind to me. I could
+have borne with his being thinner and older; but that he should be
+shabbier wrung my heart.
+
+I considered myself engaged to him. That as yet I had not spoken the
+final word was a detail, in my mind, considering that I had so often
+rested in his arms and pillowed my head on his shoulder. The fact, too,
+that when I had first allowed myself those privileges I had taken him to
+be a strong character--the shadow of a rock in a thirsty land, I had
+called him--and that I now saw he was a weak one, bound me to him the
+more closely. I had gone to him because I needed him; but now that I saw
+he needed me I was sure I could never break away from him.
+
+He dined with me at the Mary Chilton on the evening of his return,
+sitting where Larry Strangways had sat only forty-eight hours
+previously. I was sorry then that I had not changed the table. To be
+face to face with two men, on exactly the same spot, on occasions so
+near together, in conditions so alike, gave me a sense of faithlessness.
+Though I wanted nothing so much as to be honest with them both, I was
+afraid of being so with neither; and yet for this I hardly knew where to
+place the blame. I suffered for Hugh because of Larry Strangways, and I
+suffered for Larry Strangways because of Hugh. If I suffered for myself
+I was scarcely aware of it, having to give so much thought to them.
+
+Nevertheless, I regretted that I had not chosen another table, and all
+the more when Hugh brought the matter up. He had finished telling me of
+his experiences in Philadelphia. "Now what have you been doing?" he
+demanded, a smile lighting up his tired face.
+
+"Oh, nothing much--the same old thing."
+
+"Seen anybody in particular?"
+
+I weighed my answer carefully.
+
+"Nobody in particular, except Mr. Strangways."
+
+He frowned.
+
+"Where did you see that fellow?"
+
+"Right here."
+
+"Right here? What do you mean by that?"
+
+"He came to dine with me."
+
+"Dine with you! And sat where I'm sitting now?"
+
+I tried to take this pleasantly.
+
+"It's the only place I've got to ask any one I want to talk to."
+
+"But why should you want to talk to--to--" I saw him struggling with the
+word, but it came out--"to that bounder?"
+
+"He's a friend of mine, Hugh. I've asked you already to remember that
+he's a gentleman."
+
+"Gentleman! O Lord!" He became kindly and coaxing, leaning across the
+table with an ingratiating smile. "Look here, little Alix! Don't you
+think that for my sake it's time you were beginning to drop that lot?"
+
+Though I revolted against the expression, I pretended to see nothing
+amiss.
+
+"You mean just as Libby Jaynes had to drop the barbers and the pages in
+the hotel when she became Mrs. Tracy Allen."
+
+He laughed nervously.
+
+"Oh, I don't go as far as that. And yet if I did--"
+
+"It wouldn't be too far." I gave him the impression that I was thinking
+the question out. "But you see, Hugh, dear, I don't see any difference
+between Mr. Strangways--"
+
+"And me?"
+
+"I wasn't going to say you, but between Mr. Strangways and the people
+you'd like me to know. Or rather, if I do see a difference it's that Mr.
+Strangways is so much more a man of the world than--than--"
+
+Perceiving my embarrassment, he broke in:
+
+"Than who?"
+
+I took my courage in both hands.
+
+"Than Mr. Rossiter, for example, or your brother, Mr. Jack Brokenshire,
+or any of the men I met when I was with your sister. If I hadn't seen
+you--the truest gentleman I ever knew--I shouldn't have supposed that
+any of them belonged to the real great world at all."
+
+To my relief he took this good-naturedly.
+
+"That's what we call social inexperience, little Alix. It's because you
+don't know how to distinguish."
+
+"That is, I don't know a good thing when I see it."
+
+"You don't know that sort of good thing--the American who counts. But
+you can learn. And if you learn you've got to take as a starting-point
+the fact that, just as there are things one does and things one doesn't
+do, so there are people one knows and people one doesn't know--and no
+one can tell you the reason why."
+
+"But if one asked for a reason--"
+
+"It would queer you with the right people. They don't want a reason. If
+people do want a reason--well, they've got to stay out of it. It was one
+of the things Libby Jaynes picked up as if she'd been born to it. She
+knew how to cut; she knew how to cut dead; and she cut as dead as she
+knew how."
+
+"But, Hugh, darling, I don't know how."
+
+He was all forbearance.
+
+"You'll learn, sweet." As for the moment the waitress was absent, he put
+out his hand and locked his fingers within mine. "You've got it in you.
+Once you've had a chance you'll knock Libby Jaynes into a cocked hat."
+
+I shook my head.
+
+"I'm not sure that you're right."
+
+"I know I'm right, if you do as I tell you: and to begin with you've got
+to put that fellow Strangways in his place."
+
+I let it go at that, having so many other things to think of that any
+mere status of my own became of no importance. I was willing that Hugh
+should marry me as Tracy Allen married Libby Jaynes, or in any other
+way, so long as I could play my part in the rest of the drama with
+right-mindedness. But it was precisely that that grew more difficult.
+
+When Mrs. Brokenshire and Mr. Grainger next met under what I can only
+call my chaperonage they were distinctly more at ease. The first
+stammering, shamefaced awkwardness was gone. They knew by this time what
+they had to say and said it. They had also come to understand that if I
+could not be moved I might be outwitted. By the simple expedient of
+wandering away on the plea of looking at this or that decorative object
+they obtained enough solitude to serve their purposes. Without taking
+themselves beyond my range of vision they got out of earshot.
+
+As far as that went I was relieved. I was not responsible for what they
+did, but only for what I did myself. I was not their keeper; I didn't
+want to be a spy on them. When, at a certain minute, as they returned
+toward me, I saw him pass a letter to her, it was entirely by chance. I
+reflected then that, while she ran no risk in using the mails in writing
+to him, it was not so with him in writing to her, and that
+communications of importance might have to pass between them. It was
+nothing to me. I was sorry to have surprised the act and tried to
+dismiss it from my mind.
+
+It was repeated, however, the next time they came and many times after
+that. Their comings settled into a routine of being twice a week, with
+fair regularity. Tuesdays and Fridays were their days, though not
+without variation. It was indeed this variation that saved the situation
+on a certain afternoon when otherwise all might have been lost.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XV
+
+
+We had come to February, 1914. During the intervening months the
+conditions in which I lived and worked underwent little change. My days
+and nights were passed between the library and the Mary Chilton, with
+few social distractions, though I had some. Larry Strangways's sister,
+Mrs. Applegate, had called on me, and her house, a headquarters of New
+York philanthropies, had opened to me its kindly doors. Through Mrs.
+Applegate one or two other women came to relieve my loneliness, and now
+and then old Halifax friends visiting New York took me to theaters and
+to dinners at hotels. Ethel Rossiter was as friendly as fear of her
+father and of social conventions permitted her to be, and once or twice
+when she was quite alone I lunched with her. On each of these occasions
+she had something new to tell me.
+
+The first was that Hugh had met his father accidentally face to face,
+and that the parent had cut the son. Of that Hugh had told me nothing.
+According to Ethel, he was more affected by the incident than by
+anything else since the beginning of his cares. He felt it too deeply to
+speak of it even to me, to whom he spoke of everything.
+
+It happened, I believe at the foot of the steps of a club. Hugh, who was
+passing, saw his father coming down, and waited. Howard Brokenshire
+brought into play his faculty of seeing without seeing, and went on
+majestically, while Hugh stared after him with tears of vexation in his
+eyes.
+
+"He felt it the more," Mrs. Rossiter stated in her impartial way,
+"because I doubt if he had the price of his dinner in his pocket."
+
+It was then that she gave me to understand that if it were not that
+Mildred was lending him money he would have nothing to subsist on at
+all. Mildred had a little from her grandfather Brew, being privileged in
+this respect because she was the only one of the first Mrs.
+Brokenshire's children born at the time of the grandfather's demise. The
+legacy had been a trifle, but from this fund, which had never been his
+father's, Hugh consented to take loans.
+
+"Hugh, darling," I said to him the next time I had speech with him,
+"don't you see now that he's irreconcilable? He'll either starve you
+into surrender--"
+
+"Never," he cried, thumping the table with his hand.
+
+"Or else you must take such work as you can get."
+
+"Such work as I can get! Do you know how much that would bring me in a
+week?"
+
+"Even so," I reasoned, "you'd have work and I should have work, and we'd
+live."
+
+He was hurt.
+
+"Americans don't believe in working their women," he declared, loftily.
+"If I can't give you a life in which you'll have nothing at all to do--"
+
+"But I don't want a life in which I'll have nothing at all to do," I
+cried. "Your idle women strike me as a weak point in your national
+organization. It's like the dinner-parties I've seen at some of your
+restaurants and hotels--a circle of men at one table and a circle of
+women at another. You revolve too much in separate spheres. Your women
+have too little to do with business and politics and your men with
+society and the fine arts. I'm not used to such a pitiless separation of
+the sexes. Don't let us begin it, Hugh, darling. Let me share what you
+share--"
+
+"You won't share anything sordid, little Alix, I can tell you that. When
+you're my wife you'll have nothing to think of but having a good time
+and looking your prettiest--"
+
+"I should die of it," I exclaimed but this he took as a joke.
+
+That had passed in January. What Ethel Rossiter told me the next time I
+lunched with her was that Lady Cecilia Boscobel had accepted her
+invitation and was expected within a few weeks. She repeated what she
+had already said of her, in exactly the same words.
+
+"She's a good deal of a girl, Cissie is." My heart leaped and fell
+almost simultaneously. If I could only give up Hugh in such a way that
+he would have to give me up, this girl might help us out of our impasse.
+Had Mrs. Rossiter stopped there I might have made some noble vow of
+renunciation; but she went on: "If she wants Hugh she'll take him. Don't
+be under any illusion about that."
+
+Though my quick mettle was up, I said, docilely:
+
+"Oh no, I'm not. But if you mean taking him away from me--well, a good
+many people have tried it, haven't they?"
+
+"Cissie Boscobel hasn't tried it."
+
+But I was peaceably inclined.
+
+"Oh, well," I said, "perhaps she won't. She may not think it worth her
+while."
+
+"If you want to know my opinion," Mrs. Rossiter insisted, as she helped
+herself to the peas which the rosebud Thomas was passing, "I think she
+will. Men aren't so plentiful over there as you seem to suppose--that
+is, men of the kind they'd marry. Lord Goldborough has no money at all,
+as you might say, and yet the girls have to be set up in big
+establishments. You've only got to look at them to see it. Cissie
+marrying a subaltern with a thousand pounds a year isn't thinkable. It
+wouldn't dress her. She's coming over here to take a look at Hugh, and
+if she likes him-- Well, I told you long ago that you'd be wise to snap
+up that young Strangways. He's much better-looking than Hugh, and more
+in your own-- Besides, Jim says that now that he's with"--she balked at
+the name of Grainger--"now that he's where he is he's beginning to make
+money. It doesn't take so long when people have the brains for it."
+
+All this gave me a feeling of mingled curiosity and fear when, a few
+weeks later, I came on Mrs. Rossiter and Lady Cecilia Boscobel looking
+into a shop window in Fifth Avenue. It was a Saturday afternoon, the day
+which I had off and on which I made my modest purchases. It was a cold,
+brisk day, with light snow whirling in tiny eddies on the ground. I was
+going northward on the sunny side. At a distance of some fifty yards I
+recognized Mrs. Rossiter's motor standing by the curb, and cast my eyes
+about for a possible glimpse of her. Moving away from the window of the
+jeweler's whence she had probably come out, she saw me approach, and
+turned at once with a word or two to the lady beside her, who also
+looked in my direction. I knew by intuition who Mrs. Rossiter's
+companion was, and that my connection with the family had been explained
+to her.
+
+Mrs. Rossiter made the presentation in her usual offhand way.
+
+"Oh, Miss Adare! I want to introduce you to Lady Cecilia Boscobel."
+
+We exchanged civil, remote, and non-committal salutations, each of us
+with her hands in her muff. My immediate impression was one of color, as
+it is when you see old Limoges enamels. There was more color in Lady
+Cissie's personality than in that of any one I have ever looked at. Her
+hair was red--not auburn or copper, but red--a decorative, flaming red.
+I have often noticed how slight is the difference between beautiful red
+hair and ugly. Lady Cissie's was of the shade that is generally ugly,
+but which in her case was rendered glorious by the introduction of some
+such pigment, gleaming and umber, as that which gives the peculiar hue
+to Australian gold. I had never seen such hair or hair in such
+quantities, except in certain pictures of the pre-Raphaelite
+brotherhood, for which I should have supposed there could have been no
+earthly model had my father not known Eleanor Siddall. Lady Cissie's
+eyes were gray, with a greenish light in them when she turned her head.
+Her complexion could only be compared to the kind of carnation which the
+whitest of whites is flecked in just the right spots by the rosiest
+rose. In the lips, which were full and firm, also like Eleanor
+Siddall's, the rose became carmine, to melt away into coral-pink in the
+shell-like ears. Her dress of seal-brown broadcloth, on which there was
+a sheen, was relieved by occasional touches of sage-green, and the
+numerous sable tails on her boa and muff blew this way and that way in
+the wind. In the small black hat, perched at what I can only describe as
+a triumphant angle, an orange wing became at the tip of each tiny
+topmost feather a daring line of scarlet. Nestling on the sage-green
+below the throat a row of amber beads slumbered and smoldered with lemon
+and orange and ruby lights that now and then shot out rays of crimson or
+scarlet fire.
+
+I thought of my own costume--naturally. I was in gray, with inexpensive
+black furs. An iridescent buckle, with hues such as you see in a
+pigeon's neck, at the side of my black-velvet toque was my only bit of
+color. I was poor Jenny Wren in contrast to a splendid bird-of-paradise.
+So be it! I could at least be a foil to this healthy, vigorous young
+beauty who was two inches taller than I, and might have my share of the
+advantages which go with all antithesis.
+
+The talk was desultory, and in it the English girl took no part. Mrs.
+Rossiter asked me where I was going, what I was going for, and whether
+or not she couldn't take me to my destination in her car. I declined
+this offer, explained that my errands were trivial, and examined Lady
+Cissie through the corner of my eye. On her side Lady Cissie examined me
+quite frankly--not haughtily, but distantly and rather sympathetically.
+She had come all this distance to take a look at Hugh, and I was the
+girl he loved. I counted on the fact to give poor Jenny Wren her value,
+and I think it did. At any rate, when I had answered all Mrs. Rossiter's
+questions and was moving off to continue my way up-town, Lady Cissie's
+rich lips quivered in a sort of farewell smile.
+
+But Hugh showed little interest when I painted her portrait verbally.
+
+"Yes, that's the girl," he observed indifferently, "red-headed,
+long-legged, slashy-colored, laid on a bit too thick."
+
+"She's beautiful, Hugh."
+
+"Is she? Well, perhaps so. Wouldn't be my style; but every one to his
+taste."
+
+"It you saw her now--"
+
+"Oh, I've seen her often enough, just as she's seen me."
+
+"She hasn't seen you as you are to-day, and neither have you seen her. A
+few years makes a difference."
+
+He looked at me quizzically.
+
+"Look here, little Alix, what are you giving us? Do you think I'd turn
+you down now--for all the Lady Cissies in the British peerage? Do you,
+now?"
+
+"Not, perhaps, if you put it as turning me down--"
+
+"Well, as you turning me down, then?"
+
+"Our outlook is pretty dark, isn't it?"
+
+"Just wait."
+
+I ignored his pathetic boastfulness to continue my own sentence.
+
+"And this prospect is so brilliant. You'd have a handsome wife, a big
+income, a good position, an important family backing on both sides of
+the Atlantic--all of which would make you the man you ought to be. Now
+that I've seen her, and rather guess that she'd take you, I don't see
+how I can let you forfeit so much. I don't want to make you regret the
+day you ever saw me--"
+
+"Or regret yourself the day you ever saw me."
+
+If I took up this challenge it was more for his sake than my own.
+
+"Then suppose I accept that way of putting it?"
+
+He looked at me solemnly, for a second or two, after which he burst out
+laughing. That I might have hesitations as to connecting myself with the
+Brokenshires was more than he could grasp. He might have minutes of
+jealousy of Larry Strangways, but his doubt could go no further. It went
+no further, even after he had seen Lady Cecilia and they had renewed
+their early acquaintance. Ethel Rossiter had managed that, of course
+with her father's connivance.
+
+"Fine big girl," Hugh commended, "but too showy."
+
+"She's not showy," I contradicted. "A thing isn't necessarily showy
+because it has bright colors. Tropical birds are not showy, nor roses,
+nor rubies--"
+
+"I prefer pearls," he said, quietly. "You're a pearl, little Alix, the
+pearl of great price for which a man sells all that he has and buys it."
+Before I could respond to this kindly speech he burst out: "Good Lord!
+don't you suppose I can see what it all means? Cissie's the gay
+artificial fly that's to tempt the fish away from the little silvery
+minnow. Once I've darted after the bit of red and yellow dad will have
+hooked me. That's his game. Don't you think I see it? What dad wants is
+not that I shall have a wife I can love, but that he shall have a
+daughter-in-law with a title. You'd have to be, well, what I hope you
+will be some day, to know what that means to a man like dad. A
+son-in-law with a title--that's as common as beans to rich Americans;
+but a daughter-in-law with a title--a real, genuine British title, as
+sound as the Bank of England--that's something new. You can count on the
+fingers of one hand the American families that have got 'em"--he named
+them, one in Philadelphia, one in Chicago, one or two in New York--"and
+dad's as mad as blazes that he didn't think of the thing first. If he
+had, he'd have put Jack on to it, in spite of all Pauline's money; but
+since it's too late for that I must toe the mark. Well, I'm not going
+to, do you see? I'm going to choose my own wife, and I've chosen her.
+Birth and position mean nothing to me, for I'm as much of a Socialist as
+ever--or almost."
+
+With such resolution as this there was no way of reasoning, so that I
+could only go on, wondering and hoping and doing what I could for the
+best.
+
+What I could do for the best included watching over Mrs. Brokenshire.
+As winter progressed the task became harder and I grew the more anxious.
+So far no one suspected her visits to Mr. Grainger's library, and to the
+best of my knowledge her imprudence ended there. Further than to wander
+about the room the lovers never tried to elude me, though now and then I
+could see, without watching them, that he took her hand. Once or twice I
+thought he kissed her, but of that I was happily not sure. It was a
+relief, too, that as the days grew longer occasional visitors dropped in
+while they were there. The old gentleman interested in prints and the
+lady who studied Shakespeare came not infrequently. There were couples,
+too, who wandered in, seeking for their own purposes a half-hour of
+privacy. After all, the place was almost a public one to those who knew
+how to find it; and I was quick enough to see that in this very
+publicity lay a measure of salvation.
+
+Mrs. Brokenshire was as quick to perceive this as I. When there were
+other people there she was more at ease. Nothing was simpler then than
+for Mr. Grainger and herself to be visitors like the rest, strolling
+about or sitting in shady corners, and keeping themselves unrecognized.
+There was thus a Thursday in the early part of March when I didn't
+expect them, because it was a Thursday. They came, however, only to find
+the old gentleman interested in prints and the lady who studied
+Shakespeare already on the spot. I was never so glad of anything as of
+this accidental happening when a surprising thing occurred to me next
+day.
+
+It was between half past five and six on the Friday. As the lovers had
+come on the preceding day, I knew they would not appear on this, and was
+beginning to make my preparations for going home. I was actually pinning
+on my hat when the soft opening of the outer door startled me. A soft
+step sounded in the little inner vestibule, and then there came an
+equally soft, breathless standing still.
+
+My hands were paralyzed in their upward position at my hat; my heart
+pounded so that I could hear it; my eyes were wide with terror as they
+looked back at me from the splendid Venetian mirror before which I
+stood. I was always afraid of robbers or murderers, even though I had
+the wrought-iron grille between me and them, and Mr. or Mrs. Daly within
+call.
+
+Knowing that there was nothing for it but to go and see who was there,
+and suspecting that it might be Mrs. Brokenshire, after all, I dragged
+my feet across the few intervening paces. It was not Mrs. Brokenshire.
+It was a man, a man who looked inordinately big and majestic in this
+little decorative pen. I needed a few seconds in which to gaze, a few
+seconds in which to adjust my faculties, before grasping the fact that I
+saw Mrs. Brokenshire's husband. On his side, he needed something of the
+sort himself. Of all people in the world with whom he expected to find
+himself face to face I am sure I must have been the last.
+
+I touched the spring, however, and the little portal opened. It opened
+and he stepped in. He stepped in and stood still. He stood still and
+looked round him. If I dare to say it of one who was never timid in his
+life, he looked round him timidly. His eyes showed it, his attitude
+showed it. He had come on a hateful errand; his feet were on hateful
+ground. He expected to see something more than me--and emptiness.
+
+I got back some of my own self-control by being sorry for him, giving no
+indication of ever having met him before.
+
+"You'd like to see the library, sir," I said, as I should have said it
+to any chance visitor.
+
+He dropped into a large William and Mary chair, one of the show pieces,
+and placed his silk hat on the floor.
+
+"I'll sit down," he murmured less to me than to himself. His stick he
+dandled now across and now between his knees.
+
+The tea things were still on the table.
+
+"Would you like a cup of tea?" I asked, in genuine solicitude.
+
+"Yes--no." I think he would have liked it, but he probably remembered
+whose tea it was. "No," he repeated, with decision.
+
+He breathed heavily, with short, puffy gasps. I recalled then that Mrs.
+Brokenshire had said that his heart had been affected. As a matter of
+fact, he put his gloved left hand up to it, as people do who feel
+something giving way within.
+
+To relieve the embarrassment of the situation I said:
+
+"I could turn on all the lights and you could see the library without
+going round it."
+
+Withdrawing the hand at his heart, he raised it in the manner with which
+I was familiar.
+
+"Sit down," he commanded, as sternly as his shortness of breath allowed.
+
+The companion William and Mary chair being near, I slipped into it.
+Having him in three-quarters profile, I could study him without doing it
+too obviously, and could verify Mrs. Brokenshire's statements that
+Hugh's affairs were "telling on him." He was perceptibly older, in the
+way in which people look older all at once after having long kept the
+semblance of youth. The skin had grown baggy, the eyes tired; the beard
+and mustache, though as well cared for as ever, more decidedly mixed
+with gray. It was indicative of something that had begun to disintegrate
+in his self-esteem, that when his poor left eye screwed up he turned the
+terrifying right one on me with no effort to conceal the grimace.
+
+As it was for him to break the silence, I waited in my huge ornamental
+chair, hoping he would begin.
+
+"What are you doing here?"
+
+The voice had lost none of its soft staccato nor of its whip-lash snap.
+
+"I'm Mr. Grainger's librarian," I replied, meekly.
+
+"Since when?" he panted.
+
+"Since not long after I left Mrs. Rossiter."
+
+He took his time to think another question out.
+
+"How did your employer come to know about you?"
+
+I explained, as though he had had no knowledge of the fact, that Mrs.
+Rossiter had employed for her boy, Brokenshire, a tutor named
+Strangways. This Mr. Strangways had attracted Mr. Grainger's attention
+by some articles he had written for the financial press. An introduction
+had followed, after which Mr. Grainger had engaged the young man as his
+secretary. Hearing that Mr. Grainger had need of a librarian, Mr.
+Strangways had suggested me.
+
+I could see suspicion in the way in which he eyed me as well as in his
+words.
+
+"Had you no other recommendation?"
+
+"No, sir," I said, simply, "none that Mr. Grainger ever told me of."
+
+He let that pass.
+
+"And what do you do here?"
+
+"I show the library to visitors. If any one wishes a particular book, or
+to look at engravings, I help him to find what he wants." I thought it
+well to keep up the fiction that he had come as a sight-seer. "If you'd
+care to go over the place now, sir--"
+
+His hand went up in a majestic waving aside of this courtesy.
+
+"And have you many visitors to the--to the library?"
+
+Though I saw the implication, I managed to elude it.
+
+"Yes, sir, taking one day with another. It depends a little on the
+weather and the time of year."
+
+"Are they chiefly strangers--or--or do you ever see any one
+you've--you've seen before?"
+
+His difficulty in phrasing this question made me even more sorry for him
+than I was already. I decided, both for his sake and my own, to walk up
+frankly and take the bull by the horns. "They're generally strangers;
+but sometimes people come whom I know." I looked at him steadily as I
+continued. "I'll tell you something, sir. Perhaps I ought not to, and it
+may be betraying a secret; but you might as well know it from me as hear
+it from some one else." The expression of the face he turned on me was
+so much that of Jove, whose look could strike a man dead, that I had all
+I could do to go on. "Mrs. Brokenshire comes to see me."
+
+"To see--you?"
+
+"Yes, sir, to see me."
+
+The staccato accent grew difficult and thick. "What for?"
+
+"Because she can't help it. She's sorry for me."
+
+There was a new attempt to ignore me and my troubles as he said:
+
+"Why should she be sorry for you?"
+
+"Because she sees that you're hard on me--"
+
+"I haven't meant to be hard on you, only just."
+
+"Well, just then; but Mrs. Brokenshire doesn't know anything about
+justice when she can be merciful. You must know that yourself, sir. I
+think she's the most beautiful woman God ever made; and she's as kind as
+she's beautiful. I'll tell you something else, sir. It will be another
+betrayal, but it will show you what she is. One day at Newport--after
+you'd spoken to me--and she saw that I was so crushed by it that all I
+could do was to creep down among the rocks and cry--she watched me, and
+followed me, and came and cried with me. And so when she heard I was
+here--"
+
+"Who told her?"
+
+There was a measure of accusation in the tone of the question, but I
+pretended not to detect it.
+
+"Mrs. Rossiter, perhaps--she knows--or almost anybody. I never asked
+her."
+
+"Very well! What then?"
+
+"I was only going to say that when she heard I was here she came almost
+at once. I begged her not to--"
+
+"Why? What were you afraid of?"
+
+"I knew you wouldn't like it. But I couldn't stop her. No one could stop
+her when it comes to her doing an act of kindness. She obeys her own
+nature because she can't do anything else. She's like a little bird that
+you can keep from flying by holding it in your hand, but as soon as your
+grasp is relaxed--it flies."
+
+Something of this was true, in that it was true potentially. She had
+these qualities, even if they were nipped in her as buds are nipped in a
+backward spring. I could only calm my conscience as I went along by
+saying to myself that if I saved her she would have to bear me out
+through being true to the picture I was painting, and living up to her
+real self.
+
+Praise of the woman he adored would have been as music to him had he
+not had something on his mind that turned music into poignancy. What it
+was I could surmise, and so be prepared for it. Not till he had been
+some time silent, probably getting his question into the right words,
+did he say:
+
+"And are you always alone when Mrs. Brokenshire comes?"
+
+"Oh no, sir!" I made the tone as natural as I could. "But Mrs.
+Brokenshire doesn't seem to mind. Yesterday, for instance--"
+
+"Was she here yesterday? I thought she came on--"
+
+I broke in before he could betray himself further.
+
+"Yes, she was here yesterday; and there was--let me see!--there was an
+old gentleman comparing his Japanese prints with Mr. Grainger's, and a
+middle-aged lady who comes to study the old editions of Shakespeare. But
+Mrs. Brokenshire didn't object to them. She sat with me and had a cup of
+tea."
+
+I knew I had come to dangerous ground, and was ready for my part in the
+adventure. Had he asked the question: "Was there anybody else?" I was
+resolved, in the spirit of my maxim, to tell the truth as harmlessly as
+I knew how. But I didn't think he would ask it. I reckoned on his
+unwillingness to take me into his confidence or to humiliate himself
+more than he could help. That he guessed at something behind my words I
+could easily suspect; but I was so sure he would have torn out his
+tongue rather than force his pride to cross-examine me too closely, that
+I was able to run my risk.
+
+As a matter of fact, he became pensive, and through the gloom of the
+half-lighted room I could see that his face was contorted twice, still
+with no effort on his part to hide his misfortune. As he took the time
+to think I could do the same, with a kind of intuition in following the
+course of his meditations. I was not surprised, therefore, when he said,
+with renewed thickness of utterance:
+
+"Has Mrs. Brokenshire any--any other motive in coming here than
+just--just to see you?"
+
+I hung my head, perhaps with a touch of that play-acting spirit which
+most women are able to command, when the time comes.
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+He waited again. I never heard such overtones of despair as were in the
+three words which at last he tried to toss off easily.
+
+"What is it?"
+
+I still hung my head.
+
+"She brings me money for poor Hugh."
+
+He started back, whether from anger or relief I couldn't tell, and his
+face twitched for the fourth time. In the end, I suppose, he decided
+that anger was the card he could play most skilfully.
+
+"So that that's what enables him to keep up his rebellion against me!"
+
+"No, sir," I said, humbly, "because he never takes it." I went on with
+that portrait of Mrs. Brokenshire which I vowed she would have to
+justify. "That doesn't make any difference, however, to her wonderful
+tenderness of heart in wanting him to have it. You see, sir, when any
+one's so much like an angel as she is they don't stop to consider how
+justly other people are suffering or how they've brought their troubles
+on themselves. Where there's trouble they only ask to help; where
+there's suffering their first instinct is to heal. Mrs. Brokenshire
+doesn't want to sustain your son against you; that never enters her
+head: she only wants him not--not"--my own voice shook a little--"not
+to have to go without his proper meals. He's doing that now, I
+think--sometimes, at least. Oh, sir," I ventured to plead, "you can't
+blame her, not when she's so--so heavenly." Stealing a glance at him, I
+was amazed and shocked, and not a little comforted, to see two tears
+steal down his withered cheeks. Knowing then that he would not for some
+minutes be able to control himself sufficiently to speak, I hurried on.
+"Hugh doesn't take the money, because he knows that this is something he
+must go through with on his own strength. If he can't do that he must
+give in. I think I've made that clear to him. I'm not the adventuress
+you consider me--indeed I'm not. I've told him that if he's ever
+independent I will marry him; but I shall not marry him so long as he
+isn't free to give himself away. He's putting up a big fight, and he's
+doing it so bravely, that if you only knew what he's going through you'd
+be proud of him as your son."
+
+Resting my case there, I waited for some response, but I waited in vain.
+He reflected, and sat silent, and crossed and uncrossed his knees. At
+last he picked up his hat from the floor and rose. I, too, rose, waiting
+beside my chair, while he flicked the dust from the crown of his hat and
+seemed to study its glossy surface as he still reflected.
+
+I was now altogether without a clue to what was passing in his mind,
+though I could guess at the age-long tragedy of December's love for May.
+Having seen Ibsen's "Master Builder," at Munich, and read one or two
+books on the theme with which it deals, I could, in a measure,
+supplement my own experience. It was, however, the first time I had seen
+with my own eyes this desperate yearning of age for youth, or this
+something that is almost a death-blow which youth can inflict on age. My
+father used to say that fundamentally there is no such period as age,
+that only the outer husk grows old, while the inner self, the vital
+_ego_, is young eternally. Here, it seemed to me, was an instance of the
+fact. This man was essentially as young as he had been at twenty-five;
+he had the same instincts and passions; he demanded the same things. If
+anything, he demanded them more imperiously because of the long, long
+habit of desire. Denial which thirty years ago he could have taken
+philosophically was now a source of anguish. As I looked at him I could
+see anguish on his lips, in his eyes, in the contraction of his
+forehead--the anguish of a love ridiculous to all, and to the object of
+it frightful and unnatural, for the reason that at sixty-two the skin
+had grown baggy and the heart was supposed to be dead.
+
+From the smoothing of the crown of his hat he glanced up suddenly. The
+whip-lash inflection was again in the timbre of the voice.
+
+"How much do you get here?"
+
+I was taken aback, but I named the amount of my salary.
+
+"I will give you twice as much as that for the next five years if--if
+you go back to where you came from."
+
+It took me a minute to seize all the implications contained in this
+little speech. I saw then that if I hoped I was making an impression, or
+getting further ahead with him, I was mistaken. Neither had my
+interpretation of Mrs. Brokenshire's character put him off the scent
+concerning her. I was so far indeed from influencing him in either her
+favor or my own that he believed that if he could get rid of me an
+obstacle would be removed.
+
+Tears sprang into my eyes, though they didn't fall.
+
+"So you blame me, sir, for everything."
+
+He continued to watch his gloved hand as it made the circle of the crown
+of his hat.
+
+"I'll make it twice what you're getting here for ten years. I'll put it
+in my will." It was no use being angry or mounting my high horse. The
+struggle with tears kept me silent as he glanced up from the rubbing of
+his hat and said in a jerky, kindly tone: "Well? What do you say?"
+
+I didn't know what to say; and what I did say was foolish. I should have
+known enough to suppress it before I began.
+
+"Do you remember, sir, that once when you were speaking to me severely,
+you said you were my friend? Well, why shouldn't I be your friend, too?"
+
+The look he bent down on me was that of a great personage positively
+dazed by an inferior's audacity.
+
+"I could be your friend," I stumbled on, in an absurd effort to explain
+myself. "I should like to be. There are--there are things I could do for
+you."
+
+He put on his tall hat with the air of a Charlemagne or a Napoleon
+crowning himself. This increase of authority must have made me
+desperate. It is only thus that I can account for my _gaffe_--the French
+word alone expresses it--as I dashed on, wildly:
+
+"I like you, sir--I can't help it. I don't know why, but I do. I like
+you in spite of--in spite of everything. And, oh, I'm so sorry for
+you--"
+
+He moved away. There was noble, wounded offense in his manner of passing
+through the wrought-iron grille, which he closed with a little click
+behind him. He stepped out of the place as softly as he had stepped in.
+
+For long minutes I stood, holding to the side of the William and Mary
+chair, regretting that the interview should have ended in this way. I
+didn't cry; I had, in fact, no longer any tendency to tears. I was
+thoughtful--wondering what it was that dug the gulf between this man and
+his family and me. Ethel Rossiter had never--I could see it well enough
+now--accepted me as an equal, and even to Hugh I was only another type
+of Libby Jaynes. I was as intelligent as they, as well born, as well
+mannered, as thoroughly accustomed to the world. Why should they
+consider me an inferior? Was it because I had no money? Was it because I
+was a Canadian? Would it have made a difference if I had been an
+Englishwoman like Cissie Boscobel, or rich like any of themselves? I
+couldn't tell. All I knew was that my heart was hot within me, and since
+Howard Brokenshire wouldn't have me as a friend I wanted to act as his
+enemy. I could see how to do it. Indeed, without doing anything at all I
+could encourage, and perhaps bring about, a situation that would send
+the name of the family ringing through the press of two continents and
+break his heart. I had only to sit still--or at most to put in a word
+here and there. I am not a saint; I had my hour of temptation.
+
+It was a stormy hour, though I never moved from the spot where I stood.
+The storm was within. That which, as the minutes went by, became rage in
+me saw with satisfaction Howard Brokenshire brought to a desolate old
+age, and Mildred and Ethel and Jack and Pauline, in spite of their
+bravado and their high heads, all seared by the flame of notorious
+disgrace. I went so far as to gloat over poor Hugh's discomfiture,
+taking vengeance on his habit of rating me with the socially
+incompetent. As for Mrs. Brokenshire, she would be over and done with, a
+poor little gilded outcast, whose fall would be such that even as Mrs.
+Stacy Grainger she would never rise again. Like another Samson, I could
+pull down this house of pride, though, happier than Samson, I should not
+be overwhelmed in the ruin of it. From that I should be safe--with Larry
+Strangways.
+
+Nearly half an hour went by while I stood thus indulging in fierce
+day-dreams. I was racked and suffering. I suffered, indeed, from the
+misfortunes I saw descending on people whom at bottom of my heart I
+cared for. It was not till I began to move, till I had put on my jacket
+and was turning out the lights, that my maxim came back to me. I knew
+then that whatever happened I should stand by that, and having come to
+this understanding with myself, I was quieted.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XVI
+
+
+Having made up my mind to adhere, however imperfectly, to the principle
+that had guided me hitherto, I was obliged to examine my conscience as
+to what I had said to Mr. Brokenshire. This I did in the evening, coming
+to the conclusion that I had told him nothing but the truth, even if it
+was not all the truth. Though I hated duplicity, I couldn't see that I
+had a right to tell him all the truth, or that to do so would be wise.
+If he could be kept, for everybody's sake, from knowing more than he
+knew already, however much or little that was, it seemed to me that
+diplomatic action on my part would be justified.
+
+In the line of diplomatic action I had before all things to inform Mrs.
+Brokenshire of the visit I had received. This was not so easy as it may
+seem. I could not trust to a letter, through fear of its falling into
+other hands than hers. Neither could I wait for her coming on the
+following Tuesday, since that was what I wanted to prevent. There was no
+intermediary whom I could intrust with a message, unless it was Larry
+Strangways, who knew something of the facts; but even with him the
+secret was too much to share.
+
+In the end I had recourse to the telephone, asking to be allowed to
+speak to Mrs. Brokenshire. I was told that she never answered the
+telephone herself, and was requested to transmit my message. Not to
+arouse suspicion, I didn't ask that she should break her rule, but
+begged that during the day she might find a minute in which to see Miss
+Adare, who was in a difficulty that involved her work. That this way of
+putting it was understood I gathered from the reply that came back to
+me. It was to the effect that as Mr. Brokenshire would be lunching with
+some men in the lower part of New York Mrs. Brokenshire would be alone
+and able to receive Miss Adare at two. Fortunately, it was a Saturday,
+so that my afternoon was free.
+
+Almost everybody familiar with New York knows the residence of J. Howard
+Brokenshire not far above the Museum. Built of brick with stone facings,
+it is meant to be in the style of Louis Treize. It would be quite in the
+style of Louis Treize were the stonework not too heavy and elaborate,
+and the façade too high for its length. Inside, with an incongruity many
+rich people do not mind, it is sumptuously Roman and Florentine--the
+Brokenshire villa at Newport on a larger and more lavish scale. Having
+gone over the house with Ethel Rossiter during the winter I spent with
+her, I had carried away the impression of huge unoccupied rooms, of
+heavily carved or gilded furniture, of rich brocades, of dim old masters
+in elaborate gold frames, of vitrines and vases and mirrors and
+consoles, all supplied by some princely dealer in _objets d'art_ who had
+received _carte blanche_ in the way of decoration. The Brokenshire
+family, with the possible exception of Mildred, cared little for the
+things with which they lived. Ethel Rossiter, in showing me over the
+house, hardly knew a Perugino from a Fragonard, and still less could she
+distinguish, between the glorious fading softness of a Flemish
+fifteenth-century tapestry and a smug and staring bit of Gobelins. Hugh
+went in and out as indifferently as in a hotel, while Jack Brokenshire's
+taste in art hardly reached beyond racing prints. Mildred liked pretty
+garlanded things _à la_ Marie Antoinette, which the parental habit of
+deciding everything would never let her have. J. Howard alone made an
+effort at knowing the value, artistic and otherwise, of his possessions,
+and would sometimes, when strangers were present, point to this or that
+object with the authority of a connoisseur, which he was not.
+
+It was a house for life in perpetual state, with no state to maintain.
+Stafford House, Holland House, Bridgewater House, to name but a few of
+the historic mansions in London, were made spacious and splendid to meet
+a definite necessity. They belonged to days when the feudal tradition
+still obtained and there were no comfortable hotels. Great lords came to
+them with great families and great suites of retainers. Accommodation
+being the first of all needs, there was a time when every corner of
+these stately residences was lived in. But now that in England the great
+lord tends more and more to be only a simple democratic individual, and
+the wants of his relatives are easily met on a public or co-operative
+principle, the noble Palladian or Georgian dwelling either becomes a
+museum or a club, or remains a white elephant on the hands of some one
+who would gladly be rid of it. Princes and princesses of the blood royal
+rent numbered houses in squares and streets, next door to the Smiths and
+the Joneses, in preference to the draughty grandeurs of St. James's and
+Buckingham Palace, while a villa in the suburbs, with a few trees and a
+garden, is often the shelter sought by the nobility.
+
+But in proportion as civilization in England, to say nothing of the
+rest of Europe, puts off the burdensome to enjoy simplicity, America, it
+strikes me, chases the tail of an antiquated, disappearing stateliness.
+Rich men, just because they have the money, take upon their shoulders
+huge domestic responsibilities in which there is no object, and which it
+is probable the next generation will refuse to carry. In New York, in
+Washington, in Newport, in Chicago, they raise palaces and châteaux
+where they often find themselves lonely, and which they can rarely fill
+more than two or three times a year. In the case of the Howard
+Brokenshires it had ceased to be as often as that. After Ethel was
+married Mr. Brokenshire seldom entertained, his second wife having no
+heart for that kind of display. Now and then, in the course of a winter,
+a great dinner was given in the great dining-room, or the music-room was
+filled for a concert; but this was done for the sake of "killing off"
+those to whom some attention had to be shown, and not because either
+host or hostess cared for it. Otherwise the down-stairs rooms were
+silent and empty, and whatever was life in the house went on in a corner
+of the mansard.
+
+Thither the footman took me in a lift. Here were the rooms--a sort of
+flat--which the occupants could dominate with their personalities. They
+reminded me of those tiny chambers at Versailles to which what was human
+in poor Marie Antoinette fled for refuge from her uncomfortable
+gorgeousness as queen.
+
+Not that these rooms were tiny. On the contrary, the library or
+living-room into which I was ushered was as large as would be found in
+the average big house, and, notwithstanding its tapestries and massive
+furniture, was bright with sunshine and flowers. Books lay about, and
+papers and magazines, and after the tomb-like deadness of the lower
+floors one got at least the impression of life.
+
+From the far end of the room Mrs. Brokenshire came forward, threading
+her way between arm-chairs and taborets, and looking more exquisite, and
+also more lost, than ever. She wore what might be called a glorified
+_negligée_, lilac and lavender shading into violet, the train adding to
+her height. Fear had to some degree blotted out her color and put
+trouble into the sweetness of her eyes.
+
+"Something has happened," she said at once, as she took my hand.
+
+I spoke as directly as she did, though a little pantingly.
+
+"Yes; Mr. Brokenshire came to the library yesterday."
+
+"Ah-h!" The exclamation was no more than a long, frightened breath.
+"Then that explains things. I saw when he came home to dinner that he
+was unhappy."
+
+"Did he say anything?"
+
+"No; nothing. He was just--unhappy. Sit down and tell me."
+
+Staring wide-eyed at each other, we seated ourselves on the edge of two
+huge arm-chairs. Having half expected my companion to fling the gauntlet
+in her husband's face, I was relieved to find in her chiefly the dread
+of detection.
+
+As exactly as I could I gave her an account of what had passed between
+Mr. Brokenshire and myself, omitting only those absurd suggestions of my
+own that had sent him away in dudgeon. She listened with no more
+interruption than a question or two, after which she said, simply:
+
+"Then, I suppose, I can't go any more."
+
+"On the contrary," I corrected, "you must come just the same as ever,
+only not on the same days, or at the same hours--or--or when there's any
+one else there besides the visitors and me. If you stopped coming all of
+a sudden Mr. Brokenshire would think--"
+
+"But he thinks that already."
+
+"Of course, but he doesn't know--not after what I said to him." I seized
+the opportunity to beg her to play up. "You are all the things I told
+him you were, dear Mrs. Brokenshire, don't you see you are?"
+
+But my appeal passed unheeded.
+
+"What made him suspect? I thought that would be the last thing."
+
+"I don't know. It might have been a lot of things. Once or twice I've
+rather fancied that some of the people who came there--"
+
+Her features contracted in a spasm of horror.
+
+"You don't mean detect--" She found the word difficult to pronounce.
+"You don't mean de-detectives watching--me?"
+
+"I don't say as much as that; but I've never liked Mr. Brokenshire's
+man, Spellman."
+
+"No, nor I. He's out now. I made sure of that before you came."
+
+"So he might have sent some one; or-- But it's no use speculating, is
+it? when there are so many ways. What we've specially got to know is how
+to act, and I think I've told you the best method. If you don't keep
+coming--judiciously--you'll show you're conscious of having done wrong."
+
+She sighed plaintively.
+
+"I don't want to do wrong unless I can't help it. If I can't--"
+
+"Oh, but you can." I tried once more to get in my point. "You wouldn't
+be all I told Mr. Brokenshire you were if your first instinct wasn't to
+do right."
+
+"Oh, right!" She sighed again, but impatiently. "You're always talking
+about that."
+
+"One has to, don't you think, when it's so important--and so easy to do
+wrong?"
+
+She grew mildly argumentative.
+
+"I don't see anything so terrible about wrong, when other people do it
+and are none the worse."
+
+"May not that be because you've never tried it on your own account? It
+depends a little on the grain of which one's made. The finer the grain,
+the more harm wrong can do to it--just as a fragile bit of Venetian
+glass is more easily broken than an earthenware jug, and an infinitely
+greater loss."
+
+But the simile was wasted. From long contemplation of her hands she
+looked up to say in a curiously coaxing tone:
+
+"You live at the Hotel Mary Chilton, don't you?"
+
+I caught her suggestion in a flash, and decided that I could let it go
+no further.
+
+"Yes, but you couldn't come there--unless it was only to see me."
+
+"But what shall I do?"
+
+It was a kind of cry. She twisted her ringed fingers, while her eyes
+implored me to help her.
+
+"Do nothing," I said, gently, and yet with some severity. "If you do
+anything do just as I've said. That's all we've got to know for the
+present."
+
+"But I must see him. Now that I've got used to doing it--"
+
+"If you must see him, dear Mrs. Brokenshire, you will."
+
+"Shall I? Will you promise me?"
+
+"I don't have to promise you. It's the way life works. If we only trust
+to events--and to whatever it is that guides events--and--and do
+right--I must repeat it--then the thing that ought to be will shape its
+course--"
+
+"Ah, but if it doesn't?"
+
+"In that case we can know that it oughtn't to be."
+
+"I don't care whether it ought to be or not, so long as I can go on
+seeing him--somewhere."
+
+I had enough sympathy with her to say:
+
+"Yes, but don't plan for it. Let it take care of itself and happen in
+some natural way. Isn't it by mapping out things for ourselves that we
+often thwart the good that would otherwise have come to us? I remember
+reading somewhere of a lady who wrote of herself that she had been
+healed of planning, and spoke of it as a real cure. That struck me as so
+sensible. Life--not to use a greater word--knows much better what's good
+for us than we do ourselves."
+
+She allowed this theme to lapse, while she sat pensive.
+
+"What shall I say," she asked at last, "if he brings the subject up?"
+
+I saw another opportunity.
+
+"What can you say other than what I've said already? You came to me
+because you were sorry for me, and you wanted to help Hugh. He might
+regret that you should do both, but he couldn't blame you for either.
+They're only kindnesses--and we're all at liberty to be kind. Oh, don't
+you see? That's your--how shall I put it?--that's your line if Mr.
+Brokenshire ever speaks to you."
+
+"And suppose he tells me not to go to see you any more?"
+
+"Then you must stop. That will be the time. But not now when the mere
+stopping would be a kind of confession--"
+
+And so, after many repetitions and some tears on both our parts, the
+lesson was urged home. She was less docile, however, when in the spirit
+of our new compact she came on the following Monday morning.
+
+"I must see him," was the burden of what she had to say. She spoke as if
+I was forbidding her and ought to lift my veto. I might even have
+inferred that in my position in Mr. Grainger's employ it was for me to
+arrange their meetings.
+
+"You will see him, dear Mrs. Brokenshire--if it's right," was the only
+answer I could find.
+
+"You don't seem to remember that I was to have married him."
+
+"I do, but we both have to remember that you didn't."
+
+"Neither did I marry Mr. Brokenshire. I was handed over to him. When
+Lady Mary Hamilton was handed over in that way to the Prince of Monaco
+the Pope annulled the marriage. We knew her afterward in Budapest,
+married to some one else. If there's such a thing as right, as you're so
+fond of saying, I ought to be considered free."
+
+I was holding both her hands as I said:
+
+"Don't try to make yourself free. Let life do it."
+
+"Life!" she cried, with a passionate vehemence I scarcely knew to be in
+her. "It's life that--"
+
+"Treat life as a friend and not as an enemy. Trust it; wait for it.
+Don't hurry it, or force it, or be impatient with it. I can't believe
+that essentially it's hard or cruel or a curse. If it comes from God, it
+must be good and beautiful. In proportion as we cling to the good and
+beautiful we must surely get the thing we ought to have."
+
+Though I cannot say that she accepted this doctrine, it helped her over
+a day or two, leaving me free for the time being to give my attention to
+my own affairs. Having no natural stamina, the poor, lovely little
+creature lived on such mental and spiritual pick-me-ups as I was able to
+administer. Whenever she was specially in despair, which was every
+forty-eight or sixty hours, she came back to me, and I did what I could
+to brace her for the next short step of her way. I find it hard to
+explain the intensity of her appeal to me. I suppose I must have
+submitted to that spell of the perfect face which had bewitched Stacy
+Grainger and Howard Brokenshire. I submitted also to her child-like
+helplessness. God knows I am not a heroine. Any little fright or
+difficulty upsets me. As compared with her, however, I was a giant
+refreshed with wine. When her lip quivered, or when the sudden mist
+drifted across her eyes, obscuring their forget-me-not blue with violet,
+my yearning was exactly that which makes any woman long to take any
+suffering baby in her arms. For this reason she didn't tax my patience,
+nor had I that impulse to scold or shake her to which another woman of
+such obvious limitations would have driven me. Touched as I was by the
+aching heart, I was captivated by the perfect face; and I couldn't help
+it.
+
+Thus through the rest of February and into March my chief occupation was
+in keeping Howard Brokenshire's wife as true to him as the conditions
+rendered possible. In the intervals I comforted Hugh, and beat off Larry
+Strangways, and sat rigidly still while Stacy Grainger prowled round me
+with fierce, suspicious, melancholy eyes, like those of a cowed tiger.
+Afraid of him as I was, it filled me with grim inward amusement to
+discover that he was equally afraid of me. He came into the library
+from time to time, when he happened to be at his house, and like Mrs.
+Brokenshire gave me the impression that the frustration of their love
+was my fault. As I sat primly and severely at my desk, and he stalked
+round and round the room, stabbing the old gentleman who classified
+prints and the lady who collated the early editions of Shakespeare with
+contemptuous glances, I knew that in his sight I represented--poor
+me!--that virtuous respectability the sinner always holds in scorn. He
+could not be ignorant of the fact that if it hadn't been for me Mrs.
+Brokenshire would have been meeting him elsewhere, and so he held me as
+an enemy. Had he not known that I was something besides an enemy he
+would doubtless have sent me about my business.
+
+In one of the intervals of this portion of the drama I received a visit
+that took me by surprise. Early in the afternoon of a day in March, Mrs.
+Billing trotted into the library, followed by Lady Cecilia Boscobel. It
+was the sort of occasion on which I should have been nervous enough in
+any case, but it became terrifying when Mrs. Billing marched up to my
+desk and pointed at me with her lorgnette, saying over her shoulder,
+"There she is," as though I was a portrait.
+
+I struggled to my feet with what was meant to be a smile.
+
+"Lady Cecilia Boscobel," I stammered, "has seen me already."
+
+"Well, she can look at you again, can't she?"
+
+The English girl came to my rescue by smiling back, and murmuring a
+faint "How do you do?" She eased the situation further by saying, with a
+crisp, rapid articulation, in which every syllable was charmingly
+distinct: "Mrs. Billing thought that as we were out sight-seeing we
+might as well look at this. It's shown every day, isn't it?"
+
+She went on to observe that when places were shown only on certain days
+it was so tiresome. One of her father's places, Dillingham Hall, in
+Nottinghamshire, an old Tudor house, perfectly awful to live in, was
+open to the public only on the second and fourth Wednesdays, and even
+the family couldn't remember when those days came round. It was so
+awkward to be doing your hair, or worse, and have tourists stumbling in
+on you.
+
+I counted it to the credit of her tact and kindliness that she chatted
+in this way long enough for me to get my breath, while Mrs. Billing
+turned her lorgnette on the room with which she must have once been
+familiar. If there was to be anything like rivalry between Lady Cissie
+and me I gathered that she wouldn't stoop to petty feminine advantages.
+Dressed in dark green, with a small hat of the same color worn
+dashingly, she had that air of being the absolutely finished thing which
+the tones of her voice announced to you. My heart grew faint at the
+thought that Hugh would have to choose between this girl, so certain of
+herself, and me.
+
+As we were all standing, I invited my callers to sit down. To this Lady
+Cecilia acceded, though old Mrs. Billing strolled off to renew her
+acquaintance with the room. I may say here that I call her old because
+to be old was a kind of pose with her. She looked old and "dressed old"
+so as to enjoy the dictatorial privileges that go with being old, when
+as a matter of fact she was only sixty, which nowadays is young.
+
+"You're English, aren't you?" Lady Cecilia began, as soon as we were
+alone. "I can tell by the way you speak."
+
+I said I was a Canadian, that I was in New York more or less by
+accident, and might go back to my own country again.
+
+"How interesting! It belongs to us, Canadia, doesn't it?"
+
+With a slightly ironic emphasis on the proper noun I replied that
+Canadia naturally belonged to the Canadians, but that the King of Great
+Britain and Ireland was our king, and that we were very loyal to all
+that we represented.
+
+"Fancy! And isn't it near here?"
+
+All of Canada, I stated, was north of some of the United States, and
+some of it was south of others of the United States, but none of the
+more settled parts was difficult of access from New York.
+
+"How very odd!" was her comment on these geographical indications. "I
+think I remember that a cousin of ours was governor out there--or
+something--though perhaps it was in India."
+
+I named the series of British noblemen who had ruled over us since the
+confederation of the provinces in 1867, but as Lady Cecilia's kinsman
+was not among them we concluded that he must have been Viceroy of India
+or Governor-General of Australia.
+
+The theme served to introduce us to each other, and lasted while Mrs.
+Billing's tour of inspection kept her within earshot.
+
+I am bound to admit that I admired Lady Cecilia with an envy that might
+be qualified as green. She was not clever and she was not well educated,
+but her high breeding was so spontaneous. She so obviously belonged to
+spheres where no other rule obtained. Her manner was the union of polish
+and simplicity; each word she pronounced was a pleasure to the ear. In
+my own case life had been a struggle with that American-Canadian
+crudity which stamps our New World carriage and speech with commonness;
+but you could no more imagine this girl lapsing from the even tenor of
+the exquisite than you could fancy the hermit thrush failing in its
+song.
+
+When Mrs. Billing was quite at the other end of the room my companion's
+manner underwent a change. During a second or two of silence her eyes
+fell, while the shifting of color over the milk-whiteness of her skin
+was like the play of Canadian northern lights. I was prepared for the
+fact that beneath her poise she might be shy, and that, being shy, she
+would be abrupt.
+
+"You're engaged to Hugh Brokenshire, aren't you?"
+
+The words were whipped out fast and jerkily, partly to profit by the
+minute during which Mrs. Billing was at a distance, and partly because
+it was a matter of now-or-never with their utterance.
+
+I made the necessary explanations, for what seemed to me must be the
+hundredth time. I was not precisely engaged to him, but I had said I
+would marry him if either of two conditions could be carried out. I went
+on to state what those conditions were, finishing with the information
+that of the two I had practically abandoned one.
+
+She nodded her comprehension.
+
+"You see that--that they won't come round."
+
+"No," I replied, with some incisiveness; "they will come
+round--especially Mr. Brokenshire. It's the other condition I no longer
+expect to see fulfilled."
+
+If the hermit thrush could fail in its song it did it then. Lady Cecilia
+stared at me with a blankness that became awe.
+
+"That's the most extraordinary thing I ever heard. Ethel Rossiter must
+be wrong."
+
+I had a sudden suspicion.
+
+"Wrong about what?"
+
+The question put Lady Cecilia on her guard.
+
+"Oh, nothing I need explain." But her face lighted with quick
+enthusiasm. "I call it magnificent."
+
+"Call what 'magnificent'?"
+
+"Why, that you should have that conviction. When one sees any one so
+sporting--"
+
+I began to get her idea.
+
+"Oh, I'm not sporting. I'm a perfect coward. But a sheep will make a
+stand when it's put to it."
+
+With her hands in her sable muff, her shapely figure was inclined
+slightly toward me.
+
+"I'm not sure that a sheep that makes a stand isn't braver than a lion.
+The man my sister Janet is engaged to--he's in the Inverness
+Rangers--often says that no one could be funkier than he on going into
+action; but that," she continued, her face aglow, "didn't prevent his
+being ever so many times mentioned in despatches and getting his D. S.
+O."
+
+"Please don't put me into that class--"
+
+"No; I won't. After all a soldier couldn't really funk things, because
+he's got everything to back him up. But you haven't. And when I think of
+you sitting here all by yourself, and expecting that great big rich Mr.
+Brokenshire and Ethel, and all of them, to come to your terms--"
+
+To get away from a view of my situation that both consoled and
+embarrassed me, I said:
+
+"Thank you, Lady Cecilia, very, very much; but it isn't what you meant
+to say when you began, is it?"
+
+With some confusion she admitted that it wasn't.
+
+"Only," she went on, "that isn't worth while now."
+
+A hint in her tone impelled me to insist.
+
+"It may be. You don't know. Please tell me what it was."
+
+"But what's the use? It was only something Ethel Rossiter said--and she
+was wrong."
+
+"What makes you so sure she was wrong?"
+
+"Because I am. I can see." She added, reluctantly, "Ethel thought there
+was some one--some one besides Hugh--"
+
+"And what if there was?"
+
+Though startled by the challenge, she stood her ground.
+
+"I don't believe in people making each other any more unhappy than they
+can help, do you?" She had a habit of screwing up her small gray-green
+eyes into two glimmering little slits of light, with an effect of
+shyness showing through amusement and _diablerie_. "We're both girls,
+aren't we? I'm twenty, and you can't be much older. And so I
+thought--that is, I thought at first--that if you had any one else in
+mind, there'd be no use in our making each other miserable--but I see
+you haven't; and so--"
+
+"And so," I laughed, nervously, "the race must be to the swift and the
+battle to the strong. Is that it?"
+
+"N-no; not exactly. What I was going to say is that since--since there's
+nobody but Hugh--you won't be offended with me, will you?--I won't step
+in--"
+
+It was my turn to be enthusiastic.
+
+"But that's what I call sporting!"
+
+"Oh no, it isn't. I haven't seen Hugh for two or three years, and
+whatever little thing there was--"
+
+I strained forward across my desk. I know my eyes must have been
+enormous.
+
+"But was there--was there ever--anything?"
+
+"Oh no; not at all. He--he never noticed me. I was only in the
+school-room, and he was a grown-up young man. If his father and mine
+hadn't been great friends--and got plans into their heads--Laura and
+Janet used to poke fun at me about it. And then we rode together and
+played tennis and golf, and so--but it was all--just nothing. You know
+how silly a girl of seventeen can be. It was nonsense. I only want you
+to know, in case he ever says anything about it--but then he never
+will--men see so little--I only want you to know that that's the way I
+feel about it--and that I didn't come over here to-- I don't say that if
+in your case there had been any one else--but I see there isn't--Ethel
+Rossiter is wrong--and so if I can do anything for Hugh and yourself
+with the Brokenshires. I--I want you to make use of me."
+
+With a dignity oddly in contrast to this stammering confession, which
+was what it was, she rose to her feet as Mrs. Billing came back to us.
+
+The hook-nosed face was somber. Curiosity as to other people's business
+had for once given place in the old lady's thoughts to meditations that
+turned inward. I suppose that in some perverse fashion of her own she
+loved her daughter, and suffered from her unhappiness. There was enough
+in this room to prove to her how cruelly mere self-seeking can overreach
+itself and ruin what it tries to build.
+
+"Well, what are you talking about?" she snapped, as she approached us.
+"Hugh Brokenshire, I'll bet a dime."
+
+"Fancy!" was the stroke with which the English girl, smiling dimly,
+endeavored to counter this attack.
+
+Mrs. Billing hardly paused as she made her way toward the door.
+
+"Don't let her have him," she threw at Lady Cecilia. "He's not good
+enough for her. She's my kind," she went on, poking at me with her
+lorgnette. "Needs a man with brains. Come along, Cissie. Don't mind what
+she says. You grab Hugh the first chance you get. She'll have bigger
+fish to fry. Do come along. We've had enough of this."
+
+Lady Cissie and I shook hands with the over-acted listlessness of two
+daughters of the Anglo-Saxon race trying to carry off an emotional
+crisis as if they didn't know what it meant. But after she had gone I
+thought of her--I thought of her with her Limoges-enamel coloring, her
+luscious English voice, her English air of race, her dignity, her style,
+her youth, her naïveté, her combination of all the qualities that make
+human beings distinguished, because there is nothing else for them to
+be. I dragged myself to the Venetian mirror and looked into it. With my
+plain gray frock, my dark complexion, and my simply arranged hair. I was
+a poor little frump whom not even the one man in five hundred could find
+attractive. I wondered how Hugh could be such a fool. I asked myself if
+he could go on being such a fool much longer. And with the thought that
+he would--and again with the thought that he wouldn't--I surprised
+myself by bursting into tears.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XVII
+
+
+In similar small happenings April passed and we had reached the middle
+of May. Easter and the opera were over; as the warm weather was coming
+on people were already leaving town for the country, the seaside or
+Europe. Personally, I had no plans beyond spending the month of August,
+which Mr. Grainger informed me I was to have "off," in making a visit to
+my old home in Halifax. Hugh had ceased to talk of immediate marriage,
+since he had all he could do to live on what he earned in selling bonds.
+
+He had taken that job when Mildred could lend him no more without
+dipping into funds that had been his father's. He was still resolute on
+that point. He was resolute, too, in seeing nothing in the charms of
+Cissie Boscobel. He hated red hair, he said, making no allowance for the
+umber-red of Australian gold, and where I saw the lights of Limoges
+enamel he found no more than the garish tints of a chromolithograph.
+When I hinted that he might be the hero of some young romance on
+Cissie's part, he was contented to say "R-rot!" with a contemptuous roll
+of the first consonant.
+
+Larry Strangways was industrious, happy, and prospering. He enjoyed the
+men with whom his work brought him into contact, and I gathered that his
+writing for daily, weekly, and monthly publications was bringing him
+into view as a young man of originality and power. From himself I
+learned that his small inherited capital was doubling and tripling and
+quadrupling itself through association with Stacy Grainger's
+enterprises. For Stacy Grainger himself he continued to feel an
+admiration not free from an uneasiness, with regard to which he made no
+direct admissions.
+
+Of Mrs. Brokenshire I was seeing less. Either she had grown used to
+doing without her lover or she was meeting him in some other way. She
+still came to see me as often as once a week, but she was not so
+emotional or excitable. She might have been more affectionate than
+before, and yet it was with a dignity that gradually put me at a
+distance.
+
+Cissie Boscobel I didn't meet during the whole of the six weeks except
+in the company of Mrs. Rossiter. That happened when once or twice I went
+to the house to see Gladys when she was suffering from colds, or when my
+former employer drove me round the Park. Just once I got the opportunity
+to hint that Lady Cissie hadn't taken Hugh from me as yet, to which Mrs.
+Rossiter replied that that was obviously because she didn't want him.
+
+We were all, therefore, at a standstill, or moving so slowly that I
+couldn't perceive that we were moving at all, when in the middle of a
+May forenoon I was summoned to the telephone. I was not surprised to
+find Mr. Strangways at the other end, since he used any and every excuse
+to call me up; but his words struck me as those of a man who had taken
+leave of his senses. He plunged into them without any of the usual
+morning greetings or preliminary remarks.
+
+"Are you game to go to Boston by the five-o'clock train to-day?"
+
+I naturally said, "What?" but I said it with some emphasis.
+
+He repeated the question a little more anxiously.
+
+"Could you be ready to go to Boston by the five-o'clock train this
+afternoon?"
+
+"Why should I be?"
+
+He seemed to hesitate before replying.
+
+"You'd know that," he said at last, "when you got on the train."
+
+"Is it a joke?" I inquired, with a light laugh.
+
+"No; it's not a joke. It's serious. I want you to take that train and
+go."
+
+"But what for?"
+
+"I've told you you'd know that when you got on the train--or before you
+had gone very far."
+
+"And do you think that's information enough?"
+
+"It will be information enough for you when I say that a great deal may
+depend on your doing as I ask."
+
+I raised a new objection.
+
+"How can I go when I've my work to attend to here?"
+
+"You must be ready to give that up. If any one makes any trouble, you
+must say you've resigned the position."
+
+As far as was possible over the wire I got the impression of earnestness
+on his part and perhaps excitement; but I was not yet satisfied.
+
+"What shall I do when I get to Boston? Where shall I go?"
+
+"You'll see. You'll know. You'll have to act for yourself. Trust your
+own judgment as I trust it."
+
+"But, Mr. Strangways, I don't understand a bit," I was beginning to
+protest, when he broke in on me.
+
+"Oh, don't you see? It will all explain itself as you go on. I can't
+tell you about it in advance. I don't know. All I can say is that
+whatever happens you'll be needed, and if you're needed you'll be able
+to play the game."
+
+He went on with further directions. It would be possible to take my seat
+in the train at twenty minutes before the hour of departure. I was to be
+early on the spot so as to be among the first to be in my place. I was
+to take nothing but a suit-case; but I was to put into it enough to last
+me for a week, or even for a week or two. I was to be prepared for
+roughing it, if necessary, or for anything else that developed. He would
+send me my ticket within an hour and provide me with plenty of money.
+
+"But what is it?" I implored again. "It sounds like spying, or the
+secret service, or something melodramatic."
+
+"It's none of those things. Just be ready. Wait where you are till you
+get your ticket and the money."
+
+"Will you bring them yourself?"
+
+"No. I can't; I'm too busy. I'm calling from a pay-station. Don't ring
+me up for any more questions. Just do as I've asked you, and I know
+you'll not regret it--not as long as you live."
+
+He put up the receiver, leaving me bewildered. My ignorance was such
+that speculation was shut out. I kept saying to myself: "It must be
+this," or, "It must be that," but with no conviction in my guesses. One
+dreadful suspicion came to me, but I firmly put it away.
+
+A little after twelve a special messenger arrived, bringing my ticket
+and five hundred dollars in bank-notes. I knew then that I was in for a
+genuine adventure. At one I put on my hat and coat, locked the door
+behind me, and went off to my hotel. Mentally I was leaving a work to
+which, from certain points of view, I was sorry to say good-by, but I
+could afford no backward looks.
+
+At the hotel I packed my belongings and left them so that they could be
+sent after me in case I should not return. I might be back the next
+morning; but then I might never come back at all. I thought of those
+villagers who from idle curiosity followed the carriage of Louis XVI.
+and Marie Antoinette as it drove out of Varennes, some of them never to
+see their native town again till they had been dragged over half the
+battle-fields of Europe. Like them I had no prevision as to where I was
+going or what was to become of me. I knew only--gloatingly, and with a
+kind of glory in the fact--that I was going at the call of Larry
+Strangways, to do his bidding, because he believed in me. But that
+thought, too, I tried to put out of my mind. In as far as it was in my
+mind I did my best to express it in terms of prose, seeing myself not as
+the heroine of a mysterious romance--a view to which I was inclined--but
+as a practical business woman, competent, up-to-date, and unafraid. I
+was afraid, mortally afraid, and I was neither up-to-date nor competent;
+but the fiction sustained me while I packed my trunks and sent a
+telegram to Hugh.
+
+This last I did only when it was too late for him to answer or intercept
+me.
+
+"Called suddenly out of town," I wrote. "May lead to a new place. Will
+write or wire as soon as possible." Having sent this off at half past
+four, I took a taxicab for the station.
+
+My instructions were so far carried out successfully that, with a
+colored porter wearing a red cap to precede me, I was the first to pass
+the barrier leading to the train, and the first to take my seat in the
+long, narrow parlor-car. My chair was two from the end toward the
+entrance and exit. Once enthroned within its upholstered depths I
+watched for strange occurrences.
+
+But I watched in vain. For a time I saw nothing but the straight, empty
+cavern of the car. Then a colored porter, as like to my own as one pea
+to another, came puffing his way in, dragging valises and other
+impedimenta, and followed by an old gentleman and his wife. These the
+porter installed in chairs toward the middle of the car, and, touching
+his cap on receipt of his tip, made hastily for the door. Similar
+arrivals came soon after that, with much stowing of luggage into
+overhead racks, and kisses, and injunctions as to conduct, and
+farewells. Within my range of vision were two elderly ladies, a smartly
+dressed young man, a couple in the disillusioned, surly stage, a couple
+who had recently been married, a clergyman, a youth of the cheap
+sporting type. To one looking for the solution of a mystery the material
+was not promising.
+
+The three chairs immediately in front of mine remained unoccupied. I
+kept my eye on them, of course, and presently got some reward. Shortly
+before the train pulled out of the station a shadow passed me which I
+knew to be that of Larry Strangways. He went on to the fourth seat,
+counting mine as the first, and, having reached it, turned round and
+looked at me. He looked at me gravely, with no sign of recognition
+beyond a shake of the head. I understood then that I was not to
+recognize him, and that in the adventure, however it turned out, we were
+to be as strangers.
+
+One more thing I saw. He had never been so pale or grim or determined in
+all the time I had known him. I had hardly supposed that it was in him
+to be so determined, so grim, or so pale. I gathered that he was taking
+our mission more to heart than I had supposed, and that, prompt in
+action as I had been, I was considering it too flippantly. Inwardly I
+prayed for nerve to support him, and for that presence of mind which
+would tell me what to do when there was anything to be done.
+
+Perhaps it increased my zeal that he was so handsome. Straight and slim
+and upright, his features were of that lean, blond, regular type I used
+to consider Anglo-Saxon, but which, now that I have seen it in so many
+Scandinavians, I have come to ascribe to the Norse strain in our blood.
+The eyes were direct; the chin was firm; the nose as straight as an
+ancient Greek's. The relatively small mouth was adorned by a relatively
+small mustache, twisted up at the ends, of the color of the coffee-bean,
+and, to my admiring feminine appreciation, blooming on his face like a
+flower.
+
+His neat spring suit was also of the color of the coffee-bean, and so
+was his soft felt hat. In his shirt there were lines of tan and violet,
+and tan and violet appeared in the tie beneath which a soft collar was
+pinned with a gold safety pin. The yellow gloves that men have affected
+of late years gave a pleasant finish to this costume, which was quite
+complete when he pulled from his bag an English traveling-cap of several
+shades of tan and put it on. He also took out a book, stretching himself
+in his chair in such a way that the English traveling-cap was all I
+could henceforth see of his personality.
+
+I give these details because they entered into the mingled unwillingness
+and zest with which I found myself dragged on an errand to which I had
+no clue. Still less had I a clue when the train began to move, and I had
+nothing but the view of the English traveling-cap to bear me company.
+But no, I had one other detail. Before sitting down Mr. Strangways had
+carefully separated his own hand-luggage from that of the person who
+would be behind him, and which included an ulster, a walking-stick, and
+a case of golf-clubs. I inferred, therefore, that the wayfarer who owned
+one of the two chairs between Mr. Strangways and myself must be a man.
+The chair directly in front of mine remained empty.
+
+As we passed into the tunnel my mind lashed wildly about in search of
+explanations, the only one I could find being that Larry Strangways was
+kidnapping me. On arriving in Boston I might find myself confronted by a
+marriage license and a clergyman. If so, I said to myself, with an
+extraordinary thrill, there would be nothing for it but submission to
+this _force majeure_, though I had to admit that the averted head, the
+English traveling-cap, and the intervening ulster, walking-stick, and
+golf-clubs worked against my theory. I was dreaming in this way when the
+train emerged from the tunnel and stopped so briefly at One Hundred and
+Twenty-fifth Street that, considering it afterward, I concluded that the
+pause had been arranged for. It was just long enough for an odd little
+bundle of womanhood to be pulled and shoved on the car and thrown into
+the seat immediately in front of mine. I choose my verbs with care,
+since they give the effect produced on me. The little woman, who was
+swathed in black veils and clad in a long black shapeless coat, seemed
+not to act of her own volition and to be more dead than alive. The
+porter who had brought her in flung down her two or three bags and
+waited, significantly, though the train was already creeping its way
+onward. She was plainly unused to fending for herself, and only when, as
+a reminder, the man had touched his hat a second time did it occur to
+her what she had to do. Hastily unfastening a small bag, she pulled out
+a handful of money and thrust it at him. The man grinned and was gone,
+after which she sagged back helplessly into her seat, the satchel open
+in her lap.
+
+That dreadful suspicion which had smitten me earlier in the day came
+back again, but the new-comer was so stiflingly wrapped up that even I
+could not be sure. She reminded me of nothing so much as of the veiled
+Begum of Bhopal as she sat in the durbar with the other Indian
+potentates, her head done up in a bag, as seen in the pictures in the
+illustrated London papers. For a lady who wished to pass unperceived it
+was perfect--for every eye in the car was turned on her. I myself
+studied her, of course, searching for something to confirm my fears, but
+finding nothing I could take as convincing. For the matter of that, as
+she sat huddled in the enormous chair I could see little beyond a
+swathing of veils round a close-fitting hat and the folds of the long
+black coat. The easiest inference was that she might be some poor old
+thing whom her relatives were anxious to be rid of, which was, I think,
+the conclusion most of our neighbors drew. Speaking of neighbors, I had
+noticed that in spite of the disturbance caused by this curious
+entrance, Larry Strangways had not turned his head.
+
+I could only sit, therefore, and wait for enlightenment, or for an
+opportunity. Both came when, some half-hour later, the ticket-collectors
+passed slowly down the aisle. Other passengers got ready for them in
+advance, but the little begum in front of me did nothing. When at last
+the collectors were before her she came to herself with a start.
+
+She came to herself with a start, seizing her satchel awkwardly and
+spilling its contents on the floor. The tickets came out, and some
+money. The collectors picked up the tickets and began to pencil and tear
+them; the youth of the cheap sporting type and I went after the coins.
+Since I was a young woman and the lady with her head in a bag might be
+taken for an old one, I had no difficulty in securing his harvest, which
+he handed over to me with an ingratiating leer. Returning the leer as
+much in his own style as I could render it, I offered the handful of
+silver and copper to its owner. To do this I stood as directly as might
+be in front of her, and when, inadvertently, she raised her head I tried
+to look her in the eyes.
+
+I couldn't see them. The shimmer I caught behind the two or three veils
+might have been any one's eyes. But in the motion of the hand that took
+the money, and in the silvery tinkle of the voice that made itself as
+low as possible in murmuring the words, "Thank you!" I couldn't be
+mistaken. It was enough. If I hadn't seen her she at least had seen me,
+and so I went back to my seat.
+
+I had got the first part of my revelation. With the aid of the ulster,
+the walking-stick, and the golf-clubs I could guess at the rest. I knew
+now why Larry Strangways wanted me there, but I didn't know what I was
+to do. By myself I could do nothing. Unless the little begum took the
+initiative I shouldn't know where to begin. I could hardly tear off a
+disguise she had chosen to assume, nor could I take it for granted that
+she was not on legitimate business.
+
+But she had seen me, and there was something in that. If the owner of
+the vacant chair turned up he, too, would see me, and he wouldn't wear a
+veil. We should look each other in the eyes, and he would know that I
+knew what he was about to do. The situation would not be pleasant for
+me; but it would conceivably be much less pleasant for anybody else.
+
+I waited, therefore, watching the beautiful green country go tearing by.
+The smiling freshness of spring was over the hillsides on the left,
+while the setting sun gilded the tiny headlands on the right and turned
+the rapid succession of creeks and inlets and marshy pools into sheets
+of orange and red. Fire illumined the windows of many a passing house,
+to be extinguished instantaneously, and touched with occasional flames
+the cold spring-tide blue of the sea. Clumps of forsythia were in
+blossom, and here and there an apple-tree held out toward the sun a
+branch of early flowers.
+
+When the train stopped at New Haven I was afraid that the owner of the
+ulster and the golf-clubs would appear, and that my work, whatever it
+was to be, would be rendered the more difficult. But no new arrival
+entered. On the other hand, the passengers began to thin out as the time
+came for going to the dining-car. In the matter of food I determined to
+stay at my post if I died of starvation, especially on seeing that the
+English traveling-cap was equally courageous.
+
+Twilight gradually filtered into the world outside; the marshes, inlets,
+and creeks grew dim. Dim was the long, burnished line of the Sound,
+above which I could soon make out a sprinkling of wan yellow stars. Wan
+yellow lights appeared in windows where no curtains were drawn, and what
+a few minutes earlier had been twilight became quickly the night. It was
+the wistful time, the homesick, heart-searching time. If the little lady
+in front of me were to have qualms as to what she was doing they would
+come then.
+
+And indeed as I watched her it seemed to me that she inserted her
+handkerchief under her series of coverings as if to wipe away a tear.
+Presently she lifted two unsteady hands and began to untie her outer
+veil. When it came to finding the pins by which it was adjusted she
+fumbled so helplessly that I took it on myself to lean forward with the
+words, "Won't you allow me?" I could do this without moving round to
+where I should have been obliged to look her in the face; and it was so
+when I helped her take off the veil underneath.
+
+"I'm smothering," she said, very much as it might have been said by a
+little child in distress.
+
+She wore still another veil, but only that which was ordinarily attached
+to her hat. The car being not very brightly lighted, and most of our
+fellow-travelers having gone to dinner, she probably thought she had
+little to fear. As she gave no sign of recognition on my rendering my
+small services I subsided again into my chair.
+
+But I knew she was as conscious of my presence as I was of hers. It was
+not wholly surprising, then, that some twenty minutes later she should
+swing round in the revolving-chair and drop all disguises. She did it
+with the words, tearfully yet angrily spoken:
+
+"What are you doing here?"
+
+"I'm going to Boston, Mrs. Brokenshire," I replied, meekly. "Are you
+doing the same?"
+
+"You know what I'm doing, and you've come to spy on me."
+
+There is something about the wrath of the sweet, mild, gentle creature,
+not easily provoked, which is far more terrible than the rage of an
+irascible old man accustomed to furies. I quailed before it now, but not
+so much that I couldn't outwardly keep my composure.
+
+"If I know what you're doing, Mrs. Brokenshire," I said, gently, "it
+isn't from any information received beforehand. I didn't know you were
+to be on this train till you got in; and I haven't been sure it was you
+till this minute."
+
+"I've a right to do as I please," she declared, hoarsely, "without
+having people to dog me."
+
+"Do I strike you as the sort of person who'd do that? You've had some
+opportunity of knowing me; and have I ever done anything for which you
+didn't first give me leave? If I'm here this evening and you're here,
+too, it's pure accident--as far as I'm concerned." I added, with some
+deepening of the tone, and speaking slowly so that she should get the
+meaning of the words: "I'll only venture to surmise that accidents of
+that kind don't happen for nothing."
+
+I could just make out her swimming eyes as they stared at me through the
+remaining veil, which was as black and thick as a widow's.
+
+"What do you mean?"
+
+"Wouldn't that depend on what you mean?"
+
+"If you think you're going to stop me--"
+
+"Dear Mrs. Brokenshire, I don't think anything at all. How can I? We're
+both going to Boston. By a singular set of circumstances we're seated
+side by side on the same train. What can I see more in the situation
+than that?"
+
+"You do see more."
+
+"But I'm trying not to. If you insist on betraying more, when perhaps
+I'd rather you wouldn't, well, that won't be my fault, will it?"
+
+"Because I've given you my confidence once or twice isn't a reason why
+you should take liberties all the rest of your life."
+
+To this, for a minute, I made no reply.
+
+"That hurts me," I said at last, "but I believe that when you've
+considered it you'll see that you've been unjust to me."
+
+"You've suspected me ever since I knew you."
+
+"I've only suspected you of a sweetness and kindness and goodness which
+I don't think you've discovered in yourself. I've never said anything of
+you, and never thought anything, but what I told Mr. Brokenshire two
+months ago, that you seem to me the loveliest thing God ever made. That
+you shouldn't live up to the beauty of your character strikes me as
+impossible. I'll admit that I think that; and if you call it
+suspicion--"
+
+Her anger began to pass into a kind of childish rebellion.
+
+"You've always talked to me about impossible things--"
+
+"I wasn't aware of it. One has to have standards of life, and do one's
+best to live up to them."
+
+"Why should I do my best to live up to them when other people-- Look at
+Madeline Pyne, and a lot of women I know!"
+
+"Do you think we can ever judge by other people, or take their actions
+as an example for our own? No one person can be more bound to do right
+than another; and yet when it comes to doing wrong it might easily be
+more serious for you than for Mrs. Pyne or for me."
+
+"I don't see why it should be."
+
+"Because you have a national position, one might even say an
+international position, and Mrs. Pyne hasn't, and neither have I. If we
+do wrong, only our own little circles have to know about it, and the
+harm we can do is limited; but if you do wrong it hurts the whole
+country."
+
+"I must say I don't see that."
+
+"You're the wife of a man who might be called a national institution--"
+
+"There are just as important men in the country as he."
+
+"Not many--let us say, at a venture, a hundred. Think of what it means
+to be one of the hundred most conspicuous women among a population of a
+hundred millions. The responsibility must be tremendous."
+
+"I've never thought of myself as having any particular
+responsibility--not any more than anybody else."
+
+"But, of course, you have. Whatever you do gets an added significance
+from the fact that you're Mrs. Howard Brokenshire. When, for example,
+you came to me that day among the rocks at Newport, your kindness was
+the more wonderful for the simple reason that you were who you were. We
+can't get away from those considerations. When you do right, right seems
+somehow to be made more beautiful; and when you do wrong--"
+
+"I don't think it's fair to put me in a position like that."
+
+"I don't put you in that position. Life does it. You were born to be
+high up. When you fall, therefore--"
+
+"Don't talk about falling."
+
+"But it would be a fall, wouldn't it? Don't you remember, some ten or
+twelve years ago, how a Saxon crown princess left her home and her
+husband? Well, all I mean is that because of her position her story rang
+through the world. However one might pity unhappiness, or sympathize
+with a miserable love, there was something in it that degraded her
+country and her womanhood. I suppose the poor thing's inability to live
+up to a position of honor was a blow at human nature. Don't you think
+that that was what we felt? And in your case--"
+
+"You mustn't compare me with her."
+
+"No; I don't--exactly. All I mean is that if--if you do what--what I
+think you've started out to do--"
+
+She raised her head defiantly.
+
+"And I'm going to."
+
+"Then by the day after to-morrow there will not be a newspaper in the
+country that won't be detailing the scandal. It will be the talk of
+every club and every fireside between the Atlantic and the Pacific, and
+Mexico and Montreal. It will be in the papers of London and Paris and
+Rome and Berlin, and there'll be a week in which you'll be the most
+discussed person in the world."
+
+"I've been that already--almost--when Mr. Brokenshire made his attack in
+the Stock Exchange on--"
+
+"But this would be different. In this case you'd be pointed at--it's
+what it would amount to--as a woman who had gone over to all those evil
+forces in civilization that try to break down what the good forces are
+building up. You'd do like that unhappy crown princess, you'd strike a
+blow at your country and at all womanhood. There are thousands of poor
+tempted wives all over Europe and America who'll say: 'Well, if she can
+do such things--'"
+
+"Oh, stop!"
+
+I stopped. It seemed to me that for the time being I had given her
+enough to think about. We sat silent, therefore, looking out at the
+rushing dark. People who drifted back from the dining-car glanced at us,
+but soon were dozing or absorbed in books.
+
+We were nearing New London when she pointed to one of her bags and asked
+me if I would mind opening it. I welcomed the request as indicating a
+return of friendliness. Having extracted a parcel of sandwiches, she
+unfolded the napkin in which they were wrapped and held them out to me.
+I took a pâté de foie-gras and followed her example in nibbling it. On
+my own responsibility I summoned the porter and asked him to bring a
+bottle of spring-water and two glasses.
+
+"I guess the old lady's feelin' some better," he confided, when he had
+carried out the order.
+
+We stopped at New London, and went on again. Having eaten three or four
+sandwiches, I declined any more, folding the remainder in the napkin and
+stowing them away. The simple meal we had shared together restored
+something of our old-time confidence.
+
+"I'm going to do it," she sighed, as I put the bag back in its place.
+"He's--he's somewhere on the train--in the smoking-car, I suppose.
+He's--he's not to come for me till--till we're getting near the Back Bay
+Station in Boston."
+
+I brought out my question simply, though I had been pondering it for
+some time. "Who'll tell Mr. Brokenshire?"
+
+She moved uncomfortably.
+
+"I don't know. I haven't made any arrangements. He's in Newport for one
+or two nights, seeing to some small changes in the house. I--I had to
+take the opportunity while he was away." As if with a sudden inspiration
+she glanced round from staring out into the dark. "Would you do it?"
+
+I shook my head.
+
+"I couldn't. I've never seen a man struck dead, and--"
+
+She swung her chair so as to face me more directly.
+
+"Why," she asked, trembling--"why do you say that?"
+
+"Because, if I told him, it's what I should have to look on at."
+
+She began wringing her hands.
+
+"Oh no, you wouldn't."
+
+"But I should. It would be his death-sentence at the least. It's true he
+has probably received that already--"
+
+"Oh, what are you saying? What are you talking about?"
+
+"Only of what every one can see. He's a stricken man--you've told me so
+yourself."
+
+"Yes, but I said it only about Hugh. Lots of men have to go through
+troubles on account of their children."
+
+"But when they do they can generally get comfort from their wives."
+
+She seemed to stiffen.
+
+"It's not my fault if he can't."
+
+"No, of course not. But the fact remains that he doesn't--and perhaps
+it's the greatest fact of all. He adores you. His children may give him
+a great deal of anxiety but that's the sort of thing any father looks
+for and can endure. Only you're not his child; you're his wife.
+Moreover, you're the wife whom he worships with a slavish idolatry.
+Everything that nature and time and the world and wealth have made of
+him he gathers together and lays it down at your feet, contented if
+you'll only give him back a smile. You may think it pitiful--"
+
+She shuddered.
+
+"I think it terrible--for me."
+
+"Well, I may think so, too, but it's his life we're talking of. His
+tenure of that"--I looked at her steadily--"isn't very certain as it is,
+do you think? You know the condition of his heart--you've told me
+yourself--and as for his nervous system, we've only to look at his face
+and his poor eye."
+
+"I didn't do that. It's his whole life--"
+
+"But his whole life culminates in you. It works up to you, and you
+represent everything he values. When he learns that you've despised his
+love and dishonored his name--"
+
+Her foot tapped the floor impatiently.
+
+"You mustn't say things like that to me."
+
+"I'm only saying them, dear Mrs. Brokenshire, so that you'll know how
+they sound. It's what every one else will be saying in a day or two. You
+can't be what--what you'll be to-morrow, and still keep any one's
+respect. And so," I hurried on, as she was about to protest, "when he
+hears what you've done, you won't merely have broken his heart, you'll
+have killed him just as much as if you'd pulled out a revolver and shot
+him."
+
+She swung back to the window again. Her foot continued to tap the floor;
+her fingers twisted and untwisted like writhing living things. I could
+see her bosom rise and fall rapidly; her breath came in short, hard
+gasps. When I wasn't expecting it she rounded on me again, with flames
+in her eyes like those in a small tigress's.
+
+"You're saying all that to frighten me; but--"
+
+"I'm saying it because it's true. If it frightens you--"
+
+"But it doesn't."
+
+"Then I've done neither good nor harm."
+
+"I've a right to be happy."
+
+"Certainly, if you can be happy this way."
+
+"And I can."
+
+"Then there's no more to be said. We can only agree with you. If you can
+be happy when you've Mr. Brokenshire on your mind, as you must have
+whether he's alive or dead--and if you can be happy when you've
+desecrated all the things your people and your country look to a woman
+in your position to uphold--then I don't think any one will say you
+nay."
+
+"Well, why shouldn't I be happy?" she demanded, as if I was withholding
+from her something that was her right. "Other women--"
+
+"Yes, Mrs. Brokenshire, other women besides you have tried the
+experiment of Anna Karénina--"
+
+"What's that?"
+
+I gave her the gist of Tolstoi's romance--the woman who is married to an
+old man and runs away with a young one, living to see him weary of the
+position in which she places him, and dying by her own act.
+
+As she listened attentively, I went on before she could object to my
+parable.
+
+"It all amounts to the same thing. There's no happiness except in right;
+and no right that doesn't sooner or later--sooner rather than later--end
+in happiness. You've told me more than once you didn't believe that; and
+if you don't I can't help it."
+
+I fell back in my seat, because for the moment I was exhausted. It was
+not merely the actual situation that took the strength out of me, but
+what I dreaded when the man came for his prize from the smoking-car. I
+might count on Larry Strangways to aid me then, but as yet he had not
+recognized my struggle by so much as glancing round.
+
+Nor had I known till this minute how much I cared for the little
+creature before me, or how deeply I pitied the man she was deserting. I
+could see her as happier conditions would have made her, and him as he
+might have become if his nature had not been warped by pride. Any
+impulse to strike back at him had long ago died within me. It might as
+well have died, since I never had the nerve to act on it, even when I
+had the chance.
+
+She turned on me again, with unexpected fierceness.
+
+"It doesn't matter whether I believe all those things or not--now. It's
+too late. I've left home. I've--I've gone away with him."
+
+Though I felt like a spent prize-fighter forced back into the ring, I
+raised myself in my chair. I even smiled, dimly, in an effort to be
+encouraging.
+
+"You've left home and you've gone away; but you won't have gone away
+with him till--till you've actually joined him."
+
+"I've actually joined him already. His things are there beside that
+chair." She nodded backward. "By the time we've passed Providence he'll
+be--he'll be getting ready to come for me."
+
+I said, more significantly than I really understood: "But we haven't
+passed Providence as yet."
+
+To this she seemingly paid no attention, nor did I give it much myself.
+
+"When he comes," she exclaimed, lyrically, "it will be like a
+marriage--"
+
+I ventured much as I interrupted.
+
+"No, it will never be like a marriage. There'll be too much that's
+unholy in it all for anything like a true marriage ever to become
+possible, not even if death or divorce--and it will probably be the one
+or the other--were to set you free."
+
+That she found these words arresting I could tell by the stunned way in
+which she stared.
+
+"Death or divorce!" she echoed, after long waiting. "He--he may divorce
+me quietly--I hope he will--but--but he won't--he won't die."
+
+"He'll die if you kill him," I declared, grimly. I continued to be grim.
+"He may die before long, whether you kill him or not--the chances are
+that he will. But living or dead, as I've said already, he'll stand
+between you and anything you look for as happiness--after to-night."
+
+She threw herself back, into the depths of her chair and moaned. Luckily
+there was no one near enough to observe the act. As we talked in low
+tones we could not be heard above the rattle of the train, and I think I
+passed as a companion or trained nurse in attendance on a nervous
+invalid.
+
+"Oh, what's the use?" she exclaimed at last, in a fit of desperation.
+"I've done it. It's too late. Every one will know I've gone away--even
+if I get out at Providence."
+
+I am sorry to have to admit that the suggestion of getting out at
+Providence startled me. I had been so stupid as not to think of it, even
+when I had made the remark that we had not as yet passed that town. All
+I had foreseen was the struggle at the end of the journey, when Larry
+Strangways and I should have to fight for this woman with the powers of
+darkness, as in medieval legends angels and devils fought over a
+contested soul.
+
+I took up the idea with an enthusiasm I tried to conceal beneath a smile
+of engaging sweetness.
+
+"They may know that you've gone away; but they can also know that you've
+gone away with me."
+
+"With you? You're going to Boston."
+
+"I could wait till to-morrow. If you wanted to get off at Providence I
+could do it, too."
+
+"But I don't want to. I couldn't let him expect to find me here--and
+then discover that I wasn't."
+
+"He would be disappointed at that, of course," I reasoned, "but he
+wouldn't take it as the end of all things. If you got off at Providence
+there would be nothing irrevocable in that step, whereas there would be
+in your going on. You could go away with him later, if you found you
+had to do it; but if you continue to-night you can never come back
+again. Don't you see? Isn't it worth turning over in your mind a second
+time--especially as I'm here to help you? If you're meant to be a
+Madeline Pyne or an Anna Karénina, you'll get another opportunity."
+
+"Oh no, I sha'n't," she sobbed. "If I don't go on to-night, he'll never
+ask me again."
+
+"He may never ask you again in this way; but isn't it possible that
+there may eventually be other ways? Don't make me put that into plainer
+words. Just wait. Let life take charge of it." I seized both her hands.
+"Darling Mrs. Brokenshire, you don't know yourself. You're too fine to
+be ruined; you're too exquisite to be just thrown away. Even the hungry,
+passionate love of the man in the smoking-car must see that and know it.
+If he comes back here and finds you gone--or imagines that you never
+came at all--he'll only honor and love you the more, and go on wanting
+you still. Come with me. Let us go. We can't be far from Providence now.
+I can take care of you. I know just what we ought to do. I didn't come
+here to sit beside you of my own free will; but since I am here doesn't
+it seem to you as if--as if I had been sent?"
+
+As she was sobbing too unrestrainedly to say anything in words, I took
+the law into my own hands. The porter had already begun dusting the dirt
+from the passengers who were to descend at Providence on to those who
+were going to Boston. Making my way up to him, I had the inspiration to
+say:
+
+"The old lady I'm with isn't quite so well, and we're going to stop here
+for the night."
+
+He grinned, with a fine show of big white teeth.
+
+"All right, lady; I'll take care of you. Cranky old bunch, ain't she?
+Handle a good many like that between Boston and Ne' Yawk."
+
+Mrs. Brokenshire made no resistance when I fastened the lighter of her
+two veils about her head, folding the other and putting it away. Neither
+did she resist when I drew her cloak about her and put on my own coat.
+But as the train drew into Providence station and she struggled to her
+feet in response to my touch on her arm, I was obliged to pull and drag
+and push her, till she was finally lifted to the platform.
+
+Before leaving the car, however, I took time to glance at the English
+traveling-cap. I noted then what I had noted throughout the journey. Not
+once did the head beneath it turn in my direction. Of whatever had
+happened since leaving the main station in New York Larry Strangways
+could say that he was wholly unaware.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XVIII
+
+
+What happened on the train after Mrs. Brokenshire and I had left it I
+heard from Mr. Strangways. Having got it from him in some detail, I can
+give it in my own words more easily than in his.
+
+I may be permitted to state here how much and how little of the romance
+between Mr. Grainger and Mrs. Brokenshire Larry Strangways knew. He knew
+next to nothing--but he inferred a good deal. From facts I gave him once
+or twice in hours of my own perplexity he had been able to get light on
+certain matters which had come under his observation as Mr. Grainger's
+confidential man, and to which otherwise he would have had no key. He
+inferred, for instance, that Mrs. Brokenshire wrote daily to her lover,
+and that occasionally, at long intervals, her lover could safely write
+to her. He inferred that when their meetings had ended in one place they
+were taken up discreetly at another, but only with difficulty and
+danger. He inferred that the man chafed against this restraint, and as
+he had got out of it with other women, he was planning to get out of it
+again. I understood that had Mrs. Brokenshire been the only such
+instance in Stacy Grainger's career Larry Strangways might not have felt
+impelled to interfere; but seeing from the beginning that his employer
+"had a weakness," he felt it only right to help me save a woman for whom
+he knew I cared.
+
+I have never wholly understood why he believed that the situation had
+worked up to a crisis on that particular day; but having watched the
+laying of the mine, he could hardly do anything but expect the explosion
+on the application of the match.
+
+When Mr. Grainger had bidden him that morning go to the station and
+secure a drawing-room, or, if that was impossible, two parlor-car seats,
+on the five-o'clock for Boston, he had reasons for following the course
+of which I have briefly given the lines. No drawing-room was available,
+because any that was not sold he bought for himself in order to set the
+stage according to his own ideas. How far he was justified in this will
+be a matter of opinion. Some may commend him, while others will accuse
+him of unwarrantable interference. My own judgment being of no
+importance I hold it in suspense, giving the incidents just as they
+occurred.
+
+It must be evident that as Mr. Strangways didn't know what was to happen
+he could have no plan of action. All he could arrange for was that he
+and I should be on the spot. As it is difficult for guilty lovers to
+elope while acquaintances are looking on, he was resolved that they
+should find elopement difficult. For anything else he relied on
+chance--and on me. Chance favored him in keeping Stacy Grainger out of
+sight, in putting Mrs. Brokenshire next to me, and in making the action,
+such as it was, run smoothly. Had I known that he relied on me I should
+have been more terrified than I actually was, since I was relying on
+him.
+
+It will be seen, then, that at the moment when Mrs. Brokenshire and I
+left the train Larry Strangways had but a vague idea of what had taken
+place. He merely conjectured from the swish of skirts that we had gone.
+His next idea was, as he phrased it, to make himself scarce on his own
+account; but in that his efforts miscarried.
+
+Hoping to slip into another car and thus avoid a meeting with the
+outmanoeuvered lover, he was snapping the clasp of the bag into which he
+had thrust his cap when he perceived a tall figure enter the car by the
+forward end. To escape recognition he bent his head, pretending to
+search for something on the floor. The tall figure passed, but came back
+again. It was necessary that he should come back, because of the number
+on the ticket, the ulster, the walking-stick, and the golf-clubs.
+
+What Stacy Grainger saw, of course, was three empty seats, with his
+secretary sitting in a fourth. The sight of the three empty seats was
+doubtless puzzling enough, but that of the secretary must have been
+bewildering. Without turning his head Mr. Strangways knew by his sixth
+and seventh senses that his employer was comparing the number on his
+ticket with that of the seat, examining the hand-luggage to make sure it
+was his own, and otherwise drawing the conclusion that his faculties
+hadn't left him. For a private secretary who had ventured so far out of
+his line of duty it was a trying minute; but he turned and glanced
+upward only on feeling a tap on his shoulder.
+
+"Hello, Strangways! Is it you? What's the meaning of this?"
+
+Strangways rose. As the question had been asked in perplexity rather
+than in anger, he could answer calmly.
+
+"The meaning of what, sir?"
+
+"Where the deuce are you going? What are you doing here?"
+
+"I'm going to Boston, sir."
+
+"What for? Who told you you could go to Boston?"
+
+The tone began to nettle the young man, who was not accustomed to being
+spoken to so imperiously before strangers.
+
+"No one told me, sir. I didn't ask permission. I'm my own master. I've
+left your employ."
+
+"The devil you have! Since when?"
+
+"Since this morning. I couldn't tell you, because when you left the
+office after I'd given you the tickets you didn't come back."
+
+"And do you call that decent to a man who's-- But no matter!" He pointed
+to the seat next his own. "Where's the--the lady who's been sitting
+here?"
+
+Mr. Strangways raised his eyebrows innocently, and shook his head.
+
+"I haven't seen any lady, sir."
+
+"What? There must have been a lady here. Was to have got on at One
+Hundred and Twenty-fifth Street."
+
+"Possibly; I only say I didn't see her. As a matter of fact, I've been
+reading, and I don't think I looked round during the entire journey.
+Hadn't we better not speak so loud?" he suggested, in a lower tone.
+"People are listening to us."
+
+"Oh, let them go to-- Now look here, Strangways," he began again,
+speaking softly, but excitedly, "there must be some explanation to
+this."
+
+"Of course there must be; only I can't give it. Perhaps the porter could
+tell us. Shall I call him?"
+
+Mr. Grainger nodded his permission. The colored man with the flashing
+teeth came up on the broad grin, showing them.
+
+"Yep," he replied, in answer to the question: "they was two ladies in
+them seats all the way f'um Ne' Yawk."
+
+"Two ladies?" Mr. Grainger cried, incredulously.
+
+"Yes, gen'lemen. Two different ladies. The young one she got in at the
+Grand Central--fust one in the cyar--and the ole one at a Hundred and
+Twenty-fifth Street."
+
+"Do you mean to say it was an old lady who got in there?"
+
+"Yep, gen'lemen; ole and cranky. I 'ain't handled 'em no crankier not
+since I've bin on this beat. Sick, too. They done get off at Providence,
+though they was booked right through to Boston, because the ole lady she
+couldn't go no farther."
+
+Mr. Grainger was not a sleuth-hound, but he did what he could in the way
+of verification.
+
+"Did the young lady wear--wear a veil?"
+
+The porter scratched his head.
+
+"Come to think of it she did--one of them there flowery things"--his
+forefinger made little whirling designs on his coffee-colored
+skin--"what makes a kind of pattern-like all over people's face."
+
+Because he was frantically seeking a clue, Mr. Grainger blurted out the
+foolish question:
+
+"Was she--pretty?"
+
+To answer as a connoisseur and as man to man the African took his time.
+
+"Wa-al, not to say p'ooty, she wasn't--but she'd pa-ss. A little
+black-eyed thing, an' awful smart. One of 'em trained nusses like--very
+perlite, but a turr'ble boss you could see she'd be, for all she was so
+soft-spoken. Had cyare of the ole one, who was what you'd call plumb
+crazy."
+
+"That will do." The trail seemed not worth following any further.
+"There's some mistake," he continued, furiously. "She must be in one of
+the other cars."
+
+Like a collie from the leash he bounded off to make new investigations.
+In five minutes he was back again, passing up the length of the car and
+going on to examine those at the other end of the train. His face as he
+returned was livid; his manner, as far as he dared betray himself before
+a dozen or twenty spectators, that of a balked wild animal.
+
+"Strangways," he swore, as he dropped to the arm of his seat, "you're
+going to answer for this."
+
+Strangways replied, composedly:
+
+"I'm ready to answer for anything I know. You can't expect me to be
+responsible for what I don't know anything about."
+
+He slapped his knee.
+
+"What are you doing in that particular chair? Even if you're going to
+Boston, why aren't you somewhere else?"
+
+"That's easily explained. You told me to get two tickets by this train.
+Knowing that I was to travel by it myself I asked for three. I dare say
+it was stupid of me not to think that the propinquity would be open to
+objection; but as it's a public conveyance, and there's not generally
+anything secret or special about a trip of the kind--"
+
+"Why in thunder didn't you get a drawing-room, as I told you to?"
+
+"For the reason I've given--there were none to be had. If you could have
+taken me into your confidence a little--But I suppose that wasn't
+possible."
+
+To this there was no response, but a series of muttered oaths that bore
+the same relation to soliloquy as a frenzied lion's growl. For some
+twenty minutes they sat in the same attitudes, Strangways quiet,
+watchful, alert, ready for any turn the situation might take, the other
+man stretched on the arm of his chair, indifferent to comfort, cursing
+spasmodically, perplexity on his forehead, rage in his eyes, and
+something that was folly, futility, and helplessness all over him.
+
+Almost no further conversation passed between them till they got out in
+Boston. In the crowd Strangways endeavored to go off by himself, but
+found Mr. Grainger constantly beside him. He was beside him when they
+reached the place where taxicabs were called, and ordered his porter to
+call one.
+
+"Get in," he said, then.
+
+Larry Strangways protested.
+
+"I'm going to--"
+
+I must be sufficiently unlady-like to give Mr. Grainger's response just
+as it was spoken, because it strikes me as characteristic of men.
+
+"Oh, hell! Get in. You're coming with me."
+
+Characteristic of men was the rest of the evening. In spite of what had
+happened--and had not happened--Messrs. Grainger and Strangways partook
+of an excellent supper together, eating and drinking with appetite, and
+smoking their cigars with what looked like an air of tranquillity.
+Though the fury of the balked wild animal returned to Stacy Grainger by
+fits and starts, it didn't interfere with his relish of his food and
+only once did it break its bounds. That was when he struck the arm of
+his chair, saying beneath his breath, and yet audibly enough for his
+secretary to hear:
+
+"She funked it--damn her!"
+
+Larry Strangways then took it on himself to say:
+
+"I don't know the lady, sir, to whom you refer, nor the reasons she may
+have had for funking it, but may I advise you for your own peace of mind
+to withdraw the two concluding syllables?"
+
+A pair of fierce, melancholy eyes rested on him for a second
+uncomprehendingly.
+
+"All right," the crestfallen lover groaned heavily at last. "I may as
+well take them back."
+
+Characteristic of women were my experiences while this was happening.
+
+Bundled out into the station at Providence no two poor females could
+ever have been more forlorn. Standing in the waiting-room with our bags
+around us I felt like one of those immigrant women, ignorant of the
+customs and language of the country to which they have come, I had
+sometimes seen on docks at Halifax. As for Mrs. Brokenshire, she was as
+little used to the unarranged as if she had been a royalty. Never before
+had she dropped in this way down upon the unexpected; never before had
+she been unmet, unwelcomed, and unprepared. She was
+_bouleversée_--overturned. Were she falling from an aeroplane she could
+not have been more at a loss as to where she was going to alight. Small
+wonder was it that she should sit down on one of her own valises and
+begin to cry distressfully.
+
+That, for the minute, I was obliged to disregard. If she had to cry she
+must cry. I could hear the train puffing out of the station, and as far
+as that went she was safe. My first preoccupations had to do with where
+we were to go.
+
+For this I made inquiries of the porter, who named what he considered to
+be the two or three best hotels. I went to the ticket-office and put the
+same question, getting approximately the same answer. Then, seeing a
+well-dressed man and lady enter the station from a private car, which I
+could discern outside, I repeated my investigations, explaining that I
+had come from New York with an invalid lady who had not been well enough
+to continue the journey. They told me I could make no mistake in going
+to one of the houses already named by my previous informants; and so,
+gathering up the hand-luggage and Mrs. Brokenshire, we set forth.
+
+At the hotel we secured an apartment of sitting-room and two bedrooms,
+registering our names as "Miss Adare and friend." I ordered the
+daintiest supper the house could provide to be served up-stairs, with a
+small bottle of champagne to inspirit us; but, unlike the two heroes of
+the episode, neither of us could do more than taste food and drink. No
+kidnapped princess in a fairy-tale was ever more lovely or pathetic than
+Mrs. Brokenshire; no giant ogre more monstrously cruel than myself. Now
+that it was done, I figured, both in her eyes and in my own, not as a
+savior, but a capturer.
+
+She had dried her tears, but she had dried them resentfully. As far as
+possible she didn't look at me, but when she couldn't help it the
+reproach in her glances almost broke my heart. Though I knew I had acted
+for the best, she made me feel a bad angel, a marplot, a spoil-sport. I
+had thwarted a dream that was as full of bliss as it was of terror, and
+reduced the dramatic to the commonplace. Here she was picking at a cold
+quail in aspic face to face with me when she might have been. . . .
+
+I couldn't help seeing myself as she saw me, and when we had finished
+what was not a repast I put her to bed with more than the humility of a
+serving-maid. You will think me absurd, but when those tender eyes were
+turned on me with their silent rebuke, I would gladly have put her back
+on the train again and hurried her on to destruction. As the dear thing
+sobbed on her pillow I laid my head beside hers and sobbed with her.
+
+But I couldn't sob very long, as I still had duties to fulfil. It was
+of little use to have her under my care at Providence unless those who
+would in the end be most concerned as to her whereabouts were to know
+the facts--or the approximate facts--from the start. It was a case in
+which doubt for a night might be doubt for a lifetime; and so when she
+was sufficiently calm for me to leave her I went down-stairs.
+
+Though I had not referred to it again, I had made a mental note of the
+fact that Mr. Brokenshire was at Newport. If at Newport I knew he could
+be nowhere but in one hotel. Within fifteen minutes I was talking to him
+on the telephone.
+
+He was plainly annoyed at being called to the instrument so late as half
+past ten. When I said I was Alexandra Adare he replied that he didn't
+recognize the name.
+
+"I was formerly nursery governess to your daughter, Mrs. Rossiter," I
+explained. "I'm the woman who's refused as yet to marry your son, Hugh."
+
+"Oh, that person," came the response, uttered wearily.
+
+"Yes, sir; that person. I must apologize for ringing you up so late; but
+I wanted to tell you that Mrs. Brokenshire is here at Providence with
+me."
+
+The symptoms of distress came to me in a series of choking sounds over
+the wire. It was a good half-minute before I got the words:
+
+"What does that mean?"
+
+"It means that Mrs. Brokenshire is perfectly well in physical condition,
+but she's tired and nervous and overwrought."
+
+I made out that the muffled and strangled voice said:
+
+"I'll motor up to Providence at once. It's now half past ten. I shall be
+there between one and two. What hotel shall I find you at?"
+
+"Don't come, sir," I pleaded. "I had to tell you we were in Providence,
+because you could have found that out by asking where the long-distance
+call had come from; but it's most important to Mrs. Brokenshire that she
+should have a few days alone."
+
+"I shall judge of that. To what hotel shall I come?"
+
+"I beg and implore you, sir, not to come. Please believe me when I say
+that it will be better for you in the end. Try to trust me. Mrs.
+Brokenshire isn't far from a nervous breakdown; but if I can have her to
+myself for a week or two I believe I could tide her over it."
+
+Reproof and argument followed on this, till at last he yielded, with the
+words:
+
+"Where are you going?"
+
+Fortunately, I had thought of that.
+
+"To some quiet place in Massachusetts. When we're settled I shall let
+you know."
+
+He suggested a hotel at Lenox as suitable for such a sojourn.
+
+"She'd rather go where she wouldn't meet people whom she knows. The
+minute she has decided I shall communicate with you again."
+
+"But I can see you in the morning before you leave?"
+
+The accent was now that of request. The overtone in it was pitiful.
+
+"Oh, don't try to, sir. She wants to get away from every one. It will be
+so much better for her to do just as she likes. She had got to a point
+where she had to escape from everything she knew and cared about; and so
+all of a sudden--only--only to-day--she decided to come with me. She
+doesn't need a trained nurse, because she's perfectly well. All she
+wants is some one to be with her--whom she knows she can trust. She
+hasn't even taken Angélique. She simply begs to be alone."
+
+In the end I made my point, but only after genuine beseeching on his
+part and much repetition on mine. Having said good-night to him--he
+actually used the words--I called up Angélique, in order to bring peace
+to a household in which the mistress's desertion would create some
+consternation.
+
+Angélique and I might have been called friends. The fact that I spoke
+French _comme une Française_, as she often flattered me by saying, was a
+bond between us, and we had the further point of sympathy that we were
+both devoted to Mrs. Brokenshire. Besides that, there is something in
+me--I suppose it must be a plebeian streak--which enables me to
+understand servants and get along with them.
+
+I gave her much the same explanation as I gave to Mr. Brokenshire,
+though somewhat differently put. In addition I asked her to pack such
+selections from the simpler examples of Mrs. Brokenshire's wardrobe as
+the lady might need in a country place, and keep them in readiness to
+send. Angélique having expressed her relief that Mrs. Brokenshire was
+safe at a known address, in the company of a responsible attendant--a
+relief which, so she said, would be shared by the housekeeper, the chef,
+and the butler, all of whom had spent the evening in painful
+speculation--we took leave of each other, with our customary mutual
+compliments.
+
+Though I was so tired by this time that fainting would have been a
+solace, I called for a Boston paper and began studying the
+advertisements of country hotels. Having made a selection of these I
+consulted the manager of our present place of refuge, who strongly
+commended one of them. Thither I sent a night-letter commandeering the
+best, after which, with no more than strength to undress, I lay down on
+a couch in Mrs. Brokenshire's room. When I knew she was sleeping I, too,
+slept fitfully. About once in an hour I went softly to her bedside, and
+finding her dozing, if not sound asleep, I went softly back again.
+
+Between four and five we had a little scene. As I approached her bed she
+looked up and said:
+
+"What are we going to do in the morning?"
+
+Afraid to tell her all I had put in train, I gave my ideas in the form
+of suggestion.
+
+"No, I sha'n't do that," she said, quietly.
+
+She lay quite still, her cheek embossed on the pillow, and a great stray
+curl over her left shoulder.
+
+"Then what would you like to do?"
+
+"I should like to go straight back."
+
+"To begin the same old life all over again?"
+
+"To begin to see him all over again."
+
+"Do you think that after last night you can begin to see him in the same
+old way?"
+
+"I must see him in some way."
+
+"But isn't the way what you've still to discover?" I resolved on a bold
+stroke. "Wouldn't part of your object in going away for a time be to
+think out some method of reconciling your feeling for Mr. Grainger
+with--with your self-respect?"
+
+"My self-respect?" She looked as if she had never heard of such a thing.
+"What's that got to do with it?"
+
+"Hasn't it got everything to do with it? You can't live without it
+forever."
+
+"Do you mean that I've been living without it as it is?"
+
+"Isn't that for you to say rather than for me?"
+
+She was silent for a minute, after which she said, fretfully:
+
+"I don't think it's very nice of you to talk to me like that. You've got
+me here at your mercy, when I might have been--" A long, bubbling sigh,
+like the aftermath of tears, laid stress on the joys she had foregone.
+"He'll never forgive me now--never."
+
+"Wouldn't it be better, dear Mrs. Brokenshire," I asked, "to consider
+whether or not you can ever forgive him?"
+
+She raised herself on her elbow and looked at me. Seated in a low
+arm-chair beside her bed, in an old-rose-colored kimono, my dark hair
+hanging down my back, I was not a fascinating object of study, even in
+the light of one small, distant, shaded bedroom lamp.
+
+"What should I forgive him for?--for loving me?"
+
+"Yes, for loving you--in that way."
+
+"He loves me--"
+
+"So much that he could see you dishonored and disgraced--and shunned by
+decent people all the rest of your life--just to gratify his own
+desires. It seems to me you may have to forgive him for that."
+
+"He asked me to do only what I would have done willingly--if it hadn't
+been for you."
+
+"But he asked you. The responsibility is in that. You didn't make the
+suggestion; he did."
+
+"He didn't make it till I'd let him see--"
+
+"Too much. Forgive me for saying it, dear Mrs. Brokenshire; but do you
+think a woman should ever go so far to meet a man as you did?"
+
+"I let him see that I loved him. I did that before I married Mr.
+Brokenshire."
+
+"You let him see more than that you loved him. You showed him that you
+didn't know how to live without him."
+
+"But since I didn't know how--"
+
+"Ah, but you should have known. No woman should be so dependent on a man
+as that."
+
+She fell back again on her pillows.
+
+"It's easy to see you've never been in love."
+
+"I have been in love--and am still; but love is not the most important
+thing in the world--"
+
+"Then you differ from all the great teachers. They say it is."
+
+"If they do they're not speaking of sexual love."
+
+"What are they speaking of, then?"
+
+"They're speaking of another kind of love, with which the mere sexual
+has nothing to do. I'm not an ascetic, and I know the sexual has its
+place. But there's a love that's as much bigger than that as the sky is
+bigger than I am."
+
+"Yes, but so long as one never sees it--"
+
+I suppose it was her tone of feeble rebellion that roused my spirit and
+made me speak in a way which I should not otherwise have allowed myself.
+
+"You do see it, darling Mrs. Brokenshire," I declared, more sweetly than
+I felt. "I'm showing it to you." I rose and stood over her. "What do you
+suppose I'm prompted by but love? What urges me to stand by Mr.
+Brokenshire but love? What made me step in between you and Mr. Grainger
+and save him, as well as you, but love? Love isn't emotion that leaves
+you weak; it's action that makes you strong. It has to be action, and it
+has to be right action. There's no love separable from right; and until
+you grasp that fact you'll always be unhappy. I'm a mere rag in my own
+person. I've no more character than a hen. But because I've got a wee
+little hold on right--"
+
+She broke in, peevishly, as she turned away:
+
+"I do wish you'd let me go to sleep."
+
+I got down from my high horse and went back, humbly, to my couch.
+Scarcely, however, had I lain down, when the voice came again, in
+childish complaint:
+
+"I think you might have kissed me."
+
+I had never kissed her in my life, nor had she ever shown any sign of
+permitting me this liberty. Timidly I went back to the bed; timidly I
+bent over it. But I was not prepared for the sudden intense clinging
+with which she threw her arms round my neck and drew my face down to
+hers.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XIX
+
+
+In the morning Mrs. Brokenshire was difficult again, but I got her into
+a neat little country inn in Massachusetts by the middle of the
+afternoon. I had to be like a jailer dragging along a prisoner, but that
+could not be helped.
+
+On leaving Providence she insisted on spending a few days in Boston,
+where, so she said, she had friends whom she wished to see. Knowing that
+Stacy Grainger would be at one of the few hotels of which we had the
+choice, I couldn't risk a meeting. Her predominating shame, a shame she
+had no hesitation in confessing, was for having failed him. He would
+never forgive her, she moaned; he wouldn't love her any more. Not to be
+loved by him, not to be forgiven, was like death. All she demanded
+during the early hours of that day was to find him, wherever he had
+gone, and fling herself at his feet.
+
+Because I didn't allow her to remain in Boston we had what was almost a
+quarrel, as we jolted over the cobblestones from the southern station to
+the northern. She was now an outraged queen and now a fiery little
+termagant. Sparing me neither tears nor reproaches, neither scoldings
+nor denunciations, she nevertheless followed me obediently. Sitting
+opposite me in the parlor-car, ignoring the papers and fashion magazines
+I spread beneath her eyes, she lifted on me the piteous face of an angel
+whom I had beaten and trampled and enslaved. For this kind of sacrilege
+I had ceased, however, to be contrite. I was so tired, and had grown so
+grim, that I could have led her along in handcuffs.
+
+But once out in the fresh, green, northern country the joy of a budding
+and blossoming world stole into us in spite of all our cares. We
+couldn't help getting out of our own little round of thought when we saw
+fields that were carpets of green velvet, or copses of hazelnut and
+alder coming into leaf, or a farmer sowing the plowed earth with the
+swing and the stride of the _Semeur_. We couldn't help seeing wider and
+farther and more hopefully when the sky was an arch of silvery blue
+overhead, and white clouds drifted across it, and the north into which
+we were traveling began to fling up masses of rolling hills.
+
+She caught me by the arm.
+
+"Oh, do look at the lambs! The darlings!"
+
+There they were, three or four helpless creatures, shivering in the
+sharp May wind and apparently struck by the futility of a life which
+would end in nothing but making chops. The ewes watched them maternally,
+or stood patiently to be tugged by the full woolly breasts. After that
+we kept our eyes open for other living things: for horses and cows and
+calves, for Corots and Constables--with a difference!--on the uplands of
+farms or in village highways. Once when a foal galloped madly away from
+the train, kicking up its slender hind legs, my companion actually
+laughed.
+
+When we got out at the station a robin was singing, the first bird we
+had heard that year. The note was so full and pure and Eden-like that it
+caught one's breath. It went with the bronze-green of maples and elms,
+with the golden westering sunshine, and with the air that was like the
+distillation of air and yet had a sharp northern tang in it. Driving in
+the motor of the inn, through the main street of the town, we saw that
+most of the white houses had a roomy Colonial dignity, and that orchards
+of apple, cherry, and plum, with acres of small fruit, surrounded them
+all. Having learned on the train that jam was the staple of the little
+town's prosperity, we could see jam everywhere. Jam was in the
+cherry-trees covered with dainty white blossoms, in the plum-trees
+showing but a flower or two, and in the apple-trees scarcely in bud. Jam
+was in the long straight lines which we were told represented
+strawberries, and in the shrubberies of currant. Jam was along the
+roadsides where the raspberry was clothing its sprawling bines with
+leaves, and wherever the blueberry gladdened the waste places with its
+millions of modest bells. Jam is a toothsome, homey thing to which no
+woman with a housekeeping heart can be insensible. The thought of it did
+something to bring Mrs. Brokenshire's thoughts back to the simple
+natural ways she had forsworn, even before reaching the hotel.
+
+The hotel was no more than a farm-house that had expanded itself half a
+dozen times. We traversed all sorts of narrow halls and climbed all
+sorts of narrow staircases, till at last we emerged on a corner suite,
+where the view led us straight to the balcony.
+
+Not that it was an extraordinary view; it was only a peaceful and a
+noble one. An undulating country held in its folds a scattering of
+lakes, working up to the lines of the southern New Hampshire hills which
+closed the horizon to the north. Green was, of course, the note of the
+landscape, melting into mauve in the mountains and saffron in the sky.
+Spacing out the perspective a mauve mist rose between the ridges, and a
+mauve light rested on the three white steeples of the town. The town
+was perhaps two hundred feet below us and a mile away, nestling in a
+feathery bower of verdure.
+
+When I joined Mrs. Brokenshire she was grasping the balcony rail,
+emitting little "Ohs!" and "Ahs!" of ecstasy. She drew long breaths,
+like a thirsty person drinking. She listened to the calling and
+answering of birds with face illumined and upturned. It was a bath of
+the spirit to us both. It was cleansing and healing; it was soothing and
+restful and corrective, setting what was sane within us free.
+
+Of all this I need say little beyond mentioning the fact that Mrs.
+Brokenshire, in spite of herself, entered into a period in which her
+taut nerves relaxed and her over-strained emotions became rested. It was
+a kind of truce of God to her. She had struggled and suffered so much
+that she was content for a time to lie still in the everlasting arms and
+be rocked and comforted. We had the simplest of rooms; we ate the
+simplest of food; we led the simplest of lives. By day we read and
+walked and talked a little and thought much; at night we slept soundly.
+Our fellow-guests were people who did the same, varying the processes
+with golf and moving pictures. For the most part they were tired people
+from the neighboring towns, seeking like ourselves a few days' respite
+from their burdens. Though they came to know who Mrs. Brokenshire was,
+they respected her privacy, never doing worse than staring after her
+when she entered the dining-room or walked on the lawns or verandas. I
+had come to love her so much that it was a joy to me to witness the
+revival of her spirit, and I looked forward to seeing her restored, not
+too reluctantly, to her husband.
+
+With him I had, of course, some correspondence. It was an odd
+correspondence, in which I made my customary _gaffe_. On our first
+evening at the inn I wrote to him in fulfilment of my promise,
+beginning, "Dear Mr. Brokenshire," as if I was writing to an equal. The
+acknowledgment came back: "Miss Alexandra Adare: Dear Madam," putting me
+back in my place. Accepting the rebuff, I adopted the style in sending
+him my daily bulletins.
+
+As a matter of fact, my time was largely passed in writing, for I had
+explanations to make to so many. My acquaintance with Mrs. Brokenshire
+having been a secret one, I was obliged to confess it to Hugh and Mrs.
+Rossiter, and even to Angélique. I had, in a measure, to apologize for
+it, too, setting down Mrs. Brokenshire's selection of my company to an
+invalid's eccentricity.
+
+So we got through May and into June, my reports to Mr. Brokenshire being
+each one better than the last. My patient never wrote to him herself,
+nor to any one. We had, in fact, been a day or two at the inn before she
+said:
+
+"I wonder what Mr. Brokenshire is thinking?"
+
+It was for me to tell her then that from the beginning I had kept him
+informed as to where she was, and that he knew I was with her. For a
+minute or two she stiffened into the _grande dame_, as she occasionally
+did.
+
+"You'll be good enough in future not to do such things without
+consulting me," she said, with dignity.
+
+That passed, and when I read to her, as I always did, the occasional
+notes with which her husband honored me, she listened without comment.
+It must have been the harder to do that since the lover's pleading ardor
+could be detected beneath all the cold formality in which he couched his
+communications.
+
+It was this ardor, as well as something else, that began in the end to
+make me uneasy. The something else was that Mrs. Brokenshire was writing
+letters on her own account. Coming in one day from a solitary walk, I
+found her posting one in the hall of the hotel. A few days later one for
+her was handed to me at the office, with several of my own. Recognizing
+Stacy Grainger's writing, I put it back with the words:
+
+"Mrs. Brokenshire will come for her letters herself."
+
+From that time onward she was often at her desk, and I knew when she got
+her replies by the feverishness of her manner. The truce of God being
+past, the battle was now on again.
+
+The first sign of it given to me was on a day when Mr. Brokenshire wrote
+in terms more definite than he had used hitherto. I read the letter
+aloud to her, as usual. He had been patient, he said, and considerate,
+which had to be admitted. Now he could deny himself no longer. As it was
+plain that his wife was better, he should come to her. He named the 20th
+as the day on which he should appear.
+
+"No, no," she cried, excitedly. "Not till after the twenty-third."
+
+"But why the twenty-third?" I asked, innocently.
+
+"Because I say so. You'll see." Then fearing, apparently, that she had
+betrayed something she ought to have concealed, she colored and added,
+lamely, "It will give me a little more time."
+
+I said nothing, but I pondered much. The 23d was no date at all that had
+anything to do with us. If it had significance it was in plans as to
+which she had not taken me into her confidence.
+
+So, too, when I heard her making inquiries of the maid who did the rooms
+as to the location of the Baptist church. "What on earth does she want
+to know that for?" was the question I not unnaturally asked myself. That
+she, who never went to church at all, except as an occasional act of
+high ceremonial for which she took great credit to her soul, was now
+concerned with the doctrine of baptism by immersion I did not believe.
+But I hunted up the sacred edifice myself, finding it to be situated on
+the edge of a daisied mead, slightly out of the town, on a road that
+might be described as lonely and remote. I came to the conclusion that
+if any one wanted to carry off in an automobile a lady picking
+flowers--a sort of _enlèvement de Proserpine_--this would be as good a
+place as any. How the Pluto of our drama could have come to select it,
+Heaven only knew.
+
+But I did as I was bid, and wrote to Mr. Brokenshire that once the 23d
+was passed he would be free to come. After that I watched, wondering
+whether or not I should have the heart or the nerve to frustrate love a
+second time, even if I got the chance.
+
+I didn't get the chance precisely, but on the 22nd of June I received a
+mysterious note. It was typewritten and had neither date nor address nor
+signature. Its message was simple:
+
+"If Miss Adare will be at the post-office at four o'clock this afternoon
+she will greatly oblige the writer of these lines and perhaps benefit a
+person who is dear to her."
+
+The post-office being a tolerably safe place in case of felonious
+attack, I was on the spot at five minutes before the hour. In that
+particular town it occupied a corner of a brick building which also gave
+shelter to the bank and a milliner's establishment. As the village hotel
+was opposite, I advertised my arrival by studying a display of hats
+which warranted the attention before going inside to invest in stamps.
+As I was the only applicant for this necessary of life, the swarthy,
+undersized young man who served me made kindly efforts at entertainment
+while "delivering the goods," as he expressed it.
+
+"English, ain't you?"
+
+I said, as usual, that I was a Canadian.
+
+He smiled at his own perspicacity.
+
+"Got your number, didn't I? All you Canucks have the same queer way o'
+talkin'. Two or three in the jam-factory here--only they're French."
+
+I knew some one had entered behind me, and, turning away from the
+wicket, I found the person I had expected. Mr. Stacy Grainger, clad
+jauntily in a gray spring suit, lifted a soft felt hat.
+
+He went to his point without introductory greeting.
+
+"It's good of you to have come. Perhaps we could talk better if we
+walked up the street. There's no one to know us or to make it awkward
+for you."
+
+Walking up the street he made his errand clear to me. I had partly
+guessed it before he said a word. I had guessed it from his pallor, from
+something indefinably humbled in the way he bore himself, and from the
+worried light in his romantic eyes. Being so much taller than I, he had
+to stoop toward me as he talked.
+
+He knew, he said, what had happened on the train. Some of it he had
+wrung from his secretary, Strangways, and the rest had been written him
+by Mrs. Brokenshire. He had been so furious at first that he might have
+been called insane. In order to give himself the pleasure of kicking
+Strangways out he had refused to accept his resignation, and had I not
+been a woman he would have sought revenge on me. He had been the more
+frantic because until getting his first note from Mrs. Brokenshire he
+hadn't known where she was. To have the person dearest to him in the
+world swept off the face of the earth after she was actually under his
+protection was enough to drive a man mad.
+
+Having acquiesced in this, I considered it no harm to add that if I had
+known the business on which I was setting out I should have hardly dared
+that day to take the train for Boston. Once on it, however, and in
+speech with Mrs. Brokenshire, it had seemed that there was no other
+course before me.
+
+"Quite so," he agreed, somewhat to my surprise. "I see that now. He's
+not altogether an ass, that fellow Strangways. I've kept him with me,
+and little by little--" He broke off abruptly to say: "And now the
+shoe's on the other foot. That's what I wanted to tell you."
+
+I walked on a few paces before getting the force of this figure of
+speech.
+
+"You mean that Mrs. Brokenshire--"
+
+"Quite so. I see you get what I'd like you to know." He went on,
+brokenly: "It isn't that I don't want it myself as much as ever. I only
+see, as I didn't see before, what it would mean to her. If I were to
+take her at her word--as I must, of course, if she insists on it--"
+
+I had to think hard while we continued to walk on beneath the leafing
+elms, and the village people watched us two as city folks.
+
+"It's for to-morrow, isn't it?" I asked at last.
+
+He nodded.
+
+"How did you know that?"
+
+"Near the Baptist church?"
+
+"How the deuce do you know? I motored up here last week to spy out the
+land. That seemed to me the most practicable spot, where we should be
+least observed--"
+
+We were still walking on when I said, without quite knowing why I did
+so:
+
+"Why shouldn't you go away at once and leave it all to me?"
+
+"Leave it all to you? And what would you do?"
+
+"I don't know. I should have to think. I could do--something."
+
+"But suppose she's counting on me to come?"
+
+"Then you would have to fail her."
+
+"I couldn't."
+
+"Not even if it was for her good?"
+
+He shook his head.
+
+"Not even if it was for her good. No one who calls himself a
+gentleman--"
+
+I couldn't help flinging him a scornful smile.
+
+"Isn't it too late to think in terms like that? We've come to a place
+where such words don't apply. The best we can do is to get out of a
+difficult situation as wisely as possible, and if you'd just go away and
+leave it to me--"
+
+"She'd never forgive me. That's what I'd be afraid of."
+
+"There's nothing to be afraid of in doing right," I declared, a little
+sententiously. "You'll do right in going away. The rest will take care
+of itself."
+
+We came to the edge of the town, where there was a gate leading into a
+pasture. Over this gate we leaned and looked down on a valley of
+orchards and farms. He was sufficiently at ease to take out a cigarette
+and ask my permission to smoke.
+
+"What would you say of a man who treated you like that?" he asked,
+presently.
+
+"It wouldn't matter what I said at first, so long as I lived to thank
+him. That's what she'd do, and she'd do it soon."
+
+"And in the mean time?"
+
+"I don't see that you need think of that. If you do right--"
+
+He groaned aloud.
+
+"Oh, right be hanged!"
+
+"Yes, there you go. But so long as right is hanged wrong will have it
+all its own way and you'll both get into trouble. Do right now--"
+
+"And leave her in the lurch?"
+
+"You wouldn't be leaving her in the lurch, because you'd be leaving her
+with me. I know her and can take care of her. If you were just failing
+her and nothing else--that would be another thing. But I'm here. If
+you'll only do what's so obviously right, Mr. Grainger, you can trust me
+with the rest."
+
+I said this firmly and with an air of competence, though, as a matter of
+fact, I had no idea of what I should have to do. What I wanted first was
+to get rid of him. Once alone with her, I knew I should get some kind of
+inspiration.
+
+He diverted the argument to himself--he wanted her so much, he would
+have to suffer so cruelly.
+
+"There's no question as to your suffering," I said. "You'll both have to
+suffer. That can be taken for granted. We're only thinking of the way in
+which you'll suffer least."
+
+"That's true," he admitted, but slowly and reluctantly.
+
+"I'm not a terribly rigorous moralist," I went on. "I've a lot of
+sympathy with Paolo and Francesca and with Pelléas and Mélisande. But
+you can see for yourself that all such instances end unhappily, and when
+it's happiness you're primarily in search of--"
+
+"Hers--especially," he interposed, with the same deliberation and some
+of the same unwillingness.
+
+"Well, then, isn't your course clear? She'll never be happy with you if
+she kills the man she runs away from--"
+
+He withdrew his cigarette and looked at me, wonderingly.
+
+"Kills him? What in thunder do you mean?"
+
+I explained my convictions. Howard Brokenshire wouldn't survive his
+wife's desertion for a month; he might not survive it for a day. He was
+a doomed man, even if his wife did not desert him at all. He, Stacy
+Grainger, was young. Mrs. Brokenshire was young. Wouldn't it be better
+for them both to wait on life--and on the other possibilities that I
+didn't care to name more explicitly?
+
+So he wrestled with himself, and incidentally with me, turning back at
+last toward the village inn--and his motor. While shaking my hand to say
+good-by he threw off, jerkily:
+
+"I suppose you know my secretary, Strangways, wants to marry you?"
+
+My heart seemed to stop beating.
+
+"He's--he's never said so to me," I managed to return, but more weakly
+than I could have wished.
+
+"Well he will. He's all right. He's not a fool. I'm taking him with me
+into some big things; so that if it's the money you're in doubt about--"
+
+I had recovered myself enough to say:
+
+"Oh no; not at all. But if you're in his confidence I beg you to ask him
+to think no more about it. I'm engaged--or practically engaged--I may
+say that I'm engaged--to Hugh Brokenshire."
+
+"I see. Then you're making a mistake."
+
+I was moving away from him by this time so that I gave him a little
+smile.
+
+"If so, the circumstances are such that--that I must go on making it."
+
+"For God's sake don't!" he called after me.
+
+"Oh, but I must," I returned, and so we went our ways.
+
+On going back to our rooms I found poor, dear little Mrs. Brokenshire
+packing a small straw suit-case. She had selected it as the only thing
+she could carry in her hand to the place of the _enlèvement_. She was
+not a packer; she was not an adept in secrecy. As I entered her room she
+looked at me with the pleading, guilty eyes of a child detected in the
+act of stealing sweets, and confessing before he is accused.
+
+I saw nothing, of course. I saw nothing that night. I saw nothing the
+next day. Each one of her helpless, unskilful moves was so plain to me
+that I could have wept; but I was turning over in my mind what I could
+do to let her know she was deceived. I was reproaching myself, too, for
+being so treacherous a confidante. All the great love-heroines had an
+attendant like me, who bewailed and lamented the steps their mistresses
+were taking, and yet lent a hand. Here I was, the nurse to this Juliet,
+the Brangaene to this Isolde, but acting as a counter-agent to all
+romantic schemes. I cannot say I admired myself; but what was I to do?
+
+To make a long story short I decided to do nothing. You may scorn me,
+oh, reader, for that; but I came to a place where I saw it would be vain
+to interfere. Even a child must sometimes be left to fight its own
+battles and stand face to face with its own fate; and how much more a
+married woman! It became the more evident to me that this was what I
+could best do for Mrs. Brokenshire in proportion as I watched the leaden
+hands and feet with which she carried out her tasks and inferred a
+leaden heart. A leaden heart is bad enough, but a leaden heart offering
+itself in vain--what lesson could go home with more effect?
+
+During the forenoon of the 23d each little incident cut me to the quick.
+It was so naïve, so useless. The poor darling thought she was outwitting
+me. As if she was stealing it she stowed away her jewelry, and when she
+could no longer hide the suit-case she murmured something about articles
+to be cleaned at the village cleaner's. I took this with a feeble joke
+as to the need of economy, and when she thought she would carry down the
+things herself I commended the impulse toward exercise. I knew she
+wouldn't drive, because she didn't want a witness to her acts. As far as
+I could guess the hour at which Pluto would carry off Proserpine, it
+would be at five o'clock.
+
+And indeed about half past three I observed unusual signs of agitation.
+Her door was kept closed, and from behind it came sounds of a final
+opening and closing of cupboards and drawers, after which she emerged,
+wearing a dark-blue walking-suit and a hat of the _canotière_ style,
+with a white quill feather at one side. I still made no comment, not
+even when the wan, wee, touching figure was ready to set forth.
+
+If her first steps were artless the last was more artless still. Instead
+of going off casually, with an implied intention to come back, she took
+leave of me with tears and protestations of affection. She had been
+harsh with me, she confessed, and seemingly indifferent to my tender
+care, but one day she might have a chance to show me how genuine was her
+gratitude. In this, too, I saw no more than the commonplace, and a
+little after four she tripped down the avenue, looking, with her
+suit-case, like a school-girl.
+
+I allowed her just such a handicap as her speed and mine would have
+warranted. Even then I made no attempt to overtake her. Having
+previously got what is called the lay of the land, I knew how I could
+come to her assistance by taking a short cut. I had hardened my heart by
+this time, and whatever qualms I had felt before, I was resolved now to
+spare her no drop of the wormwood that would be for her good.
+
+I cannot describe our respective routes without appending a map, which
+would scarcely be worth while. It will be enough if I say that she went
+round the arc of a bow and I cut across by the string. I came thus to a
+slight eminence, selected in advance, whence I could watch her descent
+of the hill by which the lower Main Street trails off into the country.
+I could follow her, too, when she deflected into a small
+cross-thoroughfare bearing the scented name of Clover Lane, in which
+there were no houses; and I should still be able to trace her course
+when she emerged on the quiet country road that would take her to her
+trysting-place. I had no intention to step in till I could do it at some
+spot on her homeward way, and thus spare her needless humiliation.
+
+In Clover Lane she was within a few hundred yards of her destination.
+She had only to turn a corner and she would be in sight of the flowery
+mead whence she was to be carried off. It was a pretty lane, grass-grown
+and overhung with lilacs in full bloom, such as you would find on the
+edge of any New England town. The lilacs shut her in from my view for a
+good part of the time, but not so constantly that I couldn't be a
+witness to her soul's tragedy.
+
+Her soul's tragedy came as a surprise to me. Closely as I had lived with
+her, I was unprepared for any such event. My first hint of it was when
+her pace through the lane began to slacken, till at last she stopped.
+That she didn't stop because she was tired I could judge by the fact
+that, though she stood stock-still, she held the light suit-case in her
+hand. I couldn't see her face, because I stood under a great elm, some
+five hundred yards away.
+
+Having paused and reflected for the space of three or four minutes, she
+went on again, but she went on more slowly. Her light, tripping gait had
+become a dragging of the feet, while I divined that she was still
+pondering. As it was nearly five o'clock, she couldn't be afraid of
+being before her time.
+
+But she stopped again, setting the suit-case down in the middle of the
+road. She turned then and looked back over the way by which she had
+come, as if regretting it. Seeing her open her small hand-bag, take out
+a handkerchief, and put it to her lips, I was sure she was repressing
+one of her baby-like sobs. My heart yearned over her, but I could only
+watch her breathlessly.
+
+She went on again--twenty paces, perhaps. Here she seemed to find a seat
+on a roadside boulder, for she sat down on it, her back being toward me
+and her figure almost concealed by the wayside growth. I could only
+wonder at what was passing in her mind. The whole period, of about ten
+minutes' duration, is filled in my memory with mellow afternoon light
+and perfumed air and the evening song of birds. When the village clock
+struck five she bounded up with a start.
+
+Again she took what might have been twenty paces, and again she came to
+a halt. Dropping the suit-case once more, she clasped her hands as if
+she was praying. As, to the best of my knowledge, her prayers were
+confined to a hasty evening and morning ritual in which there was
+nothing more than a pious, meaningless habit, I could surmise her
+present extremity. Stacy Grainger was like a god to her. If she
+renounced him now it would be an act of heroism of which I could hardly
+believe her capable.
+
+But, apparently, she made up her mind that she couldn't renounce him. If
+there was an answer to her prayer it was one that prompted her to snatch
+up her burden again and hurry, with a kind of skimming motion, right to
+the end of the lane. It was to the end of the lane, but not to the
+turning into the roadway. Once in the roadway she would see--or she
+thought she would see--Stacy Grainger and his automobile, and her fate
+would be sealed.
+
+She had still a chance before her--and from that rutted sandy juncture,
+with wild roses and wild raspberries in the hedgerows on each side, she
+reeled back as if she had been struck. I can only think of a person
+blinded by a flash of lightning who would recoil in just that way.
+
+For a few minutes she was hidden from my view behind the lilacs. When I
+caught sight of her again she was running like a terrified bird back
+through Clover Lane and toward the Main Street, which would take her
+home.
+
+I met her as she was dragging herself up the hill, white, breathless,
+exhausted. Pretending to take the situation lightly, I called as I
+approached:
+
+"So you didn't leave the things."
+
+Her answer was to drop the suit-case once again, while, regardless of
+curious eyes at windows and doors, she flew to throw herself into my
+arms.
+
+She never explained; I never asked for explanations. I was glad enough
+to get her back to the hotel, put her to bed, and wait on her hand and
+foot. She was saved now; Stacy Grainger, too, was saved. Each had
+deserted the other; each had the same crime to forgive. From that day
+onward she never spoke his name to me.
+
+But as, that evening, I went to her bedside to say good-night, she drew
+my face to hers and whispered, cryptically:
+
+"It will be all right now between yourself and Hugh. I know how I can
+help."
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XX
+
+
+Mr. Brokenshire arrived on the 26th of June, thus giving us a few days'
+grace. In the interval Mrs. Brokenshire remained in bed, neither tired
+nor ill, but white, silent, and withdrawn. Her soul's tragedy had
+plainly not ended with her skimming retreat through Clover Lane. In the
+new phase on which it had entered it was creating a woman, possibly a
+wife, where there had been only a lovely child of arrested development.
+Slipping in and out of her room, attending quietly to her wants, I was
+able to note, as never in my life before, the beneficent action of
+suffering.
+
+Because she was in bed, I folded my tent like the Arab and silently
+vacated my room in favor of Mr. Brokenshire. I looked for some objection
+on telling her of this, but she merely bit her lip and said nothing. I
+had asked the manager to put me in the most distant part of the most
+distant wing of the hotel, and would have stolen away altogether had it
+not been for fear that my poor, dear little lady might need me.
+
+As it was, I kept out of sight when Mr. Brokenshire drove up with
+secretary, valet, and chauffeur, and I contrived to take my meals at
+hours when there could be no encounter between me and the great
+personage. If I was wanted I knew I could be sent for; but the 27th
+passed and no command came.
+
+Once or twice I got a distant view of my enemy, as I began to call
+him--majestic, noble, stouter, too, and walking with a slight waddle of
+the hips, which had always marked his carriage and became more
+noticeable as he increased in bulk. Not having seen him for nearly three
+months, I observed that his hair and beard were grayer. During those
+first few days I was never near enough to be able to tell whether or not
+there was a change for the better or the worse in his facial affliction.
+
+From a chance word with the cadaverous Spellman on the 28th I learned
+that a sitting-room had been arranged in connection with the two
+bedrooms Mrs. Brokenshire and I had occupied, and that husband and wife
+were now taking their repasts in private. Later that day I saw them
+drive out together, Mrs. Brokenshire no more than a silhouette in the
+shadows of the limousine. I drew the inference that, however the soul's
+tragedy was working, it was with some reconciling grace that did what
+love had never been able to accomplish. Perhaps for her, as for me,
+there was an appeal in this vain, fatuous, suffering magnate of a coarse
+world's making that, in spite of everything, touched the springs of
+pity.
+
+In any case, I was content not to be sent for--and to rest. After a
+tranquil day or two my own nerves had calmed down and I enjoyed the
+delight of having nothing on my mind. It was extraordinary how remote I
+could keep myself while under the same roof with my superiors,
+especially when they kept themselves remote on their side. I had decided
+on the 1st of July as the date to which I should remain. If there was no
+demand for my services by that time I meant to consider myself free to
+go.
+
+But events were preparing, had long been preparing, which changed my
+life as, I suppose, they changed to a greater or less degree the
+majority of lives in the world. It was curious, too, how they arranged
+themselves, with a neatness of coincidence which weaves my own small
+drama as a visible thread--visible to me, that is--in the vast tapestry
+of human history begun so far back as to be time out of mind.
+
+It was the afternoon of Monday the 29th of June, 1914. Having secured a
+Boston morning paper, I had carried it off to the back veranda, which
+was my favorite retreat, because nobody else liked it. It was just
+outside my room, and looked up into a hillside wood, where there were
+birds and squirrels, and straight bronze pine-trunks wherever the
+sunlight fell aslant on them. At long intervals, too, a partridge hen
+came down with her little brood, clucking her low wooden cluck and
+pecking at tender shoots invisible to me, till she wandered off once
+more into the hidden depths of the stillness.
+
+But I wasn't watching for the partridge hen that afternoon. I was
+thrilled by the tale of the assassination of the Archduke Franz
+Ferdinand and the Duchess of Hohenberg, which had taken place at
+Sarajevo on the previous day. Millions of other readers, who, no more
+than I, felt their own destinies involved were being thrilled at the
+same moment. The judgment trumpet was sounding--only not as we had
+expected it. There was no blast from the sky--no sudden troop of angels.
+There was only the soundless vibration of the wire and of the Hertzian
+waves; there was only the casting of type and the rattling of
+innumerable reams of paper; and, as the Bible says, the dead could hear
+the voice, and they that heard it stood still; and the nations were
+summoned before the Throne "that was set in the midst." I was summoned,
+with my own people--though I didn't know it was a summons till
+afterward.
+
+The paper had fallen to my knee when I was startled to see Mr.
+Brokenshire come round the corner of my retreat. Dressed entirely in
+white, with no color in his costume save the lavender stripe in his
+shirt and collar, and the violet of his socks, handkerchief, and tie, he
+would have been the perfect type of the middle-aged exquisite had it not
+been for the pitiless distortion of his eye the minute he caught sight
+of me. That he had not stumbled on me accidentally I judged by the way
+in which he lifted a Panama of the kind that is said to be made under
+water and is costlier than the costliest feminine confection by Caroline
+Ledoux.
+
+I was struggling out of my wicker chair when the uplifted hand forbade
+me.
+
+"Be good enough to stay where you are," he commanded, but more gently
+than he had ever spoken to me. "I've some things to say to you."
+
+Too frightened to make a further attempt to move, I looked at him as he
+drew up a chair similar to my own, which creaked under his weight when
+he sat down in it. The afternoon being hot, and my veranda lacking air,
+which was one of the reasons why it was left to me, he mopped his brow
+with the violet handkerchief, on which an enormous monogram was
+embroidered in white. I divined his reluctance to begin not only from
+his long hesitation, but from the renewed contortion of his face. His
+hand went up to the left cheek as if to hold it in place, though with no
+success in the effort. When, at last, he spoke there was a stillness in
+his utterance suggestive of an affection extending now to the lips or
+the tongue.
+
+"I want you to know how much I appreciate the help you've given to Mrs.
+Brokenshire during her--her"--he had a difficulty in finding the right
+word--"during her indisposition," he finished, rather weakly.
+
+"I did no more than I was glad to do," I responded, as weakly as he.
+
+"Exactly; and yet I can't allow such timely aid to go unrewarded."
+
+I was alarmed. Grasping the arms of the chair, I braced myself.
+
+"If you mean money, sir--"
+
+"No; I mean more than money." He, too, braced himself. "I--I withdraw my
+opposition to your marriage with my son."
+
+The immediate change in my consciousness was in the nature of a
+dissolving view. The veranda faded away, and the hillside wood. Once
+more I saw the imaginary dining-room, and myself in a smart little
+dinner gown seating the guests; once more I saw the white-enameled
+nursery, and myself in a lace peignoir leaning over the bassinet. As in
+previous visions of the kind, Hugh was a mere shadow in the background,
+secondary to the home and the baby.
+
+Secondary to the home and the baby was the fact that my object was
+accomplished and that my enemy had come to his knees. Indeed, I felt no
+particular elation from that element in the case; no special sense of
+victory. Like so many realized ambitions, it seemed a matter of course,
+now that it had come. Nevertheless, it seemed to me that for my own sake
+and for the sake of the future I must have a more definite expression of
+surrender than he had yet given me.
+
+I remembered that Mrs. Brokenshire had said she would help me, and could
+imagine how. I summoned up everything within me that would rank as
+force of character, speaking quietly.
+
+"I should be sorry, sir, to have you come to this decision against your
+better judgment."
+
+"If you'll be kind enough to accept the fact," he said, sharply, "we can
+leave my manner of reaching it out of the discussion."
+
+In spite of the tone I rallied my resources.
+
+"I don't want to be presumptuous, sir; but if I'm to enter your family I
+should like to feel sure that you'll receive me whole-heartedly."
+
+"My dear young lady, isn't it assurance enough that I receive you at
+all? When I bring myself to that--"
+
+"Oh, please don't think I can't appreciate the sacrifice."
+
+"Then what more is to be said?"
+
+"But the sacrifice is the point. No girl wants to become one of a family
+which has to make such an effort to take her."
+
+There was already a whisper of insecurity in his tone.
+
+"Even so, I can't see why you shouldn't let the effort be our affair.
+Since we make it on our own responsibility--"
+
+"I don't care anything about the responsibility, sir. All I'm thinking
+of is that the effort must be made."
+
+"But what did you expect?"
+
+"I haven't said that I expected anything. If I've been of the slightest
+help to Mrs. Brokenshire I'm happy to let the service be its own
+reward."
+
+"But I'm not. It isn't my habit to remain under an obligation to any
+one."
+
+"Nor mine," I said, demurely.
+
+He stared.
+
+"What does that mean? I don't follow you."
+
+"Perhaps not, sir; but I quite follow you. You wish me to understand
+that, in spite of my deficiencies, you accept me as your son's wife--for
+the reason that you can't help yourself."
+
+Two sharp hectic spots came out on each cheek-bone.
+
+"Well, what if I do?"
+
+"I'm far too generous to put you in that position. I couldn't take you
+at a disadvantage, not even for the sake of marrying Hugh."
+
+I was not sure whether he was frightened or angry, but it was the one or
+the other.
+
+"Do you mean to say that, now--now that I'm ready--"
+
+"That I'm not? Yes, sir. That's what I do mean to say. I told you once
+that if I loved a man I shouldn't stop to consider the wishes of his
+relatives; but I've repented of that. I see now that marriage has a
+wider application than merely to individuals; and I'm not ready to enter
+any family that doesn't want me."
+
+I looked off into the golden dimnesses of the hillside wood in order not
+to be a witness of the struggle he was making.
+
+"And suppose"--it was almost a groan--"and suppose I said we--wanted
+you?"
+
+It was like bending an iron bar; but I gave my strength to it.
+
+"You'd have to say it differently from that, sir."
+
+He spoke hoarsely.
+
+"Differently--in what sense?"
+
+I knew I had him, as Hugh would have expressed it, where I had been
+trying to get him.
+
+"In the sense that if you want me you must ask me."
+
+He mopped his brow once more.
+
+"I--I have asked you."
+
+"You've said you withdrew your opposition. That's not enough."
+
+Beads or perspiration were again standing on his forehead.
+
+"Then what--what would be--enough?"
+
+"A woman can't marry any one unless she does it as something of a
+favor."
+
+He drew himself up.
+
+"Do you remember that you're talking to me?"
+
+"Yes, sir; and it's because I do remember it that I have to insist. With
+anybody else I shouldn't have to be so crude."
+
+Again he put up a struggle, and this time I watched him. If his wife had
+made the conditions I guessed at, I had nothing to do but sit still.
+Grasping the arms of his chair, he half rose as if to continue the
+interview no further, but immediately saw, as I inferred, what that
+would mean to him. He fell back again into the creaking depths of the
+chair.
+
+"What do you wish me to say?"
+
+But his stricken aspect touched me. Now that he was prepared to come to
+his knees, I had no heart to force him down on them. Since I had gained
+my point, it was foolish to battle on, or try to make the Ethiopian
+change his skin.
+
+"Oh, sir, you've said it!" I cried, with sudden emotion. I leaned toward
+him, clasping my hands. "I see you do want me; and since you do
+I'll--I'll come."
+
+Having made this concession, I became humble and thankful and tactful. I
+appeased him by saying I was sensible of the honor he did me, that I was
+happy in the thought that he was to be reconciled with Hugh; and I
+inquired for Mrs. Brokenshire. Leading up to this question with an air
+of guilelessness, I got the answer I was watching for in the ashen shade
+that settled on his face.
+
+I forget what he replied; I was really not listening. I was calling up
+the scene in which she must have fulfilled her promise of helping Hugh
+and me. From the something crushed in him, as in the case of a man who
+knows the worst at last, I gathered that she had made a clean breast of
+it. It was awesome to think that behind this immaculate white suit with
+its violet details, behind this pink of the old beau, behind this
+moneyed authority and this power of dictation to which even the mighty
+sometimes had to bow, there was a broken heart.
+
+He knew now that the bird he had captured was nothing but a captured
+bird, and always longing for the forest. That his wife was willing to
+bear his name and live in his house and submit to his embraces was
+largely because I had induced her. Whether or not, in spite of his
+pompousness, he was grateful to me I didn't know; but I guessed that he
+was not. He could accept such benefits as I had secured him and yet be
+resentful toward the curious providence that had chosen me in particular
+as its instrument.
+
+I came out of my meditations in time to hear him say that, Mrs.
+Brokenshire being as well rested as she was, there would be no further
+hindrance to their proceeding soon to Newport.
+
+"And I suppose I might go back to my home," I observed, with no other
+than the best intentions.
+
+He made an attempt to regain the authority he had just forfeited.
+
+"What for?"
+
+"To be married," I explained--"since I am to be married."
+
+"But why should you be married there?"
+
+"Wouldn't it be the most natural thing?"
+
+"It wouldn't be the most natural thing for Hugh."
+
+"A man can be married anywhere; whereas a woman, at such a turning-point
+in her life, needs a certain backing. I've an uncle and aunt and a great
+many friends--"
+
+The effort at a faint smile drew up the corner of his mouth and set his
+face awry.
+
+"You'll excuse me, my dear"--the epithet made me jump--"if I correct you
+on a point of taste. In being willing that Hugh should marry you I think
+I must draw the line at anything like parade."
+
+I know my eyebrows went up.
+
+"Parade? Parade--how?"
+
+The painful little smile persisted.
+
+"The ancient Romans, when they went to war, had a custom of bringing
+back the most conspicuous of their captives and showing them in triumph
+in the streets--"
+
+I, too, smiled.
+
+"Oh! I understand. But you see, sir, the comparison doesn't hold in this
+case, because none of my friends would know anything more about Hugh
+than the fact that he was an American."
+
+The crooked features went back into repose.
+
+"They'd know he was my son."
+
+I continued to smile, but sweetly.
+
+"They'd take it for granted that he was somebody's son--but they
+wouldn't know anything about you, sir. You'd be quite safe so far as
+that went. Though I don't live many hundreds of miles from New York, and
+we're fairly civilized, I had never so much as heard the name of
+Brokenshire till Mrs. Rossiter told me it was hers before she was
+married. You see, then, that there'd be no danger of my leading a
+captive in triumph. No one I know would give Hugh a second thought
+beyond being nice to the man I was marrying."
+
+That he was pleased with this explanation I cannot affirm, but he passed
+it over.
+
+"I think," was his way of responding, "that it will be better if we
+consider that you belong to us. Till your marriage to Hugh, which I
+suppose will take place in the autumn, you'll come back with us to
+Newport. There will be a whole new--how shall I put it?--a whole new
+phase of life for you to get used to. Hugh will stay with us, and I
+shall ask my daughter, Mrs. Rossiter, to be your hostess till--"
+
+As, without finishing his sentence, he rose I followed his example.
+Though knowing in advance how futile would be the attempt to present
+myself as an equal, I couldn't submit to this calm disposition of my
+liberty and person without putting up a fight.
+
+"I've a great preference, sir--if you'll allow me--for being married in
+my own home, among my own people, and in the old parish church in which
+I was baptized. I really have people and a background; and it's possible
+that my sisters might come over--"
+
+The hand went up; his tone put an end to discussion.
+
+"I think, my dear Alexandra, that we shall do best in considering that
+you belong to us. You'll need time to grow accustomed to your new
+situation. A step backward now might be perilous."
+
+My fight was ended. What could I do? I listened and submitted, while he
+went on to tell me that Mrs. Brokenshire would wish to see me during the
+day, that Hugh would be sent for and would probably arrive the next
+afternoon, and that by the end of the week we should all be settled in
+Newport. There, whenever I felt I needed instruction, I was not to be
+ashamed to ask for it. Mrs. Rossiter would explain anything of a social
+nature that I didn't understand, and he knew I could count on Mrs.
+Brokenshire's protection.
+
+With a comic inward grimace I swallowed all my pride and thanked him.
+
+As for Mrs. Brokenshire's protection, that was settled when, later in
+the afternoon, we sat on her balcony and laughed and cried together, and
+held each other's hands, as young women do when their emotions outrun
+their power of expression. She called me Alix and begged me to invent a
+name for her that would combine the dignity of Hugh's stepmother with
+our standing as friends. I chose Miladi, out of _Les Trois
+Mousquetaires_, with which she was delighted.
+
+I begged off from dining with them that evening, nominally because I was
+too upset by all I had lived through in the afternoon, but really for
+the reason that I couldn't bear the thought of Mr. Brokenshire calling
+me his dear Alexandra twice in the same day. Once had made my blood run
+cold. His method of shriveling up a name by merely pronouncing it is
+something that transcends my power to describe. He had ruined that of
+Adare with me forever, and now he was completing my confusion at being
+called after so lovely a creature as our queen. I have always admitted
+that, with its stately, regal suggestions, Alexandra is no symbol for a
+plain little body like me; but when Mr. Brokenshire took it on his lips
+and called me his dear I could have cried out for mercy. So I had my
+dinner by myself, munching slowly and meditating on what Mr. Brokenshire
+described as "my new situation."
+
+I was meditating on it still when, in the course of the following
+afternoon, I was sitting in a retired grove of the hillside wood
+waiting for Hugh to come and find me. He was to arrive about three and
+Miladi was to tell him where I was. In our crowded little inn, with its
+crowded grounds, nooks of privacy were rare.
+
+I had taken the Boston paper with me in order to get further details of
+the tragedy of Sarajevo. These I found absorbing. They wove themselves
+in with my thoughts of Hugh and my dreams of our life together. An
+article on Serbia, which I had found in an old magazine that morning,
+had given me, too, an understanding of the situation I hadn't had
+before. Up to that day Serbia had been but a name to me; now I began to
+see its significance. The story of this brave, patient little people,
+with its one idea--an _idée fixe_ of liberty--began to move me.
+
+Of all the races of Europe the Serbian impressed me as the one that had
+been most constantly thwarted in its natural ambitions--struck down
+whenever it attempted to rise. Its patriotic hopes had always been
+inconvenient to some other nation's patriotic hopes, and so had to be
+blasted systematically. England, France, Austria, Turkey, Italy, and
+Russia had taken part at various times in this circumvention, denying
+the fruits of victory after they had been won. Serbia had been the poor
+little bastard brother of Europe, kept out of the inheritance of justice
+and freedom and commerce when others were admitted to a share. For some
+of them there might have been no great share; but for little Serbia
+there was none.
+
+It was terrible to me that such wrong could go on, generation after
+generation, and that there should be no Nemesis. In a measure it
+contradicted my theory of right. I didn't want any one to suffer, but I
+asked why there had been no suffering. Of the nations that had knocked
+Serbia about, hedged her in by restrictions, dismembered her and kept
+her dismembered, most were prosperous. From Serbia's point of view I
+couldn't help sympathizing with the hand that had struck down at least
+one member of the House of Hapsburg; and yet in that tragic act there
+could be no adequate revenge for centuries of repression. What I wanted
+I didn't know; I suppose I didn't want anything. I was only
+wondering--wondering why, if individuals couldn't sin without paying for
+the sin they had committed, nations should sin and be immune.
+
+Strangely enough, these reflections did not shut out the thought of the
+lover who was coming up the hill; they blended with it; they made it
+larger and more vital. I could thank God I was marrying a man whose hand
+would always be lifted on behalf of right. I didn't know how it could be
+lifted in the cause of Serbia against the influences represented by
+Franz Ferdinand; but when one is dreaming one doesn't pause to direct
+the logical course of one's dreams. Perhaps I was only clutching at
+whatever I could say for Hugh; and at least I could say that. He was not
+a strong man in the sense of being fertile in ideas; but he was brave
+and generous, and where there was injustice his spirit would be among
+the first to be stirred by it. That conviction made me welcome him when,
+at last, I saw his stocky figure moving lower down among the pine
+trunks.
+
+I caught sight of him long before he discovered me, and could make my
+notes upon him. I could even make my notes upon myself, not wholly with
+my own approval. I was too business-like, too cool. There was nothing I
+possessed in the world that I would not have given for a single
+quickened heart-throb. I would have given it the more when I saw Hugh's
+pinched face and the furbished-up spring suit he had worn the year
+before.
+
+It was not the fact that he had worn it the year before that gave me a
+pang; it was that he must have worn it pretty steadily. I am not
+observant of men's clothes. Except that I like to see them neat, they
+are too much alike to be worth noticing. But anything not plainly
+opulent in Hugh smote me with a sense of guilt. It could so easily be
+attributed to my fault. I could so easily take it so myself. I did take
+it so myself. I said as he approached: "This man has suffered. He has
+suffered on my account. All my life must be given to making it up to
+him."
+
+I make no attempt to tell how we met. It was much as we had met after
+other separations, except that when he slipped to the low boulder and
+took me in his arms it was with a certainty of possession which had
+never hitherto belonged to him. There was nothing for me but to let
+myself go, and lie back in his embrace.
+
+I came to myself, as it were, on hearing him whisper, with his face
+close to mine:
+
+"You witch! You witch! How did you ever manage it?"
+
+I made the necessity for giving him an explanation the excuse for
+working myself free.
+
+"I didn't manage it. It was Mrs. Brokenshire."
+
+He cried out, incredulously:
+
+"Oh no! Not the madam!"
+
+"Yes, Hugh. It was she. She asked him. She must have begged him. That's
+all I can tell you about it."
+
+He was even more incredulous.
+
+"Then it must have been on your account rather than on mine; you can bet
+your sweet life on that!"
+
+"Hugh, darling, she's fond of you. She's fond of you all. If you could
+only have--"
+
+"We couldn't." For the first time he showed signs of admitting me into
+the family sense of disgrace. "Did you ever hear how dad came to marry
+her?"
+
+I said that something had reached me, but one couldn't put the blame for
+that on her.
+
+"And she's had more pull with him than we've had," he declared,
+resentfully. "You can see that by the way he's given in to her on
+this--"
+
+I soothed him on this point, however, and we talked of a general
+reconciliation. From that we went on to the subject of our married life,
+of which his father, in the hasty interview of half an hour before, had
+briefly sketched the conditions. A place was to be found for Hugh in the
+house of Meek & Brokenshire; his allowance was to be raised to twelve or
+fifteen thousand a year; we were to have a modest house, or apartment in
+New York. No date had been fixed for the wedding, so far as Hugh could
+learn; but it might be in October. We should be granted perhaps a three
+months' trip abroad, with a return to New York before Christmas.
+
+He gave me these details with an excitement bespeaking intense
+satisfaction. It was easy to see that, after his ten months' rebellion,
+he was eager to put his head under the Brokenshire yoke again. His
+instinct in this was similar to Ethel's and Jack's--only that they had
+never declared themselves free. I could best compare him to a horse who
+for one glorious half-hour kicks up his heels and runs away, and yet
+returns to the stable and the harness as the safest sphere of
+blessedness. Under the Brokenshire yoke he could live, move, have his
+being, and enjoy his twelve or fifteen thousand a year, without that
+onerous responsibility which comes with the exercise of choice. Under
+the Brokenshire yoke I, too, should be provided for. I should be raised
+from my lowly estate, be given a position in the world, and, though for
+a while the fact of the _mésalliance_ might tell against me, it would be
+overcome in my case as in that of Libby Jaynes. His talk was a pæan on
+our luck.
+
+"All we'll have to do for the rest of our lives, little Alix, will be to
+get away with our thousand dollars a month. I guess we can do
+that--what? We sha'n't even have to save, because in the natural course
+of events--" He left this reference to his father's demise to go on with
+his hymn of self-congratulation. "But we've pulled it off, haven't we?
+We've done the trick. Lord! what a relief it is! What do you think I've
+been living on for the last six weeks? Chocolate and crackers for the
+most part. Lost thirty pounds in two months. But it's all right now,
+little Alix. I've got you and I mean to keep you." He asked, suddenly:
+"How did you come to know the madam so well? I'd never had a hint of it.
+You do keep some things awful close!"
+
+I made my answer as truthful as I could.
+
+"This was nothing I could tell you, Hugh. Mrs. Brokenshire was sorry for
+me ever since last year in Newport. She never dared to say anything
+about it, because she was afraid of your father and the rest of you; but
+she did pity me--"
+
+"Well, I'll be blowed! I didn't suppose she had it in her. She's always
+seemed to me like a woman walking in her sleep--"
+
+"She's waking up now. She's beginning to understand that perhaps she
+hasn't taken the right attitude toward your father; and I think she'd
+like to begin. It was to work that problem out that she decided to come
+away with me and live simply for a while. . . . She wanted to escape
+from every one, and I was the nearest to no one she could find to take
+with her; and so-- If your sisters or your brother ask you any questions
+I wish you would tell them that."
+
+We discussed this theme in its various aspects while the afternoon light
+turned the pine trunks round us into columns of red-gold, and a soft
+wind soothed us with balsamic smells. Birds flitted and fluted overhead,
+and now and then a squirrel darted up to challenge us with the peak of
+its inquisitive sharp little nose. I chose what I thought a favorable
+moment to bring before Hugh the matter that had been so summarily
+shelved by his father. I wanted so much to be married among my own
+people and from what I could call my own home.
+
+His child-like, wide-apart, small blue eyes regarded me with growing
+astonishment as I made my point clear.
+
+"For Heaven's sake, my sweet little Alix, what do you want that for?
+Why, we can be married in Newport!"
+
+His emphasis on the word Newport was as if he had said Heaven.
+
+"Yes; but you see, Hugh, darling, Newport means nothing to me--"
+
+"It will jolly well have to if--"
+
+"And my home means such a lot. If you were marrying Lady Cissie Boscobel
+you'd certainly go to Goldborough for the occasion."
+
+"Ah, but that would be different!"
+
+"Different in what way?"
+
+He colored, and grew confused.
+
+"Well, don't you see?"
+
+"No; I'm afraid I don't."
+
+"Oh yes, you do, little Alix," he smiled, cajolingly. "Don't try to pull
+my leg. We can't have one of these bang-up weddings, as it is. Of course
+we can't--and we don't want it. But they'll do the decent thing by us,
+now that dad has come round at all, and let people see that they stand
+behind us. If we were to go down there to where you came from--Halifax,
+or wherever it is--it would put us back ten years with the people we
+want to keep up with."
+
+I submitted again, because I didn't know what else to do. I submitted,
+and yet with a rage which was the hotter for being impotent. These
+people took it so easily for granted that I had no pride, and was
+entitled to none. They allowed me no more in the way of antecedents than
+if I had been a new creation on the day when I first met Mrs. Rossiter.
+They believed in the principle of inequality of birth as firmly as if
+they had been minor German royalties. My marriage to Hugh might be valid
+in the eyes of the law, but to them it would always be more or less
+morganatic. I could only be Duchess of Hohenberg to this young prince;
+and perhaps not even that. She was noble--_adel_, as they call it--at
+the least; while I was merely a nursemaid.
+
+But I made another grimace--and swallowed it. I could have broken out
+with some vicious remark, which would have bewildered poor Hugh beyond
+expression and made no change in his point of view. Even if it relieved
+my pent-up bitterness, it would have left me nothing but a nursemaid;
+and, since I was to marry him, why disturb the peace? And I owed him too
+much not to marry him; of that I was convinced. He had been kind to me
+from the first day he knew me; he had been true to me in ways in which
+few men would have been true. To go back on him now would not be simply
+a change of mind; it would be an act of cruel treachery. No, I argued; I
+could do nothing but go on with it. My debt could not be paid in any
+other way. Besides, I declared to myself, with a catch in the throat,
+I--I loved him. I had said it so many times that it must be true.
+
+When the minute came to go down the hill and prepare for the little
+dinner at which I was to be included in the family, my thoughts reverted
+to the event that had startled the world.
+
+"Isn't this terrible?" I said to Hugh, indicating the paper I carried in
+my hand.
+
+He looked at me with the mild wondering which always made his expression
+vacuous.
+
+"Isn't what terrible?"
+
+"Why, the assassinations in Bosnia."
+
+"Oh! I saw there had been something."
+
+"Something!" I cried. "It's one of the most momentous things that have
+ever happened in history."
+
+"What makes you say that?" he inquired, turning on me the innocent stare
+of his baby-blue eyes as we sauntered between the pine trunks.
+
+I had to admit that I didn't know, I only felt it in my bones.
+
+"Aren't they always doing something of the sort down there--killing
+kings and queens, or something?"
+
+"Oh, not like this!" I paused. "You know, Hugh, Serbia is a wonderful
+little country when you've heard a bit of its story."
+
+"Is it?" He took out a cigarette and lit it.
+
+In the ardor of my sympathy I poured out on him some of the information
+I had just acquired.
+
+"And we're all responsible," I was finishing; "English, French,
+Russians, Austrians--"
+
+"We're not responsible--we Americans," he broke in, quietly.
+
+"Oh, I'm not so sure about that. If you inherit the civilization of the
+races from which you spring you inherit some of their crimes; and you've
+got to pay for them."
+
+"Not on your life!" he laughed, easily; but in the laugh there was
+something that cut me more deeply than he knew.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXI
+
+
+But once we were settled in Newport, I almost forgot the tragedy of
+Sarajevo. The world, it seemed to me, had forgotten it, too; it had
+passed into history. Franz Ferdinand and Sophie Chotek being dead and
+buried, we had gone on to something else.
+
+Personally I had gone on to the readjustment of my life. I was with
+Ethel Rossiter as a guest. Guest or retainer, however, made little
+difference. She treated me just as before--with the same detached,
+live-and-let-live kindliness that dropped into the old habit of making
+use of me. I liked that. It kept us on a simple, natural footing. I
+could see myself writing her notes and answering her telephone calls as
+long as I lived. Except that now and then, when she thought of it, she
+called me Alix, instead of Miss Adare, she might still have been paying
+me so much a month.
+
+"Well, I can't get over father," was the burden of her congratulations
+to me. "I knew that woman could turn him around her finger; but I didn't
+suppose she could do it like that. You played your cards well in getting
+hold of her."
+
+"I didn't play my cards," was my usual defense, "because I had none to
+play.'"
+
+"Then what on earth brought her over to your side?"
+
+"Life."
+
+"Life--fiddlesticks! It was life with a good deal of help from Alix
+Adare." She added, on one occasion: "Why didn't you take that young
+Strangways--frankly, now?"
+
+"Because," I smiled, "I don't believe in polyandry."
+
+"But you're fond of him. That's what beats me! You're fond of one man
+and you're marrying another; and yet--"
+
+I don't know what color I turned outwardly, but within I was fire. It
+was the fire of confusion and not of indignation. I felt it safest to
+let her go on, hazarding no remarks of my own.
+
+"And yet--what?"
+
+"And yet you don't seem like a girl who'd marry for money--you really
+don't. That's one thing about you."
+
+I screwed up a wan smile.
+
+"Thanks."
+
+"So that I'm all in the dark. What you can see in Hugh--"
+
+"What I can see in Hugh is the kindest of men. That's a good deal to say
+of any one."
+
+"Well, I'll be hanged if I'd marry even the kindest of men if it was for
+nothing but his kindness."
+
+The Jack Brokenshires were jovially non-committal, letting it go at
+that. In offering the necessary good wishes Jack contented himself with
+calling me a sly one; while Pauline, who was mannish and horsey, wrung
+my hand till she almost pulled it off, remarking that in a family like
+the Brokenshires the natural principle was, The more, the merrier.
+Acting, doubtless, on a hint from higher up, they included Hugh and me
+in a luncheon to some twenty of their cronies, whose shibboleths I
+didn't understand and among whom I was lost.
+
+As far as I went into general society it was so unobtrusively that I
+might be said not to have gone at all. I made no sensation as the
+affianced bride of Hugh Brokenshire. To the great fact of my engagement
+few people paid any attention, and those who referred to it did so with
+the air of forgetting it the minute afterward. It came to me with some
+pain that in his own circle Hugh was regarded more or less as a
+nonentity. I was a "queer Canadian." Newport presented to me a hard,
+polished exterior, like a porcelain wall. It was too high to climb over
+and it afforded no nooks or crevices in which I might find a niche. No
+one ever offered me the slightest hint of incivility--or of interest.
+
+"It's because they've too much to do and to think of," Mrs. Brokenshire
+explained to me. "They know too many people already. Their lives are too
+full. Money means nothing to them, because they've all got so much of
+it. Quiet good breeding isn't striking enough. Cleverness they don't
+care anything about--and not even for scandals outside their own close
+corporation. All the same"--I waited while she formulated her
+opinion--"all the same, a great deal could be done in Newport--in New
+York--in Washington--in America at large--if we had the right sort of
+women."
+
+"And haven't you?"
+
+"No. Our women are--how shall I say?--too small--too parochial--too
+provincial. They've no national outlook; they've no authority. Few of
+them know how to use money or to hold high positions. Our men hardly
+ever turn to them for advice on important things, because they've rarely
+any to give."
+
+Her remarks showed so much more of the reflecting spirit than I had ever
+seen in her before, that I was emboldened to ask:
+
+"Then, couldn't you show them how?"
+
+She shook her head.
+
+"No; I'm an American, like the rest. It isn't in me. It's both personal
+and national. Cissie Boscobel could do it--not because she's clever or
+has had experience, but because the tradition is there. We've no
+tradition."
+
+The tradition in Cissie Boscobel became evident on a day in July when
+she came to sit beside me in the grounds of the Casino. I had gone with
+Mrs. Rossiter, with whom I had been watching the tennis. When she
+drifted away with a group of her friends I was left alone. It was then
+that Lady Cecilia, in tennis things, with her racket in her hand, came
+across the grass to me. She moved with the splendid careless freedom of
+women who pass their lives outdoors and yet are trained to
+drawing-rooms.
+
+She didn't go to her point at once; she was, in fact, a mistress of the
+introductory. The visits she had made and the people she had met since
+our last meeting were the theme of her remarks; and now she was staying
+with the Burkes. She would remain with them for a month, after which she
+had two or three places to go to on Long Island and in the Catskills.
+She would have to be at Strath-na-Cloid in September, for the wedding of
+her sister Janet and the young man in the Inverness Rangers, who would
+then have got home from India. She would be sorry to leave. She adored
+America. Americans were such fun. Their houses were so fresh and new.
+She doted on the multiplicity of bathrooms. It would be so horrid to
+live at Strath-na-Cloid or Dillingham Hall after the cheeriness of Mrs.
+Burke's or Mrs. Rossiter's.
+
+Screwing up her greenish cat-like eyes till they were no more than tiny
+slits with a laugh in them, she said, with her deliciously incisive
+utterance:
+
+"So you've done it, haven't you?"
+
+"You mean that Mr. Brokenshire has come round."
+
+"You know, that seems to me the most wonderful thing I ever heard of!
+It's like a miracle isn't it? You've hardly lifted a finger--and yet
+here it is." She leaned forward, her firm hands grasping the racket that
+lay across her knees. "I want to tell you how much I admire you. You're
+splendid! You're not a bit like a Colonial, are you?"
+
+Since she meant well, I mastered my indignation.
+
+"Oh yes, I am. I'm exactly like a Colonial, and very proud of the fact."
+
+"Fancy! And are all Colonials like you?"
+
+"All that aren't a great deal cleverer and better."
+
+"Fancy!" she breathed again. "I must tell them when I go home. They
+don't know it, you know." She added, in a slight change of key: "I'm so
+glad Hugh is going to have a wife like you."
+
+It was on my tongue to say, "He'd be much better off with a wife like
+you"; but I made it:
+
+"What do you think it will do for him?"
+
+"It will bring him out. Hugh is splendid in his way--just as you
+are--only he needs bringing out, don't you think?"
+
+"He hasn't needed bringing out in the last ten months," I declared, with
+some emphasis. "See what he's done--"
+
+"And yet he didn't pull it off, did he? You managed that. You'll manage
+a lot of other things for him, too. I must go back to the others," she
+continued, getting up. "They're waiting for me to make up the set. But I
+wanted to tell you I'm--I'm glad--without--without any--any reserves."
+
+I think there were tears in her narrow eyes, as I know there were in my
+own; but she beat such a hasty retreat that I could not be very sure of
+it.
+
+Mildred Brokenshire was a surprise to me. I had hardly ever seen her
+till she sent for me in order to talk about Hugh. I found her lying on a
+couch in a dim corner of her big, massively furnished room, her face no
+more than a white pain-pinched spot in the obscurity. After having
+kissed me she made me sit at a distance, nominally to get the breeze
+through an open window, but really that I might not have to look at her.
+
+In an unnaturally hollow, tragic voice she said it was a pleasure to her
+that Hugh should have got at last the woman he loved, especially after
+having made such a fight for her. Though she didn't know me, she was
+sure I had fine qualities; otherwise Hugh would not have cared for me as
+he did. He was a dear boy, and a good wife could make much of him. He
+lacked initiative in the way that was unfortunately common among rich
+men's sons, especially in America; but the past winter had shown that he
+was not deficient in doggedness. She wondered if I loved him as much as
+he loved me.
+
+There was that in this suffering woman, so far withdrawn from our
+struggles in the world outside, which prompted me to be as truthful as
+the circumstances rendered possible.
+
+"I love him enough, dear Miss Brokenshire," I said, with some emotion,
+"to be eager to give my life to the object of making him happy."
+
+She accepted this in silence. At least it was silence for a time, after
+which she said, in measured, organ-like tones:
+
+"We can't make other people happy, you know. We can only do our
+duty--and let their happiness take care of itself. They must make
+themselves happy! It's a mistake for any of us to feel responsible for
+more than doing right. "When we do right other people must make the best
+they can of it."
+
+"I believe that, too," I responded, earnestly--"only that it's sometimes
+so hard to tell what is right."
+
+There was again an interval of silence. The voice, when it came out of
+the dimness, might have been that of the Pythian virgin oracle. The
+utterances I give were not delivered consecutively, but in answer to
+questions and observations of my own.
+
+"Right, on the whole, is what we've been impelled to do when we've been
+conscientiously seeking the best way. . . . Forces catch us, often
+contradictory and bewildering forces, and carry us to a certain act, or
+to a certain line of action. Very well, then; be satisfied. Don't go
+back. Don't torture yourself with questionings. Don't dig up what has
+already been done. That's done! Nothing can undo it. Accept it as it is.
+If there's a wrong or a mistake in it life will take care of it. . . .
+Life is not a blind impulse, working blindly. It's a beneficent,
+rectifying power. It's dynamic. It's a perpetual unfolding. It's a fire
+that utilizes as fuel everything that's cast into it. . . ."
+
+And yet when I kissed her to say good-by I got the impression that she
+didn't like me or that she didn't trust me. I was not always liked, but
+I was generally trusted. The idea that this Brokenshire seeress, this
+suffering priestess whose whole life was to lie on a couch and think,
+and think, and think, had reserves in her consciousness on my account
+was painful. I said so to Hugh that evening.
+
+"Oh, you mustn't take Mildred's gassing too seriously," he advised.
+"Gets a lot of ideas in her head: but--poor thing--what else can she do?
+Since she doesn't know anything about real life, she just spins
+theories on the subject. Whatever you want to know, little Alix, I'll
+tell you."
+
+"Thanks," I said, dryly, explaining the shiver which ran through me by
+the fact that we were sitting in the loggia, in the open air.
+
+"Then we'll go in."
+
+"No, no!" I protested. "I like it much better out here."
+
+But he was on his feet.
+
+"We'll go in. I can't have my sweet little Alix taking cold. I'm here to
+protect her. She must do what I tell her. We'll go in."
+
+And we went in. It was one of the things I was learning, that my kind
+Hugh would kill me with kindness. It was part of his way of taking
+possession. If he could help it he wouldn't leave me for an hour
+unwatched; nor would he let me lift a hand.
+
+"There are servants to do that," he would say. "It's one of the things
+little Alix will have to get accustomed to."
+
+"I can't get accustomed to doing nothing, Hugh."
+
+"You'll have plenty to do in having a good time."
+
+"Oh, but I must have more than that in life."
+
+"In your old life, perhaps; but everything is to be different now. Don't
+be afraid, little Alix; you'll learn."
+
+"Learn what? It seems to me you're taking the possibility of ever
+learning anything away."
+
+This was a joke. Over it he laughed heartily.
+
+"You won't know yourself, little Alix, when I've had you for a year."
+
+Mr. Brokenshire's compliments to me were in a similar vein. He seemed
+always to be in search of the superior position he had lost on the day
+we sat looking up into the hillside wood. His dear Alexandra must never
+forget her social inexperience. In being raised to a higher level I was
+to watch the manners of those about me. I was to copy them, as people
+learning French or Italian try to catch an accent which is not that of
+their mother tongue. They probably do it badly; but that is better than
+not doing it at all. I could never be an Ethel Rossiter or a Daisy
+Burke, but I could become an imitation. Imitations being to the house of
+Brokenshire like paste diamonds or fish-glue pearls, my gratitude for
+the effort they made in accepting me had to be the more humble.
+
+And yet on occasions I tried to get justice for myself.
+
+"I'm not altogether without knowledge of the world, Mr. Brokenshire," I
+said, after one of his kindly, condescending lectures. "Not only in
+Canada, but in England, and to some slight extent abroad, I've had
+opportunities--"
+
+"Yes, yes; but this is different. You've had opportunities, as you say.
+But there you were looking on from the outside, while here you'll be
+living from within."
+
+"Oh, but I wasn't looking on from the outside--"
+
+His hand went up; his pitiful crooked smile was meant to express
+tolerance. "You'll pardon me, my dear; but we gain nothing by discussing
+that point. You'll see it yourself when you've been one of us a little
+longer. Meantime, if you watch the women about you and study them--"
+
+We left it there. I always left it there. But I did begin to see that
+there was a difference between me and the women whom Hugh and his father
+wished me to take as my models. I had hitherto not observed this
+variation in type--I might possibly call it this distinction between
+national ideals--during my two years under the Stars and Stripes; and I
+find a difficulty in expressing it, for the reason that to anything I
+say so many exceptions can be made. The immense class of wage-earning
+women would be exceptions; mothers and housekeepers would again be
+exceptions; exceptions would be all women engaged in political or social
+or philanthropic service to the country; but when this allowance has
+been made there still remain a multitude of American women economically
+independent, satisfied to be an incubus on the land. They dress, they
+entertain, they go to entertainments, they live gracefully. When they
+can't help it they bear children; but they bear as few as possible.
+Otherwise they are not much more than pleasing forms of vegetation, idle
+of body and mind; and the American man, as a rule, loves to have it so.
+
+"The American man," Mrs. Rossiter had said to me once, "likes
+figurines." Hugh was a rebel to that doctrine, she had added then; but
+his rebellion had been short-lived. He had come back to the standard of
+his countrymen. He had chosen me, he used to say, because I was a woman
+of whom a Socialist might make his star; and now I was to be put in a
+vitrine.
+
+Canadian women, as a class, are not made for the vitrine. Their instinct
+is to be workers in the world and mates for men. They have no very high
+opinion of their privileges; they are not self-analytical. They rarely
+think of themselves as the birds and flowers of the human race, or as
+other than creatures to put their shoulders to the wheel in the ways of
+which God made them mistresses. Not ashamed to know how to bake and brew
+and mend and sew, they rule the house with a practically French
+economy. I was brought up in that way; not ignorant of books or of
+social amenities, but with the assumption that I was in this world to
+contribute something to it by my usefulness. I hadn't contributed much,
+Heaven only knows; but the impulse to work was instinctive.
+
+And as Hugh's wife I began to see that I should be lifted high and dry
+into a sphere where there was nothing to be done. I should dress and I
+should amuse myself; I should amuse myself and I should dress. It was
+all Mrs. Rossiter did; it was all Mrs. Brokenshire did--except that to
+her, poor soul, amusement had become but gall and bitterness. Still,
+with the large exceptions which I cheerfully concede, it was the
+American ideal, so far as I could get hold of it; and I began to feel
+that, in the long run, it would stifle me.
+
+It was a kind of feminine Nirvana. It offered me nothing to strive for,
+nothing to wait for in hope, nothing to win gloriously. The wife of
+Larry Strangways, whoever she turned out to be, would have a goal before
+her, high up and far ahead, with the incentive of lifelong striving.
+Hugh Brokenshire's wife would have everything done for her, as it was
+done for Mildred. Like Mildred she would have nothing to do but think
+and think and think--or train herself to not thinking at all. Little by
+little I saw myself being steered toward this fate; and, like St. Peter,
+when I thought thereon I wept.
+
+I had taken to weeping all alone in my pretty room, which looked out on
+shrubberies and gardens. I should probably have shrubberies and gardens
+like them some day; so that weeping was the more foolish. Every one
+considered me fortunate. All my Canadian and English friends spoke of me
+as a lucky girl, and, in their downright, practical way, said I was
+"doing very well for myself."
+
+Of course I was--which made it criminal on my part not to take the
+Brokenshire view of things with equanimity. I tried to. I bent my will
+to it. I bent my spirit to it. In the end I might have succeeded if the
+heavenly trumpet had not sounded again, with another blast from
+Sarajevo.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXII
+
+
+As I have already said, I had almost forgotten Sarajevo. The illustrated
+papers had shown us a large coffin raised high and a small one set low,
+telling us of unequal rank, even at the Great White Throne. I had a
+thought for that from time to time; but otherwise Franz Ferdinand and
+Sophie Chotek were less to me than Cæsar or Napoleon.
+
+But toward the end of July there was a sudden rumbling. It was like that
+first disquieting low note of the "Rheingold," rising from elemental
+depths, presaging love and adventure and war and death and defeat and
+triumph, and the end of the old gods and the burning of their Valhalla.
+I cannot say that any of us knew its significance; but it was arresting.
+
+"What does it mean?"
+
+I think Cissie Boscobel was the first to ask me that question, to which
+I could only reply by asking it in my own turn. What did it mean--this
+ultimatum from Vienna to Belgrade? Did it mean anything? Could it
+possibly mean what dinner-table diplomats hinted at between a laugh and
+a look of terror?
+
+Hugh and I were descending the Rossiter lawn on a bright afternoon near
+the end of July. Cissie, who was passing with some of the Burkes, ran
+over the grass toward us. Had we seen the papers? Had we read the
+Austrian note? Could we make anything out of it?
+
+I recall her as an extraordinarily vivid picture against the background
+of blue sea, in white, with a green-silk tunic embroidered in peacock's
+feathers, with long jade ear-rings and big jade beads, and a
+jade-colored plume in a black-lace hat cocked on her flaming hair as she
+alone knew how to cock it. I merely want to point out here that to
+Cissie Boscobel and me the questions she asked already possessed a
+measure of life-and-death importance; while to Hugh they had none at
+all.
+
+I remember him as he stood aloof from us, strong and stocky and
+summer-like in his white flannels, a type of that safe and separated
+America which could afford to look on at Old World tragedies and feel
+them of no personal concern. To him Cissie Boscobel and I, with anxiety
+in our eyes and something worse already clutching at our hearts, were
+but two girls talking of things they didn't understand and of no great
+interest, anyway.
+
+"Come along, little Alix!" he interrupted, gaily. "Cissie will excuse
+us. The madam is waiting to motor us over to South Portsmouth, and I
+don't want to keep her waiting. You know," he explained, proudly, "she
+thinks this little girl is a peach!"
+
+Cissie ran back to join the Burkes and we continued our way along the
+Cliff Walk to Mr. Brokenshire's. Hugh had come for me in order that we
+might have the stroll together.
+
+I gave him my view of the situation as we went along, though in it there
+was nothing original.
+
+"You see, if Austria attacks Serbia, then Russia must attack Austria; in
+which case Germany will attack Russia, and France will attack Germany.
+Then England will certainly have to pitch in."
+
+"But we won't. We shall be out of it."
+
+The complacency of his tone nettled me.
+
+"But I sha'n't be out of it, Hugh."
+
+He laughed.
+
+"You? What could you do, little lightweight?"
+
+"I don't know; but whatever it was I should want to be doing it."
+
+This joke might have been characterized as a screamer. He threw back his
+head with a loud guffaw.
+
+"Well, of all the little spitfires!" Catching me by the arm, he hugged
+me to him, as we were hidden in a rocky nook of the path. "Why, you're a
+regular Amazon! A soldier in your way would be no more than a ninepin in
+a bowling-alley."
+
+I didn't enter into the spirit of this pleasantry. On the contrary, I
+concealed my anger in endeavoring to speak with dignity.
+
+"And, what's more, Hugh, than not being out of it myself, I don't see
+how I could marry a man who was. Of course, no such war will come to
+pass. It couldn't! The world has gone beyond that sort of madness. We
+know too well the advantages of peace. But if it should break out--"
+
+"I'll buy you a popgun with the very first shot that's fired."
+
+But in August, when the impossible had happened, when Germany had
+invaded Belgium, and France had moved to her eastern frontier, and
+Russia was pouring into Prussia, and English troops were on foreign
+continental soil for the first time in fifty years, Hugh's indifference
+grew painful. He was perhaps not more indifferent than any one else with
+whom I was thrown, but to me he seemed so because he was so near me. He
+read the papers; he took a sporting interest in the daily events; but it
+resembled--to my mind at least--the interest of an eighteenth-century
+farmer's lad excited at a cockfight. It was somewhat in the spirit of
+"Go it, old boy!" to each side indifferently.
+
+If he took sides at all it was rather on that to which Cissie Boscobel
+and I were nationally opposed; but this, we agreed, was to tease us. So
+far as opinions of his own were concerned, he was neutral. He meant by
+that that he didn't care a jot who lost or who won, so long as America
+was out of the fray and could eat its bread in safety.
+
+"There are more important things than safety," I said to him,
+scornfully, one day.
+
+"Such as--"
+
+But when I gave him what seemed to me the truisms of life he was
+contented to laugh in my face.
+
+Cissie Boscobel was more patient with him than I was. I have always
+admired in the English that splendid tolerance which allows to others
+the same liberty of thinking they claim for themselves; but in this
+instance I had none of it. Hugh was too much a part of myself. When he
+said, as he was fond of saying, "If Germany gets at poor degenerate old
+England she'll crumple her up," Lady Cissie could fling him a pitying,
+confident smile, with no venom in it whatever, while I became bitter or
+furious.
+
+Fortunately, Mr. Brokenshire was called to New York on business
+connected with the war, so that his dear Alexandra was delivered for a
+while from his daily condescensions. Though Hugh didn't say so in actual
+words, I inferred that the struggle would further enrich the house of
+Meek & Brokenshire. Of the vast sums it would handle a commission would
+stick to its fingers, and if the business grew too heavy for the usual
+staff to deal with Hugh's own energies were to be called into play. His
+father, he told me, had said so. It would be an eye-opener to Cousin
+Andrew Brew, he crowed, to see him helping to finance the European War
+within a year after that slow-witted nut had had the hardihood to refuse
+him!
+
+In the Brokenshire villa the animation was comparable to a suppressed
+fever. Mr. Brokenshire came back as often as he could. Thereupon there
+followed whispered conferences between him and Jack, between him and Jim
+Rossiter, between him and kindred magnates, between three and four and
+six and eight of them together, with a ceaseless stream of telegrams, of
+the purport of which we women knew nothing. We gave dinners and lunches,
+and bathed at Bailey's, and played tennis at the Casino, and lived in
+our own little lady-like Paradise, shut out from the interests
+convulsing the world. Knitting had not yet begun. The Red Cross had
+barely issued its appeals. America, with the speed of the
+Franco-Prussian War in mind, was still under the impression that it
+could hardly give its philanthropic aid before the need for it would be
+over.
+
+Of all our little coterie Lady Cissie and I alone perhaps took the sense
+of things to heart. Even with us, it was the heart that acted rather
+than the intelligence. So far as intelligence went, we were convinced
+that, once Great Britain lifted her hand, all hostile nations would
+tremble. That was a matter of course. It amazed us that people round us
+should talk of our enemy's efficiency. The word was just coming into
+use, always with the implication that the English were inefficient and
+unprepared.
+
+That would have made us laugh if those who said such things hadn't said
+them like Hugh, with detached, undisturbed deliberation, as a matter
+that was nothing to them. Many of them hoped, and hoped ardently, that
+the side represented by England, Russia, and France would be victorious;
+but if it wasn't, America would still be able to sit down to eat and
+drink, and rise up to play, as we were doing at the moment, while
+nothing could shake her from her ease.
+
+Owing to our kinship in sentiment, Lady Cissie and I drew closer
+together. We gave each other bits of information in which no one else
+would have had an interest. She was getting letters from England; I from
+England and Canada. Her brother Leatherhead had been ordered to France
+with his regiment--was probably there. Her brother Rowan, who had been
+at Sandhurst, had got his commission. The young man her sister Janet was
+engaged to had sailed with the Rangers for Marseilles and would go at
+once to the front instead of coming home. If he could get leave the
+young couple would be married hastily, after which he would return to
+his duty. My sister Louise wrote that her husband's ship was in the
+North Sea and that her news of him was meager. The husband of my sister
+Victoria, who had had a staff appointment at Gibraltar, had been ordered
+to rejoin his regiment; and he, too, would soon be in Belgium.
+
+From Canada I heard of that impulse toward recruiting which was
+thrilling the land from the Island of Vancouver, in the Pacific, to that
+of Cape Breton, in the Atlantic, and in which the multitudes were of one
+heart and one soul. Men came from farms, factories, and fisheries; they
+came from banks and shops and mines. They tramped hundreds of miles,
+from the Yukon, from Ungava, and from Hudson Bay. They arrived in troops
+or singly, impelled by nothing but that love which passes the love of
+women--the love of race, the love of country, the love of honor, the
+love of something vast and intangible and inexplicable, that comes as
+near as possible to that love of man which is almost the love of God.
+
+I can proudly say that among my countrymen it was this, and it was
+nothing short of this. They were as far from the fray as their neighbors
+to the south, and as safe. Belgium and Serbia meant less to most of them
+than to the people of San Francisco, Chicago, and New York; but a great
+cause, almost indefinable to thought, meant everything. To that cause
+they gave themselves--not sparingly or grudgingly, but like Araunah the
+Jebusite to David the son of Jesse, "as a king gives unto a king."
+
+Men are wonderful to me--all men of all races. They face hardship so
+cheerfully and dangers so gaily, and death so serenely. This is true of
+men not only in war, but in peace--of men not only as saints, but as
+sinners. And among men it seems to me that our Colonial men are in the
+first rank of the manliest. Frenchman, German, Austrian, Italian,
+Russian, Englishman, and Turk had each some visible end to gain. They
+couldn't help going. They couldn't help fighting. Our men had nothing to
+gain that mortal eyes could see. They have endured, "as seeing Him who
+is invisible."
+
+They have come from the far ends of the earth, and are still
+coming--turning their backs on families and business and pleasure and
+profit and hope. They have counted the world well lost for love--for a
+true love--a man's love--a redemptive love if ever there was one; for
+"greater love hath no man than this, that a man lay down his life for
+his friends."
+
+But when, with my heart flaming, I spoke of this to Lady Cecilia, she
+was cold. "Fancy!" was the only comment she ever made on the subject.
+Toward my own intensity of feeling she was courteous; but she plainly
+felt that in a war in which the honors would be to the professional
+soldier, and to the English professional soldier first of all, Colonials
+were out of place. It was somewhat presumptuous of them to volunteer.
+
+She was a splendid character--with British limitations. Among those
+limitations her attitude toward Colonials was, as I saw things, the
+first. She rarely spoke of Canadians or Australians; it was always of
+Colonials, with a delicately disdainful accent on the word impossible to
+transcribe. Geography, either physical or ethnic, was no more her strong
+point than it is that of other women; and I think she took Colonials to
+be a kind of race of aborigines, like the Maoris or the Hottentots--only
+that by some freak of nature they were white. So, whenever my heart was
+so hot that I could contain myself no longer, and I poured out my
+foolish tales of the big things we hoped to do for the empire and the
+world, the dear thing would merely utter her dazed, "Fancy!" and strike
+me dumb.
+
+And it all threw me back on the thought of Larry Strangways. Reader, if
+you suppose that I had forgotten him you are making a mistake.
+Everything made my heart cry out for him--Hugh's inanity; his father's
+lumbering dignity; Mildred's sepulchral apothegms, which were deeper
+than I could fathom and higher than I could scale; Cissie Boscobel's
+stolid scorn of my country; and Newport's whole attitude of taking no
+notice of me or mine. Whenever I had minutes of rebellion or stress it
+was on Larry Strangways I called, with an agonized appeal to him to come
+to me. It was a purely rhetorical appeal, let me say in passing. As it
+would never reach him, he could not respond to it; but it relieved my
+repressed emotions to send it out on the wings of the spirit. It was
+the only vehicle I could trust; and even that betrayed me--for he came.
+
+He came one hot afternoon about the 20th of August. His card was brought
+to me by the rosebud Thomas as I was taking a siesta up-stairs.
+
+"Tell Mr. Strangways I shall come down at once," I said to my footman
+knight; but after he had gone I sat still.
+
+I sat still to estimate my strength. If Larry Strangways made such an
+appeal to me as I had made to him, should I have the will-power to
+resist him? I could only reply that I must have it! There was no other
+way. When Hugh had been so true to me it was impossible to be other than
+true to him. It was no longer a question of love, but of right: and I
+couldn't forsake my maxim.
+
+Nevertheless, when I threw off my dressing-gown instinct compelled me to
+dress at my prettiest. To be sure, my prettiest was only a flowered
+muslin and a Leghorn hat, in which I resembled the vicar's daughter in a
+Royal Academy picture; but if I was never to see Larry Strangways again
+I wanted the vision in his heart to be the most decent possible. As I
+dressed I owned to myself that I loved him. I had never done so before,
+because I had never known it--or rather, I had known it from that
+evening on the train when I had seen nothing but his traveling-cap; only
+I had strangled the knowledge in my heart. I meant to strangle it again.
+I should strangle it the minute I went down-stairs. But for this little
+interval, just while I was fastening my gown and pinning on my hat, it
+seemed to me of no great harm to let the unfortunate passion come out
+for a breath in the sunlight.
+
+And yet, after having rehearsed all the romantic speeches I should make
+in giving him up forever, he never mentioned love to me at all. On the
+contrary, he had on that gleaming smile which, from the beginning of our
+acquaintance, was like the flash of a sword held up between him and me.
+When he came forward from a corner of the long, dim drawing-room all the
+embarrassment was on my side.
+
+"I suppose you wonder what brings me," were the words he uttered when
+shaking hands.
+
+I tried to murmur politely that, whatever it was, I was glad to see
+him--only the words refused to form themselves.
+
+"Can't we go out?" he asked, as I cast about me for chairs. "It's so
+stuffy in here."
+
+I led the way through the hall, picking up a rose-colored parasol of
+Mrs. Rossiter's as we passed the umbrella-stand.
+
+"How much money have you got?" he asked, abruptly, as soon as we were on
+the terrace.
+
+I made an effort to gather my wits from the far fields into which they
+had wandered.
+
+"Do you mean in ready cash? Or how much do I own in all?"
+
+"How much in all?"
+
+I told him--just a few thousand dollars, the wreckage of what my father
+had left. My total income, apart from what I earned, was about four
+hundred dollars a year.
+
+"I want it," he said, as we descended the steps to the lower terrace.
+"How soon could you let me have it?"
+
+I made the reckoning as we went down the lawn toward the sea. I should
+have to write to my uncle, who would sell my few bonds and forward me
+the proceeds. Mr. Strangways himself said that would take a week.
+
+"I'm going to make a small fortune for you," he laughed, in explanation.
+"All the nations of the earth are beginning to send to us for munitions,
+and Stacy Grainger is right on the spot with the goods. There'll be a
+demand for munitions for years to come--"
+
+"Oh, not for years to come!" I exclaimed. "Only till the end of the
+war."
+
+"'But the end is not by and by,'" he quoted from the Bible. "It's a long
+way off from by and by--believe me! We're up against the struggle
+mankind has been getting ready for ever since it's had a history. I
+don't want just to make money out of it; but, since money's to be
+made--since we can't help making it--I want you to be in on it."
+
+I didn't thank him, because I had something else on my mind.
+
+"Perhaps you don't know that I'm engaged to Hugh Brokenshire. We're to
+be married before we move back to New York."
+
+"Yes, I do know it. That's the reason I'm suggesting this. You'll want
+some money of your own, in order to feel independent. If you don't have
+it the Brokenshire money will break you down."
+
+I don't know what I said, or whether I was able to say anything. There
+was something in this practical care-taking interest that moved me more
+than any love declaration he could have made. He was renouncing me in
+everything but his protection. That was going with me. That was watching
+over me. There was no one to watch over me in the whole world with just
+this sort of devotion.
+
+I suppose we talked. We must have said something as we descended the
+slope; I must have stammered some sort of appreciation. All I can
+clearly remember is that, as we reached the steps going down to the
+Cliff Walk, Hugh was coming up.
+
+I had forgotten that this sort of encounter was possible. I had
+forgotten Hugh. When I saw his innocent, blank face staring up at us I
+felt I was confronting my doom.
+
+"Well!" he ejaculated, as though he had caught us in some criminal
+conspiracy.
+
+As it was for me to explain, I said, limply:
+
+"Mr. Strangways has been good enough to offer to make some money for me,
+Hugh. Isn't that kind of him?"
+
+Hugh grew slowly crimson. His voice shook with passion. He came up one
+step.
+
+"Mr. Strangways will be kinder still in minding his own business."
+
+"Oh, Hugh!"
+
+"Don't be offended, Mr. Brokenshire," Larry Strangways said, peaceably.
+"I merely had the opportunity to advise Miss Adare as to her
+investments--"
+
+"I shall advise Miss Adare as to her investments. It happens that she's
+engaged to me!"
+
+"But she's not married to you. An engagement is not a marriage; it's
+only a preliminary period in which two persons agree to consider whether
+or not a marriage between them would be possible. Since that's the
+situation at present, I thought it no harm to tell Miss Adare that if
+she puts her money into some of the new projects for ammunition that I
+know about--"
+
+"And I'm sure she's not interested."
+
+Mr. Strangways bowed.
+
+"That will be for her to decide. I understood her to say--"
+
+"Whatever you understood her to say, sir, Miss Adare is not interested!
+Good afternoon." He nodded to me to come down the steps. "I was just
+coming over for you. Shall we walk along together?"
+
+I backed away from him toward the stone balustrade.
+
+"But, Hugh, I can't leave Mr. Strangways like this. He's come all the
+way from New York on purpose to--"
+
+"Then I shall defray his expense and pay him for his time; but if we're
+going at all, dear--"
+
+At a sign of the eyes from Larry Strangways I mastered my wrath at this
+insolence, and spoke meekly:
+
+"I didn't know we were going anywhere in particular."
+
+"And you'll excuse me, Mr. Brokenshire," our visitor interrupted, "if I
+say that I can't be dismissed in this way by any one but Miss Adare
+herself. You must remember she isn't your wife--that she's still a free
+agent. Perhaps, if I explain the matter a little further--"
+
+Hugh put up his hand in stately imitation of his father.
+
+"Please! There's no need of that."
+
+"Oh, but there is, Hugh!"
+
+"You see," Mr. Strangways reasoned, "it's more than a question of making
+money. We shall make money, of course; but that's only incidental. What
+I'm really asking Miss Adare to do is to help one of the most glorious
+causes to which mankind has ever given itself--"
+
+I started toward him impulsively.
+
+"Oh! Do you feel like that?"
+
+"Not like that; that's all I feel. I live it! I've no other thought."
+
+It was curious to see how the force of this all-absorbing topic swept
+Hugh away from the merely personal standpoint.
+
+"And you call yourself an American?" he demanded, hotly.
+
+"I call myself a man. I don't emphasize the American. This thing
+transcends what we call nationality."
+
+Hugh shouted, somewhat in the tone of a man kicking against the pricks:
+
+"Not what I call nationality! It's got nothing to do with us."
+
+"Ah, but it will have something to do with us! It isn't merely a
+European struggle; it's a universal one. Sooner or later you'll see
+mankind divided into just two camps."
+
+Hugh warmed to the discussion.
+
+"Even if we do, it still doesn't follow that we'll all be in your camp."
+
+"That depends on whether we're among those driving forward or those
+kicking back. The American people has been in the first of these classes
+hitherto; it remains to be seen whether or not it's there still. But if
+it isn't as a nation I can tell you that some of us will be there as
+individuals."
+
+Hugh's tone was one of horror.
+
+"You mean that you'd go and fight?"
+
+"That's about the size of it."
+
+"Then you'd be a traitor to your country for getting her into trouble."
+
+"If I had to choose between being a traitor to my country and a traitor
+to my manhood I'd take the first. Fortunately, no such alternative will
+be thrust upon us. Miss Adare pointed out to me once that there couldn't
+be two right courses, each opposed to the other. Right and rights must
+be harmonious. If I'm true to myself I'm true to my country; and I can't
+be true to my country unless I do my 'bit,' as the phrase begins to go,
+for the good of the human race."
+
+"And you're really going?" I asked, breathlessly.
+
+"As soon as I can arrange things with Mr."--but he remembered he was
+speaking to a Brokenshire--"as soon as I can arrange things with--with
+my boss. He's willing to let me go, and to keep my job for me if I come
+back. He'll take charge of my small funds and of any Miss Adare
+intrusts to me. He asked me to give her that message. When it's settled
+I shall start for Canada."
+
+"That'll do you no good," Hugh stated, triumphantly. "They won't enlist
+Americans there."
+
+Larry Strangways smiled.
+
+"Oh, there are ways! If there's nothing else for it I'll swear in as a
+Canadian."
+
+"You'd do that!" In different tones the exclamation came from Hugh and
+me, simultaneously.
+
+I can still see Larry Strangways with his proud, fair head held high.
+
+"I'd do anything rather than not fight. My American birthright is as
+dear to me as it is to any one; but we've reached a time when such
+considerations must go by the board. For the matter of that, the more
+closely we can now identify the Briton and the American, the better it
+will be for the world."
+
+He explained this at some length. The theme was so engrossing that even
+Hugh was willing to listen to the argument. People were talking already
+of a world federation which would follow the war and unite all the
+nations in approximate brotherhood. Larry Strangways didn't believe in
+that as a possibility; at least he didn't believe in it as an immediate
+possibility. There were just two nations fitted to understand each other
+and act together, and if they couldn't fraternize and sympathize it was
+of no use to expect that miracle from races who had nothing in common.
+Get the United States and the British Empire to stand shoulder to
+shoulder, and sooner or later the other peoples would line up beside
+them.
+
+But you must begin at the beginning. Unless you started as an acorn you
+couldn't be an oak; if you were not willing to be a baby you could
+never become a man. There must be no more Hague conferences, with their
+vast programs and ineffective means. The failure of that dream was
+evident. We must be practical; we mustn't soar beyond the possible. The
+possible and the practical lay in British and American institutions and
+commonly understood principles. The world had an asset in them that had
+never been worked. To work it was the task not primarily of governments,
+but, first and before everything, of individuals. It was up to the
+British and American man and woman in their personal lives and opinions.
+
+I interrupted to say that it was up to the American man and woman first
+of all; that British willingness to co-operate with America was far more
+ready than any similar sentiment on the American side.
+
+Hugh threw the stress on efficiency. America was so thorough in her
+methods that she couldn't co-operate with British muddling.
+
+"What is efficiency?" Larry Strangways asked. "It's the best means of
+doing what you want to do, isn't it? Well, then, efficiency is a matter
+of your ambitions. There's the efficiency of the watch-dog who loves his
+master and guards the house, and there's the efficiency of the tiger in
+the jungle. One has one's choice."
+
+It was not a question, he continued to reason, as to who began this
+war--whether it was a king or a czar or a kaiser. It was not a question
+of English and German competition, or of French or Russian aggression,
+or fear of it. The inquiry went back of all that. It went back beyond
+modern Europe, beyond the Middle Ages, beyond Rome and Assyria and
+Egypt. It was a battle of principles rather than of nations--the last
+great struggle between reason and force--the fight between the instinct
+of some men to rule other men and the contrary instinct, implanted more
+or less in all men, that they shall hold up their heads and rule
+themselves.
+
+It was part of the impulse of the human race to forge ahead and upward.
+The powers that worked against liberty had been arming themselves, not
+merely for a generation or a century, but since the beginning of time,
+for just this trial of strength. The effort would be colossal and it
+would be culminating; no human being would be spared taking part in it.
+If America didn't come in of her own accord she would be compelled to
+come in; and meantime he, Larry Strangways, was going of free will.
+
+He didn't express it in just this way. He put it humbly, colloquially,
+with touches of slang.
+
+"I've got to be on the job, Miss Adare, and there are no two ways about
+it," were the words in which he ended. "I've just run down from New York
+to speak about--about the money; and--and to bid you good-by." He
+glanced toward Hugh. "Possibly, in view of the fact that I'm so soon to
+be off--and may not come back, you know," he added, with a laugh--"Mr.
+Brokenshire won't mind if--if we shake hands."
+
+I can say to Hugh's credit that he gave us a little while together.
+Going down the steps he had mounted, he called back, over his shoulder:
+
+"I'm going off for a walk, dear. I shall return in exactly fifteen
+minutes; and I expect you to be ready for me then."
+
+But when we were alone we had little or nothing to say. I recall that
+quarter of an hour as a period of emotional paralysis. I knew and he
+knew that each second ticked off an instant that all the rest of our
+lives we should long for in vain; and yet we didn't know how to make use
+of it.
+
+We began to wander slowly up the slope. We did it aimlessly, stopping
+when we were only a few yards away from the steps. We talked about the
+money. We talked about his going to Canada. We talked about the breaking
+off, so far as we knew, of all intercourse between Mr. Grainger and Mrs.
+Brokenshire. But we said nothing about ourselves. We said nothing about
+anything but what was superficial and trite and lame.
+
+Once or twice Larry Strangways took out his watch and glanced at it, as
+if to underscore the fact that the sands were slipping away. I kept my
+face hidden as much as possible beneath the rose-colored parasol. So far
+as I could judge, he looked over my head. We still had said
+nothing--there was still nothing we could say--when, beneath the bank of
+the lawn, and moving back in our direction, we saw the crown of Hugh's
+Panama.
+
+"Good-by!" Larry Strangways said, then.
+
+"Good-by!"
+
+My hand rested in his without pressure; without pressure his had taken
+mine. I think his eyes made one last wild, desperate appeal to me but if
+so I was unable to respond to it.
+
+I don't know how it happened that he turned his back and walked firmly
+up the lawn. I don't know how it happened that I also turned and took
+the necessary steps toward Hugh. All I can say is--and I can say it only
+in this way--all I can say is, I felt that I had died.
+
+That is, I felt that I had died except for one queer, bracing echo which
+suddenly come back to me. It was in the words Mildred Brokenshire had
+used, and which, at the time, I had thought too deep for me to
+understand:
+
+"Life is not a blind impulse working blindly. It is a beneficent
+rectifying power."
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXIII
+
+
+As Hugh Brokenshire and I were walking along the Ocean Drive a few days
+after Larry Strangways had come and gone, the dear lad got some
+satisfaction from charging me with inconsistency.
+
+"You're certainly talking about England and Canada to-day very
+differently from what you used to."
+
+"Am I? Well, if it seems so it's because you don't understand the
+attitude of Canadians toward their mother country. As a country, as a
+government, England has been magnificently true to us always. It's only
+between Englishmen and Canadians as individuals that irritation arises,
+and for that most Canadians don't care. The Englishman snubs and the
+Canadian grows bumptious. I don't think the Canadian would grow
+bumptious if the Englishman didn't snub. Both snubbing and bumptiousness
+are offensive to me; but that, I suppose, is because I'm over-sensitive.
+And yet one forgets sensitiveness when it comes to anything really
+national. In that we're one, with as perfect a solidarity as that which
+binds Oregon to Florida. You'll never find one of us who isn't proud to
+serve when England gives the orders."
+
+"To be snubbed by her for serving."
+
+"Certainly; to be snubbed by her for serving! It's all we look for; it's
+all we shall ever get. No one need make any mistake about that. In
+Canada we're talking of sending fifty thousand troops to the front. We
+may send five hundred thousand and we shall still be snubbed. But we're
+not such children as to go into a cause in the hope that some one will
+give us sweets. We do it for the Cause. We know, too, that it isn't
+exactly injustice on the English side; it's only ungraciousness."
+
+"Oh, they're long on ungraciousness, all right."
+
+"Yes; they're very long on ungraciousness--"
+
+"Even dad feels that. You should hear him cuss after he's been kotowing
+to some British celebrity--and given him the best of all he's got--and
+put him up at the good clubs. They bring him letters in shoals, you
+know--"
+
+"I'm afraid it has to be admitted that the best-mannered among them are
+often rude from our transatlantic point of view; and yet the very
+rudeness is one of the defects of their good qualities. You can no more
+take the ungraciousness out of the English character than you can take
+the hardness out of granite; but if granite wasn't hard it wouldn't
+serve its purposes. We Canadians know that, don't you see? We allow for
+it in advance, just as you allow for the clumsiness of the elephant for
+the sake of his strength and sagacity. We're not angels
+ourselves--neither you Americans nor we Canadians; and yet we like to
+get the credit for such small merits as we possess."
+
+Hugh whipped off the blossom of a roadside flower as he swung his stick.
+
+"All they give us credit for is money."
+
+"Well, they certainly give you a great deal of credit for that!" I
+laughed. "They make a golden calf of you. They fall down and worship
+you, like the children of Israel in the wilderness. When we're as rich
+as we shall be some day they'll do the same by us."
+
+Within a week my intercourse with Hugh had come to be wholly along
+international lines. We were no longer merely a man and a woman; we were
+types; we were points of view. The world-struggle--the time-struggle, as
+Larry Strangways would have called it--had broken out in us. The
+interlocking of human destinies had become apparent. As positively as
+Franz Ferdinand and Sophie Chotek, we had our part in the vast drama.
+Even Hugh, against all his inclinations to hang back, was obliged to
+take his share. So lost were we in the theme that, as we tramped along,
+we had not a thought for the bracing wind, the ruffled seas, the dashing
+of surf over ledges, or the exquisite, gentle savagery of the rocky
+flowering uplands, with villas marking the sky-line as they do on the
+Côte d'Azur.
+
+I was the more willing to discuss the subject since I felt it a kind of
+mission from Mr. Strangways to carry out the object he had so much at
+heart. I was to be--so far as so humble a body as I could be it--an
+interpreter of the one country to the other. I reckoned that if I
+explained and explained and explained, and didn't let myself grow tired
+of explaining, some little shade of the distrust which each of the great
+English-speaking nations has for its fellow might be scrubbed away. I
+couldn't do much, but the value of all effort is in proportion to the
+opportunity. So I began with Hugh.
+
+"You see, Hugh, peoples are like people. Each of us has his weak points
+as well as his strong ones; but we don't necessarily hate each other on
+that account. You've lived in England, and you know the English rub you
+up the wrong way. I've lived there, too, and had exactly the same
+experience. But we go through just that thing with lots of individuals
+with whom we manage to be very good friends. You and your brother Jack,
+for instance, don't hit it off so very well; and yet you contrive to be
+Brokenshires together and uphold the honor of the family."
+
+"I'm a Socialist and Jack's a snob--"
+
+"That's it. Mentally you're the world apart. But, as you've objects in
+common to work for, you get along fairly well. Now why shouldn't the
+Englishman and the American do the same? Why should they always see how
+much they differ instead of how much they are alike? Why should they
+always underscore each other's faults when by seeing each other's good
+points they could benefit not only themselves, but the world? If there
+was an entente, let us say, between the British Empire and the United
+States--not exactly an alliance, perhaps, if people are afraid of the
+word--"
+
+He stopped and wheeled round suddenly, suspicion in his small,
+myosotis-colored eyes.
+
+"Look here, little Alix; isn't this the dope that fresh guy Strangways
+was handing out the other day?"
+
+I flushed, but I didn't stammer.
+
+"I don't care whether it is or not. Besides, it isn't dope; it's food;
+it's medicine; it's a remedy for the ills of this poor old civilization.
+We've got it in our power, we English-speaking peoples--"
+
+"You haven't," he declared, coolly. "Your country would still be the
+goat."
+
+"Yes," I agreed, "Canada would still be the goat; but we don't mind
+that. We're used to it. You'll always have a fling at us on one side and
+England on the other; but we're like the strong, good-natured boy who
+doesn't resent kicks and cuffs because he knows he can grow and thrive
+in spite of them."
+
+He put his hand on my arm and spoke in the kindly tone that reminded me
+of his father.
+
+"My dear little girl, you can drop it. It won't go down. Suppose we keep
+to the sort of thing you can tackle. You see, when you've married me
+you'll be an American. Then you'll be out of it."
+
+I was hurt. I was furious. The expression, too, was getting on my
+nerves. I began to wish I was out of it. Since I couldn't be in it,
+marriage might prove a Lethe bath, in which I should forget I had
+anything to do with it. Sheer desperation made me cry out:
+
+"Very well, then, Hugh! If we're to be married, can't we be married
+quickly? Then I shall have it off my mind."
+
+There was not only a woeful decline of spirit in his response, but a
+full acceptance of the Brokenshire yoke.
+
+"We can't be married any quicker than dad says. But I'll talk to him."
+
+He made no objection, however, when, a little later, I received from my
+uncle a draft for my entire fortune and announced my intention of
+handing the sum over to Mr. Strangways for investment. Hugh probably
+looked on the amount as too insignificant to talk about; in addition to
+which some Brokenshire instinct for the profitable may have led him to
+appreciate a thing so good as to make it folly to say nay to it. The
+result was that I heard from Larry Strangways, in letters which added
+nothing to my comfort.
+
+I don't know what I expected him to say; but, whatever it was, he didn't
+say it. He wasn't curt; his letters were not short. On the contrary, he
+wrote at length, and brought up subjects that had nothing to do with
+certificates of stock. But they were all political or international, or
+related in one way or another to the ideal of his heart--England and
+America! The British Empire and the United States! The brotherhood of
+democracies! Why in thunder had the bally world waited so long for the
+coalition of dominating influences which alone could keep it straight?
+Why dream of the impossible when the practical had not as yet been
+tried? Why talk peace, peace, when there was no peace at The Hague, if a
+full and controlling sympathy could be effected nearer home--let us say
+at Ottawa? He was going to Canada to enlist; he would start in a few
+days' time; but he was doing it not merely to fight for the Cause; he
+was going to be one man, at least, just a straggling democratic
+scout--one of a forlorn hope, if you chose to call it so--to offer his
+life to a union of which the human race had the same sort of need as
+human beings of wedlock.
+
+And in all this there was no reference to me. He might not have loved
+me; I might not have loved him. I answered the letters in the vein in
+which they were written, and once or twice showed my replies to Hugh.
+
+"Forget it!" was his ordinary comment. "The American eagle is too wise
+an old bird to be caught with salt on its tail."
+
+Perhaps it was because Larry Strangways made no appeal to me that I gave
+myself to forwarding his work with a more enthusiastic zeal. I had to do
+it quietly, for fear of offending Hugh; but I got my opportunities--that
+is, I got my opportunities to talk, though I saw I made no impression.
+
+I was only a girl--the queer Canadian who had been Ethel Rossiter's
+nursery governess and whom the Brokenshire family, for unexplained
+reasons, had accepted as Hugh's future wife. What could I know about
+matters at which statesmen had always shied? It was preposterous that I
+should speak of them; it was presumptuous. Nobody told me that; I saw it
+in people's eyes.
+
+And I should have seen it in their eyes more plainly if they had been
+interested. No one was. An entente between the United States and the
+British Empire might have been an alliance between Bolivia and
+Beluchistan. It wasn't merely fashionable folk who wouldn't think of it;
+no one would. I knew plenty of people by this time. I knew townspeople
+of Newport, and summer residents, and that intermediate group of retired
+admirals and professors who come in between the two. I knew shop people
+and I knew servants, all with their stake in the country, their stake in
+the world. Not a soul among them cared a hang.
+
+And then, threatening to put me entirely out of business, we got the
+American war refugees and the English visitors. I group them together
+because they belonged together. They belonged together for the reason
+that there was nothing each one of them didn't know--by hearsay from
+some one who knew it by hearsay. The American war refugees had all been
+in contact with people in England whom they characterized as well
+informed. The English visitors were well informed because they were
+English visitors. Some of them told prodigious secrets which they had
+indirectly from Downing Street. Others gave the reasons why General
+Isleworth had been superseded in his command, and the part Mrs.
+Lamingford, that beautiful American, had played in the scandal. From
+others we learned that Lady Hull, with her baleful charm, was the
+influence really responsible for the shortage of shells.
+
+War was shown to us by our English visitors not as a mighty, pitiless
+contest, but as a series of social, sexual, and political intrigues, in
+which women pulled the strings. I know it was talk; but talk it was. For
+weeks, for months, we had it with the greater number of our meals.
+Wherever there were English guests--women of title they often were, or
+eccentric public men--we had an orgy of tales in which the very entrails
+of English reputations were torn out. No one was spared---not even the
+Highest in the Land. All the American could do was to listen
+open-mouthed; and open-mouthed he listened.
+
+I will say for the English that they have no disloyalty but that of
+chatter; but the plain American could not be expected to know that. To
+him the chatter was gospel truth. He has none of that facility for
+discounting gossip on the great which the Englishman learns with his
+mother tongue. The American heard it greedily; he was avid for more. He
+retailed it at dinners and teas, and in that Reading-room which is
+really a club. Naturally enough! From what our English visitors told us
+about themselves, their statesmen, their generals, their admirals were
+footlers at the best, and could, moreover, be described by a vigorous
+compound Anglo-Saxon word in the Book of Revelations.
+
+And the English papers were no better. All the important ones, weeklies
+as well as dailies, were sent to Mr. Brokenshire, and copies lay about
+at Mr. Rossiter's. They sickened me. I stopped reading them. There was
+good in them, doubtless; but what I chiefly found was a wild tempest of
+abuse of this party or that party, of this leading man or that leading
+man, with the effect on the imagination of a ship going down amid the
+curses and confusion of officers and passengers alike. It may have
+sounded well in England; very likely it did; but in America it was
+horrible. I mention it here only because, in this babel of voices, my
+own faint pipe on behalf of a league of democracies could no more be
+heard than the tinkle of a sacring bell amid the shrieking and bursting
+of shells.
+
+I was often tempted to say no more about it and let the world go to pot.
+Then I thought of Larry Strangways, offering his life for an ideal as to
+which I was unwilling to speak a word. So I would begin my litany of
+Bolivia and Beluchistan over again, crooning it into the ears of people,
+both gentle and simple, who, in the matter of response, might never have
+heard the names of the two countries I mentioned together.
+
+A few lines from one of Larry Strangways's letters, written from
+Valcartier, prompted me to persevere in this course:
+
+ People are no more interested here than they are on our side of
+ the border; but it's got to come, for all that. What we need is
+ a public opinion; and a public opinion can only be created by
+ writing and talk. Thank the Lord, you and I can talk if we are
+ not very strong on writing! and talk we must! Bigger streams
+ have risen from smaller springs. The mustard seed is the least
+ of all seeds; but it grows to be the greatest of herbs.
+
+It might have been easier to call forth a responsive spark had we
+realized that there was a war. But we hadn't--not in the way that the
+fact came to us afterward. In spite of the taking of Namur, Liège,
+Maubeuge, the advance on Paris, and the rolling back on the Marne, we
+had seen no more than chariots and horses of fire in the clouds. It was
+not only distant, it was phantom-like. We read the papers; we heard of
+horrors; American war refugees and English visitors alike piled up the
+agonies, to which we listened eagerly; we saw the moneyed magnates come
+and go in counsel with Mr. Brokenshire; we knitted and sewed and
+subscribed to funds; but, so far as vital participation went, Hugh was
+right in saying we were out of it.
+
+And then a shot fell into our midst, smiting us with awe.
+
+Cissie Boscobel, Hugh, another young man, and I had been playing tennis
+one September morning on Mrs. Rossiter's courts. The other young man
+having left for Bailey's Beach, the remaining three of us were
+sauntering back toward the house when a lad, whom Cissie recognized as
+belonging to the Burkes' establishment, came running up with a telegram.
+As it was for Cissie she stood still to read it, while Hugh and I
+strolled on. Once or twice I glanced back toward her; but she still held
+the brief lines up before her as if she couldn't make out their meaning.
+
+When she rejoined us, as she presently did, I noticed that her color had
+died out, though there was otherwise no change in her unless it was in
+stillness. The question was as to whether we should go to Bailey's or
+not. I didn't want to go and Hugh declared he wouldn't go without me.
+
+"We'll put it up to Cissie," he said, as we reached the house. "If she
+goes we'll all go."
+
+"I think I won't go," she answered, quietly; adding, without much change
+of tone, "Leatherhead's been killed in action."
+
+So there really was a war! Hugh's deep "Oh!" was in Itself like the
+distant rumble of guns.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXIV
+
+
+There was nothing to be done for Lady Cecilia because she took her
+bereavement with so little fuss. She asked for no sympathy; so far as I
+ever saw, she shed no tears. If on that particular spot in the
+neighborhood of Ypres a man had had to fall for his country, she was
+proud that it had been a Boscobel. She put on a black frock and ordered
+her maid to take the jade-green plume out of a black hat; but, except
+that she declined invitations, she went about as usual. As the first
+person we knew to be touched by the strange new calamity of war, we made
+a kind of heroine of her, treating her with an almost romantic
+reverence; but she herself never seemed aware of it. It was my first
+glimpse of that unflinching British heroism of which I have since seen
+much, and it impressed me.
+
+We began to dream together of being useful; our difficulty was that we
+didn't see the way. War had not yet made its definite claims on women
+and girls, and knitting till our muscles ached was not a sufficient
+outlet for our energies. Had I been in Cissie's place, I should have
+gone home at once; but I suspected that, in spite of all her brave words
+to me, she couldn't quite kill the hope that kept her lingering on.
+
+My own ambitions being distasteful to Hugh, I was obliged to repress
+them, doing so with the greater regret because some of the courses I
+suggested would have done him good. They would have utilized the
+physical strength with which he was blessed, and delivered him from that
+material well-being to which he returned with the more child-like
+rejoicing because of having been without it.
+
+"Hugh, dear," I said to him once, "couldn't we be married soon and go
+over to France or England? Then we should see whether there wasn't
+something we could do."
+
+"Not on your life, little Alix!" was his laughing response. "Since as
+Americans we're out of it, out of it we shall stay."
+
+Over replies like this, of which there were many, I was gnashing my
+teeth helplessly when, all at once, I was called on to see myself as
+others saw me, so getting a surprise.
+
+The first note of warning came to me in a few words from Ethel Rossiter.
+I was scribbling her notes one morning as she lay in bed, when it
+occurred to me to say:
+
+"If I'm going to be married, I suppose I ought to be doing something
+about clothes."
+
+She murmured, listlessly:
+
+"Oh, I wouldn't be in a hurry about that, if I were you."
+
+I went on writing.
+
+"I haven't been in a hurry, have I? But I shall certainly want some
+things I haven't got now."
+
+"Then you can get them after you're married. When are you to be married,
+anyhow?"
+
+As the question was much on my mind, I looked up from my task and said:
+
+"Well--when?"
+
+"Don't you know?"
+
+"No. Do you?"
+
+She shook her head.
+
+"I didn't know but what father had said something about it."
+
+"He hasn't--not a word." I resumed my scribbling. "It's a queer thing
+for him to have to settle, don't you think? One might have supposed it
+would have been left to me."
+
+"Oh, you don't know father!" It was as if throwing off something of no
+importance that she added, "Of course, he can see that you're not in
+love with Hugh."
+
+Amazed at this reading of my heart, I bent my head to hide my confusion.
+
+"I don't know why you should say that," I stammered at last, "when you
+can't help seeing I'm quite true to him."
+
+She shrugged her beautiful shoulders, of which one was bare.
+
+"Oh, true! What's the good of that?" She went on, casually: "By the by,
+do call up Daisy Burke and tell her I sha'n't go to that luncheon of
+theirs. They're going to have old lady Billing, who's coming to stay at
+father's; and you don't catch me with that lot except when I can't help
+it." She reverted to the topic of a minute before. "I don't blame you,
+of course. I suppose, if I were in your place, it's what I should do
+myself. It's what I thought you'd try for--you remember, don't you?--as
+long ago as when we were in Halifax. But naturally enough other people
+don't--" I failed to learn, however, what other people didn't, because
+of a second reversion in theme: "Do make up something civil to say to
+Daisy, and tell her I won't come."
+
+We dropped the subject, chiefly because I was afraid to go on with it;
+but when I met old Mrs. Billing I received a similar shock. Having gone
+to Mr. Brokenshire's to pay her my respects, I was told she was on the
+terrace. As a matter of fact, she was making her way toward the hall,
+and awkwardly carried a book, a sunshade, and the stump of a cigarette.
+Dutifully I went forward in the hope of offering my services.
+
+"Get out of my sight!" was her response to my greetings. "I can't bear
+to look at you."
+
+Brushing past me without further words, she entered the house.
+
+"What did she mean?" I asked of Cissie Boscobel, to whom I heard that
+Mrs. Billing had given her own account of the incident.
+
+Lady Cecilia was embarrassed.
+
+"Oh, nothing! She's just so very odd."
+
+But I insisted:
+
+"She must have meant something. Had it anything to do with Hugh?"
+
+Reluctantly Lady Cissie let it out. Mrs. Billing had got the idea that I
+was marrying Hugh for his money; and, though in the past she had not
+disapproved of this line of action, she had come to think it no road to
+happiness. Having taken the trouble to give me more than one hint that I
+should many the man I was in love with she was now disappointed in my
+character.
+
+"You know how much truth there is in all that, don't you?" I said,
+evasively.
+
+Lady Cissie did her best to support me, though between her words and her
+inflection there was a curious lack of correspondence.
+
+"Oh yes--certainly!"
+
+I got the reaction of her thought, however, some minutes later, when she
+said, apropos of nothing in our conversation:
+
+"Since Janet can't be married this month, I needn't go home for a long
+time."
+
+But knowing that this suggestion was in the air, I was the better able
+to interpret Mildred's oracular utterance the next time I sat at the
+foot of the couch, in the darkened room.
+
+"One can't be true to another," she said, in reply to some feeler of my
+own, "unless one is true to oneself, and one can't be true to oneself
+unless one follows the highest of one's instincts."
+
+I said, inwardly: "Ah! Now I know the reason for her distrust of me."
+Aloud I made it:
+
+"But that throws us back on the question as to what one's highest
+instincts are."
+
+There was the pause that preceded all her expressions of opinion.
+
+"On the principle that it is more blessed to give than to receive, I
+suppose our highest promptings are those which urge us to give most of
+ourselves."
+
+"And when one gives all of oneself that one can dispose of?"
+
+"One has then to consider the importance or the unimportance of what one
+has to withhold."
+
+Of all the things that had been said to me this was the most disturbing.
+It had seemed to me hitherto that the essence of my duty lay in marrying
+Hugh. If I married him, I argued, I should have done my best to make up
+to him for all he had undergone for my sake. I saw myself as owing him a
+debt. The refusal to pay it would have implied a kind of moral
+bankruptcy. Considering myself solvent, and also considering myself
+honest, I felt I had no choice. Since I could pay, I must pay. The
+reasoning was the more forcible because I liked Hugh and was grateful
+to him. I could be tolerably happy with him, and would make him a good
+wife.
+
+To make him a good wife I had choked back everything I had ever felt for
+Larry Strangways; I had submitted to all the Brokenshire repressions; I
+had made myself humble and small before Hugh and his father, and
+accepted the status of a Libby Jaynes. My heart cried out like any other
+woman's heart--it cried out for my country in the hour of its stress; it
+cried out for my home in what I tried to make the hour of my happiness;
+when it caught me unawares it cried out for the man I loved. But all
+this I mastered as our Canadian men were mastering their longings and
+regrets on saying their good-bys. What was to be done was to be done,
+and done willingly. Willingly I meant to marry Hugh, not because he was
+the man I would have chosen before all others, but because, when no one
+else in the world was giving me a thought, he had had the astonishing
+goodness to choose me. And now--
+
+With Mrs. Brokenshire the situation was different. She believed I was in
+love with Hugh and that the others were doing me a wrong. Moreover, she
+informed me one day that I was making my way in Newport. People who
+noticed me once noticed me again. The men beside whom I sat at the
+occasional lunches and dinners I attended often spoke of me to the
+hostess on going away, and there could be no better sign than that. They
+said that, though I "wasn't long on looks," I had ideas and knew how to
+express them. She ventured to hope that this kindly opinion might, in
+the end, soften Mr. Brokenshire.
+
+"Do you mean that he isn't softened as it is?"
+
+She answered, indirectly:
+
+"He's not accustomed to be forced--and he feels I've forced him."
+
+It was her first reference to what she had done for Hugh and me. In its
+way it gave me permission to say:
+
+"But isn't it a question of the _quid pro quo_? If you granted him
+something for something he granted you in return--"
+
+But the expression on her face forbade my going on. I have never seen
+such a parting to human lips, or so haunting, so lost a look in human
+eyes. It told me everything. It was a confession of all the things she
+never could have said. "Better is it," says the Book of Ecclesiastes,
+"that thou shouldest not vow, than that thou shouldest vow and not pay."
+She had vowed and not paid. She had got her price and hadn't fulfilled
+her bargain. She couldn't; she never would. It was beyond her. The big
+moneyed man who at that minute was helping to finance a good part of
+Europe, who was a power not only in a city or a country, but the world,
+had been tricked by a woman; and I in my poor little person was the
+symbol of his discomfiture.
+
+No wonder he found it hard to forgive me! No wonder that whenever I came
+where he was he treated me to some kindly hint or correction which was
+no sufficient veil for his scorn! As I had never to my knowledge been
+hated by any one, it was terrible to feel myself an object of abhorrence
+to a man of such high standing in the world. Our eyes couldn't meet
+without my seeing that his passions were seething to the boiling-point.
+If he could have struck me dead with a look I think he would have done
+it. And I didn't hate him; I was too sorry for him. I could have liked
+him if he had let me.
+
+I had, consequently, much to think about. I thought and I prayed. It was
+not a minute at which to do anything hurriedly. To a spirit so hot as
+mine it would have been a relief to lash out at them all; but, as I had
+checked myself hitherto, I checked myself again. I reasoned that if I
+kept close to right, right would take care of me. Not being a
+theologian, I felt free to make some closeness of identity between right
+and God. I might have defined right as God in action, or God as right in
+conjunction with omnipotence, intelligence, and love; but I had no need
+for exactness of terms. In keeping near to right I knew I must be near
+to God: and near to God I could let myself go so far that no power on
+earth would seem strong enough to save me--and yet I should be saved.
+
+I went on then with a kind of fearlessness. If I was to marry Hugh I was
+convinced that I should be supported; if not, I was equally convinced
+that something would hold me back.
+
+"If anything should happen," I said to Cissie Boscobel one day, "I want
+you to look after Hugh."
+
+The dawn seemed to break over her, though she only said, tremulously:
+
+"Happen--how?"
+
+"I don't know. Perhaps nothing will. But if it does--"
+
+She slipped away, doubtless so as not to hear more.
+
+And then one evening, when I was not thinking especially about it, the
+Cloud came down on the Mountain; the voice spoke out of it, and my
+course was made plain.
+
+But before that night I also had received a cablegram. It was from my
+sister Louise, to say that the _King Arthur_, her husband's ship, had
+been blown up in the North Sea, and that he was among the lost.
+
+So the call was coming to me more sharply than I had yet heard it. With
+Lady Cecilia's example in mind, I said little to those about me beyond
+mentioning the fact. I suppose they showed me as much sympathy as the
+sweeping away of a mere brother-in-law demanded. They certainly said
+they were sorry, and hinted that that was what nations let themselves in
+for when they were so rash as to go to war.
+
+"Think we'd ever expose our fellows like that?" was Hugh's comment. "Not
+on your life!"
+
+But they didn't make a heroine of me as they did with Lady Cissie; not
+that I cared about that. I only hoped that the fact that my
+brother-in-law's name was in all the American accounts of the incident
+would show them that I belonged to some one, and that some one belonged
+to me. If it did I never perceived it. Perhaps the loss of a mere
+captain in the navy was a less gallant occurrence than the death in
+action of a Lord Leatherhead; perhaps we were already getting used to
+the toll of war; but, whatever the reason, Lady Cissie was still, to all
+appearances, the only sufferer. Within a day or two a black dress was my
+sole reminder that the _King Arthur_ had gone down; and, even to Hugh, I
+made no further reference to the catastrophe.
+
+And then came the evening when, as Larry Strangways said on my telling
+him about it, "the fat was all in the fire."
+
+It was the occasion of what had become the annual dinner at Mr.
+Brokenshire's in honor of Mrs. Billing--a splendid function. Nothing
+short of a splendid function would have satisfied the old lady, who had
+the gift of making even the great afraid of her. The event was the more
+magnificent for the reason that, in addition to the mother of the
+favorite, a number of brother princes of finance, in Newport for
+conference with our host, were included among the guests. Of these one
+was staying in the house, one with the Jack Brokenshires, and two at a
+hotel. I was seated between the two who were at the hotel because they
+were socially unimportant. Even Mr. Brokenshire had sometimes to extend
+his domestic hospitality to business friends for the sake of business,
+when perhaps he should have preferred to show his attentions in clubs.
+
+The chief scene, if I may so call it, was played to the family alone in
+Mildred's sitting-room, after the guests had gone; but there was a
+curtain-raiser at the dinner-table before the assembled company. I give
+bits of the conversation, not because they were important, but because
+of what they led up to.
+
+We were twenty-four, seated on great Italian chairs, which gave each of
+us the feeling of being a sovereign on a throne. It took all the men of
+the establishment, as well as those gathered in from the Jack
+Brokenshires' and Mrs. Rossiter's, to wait on us, a detail by which in
+the end I profited. The gold service had been sent down from the vaults
+in New York, so that the serving-plates were gold, as well as the plates
+for some of the other courses. Gold vases and bowls held the roses that
+adorned the table, and gold spoons and forks were under our hands. It
+was the first time I had ever been able to notice with my own eyes how
+nearly the rich American can rival the state of kings and emperors.
+
+It goes without saying that all the women had put on their best, and
+that the jewels were as precious metals in the days of Solomon; they
+were "nothing accounted of." Diamonds flashed, rubies broke out in fire,
+and emeralds said unspeakable things all up and down the table; the rows
+and ropes and circlets of pearls made one think of the gates of
+Paradise. I was the only one not so bedecked, getting that contrast of
+simplicity which is the compensation of the poor. The ring Hugh had
+given me, a sapphire set in diamonds, was my only ornament; and yet the
+neat austerity of my black evening frock rendered me conspicuous.
+
+It also goes without saying that I had no right to be conspicuous, being
+the person of least consequence at the board. Mr. Brokenshire not only
+felt that himself, but he liked me to feel it; and he not only liked me
+to feel it, but he liked others to see that his great, broad spirit
+admitted me among his family and friends from noble promptings of
+tolerance. I was expected to play up to this generosity and to present
+the foil of humility to the glory of the other guests and the beauty of
+the table decorations.
+
+In general I did this, and had every intention of doing it again.
+Nothing but what perhaps were the solecisms of my immediate neighbors
+caused my efforts to miscarry. I had been informed by Mrs. Brokenshire
+beforehand that they were socially dull, that one of them was "awful,"
+and that my powers would be taxed to keep them in conversation. My
+mettle being up, I therefore did my best.
+
+The one who was awful proved to be a Mr. Samuel Russky, whose claim to
+be present sprang from the fact that he was a member of a house that had
+the power to lend a great deal of money. He was a big man, of a mingled
+Slavic and Oriental cast of countenance, and had nothing more awful
+about him than a tendency to overemphasis. On my right I had Mr. John G.
+Thorne, whose face at a glance was as guileless as his name till
+contemplation revealed to you depth beyond depth of that peculiar
+astuteness of which only the American is master. I am sure that when we
+sat down to table neither of these gentlemen had any intention of taking
+a hand in my concerns, and are probably ignorant to this day of ever
+having done so; but the fact remains.
+
+It begins with my desire to oblige Mrs. Brokenshire by trying to make
+the dinner a success. Having to lift the heaviest corner, so to speak, I
+gave myself to the task first with one of my neighbors and then with the
+other. They responded so well that as early as when the terrapin was
+reached I was doing it with both. As there was much animation about the
+table, there was nothing at that time to call attention to our talk.
+
+Naturally, it was about the war. From the war we passed to the attitude
+of the United States toward the struggle; and from that what could I do
+but glide to the topics as to which I felt myself a mouthpiece for Larry
+Strangways? It was a chance. Here were two men obviously of some
+influence in the country, and neither of them of very strong
+convictions, so far as I could judge, on any subject but that of
+floating foreign bonds. As the dust from a butterfly's wing might turn
+the scale with one or both of them, I endeavored to throw at least that
+much weight on the side of a British and American entente.
+
+At something I said, Mr. Russky, with the slightest hint of a Yiddish
+pronunciation, complained that I spoke as if all Americans were
+"Anglo-Zaxons"; whereas it was well known that the "Anglo-Zaxon" element
+among them was but a percentage, which was destined to grow less.
+
+"I'm not putting it on that ground," I argued, with some zeal, taking up
+a point as to which one of Larry Strangways's letters had enlightened
+me. "I see well enough that the American ideal isn't one of nationality,
+but of principle. When the federation of the States was completed it was
+on the basis not of a common Anglo-Saxon origin, but on that of the
+essential unity of mankind. Mere nationality was left out of the
+question. All nations were welcomed, with the idea of welding them into
+one."
+
+"And England," Mr. Russky declared, somewhat more loudly than was
+necessary for my hearing him, "is still bound up in her Anglo-Zaxondon."
+
+"Not a bit of it!" I returned. "Her spirit is exactly the same as that
+of this country. Except this country, where is there any other of which
+the gates and ports and homes and factories have been open to all
+nations as hers have been? They've landed on her shores in thousands and
+thousands, without passports and without restraint, welcomed and
+protected even when they've been taking the bread out of the born
+Englishman's mouth. Look at the number of foreigners they've been
+obliged to round up since the war began--for the simple reason that
+they'd become so many as to be a peril. It's the same not only in the
+British Islands, but in every part of the British Empire. Always the
+same reception for all, with liberty for all. My own country, in
+proportion to its population, is as full of citizens of foreign birth as
+this is. They've been fathered and mothered from the minute they landed
+at Halifax. Poles and Ruthenians and Slovaks and Icelanders have been
+given the same advantages as ourselves. I'm not boasting of this, Mr.
+Russky. I'm only saying that, though we've never defined the principle
+in a constitution, our instinct toward mankind is the same as yours."
+
+It was here Mr. Thorne broke in, saying that sympathy in the United
+States was all for France.
+
+"I can understand that," I said. "You often find in a family that the
+sympathy of each of the members is for some one outside. But that
+doesn't keep them from being a family, or from acting in important
+moments with a family's solidarity."
+
+"And, personally," Mr. Thorne went on, "I don't care for England."
+
+I laughed politely in his face.
+
+"And do you, a business man, say that? I thought business was carried on
+independently of personal regard. You might conceivably not like Mr.
+Warren or Mr. Casemente"--I named the two other banker guests--"or even
+Mr. Brokenshire; but you do business with them as if you loved them, and
+quite successfully, too. In the same way the Briton and the American
+might put personal fancies out of the question and co-operate for great
+ends."
+
+"Ah, but, young lady," Mr. Russky exclaimed, so noisily as to draw
+attention, "you forget that we're far from the scene of European
+disputes, and that our wisest course is to keep out of them!"
+
+I fell back again on what I had learned from Larry Strangways.
+
+"But you're not far from the past of mankind. You inherit that as much
+as any European; and it isn't an inheritance that can be limited
+geographically." I still quoted one of Larry Strangways's letters,
+knowing it by heart. "Every Russian and German and Jew and Italian and
+Scotchman who lands in New York brings a portion of it with him and
+binds the responsibility of the New World more closely to the sins of
+the Old. Oceans and continents will not separate us from sins. As we can
+never run away from our past, Americans must help to expiate what they
+and their ancestors have done in the countries from which they came.
+This isn't going to be a local war or a twentieth-century war. It's the
+struggle of all those who have had to bear the burdens of the world
+against those who have made them bear them."
+
+"If that was the case," Mr. Russky said, doubtfully, "Americans would be
+all on one side."
+
+"They will be all on one side--when they see it. The question is, Will
+they see it soon enough?"
+
+Being so interested I didn't notice that our immediate neighbors were
+listening, nor did I observe, what Cissie Boscobel told me afterward,
+that Hugh was dividing disquieting looks between me and his father. I
+did try to divert Mr. Thorne to giving his attention to Mrs. Burke, who
+was his neighbor on the right, but I couldn't make him take the hint. It
+was, in fact, he who said:
+
+"We've too many old grudges against England to keep step with her now."
+
+I smiled engagingly.
+
+"But you've no old grudges against the British Empire, have you?"
+
+"What do you mean?"
+
+"You've no old grudges against Canada, or Australia, or the West Indies,
+or New Zealand, or the Cape?"
+
+"N-no."
+
+"Nor even against Scotland or Wales or Ireland?"
+
+"N-no."
+
+"You recognize in all those countries a spirit more or less akin to your
+own, and one with which you can sympathize?"
+
+"Y-yes."
+
+"Then isn't that my point? You speak of England, and you see the
+southern end of an island between the North Sea and the Atlantic; but
+that's all you see. You forget Scotland and Ireland and Canada and
+Australia and South Africa. You think I'm talking of a country three
+thousand miles away, whereas it comes right up to your doors. It's on
+the borders of Maine and Michigan and Minnesota, and all along your
+line. That isn't Canada alone; it's the British Empire. It's the country
+with which you Americans have more to do than with any other in the
+world. It's the one you have to think of first. You may like some other
+better, but you can't get away from having it as your most pressing
+consideration the minute you pass your own frontiers. That," I declared,
+with a little laugh, "is what makes my entente important."
+
+"Important for England or for America?" Mr. Russky, as a citizen of the
+country he thought had most to give, was on his guard.
+
+"Important for the world!" I said, emphatically. "England and
+America--the British Empire and the United States--are both secondary in
+what I'm trying to say. I speak of them only as the two that can most
+easily line up together. When they've done that the rest will follow
+their lead. It's not to be an offensive and defensive alliance, or
+directed against any other power. It would be a starting-point, the
+beginning of world peace. It would also be an instance of what could be
+accomplished in the long run among all the nations of the world by
+mutual tolerance and common sense."
+
+As I made a little mock oratorical flourish there was a laugh from our
+part of the table. Some one sitting opposite called out, "Good!" I
+distinctly heard Mrs. Billing's cackle of a "Brava!" I ought to say,
+too, that, afraid of even the appearance of "holding forth," I had kept
+my tone lowered, addressing myself to my left-hand companion. If others
+stopped talking and listened it was because of the compulsion of the
+theme. It was a burning theme. It was burning in hearts and minds that
+had never given it a conscious thought; and, now that for a minute it
+was out in the open, it claimed them. True, it was an occasion meant to
+be kept free from the serious; but even in Newport we were beginning to
+understand that occasions kept free from the serious were over--perhaps
+for the rest of our time.
+
+After that the conversation in our neighborhood became general. With the
+exception of Hugh, who was not far away, every one joined in, aptly or
+inaptly, as the case might be, with pros and cons and speculations and
+anecdotes and flashes of wit, and a far deeper interest than I should
+have predicted. As Mrs. Brokenshire whispered after we regained the
+drawing-room, it had made the dinner go; and a number of women whom I
+hadn't known before came up and talked to me.
+
+But all that was only the curtain-raiser. It was not till the family
+were assembled in Mildred's room up-stairs that the real play began.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXV
+
+
+Mildred's big, heavily furnished room was as softly lighted as usual. As
+usual, she herself, in white, with a rug across her feet, lay on her
+couch, withdrawn from the rest. She never liked to have any one near
+her, unless it was Hugh; she never entered into general talk. When
+others were present she remained silent, as she did on this evening.
+Whatever passed through her mind she gave out to individuals when she
+was alone with them.
+
+The rest of the party were scattered about, standing or sitting. There
+were Jack and Pauline, Jim and Ethel Rossiter, Mrs. Billing, Mrs.
+Brokenshire, Cissie Boscobel, who was now staying with the Brokenshires,
+and Hugh. The two banker guests had gone back to the smoking-room. As I
+entered, Mr. Brokenshire was standing in his customary position of
+command, a little like a pasha in his seraglio, his back to the empty
+fireplace. With his handsome head and stately form, he would have been a
+truly imposing figure had it not been for his increased stoutness and
+the occasional working of his face.
+
+I had come up-stairs with some elation. The evening might have been
+called mine. Most of the men, on rejoining us in the drawing-room, had
+sought a word with me, and those who didn't know me inquired who I was.
+I could hardly help the hope that Mr. Brokenshire might see I was worth
+my salt, and that on becoming a member of his family I should bring my
+contribution.
+
+But on the way up-stairs Hugh gave me a hint that in that I might be
+mistaken.
+
+"Well, little Alix, you certainly gave poor old dad a shock this time."
+
+"A shock?" I asked, in not unnatural astonishment.
+
+"Your fireworks."
+
+"Fireworks! What on earth do you mean?"
+
+"It's always a shock when fireworks go off too close to you; and
+especially when it's in church."
+
+As we had reached the door of Mildred's room, I searched my conduct
+during dinner to see in what I had offended.
+
+It is possible my entry might have passed unnoticed if Mrs. Brokenshire,
+with the kindest intentions, had not come forward to the threshold and
+taken me by the hand. As if making a presentation, she led me toward the
+august figure before the fireplace.
+
+"Our little girl," she said, in the hope of doing me a good turn,
+"distinguished herself to-night, didn't she?"
+
+He must have been stung to sudden madness by the sight of the two of us
+together. In general he controlled himself in public. He was often
+cruel, but with a quiet subtle cruelty to which even the victims often
+didn't know how to take exception. But to-night the long-gathering fury
+of passion was incapable of further restraint. Behind it there was all
+the explosive force of a lifetime of pride, complacence, and self-love.
+The exquisite creature--a vision of soft rose, with six strings of
+pearls--who was parading her bargain, as you might say, without having
+paid for it, excited him to the point of frenzy. I saw later, what I
+didn't understand at the time, that he was striking at her through me.
+He was willing enough to strike at me, since I was the nobody who had
+forced herself into his family; but she was his first aim.
+
+Having looked at me disdainfully, he disdainfully looked away.
+
+"She certainly gave us an exhibition!" he said, with his incisive,
+whip-lash quietude.
+
+Mrs. Brokenshire dropped my hand.
+
+"Oh, Howard!"
+
+I think she backed away toward the nearest chair. I was vaguely
+conscious of curious eyes in the dimness about me as I stood alone
+before my critic.
+
+"I'm sorry if I've done anything wrong, Mr. Brokenshire," I said,
+meekly. "I didn't mean to."
+
+He looked over my head, speaking casually, as one who takes no interest
+in the subject.
+
+"All the great stupidities have been committed by people who didn't mean
+to--but there they are!"
+
+I continued to be meek.
+
+"I didn't know I had been stupid."
+
+"The stupid never do."
+
+"And I don't think I have been," I added, with rising spirit.
+
+Though there was consternation in the room behind me, Mr. Brokenshire
+merely said:
+
+"Unfortunately, you must let others judge of that."
+
+"But how?" I insisted. "If I have been, wouldn't it be a kindness on
+your part to tell me in what way?"
+
+He pretended not merely indifference, but reluctance.
+
+"Isn't that obvious?"
+
+"Not to me--and I don't think to any one else."
+
+"What do you call it when one--you compel me to speak frankly--what do
+you call it when one exposes one's ignorance of--of fundamental things
+before a roomful of people who've never set eyes on one before?"
+
+Since no one, not even Hugh, was brave enough to stand up for me, I had
+to do it for myself.
+
+"But I didn't know I had."
+
+"Probably not. It's what I warned you of, if you'll take the trouble to
+remember. I said--or it amounted to that--that until you'd learned the
+ways of the people who are generally recognized as _comme il faut_,
+you'd be wise in keeping yourself--unobtrusive."
+
+"And may I ask whether one becomes obtrusive merely in talking of public
+affairs?"
+
+"You'll pardon me for giving you a lesson before others; but, since you
+invite it--"
+
+"Quite so, Mr. Brokenshire, I do invite it."
+
+"Then I can only say that in what we call good society we become
+obtrusive in talking of things we know nothing about."
+
+"But surely one can set an idea going, even if one hasn't sounded all
+its depths. And as for the relations between this country and the
+British Empire--"
+
+"Well-bred women leave such subjects to statesmen."
+
+"Yes; we've done so. We've left them to statesmen and"--I couldn't
+resist the temptation to say it--"and we've left them to financiers; but
+we can't look at Europe and be proud of the result. We women, well bred
+or otherwise, couldn't make things worse even if we were to take a hand;
+and we might make them better."
+
+He was not moved from his air of slightly bored indifference.
+
+"Then you must wait for women with some knowledge of the subject."
+
+"But, Mr. Brokenshire, I have some knowledge of the subject! Though I'm
+neither English nor American, I'm both. I've only to shift from one side
+of my mind to the other to be either. Surely, when it comes to the
+question of a link between the two countries I love I'm qualified to put
+in a plea for it."
+
+I think his nerves were set further on edge because I dared to argue the
+point, though he would probably have been furious if I had not. His tone
+was still that of a man deigning no more than to fling out an occasional
+stinging remark.
+
+"As a future member of my family, you're not qualified to make yourself
+ridiculous before my friends. To take you humorously was the kindest
+thing they could do."
+
+I saw an opportunity.
+
+"Then wouldn't it be equally kind, sir, if you were to follow their
+example?"
+
+Mrs. Billing's hen-like crow came out of the obscurity:
+
+"She's got you there!"
+
+The sound incited him. He became not more irritable, but cruder.
+
+"Unhappily, that's beyond my power. I have to blush for my son Hugh."
+
+Hugh spoke out of the darkness, his voice trembling with the fear of his
+own hardihood in once more braving Jove.
+
+"Oh no, dad! You must take that back."
+
+The father wheeled round in the new direction. He was losing command of
+the ironic courtesy he secured by his air of indifference, and growing
+coarser.
+
+"My poor boy! I can't take it back. You're like myself--in that you can
+only be fooled when you put your trust in a woman."
+
+It was Mrs. Brokenshire's turn:
+
+"Howard--please!"
+
+In the cry there was the confession of the woman who has vowed and not
+paid, and yet begs to be spared the blame.
+
+Jack Brokenshire sprang to his feet and hurried forward, laying his hand
+on his father's arm.
+
+"Say, dad--"
+
+But Mr. Brokenshire shook off the hand, refusing to be placated. He
+looked at his wife, who had risen, confusedly, from her chair and was
+backing away from him to the other side of the room.
+
+"I said poor Hugh was being fooled by a woman; and he is. He's marrying
+some one who doesn't care a hang about him and who's in love with
+another man. He may not be the first in the family to do that, but I
+merely make the statement that he's doing it."
+
+Hugh leaped forward.
+
+"She's not in love with another man!"
+
+"Ask her."
+
+He clutched me by the wrist.
+
+"You're not, are you?" he pleaded. "Tell father you're not."
+
+I was so sorry for Hugh that I hardly thought of myself. I was benumbed.
+The suddenness of the attack had been like a blow from behind that stuns
+you without taking away your consciousness. In any case Mr. Brokenshire
+gave me no time, for he laughed gratingly.
+
+"She can't do that, my boy, because she is. Everybody knows it. I know
+it--and Ethel and Mildred and Cissie. They're all here and they can
+contradict me if I'm saying what isn't so."
+
+"But she may not know it herself," Mrs. Billing croaked. "A girl is
+often the last to make that discovery."
+
+"Ask her."
+
+Hugh obeyed, still clutching my wrist.
+
+"I'm asking you, little Alix. You're not, are you?"
+
+I could say nothing. Apart from the fact that I didn't knew what to say,
+I was dumbfounded by the way in which it had all come upon me. The only
+words that occurred to me were:
+
+"I think Mr. Brokenshire is ill."
+
+Oddly enough. I was convinced of that. It was the one assuaging fact. He
+might hate me, but he wouldn't have made me the object of this mad-bull
+rush if he had been in his right mind. He was not in his right mind; he
+was merely a blood-blinded animal as he went on:
+
+"Ask her again, Hugh. You're the only one she's been able to keep in the
+dark; but then"--his eyes followed his wife, who was still slowly
+retreating--"but then that's nothing new. She'll let you believe
+anything--till she gets you. That's always the game with women of the
+sort. But once you're fast in her clutches--then, my boy, look out!"
+
+I heard Pauline whisper, "Jack, for Heaven's sake, do something!"
+
+Once more Jack's hand was laid on his parent's arm, with his foolish
+"Say, dad--"
+
+Once more the restraining hand was shaken off. The cutting tones were
+addressed to Hugh:
+
+"You see what a hurry she's been in to be married, don't you? How many
+times has she asked you to do it up quick? She's been afraid that you'd
+slip through her fingers." He turned toward me. "Don't be alarmed, my
+dear. We shall keep our word. You've worked hard to capture the
+position, and I shall not deny that you've been clever in your attacks.
+You deserve what you've won, and you shall have it. But all in good
+time. Don't rush. The armies in Europe are showing us that you must
+intrench yourself where you are if you want, in the end, to push
+forward. You push a little too hard."
+
+Poor Hugh had gone white. He was twisting my wrist as if he would wring
+it off, though I felt no pain till afterward.
+
+"Tell me!" he whispered. "Tell me! You're--you're not marrying me
+for--for my money, are you?"
+
+I could have laughed hysterically.
+
+"Hugh, don't be an idiot!" came, scornfully, from Ethel Rossiter.
+
+I could see her get up, cross the room, and sit down on the edge of
+Mildred's couch, where the two engaged in a whispered conversation. Jim
+Rossiter, too, got up and tiptoed his sleek, slim person out of the
+room. Cissie Boscobel followed him. They talked in low tones at the head
+of the stairs outside. I found voice at last:
+
+"No, Hugh; I never thought of marrying you for that reason. I was doing
+it only because it seemed to me right."
+
+Mr. Brokenshire emitted a sound, meant to be a laugh:
+
+"Right! Oh, my God!"
+
+Mrs. Brokenshire was now no more than a pale-rose shadow on the farther
+side of the room, but she came to my aid:
+
+"She was, Howard. Please believe her. She was, really!"
+
+"Thanks, darling, for the corroboration! It comes well from you. Where
+there's a question of right you're an authority."
+
+Mrs. Billing's hoarse, prolonged "Ha-a!" implied every shade of
+comprehension. I saw the pale-rose shadow sink down on a sofa, all in a
+little heap, like something shot with smokeless powder.
+
+Hugh was twisting my wrist again and whispering:
+
+"Alix, tell me. Speak! What are you marrying me for? What about the
+other fellow? Is it Strangways? Speak!"
+
+"I've given you the only answer I can, Hugh. If you can't believe in my
+doing right--"
+
+"What were you in such a hurry for? Was that the reason--what dad
+says--that you were afraid you wouldn't--hook me?"
+
+I looked him hard in the eye. Though we were speaking in the lowest
+possible tones, there was a sudden stillness in the room, as though
+every one was hanging on my answer.
+
+"Have I ever given you cause to suspect me of that?" I asked, after
+thinking of what I ought to say.
+
+Three words oozed themselves out like three drops of his own blood. They
+were the distillation of two years' uncertainty:
+
+"Well--sometimes--yes."
+
+Either he dropped my wrist or I released myself. I only remember that I
+was twisting the sapphire-and-diamond ring on my finger.
+
+"What made you think so?" I asked, dully.
+
+"A hundred things--everything!" He gave a great gasp. "Oh, little Alix!"
+
+Turning away suddenly, he leaned his head against the mantelpiece, while
+his shoulders heaved.
+
+It came to me that this was the moment to make an end of it all; but I
+saw Mrs. Rossiter get up from her conference with Mildred and come
+forward. She did it leisurely, pulling up one shoulder of her décolleté
+gown as she advanced.
+
+"Hugh, don't be a baby!" she said, in passing. "Father, you ought to be
+ashamed of yourself!"
+
+If the heavens had fallen my amazement might have been less. She went on
+in a purely colloquial tone, extricating the lace of her corsage from a
+spray of diamond flowers as she spoke:
+
+"I'll tell you why she was marrying Hugh. It was for two or three
+reasons, every one of them to her credit. Any one who knows her and
+doesn't see that must be an idiot. She was marrying him, first, because
+he was kind to her. None of the rest of us was, unless it was Mrs.
+Brokenshire; and she was afraid to show it for fear you'd jump on her,
+father. The rest of us have treated Alix Adare like brutes. I know I
+have."
+
+"Oh no!" I protested, though I could scarcely make myself audible.
+
+"But Hugh was nice to her. He was nice to her from the start. And she
+couldn't forget it. No nice girl would. When he asked her to marry him
+she felt she had to. And then, when he put up his great big bluff of
+earning a living--"
+
+"It wasn't a bluff," Hugh contradicted, his face still buried in his
+hands.
+
+"Well, perhaps it wasn't," she admitted, imperturbably. "If you, father,
+hadn't driven him to it with your heroics--"
+
+"If you call it heroics that I should express my will--"
+
+"Oh your will! You seem to think that no one's got a will but you. Here
+we are, all grown up, two of us married, and you still try to keep us as
+if we were five years old. We're sick of it, and it's time some of us
+spoke. Jack's afraid to, and Mildred's too good; so it's up to me to say
+what I think."
+
+Mr. Brokenshire's first shock having passed, he got back something of
+his lordly manner, into which he threw an infusion of the misunderstood.
+
+"And you've said it sufficiently. When my children turn against me--"
+
+"Nonsense, father! Your children don't do anything of the sort. We're
+perfect sheep. You drive us wherever you like. But, however much we can
+stand ourselves, we can't help kicking when you attack some one who
+doesn't quite belong to us and who's a great deal better than we are."
+
+Mrs. Billing crowed again:
+
+"Brava, Ethel! Never supposed you had the pluck."
+
+Ethel turned her attention to the other side of her corsage.
+
+"Oh, it isn't a question of pluck; it's one of exasperation. Injustice
+after a while gets on one's nerves. I've had a better chance of knowing
+Alix Adare than any one; and you can take it from me that, when it comes
+to a question of breeding, she's the genuine pearl and we're only
+imitations--all except Mildred."
+
+Both of Mr. Brokenshire's handsome hands went up together. He took a
+step forward as if to save Mrs. Rossiter from a danger.
+
+"My daughter!"
+
+The pale-rose heap on the other side of the room raised its dainty head.
+
+"It's true, Howard; it's true! Please believe it!"
+
+Ethel went on in her easy way:
+
+"If Alix Adare has made any mistake it's been in ignoring her own
+wishes--I may say her own heart--in order to be true to us. The Lord
+knows she can't have respected us much, or failed to see that, judged by
+her standards, we're as common as grass when you compare it to orchids.
+But because she is an orchid she couldn't do anything but want to give
+us back better than she ever got from us; and so--"
+
+"Oh no; it wasn't that!" I tried to interpose.
+
+"It's no dishonor to her not to be in love with Hugh," she pursued,
+evenly. "She may have thought she was once; but what girl hasn't thought
+she was in love a dozen times? A fine day in April will make any one
+think it's summer already; but when June comes they know the difference.
+It was April when Hugh asked her; and now it's June. I'll confess for
+her. She is in love with--"
+
+"Please!" I broke in.
+
+She gave me another surprise.
+
+"Do run and get me my fan. It's over by Mildred. There's a love!"
+
+I had to do her bidding. The picture of the room stamped itself on my
+brain, though I didn't think of it at the time. It seemed rather empty.
+Jack had retired to one window, where he was smoking a cigarette;
+Pauline was at another, looking out at the moonlight on the water. Mrs.
+Billing sat enthroned in the middle, taking a subordinate place for
+once. Mrs. Brokenshire was on the sofa by the wall. The murmur of
+Ethel's voice, but no words, reached me as I stooped beside Mildred's
+couch to pick up the fan.
+
+The invalid took my hand. Her voice had the deep, low murmur of the sea.
+
+"You must forgive my father."
+
+"I do," I was able to say. "I--I like him in spite of everything--"
+
+"And as for my brother, you'll remember what we agreed upon once--that
+where we can't give all, our first consideration must be the value of
+what we withhold."
+
+I thanked her and went back with the fan. As I passed Mrs. Billing she
+snapped at me, with the enigmatic words:
+
+"You're a puss!"
+
+When I drew near to the group by the fireplace, Mrs. Rossiter was saying
+to Hugh:
+
+"And as for her marrying you for your money--well, you're crazy! I
+suppose she likes money as well as anybody else; but she would have
+married you to be loyal. She would have married you two months ago if
+father had been willing; and if you'd been willing you could now have
+been in England or France together, trying to do some good. If a woman
+marries one man when she's in love with another the right or the wrong
+depends on her motives. Who knows but what I may have done it myself? I
+don't say I haven't. And so--"
+
+But I had taken off the ring on my way across the room. Having returned
+the fan to Ethel, I went up to Hugh, who looked round at me over his
+shoulder.
+
+"Hugh, darling," I said, very softly, "I feel that I ought to give you
+back this."
+
+He put out his hand mechanically, not thinking of what I was about to
+offer. On seeing it he drew back his hand quickly, and the ring dropped
+on the floor. I can hear it still, rolling with a little rattle among
+the fire-irons.
+
+In making my curtsy to Mr. Brokenshire I raised my eyes to his face. It
+seemed to me curiously stricken. After all her years of submission Mrs.
+Rossiter's rebellion must have made him feel like an autocrat dethroned.
+I repeated my curtsy to Mrs. Billing, who merely stared at me through
+her lorgnette--to Jack and Pauline, who took no notice, who perhaps
+didn't see me--to Mrs. Brokenshire, who was again a little rose-colored
+heap--and to Mildred, who raised her long, white hand.
+
+In the hall outside Cissie Boscobel rose and came toward me.
+
+"You must look after Hugh," I said to her, breathlessly, as I sped on my
+way.
+
+She did. As I hurried down the stairs I heard her saying:
+
+"No, Hugh, no! She wants to go alone."
+
+
+
+
+ POSTSCRIPT
+
+
+I am writing in the dawn of a May morning in 1917.
+
+Before me lies a sickle of white beach some four or five miles in curve.
+Beyond that is the Atlantic, a mirror of leaden gray. Woods and fields
+bank themselves inland; here a dewy pasture, there a stretch of plowed
+earth recently sown and harrowed; elsewhere a grove of fir or maple or a
+hazel copse. From a little wooden house on the other side of the
+crescent of white sand a pillar of pale smoke is going straight up into
+the windless air. In the woods round me the birds, which have only just
+arrived from Florida, from the West Indies, from Brazil, are chirruping
+sleepily. They will doze again presently, to awake with the sunrise into
+the chorus of full song. Halifax lies some ten or twelve miles to the
+westward. This house is my uncle's summer residence, which he has lent
+to my husband and me for the latter's after-cure.
+
+I am used to being up at this hour, or at any hour, owing to my
+experience in nursing. As a matter of fact, I am restless with the
+beginning of day, fearing lest my husband may need me. He is in the next
+room. If he stirs I can hear him. In this room my baby is sleeping in
+his little bassinet. It is not the bassinet of my dreams, nor is this
+the white-enameled nursery, nor am I wearing a delicate lace peignoir.
+It is all much more beautiful than that, because it is as it is. My
+baby's name is John Howard Brokenshire Strangways, though we shorten it
+to Broke, which, in the English fashion, we pronounce Brook.
+
+You will see why I wanted to call him by this name; but for that I must
+hark back to the night when I returned the ring to dear Hugh Brokenshire
+and fled. It is like a dream to me now, that night; but a dream still
+vivid enough to recall.
+
+On escaping Hugh and making my way down-stairs I was lucky enough to
+find Thomas, my rosebud footman knight. Poor lad! The judgment trumpet
+was sounding for him, as for Franz Ferdinand and Sophie Chotek and the
+rest of us. He went back to England shortly after that and was killed
+the next year at the Dardanelles. But there he was for the moment,
+standing with the wraps of the Rossiter party.
+
+"Thomas, call the motor," I said, hurriedly. "Be quick! I'm going home,
+alone, and you must come with me. I've things for you to do. Mr. Jack
+Brokenshire will bring Mrs. Rossiter."
+
+On the way I explained my program to him through the window. I had been
+called suddenly to New York. There was a train from Boston to that city
+which would stop at Providence at two. I thought there was one from
+Newport to Providence about twelve-thirty, and it was now a quarter past
+eleven. If there was such a train I must take it; if there wasn't, the
+motor must run me up to Providence, for which there was still time. I
+should delay only long enough to pack a suit-case. For the use I was
+making of him and the chauffeur, as well as of the vehicle, I should be
+responsible to my hosts.
+
+Both the men being my tacitly sworn friends, there was no questioning of
+my authority. I fell back, therefore, into the depths of the limousine
+with the first sense of relief I had had since the day I accepted my
+position with Mrs. Rossiter. Something seemed to roll off me. I realized
+all at once that I had never, during the whole of the two years, been
+free from that necessity of picking my steps which one must have in
+walking on a tight-rope. Now it was delicious. I could have wished that
+the drive along Ochre Point Avenue had been thirty times as long.
+
+For Hugh I had no feeling of compunction. It was so blissful to be free.
+Cissie Boscobel, I knew, would make up to him for all I had failed to
+give, and would give more. Let me say at once that when, a few weeks
+later, the man Lady Janet Boscobel was engaged to had also been killed
+at the front, and her parents had begged Cissie to go home, Hugh was her
+escort on the journey. It was the beginning of an end which I think is
+in sight, of a healing which no one wishes so eagerly as I.
+
+For the last two years Cissie has been mothering Belgian children
+somewhere in the neighborhood of Poperinghe, and Hugh has been in the
+American Ambulance Corps before Verdun. That was Cissie's work, made
+easier, perhaps, by some recollection he retained of me. When he has a
+few days' leave--so Ethel Rossiter writes me--he spends it at
+Goldborough Castle or Strath-na-Cloid. I ran across Cissie when for a
+time I was helping in first-aid work not far behind the lines at Neuve
+Chapelle.
+
+I had been taking care of her brother Rowan--Lord Ovingdean, he calls
+himself now, hesitating to follow his brother as Lord Leatherhead, and
+using one of his father's other secondary titles--and she had come to
+see him. I hadn't supposed till then that we were such friends. We
+talked and talked and talked, and still would have gone on talking. I
+can understand what she sees in Hugh, though I could never feel it for
+him with her intensity. I hope her devotion will be rewarded soon, and
+I think it will.
+
+I had a premonition of this as I drove along Ochre Point Avenue that
+night. It helped me to the joy of liberty, to rightness of heart. As I
+threw the things into my suit-case I could have sung. Séraphine, who was
+up, waiting for her mistress, being also my friend, promised to finish
+my packing after I had gone, so that Mrs. Rossiter would have nothing to
+do but send my boxes after me. It couldn't have been half an hour after
+my arrival at the house before I was ready to drive away again.
+
+I was in the down-stairs hall, going out to the motor, when a great
+black form appeared in the doorway. My knees shook under me; my
+happiness came down like a shot bird. Mr. Brokenshire advanced and stood
+under the many-colored Oriental hall lantern. I clung for support to the
+pilaster that finished the balustrade of the stairway.
+
+There was gentleness in his voice, in spite of its whip-lash abruptness.
+
+"Where are you going?"
+
+I could hardly reply, my heart pounded with such fright.
+
+"To--to New York, sir."
+
+"What for?"
+
+"Be-because," I faltered. "I want to--to get away."
+
+"Why do you want to get away?"
+
+"For--for every reason."
+
+"But suppose I don't want you to go?"
+
+"I should still have to be gone."
+
+He said in a hoarse whisper:
+
+"I want you to stay--and--and marry Hugh."
+
+I clasped my hands.
+
+"Oh, but how can I?"
+
+"He's willing to forget what you've said--what my daughter Ethel has
+said; and I'm willing to forget it, too."
+
+"Do you mean as to my being in love with some one else? But I am."
+
+"Not more than you were at the beginning of the evening. You were
+willing to marry him then."
+
+"But he didn't know then what he's had to learn since. I hoped to have
+kept it from him always. I may have been wrong--I suppose I was; but I
+had nothing but good motives."
+
+There was a strange drop in his voice as he said, "I know you hadn't."
+
+I couldn't help taking a step nearer him.
+
+"Oh, do you? Then I'm so glad. I thought--"
+
+He turned slightly away from me, toward a huge ugly fish in a glass
+case, which Mr. Rossiter believed to be a proof of his sportsmanship and
+an ornament to the hall.
+
+"I've had great trials," he said, after a pause--"great trials!"
+
+[Illustration: "I'VE HAD GREAT TRIALS . . . I'VE ALWAYS BEEN MISJUDGED.
+. . . THEY'VE PUT ME DOWN AS HARD AND PROUD"]
+
+"I know," I agreed, softly.
+
+He walked toward the fish and seemed to be studying it.
+
+"They've--they've--broken me down."
+
+"Oh, don't say that, sir!"
+
+"It's true." His finger outlined the fish's skeleton from head to tail.
+"The things I said to-night--" He seemed hung up there. He traced the
+fish's skeleton back from tail to head. "Have we been unkind to you?" he
+demanded, suddenly, wheeling round in my direction.
+
+I thought it best to speak quite truthfully.
+
+"Not unkind, sir--exactly."
+
+"But what did Ethel mean? She said we'd been brutes to you. Is that
+true?"
+
+"No, sir; not in my sense. I haven't felt it."
+
+He tapped his foot with the old imperiousness. "Then--what?"
+
+We were so near the fundamentals that again I felt I ought to give him
+nothing but the facts.
+
+"I suppose Mrs. Rossiter meant that sometimes I should have been glad of
+a little more sympathy, and always of more--courtesy." I added: "From
+you, sir, I shouldn't have asked for more than courtesy."
+
+Though only his profile was toward me and the hall was dim, I could see
+that his face was twitching. "And--and didn't you get it?"
+
+"Do you think I did?"
+
+"I never thought anything about it."
+
+"Exactly; but any one in my position does. Even if we could do without
+courtesy between equals--and I don't think we can--from the higher to
+the lower--from you to me, for instance--it's indispensable. I don't
+remember that I ever complained of it, however. Mrs. Rossiter must have
+seen it for herself."
+
+"I didn't want you to marry Hugh," he began, again, after a long pause;
+"but I'd given in about it. I shouldn't have minded it so much if--if my
+wife--"
+
+He broke off with a distressful, choking sound in the throat, and a
+twisting of the head, as if he couldn't get his breath. That passed and
+he began once more.
+
+"I've had great trials. . . . My wife! . . . And then the burden of this
+war. . . . They think--they think I don't care anything about it
+but--but just to make money. . . . I've always been misjudged. . . .
+They've put me down as hard and proud, when--"
+
+"I could have liked you, sir," I interrupted, boldly. "I told you so
+once, and it offended you. But I've never been able to help it. I've
+always felt that there was something big and fine in you--if you'd only
+set it free."
+
+His reply to this was to turn away from his contemplation of the fish
+and say:
+
+"Why don't you come back?"
+
+I was sure it was best to be firm.
+
+"Because I can't, sir. The episode is--is over. I'm sorry, and yet I'm
+glad. What I'm doing is right. I suppose everything has been right--even
+what happened between me and Hugh. I don't think it will do him any
+harm--Cissie Boscobel is there--and it's done me good. It's been a
+wonderful experience; but it's over. It would be a mistake for me to go
+back now--a mistake for all of us. Please let me go, sir; and just
+remember of me that I'm--I'm--grateful."
+
+He regarded me quietly and--if I may say so--curiously. There was
+something in his look, something broken, something defeated, something,
+at long last, kind, that made me want to cry.
+
+I was crying inwardly when he turned about, without another word, and
+walked toward the door.
+
+It must have been the impulse to say a silent good-by to him that sent
+me slowly down the hall, though I was scarcely aware of moving. He had
+gone out into the dark and I was under the Oriental lamp, when he
+suddenly reappeared, coming in my direction rapidly. I would have leaped
+back if I hadn't refused to show fear. As it was, I stood still. I was
+only conscious of an overwhelming pity, terror, and amazement as he
+seized me and kissed me hotly on the brow. Then he was gone.
+
+But it was that kiss which made all the difference in my afterthought of
+him. It was a confession on his part, too, and a bit of self-revelation.
+Behind it lay a nature of vast, splendid qualities--strong, noble,
+dominating, meant to be used for good--all ruined by self-love. Of the
+Brokenshire family, of whom I am so fond and to whom I owe so much, he
+was the one toward whom, by some blind, spontaneous, subconscious
+sympathy of my own, I have been most urgently attracted. If his soul was
+twisted by passions as his face became twisted by them, too--well, who
+is there among us of whom something of the sort may not be said; and yet
+God has patience with us all.
+
+Howard Brokenshire and I were foes, and we fought; but we fought as so
+many thousands, so many millions, have fought in the short time since
+that day; we fought as those who, when the veils are suddenly stripped
+away, when they are helpless on the battle-field after the battle, or on
+hospital cots lined side by side, recognize one another as men and
+brethren. And so, when my baby was born I called him after him. I wanted
+the name as a symbol--not only to myself, but to the Brokenshire
+family--that there was no bitterness in my heart.
+
+At present let me say that, though pained, I was scarcely surprised to
+read in the New York papers on the following afternoon that Mr. J.
+Howard Brokenshire, the eminent financier, had, on the previous evening,
+been taken with a paralytic seizure while in his motor on the way from
+his daughter's house to his own. He was conscious when carried indoors,
+but he had lost the power of speech. The doctors indicated overwork in
+connection with foreign affairs as the predisposing cause.
+
+From Mrs. Rossiter I heard as each successive shock overtook him. Very
+pitifully the giant was laid low. Very tenderly--so Ethel has written
+me--Mrs. Brokenshire has watched over him--and yet, I suppose, with a
+terrible tragic expectation in her heart, which no one but myself, and
+perhaps Stacy Grainger, can have shared with her. Howard Brokenshire
+died on that early morning when his country went to war.
+
+I stayed in New York just long enough to receive my boxes from Newport.
+On getting out of the train at Halifax Larry Strangways received me in
+his arms.
+
+And this time I saw no little dining-room, with myself seating the
+guests; I saw no bassinet and no baby. I saw nothing but him. I knew
+nothing but him. He was all to me. It was the difference.
+
+And not the least of my surprises, when I came to find out, was the fact
+that it was Jim Rossiter who had sent him there--Jim Rossiter, whom I
+had rather despised as a selfish, cat-like person, with not much thought
+beyond "ridin' and racin'," and pills and medicinal waters. That was
+true of him; and yet he took the trouble to get into touch with Stacy
+Grainger--as a Brokenshire only by affinity, he could do it--to use his
+influence at Washington and Ottawa to get Larry Strangways a week's
+leave from Princess Patricia's regiment--to watch over my movements in
+New York and know the train I should take--and wire to Larry Strangways
+the hour of my arrival. When I think of it I grow maudlin at the thought
+of the good there is in every one.
+
+We were married within the week at the old church which was once a
+center for Loyalist refugees from New England, beneath which some of
+them lie buried, and where I was baptized. When my husband returned to
+Valcartier I went--to be near him--to Quebec. After he sailed for
+England I, too, sailed, and met him there. I kept near him in England,
+taking such nursing training as I could while he trained in other ways.
+I was not many miles away from him when, in the spring of the next
+year, he was badly cut up at Bois Grenier, near Neuve Chapelle.
+
+He was one of the two or three Canadians to hold a listening post
+half-way between the hostile lines, where they could hear the slightest
+movement of the enemy and signal back. A Maxim swept the dugout at
+intervals, and now and then a shell burst near them. My husband was
+wounded in a leg and his right arm was shattered.
+
+When I was permitted to see him at Amiens the arm had been taken off and
+the doctors were doing what they could to save the leg. Fortunately,
+they have succeeded; and now he walks with no more than a noticeable
+limp. He is a captain in Princess Patricia's regiment and a D. S. O.
+
+Later he was taken to the American Women's Hospital, at Paignton, in
+Devonshire, and there again I had the joy of being near him. I couldn't
+take care of him--I had not the skill, and perhaps my nerve would have
+failed me--but I worked in the kitchen and was sometimes allowed to take
+him his food and feed him. I think the hope, the expectation, of my
+doing this was what brought him out of the profound silence into which
+he was plunged when he arrived.
+
+That was the only sign of mental suffering I ever saw in him. For the
+physical suffering he never seemed to care. But something deep and far
+off, and beyond the beyond of self-consciousness, seemed to have been
+reached by what he had seen and heard and done. It was said of Lazarus,
+after his recall to life by Christ, that he never spoke of what he had
+experienced in those four days; and I can say as much of my husband.
+
+When his mind reverts to the months in France and Flanders he grows
+dumb. He grows dumb and his spirit moves away from me. It moves away
+from me and from everything that is of this world. It is among scenes
+past speech, past understanding, past imagining. He is Lazarus back in
+the world, but with secrets in his keeping which no one may learn but
+those who have learned them where he did.
+
+When he came to Paignton he was far removed from us; but little by
+little he reapproached. I helped to restore him; and then, when the baby
+was born, the return to earth was quickened.
+
+To have my baby I went over to Torquay, where I had six quiet contented
+weeks in a room overlooking the peacock-blue waters of Tor Bay, with the
+kindly roof that sheltered my husband in the distance. When I had
+recovered I went to a cottage at Paignton, where, when he left the
+hospital, he joined me. As the healing of the leg has been so slow, we
+have been in the lovely Devon country ever since, till, a few weeks ago,
+the British Government allowed us to cross on the ship that brought the
+British Commissioners to Washington.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I have just been in to look at him. He is sound asleep, lying on his
+left side, the coverlet sagging slightly at the shoulder where the right
+arm is gone. He is getting accustomed to using his left hand, but not
+rapidly. Meantime he is my other baby; and, in a way, I love to have it
+so. I can be more to him. In proportion as he needs me the bond is
+closer.
+
+He is a grave man now. The smile that used to flash like a sword between
+us is never there any more. When he smiles it is with a long, slow smile
+that comes from far away--perhaps from life as it was before the war. It
+is a sweet smile, a brave one, one infinitely touching; and it pierces
+me to the heart.
+
+He didn't have to forfeit his American citizenship in becoming one of
+the glorious Princess Pats. They were glad to have him on any terms. He
+is an American and I am one. I thought I became one without feeling any
+difference. It seemed to me I had been born one, just as I had been born
+a subject of the dear old queen. But on the night of our landing in
+Halifax, a military band came and played the "Star-spangled Banner"
+before my uncle's door, and I burst into the first tears I had shed
+since my marriage.
+
+Through everything else I had been upheld; but at the strains of that
+anthem, and all it implied, I broke down helplessly. When we went to the
+door and my husband stood to listen to the cheering of my friends, in
+his khaki with the empty sleeve, and the fine, stirring, noble air was
+played again, his eyes, as well as mine, were wet.
+
+It recalled to me what he said once when I was allowed to relieve the
+night nurse and sit beside him at Paignton. He woke in the small hours
+and smiled at me--his distant, dreamy smile. His only words--words he
+seemed to bring with him out of the lands of sleep, in which perhaps he
+lived again what now was past for him--his only words were:
+
+"You know the Stars and Stripes were at Bois Grenier."
+
+"How?" I asked, to humor him, thinking him delirious.
+
+He laughed--the first thing that could be called a laugh since they had
+brought him there.
+
+"Sewn or my undershirt--over my heart! It will be there again," he
+added, "floating openly!"
+
+And almost immediately he fell asleep once more.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+And, after all, it is to be there again--floating openly. The
+time-struggle has taken it and will carry it aloft. It has taken other
+flags, too--flags of Asia; flags of South America; flags of the islands
+of the seas. As my husband predicted long ago, mankind is divided into
+just two camps. So be it! God knows I don't want war. I have been too
+near it, and too closely touched by it, ever to wish again to hear a
+cannon-shot or see a sword. But I suppose it is all a part of the great
+War in Heaven.
+
+Michael and his angels are fighting, and the dragon is fighting and his
+angels. By that I do not mean that all the good is on one side and all
+the evil on the other. God forbid! There is good and evil on both sides.
+On both sides doubtless evil is being purged away and the new, true man
+is coming to his own.
+
+If I think most of the spiritualization of France, and the consecration
+of the British Empire, and the coming of a new manhood to the United
+States, it is because these are the countries I know best. I should be
+sorry, I should be hopeless, were I not to believe that, above
+bloodshed, and cruelty, and hatred, and lust, and suffering, and all
+that is abominable, the Holy Ghost is breathing on every nation of
+mankind.
+
+When it is all over, and we have begun to live again, there will be a
+great Renaissance. It will be what the word implies--a veritable New
+Birth. The sword shall be beaten to a plowshare and the spear to a
+pruning-hook. "Nation shall not lift up sword against nation, neither
+shall they learn war any more."
+
+So, in this gray light, growing so silvery that as day advances it
+becomes positively golden, I turn to my Bible. It is extraordinary how
+comforting the Bible has become in these days when hearts have been
+lifted up into long-unexplored regions of terror and courage. Men and
+women who had given up reading it, men and women who have never read it
+at all, turn its pages with trembling hands and find the wisdom of the
+ages. And so I read what for the moment have become to me its most
+strengthening words:
+
+ In your patience possess ye your souls. . . . There shall be
+ signs in the sun, and in the moon, and in the stars; and upon
+ the earth distress of nations, with perplexity; the sea and the
+ waves roaring; men's hearts failing them for fear, and for
+ looking after those things which are coming on the earth; for
+ the powers of heaven shall be shaken. . . . And when these
+ things begin to come to pass, then look up, and lift up your
+ heads; for your redemption draweth nigh.
+
+That is what I believe--that through this travail of the New Birth for
+all mankind redemption is on the way.
+
+It is coming like the sunrise I now see over the ocean. In it are the
+glories that never were on land or sea. It paints the things which have
+never entered into the heart of man, but which God has prepared for them
+that love him. It is the future; it is Heaven. Not a future that no man
+will live to see; not a Heaven beyond death and the blue sky. It is a
+future so nigh as to be at the doors; it is the Kingdom of Heaven within
+us.
+
+Meantime there is saffron pulsating into emerald, and emerald into rose,
+and rose into lilac, and lilac into pearl, and pearl into the great gray
+canopy that has hardly as yet been touched with light.
+
+And the great gray ocean is responding a fleck of color here, a hint of
+glory there; and now, stealing westward, from wavelet to wavelet,
+stealing and ever stealing, nearer and still more near, a wide, golden
+pathway, as if some Mighty One were coming straight to me. "Even so,
+come, Lord Jesus."
+
+Even so I look up, and lift up my head. Even so I possess my soul in
+patience.
+
+Even so, too, I think of Mildred Brokenshire's words:
+
+"Life is not a blind impulse, working blindly. It is a beneficent,
+rectifying power."
+
+
+ THE END
+
+
+ =Transcriber's Notes:=
+ original hyphenation, spelling and grammar have been preserved as in
+ the original
+ Page 8, "won't he Miss" changed to "won't be Miss"
+ Page 32, "was to indignant" changed to "was too indignant"
+ Page 43, "what is is" changed to "what it is"
+ Page 72, "shoulder. "No" changed to "shoulder, "No"
+ Page 84, "Glady's" changed to "Gladys's"
+ Page 85, "Glady's" changed to "Gladys's"
+ Page 93, "presisted" changed to "persisted"
+ Page 129, "waistcoat. a slate-colored" changed to "waistcoat, a
+ slate-colored"
+ Page 150, "come an and" changed to "come and"
+ Page 178, "stammer the words" changed to "stammer the words--"
+ Page 211, "well received His" changed to "well received. His"
+ Page 230, "your hand but" changed to "your hand, but"
+ Page 235, "put in it my" changed to "put it in my"
+ Page 235, "'I could be" changed to '"I could be'
+ Page 268, "at last "but" changed to "at last, "but"
+ Page 293, "'So much that" changed to '"So much that'
+ Page 297, "The darlings!'" changed to 'The darlings!"'
+ Page 312, "ligthning" changed to "lightning"
+ Page 333, "must be true" changed to "must be true."
+ Page 334, "broke in, quietly" changed to "broke in, quietly."
+ Page 398, "dumfounded" changed to "dumbfounded"
+ Page 409, "want you so stay" changed to "want you to stay"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The High Heart, by Basil King
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+ The Project Gutenberg eBook of The High Heart, by Basil King.
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+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The High Heart, by Basil King
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The High Heart
+
+Author: Basil King
+
+Release Date: March 3, 2011 [EBook #35463]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE HIGH HEART ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Barbara Watson, Ross Cooling and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Canada Team at
+http://www.pgdpcanada.net (This file was produced from
+images generously made available by The Internet
+Archive/Canadian Libraries)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+<br /><br />
+<h3><span class="smcap">Books by the</span></h3>
+<h2>AUTHOR OF "THE INNER SHRINE"</h2>
+
+<h3>[BASIL KING]</h3>
+
+<h3>THE HIGH HEART. Illustrated.<br />
+THE LIFTED VEIL. Illustrated.<br />
+THE SIDE OF THE ANGELS. Illustrated.<br />
+THE LETTER OF THE CONTRACT. Illustrated.<br />
+THE WAY HOME. Illustrated.<br />
+THE WILD OLIVE. Illustrated.<br />
+THE INNER SHRINE. Illustrated.<br />
+THE STREET CALLED STRAIGHT. Illustrated.<br />
+LET NOT MAN PUT ASUNDER. Post 8vo.<br />
+IN THE GARDEN OF CHARITY. Post 8vo.<br />
+THE STEPS OF HONOR. Post 8vo.<br />
+THE GIANT'S STRENGTH. Post 8vo.</h3>
+
+<hr style='width: 15%;' />
+
+<h3>HARPER &amp; BROTHERS, NEW YORK</h3>
+<h4><span class="smcap">Established</span> 1817</h4>
+
+
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+<a name="ILLO_1" id="ILLO_1"></a>
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%;">
+<img src="images/000c.jpg" width="345" height="393" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+<h4>"<span class="smcap">i've been thinking a good deal during the past few weeks
+of your law of Right</span>"</h4>
+
+
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+<h1>THE HIGH HEART</h1>
+<br />
+<h3>BY</h3>
+<h2>BASIL KING</h2>
+<h4>AUTHOR OF<br />
+"<i>The Inner Shrine</i>" "<i>The Lifted Veil</i>" <i>Etc.</i></h4>
+<br />
+<h3>ILLUSTRATED</h3>
+<br /><br /><br />
+<h2>HARPER &amp; BROTHERS PUBLISHERS</h2>
+<h3>NEW YORK AND LONDON</h3>
+
+
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+<h4><span class="smcap">The High Heart</span></h4>
+<hr style="width: 15%;" />
+<h4>Copyright, 1917, by Harper &amp; Brothers<br />
+Printed in the United States of America<br />
+Published September, 1917</h4>
+
+
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+<h2>ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
+
+<table summary="Illustrations" width="80%">
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl"><a href="#ILLO_1">"<span class="smcap">I've Been Thinking a Good Deal During the
+Past Few Weeks of Your Law of Right</span>"</a></td>
+<td class="tdr"><i>Frontispiece</i></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl"><a href="#ILLO_2"><span class="smcap">The Marriage She Had Missed Was on Her Mind.
+It Created an Obsession or a Broken Heart, I Wasn't Quite Sure Which</span></a></td>
+<td class="tdr"><i>Facing p.</i> 118</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl"><a href="#ILLO_3"><span class="smcap">I Saw a Man and a Woman Consumed with Longing
+for Each Other</span></a></td>
+<td class="tdr">"&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;192</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdl"><a href="#ILLO_4">"<span class="smcap">I've Had Great Trials . . . I've Always Been
+Misjudged. . . . They've Put Me Down as Hard and Proud</span>"</a></td>
+<td class="tdr">"&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;410</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+<h1>THE HIGH HEART</h1>
+
+<br />
+<h2>CHAPTER I</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="dropcap">I</span> could not have lived in the Brokenshire circle for nearly a year
+without recognizing the fact that in the eyes of his family J. Howard,
+as he was commonly called by the world, was the Great Dispenser; but my
+first intimation that he meant to act in that capacity toward me came
+from Larry Strangways, on a bright July morning during the summer of
+1913, when we were at Newport.</p>
+
+<p>I was crossing the lawn, going toward the sea, with little Gladys
+Rossiter, to whom I acted as companion in the hours when she was out of
+the nursery, with a specific duty to speak French. Larry Strangways was
+tutor to the Rossiter boy, and in our relative positions we were bound
+to exercise toward each other a good deal of discretion. We fraternized
+with constraint. We fraternized because&mdash;well, chiefly because we
+couldn't help it. In the mocking flare of his eye, which contradicted
+the assumed young gravity of his manner, I read an opinion of the
+Rossiter household and of the Brokenshire family in general similar to
+my own. That would have been enough for mutual comprehension had there
+been no instinctive sympathies between us; but there were. Allowing for
+the fact that we were of different nationalities, we had the same kind
+of antecedents; we spoke the same kind of social language; we had the
+same kind of aims in life. Neither of us regarded the position in the
+Rossiter establishment as a permanent status. He was a tutor merely for
+the minute, while feeling his way to that first rung of the ladder which
+I was convinced would lead him to some high place in American life. I
+was a nursery governess only on the way to getting married. Matrimony
+was the continent toward which more or less consciously I had been
+traveling for five or six years, without having actually descried a
+port. In this connection I may relate a little incident which had taken
+place between myself and Mrs. Rossiter after I had accepted my situation
+in her family. It will retard my meeting with Larry Strangways on the
+lawn, but it will throw light on it when it comes.</p>
+
+<p>I had met Mrs. Rossiter, who was J. Howard Brokenshire's daughter, in
+the way that is known as socially. I never understood why she should
+have taken a house for the summer in our quiet old town of Halifax,
+unless she was urged to it by the vague restlessness which was one of
+her characteristics. But there she was in a roomy old brick mansion I
+had known all my life, with gardens and conservatories and lawns running
+down to the fiord or back-harbor which we call the Northwest Arm, and a
+fine English air of seclusion. In our easy, neighborly way she was well
+received, and made herself agreeable. She flirted with the officers of
+both Army and Navy enough to create talk without raising scandal; and
+she was sufficiently good-natured to be civil to us girls, among whom
+she singled me out for attentions. I attributed this kindness to our
+recent bereavement and financial crash, which had left me poor after
+twenty-four years of comfort, and was proportionately grateful. It was
+partly gratitude, and partly a natural love of children, and partly a
+special affection for the exquisite thing herself, that drew me to
+little Gladys Rossiter, to playing with her on the lawns, and rowing her
+on the Arm, and&mdash;as I had been for three or four years at school in
+Paris&mdash;dropping into a habit of lisping French to her. As the child
+liked me the mother left her more and more to my care, gaining thus the
+greater scope for her innocuous flirtations.</p>
+
+<p>It was toward the end of the summer that Mrs. Rossiter began to sigh, "I
+don't know how I shall ever tear Gladys away from you," and, "I do wish
+you were coming with us."</p>
+
+<p>I wished it in a way myself, since I was rather at a loss as to what to
+do. I had never expected to have to earn a living; I had expected to get
+married. My two elder sisters, Louise and Victoria, had married easily
+enough, the one in the Navy, the other in the Army; but with me suitors
+seemed to lag. They came and saw&mdash;but they never went far enough for
+conquest. I couldn't understand it. I was not stupid; I was not ugly;
+and I was generally spoken of as having charm. But there was the fact
+that I was twenty-four, with scarcely a penny, and drawing nearer and
+nearer to the end of my expedients. I was not without some social
+experience, having kept house in a generous way for my widowed father,
+till his death, some two years before the summer when I met Mrs.
+Rossiter, brought with it our financial collapse. If he hadn't left a
+lot of old books&mdash;<i>Canadiana</i>, the pamphlets were called&mdash;and rare first
+editions of all kinds, which I took over to London and sold at
+Sothbey's, I shouldn't have had enough on which to dress. This business
+being settled, I stayed as long as I decently could with Louise at
+Southsea and Victoria at Gibraltar; but no man asked me to marry him
+during the course of either visit. Had there been a sign of any such
+possibility the sisters would have put themselves out to keep me; but as
+nothing warranted them in doing so they let me go. An uncle and aunt
+having offered to give me shelter for a time at Halifax, there was
+nothing left for it but to go back and renew the search for my fortunes
+in my native town.</p>
+
+<p>When, therefore, Mrs. Rossiter, in her pretty, helpless way said to me
+one day, "Why shouldn't you come with me, dear Miss Adare?" I jumped
+inwardly at the opportunity, though I smiled and replied in an offhand
+manner, "Oh, that would have to be discussed."</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Rossiter admitted the truth of this observation somewhat pensively.
+I know now that I took her up with too much promptitude.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, of course," she returned, absently, and the subject was dropped.</p>
+
+<p>It was taken up again, however, and our bargain made. On Mrs. Rossiter's
+part it was made astutely, not in the matter of money, but in the way in
+which she shifted me from the position of a friend into that of a
+retainer. It was done with the most perfect tact, but it was done. I had
+no complaint to make. What she wanted was a nursery governess. My own
+first preoccupations were food and shelter for which I should not be
+dependent on my kin. We came to the incident I am about to relate very
+gradually; but when we did come to it I had no difficulty in seeing that
+it had been in the back of Mrs. Rossiter's mind from the first. It had
+been the cause of that second thought on the day when I had taken her up
+too readily.</p>
+
+<p>She began by telling me about her father. Beyond the fact that some man
+who seemed to be specially well informed would occasionally say with
+awe, "She's J. Howard Brokenshire's daughter," I knew nothing whatever
+about him. But I began to see him now as the central sun round whom all
+the Brokenshires revolved. They revolved round him, not so much from
+adoration or even from natural affection as from some tremendous rotary
+force to which there was no resistance.</p>
+
+<p>Up to this time I had heard no more of American life than American life
+had heard of me. The great country south of our border was scarcely on
+my map. The Halifax in which I was born and grew up was not the bustling
+Canadian port, dependent on its hinterland, it is to-day; it was an
+outpost of England, with its face always turned to the Atlantic and the
+east. My own face had been turned the same way. My home had been
+literally a jumping-off place, in that when we left it we never expected
+to go in any but the one direction. I had known Americans when they came
+into our midst as summer visitors, but only in the way one knows the
+stars which dawn and fade and leave no trace of their passage on actual
+happenings.</p>
+
+<p>In the course of Mrs. Rossiter's confidences I began to see a vast
+cosmogony beyond my own personal sun, with J. Howard Brokenshire as the
+pivot of the new universe. With a curious little shock of surprise I
+discovered that there could be other solar systems besides the one to
+which I was accustomed, and that Canada was not the whole of North
+America. It was like looking through a telescope which Mrs. Rossiter
+held to my eye, a telescope through which I saw the nebular evidence of
+an immense society, wealthy, confused, more intellectual than our own,
+but more provincial too, perhaps; more isolated, more timid, more
+conservative, less instinct with the great throb of national and
+international impulse which all of us feel who live on the imperial red
+line and, therefore, less daring, but interesting all the same. I began
+to glow with the spirit of adventure. My position as a nursery governess
+presented the opportunities not merely of a Livingstone or a Stanley,
+but of a Galileo or a Copernicus.</p>
+
+<p>I learned that Mrs. Rossiter's mother had been a Miss Brew, and that the
+Brews were a great family in Boston. She was the mother of all Mr.
+Brokenshire's children. By looks and hints and sighs I gathered from
+Mrs. Rossiter that her father's second marriage had been a trial to his
+family. Not that there had been any social descent. On the contrary, the
+present Mrs. Brokenshire had been Editha Billing, of Philadelphia, and
+there could be nothing better than that. It was a question of fitness,
+of necessity, of age. "There was no need for him to marry again at all,"
+Mrs. Rossiter complained. "If she'd only been a middle-aged woman," she
+said to me later, "we might not have felt. . . . But she's younger than
+Mildred and only a year or two older than I am." "Oh yes," was another
+remark, "she's pretty; very pretty . . . but I often&mdash;wonder."</p>
+
+<p>She described her brothers and her sister by degrees. One day she told
+me about Mildred, another about Jack, so coming toward her point.
+Mildred was the eldest of the family, a great invalid. She had been
+thrown from her horse years before while hunting in England, and had
+injured her spine. Jack had just gone into business with his father, and
+had married Pauline Gray, of Baltimore. Though she didn't say it in so
+many words I judged that it was not a happy marriage in the highest
+sense&mdash;that Jack was somewhat light of love, while Pauline "went her own
+way" to a degree that made her talked about. It was not till the day
+before her departure for New York that Mrs. Rossiter mentioned her
+younger brother, Hugh.</p>
+
+<p>I was helping her to pack&mdash;that is, I was helping the maid while Mrs.
+Rossiter directed. Just at that minute, however, she was standing up,
+shaking out the folds of an evening dress. She seemed to peep at me
+round its garnishings as she said, apropos of nothing:</p>
+
+<p>"There's my brother Hugh. He's the youngest of us all&mdash;just twenty-six.
+He has no occupation as yet&mdash;he's just studying languages and things. My
+father wants him to go into diplomacy." As I caught her eye there was a
+smile in it, but a special kind of smile. It was the smile to go with
+the sensible, kindly, coaxing inflection with which she said, "You'll
+leave him alone, won't you?"</p>
+
+<p>I took the dress out of her hand to carry it to the maid in the next
+room.</p>
+
+<p>"Leave him alone&mdash;how?"</p>
+
+<p>She flushed to a lovely pink.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, you know what I mean. I don't have to explain."</p>
+
+<p>"You mean that in my position in the household it will be for me to&mdash;to
+keep out of his way?"</p>
+
+<p>"It's you who put it like that, dear Miss Adare&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"But it's the way you want me to put it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, if I admit that it is?"</p>
+
+<p>"Then I don't think I care for the place."</p>
+
+<p>"What?"</p>
+
+<p>I stated my position more simply.</p>
+
+<p>"If I'm to have nothing to do with your brother, Mrs. Rossiter, I don't
+want to go."</p>
+
+<p>In the audacity of this response she saw something that amused her, for,
+snatching the dress from my hand, she ran with it into the next room,
+laughing.</p>
+
+<p>During the following winter in New York and the early summer of the next
+year in Newport I saw a good deal of Mr. Hugh Brokenshire, but never
+with any violent restriction on the part of Mrs. Rossiter. I say
+violent with intention, for she did intervene when she could do so. Only
+once did I hear that she knew he was kind to me, and that was from Larry
+Strangways. It was an observation he had overheard as it passed from
+Mrs. Rossiter to her husband, and which, in the spirit of our silent
+<i>camaraderie</i>, he thought it right to hand along.</p>
+
+<p>"I can't be responsible for Hugh!" Mrs. Rossiter had said. "He's old
+enough to look after himself. If he wants a row with father he must have
+it; and he seems to me in a fair way to get it. If he does it will be
+his own fault; it won't be Miss Adare's."</p>
+
+<p>Fortified by this acquittal, I went on my way as quietly as I could,
+though I cannot say I was free from perturbation.</p>
+
+<p>Perturbation caught me like a whiff of wind as I saw Larry Strangways
+deflect from his course across the lawn and come in my direction. I knew
+he wouldn't have done that unless he felt himself authorized; and
+nothing could give him the authorization but something in the way of a
+message or command. To all observers we were strangers. We should have
+been strangers even to each other had it not been for that freemasonry
+of caste, that secret mutual comprehension, which transcends speech and
+opportunities of meeting, and which, on our part, at least, had little
+expression beyond smiles and flying glances.</p>
+
+<p>Of course he was good-looking. It has often seemed to me the privilege
+of ineligible men to be tall and slim and straight, with just such a
+flash in the eye and just such a beam about the mouth as belonged to
+Larry Strangways. Instinct had told me from the first that it would be
+wise for me to avoid him, while prudence, as I have hinted, gave him the
+same indication to keep at a distance from me. Luckily he didn't live
+in the house, but in lodgings in the town. We hardly ever met face to
+face, and then only under the eye of Mrs. Rossiter when each of us
+marshaled a pupil to lunch or to tea.</p>
+
+<p>As the collie at his heels and the wire-haired terrier at ours made a
+bee-line for each other the children kept them company, which gave us
+space for those few minutes of privacy the occasion apparently demanded.
+Though he lifted his hat formally, and did his best to preserve the
+decorum of our official situations, the prank in his eye flung out that
+signal to which I could never do anything but respond.</p>
+
+<p>"I've a message for you, Miss Adare."</p>
+
+<p>I managed to stammer out the word "Indeed?" I couldn't be surprised, and
+yet I could hardly stand erect from fear.</p>
+
+<p>He glanced at the children to make sure they were out of earshot.</p>
+
+<p>"It's from the great man himself&mdash;indirectly."</p>
+
+<p>I was so near to collapse that I could only say, "Indeed?" again, though
+I rallied sufficiently to add, "I didn't know he was aware of my
+existence."</p>
+
+<p>"Apparently he wasn't&mdash;but he is now. He desires you&mdash;I give you the
+verb as Spellman, the secretary, passed it on to me&mdash;he desires you to
+be in the breakfast loggia here at three this afternoon."</p>
+
+<p>I could barely squeak the words out:</p>
+
+<p>"Does he mean that he's coming to see me?"</p>
+
+<p>"That, it seems, isn't necessary for you to know. Your business is to be
+there. There's quite a subtle point in the limitation. Being there,
+you'll see what will happen next. It isn't good for you to be told too
+much at a time."</p>
+
+<p>My spirit began to revive.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm not his servant. I'm Mrs. Rossiter's. If he wants anything of me
+why doesn't he say so through her?"</p>
+
+<p>"'Sh, 'sh, Miss Adare! You mustn't dictate to God, or say he should act
+in this way or in that."</p>
+
+<p>"But he's not God."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, as to that&mdash;well, you'll see." He added, with his light laugh,
+"What will you bet that I don't know what it's all about?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I bet you do."</p>
+
+<p>"Then," he warned, "you're up against it."</p>
+
+<p>I was getting on my mettle.</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps I am&mdash;but I sha'n't be alone."</p>
+
+<p>"No; but you'll be made to feel alone."</p>
+
+<p>"Even so&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>As I was anxious to keep from boasting beforehand, I left the sentence
+there.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes?" he jogged. "Even so&mdash;what?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, nothing. I only mean that I'm not afraid of him&mdash;that is," I
+corrected, "I'm not afraid of him fundamentally."</p>
+
+<p>He laughed again. "Not afraid of him fundamentally! That's fine!"
+Something in his glance seemed to approve of me. "No, I don't believe
+you are; but I wonder a little why not."</p>
+
+<p>I reflected, gazing beyond his shoulder, down the velvety slopes of the
+lawn, and across the dancing blue sea to the islets that were mere
+specks on the horizon. In the end I decided to speak soberly. "I'm not
+afraid of him," I said at last, "because I've got a sure thing."</p>
+
+<p>"You mean him?"</p>
+
+<p>I knew the reference was to Hugh Brokenshire. "If I mean him," I
+replied, after a minute's thinking, "it's only as the greater includes
+the less, or as the universal includes everything."</p>
+
+<p>He whistled under his breath.</p>
+
+<p>"Does that mean anything? Or is it just big talk?"</p>
+
+<p>Half shy and half ashamed of going on with what I had to say, I was
+obliged to smile ruefully.</p>
+
+<p>"It's big talk because it's a big principle. I don't know how to manage
+it with anything small." I tried to explain further, knowing that my
+dark skin flushed to a kind of dahlia-red while I was doing so. "I don't
+know whether I've read it&mdash;or whether I heard it&mdash;or whether I've just
+evolved it&mdash;but I seem to have got hold of&mdash;of&mdash;don't laugh too hard,
+please&mdash;of the secret of success."</p>
+
+<p>"Good for you! I hope you're not going to be stingy with it."</p>
+
+<p>"No; I'll tell you&mdash;partly because I want to talk about it to some one,
+and just at present there's no one else."</p>
+
+<p>"Thanks!"</p>
+
+<p>"The secret of success, as I reason it out, must be something that will
+protect a weak person against a strong one&mdash;me, for instance, against J.
+Howard Brokenshire&mdash;and work everything out all right. There," I cried,
+"I've said the word."</p>
+
+<p>"You've said a number. Which is the one?"</p>
+
+<p>Anxiety not to seem either young or didactic or a prig made my tone
+apologetic.</p>
+
+<p>"There's such a thing as Right, written with a capital. If I persist in
+doing Right&mdash;still with a capital&mdash;then nothing but right can come of
+it."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, can't it!"</p>
+
+<p>"I know it sounds like a platitude&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"No, it doesn't," he interrupted, rudely, "because a platitude is
+something obviously true; and this isn't."</p>
+
+<p>I felt some relief.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, isn't it? Then I'm glad. I thought it must be."</p>
+
+<p>"You won't go on thinking it. Suppose you do right and somebody else
+does wrong?"</p>
+
+<p>"Then I should be willing to back my way against his. Don't you see?
+That's the point. That's the secret I'm telling you about. Right works;
+wrong doesn't."</p>
+
+<p>"That's all very fine&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"It's all very fine because it's so. Right is&mdash;what's the word William
+James put into the dictionary?"</p>
+
+<p>He suggested pragmatism.</p>
+
+<p>"That's it. Right is pragmatic, which I suppose is the same thing as
+practical. Wrong must be impractical; it must be&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I shouldn't bank too confidently on that in dealing with the great J.
+Howard."</p>
+
+<p>"But I'm going to bank on it. It's where I'm to have him at a
+disadvantage. If he does wrong while I do right, why, then I'll get him
+on the hip."</p>
+
+<p>"How do you know he's going to do wrong?"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't. I merely surmise it. If he does right&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"He'll get you on the hip."</p>
+
+<p>"No, because there can't be a right for him which isn't a right for me.
+There can't be two rights, each contrary to the other. That's not in
+common sense. If he does right then I shall be safe&mdash;whichever way I
+have to take it. Don't you see? That's where the success comes in as
+well as the secret. It can't be any other way. Please don't think I'm
+talking in what H. G. Wells calls the tin-pot style&mdash;but one must
+express oneself somehow. I'm not afraid, because I feel as if I'd got
+something that would hang about me like a magic cloak. Of course for
+you&mdash;a man&mdash;a magic cloak may not be necessary; but I assure you that
+for a girl like me, out in the world on her own&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>He, too, sobered down from his chaffing mood.</p>
+
+<p>"But in this case what is going to be Right&mdash;written with a capital?"</p>
+
+<p>I had just time to reply, "Oh, that I shall have to see!" when the
+children and dogs came scampering up and our conversation was over.</p>
+
+<p>On returning from my walk with Gladys I informed Mrs. Rossiter of the
+order I had received. I could see her distressed look in the mirror
+before which she sat doing something to her hair.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, dear!" she sighed, "it's just what I was afraid of. Now I suppose
+he'll want you to leave."</p>
+
+<p>"That is, he'll want you to send me away."</p>
+
+<p>"It's the same thing," she said, fretfully, and sat with hands lying
+idly in her lap.</p>
+
+<p>She stared out of the window. It was a large bow window, with a
+window-seat cushioned in flowered chintz. Couch, curtains, and
+easy-chairs reproduced this Enchanted Garden effect, forming a
+paradisiacal background for her intensely modern and somewhat neurotic
+prettiness. I had seen her sit by the half-hour like this, gazing over
+the shrubberies, lawns, and waves, with a yearning in her eyes like that
+of some twentieth-century Blessed Damozel.</p>
+
+<p>It was her unhappy hour of the day. Between getting up at nine or ten
+and descending languidly to lunch, life was always a great load to her.
+It pressed on one too weak to bear its weight and yet too conscientious
+to throw it off, though, as a matter of fact, this melancholy was only
+the reaction of her nerves from the mild excitements of the night
+before. I was generally with her during some portion of this forenoon
+time, reading her notes and answering them, speaking for her at the
+telephone, or keeping her company and listening to her confidences while
+she nibbled without appetite at a bit of toast and sipped her tea.</p>
+
+<p>To put matters on the common footing I said:</p>
+
+<p>"Is there anything you'd like me to do, Mrs. Rossiter?"</p>
+
+<p>She ignored this question, murmuring in a way she had, through
+half-closed lips, as if mere speech was more than she was equal to: "And
+just when we were getting on so well&mdash;and the way Gladys adores you&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"And the way I adore Gladys."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, well, you don't spoil the child, like that Miss Phips. I suppose
+it's your sensible English bringing up."</p>
+
+<p>"Not English," I interrupted.</p>
+
+<p>"Canadian then. It's almost the same thing." She went on without
+transition of tone: "Mr. Millinger was there again last night. He was on
+my left. I do wish they wouldn't keep putting him next to me. It makes
+everything look so pointed&mdash;especially with Harry Scott glowering at me
+from the other end of the table. He hardly spoke to Daisy Burke, whom
+he'd taken in. I must say she was a fright. And Mr. Millinger so
+imprudent! I'm really terrified that Jim will hear gossip when he comes
+down from New York&mdash;or notice something." There was the slightest
+dropping of the soft fluting voice as she continued: "I've never
+pretended to love Jim Rossiter more than any man I've ever seen. That
+was one of papa's matches. He's a born match-maker, you know, just as
+he's a born everything else. I suppose you didn't think of that. But
+since I am Jim's wife&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>As I was the confidante of what she called her affairs&mdash;a r&ocirc;le for which
+I was qualified by residence in British garrison towns&mdash;I interposed
+diplomatically, "But so long as Mr. Millinger hasn't said anything, not
+any more than Mr. Scott&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, if I were to allow men to say things, where should I be? You can go
+far with a man without letting him come to that. It's something I should
+think you'd have known&mdash;with your sensible bringing up&mdash;and the heaps of
+men you had there in Halifax&mdash;and I suppose at Southsea and Gibraltar,
+too." It was with a hint of helpless complaint that she added, "You
+remember that I asked you to leave him alone, now don't you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I remember&mdash;quite. And suppose I did&mdash;and he didn't leave me
+alone?"</p>
+
+<p>"Of course there's that, though it won't have any effect on papa. You
+are unusual, you know. Only one man in five hundred would notice it; but
+there always is that man. It's what I was afraid of about Hugh from the
+first. You're different&mdash;and it's the sort of thing he'd see."</p>
+
+<p>"Different from what?" I asked, with natural curiosity.</p>
+
+<p>Her reply was indirect.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, well, we Americans have specialized too much on the girl. You're
+not half as good-looking as plenty of other girls in Newport, and when
+it comes to dress&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I'm not in their class, I know."</p>
+
+<p>"No; it's what you seem not to know. You aren't in their class&mdash;but it
+doesn't seem to matter. If it does matter, it's rather to your
+advantage."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm afraid I don't see that."</p>
+
+<p>"No, you wouldn't. You're not sufficiently subtle. You're really not
+subtle at all, in the way an American girl would be." She picked up the
+thread she had dropped. "The fact is we've specialized so much on the
+girl that our girls are too aware of themselves to be wholly human.
+They're like things wound up to talk well and dress well and exhibit
+themselves to advantage and calculate their effects&mdash;and lack character.
+We've developed the very highest thing in exquisite girl-mechanics&mdash;a
+work of art that has everything but a soul." She turned half round to
+where I stood respectfully, my hands resting on the back of an
+easy-chair. She was lovely and pathetic and judicial all at once. "The
+difference about you is that you seem to spring right up out of the soil
+where you're standing&mdash;just like an English country house. You belong to
+your background. Our girls don't. They're too beautiful for their
+background, too expensive, too produced. Take any group of girls here in
+Newport&mdash;they're no more in place in this down-at-the-heel old town than
+a flock of parrakeets in a New England wood. It's really inartistic,
+though we don't know it. You're more of a woman and less of a lovely
+figurine. But that won't appeal to papa. He likes figurines. Most
+American men do. Hugh is an exception, and I was afraid he'd see in you
+just what I've seen myself. But it won't go down with papa."</p>
+
+<p>"If it goes down with Hugh&mdash;" I began, meekly.</p>
+
+<p>"Papa is a born match-maker, which I don't suppose you know. He made my
+match and he made Jack's. Oh, we're&mdash;we're satisfied now&mdash;in a way; and
+I suppose Hugh will be, too, in the long run." I wanted to speak, but
+she tinkled gently on: "Papa has his designs for him, which I may as
+well tell you at once. He means him to marry Lady Cissie Boscobel. She's
+Lord Goldborough's daughter, and papa and he are very intimate. Papa
+knew him when we lived in England before grandpapa died. Papa has done
+things for him in the American money-market, and when we're in England
+he does things for us. Two or three of our men have married earls'
+daughters during the last few years, and it hasn't turned out so badly.
+Papa doesn't want not to be in the swim."</p>
+
+<p>"Does"&mdash;I couldn't pronounce Hugh's name again&mdash;"does your brother know
+of Mr. Brokenshire's intentions?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. I told him so. I told him when I began to see that he was noticing
+you."</p>
+
+<p>"And may I ask what he said?"</p>
+
+<p>"It would be no use telling you that, because, whatever he said, he'd
+have to do as papa told him in the end."</p>
+
+<p>"But suppose he doesn't?"</p>
+
+<p>"You can't suppose he doesn't. He will. That's all that can be said
+about it." She turned fully round on me, gazing at me with the largest
+and sweetest and tenderest eyes. "As for you, dear Miss Adare," she
+murmured, sympathetically, "when papa comes to see you this afternoon,
+as apparently he means to do, he'll grind you to powder. If there's
+anything smaller than powder he'll grind you to that. After he's gone we
+sha'n't be able to find you. You'll be dust."</p>
+
+
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+<h2>CHAPTER II</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="dropcap">A</span>t five minutes to three, precisely, I took my seat in the breakfast
+loggia.</p>
+
+<p>The front of the house with the garden looked toward Ochre Point Avenue.
+The so-called breakfast loggia was thrown out from the dining-room in
+the direction of the sea. Here the family and their guests could gather
+on warm evenings, and in fine weather eat in the open air. Paved with
+red tiles, it was furnished with a long oak table, ornately carved, and
+some heavy old oak chairs that might have come from a monastery. Steamer
+chairs and wicker easy-chairs were scattered on the grass outside. On
+the left the loggia was screened from the neighboring property by a
+hedge of rambler roses that now ran the gamut of shades from crimson to
+sea-shell pink, while on the right it commanded a view of the two
+terraces supporting the house, with their long straight lines of
+flowers. The house itself had been built piecemeal, and was now a low,
+rambling succession of pavilions or <i>corps de logis</i>, to which a series
+of rose-colored awnings gave the only unifying principle.</p>
+
+<p>Just now it was a house deserted by every one but the servants and
+myself. Mrs. Rossiter, having gone out to luncheon, had been careful not
+to return, and even the children had been sent over to Mrs. Jack
+Brokenshire, on the pretext of playing with her baby, but really to be
+out of the way. From Hugh I had had no sign of life since the previous
+afternoon. As to whether his father was coming as his enemy, his master,
+or his interpreter I could do nothing but conjecture.</p>
+
+<p>But as far as I could I kept myself from conjecturing; holding my
+faculties in suspense. I had enough to do in assuring myself that I was
+not afraid&mdash;fundamentally. Superficially I was terrified. I should have
+been terrified had the great man but passed me in the hall and cast a
+look at me. He had passed me in the hall on occasions, but as he had
+never cast the look I had escaped. He had struck me then as a master of
+that art of seeing without seeing which I had hitherto thought of as
+feminine. Even when he stopped and spoke to Gladys he seemed not to know
+that I occupied the ground I stood on. I cannot say I enjoyed this
+treatment. I was accustomed to being seen. Moreover, I had lived with
+people who were courteous to inferiors, however cavalier with equals.
+The great J. Howard was neither courteous nor cavalier toward me, for
+the reason that where I was he apparently saw nothing but a vacuum.</p>
+
+<p>Out to the loggia I took my work-basket and some sewing. Having no idea
+from which of the several approaches my visitor would come on me, I drew
+up one of the heavy arm-chairs and sat facing toward the sea. With the
+basket on the table beside me and my sewing in my hands I felt
+indefinably more mistress of myself.</p>
+
+<p>It was a still afternoon and hot, with scarcely a sound but the pounding
+of the surf on the ledges at the foot of the lawn. Though the sky was
+blue overhead, a dark low bank rose out of the horizon, foretelling a
+change of wind with fog. In the air the languorous scent of roses and
+honeysuckle mingled with the acrid tang of the ocean.</p>
+
+<p>I felt extraordinarily desolate. Not since hearing what the lawyer had
+told me on the afternoon of my father's funeral had I seemed so entirely
+alone. The fact that for nearly twenty-four hours Hugh had got no word
+to me threw me back upon myself. "You'll be made to feel alone," Mr.
+Strangways had said in the morning; and I was. I didn't blame Hugh. I
+had purposely left the matter in such a way that there was nothing he
+could say or do till after his father had spoken. He was probably
+waiting impatiently; I had, indeed, no doubt about that; but the fact
+remained that I, a girl, a stranger, in a certain sense a foreigner, was
+to make the best of my situation without help. J. Howard Brokenshire
+could grind me to powder&mdash;when he had gone away I should be dust.</p>
+
+<p>"If I do right, nothing but right can come of it."</p>
+
+<p>The maxim was my only comfort. By sheer force of repeating it I got
+strength to thread my needle and go on with my seam, till on the stroke
+of three the dread personage appeared.</p>
+
+<p>I saw him from the minute he mounted the steps that led up from the
+Cliff Walk to Mr. Rossiter's lawn. He was accompanied by Mrs.
+Brokenshire, while a pair of greyhounds followed them. Having reached
+the lawn, they crossed it diagonally toward the loggia. Because of the
+heat and the up-hill nature of the way, they advanced slowly, which gave
+me leisure to observe.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Brokenshire's presence had almost caused my heart to stop beating.
+I could imagine no motive for her coming but one I refused to accept. If
+the mission was to be unfriendly, she surely would have stayed away; but
+that it could be other than unfriendly was beyond my strength to hope.</p>
+
+<p>I had never seen her before except in glimpses or at a distance. I
+noticed now that she was a little thing, looking the smaller for the
+stalwart six-foot-two beside which she walked. She was in white and
+carried a white parasol. I saw that her face was one of the most
+beautiful in features and finish I had ever looked into. Each trait was
+quite amazingly perfect. The oval was perfect; the coloring was perfect;
+mouth and nose and forehead might have been made to a measured scale.
+The finger of personified Art could have drawn nothing more exquisite
+than the arch of the eyebrows, or more delicately fringed than the lids.
+It might have been a doll's face, or the face for the cover of an
+American magazine, had it not been saved by something I hadn't the time
+to analyze, though I was later to know what it was.</p>
+
+<p>As for him, he was as perfect in his way as she in hers. When I say that
+he wore white shoes, white-duck trousers, a navy-blue jacket, and a
+yachting-cap I give no idea of the something noble in his personality.
+He might have been one of the more ornamental Italian princes of
+immemorial lineage. A Jove with a Vandyke beard one could have called
+him, and if you add to that the conception of Jove the Thunderer, Jove
+with the look that could strike a man dead, perhaps the description
+would be as good as any. He was straight and held his head high. He
+walked with a firm setting of his feet that impressed you with the fact
+that some one of importance was coming.</p>
+
+<p>It is not my purpose to speak of this man from the point of view of the
+ordinary member of the public. Of that I know next to nothing. I was
+dimly aware that his wealth and his business interests made him
+something of a public character; but apart from having heard him
+mentioned as a financier I could hardly have told what his profession
+was. So, too, with questions of morals. I have been present when, by
+hints rather than actual words, he was introduced as a profligate and a
+hypocrite; and I have also known people of good judgment who upheld him
+both as man and as citizen. On this subject no opinion of mine would be
+worth giving. I have always relegated the matter into that limbo of
+disputed facts with which I have nothing to do. I write of him only as I
+saw him in daily life, or at least in direct intercourse, and with that
+my testimony must end. Other people have been curious with regard to
+those aspects of his character on which I can throw no light. To me he
+became interesting chiefly because he was one of those men who from a
+kind of na&iuml;ve audacity, perhaps an unthinking audacity, don't hesitate
+to play the part of the Almighty.</p>
+
+<p>When they drew near enough to the loggia I stood up, my sewing in my
+hand. The two greyhounds, who had outdistanced them, came sniffing to
+the threshold and stared at me. I felt myself an object to be stared at,
+though I had taken pains with my appearance and knew that I was neat.
+Neatness, I may say in passing, is my strong point. Where many other
+girls can stand expensive dressing I am at my best when meticulously
+tidy. The shape of my head makes the simplest styles of doing the hair
+the most distinguished. My figure lends itself to country clothes and
+the tailor-made. In evening dress I can wear the cheapest and flimsiest
+thing, so long as it is dependent only on its lines. I was satisfied,
+therefore, with the way I looked, and when I say I felt myself an object
+to be stared at I speak only of my consciousness of isolation.</p>
+
+<p>I cannot affirm, however, that J. Howard Brokenshire stared at me. He
+stared; but only at the general effects in which I was a mere detail.
+The loggia being open on all sides, he paused for half a second to take
+it and its contents in. I went with the contents. I looked at him; but
+nothing in the glance he cast over me recognized me as a human being. I
+might have been the table; I might have been the floor; for him I was
+hardly in existence.</p>
+
+<p>I wonder if you have ever stood under the gaze of one who considered you
+too inferior for notice. The sensation is quite curious. It produces not
+humiliation or resentment so much as an odd apathy. You sink in your own
+sight; you go down; you understand that abjection of slaves which kept
+them from rising against their masters. Negatively at least you concede
+the right that so treats you. You are meek and humble at once; and yet
+you can be strong. I think I never felt so strong as when I saw that
+cold, deep eye, which was steely and fierce and most inconsistently
+sympathetic all in one quick flash, sweep over me and pay me no
+attention. <i>Ecce Femina</i> I might have been saying to myself, as a
+pendant in expression to the <i>Ecce Homo</i> of the Pr&aelig;torium.</p>
+
+<p>He moved aside punctiliously at the lower of the two steps that led up
+to the loggia to let his wife precede him. As she came in I think she
+gave me a salutation that was little more than a quiver of the lids.
+Having closed her parasol, she slipped into one of the arm-chairs not
+far from the table.</p>
+
+<p>Now that he was at close quarters, with his work before him, he
+proceeded to the task at once. In the act of laying his hat and stick on
+a chair he began with the question, "Your name is&mdash;?"</p>
+
+<p>The voice had a crisp gentleness that seemed to come from the effort to
+despatch business with the utmost celerity and spend no unnecessary
+strength on words. The fact that he must have heard my name from Hugh
+was plainly to play no part in our discussion. I was so unutterably
+frightened that when I tried to whisper the word "Adare" hardly a sound
+came forth.</p>
+
+<p>As he raised himself from the placing of his cap and stick he was
+obliged to utter a sharp, "What?"</p>
+
+<p>"Adare."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh. Adare!"</p>
+
+<p>It is not a bad name as names go; we like to fancy ourselves connected
+with the famous Fighting Adares of the County Limerick; but on J. Howard
+Brokenshire's lips it had the undiscriminating commonness of Smith or
+Jones. I had never been ashamed of it before.</p>
+
+<p>"And you're one of my daughter's&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I'm her nursery governess."</p>
+
+<p>"Sit down."</p>
+
+<p>As he took the chair at the end of the table I dropped again into that
+at the side from which I had risen. It was then that something happened
+which left me for a second in doubt as to whether to take it as comic or
+catastrophic. His left eye closed; his left nostril quivered; he winked.
+To avoid having to face this singular phenomenon a second time I lowered
+my eyes and began mechanically to sew.</p>
+
+<p>"Put that down!"</p>
+
+<p>I placed the work on the table and once more looked at him. The striking
+eyes were again as striking as ever. In their sympathetic hardness there
+was nothing either ribald or jocose.</p>
+
+<p>I suppose my scrutiny annoyed him, though I was unconscious of more than
+a mute asking for orders. He pointed to a distant chair, a chair in a
+corner, just within the loggia as you come from the direction of the
+dining-room.</p>
+
+<p>"Sit there."</p>
+
+<p>I know now that his wink distressed him. It was something which at that
+time had come upon him recently, and that he could neither control nor
+understand. A less imposing man, a man to whom personal impressiveness
+was less of an asset in daily life and work, would probably have been
+less disturbed by it; but to J. Howard Brokenshire it was a trial in
+more ways than one. Curiously, too, when the left eye winked the right
+grew glassy and quite terrible.</p>
+
+<p>Not knowing that he was sensitive in this respect, I took my retreat to
+the corner as a kind of symbolic banishment.</p>
+
+<p>"Hadn't I better stand up?" I asked, proudly, when I had reached my
+chair.</p>
+
+<p>"Be good enough to sit down."</p>
+
+<p>I seemed to fall backward. The tone had the effect of a shot. If I had
+ever felt small and foolish in my life it was then. I flushed to my
+darkest crimson. Angry and humiliated, I was obliged to rush to my maxim
+in order not to flash back in some indignant retort.</p>
+
+<p>And then another thing happened of which I was unable at the minute to
+get the significance. Mrs. Brokenshire sprang up with the words:</p>
+
+<p>"You're quite right, Howard. It's ever so much cooler over here by the
+edge. I never felt anything so stuffy as the middle of this place. It
+doesn't seem possible for air to get into it."</p>
+
+<p>While speaking she moved with incomparable daintiness to a chair
+corresponding to mine and diagonally opposite. With the length and width
+of the loggia between us we exchanged glances. In hers she seemed to
+say, "If you are banished I shall be banished too"; in mine I tried to
+express gratitude. And yet I was aware that I might have misunderstood
+both movement and look entirely.</p>
+
+<p>My next surprise was in the words Mr. Brokenshire addressed to me. He
+spoke in the soft, slightly nasal staccato which I am told had on his
+business associates the effect of a whip-lash.</p>
+
+<p>"We've come over to tell you, Miss&mdash;Miss Adare, how much we appreciate
+your attitude toward our boy, Hugh. I understand from him that he's
+offered to marry you, and that very properly in your situation you've
+declined. The boy is foolish, as you evidently see. He meant nothing; he
+could do nothing. You're probably not without experience of a similar
+kind among the sons of your other employers. At the same time, as you
+doubtless expect, we sha'n't let you suffer by your prudence&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>It was a bad beginning. Had he made any sort of appeal to me, however
+unkindly worded, I should probably have yielded. But the tradition of
+the Fighting Adares was not in me for nothing, and after a smothering
+sensation which rendered me speechless I managed to stammer out:</p>
+
+<p>"Won't you allow me to say that&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>The way in which his large, white, handsome hand went up was meant to
+impose silence upon me while he himself went on:</p>
+
+<p>"In order that you may not be annoyed by my son's folly in the future
+you will leave my daughter's employ, you'll leave Newport&mdash;you'll be
+well advised, indeed, in going back to your own country, which I
+understand to be the British provinces. You will lose nothing, however,
+by this conduct, as I've given you to understand. Three&mdash;four&mdash;five
+thousand dollars&mdash;I think five ought to be sufficient&mdash;generous, in
+fact&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"But I've not refused him," I was able at last to interpose. "I&mdash;I mean
+to accept him."</p>
+
+<p>There was an instant of stillness during which one could hear the
+pounding of the sea.</p>
+
+<p>"Does that mean that you want me to raise your price?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, Mr. Brokenshire. I have no price. If it means anything at all that
+has to do with you, it's to tell you that I'm mistress of my acts and
+that I consider your son&mdash;he's twenty-six&mdash;to be master of his."</p>
+
+<p>There was a continuation of the stillness. His voice when he spoke was
+the gentlest sound I had ever heard in the way of human utterance. If it
+were not for the situation it could have been considered kind:</p>
+
+<p>"Anything at all that has to do with me? You seem to attach no
+importance to the fact that Hugh is my son."</p>
+
+<p>I do not know how words came to me. They seemed to flow from my lips
+independently of thought.</p>
+
+<p>"I attach importance only to the fact that he's a man. Men who are never
+anything but their father's sons aren't men."</p>
+
+<p>"And yet a father has some rights."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir; some. He has the right to follow where his grown-up children
+lead. He hasn't the right to lead and require his grown-up children to
+follow."</p>
+
+<p>He shifted his ground. "I'm obliged to you for your opinion, but at
+present it's not to the point&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>I broke in breathlessly: "Pardon me, sir; it's exactly to the point. I'm
+a woman; Hugh's a man. We're&mdash;we're in love with each other; it's all we
+have to be concerned with."</p>
+
+<p>"Not quite; you've got to be concerned&mdash;with me."</p>
+
+<p>"Which is what I deny."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, denial won't do you any good. I didn't come to hear your denials,
+or your affirmations, either. I've come to tell you what to do."</p>
+
+<p>"But if I know that already?"</p>
+
+<p>"That's quite possible&mdash;if you mean to play your game as doubtless
+you've played it before. I only want to warn you&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>I looked toward Mrs. Brokenshire for help, but her eyes were fixed on
+the floor, on which she was drawing what seemed like a design with the
+tip of her parasol. The greyhounds were stretched at her feet. I could
+do nothing but speak for myself, which I did with a calmness that
+surprised me.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Brokenshire," I interrupted, "you are a man and I'm a woman. What's
+more, you're a strong man, while I'm a woman with no protection at all.
+I ask you&mdash;do you think you're playing a man's part in insulting me?"</p>
+
+<p>His tone grew kind almost to affection. "My dear young lady, you
+misunderstand me. Insult couldn't be further from my thoughts. I'm
+speaking entirely for your own sake. You're young; you're very pretty; I
+won't say you've no knowledge of the world because I see you have&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I've a good deal of knowledge of the world."</p>
+
+<p>"Only not such knowledge as would warrant you in pitting yourself
+against me."</p>
+
+<p>"But I don't. If you'd leave me alone&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Let us keep to what we're talking of. I'm sorry for you; I really am.
+You're at the beginning of what might euphemistically&mdash;do you know the
+meaning of the word?&mdash;be called a career. I should like to save you from
+it; that's all. It's why I'm speaking to you very plainly and using
+language that can't be misunderstood. There's nothing original in your
+proceeding, believe me. Nearly every family of the standing of mine has
+had to reckon with something of the sort. Where there are young men, and
+young women of&mdash;what do you want me to say?&mdash;young women who mean to do
+the best they can for themselves&mdash;let us put it in that way&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I'm a gentleman's daughter," I broke in, weakly.</p>
+
+<p>He smiled. "Oh yes; you're all gentlemen's daughters. Neither is there
+anything original in that."</p>
+
+<p>"Mrs. Rossiter will tell you that my father was a judge in Canada&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"The detail doesn't interest me."</p>
+
+<p>"No, but it interests me. It gives me a sense of being equal to&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"If you please! We'll not go into that."</p>
+
+<p>"But I must speak. If I'm to marry Hugh you must let me tell you who I
+am."</p>
+
+<p>"It's not necessary. You're not to marry Hugh. Let that be absolutely
+understood. Once you've accepted the fact&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I could only accept it from Hugh himself."</p>
+
+<p>"That's foolish. Hugh will do as I tell him."</p>
+
+<p>"But why should he in this case?"</p>
+
+<p>"That again is something we needn't discuss. All that matters, my dear
+young lady, is your own interest. I'm working for that, don't you see,
+against yourself&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>I burst out, "But why shouldn't I marry him?"</p>
+
+<p>He leaned on the table, tapping gently with his hand. "Because we don't
+want you to. Isn't that enough?"</p>
+
+<p>I ignored this. "If it's because you don't know anything about me I
+could tell you."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, but we do know something about you. We know, for example, since
+you compel me to say it, that you're a little person of no importance
+whatever."</p>
+
+<p>"My family is one of the best in Canada."</p>
+
+<p>"And admitting that that's so, who would care what constituted a good
+family in Canada? To us here it means nothing; in England it would mean
+still less. I've had opportunities of judging how Canadians are regarded
+in England, and I assure you it's nothing to make you proud."</p>
+
+<p>Of the several things he had said to sting me I was most sensitive to
+this. I, too, had had opportunities of judging, and knew that if
+anything could make one ashamed of being a British colonial of any kind
+it would be British opinion of colonials.</p>
+
+<p>"My father used to say&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>He put up his large, white hand. "Another time. Let us keep to the
+subject before us."</p>
+
+<p>I omitted the mention of my father to insist on a theory as to which I
+had often heard him express himself: "If it's part of the subject before
+us that I'm a Canadian and that Canadians are ground between the upper
+and lower millstones of both English and American contempt&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Isn't that another digression?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not really," I hurried on, determined to speak, "because if I'm a
+sufferer by it, you are, too, in your degree. It's part of the
+Anglo-Saxon tradition for those who stay behind to despise those who go
+out as pioneers. The race has always done it. It isn't only the British
+who've despised their colonists. The people of the Eastern States
+despised those who went out and peopled the Middle West; those in the
+Middle West despised those who went farther West." I was still quoting
+my father. "It's something that defies reason and eludes argument. It's
+a base strain in the blood. It's like that hierarchy among servants by
+which the lady's maid disdains the cook, and the cook disdains the
+kitchen-maid, and the proudest are those who've nothing to be proud of.
+For you to look down on me because I'm a Canadian, when the commonest of
+Englishmen, with precisely the same justification, looks down on you&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Dear young lady," he broke in, soothingly, "you're talking wildly.
+You're speaking of things you know nothing about. Let us get back to
+what we began with. My son has offered to marry you&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"He didn't offer to marry me. He asked me&mdash;he begged me&mdash;to marry him."</p>
+
+<p>"The way of putting it is of no importance."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, but it is."</p>
+
+<p>"I mean that, however he expressed it&mdash;however you express it&mdash;the
+result must be the same."</p>
+
+<p>I nerved myself to look at him steadily. "I mean to accept him. When he
+asked me yesterday I said I wouldn't give him either a Yes or a No till
+I knew what you and his family thought of it. But now that I do know&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"You're determined to try the impossible."</p>
+
+<p>"It won't be the impossible till he tells me so."</p>
+
+<p>He seemed for a second or two to study me. "Suppose I accepted you as
+what you say you are&mdash;as a young woman of good antecedents and honorable
+character. Would you still persist in the effort to force yourself on a
+family that didn't want you?"</p>
+
+<p>I confess that in the language Mr. Strangways and I had used in the
+morning, he had me here "on the hip." To force myself on a family that
+didn't want me would normally have been the last of my desires. But I
+was fighting now for something that went beyond my desires&mdash;something
+larger&mdash;something national, as I conceived of nationality&mdash;something
+human&mdash;though I couldn't have said exactly what it was. I answered only
+after long deliberation.</p>
+
+<p>"I couldn't stop to consider a family. My object would be to marry the
+man who loved me&mdash;and whom I loved."</p>
+
+<p>"So that you'd face the humiliation&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"It wouldn't be humiliation, because it would have nothing to do with
+me. It would pass into another sphere."</p>
+
+<p>"It wouldn't be another sphere to him."</p>
+
+<p>"I should have to let him take care of that. It's all I can manage to
+look out for myself&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>There seemed to be some admiration in his tone.</p>
+
+<p>"Which you seem marvelously well fitted to do."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you."</p>
+
+<p>"In fact, it's one of the ways in which you betray yourself. An innocent
+girl&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>I strained forward in my chair. "Wouldn't it be fair for you to tell me
+what you mean by the word innocent?"</p>
+
+<p>"I mean a girl who has no special ax to grind&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>I could hear my foot tapping on the floor, but I was too indignant to
+restrain myself. "Even that figure of speech leaves too much to the
+imagination."</p>
+
+<p>He studied me again. "You're very sharp."</p>
+
+<p>"Don't I need to be," I demanded, "with an enemy of your acumen?"</p>
+
+<p>"But I'm not your enemy. It's what you don't seem to see. I'm your
+friend. I'm trying to keep you out of a situation that would kill you if
+you got into it."</p>
+
+<p>I think I laughed. "Isn't death preferable to dishonor?" I saw my
+mistake in the quickness with which Mrs. Brokenshire looked up. "There
+are more kinds of dishonor than one," I explained, loftily, "and to me
+the blackest would be in allowing you to dictate to me."</p>
+
+<p>"My dear young woman, I dictate to men&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, to men!"</p>
+
+<p>"I see! You presume on your womanhood. It's a common American expedient,
+and a cheap one. But I don't stop for that."</p>
+
+<p>"You may not stop for womanhood, Mr. Brokenshire; but neither does
+womanhood stop for you."</p>
+
+<p>He rose with an air of weary patience. "I'm afraid we sha'n't gain
+anything by talking further&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I'm afraid not." I, too, rose, advancing to the table. We confronted
+each other across it, while one of the dogs came nosing to his master's
+hand. I had barely the strength to gasp on: "We've had our talk and you
+see where I am. I ask nothing but the exercise of human liberty&mdash;and the
+measure of respect I conceive to be due to every one. Surely you, an
+American, a representative of what America is supposed to stand for,
+can't think of it as too much."</p>
+
+<p>"If America is supposed to stand for your marrying my son&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"America stands, so I've been told by Americans, for the reasonable
+freedom of the individual. If Hugh wants to marry me&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Hugh will marry the woman I approve of."</p>
+
+<p>"Then that apparently is what we must put to the test."</p>
+
+<p>I was now so near to tears that I suppose he saw an opening to his own
+advantage. Coming round the table, he stood looking down at me with that
+expression which I can only describe as sympathetic. With all the
+dominating aggressiveness which either forced you to give in to him or
+urged you to fight him till you dropped, there was that about him which
+left you with a lingering suspicion that he might be right. It was the
+man who might be right who was presently sitting easily on the edge of
+the table, so that his face was on a level with my own, and saying in a
+kindly voice:</p>
+
+<p>"Now look here! Let's be reasonable. I don't want to be unfair to you,
+or to say anything a man isn't justified in saying to a woman. I'm
+willing to throw the whole blame on Hugh&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I'm not," I declared, hotly.</p>
+
+<p>"That's generous; but I'm speaking of myself. I'm willing to throw the
+whole blame on Hugh, because he's my son. I'll absolve you, if you like,
+because you're a stranger and a girl, and consider you a victim&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I'm not a victim," I insisted. "I'm only a human being, asking for a
+human being's rights."</p>
+
+<p>He shrugged his shoulders. "Oh, rights! Who knows what rights are?"</p>
+
+<p>"I do. That is," I corrected, "I know my own."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, of course! One always knows one's own. One's own rights are
+everything one can get. Now you can't get Hugh; but you can get five
+thousand dollars. That's a lot of money. There are men all over the
+United States who'd cut off a hand for it. You won't have to cut off a
+hand. You only need to be a good, sensible little girl and&mdash;get out."
+Perhaps he thought I was yielding, for he tapped his side pocket as he
+went on speaking. "It won't take a minute. I've got a check-book here&mdash;a
+stroke of the pen&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>My work was lying on the table a few inches away. Leaning forward
+deliberately I put it into the basket, which I tucked under my arm. I
+looked at Mrs. Brokenshire, who was leaning forward and looking at me. I
+inclined my head with a slight salutation, to which she did not respond,
+and turned away. Of him I took no notice.</p>
+
+<p>"So it's war."</p>
+
+<p>I was half-way to the dining-room when I heard him say that. As I paused
+to look back he was still sitting sidewise on the edge of the table,
+swinging a leg and staring after me.</p>
+
+<p>"No, sir," I said, quietly. "It takes two to fight, and I should never
+think of being one."</p>
+
+<p>"You know, of course, that I shall have no mercy on you."</p>
+
+<p>"No, sir; I don't."</p>
+
+<p>"Then you can know it now. I'm sorry for you; but I can't afford to
+spare you. Bigger things than you have come in my way&mdash;and have been
+blasted."</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Brokenshire made a quick little movement behind his back. It told
+me nothing I understood then, though I was able to interpret it later. I
+could only say, in a voice that shook with the shaking of my whole body:</p>
+
+<p>"You couldn't blast me, sir, because&mdash;because&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes? Because&mdash;what? I should like to know."</p>
+
+<p>There was a robin hopping on the lawn outside and I pointed to it. "You
+couldn't blast a little bird like that with a bombshell."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, birds have been shot."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir; with a fowling-piece; but not with a howitzer. The one is too
+big; the other is too small."</p>
+
+<p>I was about to drop him a little courtesy when I saw him wink. It was a
+grotesque, amusing wink that quivered and twisted till it finally
+closed the left eye. If he had been a less handsome man the effect would
+have been less absurd.</p>
+
+<p>I made my courtesy the deeper, bending my head and lowering my eyes so
+as to spare him the knowledge that I saw.</p>
+
+
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+<h2>CHAPTER III</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="dropcap"><small><small><sup>"</sup></small></small>H</span>e attacked my country. I think I could forgive him everything but
+that."</p>
+
+<p>It was an hour after Mr. and Mrs. Brokenshire had left me. I was half
+crying by this time&mdash;that is, half crying in the way one cries from
+rage, and yet laughing nervously, in flashes, at the same time. From the
+weakness of sheer excitement I had dropped to one of the steps leading
+down to the Cliff Walk, while Larry Strangways leaned on the stone post.
+I had met him there as I was going out and he was coming toward the
+house. We couldn't but stop to exchange a word, especially with his
+knowledge of the situation. He took what I had to say with the light,
+gleaming, non-committal smile which he brought to bear on everything. I
+was glad of that because it kept him detached. I didn't want him any
+nearer to me than he was.</p>
+
+<p>"Attacked your country? Do you mean England?"</p>
+
+<p>"No; Canada. England is my grandmother; but Canada's my mother. He said
+you all despised her."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh no, we don't. He was trying to put something over on you."</p>
+
+<p>"Your 'No, we don't' lacks conviction; but I don't mind you. I shouldn't
+mind him if I hadn't seen so much of it."</p>
+
+<p>"So much of what?"</p>
+
+<p>"Being looked down upon geographically. Of all the ways of being proud,"
+I declared, indignantly, "that which depends on your merely accidental
+position with regard to land and water strikes me as the most
+poor-spirited. I can't imagine any one dragging himself down to it who
+had another rag of a reason for self-respect. As a matter of fact, I
+don't believe any one ever does. The people I've heard express
+themselves on the subject&mdash;well, I'll give you an illustration: There
+was a woman at Gibraltar&mdash;a major's wife, a big, red-faced woman. Her
+name was Arbuthnot&mdash;her father was a dean or something&mdash;a big, red-faced
+woman, with one of those screechy, twangy English voices that cut you
+like a saw&mdash;you know there are some&mdash;a good many&mdash;and they don't know
+it. Well, she was saying something sneering about Canadians. I was
+sitting opposite&mdash;it was at a dinner-party&mdash;and so I leaned across the
+table and asked her why she didn't like them. She said colonials were
+such dreadful form. I held her with my eye"&mdash;I showed him how&mdash;"and made
+myself small and demure as I said, 'But, dear lady, how clever of you!
+Who would ever have supposed that you'd know that?' My sister Vic
+pitched into me about it after we got home. She said the Arbuthnot
+person didn't understand what I meant&mdash;nor any one else at the table,
+they're so awfully thick-skinned&mdash;and that it's better to let them
+alone. But that's the kind of person who&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>He tried to comfort me. "They'll come round in time. One of these days
+England will see what she owes to her colonists and do them justice."</p>
+
+<p>"Never!" I declared, vehemently. "It will be always the same&mdash;till we
+knock the Empire to pieces. Then they'll respect us. Look at the Boer
+War. Didn't our men sacrifice everything to go out that long
+distance&mdash;and win battles&mdash;and lay down their lives&mdash;only to have the
+English say afterward&mdash;especially the army people&mdash;that they were more
+trouble than they were worth? It will be always the same. When we've
+given our last penny and shed our last drop of blood they'll still tell
+us we've been nothing but a nuisance. You may live to see it and
+remember that I said so. If when Shakespeare wrote that it's sharper
+than a serpent's tooth to have a thankless child he'd gone on to add
+that it's the very dickens to have a picturesque, self-satisfied old
+grandmother who thinks her children's children should give her
+everything and take kicks instead of ha'pence for their pay, he'd have
+been up to date. Mind you, we don't object to giving our last penny and
+shedding our last drop of blood; we only hate being abused and sneered
+at for doing it."</p>
+
+<p>I warmed to my subject as I dabbed fiercely at my eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll tell you what the typical John Bull is like. He's like those
+men&mdash;big, flabby men they generally are&mdash;who'll be brutes to you so long
+as you're civil to them, but will climb down the minute you begin to hit
+back. Look at the way they treat you Americans! They can't do enough for
+you&mdash;because you snap your fingers in their faces and show them you
+don't care a hang about them. They come over here, and give you
+lectures, and marry your girls, and pocket your money, and adopt your
+bad form as delightful originality&mdash;and respect you. Now that earls'
+daughters are beginning to cast an eye on your millionaires&mdash;Mrs.
+Rossiter told me that&mdash;they won't leave you a rag to your back. But with
+us who've been faithful and loyal they're all the other way. I can
+hardly tell you the small pin-pricking indignities to which my sisters
+and I have been subjected for being Canadians. And they'll never change.
+It will never be otherwise, no matter what we do, no matter what we
+become, no matter if we give our bodies to be burned, as the Bible says.
+It will never be otherwise&mdash;not till we imitate you and strike them in
+the face. <i>Then</i> you'll see how they'll come round."<a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a></p>
+
+<p>He still smiled, with an aloofness in which there was a beam of
+sweetness. "I had no idea that you were such a little rebel."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm not a rebel. I'm loyal to the King. That is, I'm loyal to the great
+Anglo-Saxon ideal of which the King is the symbol&mdash;and I suppose he's as
+good a symbol as any other, especially as he's already there. The
+English are only partly Anglo-Saxon. 'Saxon and Norman and Dane are
+they'&mdash;didn't Tennyson say that? Well, there's a lot that's Norman, and
+a lot that's Dane, and a lot that's Scotch and Irish and rag-tag in
+them. But they're saved by the pure Anglo-Saxon ideal in so far as they
+hold to it&mdash;just as you'll be, with all your mixed bloods&mdash;and just as
+we shall be ourselves. It's like salt in the meat, it's like grace in
+the Christian religion&mdash;it's the thing that saves, and I'm loyal to
+that. My father used to say that it's the fact that English and
+Canadians and Australians are all devoted to the same principle that
+holds us together as an Empire, and not the subservience of distant
+lands to a Parliament sitting at Westminster. And so it is. We don't
+always like each other; but that doesn't matter. What does matter is
+that we should betray the fact that we don't like each other to
+outsiders&mdash;and so give them a handle against us."</p>
+
+<p>"You mean that J. Howard should be in a position to side with the
+English in looking down on you as a Canadian?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, and that the English should give him that position. He's an
+American and an enemy&mdash;every American is an enemy to England <i>au fond</i>.
+Oh yes, he is! You needn't deny it! It's something fundamental, deeper
+down than anything you understand. Even those of you who like England
+are hostile to her at heart and would be glad to see her in trouble. So,
+I say, he's an American and an enemy, and yet they hand me, their child
+and their friend, over to him to be trampled on. He's had opportunities
+of judging how Canadians are regarded in England, he says&mdash;and he
+assures me it's nothing to be proud of. That's it. I've had
+opportunities too&mdash;and I have to admit that he's right. Don't you see?
+That's what enrages me. As far as their liking us and our not liking
+them is concerned, why, it's all in the family. So long as it's kept in
+the family it's like the pick that Louise and Vic have always had on me.
+I'm the youngest and the plainest&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, you're the plainest, are you? What on earth are they like?"</p>
+
+<p>"They're quite good-looking, and they're awfully chic. But that's in
+parentheses. What I mean is that they're always hectoring me because I'm
+not attractive&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Really?"</p>
+
+<p>"I'm not fishing for compliments. I'm too busy and too angry for that. I
+want to go on talking about what we're talking about."</p>
+
+<p>"But I want to know why they said you were unattractive."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, perhaps they didn't say it. What they have said is this, and it's
+what Mrs. Rossiter says&mdash;she said it to-day&mdash;that I'm only attractive to
+one man in five hundred&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"But very attractive to him?"</p>
+
+<p>"No; she didn't say that. She merely admitted that her brother Hugh was
+that man&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>He interrupted with something I wished at the time he hadn't said, and
+which I tried to ignore:</p>
+
+<p>"He's the man in that five hundred&mdash;and I know another in another five
+hundred, which makes two in a thousand. You'd soon get up to a high
+percentage, when you think of all the men there are in the world."</p>
+
+<p>As he had never hinted at anything of the kind before, it gave me&mdash;how
+shall I put it?&mdash;I can only think of the word fright&mdash;it gave me a
+little fright. It made me uneasy. It was nothing, really. It was spoken
+with that gleaming smile of his which seemed to put distance between him
+and me&mdash;between him and everything else that was serious&mdash;and yet
+subconsciously I felt as one feels on hearing the first few notes, in an
+opera or a symphony, of that arresting phrase which is to work up into a
+great motive. I tried to get back to my original theme, rising to move
+on as I did so.</p>
+
+<p>"Good gracious!" I cried. "Isn't the world big enough for us all? Why
+should we go about saying unkind and untrue things of one other, when
+each of us is an essential part of a composite whole? Isn't it the foot
+saying to the hand I have no need of thee, and the eye saying the same
+thing to the nose? We've got something you haven't got, and you've got
+something we haven't got. Why shouldn't we be appreciative toward each
+other, and make our exchange with mutual respect as we do with trade
+commodities?"</p>
+
+<p>It was probably to urge me on to talk that he said, with a challenging
+smile: "What have you Canadians got that we haven't? Why, we could buy
+and sell you."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh no, you couldn't; because our special contribution toward the
+civilization of the American continent isn't a thing for sale. It can be
+given; it can be inherited; it can be caught; but it can't be
+purchased."</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed? What is this elusive endowment?"</p>
+
+<p>I answered frankly enough: "I don't know. It's there&mdash;and I can't tell
+you what it is. Ever since I've been living among you I've felt how much
+we resemble each other&mdash;what a difference. I think&mdash;mind you, I only
+think&mdash;that what it consists in is a sense of the <i>comme il faut</i>. We're
+simpler than you; and less intellectual; and poorer, of course; and
+less, much less, self-analytical; and yet we've got a knowledge of
+what's what that you couldn't command with money. None of the
+Brokenshires have it at all, and, as far as I can see, none of their
+friends. They command it with money, and the difference is like having a
+copy of a work of art instead of the original. It gives them the air of
+being&mdash;I'm using Mrs. Rossiter's word&mdash;of being produced. Now we
+Canadians are not produced. We just come&mdash;but we come the right
+way&mdash;without any hooting or tooting or beating of tin pans or
+self-advertisement. We just are&mdash;and we say nothing about it. Let me
+make an example of what Mrs. Rossiter was discussing this morning. There
+are lots of pretty girls in my country&mdash;as many to the hundred as you
+have here&mdash;but we don't make a fuss about them or talk as if we'd
+ordered a special brand from the Creator. We grow them as you grow
+flowers in a garden, at the mercy of the air and sunshine. You grow
+yours like plants in a hothouse, to be exhibited in horticultural shows.
+Please don't think I'm bragging&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>He laughed aloud. "Oh no!"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I'm not," I insisted. "You asked me a question and I'm trying to
+answer it&mdash;and incidentally to justify my own existence, which J. Howard
+has called into question. You've got lots to offer us, and many of us
+come and take it thankfully. What we can offer to you is a simpler and
+healthier and less self-conscious standard of life, with a great deal
+less talk about it&mdash;with no talk about it at all, if you could get
+yourselves down to that&mdash;and a willingness to be instead of an
+everlasting striving to become. You won't recognize it or take it, of
+course. No one ever does. Nations seem to me insane, and ruled by insane
+governments. Don't the English need the Germans, and the Germans the
+French, and the French the Austrians, and the Austrians the Russians,
+and so on? Why on earth should the foot be jealous of the nose? But
+there! You're simply making me say things&mdash;and laughing at me all the
+while&mdash;so I'm off to take my walk. We'll get even with J. Howard and all
+the first-class powers some day, and till then&mdash;<i>au revoir</i>."</p>
+
+<p>I had waved my hand to him and gone some paces into the fog that had
+begun to blow in when he called to me.</p>
+
+<p>"Wait a minute. I've something to tell you."</p>
+
+<p>I turned, without going back.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm&mdash;I'm leaving."</p>
+
+<p>I was so amazed that I retraced a step or two toward him. "What?"</p>
+
+<p>His smile underwent a change. It grew frozen and steely instead of being
+bright with a continuous play suggesting summer lightning, which had
+been its usual quality.</p>
+
+<p>"My time is up at the end of the month&mdash;and I've asked Mr. Rossiter not
+to expect me to go on."</p>
+
+<p>I was looking for something of the sort sooner or later, but now that it
+had come I saw how lonely I should be.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! Where are you going? Have you got anything in particular?"</p>
+
+<p>"I'm going as secretary to Stacy Grainger."</p>
+
+<p>"I've some connection with that name," I said, absently, "though I can't
+remember what it is."</p>
+
+<p>"You've probably heard of him. He's a good deal in the public eye."</p>
+
+<p>"Have you known him long?" I asked, for the sake of speaking, though I
+was only thinking of myself.</p>
+
+<p>"Never knew him at all." He came nearer to me. "I've a confession to
+make, though it won't be of interest to you. All the while I've been
+here, playing with little Broke Rossiter, I've been&mdash;don't laugh&mdash;I've
+been contributing to the press&mdash;<i>moi qui vous parle</i>!"</p>
+
+<p>"What about?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, politics and finance and foreign policy and public things in
+general. Always had a taste that way. Now it seems that something I
+wrote for the <i>Providence Express</i>&mdash;people read it a good deal&mdash;has
+attracted the attention of the great Stacy. Yes, he's great, too&mdash;J.
+Howard's big rival for&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>I began to recall something I had heard. "Wasn't there a story about him
+and Mr. Brokenshire and Mrs. Brokenshire?"</p>
+
+<p>"That's the man. Well, he's noticed my stuff, and written to the
+editor&mdash;and to me, and I'm to go to him."</p>
+
+<p>I was still thinking of myself and the loss of his <i>camaraderie</i>. "I
+hope he's going to pay you well."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, for me it will be wealth."</p>
+
+<p>"It will probably be more than that. It will be the first long step up."</p>
+
+<p>He nodded confidently. "I hope so."</p>
+
+<p>I had again begun to move away when he stopped me the second time.</p>
+
+<p>"Miss Adare, what's your first name? Mine's Lawrence, as you know."</p>
+
+<p>If I laughed a little it was to conceal my discomfort at this abrupt
+approach to the intimate.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm rather sorry for my name," I said, apologetically. "You see my
+father was one of those poetically loyal Canadians who rather overdo the
+thing. My eldest sister should have been Victoria, because Victoria was
+the queen. But the Duchess of Argyll was in Canada at that time&mdash;and
+very nice to father and mother&mdash;and so the first of us had to be Louise.
+He couldn't begin on the queens till there was a second one. That's poor
+Vic; while I'm&mdash;I know you'll shout&mdash;I'm Alexandra. If there'd been a
+fourth she'd have been a Mary; but poor mother died and the series
+stopped."</p>
+
+<p>He shook hands rather gravely. "Then I shall think of you as Alexandra."</p>
+
+<p>"If you are going to think of me at all," I managed to say, with a
+little <i>moue</i>, "put me down as Alix. That's what I've always been
+called."</p>
+
+
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+<h2>CHAPTER IV</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="dropcap">I</span> was glad of the fog. It was cool and refreshing; it was also
+concealing. I could tramp along under its protection with little or no
+fear of being seen. Wearing tweeds, thick boots, and a felt hat, I was
+prepared for wet, and as a Canadian girl I was used to open air in all
+weathers. The few stragglers generally to be seen on the Cliff Walk
+having rushed to their houses for shelter, I had the rocks and the
+breakers, the honeysuckle and the patches of dog-roses, to myself. In
+the back of my mind I was fortified, too, by the knowledge that dampness
+curls my hair into pretty little tendrils, so that if I did meet any one
+I should be looking at my best.</p>
+
+<p>The path is like no other in the world. I have often wondered why the
+American writer-up of picturesque bits didn't make more of it. Trouville
+has its <i>Plage</i>, and Brighton its King's Road, and Nice its Promenade
+des Anglais, but in no other kingdom of leisure that I know anything
+about will you find the combination of qualities, wild and subdued, that
+mark this ocean-front of the island of Aquidneck. Neither will you
+easily come elsewhere so near to a sense of the primitive human
+struggle, of the crude social clash, of the war of the rights of
+man&mdash;Fisherman's Rights, as this coast historically knows them&mdash;against
+encroachment, privilege, and seclusion. As you crunch the gravel, and
+press the well-rolled turf, and sniff the scent of the white and red
+clover and Queen Anne's lace that fringe the precipice leaning over the
+sea, you feel in the air those elements of conflict that make drama.</p>
+
+<p>In clinging to the edge of the cliff, in twisting round every curve of
+the shore line, in running up hill and down dale, under crags and over
+them, the path is, of course, not the only one of its kind. You will
+find the same thing anywhere on the south coast of England or the north
+coast of France. But in the sum of human interest it sucks into the
+three miles of its course I can think of nothing else that resembles it.
+As guaranteeing the rights of the fisherman it is, so I believe,
+inalienable public property. The fisherman can walk on it, sit on it,
+fish from it, right into eternity. So much he has secured from the past
+history of colony and state; but he has done it at the cost of making
+himself offensive to the gentlemen whose lawns he hems as a seamstress
+hems a skirt.</p>
+
+<p>It is a hem like a serpent, with a serpent's sinuosity and grace, but
+also with a serpent's hatefulness to those who can do nothing but accept
+it as a fact. Since, as a fact, it cannot be abolished it has to be put
+up with; and since it has to be put up with the means must needs be
+found to deal with it effectively. Effectively it has been dealt with.
+Money, skill, and imagination have been spent on it, to adorn it, or
+disguise it, or sink it out of sight. The architect, the landscape
+gardener, and the engineer have all been called into counsel. On
+Fisherman's Rights the smile and the frown are exercised by turns, each
+with its phase of ingenuity. Along one stretch of a hundred yards bland
+recognition borders the way with roses or spans the miniature chasms
+with decorative bridges; along the next shuddering refinement grows a
+hedge or digs a trench behind which the obtrusive wayfarer may pass
+unseen. But shuddering refinement and bland recognition alike withdraw
+into themselves as far as broad lawns and lofty terraces permit them to
+retire, leaving to the owner of Fisherman's Rights the enjoyment of
+ocher and umber rocks and sea and sky and grain-fields yellowing on far
+headlands.</p>
+
+<p>It gave me the nearest thing to glee I ever felt in Newport. It was
+bracing and open and free. It suggested comparisons with scrambles along
+Nova-Scotian shores or tramps on the moors in Scotland. I often hated
+the fine weather; it was oppressive; it was strangling. But a day like
+this, with its whiffs of wild wind and its handfuls of salt slashing
+against eyes and mouth and nostrils, was not only exhilarating, it was
+glorious. I was glad, too, that the prim villas and pretentious
+ch&acirc;teaux, most of them out of proportion to any scale of housekeeping of
+which America is capable, could only be descried like castles in a dream
+through the swirling, diaphanous drift. I could be alone to rage and
+fume&mdash;or fly onward with a speed that was in itself a relief.</p>
+
+<p>I could be alone till, on climbing the slope of a shorn and wind-swept
+bluff, I saw a square-shouldered figure looming on the crest. It was no
+more than a deepening of the texture of the fog, but I knew its lines.
+Skimming up the ascent with a little cry, I was in Hugh's arms, my head
+on his burly breast.</p>
+
+<p>I think it was his burliness that made the most definite appeal to me.
+He was so sturdy and strong, and I was so small and desolate. From the
+beginning, when he first used to come near me, I felt his presence, as
+the Bible says, like the shadow of a rock in a thirsty land. That was in
+my early homesick time, before I had seized the new way of living and
+the new national point of view. The fact, too, that, as I expressed it
+to myself, I was in the second cabin when I had always been accustomed
+to the first, inspired a discomfort for which unwittingly I sought
+consolation. Nobody thought of me as other than Mrs. Rossiter's
+retainer, but this one kindly man.</p>
+
+<p>I noticed his kindliness almost before I noticed him, just as, I think,
+he noticed my loneliness almost before he noticed me. He opened doors
+for me when I went in or out; he served me with things if he happened to
+be there at tea; he dropped into a chair beside me when I was the only
+member of a group whom no one spoke to. If Gladys was of the company I
+was of it too, with a nominal footing but a virtual exclusion. The men
+in the Rossiter circle were of the four hundred and ninety-nine to whom
+I wasn't attractive; the women were all civil&mdash;from a distance.
+Occasionally some nice old lady would ask me where I came from and if I
+liked my work, or talk to me of new educational methods in a way which,
+with my bringing up, was to me as so much Greek; but I never got any
+other sign of friendliness. Only this short, stockily built young
+fellow, with the small, blue eyes, ever recognized me as a human being
+with the average yearning for human intercourse.</p>
+
+<p>During the winter in New York he never went further than that. I
+remembered Mrs. Rossiter's recommendation and "let him alone." I knew
+how to do it. He was not the first man I had ever had to deal with, even
+if no one had asked me to marry him. I accepted his small, kindly acts
+with that shade of discretion which defined the distance between us. As
+far as I could observe, he himself had no disposition to cross the lines
+I set&mdash;not till we moved to Newport.</p>
+
+<p>There was a fortnight between our going there and his&mdash;a fortnight which
+seemed to work a change in him. The Hugh Brokenshire I met on one of my
+first rambles along the cliffs was not the Hugh Brokenshire I had last
+seen in Fifth Avenue. Perhaps I was not the same myself. In the new
+surroundings I had missed him&mdash;a little. I will not say that his absence
+had meant an aching void to me; but where I had had a friend, now I had
+none&mdash;since I was unable to count Larry Strangways. Had it not been for
+this solitude I should have been less receptive to his comings when he
+suddenly began to pursue me.</p>
+
+<p>Pursuit is the only word I can use. I found him everywhere, quiet,
+deliberate, persistent. If he had been ten or even five years older I
+could have taken his advances without uneasiness. But he was only
+twenty-six and a dependent. He had no work; apart from his allowance
+from his father he had no means. And yet when, on the day before my
+chronicle begins, he stole upon me as I sat in a sheltered nook below
+the cliffs to which I was fond of retreating when I had time&mdash;when he
+stole upon me there, and kissed me and kissed me and kissed me, I
+couldn't help confessing that I loved him.</p>
+
+<p>I must leave to some woman who has had to fend for herself the task of
+telling what it means when a man comes to offer her his heart and his
+protection. It goes without saying that it means more to her than to the
+sheltered woman, for it means things different and more wonderful. It is
+the expected unexpected come to pass; it is the impossible achieved. It
+is not only success; it is success with an aureole of glory.</p>
+
+<p>I suppose I must be parasitical by nature, for I never have conceived of
+life as other than dependent on some man who would love me and take care
+of me. Even when no such man appeared and I was forced out to earn my
+bread, I looked upon the need as temporary only. In the loneliest of
+times at Mrs. Rossiter's, at periods when I didn't see a man for weeks,
+the hero never seemed farther away than just behind the scenes. I
+confess to minutes when I thought he tarried unnecessarily long; I
+confess to terrified questionings as to what would happen were he never
+to come at all; I confess to solitary watches of the night in company
+with fears and tears; but I cannot confess to anything more than a low
+burning of that lamp of hope which never went out entirely.</p>
+
+<p>When, therefore, Hugh Brokenshire offered me what he had to offer me I
+felt for a few minutes&mdash;ten, fifteen, twenty perhaps&mdash;that sense of the
+fruition of the being which I am sure comes to us but rarely in this
+life, and perhaps is a foretaste of eternity. I was like a creature that
+has long been struggling up to some higher state&mdash;and has reached it.</p>
+
+<p>I am ashamed to say, too, that my first consciousness came in pictures
+to which the dear young man himself was only incidental. Two scenes in
+particular that for ten years past had been only a little below the
+threshold of my consciousness came out boldly, like developed
+photographs. I was the center of both. In one I saw a dainty little
+dining-room, where the table was laid. The damask was beautiful; the
+silver rich; the glasses crystalline. Wearing an inexpensive but
+extremely chic little gown, I was seating the guests. The other picture
+was more dim, but only in the sense that the room was deliciously
+darkened. It had white furnishings, a little white cot, and toys. In its
+very center was a bassinet, and I was leaning over it, wearing a
+delicate lace peignoir.</p>
+
+<p>Ought I to blush to say that while Hugh stammered out his impassioned
+declarations I was seeing these two tableaux emerging from the state of
+only half-acknowledged dreams into real possibility? I dare say. I
+merely affirm that it was so. Since the dominant craving of my nature
+was to have a home and a baby, I saw the baby and the home before I
+could realize a husband or a father, or bring my mind to the definite
+proposals faltered by poor Hugh.</p>
+
+<p>But I did bring my mind to them, with the result of which I have already
+given a sufficient indication. Even in admitting that I loved him I
+thrust and parried and postponed. The whole idea was too big for me to
+grapple with on the spur of a sudden moment. I suggested his talking the
+matter over with his father chiefly to gain time.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>But to rest in his arms had only a subordinate connection with the great
+issue I had to face. It was a joy in itself. It was a pledge of the
+future, even if I were never to take anything but the pledge. After my
+shifts and struggles and anxieties I could feel the satisfaction of
+knowing it was in my power to let them all roll off. If I were never to
+do it, if I were to go back to my uncertainties, this minute would
+mitigate the trial in advance. I might fight for existence during all
+the rest of my life, and yet I should still have the bliss of
+remembering that some one was willing to fight for me.</p>
+
+<p>He released me at last, since there might be people in Newport as
+indifferent to weather as ourselves.</p>
+
+<p>"What happened?" he asked then, with an eagerness which almost choked
+the question in its utterance. "Was it awful?"</p>
+
+<p>I was too nearly hysterical to enter on anything like a recital. "It
+might have been worse," I half laughed and half sobbed, trying to
+recover my breath and dry my eyes.</p>
+
+<p>His spirit seemed to leap at the answer. "Do you mean to say you got
+concessions from him&mdash;or anything like that?"</p>
+
+<p>I couldn't help clinging to the edge of his raincoat. "Did you expect me
+to?"</p>
+
+<p>"I didn't know but what, when he saw you&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, but he didn't see me. That was part of the difficulty. He looked
+where I was&mdash;but he didn't find anything there."</p>
+
+<p>He laughed, with a hint of disappointment. "I know what you mean; but
+you mustn't be surprised. He'll see you yet." He clasped me again. "I
+didn't see you at first, little girl; I swear I didn't. You're like
+that. A fellow must look at you twice before he knows that you're there;
+but when he begins to take notice&mdash;" I struggled out of his embrace,
+while he continued: "It's the same with all the great things&mdash;with
+pictures and mountains and cathedrals, and so on. Often thought about it
+when we've been abroad. See something once and pass it by. Next time you
+look at it a little. Third time it begins to grow on you. Fourth time
+you've found a wonder. You're a wonder, little Alix, do you know it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh no, I'm not. I must warn you, Hugh darling, that I'm very prosaic
+and practical and ordinary. You mustn't put me on a pedestal&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Put you on a pedestal? You were born on a pedestal. You're the woman
+I've seen in hopes and dreams&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>We began to walk on, coming to a little hollow that dipped near enough
+to the shore to allow of our scrambling over the rocks to where we could
+sit down among them. As we were here below the thickest belt of the fog
+line, I could see him in a way that had been impossible on the bluff.</p>
+
+<p>If he was good-looking it was only in the handsome-ugly sense. Mrs.
+Rossiter often said he was the one member of the family who inherited
+from the Brews of Boston, a statement I could verify from the first Mrs.
+Brokenshire's portrait by Carolus-Duran. Hugh's features were not
+ill-formed so much as they were out of proportion to each other,
+becoming thus a mere jumble of organs. The blue eyes were too small and
+too wide apart; the forehead was too broad for its height; the nose,
+which started at the same fine angle as his father's, changed in
+mid-course to a knob; the upper lip was intended to be long, but
+half-way in its descent took a notion to curve upward, making a hollow
+for a tender, youthful, fair mustache that didn't quite meet in the
+center and might have been applied with a camel's-hair brush; the lower
+lip turned outward with a little fullness that spilled over in a little
+fall, giving to the whole expression something lovably good-natured.</p>
+
+<p>Because the sea boiled over the ledges and scraped on the pebbles with a
+screechy sound we were obliged to sit close together in order to make
+ourselves heard. His arm about me was amazingly protective. I felt safe.</p>
+
+<p>The account of his interview with his father was too incoherent to give
+me more than the idea that they had talked somewhat at cross-purposes.
+To Hugh's statement that he wished to marry Miss Adare, the little
+nursery governess at Ethel's, his father had responded by reading a
+letter from Lord Goldborough inviting Hugh to his place in Scotland for
+the shooting.</p>
+
+<p>"It would be well for you to accept," the father commented, as he
+folded the letter. "I've cabled to Goldborough to say you'd sail on&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"But, father, how can I sail when I've asked Miss Adare to marry me?"</p>
+
+<p>To this the reply was the mention of the steamer and the date. He went
+on to say, however: "If you've asked any one to marry you it's absurd,
+of course. But I'll take care of that. If you go by that boat you'll
+reach London in plenty of time to fit out at your tailor's and still be
+at Strath-na-Cloid by the twelfth. In case you're short of money&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Apparently they got no further than that. To Hugh's assertions and
+objections his father had but one response. It was a response, as I
+understood, which confronted the younger man like a wall he had neither
+the force to break down nor the agility to climb over, and left him
+staring at a blank.</p>
+
+<p>Then followed another outburst which to my unaccustomed ear was as wild,
+sweet music. It wasn't merely that he loved me, he adored me; it wasn't
+merely that I was young and pretty and captivating with a sly,
+unobtrusive fascination that held you enchanted when it held you at all.
+I was mistress of the wisdom of the ages. Among the nice expensively
+dressed young girls with whom he danced and rode and swam and flirted,
+Hugh had never seen any one who could "hold a candle" to me in knowledge
+of human nature and the world. It wasn't that I had seen more than they
+or done more than they; it was that I had a mind through which every
+impression filtered and came out as something of my own. It was what he
+had always been looking for in a woman, and had given up the hope of
+finding. He spoke as if he was forty. He was serious himself, he
+averred; he had reflected, and held original convictions. Though a rich
+man's son, with corresponding prospects, his heart was with the masses
+and he labeled himself a Socialist.</p>
+
+<p>It was not the same thing to be a Socialist now, he explained to me, as
+it had been twenty years before, since so many men of education and
+position had adopted this system of opinion. In fact, his own conversion
+had been partly due to young Lord Ernest Hayes, of the British Embassy,
+who had spent the preceding summer at Newport, though his inclinations
+had gone in this direction ever since he had begun to think. It was
+because I was so open-eyed and so sincere that he had been drawn to me
+as soon as he had started in to notice me. It was true that he had
+noticed me first of all because I was in a subordinate position and
+alone, but, having done so, he had found a queen disguised as a working
+girl. I was a queen of the vital things in life, a queen of
+intelligence, of sympathy, of the defiance of convention, of everything
+that was great. I was the woman a Socialist could love, of whom a
+Socialist could make his star.</p>
+
+<p>"If father would only give me credit for being twenty-six and a man,"
+the dear boy went on earnestly, "with a man's responsibility to society
+and the human race! But he doesn't. He thinks I ought to quit being a
+Socialist because he tells me to&mdash;or else he doesn't think at all. Nine
+times out of ten, when I begin to say what I believe, he talks of
+something else&mdash;just as he did last night in bringing up the
+Goldboroughs."</p>
+
+<p>I found the opportunity for which I had been looking during his
+impassioned rhapsody. The mention of the Goldboroughs gave me that kind
+of chill about the heart which the mist imparted to the hands and face.</p>
+
+<p>"You know them all very well," I said, when I found an opening in which
+I could speak.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh yes," he admitted, indifferently. "Known them all my life. Father
+represented Meek &amp; Brokenshire in England till my grandfather died.
+Goldborough used to be an impecunious chap, land poor, till he and
+father began to pull together. Father's been able to give him tips on
+the market, and he's given father&mdash; Well, dad's always had a taste for
+English swells. Never could stand the Continental kind&mdash;gilt gingerbread
+he's called 'em&mdash;and so, well, you can see."</p>
+
+<p>I admitted that I could see, going on to ask what the Goldborough family
+consisted of.</p>
+
+<p>There was Lord Leatherhead, the eldest son; then there were two younger
+sons, one in the army and one preparing for the Church; and there were
+three girls.</p>
+
+<p>"Any of the daughters married?" I ventured, timidly.</p>
+
+<p>There was nothing forced in the indifference with which he made his
+explanations. Laura was married to a banker named Bell; Janet, he
+thought he had heard, was engaged to a chap in the Inverness Rangers;
+Cecilia&mdash;Cissie they usually called her&mdash;was to the best of his
+knowledge still wholly free, but the best of his knowledge did not go
+far.</p>
+
+<p>I pumped up my courage again. "Is she&mdash;nice?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, nice enough." He really didn't know much about her. She was
+generally away at school when he had been at Goldborough Castle. When
+she was there he hadn't seen more than a long-legged, gawky girl, rather
+good at tennis, with red hair hanging down her back.</p>
+
+<p>Satisfied with these replies, I went on to tell him of my interview with
+his father an hour or two before. Of this he seized on one point with
+some ecstasy.</p>
+
+<p>"So you told him you'd take me! Oh, Alix&mdash;gosh!"</p>
+
+<p>The exclamation was a sigh of relief as well as of rapture. I could
+smile at it because it was so boyish and American, especially as he
+clasped me again and held me in a way that almost stopped my breath.
+When I freed myself, however, I said, with a show of firmness:</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Hugh; it's what I said to him; but it's not what I'm going to
+repeat to you."</p>
+
+<p>"Not what you're going to repeat to me? But if you said it to him&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I'm still not obliged to accept you&mdash;to-day."</p>
+
+<p>"But if you mean to accept me at all&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I mean to accept you&mdash;if all goes well."</p>
+
+<p>"But what do you mean by that?"</p>
+
+<p>"I mean&mdash;if your family should want me."</p>
+
+<p>I could feel his clasp relax as he said: "Oh, if you're going to wait
+for that!"</p>
+
+<p>"Hugh, darling, how can I not wait for it? I told him I couldn't stop to
+consider a family; but&mdash;but I see I must."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, but why? We shall lose everything if you do that. To wait for my
+family to want you to marry me&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>I detached myself altogether from his embrace, pretending to arrange my
+skirts about my feet. He leaned forward, his fingers interlocked, his
+elbows on his knees, his kind young face disconsolate.</p>
+
+<p>"When I talked to your father," I tried to explain, "I saw chiefly the
+individual's side of the question of marriage. There is that side; but
+there's another. Marriage doesn't concern a man and a woman alone; it
+concerns a family&mdash;sometimes two."</p>
+
+<p>His cry came out with the explosive force of a slowly gathering groan.
+"Oh, rot, Alix!" He went on to expostulate: "Can't you see? If we were
+to go now and buy a license&mdash;and be married by the first clergyman we
+met&mdash;the family couldn't say a word."</p>
+
+<p>"Exactly; it's just what I do see. Since you want it I could force
+myself on them&mdash;the word is your father's&mdash;and they'd have no choice but
+to accept me."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, then?"</p>
+
+<p>"Hugh, dear, I&mdash;I can't do it that way."</p>
+
+<p>"Then what way could you do it?"</p>
+
+<p>"I'm not sure yet. I haven't thought of it. I only know in advance that
+even if I told you I'd marry you against&mdash;against all their wishes, I
+couldn't keep my promise in the end."</p>
+
+<p>"That is," he said, bitterly, "you think more of them than you do of
+me."</p>
+
+<p>I put my hand on his clasped fingers. "Nonsense. I&mdash;I love you. Don't
+you see I do? How could I help loving you when you've been so kind to
+me? But marriage is always a serious thing to a woman; and when it comes
+to marriage into a family that would look on me as a great
+misfortune&mdash;Hugh, darling, I don't see how I could ever face it."</p>
+
+<p>"I do," he declared, promptly. "It isn't so bad as you think. Families
+come round. There was Tracy Allen. Married a manicure. The Allens kicked
+up a row at first&mdash;wouldn't see Tracy and all that; but now&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, but, Hugh, I'm not a manicure."</p>
+
+<p>"You're a nursery governess."</p>
+
+<p>"By accident&mdash;and a little by misfortune. I wasn't a nursery governess
+when I first knew your sister."</p>
+
+<p>"But what difference does that make?"</p>
+
+<p>"It makes this difference: that a manicure would probably not think of
+herself as your equal. She'd expect coldness at first, and be prepared
+for it."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, couldn't you?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, because, you see, I'm your equal."</p>
+
+<p>He hunched his big shoulders impatiently. "Oh, Alix, I don't go into
+that. I'm a Socialist. I don't care what you are."</p>
+
+<p>"But you see I do. I don't want to expose myself to being looked down
+upon, and perhaps despised, for the rest of my life, because my family
+is quite as good as your own."</p>
+
+<p>He turned slowly from peering into the fog-bank to fix on me a look of
+which the tenderness and pity and incredulity seemed to stab me. I felt
+the helplessness of a sane person insisting on his sanity to some one
+who believes him mad.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't let us talk about those things, darling little Alix," he begged,
+gently. "Let's do the thing in style, like Tracy Allen, without any
+flummery or fluff. What's family&mdash;once you get away from the idea? When
+I sink it I should think that you could afford to do it too. If I take
+you as Tracy Allen took Libby Jaynes&mdash;that was her name, I remember
+now&mdash;not a very pretty girl&mdash;but if I take you as he took her, and you
+take me as she took him&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"But, Hugh, I can't. If I were Libby Jaynes, it's possible I could; but
+as it is&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>And in the end he came round to my point of view. That is to say, he
+appreciated my unwillingness to reward Mrs. Rossiter's kindness to me by
+creating a scandal, and he was not without some admiration for what he
+called my "magnanimity toward his old man" in hesitating to drive him to
+extremes.</p>
+
+<p>And yet it was Hugh himself who drove him to extremes, over questions
+which I hardly raised. That was some ten days later, when Hugh refused
+point-blank to sail on the steamer his father had selected to take him
+on the way to Strath-na-Cloid. I was, of course, not present at the
+interview, but having heard of it from Hugh, and got his account
+corroborated by Ethel Rossiter, I can describe it much as it took place.</p>
+
+<p>I may say here, perhaps, that I still remained with Mrs. Rossiter. My
+marching orders, expected from hour to hour, didn't come. Mrs. Rossiter
+herself explained this delay to me some four days after that scene in
+the breakfast loggia which had left me in a state of curiosity and
+suspense.</p>
+
+<p>"Father seems to think that if he insisted on your leaving it would make
+Hugh's asking you to marry him too much a matter of importance."</p>
+
+<p>"And doesn't he himself consider it a matter of importance?"</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Rossiter patted a tress of her brown hair into place. "No, I don't
+think he does."</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps nothing from the beginning had made me more inwardly indignant
+than the simplicity of this reply. I had imagined him raging against me
+in his heart and forming deep, dark plans to destroy me.</p>
+
+<p>"It would be a matter of importance to most people," I said, trying not
+to betray my feeling of offense.</p>
+
+<p>"Most people aren't father," Mrs. Rossiter contented herself with
+replying, still occupied with her tress of hair.</p>
+
+<p>It was the confidential hour of the morning in her big chintzy room. The
+maid having departed, I had been answering notes and was still sitting
+at the desk. It was the first time she had broached the subject in the
+four days which had been to me a period of so much restlessness.
+Wondering at this detachment, I had the boldness to question her.</p>
+
+<p>"Doesn't it seem important to you?"</p>
+
+<p>She threw me a glance over her shoulder, turning back to the mirror at
+once. "What have I got to do with it? It's father's affair&mdash;and Hugh's."</p>
+
+<p>"And mine, too, I suppose?" I hazarded, interrogatively.</p>
+
+<p>To this she said nothing. Her silence gave me to understand what so many
+other little things impressed upon me&mdash;that I didn't count. What Hugh
+did or didn't do was a matter for the Brokenshires to feel and for J.
+Howard Brokenshire to deal with. Ethel Rossiter herself was neither for
+me nor against me. I was her nursery governess, and useful as an
+unofficial companion-secretary. As long as it was not forbidden she
+would keep me in that capacity; when the order came she would send me
+away. As for anything I had to suffer, that was my own lookout. Hugh
+would be managed by his father, and from that fate there was no appeal.
+There was nothing, therefore, to worry Mrs. Rossiter. She could dismiss
+the whole matter, as she presently did, to discuss her troubles over the
+rival attentions of Mr. Millinger and Mr. Scott, and to protest against
+their making her so conspicuous. She had the kindness to say, however,
+just as she was leaving the house for Bailey's Beach:</p>
+
+<p>"I don't talk to you about this affair of Hugh's because I really don't
+see much of father. It's his business, you see, and nothing for me to
+interfere with. With that woman there I hardly ever go to their house,
+and he doesn't often come here. Her mother's with them, too, just
+now&mdash;that's old Mrs. Billing&mdash;a harpy if ever there was one&mdash;and with
+all the things people are saying! If father only knew! But, of course,
+he'll be the last one to hear it."</p>
+
+<p>She was getting into her car by this time and I seized no more; but at
+lunch I had a few minutes in which to bring my searchings of heart
+before Larry Strangways.</p>
+
+<p>It was not often we took this repast alone with the children, but it had
+to happen sometimes. Mrs. Rossiter had telephoned from Bailey's that she
+had accepted the invitation of some friends and we were not to expect
+her. We should lunch, however, she informed me, in the breakfast loggia,
+where the open air would act as chaperon and insure the necessary
+measure of propriety.</p>
+
+<p>So long as Broke and Gladys were present we were as demure as if we had
+met by chance in the restaurant car of a train. With the coffee the
+children begged to be allowed to play with the dogs on the grass, which
+left us for a few minutes as man and woman.</p>
+
+<p>"How is everything?" he asked at once, taking on that smile which seemed
+to put him outside the sphere of my interests.</p>
+
+<p>I shrugged my shoulders and looked down at the spoon with which I was
+dabbling in my cup. "Oh, just the same," I glanced up to say. "Tell me.
+Have people in this country no other measure of your standing but that
+of money?"</p>
+
+<p>"Have they any such measure in any country?"</p>
+
+<p>I was beginning with the words, "Why, yes," when he interrupted me.</p>
+
+<p>"Think."</p>
+
+<p>"I am thinking," I insisted. "In England and Canada and the British
+Empire generally&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"You attach some importance to birth. Yes; so do we here&mdash;when it goes
+with money. Without the basis of that support neither you nor we give
+what is so deliciously called birth the honor of a second thought."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh yes, we do&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"When it's your only asset&mdash;yes; but you do it alone. No one else pays
+it any attention."</p>
+
+<p>I colored. "That's rather cruel&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"It's not a bit more cruel than the fact. Take your case and mine as an
+illustration. As the estimate of birth goes in this country, I'm as well
+born as the majority. My ancestors were New-Englanders, country doctors
+and lawyers and ministers&mdash;especially the ministers. But as long as I
+haven't the cash I'm only a tutor, and eat at the second table. Jim
+Rossiter's forebears were much the same as mine; but the fact that he
+has a hundred thousand dollars a year and I've hardly got two is the
+only thing that would be taken into consideration, by any one in either
+the United Kingdom or the United States. It would be the same if I
+descended from Crusaders. If I've got nothing but that and my character
+to recommend me&mdash;" He raised his hand and snapped his fingers with a
+scornful laugh. "Take your case," he hurried on as I was about to speak.
+"You're probably like me, sprung of a line of professional men&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"And soldiers," I interrupted, proudly. "The first of my family to
+settle in Canada was a General Adare in the middle of the seventeen
+hundreds. He'd been in the garrison at Halifax and chose to remain in
+Nova Scotia." Perhaps there was some boastfulness in my tone as I added,
+"He came of the famous Fighting Adares of the County Limerick."</p>
+
+<p>"And all that isn't worth a row of pins&mdash;except to yourself. If you
+were the daughter of a miner who'd struck it rich you'd be a candidate
+for the British peerage. You'd be received in the best houses in London;
+you could marry a duke and no one would say you nay. As it is&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"As it is," I said, tremulously, "I'm just a nursery governess, and
+there's no getting away from the fact."</p>
+
+<p>"Not until you get away from the condition."</p>
+
+<p>"So that when I told Hugh Brokenshire the other day that in point of
+family I was his equal&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"He probably didn't believe you."</p>
+
+<p>The memory of Hugh's look still rankled in me. "No, I don't think he
+did."</p>
+
+<p>"Of course he didn't. As the world counts&mdash;as we all count&mdash;no poor
+family, however noble, is the equal of any rich family, however base."
+There was that transformation of his smile from something sunny to
+something hard which I had noticed once before, as he went on to add,
+"If you want to marry Hugh Brokenshire&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Which I do," I interposed, defiantly.</p>
+
+<p>"Then you must enter into his game as he enters into it himself. He
+thinks of himself as doing the big romantic thing. He's marrying a poor
+girl who has nothing but herself as guaranty. That your
+great-grandfather was a general and one of the&mdash;what did you call
+them?&mdash;Fighting Adares of the County Cork would mean no more to him than
+if you said you were descended from the Laced&aelig;monians and the dragon's
+teeth. As far as that goes, you might as well be an immigrant girl from
+Sweden; you might as well be a cook. He's stooping to pick up his
+diamond from the mire, instead of buying it from a jeweler's window.
+Very well, then, you must let him stoop. You mustn't try to
+underestimate his condescension. You mustn't tell him you were once in
+a jeweler's window, and only fell into the mire by chance&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Because," I smiled, "the mire is where I belong, until I'm taken out of
+it."</p>
+
+<p>"We belong," he stated, judicially, "where the world puts us. If we're
+wise we'll stay there&mdash;till we can meet the world's own terms for
+getting out."</p>
+
+
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+<h2>CHAPTER V</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="dropcap">I</span> come at last to Hugh's defiance of his father. It took place not only
+without my incitement, but without my knowledge. No one could have been
+more sick with misgiving than I when I learned that the boy had left his
+father's house and gone to a hotel. If I was to blame at all it was in
+mentioning from time to time his condition of dependence.</p>
+
+<p>"You haven't the right to defy your father's wishes," I said to him. "so
+long as you're living on his money. What it comes to is that he pays you
+to do as he tells you. If you don't do as he tells you, you're not
+earning your allowance honestly."</p>
+
+<p>The point of view was new to him. "But if I was making a living of my
+own?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, that would be different."</p>
+
+<p>"You'd marry me then?"</p>
+
+<p>I considered this. "It would still have to depend," I was obliged to say
+at last.</p>
+
+<p>"Depend on what?"</p>
+
+<p>"On the degree to which you made yourself your own master."</p>
+
+<p>"I should be my own master if I earned a good income."</p>
+
+<p>I admitted this.</p>
+
+<p>"Very well," he declared, with decision. "I shall earn it."</p>
+
+<p>I didn't question his power to do that. I had heard so much of the
+American man's ability to make money that I took it for granted, as I
+did a bird's capacity for flight. As far as Hugh was concerned, it
+seemed to me more a matter of intention than of opportunity. I reasoned
+that if he made up his mind to be independent, independent he would be.
+It would rest with him. It was not of the future I was thinking so much
+as of the present; and in the present I was chiefly dodging his plea
+that we settle the matter by taking the law into our own hands.</p>
+
+<p>"It won't be as bad as you think," he kept urging. "Father would be sure
+to come round to you if you were my wife. He never quarrels with the
+accomplished fact. That's been part of the secret of his success. He'll
+fight a thing as long as he can; but when it's carried over his head no
+one knows better than he how to make the best of it."</p>
+
+<p>"But, Hugh, I don't want to have him make the best of it that way&mdash;at
+least, so long as you're not your own master."</p>
+
+<p>One day at the Casino he pointed out Libby Jaynes to me. I was there in
+charge of the children, and he managed to slip over from the tennis he
+was playing for a word:</p>
+
+<p>"There she is&mdash;that girl with the orange-silk sweater."</p>
+
+<p>The point of his remark was that Libby Jaynes was one of a group of half
+a dozen people, and was apparently received at Newport like anybody
+else. The men were in flannels; the women in the short skirts and easy
+attitudes developed by a sporting life. The silk sweater in its
+brilliant hues was to the Casino grounds as the parrot to Brazilian
+woods. Libby Jaynes wasn't pretty; her lips were too widely parted and
+her teeth too big; but her figure was adapted to the costume of the day,
+and her head to the slouching panama. She wore both with a decided
+<i>chic</i>. She was the orange spot where there was another of purple and
+another of pink and another of bright emerald-green. As far as I could
+see no one remembered that she had ever rubbed men's finger-nails in the
+barber's room of a hotel, and she certainly betrayed no sign of it. It
+was what Hugh begged me to observe. If I liked I could within a year be
+a member of this privileged troop instead of an outsider looking on.
+"You'd be just as good as she is," he declared with a na&iuml;vet&eacute; I couldn't
+help taking with a smile.</p>
+
+<p>I was about to say, "But I don't feel inferior to her as it is," when I
+recalled the queer look of incredulity he had given me on the beach.</p>
+
+<p>And then one morning I heard he had quarreled with his father. It was
+Hugh who told me first, but Mrs. Rossiter gave me all the details within
+an hour afterward.</p>
+
+<p>It appeared that they had had a dinner-party in honor of old Mrs.
+Billing which had gone off with some success. The guests having left,
+the family had gathered in Mildred's sitting-room to give the invalid an
+account of the entertainment. It was one of those domestic reunions on
+which the household god insisted from time to time, so that his wife
+should seem to have that support from his children which both he and she
+knew she didn't have. The Jack Brokenshires were there, and Hugh, and
+Ethel Rossiter.</p>
+
+<p>It was exactly the scene for a tragi-comedy, and had the kind of setting
+theatrical producers liked before the new scene-painters set the note of
+allegorical simplicity. Mildred had the best corner room up-stairs,
+though, like the rest of the house, her surroundings suffered from her
+father's taste for the Italianate and over-rich. Heavy dark cabinets,
+heavy dark chairs, gilt candelabra, and splendidly brocaded stuffs threw
+the girl's wan face and weak figure into prominence. I think she often
+sighed for pretty papers and cretonnes, for S&egrave;vres and colored prints,
+but she took her tapestries and old masters and majolica as decreed by a
+power she couldn't question. When everything was done for her comfort
+the poor thing had nothing to do for herself.</p>
+
+<p>The room had the further resemblance to a scene on the stage since, as I
+was given to understand, no one felt the reality of the friendliness
+enacted. To all J. Howard's children it was odious that he should
+worship a woman who was younger than Mildred and very little older than
+Ethel. They had loved their mother, who had been plain. They resented
+the fact that their father had got hold of her money for himself, had
+made her unhappy, and had forgotten her. That he should have become
+infatuated with a girl who was their own contemporary would have been a
+humiliation to them in any case; but when the story of his fight for her
+became public property, when it was the joke of the Stock Exchange and
+the subject of leading articles in the press, they could only hold their
+heads high and carry the situation with bravado. It was a proof of his
+grip on New York that he could put Editha Billing where he wished to see
+her, and find no authority, social or financial, bold enough to question
+him; it was equally a proof of his dominance in his family that neither
+son nor daughter could treat his new wife with anything but deference.
+She was the <i>ma&icirc;tresse en t&icirc;tre</i> to whom even the princes and princesses
+had to bow.</p>
+
+<p>They were bowing on this evening by treating old Mrs. Billing as if they
+liked her and counted her one of themselves. As the mother of the
+favorite she could reasonably claim this homage, and no one refused it
+but poor Hugh. He turned his back on it. Mildred being obliged to lie on
+a couch, he put himself at her feet, refusing thus to be witness of what
+he called a flattering hypocrisy that sickened him. That went on in the
+dimly, richly lighted room behind him, where the others sat about,
+pretending to be gay.</p>
+
+<p>Then the match went into the gunpowder all at once.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm the more glad the evening has been pleasant," J. Howard observed,
+blandly, "since we may consider it a farewell to Hugh. He's sailing
+on&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Hugh merely said over his shoulder, "No, father; I'm not."</p>
+
+<p>The startled silence was just long enough to be noticed before the
+father went on, as if he had not been interrupted:</p>
+
+<p>"He's sailing on&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"No, father; I'm not."</p>
+
+<p>There was no change in Hugh's tone any more than in his parent's. I
+gathered from Mrs. Rossiter that all present held their breaths as if in
+expectation that this blasphemer would be struck dead. Mentally they
+stood off, too, like the chorus in an opera, to see the great tragedy
+acted to the end without interference of their own. Jack Brokenshire,
+who was fingering an extinct cigar, twiddled it nervously at his lips.
+Pauline clasped her hands and leaned forward in excitement. Mrs.
+Brokenshire affected to hear nothing and arranged her five rows of
+pearls. Mrs. Billing, whom Mrs. Rossiter described as a condor with lace
+on her head and diamonds round her shrunken neck, looked from one to
+another through her lorgnette, which she fixed at last on her
+son-in-law. Ethel Rossiter kept herself detached. Knowing that Hugh had
+been riding for a fall, she expected him now to come his cropper.</p>
+
+<p>It caused some surprise to the lookers-on that Mr. Brokenshire should
+merely press the electric bell. "Tell Mr. Spellman to come here," he
+said, quietly, to the footman who answered his ring.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Spellman appeared, a smooth-shaven man of indefinite age, with dark
+shadows in the face, and cadaverous. His master instructed him with a
+word or two. There was silence during the minute that followed the man's
+withdrawal, a silence ominous with expectation. When Spellman had
+returned and handed a long envelope to his employer and withdrawn again,
+the suspended action was renewed.</p>
+
+<p>Hugh, who was playing in seeming unconcern with the tassel of Mildred's
+dressing-gown, had given no attention to the small drama going on behind
+him.</p>
+
+<p>"Hugh, here's father," Mildred whispered.</p>
+
+<p>Her white face was drawn; she was fond of Hugh; she seemed to scent the
+catastrophe. Hugh continued to play with the tassel without glancing
+upward.</p>
+
+<p>It was not J. Howard's practice to raise his voice or to speak with
+emphasis except when the occasion demanded it. He was very gentle now as
+his hand slipped over Hugh's shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>"Hugh, here's your ticket and your letter of credit. I asked Spellman to
+see to them when he was in New York."</p>
+
+<p>The young man barely turned his head. "Thank you, father; but I don't
+want them. I can't go over&mdash;because I'm going to marry Miss Adare."</p>
+
+<p>As it was no time for the chorus of an opera to intervene, all waited
+for what would happen next. Old Mrs. Billing, turning her lorgnette on
+the rebellious boy, saw nothing but the back of his head. The father's
+hand wavered for a minute over the son's shoulder and let the envelope
+fall. Hugh continued to play with the tassel.</p>
+
+<p>For once Howard Brokenshire was disconcerted. Having stepped back a pace
+or two, he said in his quiet voice, "What did you say, Hugh?"</p>
+
+<p>The answer was quite distinct. "I said I was going to marry Miss Adare."</p>
+
+<p>"Who's that?"</p>
+
+<p>"You know perfectly well, father. She's Ethel's nursery governess.
+You've been to see her, and she's told you she's going to marry me."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, but I thought that was over and done with."</p>
+
+<p>"No, you didn't, father. Please don't try to come that. I told you
+nearly a fortnight ago that I was perfectly serious&mdash;and I am."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, are you? Well, so am I. The Goldboroughs are expecting you for the
+twelfth&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"The Goldboroughs can go to&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Hugh!" It was Mildred who cut him short with a cry that was almost a
+petition.</p>
+
+<p>"All right, Milly," he assured her under his breath. "I'm not going to
+make a scene."</p>
+
+<p>That J. Howard expected to become the principal in a duel, under the
+eyes of excited witnesses, I do not think. If he had chosen to speak
+when witnesses were present, it was because of his assumption that
+Hugh's submission would be thus more easily secured. As it was his
+policy never to enter into a conflict of authorities, or of will against
+will, he was for the moment nonplussed. I have an idea he would have
+retired gracefully, waiting for a more convenient opportunity, had it
+not been for old Mrs. Billing's lorgnette.</p>
+
+<p>It will, perhaps, not interrupt my narrative too much if I say here that
+of all the important women he knew he was most afraid of her. She had
+coached him when he was a beginner in life and she an established young
+woman of the world. She must then have had a certain <i>beaut&eacute; du diable</i>
+and that nameless thing which men find exciting in women. I have been
+told that she was an example of the modern Helen of Troy, over whom men
+fight while she holds the stakes, and I can believe it. Her history was
+said to be full of dramatic episodes, though I never knew what they
+were. Even at sixty, which was the age at which I saw her, she had that
+kind of presence which challenges and dares. She was ugly and hook-nosed
+and withered; but she couldn't be overlooked. To me she suggested that
+Madame Poisson who so carefully prepared her daughter to become the
+Marquise de Pompadour. Stacy Grainger, I believe, was the Louis XV. of
+her earlier plans, though, like a born strategist, she changed her
+methods when reasons arose for doing so. I shall return to this later in
+my story. At present I only want to say that I do not believe that Mr.
+Brokenshire would have pushed things to an issue that night had her
+lorgnette not been there to provoke him.</p>
+
+<p>"Has it occurred to you, Hugh," he asked, in his softest tones, on
+reaching a stand before the chimney which was filled with dwarfed potted
+palms, "that I pay you an allowance of six thousand dollars a year?"</p>
+
+<p>Hugh continued to play with the tassel of Mildred's gown. "Yes, father;
+and as a Socialist I don't think it right. I've been coming to the
+decision that&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"You'll spare us your poses and let the Socialist nonsense drop. I
+simply want to remind you&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I can't let the Socialist nonsense drop, father, because&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>The tartness of the tone betrayed a rising irritation.</p>
+
+<p>"Be good enough to turn round this way. I don't understand what you're
+saying. Perhaps you'll take a chair, and leave poor Mildred alone."</p>
+
+<p>Mildred whispered: "Oh, Hugh, be careful. I'll do anything for you if
+you won't get him worked up. It'll hurt his face&mdash;and his poor eye."</p>
+
+<p>Hugh slouched&mdash;the word is Mrs. Rossiter's&mdash;to a nearby chair, where he
+sat down in a hunched position, his hands in his trousers pockets and
+his feet thrust out before him. The attitude was neither graceful nor
+respectful to the company.</p>
+
+<p>"It's no use talking, father," he declared, sulkily, "because I've said
+my last word."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh no, you haven't, for I haven't said my first."</p>
+
+<p>In the tone in which Hugh cried out there must have been something of
+the plea of a little boy before he is punished:</p>
+
+<p>"Please don't give me any orders, father, because I sha'n't be able to
+obey them."</p>
+
+<p>"Hugh, your expression 'sha'n't be able to obey' is not in the
+vocabulary with which I'm familiar."</p>
+
+<p>"But it's in the one with which I am."</p>
+
+<p>"Then you've probably learnt it from Ethel's little servant&mdash;I've
+forgotten the name&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Hugh spoke with spirit. "She's not a servant; and her name is Alexandra
+Adare. Please, dad, try to fix it in your memory. You'll find you'll
+have a lot of use for it."</p>
+
+<p>"Don't be impertinent."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm not impertinent. I'm stating a fact. I ask every one here to
+remember that name&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"We needn't bring any one else into this foolish business. It's between
+you and me. Even so, I wish to have no argument."</p>
+
+<p>"Nor I."</p>
+
+<p>"Then in that case we understand each other. You'll be with the
+Goldboroughs for the twelfth&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Hugh spoke very distinctly: "Father&mdash;I'm&mdash;not&mdash;going."</p>
+
+<p>In the silence that followed one could hear the ticking of the
+mantelpiece clock.</p>
+
+<p>"Then may I ask where you are going?"</p>
+
+<p>Hugh raised himself from his sprawling attitude, holding his bulky young
+figure erect. "I'm going to earn a living."</p>
+
+<p>Some one, perhaps old Mrs. Billing, laughed. The father continued to
+speak with great if dangerous courtesy.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah? Indeed! That's interesting. And may I ask at what?"</p>
+
+<p>"At what I can find."</p>
+
+<p>"That's more interesting still. Earning a living in New York is like the
+proverbial looking for the needle in the haystack. The needle is there,
+but it takes&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Very good eyesight to detect it. All right, dad. I shall be on the
+job."</p>
+
+<p>"Good! And when do you propose to begin?"</p>
+
+<p>It had not been Hugh's intention to begin at any time in particular,
+but, thus challenged, he said, boldly, "To-morrow."</p>
+
+<p>"That's excellent. But why put it off so long? I should think you'd
+start out&mdash;to-night."</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Billing's "Ha-a!" subdued and prolonged, was like that tense
+exclamation which the spectators utter at some exiting moment of a game.
+It took no sides, but it did justice to a sporting situation. As Hugh
+told me the story on the following day he confessed that more than any
+other occurrence it put the next move "up to him." According to Ethel
+Rossiter he lumbered heavily to his feet and crossed the room toward his
+father. He began to speak as he neared the architectural chimneypiece,
+merely throwing the words at J. Howard as he passed.</p>
+
+<p>"All right, father. Since you wish it&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh no. My wishes are out of it. As you defy those I've expressed,
+there's no more to be said."</p>
+
+<p>Hugh paused in his walk, his hands in the pockets of his dinner-jacket,
+and eyed his father obliquely. "I don't defy your wishes, dad. I only
+claim the right, as a man of twenty-six, to live my own life. If you
+wouldn't make yourself God&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>The handsome hand went up. "We'll not talk about that, if you please.
+I'd no intention of discussing the matter any longer. I merely thought
+that if I were in the situation in which you've placed yourself, I
+should be&mdash;getting busy. Still, if you want to stay the night&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, not in the least." Hugh was as nonchalant as he had the power to
+make himself. "Thanks awfully, father, all the same." He looked round on
+the circle where each of the chorus sat with an appropriate expression
+of horror&mdash;that is, with the exception of the old lady Billing, who,
+with her lorgnette still to her eyes, nodded approval of so much spirit.
+"Good night, every one," Hugh continued, coolly, and made his way toward
+the door.</p>
+
+<p>He had nearly reached it when Mildred cried out: "Hugh! Hughie! You're
+not going away like that!"</p>
+
+<p>He retraced his steps to the couch, where he stooped, pressed his
+sister's thin fingers, and kissed her. In doing so he was able to
+whisper:</p>
+
+<p>"Don't worry, Milly dear. Going to be all right. Shall be a man now. See
+you soon again." Having raised himself, he nodded once more. "Good
+night, every one."</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Rossiter said that he was so much like a young fellow going to his
+execution that she couldn't respond by a word.</p>
+
+<p>Hugh then marched up to his father and held out his hand. "Good night,
+dad. We needn't have any ill-feeling even if we don't agree."</p>
+
+<p>But the Great Dispenser didn't see him. An imposing figure standing with
+his hands behind his back, he kept his fingers clasped. Looking through
+his son as if he was no more than air, he remarked to the company in
+general:</p>
+
+<p>"I don't think I've ever seen Daisy Burke appear better than she did
+to-night. She's usually so badly dressed." He turned with a little
+deferential stoop to where Mrs. Brokenshire&mdash;whom Ethel Rossiter
+described as a rigid, exquisite thing staring off into vacancy&mdash;sat on a
+small upright chair. "What do you think, darling?"</p>
+
+<p>Hugh could hear the family trying to rally to the hint that had thus
+been given them, and doing their best to discuss the merits and demerits
+of Daisy Burke, as he stood in the big, square hall outside, wondering
+where he should seek shelter.</p>
+
+
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+<h2>CHAPTER VI</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="dropcap">W</span>hat Hugh did in the end was simple. Finding the footman who was
+accustomed to valet him, he ordered him to bring a supply of linen and
+some suits to a certain hotel early on the following morning. He then
+put on a light overcoat and a cap and left the house.</p>
+
+<p>The first few steps from the door he closed behind him gave him, so he
+told me next day, the strangest feeling he had ever experienced. He was
+consciously venturing forth into life without any of his usual supports.
+What those supports had been he had never realized till then. He had
+always been stayed by some one else's authority and buoyed all round by
+plenty of money. Now he felt, to change the simile as he changed it
+himself, as if he had been thrown out of the nest before having learnt
+to fly. As he walked resolutely down the dark driveway toward Ochre
+Point Avenue he was mentally hovering and balancing and trembling, with
+a tendency to flop. There was no longer a downy bed behind him; no
+longer a parent bill to bring him his daily worm. The outlook which had
+been one thing when he was within that imposing, many-lighted mansion
+became another now that he was turning his back on it permanently and in
+the dark.</p>
+
+<p>This he confessed when he had surprised me by appearing at the breakfast
+loggia, where I was having my coffee with little Gladys Rossiter
+somewhere between half past eight and nine. He was not an early riser,
+except when the tide enticed him to get up at some unusual hour to take
+his dip, and even then he generally went back to bed. To see him coming
+through the shrubbery now, carefully dressed, pallid and grave, half
+told me his news before he had spoken.</p>
+
+<p>Luckily Gladys was too young to follow anything we said, so that after
+having joyfully kissed her uncle Hugh she went on with her bread and
+milk. Hugh took a cup of coffee, sitting sidewise to the table of which
+only one end was spread, while I was at the head. It was the hour of the
+day when we were safest. Mrs. Rossiter never left her room before eleven
+at earliest, and no one else whom we were afraid of was likely to be
+about.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, the fat's all in the fire, little Alix," were the words in which
+he announced his position. "I'm out on my own at last."</p>
+
+<p>I could risk nothing in the way of tenderness, partly because of the
+maid who was coming and going, and partly because that was something
+Gladys would understand. I tried to let him see by my eyes, however, the
+sympathy I felt. I knew he was taking the new turn of events soberly,
+and soberly, with an immense semi-maternal yearning over him, I couldn't
+help taking it myself.</p>
+
+<p>He told his tale quietly, with almost no interruption on my part. I was
+pleased to note that he expressed nothing in the way of recrimination
+toward his father. With the exception of an occasional fling at old Mrs.
+Billing, whom he seemed to regard as a joss or a bottle imp, he was
+temperate, too, in his remarks about everybody else. I liked his
+sporting attitude and told him so.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, there's nothing sporting in it," he threw off with a kind of
+serious carelessness. "I'm a man; that's all. As I look back over the
+past I seem to have been a doll."</p>
+
+<p>I asked him what were his plans. He said he was going to apply to his
+cousin, Andrew Brew, of Boston, going on to tell me more about the Brews
+than I had ever heard. He was surprised that I knew nothing of the
+important house of Brew, Borrodaile &amp; Co., of Boston, who did such an
+important business with England and Europe in general. I replied that in
+Canada all my connections had been with the law, and with Service people
+in England. I noticed, as I had noticed before in saying things like
+that, that, in common with most American business men, he looked on the
+Army and Navy as inferior occupations. There was no money in either.
+That in itself was sufficient to condemn them in the eyes of a
+gentleman.</p>
+
+<p>I forgot to be nettled, as I sometimes had been, because of finding
+myself so deeply immersed in his interests. Up to that minute, too, I
+had had no idea that he had so much pride of birth. He talked of the
+Brews and the Brokenshires as if they had been Bourbons and
+Hohenzollerns, making me feel a veritable Libby Jaynes never to have
+heard of them. Of the Brews in particular he spoke with reverence. There
+had been Brews in Boston, he said, since the year one. Like all other
+American families, as I came to know later, they were descended from
+three brothers. In Norfolk and Suffolk they had been, so I
+guessed&mdash;though Hugh passed the subject over with some vagueness&mdash;of
+comparatively humble stock, but under the American flag they had
+acquired money, a quasi-nobility and coats of arms. To hear a man
+boasting, however modestly&mdash;and he was modest&mdash;of these respectable
+nobodies, who had simply earned money and saved it, made me blush
+inwardly in such a way that I vowed never to mention the Fighting Adares
+again.</p>
+
+<p>I could do this with no diminution of my feeling for poor Hugh. His
+artless glory in a line of ancestry of which the fame had never gone
+beyond the shores of Massachusetts Bay was, after all, a harmless bit of
+vanity. It took nothing away from his kindness, his good intentions, or
+his solid worth. When he asked me how I should care to live in Boston I
+replied that I should like it very much. I had always heard of it as a
+pleasant city of English characteristics and affiliations.</p>
+
+<p>Wherever he was, I told him, I should be at home&mdash;if I made up my mind
+to marry him.</p>
+
+<p>"But you have made up your mind, haven't you?" he asked, anxiously.</p>
+
+<p>I was obliged to reply with frankness, "Not quite, Hugh, because&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Then what's the use of my getting into this hole, if it isn't to be
+with you?"</p>
+
+<p>"You mean by the hole the being, as you call it, out on your own? But I
+thought you did that to be a Socialist&mdash;and a man."</p>
+
+<p>"I've done it because father won't let me marry you any other way."</p>
+
+<p>"Then if that's all, Hugh&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"But it isn't all," he interrupted, hastily. "I don't say but what if
+father had given us his blessing, and come down with another six
+thousand a year&mdash;we could hardly scrub along on less&mdash;I'd have taken it
+and been thankful. But now that he hasn't&mdash;well, I can see that it's
+all for the best. It's&mdash;it's brought me out, as you might say, and
+forced me to a decision."</p>
+
+<p>I harked back to the sentence in which he had broken in on me. "If it
+was all, Hugh, then that would oblige me to make up my mind at once. I
+couldn't be the means of compelling you to break with your family and
+give up a large income."</p>
+
+<p>He cried out impatiently, "Alix, what the dickens is a family and a
+large income to me in comparison with you?"</p>
+
+<p>I must say that his intensity touched me. Tears sprang into my eyes. I
+risked Gladys's presence to say: "Hugh, darling, I love you. I can't
+tell you what your generosity and nobleness mean to me. I hadn't
+imagined that there was a man like you in the world. But if you could be
+in my place&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>He pushed aside his coffee-cup to lean with both arms on the table and
+look me fiercely in the eyes. "If I can't be in your place, Alix, I've
+seen women who were, and who didn't beat so terribly about the bush.
+Look at the way Libby Jaynes married Tracy Allen. She didn't talk about
+his family or his giving up a big income. She trusted him."</p>
+
+<p>"And I trust you; only&mdash;" I broke off, to get at him from another point
+of view. "Do you know Libby Jaynes personally?"</p>
+
+<p>He nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"Is she&mdash;is she anything like me?"</p>
+
+<p>"No one is like you," he exclaimed, with something that was almost
+bitterness in the tone. "Isn't that what I'm trying to make you see?
+You're the one of your kind in the world. You've got me where a woman
+has never got a man before. I'd give up everything&mdash;I'd starve&mdash;I'd
+lick dust&mdash;but I'd follow you to the ends of the earth, and I'd cling to
+you and keep you." He, too, risked Gladys's presence. "But you're so
+damn cool, Alix&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh no, I'm not, Hugh, daring," I pleaded on my own behalf. "I may seem
+like that on the outside, because&mdash;oh, because I've such a lot to think
+of, and I have to think for us two. That's why I'm asking you if you
+found Libby Jaynes like me."</p>
+
+<p>He looked puzzled. "She's&mdash;she's decent." he said, as if not knowing
+what else to say.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, of course; but I mean&mdash;does she strike you as having had my kind
+of ways? Or my kind of antecedents?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, antecedents! Why talk about them?"</p>
+
+<p>"It's what you've been doing, isn't it, for the past half-hour?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, mine, yes; because I want you to see that I've got a big asset in
+Cousin Andrew Brew. I know he'll do anything for me, and if you'll trust
+me, Alix&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I do trust you, Hugh, and as soon as you have anything like what would
+make you independent, and justified in braving your family's
+disapproval&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>He took an apologetic tone. "I said just now that we couldn't scrape
+along on less than twelve thousand a year&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>To me the sum seemed ridiculously enormous. "Oh, I'm sure we could."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, that's what I've been thinking," he said, wistfully. "That figure
+was based on having the Brokenshire position to keep up. But if we were
+to live in Boston, where less would be expected of us, we could manage,
+I should think, on ten."</p>
+
+<p>Even that struck me as too much. "On five, Hugh," I declared, with
+confidence. "I know I could manage on five, and have everything we
+needed."</p>
+
+<p>He smiled at my eagerness. "Oh, well, darling, I sha'n't ask you to come
+down to that. Ten will be the least."</p>
+
+<p>To me this was riches. I saw the vision of the dainty dining-room again,
+and the nursery with the bassinet; but I saw Hugh also in the
+background, a little shadowy, perhaps, a little like a dream as an
+artist embodies it in a picture, and yet unmistakably himself. I spoke
+reservedly, however, far more reservedly than I felt, because I hadn't
+yet made my point quite clear to him.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm sure we could be comfortable on that. When you get it&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>I hadn't realized that this was the detail as to which he was most
+sensitive.</p>
+
+<p>"There you go again! When I get it! Do you think I sha'n't get it?"</p>
+
+<p>I felt my eyebrows going up in surprise. "Why, no, Hugh, dear. I suppose
+you know what you can get and what you can't. I was only going to say
+that when you do get it I shall feel as if you were free to give
+yourself away, and that I shouldn't have"&mdash;I tried to smile at him&mdash;"and
+that I shouldn't have the air of&mdash;of stealing you from your family.
+Can't you see, dear? You keep quoting Libby Jaynes at me; but in my
+opinion she did steal Tracy Allen. That the Allens have made the best of
+it has nothing to do with the original theft."</p>
+
+<p>"Theft is a big word."</p>
+
+<p>"Not bigger than the thing. For Libby Jaynes it was possibly all right.
+I'm not condemning her. But it wouldn't be all right for me."</p>
+
+<p>"Why not? What's the difference?"</p>
+
+<p>"I can't explain it to you, Hugh, if you don't see it already. It's a
+difference of tradition."</p>
+
+<p>"But what's difference of tradition got to do with love? Since you admit
+that you love me, and I certainly love you&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I admit that I love you, but love is not the only thing in the
+world."</p>
+
+<p>"It's the biggest thing in the world."</p>
+
+<p>"Possibly; and yet it isn't necessarily the surest guide in conduct.
+There's honor, for instance. If one had to take love without honor, or
+honor without love, surely one would choose the latter."</p>
+
+<p>"And what would you call love without honor in this case?"</p>
+
+<p>I reflected. "I'd call it doing this thing&mdash;getting engaged or married,
+whichever you like&mdash;just because we have the physical power to do it,
+and making the family, especially the father, to whom you're indebted
+for everything you are, unhappy."</p>
+
+<p>"He doesn't mind making you and me unhappy."</p>
+
+<p>"But that's his responsibility. We haven't got to do what's right for
+him; we've only got to do what's right for ourselves." I fell back on my
+maxim, "If we do right, only right will come of it, whatever the wrong
+it seems to threaten now."</p>
+
+<p>"But if I made ten thousand a year of my own&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I should consider you free. I should feel free myself. I should feel
+free on less than so big an income."</p>
+
+<p>His spirits began to return.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't call that big. We should have to pinch like the devil to keep
+our heads above water&mdash;no motor&mdash;no butler&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I've never had either," I smiled at him, "nor a lot of the things that
+go with them. Not having them might be privations to you&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Not when you were there, little Alix. You can bet your sweet life on
+that."</p>
+
+<p>We laughed together over the expression, and as Broke came bounding out
+to his breakfast, with the cry, "Hello, Uncle Hughie!" we lapsed into
+that language of signs and nods and cryptic things which we mutually
+understood to elude his sharp young wits. By this method of <i>double
+entendre</i> Hugh gave me to understand his intention of going to Boston by
+an afternoon train. He thought it possible he might stay there. The
+friendliness of Cousin Andrew Brew would probably detain him till he
+should go to work, which was likely to be in a day or two. Even if he
+had to wait a week he would prefer to do so at Boston, where he had not
+only ties of blood, but acquaintances and interests dating back to his
+Harvard days, which had ended three years before.</p>
+
+<p>In the mean time, my position might prove to be precarious. He
+recognized that, making it an excuse for once more forcing on me his
+immediate protection. Marriage was not named by word on Broke's account,
+but I understood that if I chose we could be marred within an hour or
+two, go to Boston together, and begin our common life without further
+delays.</p>
+
+<p>My answer to this being what it had been before, we discussed, over the
+children's heads, the chances that could befall me before night. Of
+these the one most threatening was that I might be sent away in
+disgrace. If sent away in disgrace I should have to go on the instant. I
+might be paid for a month or two ahead; it was probable I should be. It
+was J. Howard's policy to deal with his cashiered employees with that
+kind of liberality, so as to put himself more in the right. But I
+should have to go with scarcely the time to pack my boxes, as Hugh had
+gone himself, and must know of a place where I could take shelter.</p>
+
+<p>I didn't know of any such refuge. My sojourn under Mrs. Rossiter's roof
+had been remarkably free from contacts or curiosities of my own. Hugh
+knew no more than I. I could, therefore, only ask his consent to my
+consulting Mr. Strangways, a proposal to which he agreed. This I was
+able to do when Larry came for Broke, not many minutes after Hugh had
+taken his departure.</p>
+
+<p>I could talk to him the more freely because of his knowledge of my
+relation to Hugh. With the fact that I was in love with another man kept
+well in the foreground between us, he could acquit me of those ulterior
+designs on himself the suspicion of which is so disturbing to a woman's
+friendship with a man. As the maid was clearing the table, as Broke had
+to go to his lessons, as Gladys had to be remanded to the nursery while
+I attended to Mrs. Rossiter's telephone calls and correspondence, our
+talk was squeezed in during the seconds in which we retreated through
+the dining-room into the main part of the house.</p>
+
+<p>"The long and short of it is," Larry Strangways summed up, when I had
+confided to him my fears of being sent about my business as soon as Hugh
+had left for Boston&mdash;"the long and the short of it is that I shall have
+to look you up another job."</p>
+
+<p>It is almost absurd to point out that the idea was new to me. In going
+to Mrs. Rossiter I had never thought of starting out on a career of
+earning a living professionally, as you might say. I clung to the
+conception of myself as a lady, with all sorts of possibilities in the
+way of genteel interventions of Providence coming in between me and a
+lifetime of work. I had always supposed that if I left Mrs. Rossiter I
+should go back to my uncle and aunt at Halifax. After all, if Hugh was
+going to marry me, it would be no more than correct that he should do it
+from under their wing. Larry Strangways's suggestions of another job
+threw open a vista of places I should fill in the future little short of
+appalling to a woman instinctively looking for a man to come and support
+her.</p>
+
+<p>I shelved these considerations, however, to say, as casually as I could:
+"Why should you do it? Why shouldn't I look out for myself?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because when I've gone to Stacy Grainger it may be right in my line."</p>
+
+<p>"But I'd rather you didn't have me on your mind."</p>
+
+<p>He laughed&mdash;uneasily, as it seemed to me. "Perhaps it's too late for
+that."</p>
+
+<p>It was another of the things I was sorry to hear him say. I could only
+reply, still on the forced casual note: "But it's not too late for me to
+look after my own affairs. What I'm chiefly concerned with is that if I
+have to leave here&mdash;to-night, let us say&mdash;I sha'n't in the least know
+where to go."</p>
+
+<p>He was ready for me in the event of this contingency. I suspected that
+he had already considered it. He had a married sister in New York, a
+Mrs. Applegate, a woman of philanthropic interests, a director on the
+board of a Home for Working-Girls. Again I shied at the word. He must
+have seen that I did, for he went on, with a smile in which I detected a
+gleam of mockery:</p>
+
+<p>"You are a working-girl, aren't you?"</p>
+
+<p>I answered with the kind of humility I can only describe as spirited,
+and which was meant to take the wind out of his sails:</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose so&mdash;as long as I'm working." But I gave him a flying upward
+glance as I asked the imprudent question, "Is that how you've thought of
+me?"</p>
+
+<p>I was sorry to have said it as soon as the words were out. I didn't want
+to know what he thought of me. It was something with which I was so
+little concerned that I colored with embarrassment at having betrayed so
+much futile curiosity. Apparently he saw that, too, hastening to come to
+my relief.</p>
+
+<p>"I've thought of you," he laughed, when we had reached the main
+stairway, "as a clever little woman, with a special set of aptitudes,
+who ought to be earning more money than she's probably getting here; and
+when I'm with Stacy Grainger&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Grateful for this turning of the current into the business-like and
+commonplace, I called Gladys, who was lagging in the dining-room with
+Broke, and went on my way up-stairs.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Rossiter was sitting up in bed, her breakfast before her on a light
+wicker tray that stood on legs. It was an abstemious breakfast,
+carefully selected from foods containing most nutrition with least
+adipose deposit. She had reached the age, within sight of the thirties,
+when her figure was becoming a matter for consideration. It was almost
+the only personal detail as to which she had as yet any cause for
+anxiety. Her complexion was as bright as at eighteen; her brown hair,
+which now hung in a loose, heavy coil over her left shoulder, was thick
+and silky and long; her eyes were clear, her lips ruby. I always noticed
+that she waked with the sleepy softness of a flower uncurling to the
+sun. In the great walnut bed, of which the curves were gilded <i>&agrave; la</i>
+Louis Quinze, she made me think of that Jeanne B&eacute;cu who became Comtesse
+du Barry, in the days of her indolence and luxury.</p>
+
+<p>Having no idea as to how she would receive me, I was not surprised that
+it should be as usual. Since I had entered her employ she was never what
+I should call gracious, but she was always easy and familiar. Sometimes
+she was petulant; often she was depressed; but beyond a belief that she
+inspired tumultuous passions in young men there was no pose about her
+nor any haughtiness. I was not afraid of her, therefore; I was only
+uneasy as to the degree in which she would let herself be used against
+me as a tool.</p>
+
+<p>"The letters are here on the bed," was her response to my greeting,
+which I was careful to make in the form in which I made it every day.</p>
+
+<p>Taking the small arm-chair at the bedside, I sorted the pile. The notes
+she had not glanced at for herself I read aloud, penciling on the
+margins the data for the answers. Some I replied to by telephone, which
+stood within her reach on the <i>table de nuit</i>; for a few I sat down at
+the desk and wrote. I was doing the latter, and had just scribbled the
+words "Mrs. James Worthington Rossiter will have much pleasure in
+accepting&mdash;" when she said, in a slightly querulous tone:</p>
+
+<p>"I should think you'd do something about Hugh&mdash;the way he goes on."</p>
+
+<p>I continued to write as I asked, "How does he go on?"</p>
+
+<p>"Like an idiot."</p>
+
+<p>"Has he been doing anything new?"</p>
+
+<p>My object being to get a second version of the story Hugh had told me, I
+succeeded. Mrs. Rossiter's facts were practically the same as her
+brother's, only viewed from a different angle. As she presented the case
+Hugh had been merely preposterous, dashing his head against a stone
+wall, with nothing he could gain by the exercise.</p>
+
+<p>"The idea of his saying he'll not go to the Goldboroughs for the
+twelfth! Of course he'll go. Since father means him to do it, he will."</p>
+
+<p>I was addressing an envelope, and went on with my task. "But I thought
+you said he'd left home?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, well, he'll come back."</p>
+
+<p>"But suppose he doesn't? Suppose he goes to work?"</p>
+
+<p>"Pff! The idea! He won't keep that up long."</p>
+
+<p>I was glad to be sitting with my back to her. To disguise the quaver in
+my voice I licked the flap of the envelope as I said:</p>
+
+<p>"But he'll have to if he means to support a wife."</p>
+
+<p>"Support a wife? What nonsense! Father means him to marry Cissie
+Boscobel, as I've told you already&mdash;and he'll fix them up with a good
+income."</p>
+
+<p>"But apparently Hugh doesn't see things that way. He's told me&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, he'd tell you anything."</p>
+
+<p>"He's told me," I persisted, boldly, "that he&mdash;he loves me; and he's
+made me say that&mdash;that I love him."</p>
+
+<p>"And that's where you're so foolish, dear Miss Adare. You let him take
+you in. It isn't that he's not sincere; I don't say that for a minute.
+But people can't go about marrying every one they love, now can they? I
+should think you'd have seen that&mdash;with the heaps of men you had there
+at Halifax&mdash;hardly room to step over them."</p>
+
+<p>I said, slyly, "I never saw them that way."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, well, I did. And by the way, I wonder what's become of that Captain
+Venables. He was a case! He could take more liberties in a
+half-hour&mdash;don't you think?"</p>
+
+<p>"He never took any liberties with me."</p>
+
+<p>"Then that must have been your fault. Talk about Mr. Millinger! Our men
+aren't in it with yours&mdash;not when it comes to the real thing."</p>
+
+<p>I got back to the subject in which I was most interested by saying, as I
+spread another note before me:</p>
+
+<p>"It seems to be the real thing with Hugh."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I dare say it is. It was the real thing with Jack. I don't
+say"&mdash;her voice took on a tender tremolo&mdash;"I don't say that it wasn't
+the real thing with me. But that didn't make any difference to father.
+It was the real thing with Pauline Gray&mdash;when she was down there at
+Baltimore; but when father picked her out for Jack, because of her money
+and his relations with old Mr. Gray&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>I couldn't help half turning round, to cry out in tones of which I was
+unable to conceal the exasperation: "But I don't see how you can all let
+yourselves be hooked by the nose like that&mdash;not even by Mr.
+Brokenshire!"</p>
+
+<p>Her fatalistic resignation gave me a sense of helplessness.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, well, you will before father has done with you&mdash;if Hugh goes on
+this way. Father's only playing with you so far."</p>
+
+<p>"He can't touch me," I declared, indignantly.</p>
+
+<p>"But he can touch Hugh. That's all he needs to know, as far as you're
+concerned." She asked, in another tone, "What are you answering now?"</p>
+
+<p>I told her it was the invitation to Mrs. Allen's dance.</p>
+
+<p>"Then tear it up and say I can't go. Say I've a previous engagement. I'd
+forgotten that they had that odious Mrs. Tracy Allen there."</p>
+
+<p>I tore up the sheet slowly, throwing the fragments into the waste-paper
+basket.</p>
+
+<p>"Why is she odious?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because she is." She dropped for a second into the tone of the early
+friendly days in Halifax. "My dear, she was a shop-girl&mdash;or worse. I've
+forgotten what she was, but it was awful, and I don't mean to meet her."</p>
+
+<p>I began to write the refusal.</p>
+
+<p>"She goes about with very good people, doesn't she?"</p>
+
+<p>"She doesn't go about with me, nor with some others I know, I can tell
+you that. If she did it would queer us."</p>
+
+<p>In the hope of drawing out some such repudiation as that which I felt
+myself, I said, dryly: "Hugh tells me that if I married him I could be
+as good as she is&mdash;by this time next year."</p>
+
+<p>I got nothing for my pains.</p>
+
+<p>"That wouldn't help you much&mdash;not among the people who count."</p>
+
+<p>There was white anger underneath my meekness.</p>
+
+<p>"But perhaps I could get along with the people who don't count."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, you might&mdash;but Hugh wouldn't."</p>
+
+<p>She dismissed the subject as one in which she took only a secondary
+interest to say that old Mrs. Billing was coming to lunch, and that
+Gladys and I should have to take that repast up-stairs. She was never
+direct in her denunciations of her father's second marriage. She brought
+them in by reference and innuendo, like a prisoner who keeps in mind the
+fact that walls have ears. She gave me to understand, however, that she
+considered Mrs. Billing a witch out of "Macbeth" or a wicked old
+vulture&mdash;I could take my choice of comparisons&mdash;and she hated having her
+in the house. She wouldn't do it only that, in ways she could hardly
+understand, Mrs. Billing was the power behind the throne. She didn't
+loathe her stepmother, she said in effect, so much as she loathed her
+father's attitude toward her. I have never forgotten the words she used
+in this connection, dropping her voice and glancing about her, afraid
+she might be overheard. "It's as if God himself had become the slave of
+some silly human woman just because she had a pretty face." The sentence
+not only betrayed the Brokenshire attitude of mind toward J. Howard, but
+sent a chill down my back.</p>
+
+<p>Having finished my notes and addressed them I rose to return to Gladys;
+but there was still an unanswered question in my mind. I asked it,
+standing for a minute beside the bed:</p>
+
+<p>"Then you don't want me to go away?"</p>
+
+<p>She arched her lovely eyebrows. "Go away? What for?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because of the danger of my marrying Hugh."</p>
+
+<p>She gave a little laugh. "Oh, there's no danger of that."</p>
+
+<p>"But there is," I insisted. "He's asked me a number of times to go with
+him to the nearest clergyman, and settle the question once for all."</p>
+
+<p>"Only you don't do it. There you are! What father doesn't want doesn't
+happen; and what he does want does. That's all there is to be said."</p>
+
+
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+<h2>CHAPTER VII</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="dropcap">A</span>s a matter of fact, that was all Mrs. Rossiter and I did say. I was so
+relieved at not being thrown out of house and home on the instant that I
+went back to Gladys and her lisping in French almost cheerily. You will
+think me pusillanimous&mdash;and I was. I didn't want to go to Mrs. Applegate
+and the Home for Working-Girls. As far as food and shelter were
+concerned I liked them well enough where I was. I liked Mrs. Rossiter
+too. I should be sorry to give the impression that she was supercilious
+or unkind. She was neither the one nor the other. If she betrayed little
+sentiment or sympathy toward me, it was because of admitting me into
+that feminine freemasonry in which the emotional is not called for. I
+might suffer while she remained indifferent; I might be killed on the
+spot while she wouldn't shed a tear; and yet there was a heartless,
+good-natured, live-and-let-live detachment about her which left me with
+nothing but good-will.</p>
+
+<p>Then, too, I knew that when I married Hugh she would do nothing of her
+own free will against me. She would not brave her father's decree, but
+she wouldn't be intolerant; she might think Hugh had been a fool, but
+when she could do so surreptitiously she would invite him and me to
+dinner.</p>
+
+<p>As this was a kind of recognition in advance, I could not be otherwise
+than grateful.</p>
+
+<p>It made waiting for Hugh the easier. I calculated that if he entered
+into some sort of partnership with his cousin Andrew Brew&mdash;I didn't in
+the least know what&mdash;we might be married within a month or two. At
+furthest it might be about the time when Mrs. Rossiter removed to New
+York, which would make it October or November. I could then slip quietly
+back to Halifax, be quietly married, and quietly settle with Hugh in
+Boston. In the mean time I was glad not to be disturbed.</p>
+
+<p>I spent, therefore, a pleasant morning with my pupil, and ate a pleasant
+lunch, watching from the gable window of the school-room the great
+people assemble in the breakfast loggia in honor of the Marquise de
+Pompadour's mother. I am not sure that old Madame Poisson ever went to
+court; but if she did I know the courtiers must have shown her just such
+deference as that which Mrs. Rossiter's guests exhibited to this
+withered old lady with the hooked nose and the lorgnette.</p>
+
+<p>I was curious about the whole entertainment. It was not the only one of
+the kind I had seen from a distance since coming to Mrs. Rossiter, and I
+couldn't help comparisons with the same kind of thing as done in the
+ways with which I was familiar. Here it was less a luncheon than it was
+an exquisite thing on the stage, rehearsed to the last point. In
+England, in Canada, luncheon would be something of a friendly haphazard,
+primarily for the sake of getting food, secondly as a means to a
+scrambling, jolly sort of social intercourse, and hardly at all a
+ceremonial. Here the ceremonial came first. Hostess and guests seemed
+alike to be taking part in a rite of seeing and being seen. The food,
+which was probably excellent, was a matter of slight importance. The
+social intercourse amounted to nothing, since they all knew one another
+but too well, and had no urgent vitality of interests in any case. The
+rite was the thing. Every detail was prepared for that. Silver,
+porcelain, flowers, doilies, were of the most expensive and the most
+correct. The guests were dressed to perfection&mdash;a little too well,
+according to the English standard, but not too well for a function. As a
+function it was beautiful, an occasion of privilege, a proof of
+attainment. It was the best thing of its kind America could show. Those
+who had money could alone present the passport that would give the right
+of admission.</p>
+
+<p>If I had a criticism to make, it was that the guests were too much
+alike. They were all business men, and the wives or widows of business
+men. The two or three who did nothing but live on inherited incomes were
+business men in heart and in blood. Granted that in the New World the
+business man must be dominant, it was possible to have too much of him.
+Having too much of him lowered the standard of interest, narrowed the
+circle of taste. In the countries I knew the business man might be
+present at such a festivity, but there would be something to give him
+color, to throw him into relief. There would be a touch of the creative
+or the intellectual, of the spiritual or the picturesque. The company
+wouldn't be all of a gilded drab. There would be a writer or a painter
+or a politician or an actor or a soldier or a priest. There would be
+something that wasn't money before it was anything else. Here there was
+nothing. Birds of a feather were flocking together, and they were all
+parrots or parrakeets. They had plumage, but no song. They drove out the
+thrushes and the larks and the wild swans. Their shrill screeches and
+hoarse shouts came up in a not wholly pleasant babel to the open window
+where I sat looking down and Gladys hovered and hopped, wondering if
+Thomas, the rosy-cheeked footman, would remember to bring us some of the
+left-over ice-cream.</p>
+
+<p>I thought it was a pity. With elements as good as could be found
+anywhere to form a Society&mdash;that fusion of all varieties of achievement
+to which alone the word written with a capital can be applied&mdash;there was
+no one to form it. It was a woman's business; and for the r&ocirc;le of
+hostess in the big sense the American woman, as far as I could judge,
+had little or no aptitude. She was too timid, too distrustful of
+herself, too much afraid of doing the wrong thing or of knowing the
+wrong people. She was so little sure of her standing that, as Mrs.
+Rossiter expressed it, she could be "queered" by shaking hands with
+Libby Jaynes. She lacked authority. She could stand out in a throng by
+her dress or her grace, but she couldn't lead or combine or co-ordinate.
+She could lend a charming hand where some one else was the Lady Holland
+or the Madame de Sta&euml;l, but she couldn't take the seemingly
+heterogeneous types represented by the writer, the painter, the
+politician, the actor, the soldier, the priest, and the business man and
+weld them into the delightful, promiscuous, entertaining whole to be
+found, in its greater or lesser degree, according to size or importance
+of place, almost anywhere within the borders of the British Empire. I
+came to the conclusion that this was why there were few "great houses"
+in America and fewer women of importance.</p>
+
+<p>It was why, too, the guests were subordinated to the ceremonial. It
+couldn't be any other way. With flint and steel you can get a spark; but
+where you have nothing but flint or nothing but steel, friction produces
+no light. The American hostess, in so far as she exists, rarely hopes
+for anything from the clash of minds, and therefore centers her
+attention on her doilies. It must be admitted that she has the most
+tasteful doilies in the world. There is a pathos in the way in which,
+for want of the courage to get interesting human specimens together, she
+spends her strength on the details of her rite. It is like the instinct
+of women who in default of babies lavish their passion on little dogs.
+One can say that it is <i>faute de mieux</i>. <i>Faute de mieux</i> was, I am
+sure, the reason why Ethel Rossiter took her table appointments with
+what seemed to me such extraordinary seriousness. When all was said and
+done it was the only real thing to care about.</p>
+
+<p>I repeat that I thought it was a pity. I had dreams, as I looked down,
+of what I could do with the same use of money, the same position of
+command. I had dreams that the Brokenshires accepted me, that Hugh came
+into the means that would be his in the ordinary course. I saw myself
+standing at the head of the stairway of a fine big house in Washington
+or New York. People were streaming upward, and I was shaking hands with
+a delightful, smiling <i>d&eacute;sinvolture</i>. I saw men and women of all the
+ranks and orders of conspicuous accomplishment, each contributing a
+gift&mdash;some nothing but beauty, some nothing but wit, some nothing but
+money, some nothing but position, some nothing but fame, some nothing
+but national importance. The Brokenshire clan was there, and the
+Billings and the Grays and the Burkes; but statesmen and diplomatists,
+too, were there, and those leaders in the world of the pen and the brush
+and the buskin of whom, oddly enough, I saw Larry Strangways, with his
+eternal defensive smile, emerging from the crowd as chief. I was wearing
+diamonds, black velvet, and a train, waving in my disengaged hand a
+spangled fan.</p>
+
+<p>From these visions I was roused by Gladys, who came prancing from the
+stair-head.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>V'l&agrave;, Mademoiselle! V'l&agrave; Thomas et le ice-cream!</i>"</p>
+
+<p>Having consumed this dainty, we watched the company wander about the
+terraces and lawns and finally drift away. I was getting Gladys ready
+for her walk when Thomas, with a pitying expression on his boyish face,
+came back to say that Mr. Brokenshire would like to speak with me
+down-stairs.</p>
+
+<p>I was never so near fainting in my life. I had barely the strength to
+gasp, "Very well, Thomas, I'll come," and to send Gladys to her nurse.
+Thomas watched me with his good, kind, sympathetic eyes. Like the other
+servants, he must have known something of my secret and was on my side.
+I called him the <i>bouton de rose</i>, partly because his clean, pink cheeks
+suggested a Killarney breaking into flower, and partly because in his
+waiting on Gladys and me he had the yearning, care-taking air of a
+fatherly little boy. Just now he could only march down the passage ahead
+of me, throw open the door of my bedroom as if he was lord chamberlain
+to a queen, and give me a look which seemed to say, "If I can be your
+liege knight against this giant, pray, dear lady, command me." I threw
+him my thanks in a trumped-up smile, which he returned with such sweet
+encouragement as to nearly unman me.</p>
+
+<p>I stayed in my room only long enough to be sure that I was neat,
+smoothing my hair and picking one or two threads from my white-linen
+suit. The suit had scarlet cuffs and a scarlet belt, and as there was a
+scarlet flush beneath my summer tan, like the color under the glaze of a
+Chinese jar, I could see for myself that my appearance was not
+ineffective.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>bouton de rose</i> was in waiting at the foot of the stairs as I came
+down. Through the hall and the dining-room he ushered me royally; but as
+I came out on the breakfast loggia my royalty stopped with what I can
+only describe as a bump.</p>
+
+<p>The guests had gone, but the family remained. The last phase of the
+details of the rite were also on the table. All the doilies were there,
+and the magnificent lace centerpiece which Mrs. Rossiter had at various
+times called on me to admire. The old Spode dessert service was the more
+dimly, anciently brilliant because of the old polished oak, and so were
+the glasses and finger-bowls picked out in gold.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Brokenshire, whom I had seen from my window strolling with some
+ladies on the lawn, had returned to the foot of the table, opposite to
+the door by which I came out, where he now sat in a careless, sidewise
+attitude, fingering his cigar. Old Mrs. Billing, who was beside him on
+his right, put up her lorgnette immediately I appeared in the entrance.
+Mrs. Rossiter had dropped into a chance chair half-way down the table on
+the left; but Mrs. Brokenshire, oddly enough, was in that same seat in
+the far corner to which she had retreated on the occasion of my
+summoning ten days before. I wondered whether this was by intention or
+by chance, though I was presently to know.</p>
+
+<p>Terrified though I was, I felt salvation to lie in keeping a certain
+dignity. I made, therefore, something between a bow and a courtesy,
+first to Mr. Brokenshire, then to Mrs. Billing, then to Mrs. Rossiter,
+and lastly to Mrs. Brokenshire, to whom I raised my eyes and looked all
+the way diagonally across the loggia. I took my time in making these
+four distinct salutations, though in response I was only stared at.
+After that there was a space of some seconds in which I merely stood, in
+my pose of <i>Ecce Femina</i>!</p>
+
+<p>"Sit down!"</p>
+
+<p>The command came, of course, from J. Howard. The chair to which I had
+once before been banished being still in its corner, I slipped into it.</p>
+
+<p>"I wished to speak to you, Miss&mdash;a&mdash;Miss&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>He glanced helplessly toward his daughter, who supplied the name.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah yes. I wished to speak to you, Miss Adare, because my son has been
+acting very foolishly."</p>
+
+<p>I made my tone as meek as I could, scarcely daring to lift my eyes from
+the floor. "Wouldn't it be well, sir, to talk to him about that?"</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Billing's lorgnette came down. She glanced toward her son-in-law as
+though finding the point well taken.</p>
+
+<p>He went on imperturbably. "I've said all I mean to say to him. My
+present appeal is to you."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, then this is an&mdash;appeal?"</p>
+
+<p>He seemed to hesitate, to reflect. "If you choose to take it so," he
+admitted, stiffly.</p>
+
+<p>"It surely isn't as I choose to take it, sir; it's as you choose to
+mean."</p>
+
+<p>"Don't bandy words."</p>
+
+<p>"But I must use words, sir. I only want to be sure that you're making an
+appeal to me, and not giving me commands."</p>
+
+<p>He spoke sharply. "I wish you to understand that you're inducing a young
+man to act in a way he is going to find contrary to his interests."</p>
+
+<p>I could barely nerve myself to look up at him. "If by the 'young man'
+you mean Mr. Hugh Brokenshire, then I'm inducing him to do nothing
+whatever; unless," I added, "you call it an inducement that I&mdash;I"&mdash;I was
+bound to force the word out&mdash;"unless you call it an inducement that I
+love him."</p>
+
+<p>"But that's it," Mrs. Rossiter broke in. "That's what my father means.
+If you'd stop caring anything about him you wouldn't give him
+encouragement."</p>
+
+<p>I looked at her with a dim, apologetic smile. It was a time, I felt, to
+speak not only with more courage, but with more sentiment than I was
+accustomed to use in expressing myself.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm afraid I can't give my heart, and take it back, like that."</p>
+
+<p>"I can," she returned, readily. She spoke as if it was a matter of
+cracking her knuckles or wagging her ears. "If I don't want to like a
+person I don't do it. It's training and self-command."</p>
+
+<p>"You're fortunate," I said, quietly. Why I should have glanced again at
+Mrs. Brokenshire I hardly know; but I did so, as I added: "I've had no
+training of that kind&mdash;and I doubt if many women have."</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Brokenshire, who was gazing at me with the same kind of fascinated
+stare as on the former occasion, faintly, but quite perceptibly,
+inclined her head. In this movement I was sure I had the key to the
+mystery that seemed to surround her.</p>
+
+<p>"All this," J. Howard declared, magisterially, "is beside the point. If
+you've told my son that you'd marry him&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I haven't."</p>
+
+<p>"Or even given him to understand that you would&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I've only given him to understand that I'd marry him&mdash;on conditions."</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed? And would it be discreet on my part to inquire the terms you've
+been kind enough to lay down?"</p>
+
+<p>I pulled myself together and spoke firmly. "The first is that I'll marry
+him&mdash;if his family come to me and express a wish to have me as a sister
+and a daughter."</p>
+
+<p>Old Mrs. Billing emitted the queer, cracked cackle of a hen when it
+crows, but she put up her lorgnette and examined me more closely. Ethel
+Rossiter gasped audibly, moving her chair a little farther round in my
+direction. Mrs. Brokenshire stared with concentrated intensity, but
+somehow, I didn't know why, I felt that she was backing me up.</p>
+
+<p>The great man contented himself with saying, "Oh, you will!"</p>
+
+<p>I ignored the tone to speak with a decision and a spirit I was far from
+feeling.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir, I will. I shall not steal him from you&mdash;not so long as he's
+dependent."</p>
+
+<p>"That's very kind. And may I ask&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"You haven't let me tell you my other condition."</p>
+
+<p>"True. Go on."</p>
+
+<p>I panted the words out as best I could. "I've told him I'd marry him&mdash;if
+he rendered himself independent; if he earned his own money and became a
+man."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! And you expect one or the other of these miracles to take place?"</p>
+
+<p>"I expect both."</p>
+
+<p>Though the words uttered themselves, without calculation or expectation
+on my part, they gave me so much of the courage of conviction that I
+held up my head. To my surprise Mrs. Billing didn't crow again or so
+much as laugh. She only gasped out that long "Ha-a!" which proclaims
+the sporting interest, of which both Hugh and Ethel Rossiter had told me
+in the morning.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Brokenshire seemed to brace himself, leaning forward, with his elbow
+on the table and his cigar between the fingers of his raised right hand.
+His eyes were bent on me&mdash;fine eyes they were!&mdash;as if in kindly
+amusement.</p>
+
+<p>"My good girl," he said, in his most pitying voice, "I wish I could tell
+you how sorry for you I am. Neither of these dreams can possibly come
+true&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>My blood being up, I interrupted with some force. "Then in that case,
+Mr. Brokenshire, you can be quite easy in your mind, for I should never
+marry your son." Having made this statement, I followed it up by saying,
+"Since that is understood, I presume there's no object in my staying any
+longer." I was half rising when his hand went up.</p>
+
+<p>"Wait. We'll tell you when to go. You haven't yet got my point. Perhaps
+I haven't made it clear. I'm not interested in your hopes&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"No, sir; of course not; nor I in yours."</p>
+
+<p>"I haven't inquired as to that&mdash;but we'll let it pass. We're both
+apparently interested in my son."</p>
+
+<p>I gave a little bow of assent.</p>
+
+<p>"I said I wished to make an appeal to you."</p>
+
+<p>I made another little bow of assent.</p>
+
+<p>"It's on his behalf. You could do him a great kindness. You could make
+him understand&mdash;I gather that he's under your influence to some degree;
+you're a clever girl, I can see that&mdash;but you could make him understand
+that in fancying he'll marry you he's starting out on a task in which
+there's no hope whatever."</p>
+
+<p>"But there is."</p>
+
+<p>"Pardon me, there isn't. By your own showing there isn't. You've laid
+down conditions that will never be fulfilled."</p>
+
+<p>"What makes you say that?"</p>
+
+<p>"My knowledge of the world."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, but would you call that knowledge of the world?" I was swept along
+by the force of an inner indignation which had become reckless.
+"Knowledge of the world," I hurried on, "implies knowledge of the human
+heart, and you've none of that at all." I could see him flush.</p>
+
+<p>"My good girl, we're here to speak of you, not of me&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Surely we're here to speak of us both, since at any minute I choose I
+can marry your son. If I don't marry him it's because I don't choose;
+but when I do choose&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Again the hand went up. "Yes, of course; but that's not what we want
+specially to hear. Let us assume, as you say, that you can marry my son
+at any time you choose. You don't choose, for the reason that you're
+astute enough to see that your last state would be worse than the first.
+To enter a family that would disown you at once&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>I kept down my tone, though I couldn't master my excitement. "That's not
+my reason. If I don't marry him it's precisely because I have the power.
+There are people&mdash;cowards they are at heart, as a rule&mdash;who because they
+have the power use it to be insolent, especially to those who are
+weaker. I'm not one of those. There's a <i>noblesse oblige</i> that compels
+one in spite of everything. In dealing with an elderly man, who I
+suppose loves his son, and with a lady who's been so kind to me as Mrs.
+Rossiter&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"You've been hired, and you're paid. There's no special call for
+gratitude."</p>
+
+<p>"Gratitude is in the person who feels it; but that isn't what I
+specially want to say."</p>
+
+<p>"What you specially want to say apparently is&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"That I'm not afraid of you, sir; I'm not afraid of your family or your
+money or your position or anything or any one you can control. If I
+don't marry Hugh, it's for the reason that I've given, and for no other.
+As long as he's dependent on your money I shall not marry him till you
+come and beg me to do it&mdash;and that I shall expect of you."</p>
+
+<p>He smiled tolerantly. "That is, till you've brought us to our knees."</p>
+
+<p>I could barely pipe, but I stood to my guns. "If you like the
+expression, sir&mdash;yes. I shall not marry Hugh&mdash;so long as you support
+him&mdash;till I've brought you to your knees."</p>
+
+<p>If I expected the heavens to fall at this I was disappointed. All J.
+Howard did was to lean on his arm toward Mrs. Billing and talk to her
+privately. Mrs. Rossiter got up and went to her father, entering also
+into a whispered colloquy. Once or twice he glanced backward to his
+wife, but she was now gazing sidewise in the direction of the house and
+over the lines of flowers that edged the terraces.</p>
+
+<p>When Mrs. Rossiter had gone back to her seat, and J. Howard had raised
+himself from his conversation with Mrs. Billing, he began again to
+address me tranquilly:</p>
+
+<p>"I hoped you might have sympathized with my hopes for Hugh, and have
+helped to convince him how useless his plans for a marriage between him
+and you must be."</p>
+
+<p>I answered with decision: "No; I can't do that."</p>
+
+<p>"I should have appreciated it&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"That I can quite understand."</p>
+
+<p>"And some day have shown you that I'm acting for your good."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, sir," I cried, "whatever else you do, you'll let my good be my own
+affair, will you not?"</p>
+
+<p>I thought I heard Mrs. Billing say, "Brava!" At any rate, she tapped her
+fingers together as if in applause. I began to feel a more lenient
+spirit toward her.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm quite willing to do that," my opponent said, in a moderate,
+long-suffering tone, "now that I see that you refuse to take Hugh's good
+into consideration. So long as you encourage him in his present
+madness&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I'm not doing that."</p>
+
+<p>He took no notice of the interruption. "&mdash;I'm obliged to regard him as
+nothing to me."</p>
+
+<p>"That must be between you and your son."</p>
+
+<p>"It is. I'm only asking you to note that you&mdash;ruin him."</p>
+
+<p>"No, no," I began to protest, but he silenced me with a movement of his
+hand.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm not a hard man naturally," he went on, in his tranquil voice, "but
+I have to be obeyed."</p>
+
+<p>"Why?" I demanded. "Why should you be obeyed more than any one else?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because I mean to be. That must be enough&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"But it isn't," I insisted. "I've no intention of obeying you&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>He broke in with some haste: "Oh, there's no question of you, my dear
+young lady. I've nothing to do with you. I'm speaking of my son. He must
+obey me, or take the consequences. And the consequences will last as
+long as he lives. I'm not one to speak rashly, or to speak twice. So
+that's what I'm putting to you. Do you think&mdash;do you honestly
+think&mdash;that you're improving your position by ruining a man who sooner
+or later&mdash;sooner rather than later&mdash;will lay his ruin at your door and
+loathe you? Come now! You're a clever girl. The case is by no means
+beyond you. Think, and think straight."</p>
+
+<p>"I am thinking, sir. I'm thinking so straight that I see right through
+you. My father used to say&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"No reminiscence, please."</p>
+
+<p>"Very well, then; we'll let the reminiscence go. But you're thinking of
+committing a crime, a crime against Hugh, a crime against yourself, a
+crime against love, every kind of love&mdash;and that's the worst crime of
+all&mdash;and you haven't the moral courage to shoulder the guilt yourself;
+you're trying to shuffle it off on me."</p>
+
+<p>"My good woman&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>But nothing could silence me now. I leaned forward, with hands clasped
+in my lap, and merely looked at him. My voice was low, but I spoke
+rapidly:</p>
+
+<p>"You're talking to bewilder me, to throw dust in my eyes, to snare me
+into taking the blame for what you're doing of your own free act. It's a
+kind of reasoning which some girls would be caught by, but I'm not one
+of them. If Hugh is ruined in the sense you mean, it's his father who
+will ruin him&mdash;but even that is not the worst. What's worst, what's
+dastardly, what's not merely unworthy of a man like you but unworthy of
+any man&mdash;of anything that calls itself a male&mdash;is that you, with all
+your resources of every kind, should try to foist your responsibilities
+off on a woman who has no resources whatever. That I shouldn't have
+believed of any of your sex&mdash;if it hadn't happened to myself."</p>
+
+<p>But my eloquence left him as unmoved as before. He whispered with Mrs.
+Billing. The old lady was animated, making beats and lunges with her
+lorgnette.</p>
+
+<p>"So that what it comes to," he said to me at last, lifting himself up
+and speaking in a tired voice, "is that you really mean to pit yourself
+against me."</p>
+
+<p>"No, sir; but that you mean to pit yourself against me." Something
+compelled me to add: "And I can tell you now that you'll be beaten in
+the end."</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps he didn't hear me, for he rose and, stooping, carried on his
+discussion with Mrs. Billing. There was a long period in which no one
+paid any further attention to my presence; in fact, no one paid any
+attention to me any more. To my last words I expected some retort, but
+none came. Ethel Rossiter joined her father at the end of the table, and
+when Mrs. Billing also rose the conversation went on <i>&agrave; trois</i>. Mrs.
+Brokenshire alone remained seated and aloof.</p>
+
+<p>But the moment came when her husband turned toward her. Not having been
+dismissed, I merely stood and looked on. What I saw then passed quickly,
+so quickly that it took a minute of reflection before I could put two
+and two together.</p>
+
+<p>Having taken one step toward his wife, Howard Brokenshire stood still,
+abruptly, putting his hand suddenly to the left side of his face. His
+wife, too, put up her hand, but palm outward and as if to wave him back.
+At the same time she averted her face&mdash;and I knew it was his eye.</p>
+
+<p>It was over before either of the other two women perceived anything.
+Presently, all four were out on the grass, strolling along in a little
+chattering group together. My dismissal having come automatically, as
+you might say, I was free to go.</p>
+
+
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+<h2>CHAPTER VIII</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="dropcap">A</span>n hour later I had what up to then I must call the greatest surprise of
+my life.</p>
+
+<p>I was crying by myself on the shore, in that secluded corner among the
+rocks where Hugh had first told me that he loved me. As a rule, I don't
+cry easily. I did it now chiefly from being overwrought. I was desolate.
+I missed Hugh. The few days or few weeks that must pass before I could
+see him again stretched before me like a century. All whom I could call
+my own were so far away. Even had they been near, they would probably,
+with the individualism of our race, have left me to shift for myself.
+Louise and Victoria had always given me to understand that, though they
+didn't mind lending me an occasional sisterly hand, my life was my own
+affair. It would have been a relief to talk the whole thing out
+philosophically with Larry Strangways. As I came from the house I tried,
+for the first time since knowing him, to throw myself in his path; but,
+as usual when one needs a friend, he was nowhere to be seen.</p>
+
+<p>I could, therefore, only scramble down to my favorite corner among the
+rocks. Not that it was really a scramble. As a matter of fact, the path
+was easy if you knew where to find it; but it was hidden from the
+ordinary passer on the Cliff Walk, first by a boulder, round which you
+had to slip, and then by a tangle of wild rosebines, wild raspberries,
+and Queen Anne's lace. It was something like a secret door, known only
+to the Rossiter household, their servants, and their friends. Once you
+had passed it you had a measure of the public privacy you get in a box
+at the theater or the opera. You had space and ease and a wide outlook,
+with no fear of intrusion.</p>
+
+<p>I cannot say that I was unhappy. I was rather in that state of mind
+which the American people, with its gift for the happy, unexpected word,
+have long spoken of as "mad." I was certainly mad. I was mad with J.
+Howard Brokenshire first of all; I was mad with his family for having
+got up and left me without so much as a nod; I was mad with Hugh for
+having made me fall in love with him; I was mad with Larry Strangways
+for not having been on the spot; and I was most of all mad with myself.
+I had been boastful and bumptious; I had been disrespectful and absurd.
+It was foolish to make worse enemies than I had already. Mrs. Rossiter
+wouldn't keep me now. There would be no escape from Mrs. Applegate and
+the Home for Working-Girls.</p>
+
+<p>The still summer beauty of the afternoon added to my wretchedness. All
+round and before me there was luxury and joyousness and sport. The very
+sea was in a playful mood, lapping at my feet like a tamed, affectionate
+leviathan, and curling round the ledges in the offing with delicate
+lace-like spouts of spume. Sea-gulls swooped and hovered with hoarse
+cries and a lovely effect of silvery wings. Here and there was a sail on
+the blue, or the smoke of a steamer or a war-ship. Eastons Point, some
+two or three miles away, was a long, burnished line of ripening wheat.
+To right and to left of me were broken crags, red-yellow, red-brown,
+red-green, where lovers and happy groups could perch or nestle
+carelessly, thrusting trouble for the moment to a distance. I had to
+bring my trouble with me. If it had not been for trouble I shouldn't
+have been there. There wasn't a soul in the world who would fight to
+take my part but Hugh, and I was, in all my primary instincts, a
+clinging, parasitic thing that hated to stand alone.</p>
+
+<p>There was nothing for it then but crying, and I did that to the best of
+my ability; not loudly, of course, or vulgarly, but gently and
+sentimentally, with an immense pity for myself. I cried for what had
+happened that day and for what had happened yesterday. I cried for
+things long past, which I had omitted to cry for at the time. When I had
+finished with these I went further back to dig up other ignominies, and
+I cried for them. I cried for my father and mother and my orphaned
+condition; I cried for the way in which my father&mdash;who was a good, kind
+man, <i>du reste</i>&mdash;had lived on his principal, and left me with scarcely a
+penny to my name; I cried for my various disappointments in love, and
+for the girl friends who had predeceased me. I massed all these motives
+together and cried for them in bulk. I cried for Hugh and the brilliant
+future we should have on the money he would make. I cried for Larry
+Strangways and the loneliness his absence would entail on me. I cried
+for the future as well as for the past and if I could have thought of a
+future beyond the future I should have cried for that. It was delicious
+and sad and consoling all at once; and when I had no more tears I felt
+almost as if Hugh's strong arm had been about me, and I was comforted.</p>
+
+<p>I was just wiping my eyes and wondering whether at the moment of going
+homeward my nose would be too red, when I heard a quiet step. I thought
+I must be mistaken. It was so unlikely that any one would be there at
+this hour of the day&mdash;the servants generally came down at night&mdash;that
+for a minute I didn't turn. It was the uncomfortable sense that some one
+was behind me that made me look back at last, when I caught the flutter
+of lace and the shimmer of pale-rose taffeta. Mrs. Brokenshire had worn
+lace and pale-rose taffeta at the lunch.</p>
+
+<p>Fear and amazement wrestled in my soul together. Struggling to my feet,
+I turned round as slowly as I could.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't get up," she said in a sweet, quiet voice. "I'll come and sit
+down beside you, if I may." She had already seated herself on a low flat
+rock as she said, "I saw you were crying, so I waited."</p>
+
+<p>I am not usually at a loss for words, but I was then. I stuttered and
+stammered and babbled, without being able to say anything articulate.
+Indeed, I had nothing articulate to say. The mind had suspended its
+action.</p>
+
+<p>My impressions were all subconscious, but registered exactly. She was
+the most exquisite production I had ever seen in human guise. Her
+perfection was that of some lovely little bird in which no color fails
+to shade harmoniously into some other color, in which no single feather
+is out of place. The word I used of her was <i>soign&eacute;e</i>&mdash;that which is
+smoothed and curled and polished and caressed till there is not an
+eyelash which hasn't received its measure of attention. I don't mean
+that she was artificial, or that her effects were too thought out. She
+was no more artificial than a highly cultivated flower is artificial, or
+a many-faceted diamond, or a King Charles spaniel, or anything else that
+is carefully bred or cut or shaped. She was the work of some specialist
+in beauty, who had no aim in view but to give to the world the loveliest
+thing possible.</p>
+
+<p>When I had mastered my confusion sufficiently I sat down with the words,
+rather lamely spoken:</p>
+
+<p>"I didn't know any one was here. I hope I haven't kept you standing
+long."</p>
+
+<p>"No; but I was watching you. I came down only a few minutes after you
+did. You see, I was afraid&mdash;when we came away from Mrs. Rossiter's&mdash;that
+you might be unhappy."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm not as unhappy as I was," I faltered, without knowing what I said,
+and was rewarded to see her smile.</p>
+
+<p>It was an innocent smile, without glee, a little sad in fact, but full
+of unutterable things like a very young child's. I had never seen such
+teeth, so white, so small, so regular.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm glad of that," she said, simply. "I thought if some&mdash;some other
+woman was near you, you mightn't feel so&mdash;so much alone. That's why I
+watched round and followed you."</p>
+
+<p>I could have fallen at her feet, but I restricted myself to saying:</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you very much. It does make a difference." I got courage to add,
+however, with a smile of my own, "I see you know."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I know. I've thought about you a good deal since that day about a
+fortnight ago&mdash;you remember?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh yes, I remember. I'm not likely to forget, am I? Only, you see, I
+had no idea&mdash;if I had, I mightn't have felt so&mdash;so awfully forlorn."</p>
+
+<p>Her eyes rested upon me. I can only say of them that they were sweet and
+lovely, which is saying nothing at all. Sweet and lovely are the words
+that come to me when I think of her, and they are so lamentably
+overworked. She seemed to study me with a child-like unconsciousness.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," she said at last, "I suppose you do feel forlorn. I didn't think
+of that or&mdash;or I might have managed to come to you before."</p>
+
+<p>"That you should have come now," I said, warmly, "is the kindest thing
+one human being ever did for another."</p>
+
+<p>Again there was the smile, a little to one side of the mouth, wistful,
+wan.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh no, it isn't. I've really come on my own account." I waited for some
+explanation of this, but she only went on: "Tell me about yourself. How
+did you come here? Ethel Rossiter has never really said anything about
+you. I should like to know."</p>
+
+<p>Her manner had the gentle command that queens and princesses and very
+rich women unconsciously acquire. I tried to obey her, but found little
+to say. Uttered to her my facts were so meager. I told her of my father
+and mother, of my father's mania for old books, of Louise and Victoria
+and their husbands, of my visits abroad; but I felt her attention
+wandering. That is, I felt she was interested not in my data, but in me.
+Halifax and Canada and British army and navy life and rare first
+editions were outside the range of her ken. Paris she knew; and London
+she knew; but not from any point of view from which I could speak of
+them. I could see she was the well-placed American who knows some of the
+great English houses and all of the great English hotels, but nothing of
+that Britannic backbone of which I might have been called a rib. She
+broke in presently, not apropos of anything I was saying, with the
+words:</p>
+
+<p>"How old are you?"</p>
+
+<p>I told her I was twenty-four.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm twenty-nine."</p>
+
+<p>I said I had understood as much from Mrs. Rossiter, but that I could
+easily have supposed her no older than myself. This was true. Had there
+not been that something mournful in her face which simulates maturity I
+could have thought of her as nothing but a girl. If I stood in awe of
+her it was only of what I guessed at as a sorrow.</p>
+
+<p>She went on to give me two or three details of her life, with nearly all
+of which I was familiar through hints from Hugh and Ethel Rossiter.</p>
+
+<p>"We're really Philadelphians, my mother and I. We've lived a good deal
+in New York, of course, and abroad. I was at school in Paris, too, at
+the Convent des Abeilles." She wandered on, somewhat inconsequentially,
+with facts of this sort, when she added, suddenly: "I was to have
+married some one else."</p>
+
+<p>I knew then that I had the clue to her thought. The marriage she had
+missed was on her mind. It created an obsession or a broken heart, I
+wasn't quite sure which. It was what she wanted to talk about, though
+her glance fell before the spark of intelligence in mine.</p>
+
+<br /><br />
+<a name="ILLO_2" id="ILLO_2"></a>
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%;">
+<img src="images/118a.jpg" width="299" height="412" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+<h4>THE MARRIAGE SHE HAD MISSED WAS ON HER MIND. IT CREATED
+AN OBSESSION OR A BROKEN HEART, I WASN'T QUITE SURE WHICH</h4>
+
+<p>Since there was nothing I could say in actual words, I merely murmured
+sympathetically. At the same time there came to me, like the slow
+breaking of a dawn, an illuminating glimpse of the great J. Howard's
+life. I seemed to be admitted into its secret, into a perception of its
+weak spot, more fully than his wife had any notion of. She would never,
+I was sure, see what she was betraying to me from my point of view. She
+would never see how she was giving him away. She wouldn't even see how
+she was giving away herself&mdash;she was so sweet, and gentle, and
+child-like, and unsuspecting.</p>
+
+<p>I don't know for how many seconds her quiet, inconsequential speech
+trickled on without my being able to follow it. I came to myself again,
+as it were, on hearing her say:</p>
+
+<p>"And if you do love him, oh, don't give him up!"</p>
+
+<p>I grasped the fact then that I had lost something about Hugh, and did my
+best to catch up with it.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't mean to, if either of my conditions is fulfilled. You heard
+what they were."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, but if I were you I wouldn't make them. That's where I think you're
+wrong. If you love him&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I couldn't steal him from his family, even if I loved him."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, but it wouldn't be stealing. When two people love each other
+there's nothing else to think about."</p>
+
+<p>"And yet that might sometimes be dangerous doctrine."</p>
+
+<p>"If there was never any danger there'd never be any courage. And courage
+is one of the finest things in life."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, of course; but even courage can carry one very far."</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing can carry us so far as love. I see that now. It's why I'm
+anxious about poor Hugh. I&mdash;I know a man who&mdash;who loves a woman whom
+he&mdash;he couldn't marry, and&mdash;" She caught herself up. "I'm fond of Hugh,
+you see, even though he doesn't like me. I wish he understood, that they
+all understood&mdash;that&mdash;that it isn't my fault. If I could have had my
+way&mdash;" She righted herself here with a slight change of tense. "If I
+could have my way, Hugh would marry the woman he's in love with and
+who's in love with him."</p>
+
+<p>I tried to enroll her decisively on my side.</p>
+
+<p>"So that you don't agree with Mr. Brokenshire."</p>
+
+<p>Her immediate response was to color with a soft, suffused rose-pink like
+that of the inside of shells. Her eyes grew misty with a kind of
+helplessness. She looked at me imploringly, and looked away. One might
+have supposed that she was pleading with me to be let off answering.
+Nevertheless, when she spoke at last, her words brought me to a new
+phase of her self-revelation.</p>
+
+<p>"Why aren't you afraid of him?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, but I am."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, but not like&mdash;" Again she saved herself. "Yes, but not like&mdash;so
+many people. You may be afraid of him inside, but you fight."</p>
+
+<p>"Any one fights for right."</p>
+
+<p>There was a repetition of the wistful smile, a little to the left corner
+of the mouth.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, do they? I wish I did. Or rather I wish I had."</p>
+
+<p>"It's never too late," I declared, with what was meant to be
+encouragement.</p>
+
+<p>There was a queer little gleam in her eye, like that which comes into
+the pupil of a startled bird.</p>
+
+<p>"So I've heard some one else say. I suppose it's true&mdash;but it frightens
+me."</p>
+
+<p>I was quite strangely uneasy. Hints of her story came back to me, but I
+had never heard it completely enough to be able to piece the fragments
+together. It was new for me to imagine myself called on to protect any
+one&mdash;I needed protection so much for myself!&mdash;but I was moved with a
+protective instinct toward her. It was rather ridiculous, and yet it was
+so.</p>
+
+<p>"Only one must be sure one is right before one fights, mustn't one?" was
+all I could think of saying.</p>
+
+<p>She responded dreamily, looking seaward.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't you think there may be worse things than wrong?"</p>
+
+<p>This being so contrary to my pet principles, I answered, emphatically,
+that I didn't think so at all. I brought out my maxim that if you did
+right nothing but right could come of it; but she surprised me by
+saying, simply, "I don't believe that."</p>
+
+<p>I was a little indignant.</p>
+
+<p>"But it's not a matter of believing; it's one of proving, of
+demonstration."</p>
+
+<p>"I've done right, and wrong came of it."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, but it couldn't&mdash;not in the long run."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, then I did wrong. That's what I've been afraid of, and what&mdash;what
+some one else tells me." If a pet bird could look at you with a
+challenging expression it was the thing she did. "Now what do you say?"</p>
+
+<p>I really didn't know what to say. I spoke from instinct, and some common
+sense.</p>
+
+<p>"If one's done wrong, or made a mistake, I suppose the only way one can
+rectify it is to begin again to do right. Right must have a rectifying
+power."</p>
+
+<p>"But if you've made a mistake the mistake is there, unless you go back
+and unmake it. If you don't, isn't it what they call building on a bad
+foundation?"</p>
+
+<p>"I dare say it is; and yet you can't push a material comparison too far
+when you're thinking of spiritual things. This is spiritual, isn't it? I
+suppose one can't really do evil and expect good to come of it; but one
+can overcome evil with good."</p>
+
+<p>She looked at me with a sweet mistiness.</p>
+
+<p>"I've no doubt that's true, but it's very deep. It's too deep for me."
+She rose with an air of dismissing the subject, though she continued to
+speak of it allusively. "You know so much about it. I could see you did
+from the first. If I was to tell you the whole story&mdash;but, of course, I
+can't do that. No, don't get up. I have to run away, because we're
+expecting people to tea; but I should have liked staying to talk with
+you. You're awfully clever, aren't you? I suppose it must be living
+round in those queer places&mdash;Gibraltar, didn't you say? I've seen
+Gibraltar, but only from the steamer, on the way to Naples. I felt that
+I was with you from that very first time I saw you. I'd seen you before,
+of course, with little Gladys, but not to notice you. I never noticed
+you till I heard that Hugh was in love with you. That was just before
+Mr. Brokenshire took me over&mdash;you remember!&mdash;that day. He wanted me to
+see how easily he could deal with people who opposed him; but I didn't
+think he succeeded very well. He made you go and sit at a distance. That
+was to show you he had the power. Did you notice what I did? Oh, I'm
+glad. I wanted you to understand that if it was a question of love I
+was&mdash;I was with you. You saw that, didn't you? Oh, I'm glad. I must run
+away now. We've people to tea; but some time, if I can manage it, I'll
+come again."</p>
+
+<p>She had begun slipping up the path, like a great rose-colored moth in
+the greenery, when she turned to say:</p>
+
+<p>"I can never do anything for you, I'm too afraid of him; but I'm on your
+side."</p>
+
+<p>After she had gone I began putting two and two together. What her visit
+did for me especially was to distract my mind. I got a better
+perspective on my own small drama in seeing it as incidental to a larger
+one. That there was a large one here I had no doubt, though I could
+neither seize nor outline its proportions. As far as I could judge of my
+visitor I found her dazed by the magnitude of the thing that had
+happened to her, whatever that was. She was good and kind; she hadn't a
+thought that wasn't tender; normally she would have been the devoted,
+clinging type of wife I longed to be myself; and yet some one's passion,
+or some one's ambition, or both in collusion, had caught her like a bird
+in a net.</p>
+
+<p>It was perhaps because she was a woman and I was a woman and J. Howard
+was a man that my reactions concerned themselves chiefly with him. I
+thought of him throughout the afternoon. I began to get new views of
+him. I wondered if he knew of himself what I knew. I supposed he did. I
+supposed he must. He couldn't have been married two or three years to
+this sweet stricken creature without seeing that her heart wasn't his.
+Furthermore, he couldn't have beheld, as he and I had beheld that
+afternoon, the hand that went up palm outward, without divining a horror
+of his person that was more than a shrinking from his poor contorted
+eye. For love the contorted eye would have meant more love, since it
+would have been love with its cognate of pity; but not so that uplifted
+hand and that instinctive waving of him back. There was more than an
+involuntary repulsion in that, more than an instant of abhorrence. What
+there was he must have discovered, he must have tasted, from the minute
+he first took her in his arms.</p>
+
+<p>I was sorry for him. I could throw enough of the masculine into my
+imagination to know how he must adore a creature of such perfected
+charm. She was the sort of woman men would adore, especially the men
+whose ideal lies first of all in the physical. For them it would mean
+nothing that she lacked mentality, that the pendulum of her nature had
+only a limited swing; that she was as good as she looked would be
+enough, seeing that she looked like an angel straight out of heaven. In
+spite of poor J. Howard's kingly suavity I knew he must have minutes of
+sheer animal despair, of fierce and bitter suffering.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Rossiter spoke to me that evening with a suggestion of reprimand,
+which was letting me off easily. I was so sure of my dismissal, that
+when I returned to the house from the shore I expected some sort of
+<i>lettre de cong&eacute;</i>; but I found nothing. I had had supper with Gladys and
+put her to bed when the maid brought me a message to say that Mrs.
+Rossiter would like me to come down and see her dress, as she was going
+out to dinner.</p>
+
+<p>I was admiring the dress, which was a new one, when she said, rather
+fretfully:</p>
+
+<p>"I wish you wouldn't talk like that to father. It upsets him so."</p>
+
+<p>I was adjusting a slight fullness at the back, which made it the easier
+for me to answer.</p>
+
+<p>"I wouldn't if he didn't talk like that to me. What can I do? I have to
+say something."</p>
+
+<p>She was peering into the cheval glass over her shoulder, giving her
+attention to two things at once.</p>
+
+<p>"I mean your saying you expected both of those preposterous things to
+happen. Of course, you don't&mdash;nor either of them&mdash;and it only rubs him
+up the wrong way."</p>
+
+<p>I was too meek now to argue the point. Besides, I was preoccupied with
+the widening interests in which I found myself involved. To probe the
+security of my position once more, I said:</p>
+
+<p>"I wonder you stand it&mdash;that you don't send me away."</p>
+
+<p>She was still twisting in front of the cheval glass.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't you think that shoulder-strap is loose? It really looks as if the
+whole thing would slip off me. If he can stand it I can," she added, as
+a matter of secondary concern.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, then he can stand it." I felt the shoulder-strap. "No, I think it's
+all right, if you don't wriggle too much."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm sure it's going to come down&mdash;and there I shall be. He has to stand
+it, don't you see, or let you think that you wound him?"</p>
+
+<p>I was frankly curious.</p>
+
+<p>"Do I wound him?"</p>
+
+<p>"He'd never let you know it if you did. The fact that he ignores you and
+lets you stay on with me is the only thing by which I can judge. If you
+didn't hurt him at all he'd tell me to send you about your business."
+She turned from the glass. "Well, if you say that strap is all right I
+suppose it must be, but I don't feel any too sure." She was picking up
+her gloves and her fan which the maid had laid out, when she said,
+suddenly: "If you're so keen on getting married, for goodness' sake why
+don't you take that young Strangways?"</p>
+
+<p>My sensation can only be compared to that of a person who has got a
+terrific blow on the head from a trip-hammer. I seemed to wonder why I
+hadn't been crushed or struck dead. As it was, I felt that I could never
+move again from the spot on which I stood. I was vaguely conscious of
+something outraged within me and yet was too stunned to resent it. I
+could only gasp, feebly, after what seemed an interminable time: "In the
+first place, I'm not so awfully keen on getting married&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>She was examining her gloves.</p>
+
+<p>"There, that stupid S&eacute;raphine has put me out two lefts. No, she hasn't;
+it's all right. Stuff, my dear! Every girl is keen on getting married."</p>
+
+<p>"And then," I stammered on, "Mr. Strangways has never given me the
+chance."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, well, he will. Do hand me my wrap, like a love." I was putting the
+wrap over her shoulders as she repeated: "Oh, well, he will. I can tell
+by the way he looks at you. It would be ever so much more suitable. Jim
+says he'll be a first-class man in time&mdash;if you don't rush in like an
+idiot and marry Hugh."</p>
+
+<p>"I may marry Hugh," I tried to say, loftily, "but I hope I sha'n't do it
+like an idiot."</p>
+
+<p>She swept toward the stairway, but she had left me with subjects for
+thought not only for that evening, but for the next day and the next.
+Now that the first shock was over I managed to work up the proper sense
+of indignity. I told myself I was hurt and offended. She shouldn't have
+mentioned such a thing. I wouldn't have stood it from one of my own
+sisters. I had never thought of Larry Strangways in any such way, and to
+do so disturbed our relations. To begin with, I wasn't in love with him;
+and to end with, he was too poor. Not that I was looking for a rich
+husband; but neither was I a lunatic. It would be years before he could
+think of marrying, if there were no other consideration; and in the mean
+time there was Hugh.</p>
+
+<p>There was Hugh with his letters from Boston, full of high ambitious
+hopes. Cousin Andrew Brew had written from Bar Harbor that he was coming
+to town in a day or two and would give him the interview he demanded.
+Already Hugh had his eye on a little house on Beacon Hill&mdash;so like a
+corner of Mayfair, he wrote, if Mayfair stood on an eminence&mdash;in which
+we could be as snug as two love-birds. I was composing in my mind the
+letter I should write to my aunt in Halifax, asking to be allowed to
+come back for the wedding.</p>
+
+<p>I filled in the hours wondering how Larry Strangways looked at me when
+there was only Mrs. Rossiter as spectator. I knew how he looked at me
+when I was looking back&mdash;it was with that gleaming smile which defied
+you to see behind it, as the sun defies you to see behind its rays. But
+I wanted to know how he looked at me when my head was turned another
+way; to know how the sun appears when you view it through a telescope
+that nullifies its defensive. For that I had only my imagination, since
+he had obtained two or three days' leave to go to New York to see his
+new employer. He had warned me to betray no hint as to the new
+employer's name, since there was a feud between the Brokenshire clan and
+Stacy Grainger which I connected vaguely with the story I had heard of
+Mrs. Brokenshire.</p>
+
+<p>Then on the fourth day Hugh came back. He appeared as he had on saying
+good-by, while I was breakfasting with Gladys in the open air and Broke
+was with his mother. Hugh was more pallid than when he went away; he was
+positively woe-begone. Everything that was love in me leaped into flame
+at sight of his honest, sorry face.</p>
+
+<p>I think I can tell his story best by giving it in my own words, in the
+way of direct narration. He didn't tell it to me all at once, but bit by
+bit, as new details occurred to him. The picture was slow in printing
+itself on my mind, but when I got it it was with satisfactory
+exactitude.</p>
+
+<p>He had been three days at the hotel in Boston before learning that
+Cousin Andrew Brew was actually in town and would see him at the bank at
+eleven on a certain morning. Hugh was on the moment. The promptitude
+with which his relative sprang up in his seat, somewhat as if impelled
+by a piece of mechanism, was truly cordial. Not less was the handshake
+and the formula of greeting. The sons of J. Howard Brokenshire were
+always welcome guests among their Boston kin, on whom they shed a
+pleasant luster of metropolitan glory. While the Brews and Borrodailes
+prided themselves on what they called their Boston provinciality and
+didn't believe to be provinciality at all, they enjoyed the New York
+connection.</p>
+
+<p>"Hello, Hugh! Glad to see you. Come in. Sit down. Looking older than
+when I saw you last. Growing a mustache. Not married yet? Sit down and
+tell us all about it. What can I do for you? Sit down."</p>
+
+<p>Hugh took the comfortable little upright arm-chair that stood at the
+corner of his cousin's desk, while the latter resumed the seat of honor.
+Knowing that the banker's time was valuable, and feeling that he would
+reveal his aptitude for business by going to the point at once, the
+younger man began his tale. He had just reached the fact that he had
+fallen in love with a little girl on whose merits he wouldn't enlarge,
+since all lovers had the same sort of things to say, though he was surer
+of his data than others of his kind, when there was a tinkle at the desk
+telephone.</p>
+
+<p>"Excuse me."</p>
+
+<p>During the conversation in which Cousin Andrew then engaged Hugh was
+able to observe the long-established, unassuming comfort of this
+friendly office, which suggested the cozy air that hangs about the
+smoking-rooms of good old English inns. There was a warm worn carpet on
+the floor; deep leather arm-chairs showed the effect of contact with two
+generations of moneyed backs; on the walls the lithographed heads of
+Brews and Borrodailes bore witness to the firm's respectability. In the
+atmosphere a faint odor of tobacco emphasized the human associations.</p>
+
+<p>Cousin Andrew emphasized them, too. "Now!" He put down the receiver and
+turned to Hugh with an air of relief at being able to give him his
+attention. He was a tall, thin man with a head like a nut. It would have
+been an expressionless nut had it not been for a facile tight-lipped
+smile that creased his face as stretching creases rubber. Coming and
+going rapidly, it gave him the appearance of mirth, creating at each end
+of a long, mobile mouth two concentric semicircles cutting deep into the
+cheeks that would have been of value to a low comedian. A slate-colored
+morning suit, a white piqu&eacute; edge to the opening of the waistcoat, a
+slate-colored tie with a pearl in it, emphasized the union of dignity
+and lightness which were the keynotes to Cousin Andrew's character.
+Blended as they were, they formed a delightfully debonair combination,
+bringing down to your own level a man who was somebody in the world of
+finance. It was part of his endearing quality that he liked you to see
+him as a jolly good fellow no whit better than yourself. He was fond of
+gossip and of the lighter topics of the moment. He was also fond of
+dancing, and frequented most of the gatherings, private and public, for
+the cultivation of that art which was the vogue of the year before the
+Great War. With his tall, limber figure he passed for less than his age
+of forty-three till you got him at close quarters.</p>
+
+<p>On the genial "Now!" in which there was an inflection of command Hugh
+went on with his tale, telling of his breach with his father and his
+determination to go into business for himself.</p>
+
+<p>"I ought to be independent, anyhow, at my age," he declared. "I've my
+own views, and it's only right to confess to you that I'm a bit of a
+Socialist. That won't make any difference, however, to our working
+together, Cousin Andrew, for, to make a long story short, I've looked in
+to tell you that I've come to the place where I should like to accept
+your kind offer."</p>
+
+<p>The statement was received with cheerful detachment, while Cousin Andrew
+threw himself forward with his arms on his desk, rubbing his long, thin
+hands together.</p>
+
+<p>"My kind offer? What was that?"</p>
+
+<p>Hugh was slightly dashed.</p>
+
+<p>"About my coming to you if ever I wanted to go into business."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! You're going into business?"</p>
+
+<p>Hugh named the places and dates at which, during the past few years,
+Cousin Andrew had offered his help to his young kinsman if ever it was
+needed.</p>
+
+<p>Cousin Andrew tossed himself back in his chair with one of his brisk,
+restless movements.</p>
+
+<p>"Did I say that? Well, if I did I'll stick to it." There was another
+tinkle at the telephone. "Excuse me."</p>
+
+<p>Hugh had time for reflection and some irritation. He had not expected to
+be thrust into the place of a petitioner, or to have to make
+explanations galling to his pride. He had counted not only on his
+cousinship, but on his position in the world as J. Howard Brokenshire's
+son. It seemed to him that Cousin Andrew was disposed to undervalue
+that.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't want to hold you to anything you don't care for, Cousin
+Andrew," he began, when his relative had again put the receiver aside,
+"but I understood&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, that's all right. I've no doubt I said it. I do recall something of
+the sort, vaguely, at a time when I thought your father might want&mdash; In
+any case we can fix you up. Sure to be something you can do. When'd you
+like to begin?"</p>
+
+<p>Hugh expressed his willingness to be put into office at once.</p>
+
+<p>"Just so. Turn you over to old Williamson. He licks the young ones into
+shape. Suppose your father'll think it hard of us to go against him. But
+on the other hand he may be pleased&mdash;he'll know you're in safe hands."</p>
+
+<p>It was a delicate thing for Hugh to attempt, but as he was going into
+business not from an irresistible impulse toward a financial career, but
+in order to make enough money to marry on, he felt obliged to ask, in
+such terms as he could command, how much money he should make.</p>
+
+<p>"Just so!" Cousin Andrew took up the receiver again. "Want to speak to
+Mr. Williamson. . . . Oh, Williamson, how much is Duffers getting now?
+. . . And how much before that? . . . Good! Thanks!"</p>
+
+<p>The result of these investigations was communicated to Hugh. He should
+receive Duffers's pay, and when he had earned it should come in for
+Duffers's promotion. The immediate effect was to make him look startled
+and blank. "What?" was his only question; but it contained several
+shades of incredulity.</p>
+
+<p>Cousin Andrew took this dismay in good part.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, what did you expect?"</p>
+
+<p>Hugh could only stammer:</p>
+
+<p>"I thought it would be more."</p>
+
+<p>"How much more?"</p>
+
+<p>Hugh sought an answer that wouldn't betray the ludicrous figure of his
+hopes.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, enough to live on as a married man at least."</p>
+
+<p>The banker's good nature was proved by the creases of his rubber smile.</p>
+
+<p>"What did you think you'd be worth to us&mdash;with no backing from your
+father?"</p>
+
+<p>The question was of the kind commonly called a poser. Hugh had not, so I
+understood from him, hitherto thought of his entering his kinsfolks'
+banking-house as primarily a matter of earning capacity. It wasn't to be
+like working for "any old firm." He had prefigured it as becoming a
+component part of a machine that turned out money of which he would get
+his share, that share being in proportion to the dignity of the house
+itself and bearing a relation to his blood connection with the
+dominating partners. When Cousin Andrew had repeated his question Hugh
+was obliged to reply:</p>
+
+<p>"I wasn't thinking of that so much as of what you'd be worth to me."</p>
+
+<p>"We could be worth a good deal to you in time."</p>
+
+<p>There was a ray of hope.</p>
+
+<p>"How long a time?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, twenty or thirty years, perhaps, if you work and save. Of course,
+if you had capital to bring in&mdash;but you haven't, have you? Didn't Cousin
+Sophy, your mother, leave everything to your father? I thought so. Mind
+you, I'm putting out of the question all thought of your father's coming
+round and putting money in for you. I'm talking of the thing on the
+ground on which you've put it."</p>
+
+<p>Hugh had no heart to resent the quirks and grimaces in Cousin Andrew's
+smile. He had all he could do in taking his leave in a way to save his
+face and cast the episode behind him. The banker lent himself to this
+effort with good-humored grace, accompanying his relative to the door of
+the room, where he shook him by the shoulder as he turned the knob.</p>
+
+<p>"Thought you'd go right in as a director? Not the first youngster who's
+had that idea, and you'll not be the last. Good-by. Let me hear from you
+if you change your mind." He called after him, as the door was about to
+close: "Best try to fix it up with your father, Hugh. As for the
+girl&mdash;well, there'll be others, and more in your line."</p>
+
+
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+<h2>CHAPTER IX</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="dropcap">O</span>n that first morning I got no more than the gist of what had happened
+during Hugh's visit to his cousin Andrew Brew. Hugh announced it in fact
+by a metaphor as soon as we had exchanged greetings and he had sat down
+at the table with his arm over Gladys's shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, little Alix, I got it where the chicken got the ax."</p>
+
+<p>"Where was that?" I asked, innocently, for the figure of speech was new
+to me.</p>
+
+<p>"In the neck."</p>
+
+<p>Neither of us laughed. His tone was so lugubrious as to preclude
+laughing. But I understood. I may say that by the time he had given me
+the outline of what he had to say I understood more than he. I might
+have seen poor Hugh's limitations before; but I never had. During the
+old life in Halifax I had known plenty of young men brought up in
+comfort who couldn't earn a living when the time came to do it. If I had
+never classed Hugh among the number, it was because the Brokenshires
+were all so rich that I supposed they must have some secret prescription
+for wringing money from the air. Besides, Hugh was an American; and
+American and money were words I was accustomed to pronounce together. I
+never questioned his ability to have any reasonable income he
+named&mdash;till now. Now I began to see him as he must have seen himself
+during those first few minutes after turning his back on the parental
+haven, alone and in the dark.</p>
+
+<p>I cannot say that for the moment I had any of the qualms of fear. My
+yearning over him was too motherly for that. I wanted to comfort and, as
+far as possible, to encourage him. Something within me whispered, too,
+the words, "It's going to be up to me." I meant&mdash;or that which spoke in
+me meant&mdash;that the whole position was reversed. I had been taking my
+ease hitherto, believing that the strong young man who had asked me to
+marry him would do the necessary work. It was to be up to him. My part
+was to be the passive bliss of having some one to love me and maintain
+me. That Hugh loved me I knew; that in one way or another he would be
+able to maintain me I took for granted. With a Brokenshire, I assumed,
+that would be the last of cares. And now I saw in a flash that I was
+wrong; that I who was nothing but a parasite by nature would somehow
+have to give my strong young man support.</p>
+
+<p>When all was said that he could say at the moment I took the
+responsibility of sending Gladys indoors with the maid who was waiting
+on the table, after which I asked Hugh to walk down the lawn with me. A
+stone balustrade ran above the Cliff Walk, and here was a bit of
+shrubbery where no one could observe us from the house, while passers on
+the Cliff Walk could see us only by looking upward. At that hour in the
+morning even they were likely to be rare.</p>
+
+<p>"Hugh, darling," I said, "this is becoming very, very serious. You're
+throwing yourself out of house and home and your father's good-will for
+my sake. We must think about it, Hugh&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>His answer was to seize me in his arms&mdash;we were sufficiently screened
+from view&mdash;and crush his lips against mine in a way that made speech
+impossible.</p>
+
+<p>Again I must make a confession. It was his doing that sort of thing that
+paralyzed my judgment. You will blame me, perhaps, but, oh, reader, have
+you any idea of what it is never to have had a man wild to kiss you
+before? Never before to have had any one adore you? Never before to have
+been the greatest of all blessings to so much as the least among his
+brethren? The experience was new to me. I had no rule of thumb by which
+to measure it. I could only think that the man who wanted me with so mad
+a desire must have me, no matter what reserves I might have preferred to
+make on my own account.</p>
+
+<p>I struggled, however, and with some success. For the first time I
+clearly perceived that occasions might arise in which, between love and
+marriage, one might have to make a distinction. Ethel Rossiter's dictum
+came back to me: "People can't go about marrying every one they love,
+now can they?" It came to me as a terrible possibility that I might be
+doomed to love Hugh all my life, and equally doomed to refuse him. If I
+didn't, the responsibilities would be "up to me." If besides loving him
+I were to accept him and marry him, it would be for me to see that the
+one possible condition was fulfilled. I should have to bring J. Howard
+to his knees.</p>
+
+<p>When he got breath to say anything it was with a mere hot muttering into
+my face, as he held me with my head thrown back:</p>
+
+<p>"I know what I'm doing, little Alix. You mustn't ask me to count the
+cost. The cost only makes you the more precious. Since I have to suffer
+for you I'll suffer, but I'll never give you up. Do you take me for a
+fellow who'd weigh money or comfort in the balances with you?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, Hugh," I whispered. His embrace was enough to strangle me.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, then, never ask me to think about this thing again, I've thought
+all I'm going to. As I mean to get you anyhow, little Alix, you may as
+well promise now, this very minute, that whatever happens you'll be my
+wife."</p>
+
+<p>But I didn't promise. First I got him to release me on the ground that
+some bathers, after a dip at Eastons Beach, were going by, with their
+heads on a level with our feet. Then I asked the natural question:</p>
+
+<p>"What do you think of doing now?"</p>
+
+<p>He said he was going to let no mushrooms spring in his footsteps, and
+that he was taking a morning train for New York. He talked about bankers
+and brokers and moneyed things in general in a way I couldn't follow,
+though I could see that in spite of Cousin Andrew Brew's rejection he
+still expected great things of himself. Like me, he seemed to feel that
+there was a faculty for conjuring money in the very name of Brokenshire.
+Never having known what it was to be without as much money as he wanted,
+never having been given to suppose that such an eventuality could come
+to pass, it was perhaps not strange that he should consider his power of
+commanding a large income to be in the nature of things. Bankers and
+brokers would be glad to have him as their associate from the mere fact
+that he was his father's son.</p>
+
+<p>I endeavored to throw a cup of cold water on too much certainty, by
+saying:</p>
+
+<p>"But, Hugh, dear, won't you have to begin at the beginning? Wasn't that
+what your cousin Andrew Brew&mdash;?"</p>
+
+<p>"Cousin Andrew Brew is an ass. He's one great big Boston
+stick-in-the-mud. He wouldn't know which side his bread was buttered on,
+not if it was buttered on both."</p>
+
+<p>"Still," I persisted, "you'll have to begin at the beginning."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I shouldn't be the first."</p>
+
+<p>"No, but you might be the first to do it with a clog round his feet in
+the shape of a person like me. How many years did your cousin
+say&mdash;twenty or thirty, wasn't it?"</p>
+
+<p>"R-rot, little Alix!" He brought out the interjection with a
+contemptuous roll. "It might be twenty or thirty years for a numskull
+like Duffers, but for me! There are ways by which a man who's in the
+business already, as you might say, goes skimming over the ground the
+common herd have to tramp. Look at the gentlemen-rankers in your own
+army. They enlist as privates, and in two or three years they're in the
+officers' mess with a commission. That comes of their education and&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"That's often true, I admit. I've known of several cases in my own
+experience. But even two or three years&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Wouldn't you wait for me?"</p>
+
+<p>He asked the question with a sharpness that gave me something like a
+stab.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, of course, Hugh, if I promised you. And yet to bind you by such a
+promise doesn't seem to me fair."</p>
+
+<p>"I'll take care of that," he declared, manfully. "As a matter of fact,
+when father sees how determined I am, he'll only be too happy to do the
+handsome thing and come down with the brass."</p>
+
+<p>"You think he's bluffing then?" I threw some conviction into my tone as
+I added, "I don't."</p>
+
+<p>"He's not bluffing to his own knowledge; but he is&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"To yours. But isn't it his knowledge that we've got to go by? We must
+expect the worst, even if we hope for the best."</p>
+
+<p>"And what it all comes to is&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Is that you're facing a very hard time, Hugh, and I don't feel that I
+can accept the responsibility of encouraging you to do it."</p>
+
+<p>"But, good Lord, Alix, you're not encouraging me. It's the other way
+round. You're a perfect wet blanket; you're an ice-water shower. I'm
+doing this thing on my own&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"You know, Hugh, I've seen your father since you went away."</p>
+
+<p>His face brightened.</p>
+
+<p>"Good! And did he show any signs of tacking to the wind?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not a bit. He said you would be ruined, and that I should ruin you."</p>
+
+<p>"The deuce you will! That's where he's got the wrong number, poor old
+dad! I hope you told him you would marry me&mdash;and let him have it
+straight."</p>
+
+<p>I made no reply to that, going on to tell him all that was said as to
+bringing J. Howard to his knees.</p>
+
+<p>He roared with ironic laughter.</p>
+
+<p>"You did have the gall!"</p>
+
+<p>"Then you think they'll never, never accept me?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not that way; not beforehand."</p>
+
+<p>Hot rage rose within me, against him and them and this scorn of my
+personality.</p>
+
+<p>"I think they will."</p>
+
+<p>"Not on your life! Dad wouldn't do it, not if I was on my death-bed and
+needed you to come and raise me up. Milly is the only one; and even she
+thinks I'm the craziest idiot&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Very well, then, Hugh," I said, quickly; "I'm afraid we must consider
+it all&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>He gathered me into his arms as he had done before, and once more
+stopped my protests. Once more, too, I yielded to this masculine
+argument.</p>
+
+<p>"For you and me there's nothing but love," he murmured, with his cheek
+pressed close against mine.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh no, Hugh," I managed to say, when I had struggled free. "There's
+honor&mdash;and perhaps there's pride." It gave some relief to what I
+conceived of as the humiliation he unconsciously heaped on me to be able
+to add: "As a matter of fact, pride and honor, in me, are as inseparable
+as the oxygen and hydrogen that go to make up water."</p>
+
+<p>He was obliged to leave it there, since he had no more than the time to
+catch his train for New York. It was, however, the sense of pride and
+honor that calmed my nerves when Mrs. Rossiter asked me to take little
+Gladys to see her grandfather in the afternoon. I had done it from time
+to time all through the summer, but not since Hugh had declared his love
+for me. If I went now, I reasoned, it would have to be on a new footing;
+and if it was on a new footing something might come of the visit in
+spite of my fears.</p>
+
+<p>We started a little after three, as Gladys had to be back in time for
+her early supper and bed. Chips, the wire-haired terrier, was nominally
+at our heels, but actually nosing the shrubbery in front of us, or
+scouring the lawns on our right with a challenging bark to any of his
+kind who might be within earshot to come down and contest our passage.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Qu'il est dr&ocirc;le, ce Chips! N'est-ce-pas, mademoiselle?</i>" Gladys would
+exclaim from time to time, to which I would make some suitable and
+instructive rejoinder.</p>
+
+<p>Her hand was in mine; her eyes as they laughed up at me were of the
+color of the blue convolvulus. In her little smocked liberty silk, with
+a leghorn hat trimmed with a wreath of tiny roses, she made me yearn for
+that bassinet between which and myself there were such stormy seas to
+cross. Everything was to be up to me. That was the great solemnity from
+which my mind couldn't get away. I was to be the David to confront
+Goliath, without so much as a sling or a stone. What I was to do, and
+how I was to do it, I knew no more than I knew of commanding an army. I
+could only take my stand on the maxim of which I was making a
+foundation-stone. I went so far as to believe that if I did right more
+right would unfold itself. It would be like following a trail through a
+difficult wood, a trail of which you observe all the notches and steps
+and signs, sometimes with misgivings, often with the fear that you're
+astray, but on which a moment arrives when you see with delight that
+you're coming out to the clearing. So I argued as I prattled with Gladys
+of such things as were in sight, of ships and lobster-pots and little
+dogs, giving her a new word as occasion served, and trying to keep my
+mind from terrors and remote anticipations.</p>
+
+<p>If you know Newport at all you know J. Howard Brokenshire's place in the
+neighborhood of Ochre Point. Anyone would name it as you passed by. J.
+Howard didn't build the house; he bought it from some people who, it
+seemed, hadn't found in Newport the hospitality of which they were in
+search. It is gloomy and fortress-like, as if the architect had planned
+a Palazzo Strozzi which he hadn't the courage to carry out. That it is
+incongruous with its surroundings goes without saying; but then it is
+not more incongruous than anything else. I had been long enough in
+America to see that for the man who could build on American soil a house
+which would have some relation to its site&mdash;as they can do in Mexico,
+and as we do to a lesser degree in Canada&mdash;fame and fortune would be in
+store.</p>
+
+<p>The entrance hall was baronial and richly Italianate. One's first
+impressions were of gilding and red damask. When one's eye lighted on a
+chest or settle, one could smell the stale incense in a Sienese or Pisan
+sacristy. At the foot of the great stairway ebony slaves held gilded
+torches in which were electric lights.</p>
+
+<p>Both the greyhounds came sniffing to meet Chips, and J. Howard, who had
+seen our approach across the lawn as we came from the Cliff Walk,
+emerged from the library to welcome his grandchild. He wore a suit of
+light-gray check, and was as imposingly handsome as usual. Gladys ran to
+greet him with a childish cry. On seizing her he tossed her into the air
+and kissed her.</p>
+
+<p>I stood in the middle of the hall, waiting. On previous occasions I had
+done the same thing; but then I had not been, as one might say,
+"introduced." I wondered if he would acknowledge the introduction now or
+give me a glance. But he didn't. Setting Gladys down, he took her by the
+hand and returned to the library.</p>
+
+<p>There was nothing new in this. It had happened to me before. Left like
+an empty motor-car till there was need for me again, I had sometimes
+seated myself in one of the huge ecclesiastical hall chairs, and
+sometimes, if the door chanced to be open, had wandered out to the
+veranda. As it was open this afternoon, I strolled toward the glimpse of
+green lawn, and the sparkle of blue sea which gleamed at the end of the
+hall.</p>
+
+<p>It was a possibility I had foreseen. Mrs. Brokenshire might be there. I
+might get into further touch with the mystery of her heart.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Brokenshire was not on the veranda, but Mrs. Billing was. She was
+seated in a low easy-chair, reading a French novel, and had been smoking
+cigarettes. An inlaid Oriental taboret, on which were a gold
+cigarette-case and ash-tray, stood beside her on the red-tiled floor.</p>
+
+<p>I had forgotten all about her, as seemingly she had forgotten about me.
+Her surprise in seeing me appear was not greater than mine at finding
+her. Instinctively she took up her lorgnette, which was lying in her
+lap, but put it down without using it.</p>
+
+<p>"So it's you," was her greeting.</p>
+
+<p>"I beg your pardon, madam," I stammered, respectfully. "I didn't know
+there was anybody here."</p>
+
+<p>I was about to withdraw when she said, commandingly:</p>
+
+<p>"Wait." I waited, while she went on: "You're a little spitfire. Did you
+know it?"</p>
+
+<p>The voice was harsh, with the Quaker drawl I have noticed in the older
+generation of Philadelphians; but the tone wasn't hostile. On the
+contrary, there was something in it that invited me to play up. I played
+up, demurely, however, saying, with a more emphatic respectfulness:</p>
+
+<p>"No, madam; I didn't."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, you can know it now. Who are you?" She made the quaint little
+gesture with which I have seen English princesses summon those they
+wished to talk to. "Come over here where I can get a look at you."</p>
+
+<p>I moved nearer, but she didn't ask me to sit down. In answer to her
+question I said, simply, "I'm a Canadian."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, a Canadian! That's neither fish, flesh, nor fowl. It's nothing."</p>
+
+<p>"No, madam, nothing but a point of view."</p>
+
+<p>"What do you mean by that?"</p>
+
+<p>I repeated something of my father's:</p>
+
+<p>"The point of view of the Englishman who understands America or of the
+American who understands England, as one chooses to put it. The Canadian
+is the only person who does both."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, indeed? I'm not a Canadian&mdash;and yet I flatter myself I know my
+England pretty well."</p>
+
+<p>I made so bold as to smile dimly.</p>
+
+<p>"Knowing and understanding are different things, madam, aren't they? The
+Canadian understands America because he is an American; he understands
+England because he is an Englishman. It's only of him that that can be
+said. You're quite right when you label him a point of view rather than
+a citizen or a subject."</p>
+
+<p>"I didn't label him anything of the kind. I don't know anything about
+him, and I don't care. What are you besides being a Canadian?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing, madam," I said, humbly.</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing? What do you mean?"</p>
+
+<p>"I mean that there's nothing about me, that I have or am, that I don't
+owe to my country."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, stuff! That's the way we used to talk in the United States forty
+years ago."</p>
+
+<p>"That's the way we talk in Canada still, madam&mdash;and feel."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, well, you'll get over it as we did&mdash;when you're more of a people."</p>
+
+<p>"Most of us would prefer to be less of a people, and not get over it."</p>
+
+<p>She put up her lorgnette.</p>
+
+<p>"Who was your father? What sort of people do you come from?"</p>
+
+<p>I tried to bring out my small store of personal facts, but she paid them
+no attention. When I said that my father had been a judge of the
+Supreme Court of Nova Scotia I might have been calling him a voivode of
+Montenegro or the president of a zemstvo. It was too remote from herself
+for her mind to take in. I could see her, however, examining my
+features, my hands, my dress, with the shrewd, sharp eyes of a
+connoisseur in feminine appearance.</p>
+
+<p>She broke into the midst of my recital with the words:</p>
+
+<p>"You can't be in love with Hugh Brokenshire."</p>
+
+<p>Fearing attack from an unexpected quarter, I clasped my hands with some
+emotion.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, but, madam, why not?"</p>
+
+<p>The reply nearly knocked me down.</p>
+
+<p>"Because you're too sensible a girl. He's as stupid as an owl."</p>
+
+<p>"He's very good and kind," was all I could find to say.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; but what's that? A girl like you needs more than a man who's only
+good and kind. Heavens above, you'll want some spice in your life!"</p>
+
+<p>I maintained my meek air as I said:</p>
+
+<p>"I could do without the spice if I could be sure of bread and butter."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, if you're marrying for a home let me tell you you won't get it.
+Hugh'll never be able to offer you one, and his father wouldn't let him
+if he was."</p>
+
+<p>I decided to be bold.</p>
+
+<p>"But you heard what I said the other day, madam. I expect his father to
+come round."</p>
+
+<p>She uttered the queer cackle that was like a hen when it crows.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, you do, do you? You don't know Howard Brokenshire. You could break
+him more easily than you could bend him&mdash;and you can't break him. Good
+Lord, girl, I've tried!"</p>
+
+<p>"But I haven't," I returned, quietly. "Now I'm going to."</p>
+
+<p>"How? What with? You can't try if you've nothing to try on."</p>
+
+<p>"I have."</p>
+
+<p>"For Heaven's sake&mdash;what?"</p>
+
+<p>I was going to say, "Right"; but I knew it would sound sententious. I
+had been sententious enough in talking about my country. Now I only
+smiled.</p>
+
+<p>"You must let me keep that as a secret," I answered, mildly.</p>
+
+<p>She gave herself what I can only call a hitch in her chair.</p>
+
+<p>"Then may I be there to see."</p>
+
+<p>"I hope you may be, madam."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I'll come," she cackled. "Don't worry about that. Just let me know.
+You'll have to fight like the devil. I suppose you know that."</p>
+
+<p>I replied that I did.</p>
+
+<p>"And when it's all over you'll have got nothing for your pains."</p>
+
+<p>"I shall have had the fight."</p>
+
+<p>She looked hard at me before speaking.</p>
+
+<p>"Good girl!" The tone was that of a spectator who calls out, "Good hit!"
+or, "Good shot!" at a game. "If that's all you want&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"No; I want Hugh."</p>
+
+<p>"Then I hope you won't get him. He's as big a dolt as his father, and
+that's saying a great deal." Terrified, I glanced over my shoulder at
+the house, but she went on imperturbably: "Oh, I know he's in there; but
+what do I care? I'm not saying anything behind his back that I haven't
+said to his face. He doesn't bear me any malice, either, I'll say that
+for him."</p>
+
+<p>"Nobody could&mdash;" I began, deferentially.</p>
+
+<p>"Nobody had better. But that's neither here nor there. All I'm telling
+you is to have nothing to do with Hugh Brokenshire. Never mind the
+money; what you need is a husband with brains. Don't I know? Haven't I
+been through it? My husband was kind and good, just like Hugh
+Brokenshire&mdash;and, O Lord! The sins of the father are visited on the
+children, too. Look at my daughter&mdash;pretty as a picture and not the
+brains of a white mouse." She nodded at me fiercely, "You're my kind. I
+can see that. Mind what I say&mdash;and be off."</p>
+
+<p>She turned abruptly to her book, hitching her chair a little away from
+me. Accepting my dismissal, I said in the third person, as though I was
+speaking to a royalty:</p>
+
+<p>"Madam flatters me too much; but I'm glad I intruded, for the minute,
+just to hear her say that."</p>
+
+<p>I had made my courtesy and reached the door leading inward when she
+called after me:</p>
+
+<p>"You're a puss. Do you know it?"</p>
+
+<p>Not feeling it necessary to respond in words, I merely smiled over my
+shoulder and entered the house.</p>
+
+<p>In one of the big chairs I waited a half-hour before J. Howard came out
+of the library with his grandchild. He had given her a doll which she
+hugged in her left arm, while her right hand was in his. The farewell
+scene was pretty, and took place in the middle of the hall.</p>
+
+<p>"Now run away," he said, genially, after much kissing and petting, "and
+give my love to mamma."</p>
+
+<p>He might have been shooing the sweet thing off into the air. There was
+no reference whatever to any one to take care of her. His eyes rested on
+me, but only as they rested on the wall behind me. I must say it was
+well done&mdash;if one has to do that sort of thing at all. Feeling myself,
+as his regard swept me, no more than a part of the carved
+ecclesiastical chair to which I stood clinging, I wondered how I was
+ever to bring this man to seeing me.</p>
+
+<p>I debated the question inwardly while I chatted with Gladys on the way
+homeward. I was obliged, in fact, to brace myself, to reason it out
+again that right was self-propagating and wrong necessarily sterile.
+Right I figured as a way which seemed to finish in a blind alley or
+cul-de-sac, but which, as one neared what seemed to be its end, led off
+in a new direction. Nearing the end of that there would be still a new
+lead, and so one would go on.</p>
+
+<p>And, sure enough, the new lead came within the next half-hour, though I
+didn't recognize it for what it was till afterward.</p>
+
+
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+<h2>CHAPTER X</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="dropcap">A</span>s we passed the Jack Brokenshire cottage, Larry Strangways and Broke,
+with Noble, the collie, bounding beside them, came racing down the lawn
+to overtake us. It was natural then that for the rest of the way Chips
+and Noble should form one company, Broke and his sister another, while
+we two elders strolled along behind them.</p>
+
+<p>It was the hour of the day for strolling. The mellow afternoon light was
+of the kind that brings something new into life, something we should be
+glad to keep if we knew how to catch it. It was not merely that grass
+and leaf and sea had a shimmer of gold on them. There was a sweet
+enchantment in the atmosphere, a poignant wizardry, a suggestion of
+emotions both higher and lower than those of our poor mortal scale. They
+made one reluctant to hurry one's footsteps, and slow in the return to
+that sheerly human shelter we call home. All along the path, down among
+the rocks, out in the water, up on the lawns, there were people, gentle
+and simple alike, who lingered and idled and paused to steep themselves
+in this magic.</p>
+
+<p>I have to admit that we followed their example. Anything served as an
+excuse for it, the dogs and the children doing the same from a similar
+instinct. I got the impression, too, that my companion was less in the
+throes of the discretion we had imposed upon ourselves, for the reason
+that his term as a mere educational lackey was drawing to a close. It
+had, in fact, only two more days to run. Then August would come and he
+would desert us.</p>
+
+<p>As it might be my last opportunity to surprise him into looking at me in
+the way Mrs. Rossiter had observed, I kept my eye on him pretty closely.
+I cannot say that I detected any change that flattered me. Tall and
+straight and splendidly poised, he was as smilingly impenetrable as
+ever. Like Howard Brokenshire, he betrayed no wound, even if I had
+inflicted one. It was a little exasperating. I was more than piqued.</p>
+
+<p>I told him I hadn't heard of his return from New York and asked how he
+had fared. His reply was enthusiastic. He had seen Stacy Grainger and
+was eager to be his henchman.</p>
+
+<p>"He's got that about him," he declared, "that would make anybody glad to
+work for him."</p>
+
+<p>He described his personal appearance, brawny and spare with the
+attributes of race. It was an odd comment on the laws of heredity that
+his grandfather was said to have begun life as a peddler, and yet there
+he was a <i>grand seigneur</i> to the finger-tips. I said that Howard
+Brokenshire was also a <i>grand seigneur</i>, to which he replied that Howard
+Brokenshire was a monument. American conditions had raised him, and on
+those conditions he stood as a statue on its pedestal. His position was
+so secure that all he had to do was stand. It was for this reason that
+he could be so dictatorial. He was safely fastened to his base; nothing
+short of seismic convulsion of the whole economic world was likely to
+knock him off. In the course of that conversation I learned more of the
+origin of the Brokenshire fortunes than I had ever before heard.</p>
+
+<p>It was the great-grandfather of J. Howard who apparently had laid the
+foundation-stone on which later generations built so well. That
+patriarch, so I understood, had been a farmer in the Connecticut Valley.
+His method of finance was no more esoteric than that of lending out
+small sums of money at a high rate of interest. Occasionally he took
+mortgages on his neighbors' farms, with the result that he became in
+time something of a landed proprietor. When the suburbs of a city had
+spread over one of the possessions thus acquired, the foundation-stone
+to which I have referred might have been considered well and truly laid.</p>
+
+<p>About the year 1830, his son migrated to New York. The firm of Meek &amp;
+Brokenshire, of which the fame was to go through two continents, was
+founded when Van Buren was in the presidential seat and Victoria just
+coming to the throne. It seems there was a Meek in those days, though at
+the time of which I am writing nothing remained of him but a syllable.</p>
+
+<p>It was after the Civil War, however, when the grandson of the
+Connecticut Valley veteran was in power, that the house of Meek &amp;
+Brokenshire forged to the front rank among financial agencies. It formed
+European affiliations. It became the financial representative of a great
+European power. John H. Brokenshire, whose name was distinguished from
+that of his more famous son only by a distribution of initials, had a
+house at Hyde Park Corner as well as one in New York. He was the first
+American banker to become something of an international magnate. The
+development of his country made him so. With the vexed questions of
+slavery and secession settled, with the phenomenal expansion of the
+West, with the freer uses of steam and electricity, with the tightening
+of bonds between the two hemispheres, that pedestal was being raised on
+which J. Howard was to pose with such decorative effectiveness.</p>
+
+<p>His posing began on his father's death in the year 1898. Up to that time
+he had represented the house in England, the post being occupied now by
+his younger brother James. Polished manners, a splendid appearance, and
+an authoritative air imported to New York a touch of the Court of St.
+James's. Mrs. Billing had called him a dolt. Perhaps he was one. If so
+he was a dolt raised up and sustained by all that was powerful in the
+United States. It was with these vast influences rather than with the
+man himself that, as Larry Strangways talked, I began to see I was in
+conflict.</p>
+
+<p>In Stacy Grainger, I gathered, the contemporaneous development of the
+country had produced something different, just as the same piece of
+ground will grow an oak or a rose-bush, according to the seed. People
+with a taste for social antithesis called him the grandson of a peddler.
+Mr. Strangways considered this description below the level of the
+ancestral Grainger's occupation. In the days of scattered farms and
+difficult communications throughout Illinois, Wisconsin, and Minnesota
+he might better have been termed an itinerant merchant. He was the
+traveling salesman who delivered the goods. His journeys being made by
+river boats and ox-teams, he began to see the necessity of steam. He was
+of the group who projected the system of railways, some of which failed
+and some of which succeeded, through the regions west of Lake Superior.
+Later he forsook the highways for a more feverish life in the incipient
+Chicago. His wandering years having given him an idea of the value of
+this focal point, he put his savings into land. The phoenix rise of the
+city after the great fire made him a man of some wealth. Out of the
+financial crash of 1873 he became richer. His son grew richer still on
+the panic of 1893, when he, too, descended on New York. It was he who
+became a power on the Stock Exchange and bought the big house with which
+parts of my narrative will have to do.</p>
+
+<p>All I want to say now is that as I strolled with Larry Strangways along
+that sunny walk, and as he ran on about Brokenshires and Graingers, I
+got my first bit of insight into the immense American romance which the
+nineteenth century unfolded. I saw it was romance, gigantic, race-wide.
+For the first time in my life I realized that there were other tales to
+make men proud besides the story of the British Empire.</p>
+
+<p>I could see that Larry Strangways was proud&mdash;proud and anxious. I had
+never seen this side of him before. Pride was in the way in which he
+held his fine young head; there was anxiety in his tone, and now and
+then in the flash of his eye, in spite of his efforts not to be too
+serious.</p>
+
+<p>It was about the country that he talked&mdash;its growth, its vastness. Even
+as recently as when he was a boy it was still a manageable thing, with a
+population reckoned at no more than seventy or eighty millions. It had
+been homogeneous in spirit if not in blood, and those who had come from
+other lands, and been welcomed and adopted, accepted their new situation
+with some gratitude. Patriotism was still a word with a meaning, and if
+it now and then became spread-eagleism it was only as the waves when
+thrown too far inland become froth. The wave was the thing and it hadn't
+ebbed.</p>
+
+<p>"And do you think it has ebbed now?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>He didn't answer this question directly.</p>
+
+<p>"We're becoming colossal. We shall soon count our people by the hundred
+million and more. Of these relatively few will have got our ideals.
+Some will reject them. There are mutterings already of other standards
+to which we must be taught to conform. Some of our own best people of
+pure Anglo-Saxon descent are losing heart and renouncing and denouncing
+the democratic tradition, though they've nothing to put in its place.
+And we're growing so huge&mdash;with a hugeness that threatens to make us
+lethargic."</p>
+
+<p>I tried to be encouraging.</p>
+
+<p>"You seem to me anything but that."</p>
+
+<p>"National lethargy can easily exist side by side with individual energy.
+Take China, for instance. There are few peoples in the world more
+individually diligent than the Chinese; and yet when it comes to
+national stirring it's a country as difficult to move as an unwieldy
+overfed giant. It's flabby and nerveless and inert. It's spread half
+over Asia, and it has the largest and most industrious population in the
+world; and yet it's a congeries of inner weaknesses, and a prey to any
+one who chooses to attack it."</p>
+
+<p>"And you think this country is on the way to being the China of the
+west?"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't say on the way. There's danger of it. In proportion as we too
+become unwieldy and overfed, the circulation of that national impulse
+which is like blood grows slower. The elephant is a heavily moving beast
+in comparison with the lion."</p>
+
+<p>"But it's the more intelligent," I argued, still with a disposition to
+be encouraging.</p>
+
+<p>"Intelligence won't save it when the lion leaps on its back."</p>
+
+<p>"Then what will?"</p>
+
+<p>"That's what we want to find out."</p>
+
+<p>"And how are you going to do it?"</p>
+
+<p>"By men. We've come to a time when the country is going to need stronger
+men than it ever had, and more of them."</p>
+
+<p>I suppose it is because I am a woman that I have to bring all questions
+to the personal.</p>
+
+<p>"And is your Stacy Grainger going to be one?"</p>
+
+<p>He walked on a few paces without replying, his head in the air.</p>
+
+<p>"No," he said, at last, "I don't think so. He's got a weakness."</p>
+
+<p>"What kind of weakness?"</p>
+
+<p>"I'm not going to tell you," he laughed. "It's enough to say that it's
+one which I think will put him out of commission for the job." He gave
+me some inkling, however, of what he meant when he added: "The country's
+coming to a place where it will need disinterested men, and
+whole-hearted men, and clean-hearted men, if it's going to pull through.
+It's extraordinary how deficient we've been in leaders who've had any of
+these characteristics, to say nothing of all three."</p>
+
+<p>"Is the United States singular in that?"</p>
+
+<p>He spoke in a half-jesting tone probably to hide the fact that he was so
+much in earnest.</p>
+
+<p>"No; perhaps not. But it's got to have them if it's going to be saved.
+Moreover," he went on, "it must find them among the young men. The older
+men are all steeped and branded and tarred and feathered with the
+materialism of the nineteenth century. They're perfectly sodden. They
+see no patriotism except in loyalty to a political machine; and no
+loyalty to a political machine except for what they can get out of it.
+From our Presidents down most of them will sacrifice any law of right
+to the good of a party. They don't realize that nine times out of ten
+the good of a party is the evil of the common weal; and our older men
+will never learn the fact. If we can't wake the younger men, we're done
+for."</p>
+
+<p>"And are you going to wake them?"</p>
+
+<p>"I'm going to be awake myself. That's all I can be responsible for. If I
+can find another fellow who's awake I'll follow him."</p>
+
+<p>"Why not lead him? I should think you could."</p>
+
+<p>He turned around on me. I shall never forget the gleam in his eye.</p>
+
+<p>"No one is ever going to get away with this thing who thinks of
+leadership. There are times in the history of countries when men are
+called on to give up everything and be true to an ideal. I believe that
+time is approaching. It may come into Europe in one way and to America
+in another; but it's coming to us all. There'll be a call for&mdash;for&mdash;" he
+hesitated at the word, uttering it only with an apologetic laugh&mdash;"for
+consecration."</p>
+
+<p>I was curious.</p>
+
+<p>"And what do you mean by that&mdash;by consecration?"</p>
+
+<p>He reflected before answering.</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose I mean knowing what this country stands for, and being true
+to it oneself through thick and thin. There'll be thin and there'll be
+thick&mdash;plenty of them both&mdash;but it will be a question of the value of
+the individual. If there had been ten righteous men in Sodom and
+Gomorrah, they wouldn't have been destroyed. I take that as a kind of
+figure. A handful of disinterested, whole-hearted, clean-hearted, and
+perhaps I ought to add stout-hearted Americans, who know what they
+believe and live by it, will hold the fort against all efforts, within
+and without, to pull it down." He paused in his walk, obliging me to do
+the same. "I've been thinking a good deal," he smiled, "during the past
+few weeks of your law of Right&mdash;with a capital. I laughed at it when you
+first spoke of it&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, hardly that," I interposed.</p>
+
+<p>"But I've come to believe that it will work."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm so glad."</p>
+
+<p>"In fact, it's the only thing that will work."</p>
+
+<p>"Exactly," I exclaimed, enthusiastically.</p>
+
+<p>"We must stand by it, we younger men, just as the younger men of the
+late fifties stood by the principles represented by Lincoln. I believe
+in my heart that the need is going to be greater for us than it was for
+them, and if we don't respond to it, then may the Lord have mercy on our
+souls."</p>
+
+<p>I give this scrap of conversation because it introduced a new note into
+my knowledge of Americans. I had not supposed that any Americans felt
+like that. In the Rossiter circle I never saw anything but an immense
+self-satisfaction. Money and what money could do was, I am sure, the
+only topic of their thought. Their ideas of position and privilege were
+all spuriously European. Nothing was indigenous. Except for their sense
+of money, their aims were as foreign to the soil as their pictures,
+their tapestries, their furniture, and their clothes. Even stranger I
+found the imitation of Europe in tastes which Europe was daily giving
+up. But in Larry Strangways, it seemed to me, I found something native,
+something that really lived and cared. It caused me to look at him with
+a new interest.</p>
+
+<p>His jesting tone allowed me to take my cue in the same vein.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm tremendously flattered, Mr. Strangways, that you should have found
+anything in my ideas that could be turned to good account."</p>
+
+<p>He laughed shortly and rather hardly.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, if it was only that!"</p>
+
+<p>It was another of the things I wished he hadn't said, but with the words
+he started on again, walking so fast for a few paces that I made no
+effort to keep up with him. When he waited till I rejoined him we fell
+again to talking of Stacy Grainger. At the first opportunity I asked the
+question that was chiefly on my mind.</p>
+
+<p>"Wasn't there something at one time between him and Mrs. Brokenshire?"</p>
+
+<p>He marched on with head erect.</p>
+
+<p>"I believe so," he admitted, reluctantly, but not till some seconds had
+passed.</p>
+
+<p>"There was a big fight, wasn't there," I persisted, "between him and Mr.
+Brokenshire&mdash;over Editha Billing&mdash;on the Stock Exchange&mdash;or something
+like that?"</p>
+
+<p>Again he allowed some seconds to go by.</p>
+
+<p>"So I've heard."</p>
+
+<p>I fished out of my memory such tag ends of gossip as had reached me, I
+could hardly tell from where.</p>
+
+<p>"Didn't Mr. Brokenshire attack his interests&mdash;railways and steel and
+things&mdash;and nearly ruin him?"</p>
+
+<p>"I believe there was some such talk."</p>
+
+<p>I admired the way in which he refused to lend himself to the spread of
+the legend; but I insisted on going on, because the idea of this
+conflict of modern giants, with a beautiful maiden as the prize,
+appealed to my imagination.</p>
+
+<p>"And didn't old Mrs. Billing shift round all of a sudden from the man
+who seemed to be going under to&mdash;?"</p>
+
+<p>He cut the subject short by giving it another twist.</p>
+
+<p>"Grainger's been unlucky. His whole family have been unlucky. It's an
+instance of tragedy haunting a race such as one reads of in mythology
+and now and then in modern history&mdash;the house of Atreus, for example,
+and the Stuarts, and the Hapsburgs, and so on."</p>
+
+<p>I questioned him as to this, only to learn of a series of accidents,
+suicides, and sudden deaths, leaving Stacy as the last of his line,
+lonely and picturesque.</p>
+
+<p>At the foot of the steps leading up to the Rossiter lawn Larry
+Strangways paused again. The children and dogs having preceded us and
+being safe on their own grounds, we could consider them off our minds.</p>
+
+<p>"What do you know about old books?" he asked, suddenly.</p>
+
+<p>The question took me so much by surprise that I could only say:</p>
+
+<p>"What makes you think I know anything?"</p>
+
+<p>"Didn't your father have a library full of them? And didn't you
+catalogue them and sell them in London?"</p>
+
+<p>I admitted this, but added that even that undertaking had left me very
+ignorant of the subject.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; but it's a beginning. If you know the Greek or Russian alphabet
+it's a very good point from which to go on and learn the language."</p>
+
+<p>"But why should I learn that language?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because I know a man who's going to have a vacancy soon for a
+librarian. It's a private library, rather a famous one in New York, and
+the young lady at present in command is leaving to be married."</p>
+
+<p>I smiled pleasantly.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; but what has that got to do with me?"</p>
+
+<p>"Didn't I tell you I was going to look you up another job?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! And so you've looked me up this!"</p>
+
+<p>"No, I didn't. It looked me up. The owner of the library mentioned the
+fact as a great bore. It was his father who made the collection in the
+days of the first great American splurge. Stacy Grainger has added a rug
+or a Chinese jar from time to time, but he doesn't give a hang for the
+lot."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, so it's his."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; it's his. He says he feels inclined to shut the place up; but I
+told him it was a pity to do that since I knew the very young lady for
+the post."</p>
+
+<p>I dropped the subject there, because of a new inspiration.</p>
+
+<p>"If Mr. Grainger has places at his command, couldn't he do something for
+poor Hugh?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why poor Hugh? I thought he was&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>I gave him a brief account of the fiasco in Boston, venturing to betray
+Hugh's confidence for the sake of some possible advantage. Mr.
+Strangways only shrugged his shoulders.</p>
+
+<p>"Of course," he said. "What could you expect?" I was sure he was looking
+down on me with the expression Mrs. Rossiter had detected, though I
+didn't dare to lift an eye to catch him in the act. "You really mean to
+marry him?"</p>
+
+<p>"Mean to marry him is not the term," I answered, with the decision which
+I felt the situation called for. "I mean to marry him only&mdash;on
+conditions."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, on conditions! What kind of conditions?"</p>
+
+<p>I named them to him as I had named them to others. First that Hugh
+should become independent.</p>
+
+<p>He repeated his short, hard laugh.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't believe you had better bank on that."</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps not," I admitted. "But I've another string to my bow. His
+family may come and ask me."</p>
+
+<p>He almost shouted.</p>
+
+<p>"Never!"</p>
+
+<p>It was the tone they all took, and which especially enraged me. I kept
+my voice steady, however, as I said, "That remains to be seen."</p>
+
+<p>"It doesn't remain to be seen, because I can tell you now that they
+won't."</p>
+
+<p>"And I can tell you now that they will," I said, with an assurance that,
+on the surface at least, was quite as strong as his own.</p>
+
+<p>He laughed again, more shortly, more hardly.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, well!"</p>
+
+<p>The laugh ended in a kind of sigh. I noted the sigh as I noted the
+laugh, and their relation to each other. Both reached me, touching
+something within me that had never yet been stirred. Physically it was
+like the prick of the spur to a spirited animal, it sent me bounding up
+the steps. I was off as from a danger; and though I would have given
+much to see the expression with which he stood gazing after me, I would
+not permit myself so much as to glance back.</p>
+
+
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+<h2>CHAPTER XI</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="dropcap">T</span>he steps by which I came to be Stacy Grainger's librarian could easily
+be traced, though to do so with much detail would be tedious.</p>
+
+<p>After Hugh's departure for New York my position with Mrs. Rossiter soon
+became untenable. The reports that reached Newport of the young man's
+doings in the city were not merely galling to the family pride, but
+maddening to his father's sense of pre-eminence. Hugh was actually going
+from door to door, as you might say, in Wall Street and Broad Street,
+only to be turned away.</p>
+
+<p>"He's making the most awful fool of himself," Mrs. Rossiter informed me
+one morning, "and papa's growing furious. Jim writes that every one is
+laughing at him, and, of course, they know it's all about some girl."</p>
+
+<p>I held my tongue at this. That they should be laughing at poor Hugh was
+a new example of the world's falsity. His letters to me were only a
+record of half-promises and fair speeches, but he found every one of
+them encouraging. Nowhere had he met with the brutal treatment he had
+received at the hands of Cousin Andrew Brew. The minute his card went in
+to never so great a banker or broker, he was received with a welcome. If
+no one had just the right thing to offer him, no one had turned him
+down. It was explained to him that it was largely a matter of the off
+season&mdash;for his purpose August was the worst month in the year&mdash;and of
+the lack of an opening which it would be worth the while of a man of his
+quality to fill. Later, perhaps! The two words, courteously spoken, gave
+the gist of all his interviews. He had every reason to feel satisfied.</p>
+
+<p>In the mean while he was comfortable at his club&mdash;his cash in hand would
+hold out to Christmas and beyond&mdash;and in the matter of energy, he wrote,
+not a mushroom was springing in his tracks. He was on the job early and
+late, day in and day out. The off season which was obviously a
+disadvantage in some respects had its merits in others, since it would
+be known, when things began to look up again, that he was available for
+any big house that could get him. That there would be competition in
+this respect every one had given him to understand. All this he told me
+in letters as full of love as they were of business, written in a great,
+sprawling, unformed, boyish hand, and with an occasional bit of phonetic
+spelling which made his protestations the more touching.</p>
+
+<p>But Jim Rossiter's sources of information were of another kind.</p>
+
+<p>"Get your father to do something to stop him," he wrote to his wife.
+"He's making the whole house of Meek &amp; Brokenshire a laughing-stock."</p>
+
+<p>There came, in fact, a Saturday when Mr. Rossiter actually appeared for
+the week-end.</p>
+
+<p>"He wouldn't be doing that," Mrs. Rossiter almost sobbed to me, on
+receipt of the telegram announcing his approach, "unless things were
+pretty bad."</p>
+
+<p>Though I dreaded his coming, I was speedily reassured. Whatever the
+object of Mr. Rossiter's visit, I, in my own person, had nothing to do
+with it. On the afternoon of his arrival he came out to where I was
+knocking the croquet balls about with Gladys on the lawn, and was as
+polite as he had been through the winter in New York. He was always
+polite even to the maids, to whom he scrupulously said good-morning. His
+wistful desire to be liked by every one was inspired by the same sort of
+impulse as the jovial <i>bonhomie</i> of Cousin Andrew Brew. He was a little,
+weazened man, with face and legs like a jockey, which I think he would
+gladly have been. Racin' and ridin', as he called them, were the
+amusements in which he found most pleasure, while his health was his
+chief preoccupation. He took pills before and after all his meals and a
+variety of medicinal waters. During the winter under his roof my own
+conversation with him had been entirely on the score of his complaints.</p>
+
+<p>In just the same way he sauntered up now. He talked of his lack of
+appetite and the beastly cooking at clubs. Expecting him to broach the
+subject of Hugh, I got myself ready; but he did nothing of the kind. He
+was merely amiable and, as far as I could judge, indifferent. Within ten
+minutes he had sauntered away again, leading Gladys by the hand.</p>
+
+<p>I saw then that in common with the other Brokenshires he considered that
+I didn't count. Hugh could be dealt with independently of me. So long as
+I was useful to his wife, there was no reason why I should be disturbed.
+I was too light a thing to be weighed in their balances.</p>
+
+<p>Next day there was a grand family council and on Monday Jack Brokenshire
+accompanied his brother-in-law to New York. Hugh wrote me of their
+threats and flatteries, their beseechings and cajoleries. He was to come
+to his senses; he was to be decent to his father; he was to quit being a
+fool. I gathered that for forty-eight hours they had put him through
+most of the tortures known to fraternal inquisition; but he wrote me he
+would bear it all and more, for the sake of winning me.</p>
+
+<p>Nor would he allow them to have everything their own way. That he wrote
+me, too. When it came to the question of marriage he bade them look at
+home. Each of them was an instance of what J. Howard could do in the
+matrimonial line, and what a mess he and they had made of it! He asked
+Jack in so many words how much he would have been in love with Pauline
+Gray if she hadn't had a big fortune, and, now that he had got her money
+and her, how true he was to his compact. Who were Trixie Delorme and
+Baby Bevan, he demanded, with a knowledge of Jack's affairs which
+compelled the elder brother to tell him to mind his own business.</p>
+
+<p>Hugh laughed scornfully at that.</p>
+
+<p>"I can mind my own business, Jack, and still keep an eye on yours,
+seeing that you and Pauline are the talk of the town. If she doesn't
+divorce you within the next five years, it will be because you've
+already divorced her. Even that won't be as big a scandal as your going
+on living together."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Rossiter intervened on this and did his best to calm the younger
+brother down:</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, cut that out now, Hugh!"</p>
+
+<p>But Hugh rounded on him, shaking off the hand that had been laid on his
+arm.</p>
+
+<p>"You're a nice one, Jim, to come with your mealy-mouthed talk to me.
+Look at Ethel! If I'd married a woman as you married her&mdash;or if I'd been
+married as she married you&mdash;just because your father was a partner in
+Meek &amp; Brokenshire and it was well to keep the money in the family&mdash;if
+I'd done that I'd shut up. I'd consider myself too low-down a cur to be
+kicked. What kind of a wife is Ethel to you? What kind of a husband are
+you to her? What kind of a father do you make to the children who hardly
+know you by sight? And now, just because I'm trying to be a man, and
+decent, and true to the girl I love, you come sneaking round to tell me
+she's not good enough. What do I care whether she's good enough or not,
+so long as she isn't like Ethel and Pauline? You can go back and tell
+them so."</p>
+
+<p>Jack Brokenshire came back, but I think he kept this confidence to
+himself. What he told, however, was enough to produce a good deal of
+gloom in the family. Though Mrs. Rossiter didn't cease to be nice to me
+in her non-committal way, I began to reason that there were limits even
+to indifference. I had made up my mind to go and was working out some
+practical way of going, when an incident hastened my departure.</p>
+
+<p>Doing an errand one day for Mrs. Rossiter in the shopping part of
+Bellevue Avenue, I saw old Mrs. Billing going by in an open motor
+landaulette. She signaled to me to stop, and, poking the chauffeur in
+the back through the open window, made him draw up at the curb.</p>
+
+<p>"I've got something for you," she said, without other form of greeting.
+She began to stir things round in her bag. "I thought you'd like it.
+I've been carrying it about with me for the last three or four
+days&mdash;ever since Jack Brokenshire got back from New York. Where the
+dickens is the thing? Ah, here!" She handed me out a crumpled card.
+"That's all, Antoine," she continued to the man. "Drive on."</p>
+
+<p>I was left with the card in my hand, finding it to be an advertisement
+for the Hotel Mary Chilton, a place of entertainment for women alone, in
+a central and reputable part of New York.</p>
+
+<p>By the time I got back to Mrs. Rossiter's I had solved what had at first
+been a puzzle, and, having reported on my errand, I gave my resignation
+verbally. I saw then&mdash;what old Mrs. Billing had also seen&mdash;that it was
+time. Mrs. Rossiter expressed no relief, but she made no attempt to
+dissuade me. That she was sorry she allowed me to see. She didn't speak
+of Hugh; but on the morning when I went she gave up her engagements to
+stay at home with me. As I said good-by she threw her arms round my neck
+and kissed me. I could feel on my cheek tears of hers as well as tears
+of my own, as I drew down my veil.</p>
+
+<p>Hugh met me at the station in New York, and we dined at a restaurant
+together. He came for me next morning, and we lunched and dined at
+restaurants again. When we did the same on the third day that sense of
+being in a false position which had been with me from the first, and
+which argument couldn't counteract, began to be disquieting. On the
+fourth day I tried to make excuses and remain at the hotel, but when he
+insisted I was obliged to let him take me out once more. The people at
+the Mary Chilton were kindly, but I was afraid they would regard me with
+suspicion. I was afraid of some other things, besides.</p>
+
+<p>For one thing I was afraid of Hugh. He began again to plead with me to
+marry him. Even he admitted that we couldn't continue to "go round
+together like that." We went to the most expensive restaurants, he
+argued, where there were plenty of people who would know him. When they
+saw him every day with a girl they didn't know, they would draw their
+own conclusions. As in a situation similar to theirs I would have drawn
+my own, I brought my bit of Bohemianism to a speedy end.</p>
+
+<p>There followed some days during which it seemed to me I was deprived of
+any outlook. I could hardly see what I was there for. I could hardly see
+what I was living for. Never till then had I realized how, in normal
+conditions, each day is linked to the day before as well as to the
+morrow. Here the link was gone. I left nothing undone when I went to
+bed; I had nothing to get up for in the morning. My reason for existing
+had suddenly been snuffed out.</p>
+
+<p>It was a time for the testing of my faith. I was near the end of my
+<i>cul-de-sac</i>, and yet I saw no further development ahead. If the
+continuous unfolding of right on which, to use Larry Strangways's
+expression, I had banked, were to come to a stop, I should be left not
+only without a duty, but without a law. Of the two possibilities it was
+the latter I dreaded most. One can live if one has a motive theory
+within one; without it&mdash; And then, just as I was coming to the last
+stretches of what seemed a blind alley and no more, my confidence was
+justified. Larry Strangways called on me.</p>
+
+<p>I have not said that on coming to New York I had decided to let my
+acquaintance with him end. He made me uneasy. I was terrified by the
+thought that he might be in love with me. Why I was terrified I didn't
+know; I only knew I was. I did not tell him, therefore, when I left Mrs.
+Rossiter; and in the whirlpool of New York I considered that I was
+swallowed up. But here was his card, and he himself waiting in the
+drawing-room below.</p>
+
+<p>Naturally my first question was as to how he had found me out. This he
+laughed off, pretending to be annoyed with me for coming to the city
+without telling him. I could see, however, that he was in spirits much
+too high to allow of his being seriously annoyed with anything. Life
+promised well with him. He enjoyed his work, and for his employer he
+had that eager personal devotion which is always a herald of success.
+After having run away from him, as it were, I was now a little irritated
+at seeing that he hadn't missed me.</p>
+
+<p>But he did not take his leave without a bit of information that puzzled
+me beyond expression. He was going out of Mr. Grainger's office that
+morning, he said, with a bundle of letters which he was to answer, when
+his master observed, casually:</p>
+
+<p>"The young lady of whom you spoke to me as qualified to take Miss
+Davis's place is at the Hotel Mary Chilton. Go and see her and get her
+opinion as to accepting the job!"</p>
+
+<p>I was what the French call <i>atterr&eacute;e</i>&mdash;knocked flat.</p>
+
+<p>"But how on earth could he know?"</p>
+
+<p>Larry Strangways laughed.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, don't ask me. He knows anything he wants to know. He's got the
+flair of a detective. I don't try to fathom him. But the point is that
+the position is there for you to take or to leave."</p>
+
+<p>I tried to bring my mind back from the fact that this important man, a
+total stranger to me, was in some way interested in my destiny.</p>
+
+<p>"What can I do but leave it, when I know no more about it than I do of
+sailing a ship?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh yes, you do. You know what books are, and you know what rare books
+are. For the rest, all you'd have to do would be to consult the
+catalogue. I don't know what the duties are; but if Miss Davis is up to
+them I guess you would be, too. She's a sweet, pretty kitten of a
+thing&mdash;daughter of one of Stacy Grainger's old pals who came to
+grief&mdash;but I don't believe she knows much more about a book than the
+cover from the print. Anyhow, I've given you the message with neither
+more nor less than he said. Look here!" he exclaimed, suddenly. "Why
+shouldn't you put on your hat and walk down the street with me, so that
+I could show you where the library is? It's not ten minutes away. I've
+never been inside it, but every one knows what it looks like."</p>
+
+<p>Consulting my wrist-watch, I objected that it was but twenty minutes to
+the time when Hugh was due to come and take me to walk in Central Park,
+returning to the hotel to tea.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, let him go to the deuce! We can be there and back in twenty
+minutes, and you can leave a message for him at the office."</p>
+
+<p>So we started. The Mary Chilton is in one of the cross-streets between
+Fifth and Sixth Avenues. I discovered that Stacy Grainger's house was on
+the corner of Fifth Avenue and a corresponding cross-street a little
+farther down-town. It is a big brownstone house, in the eighteen-seventy
+style, of the type which all round it has been turned into offices and
+shops. All its many windows were blinded in a yellowish holland staff,
+giving to the whole building an aspect sealed and dead.</p>
+
+<p>I shuddered.</p>
+
+<p>"I hope I shouldn't have to work there."</p>
+
+<p>"No. The house has been shut up for years." He named the hotel
+overlooking the Park at which Stacy Grainger actually lived. "Anybody
+else would have sold the place; but he has a lot of queer sentiment
+about him. Of the two or three devotions in his life one of the most
+intense is to his father's memory. I believe the old fellow committed
+suicide in that house, and the son hallows it as he would a grave."</p>
+
+<p>"Cheerful!"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, cheerful isn't the word one would associate with him first&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Or last, apparently."</p>
+
+<p>"No, or last; but he's got other qualities to which cheerfulness is as
+small change to gold. All I want you to see is that he keeps this
+property, which is worth half a million at the least, from motives which
+the immense majority wouldn't understand. It gives you a clue to the
+man."</p>
+
+<p>"But what I want," I said, with nervous flippancy, for I was afraid of
+meeting Hugh, "is a clue to the library."</p>
+
+<p>"There it is."</p>
+
+<p>"That?"</p>
+
+<p>He had pointed to a small, low, rectangular building I had seen a
+hundred times, without the curiosity to wonder what it was. It stood
+behind the house, in the center of a grass-plot, and was approached from
+the cross-street, through a small wrought-iron gate. Built of
+brownstone, without a window, and with no other ornament than a frieze
+in relief below the eave, it suggested a tomb. At the back was a kind of
+covered cloister connecting with the house.</p>
+
+<p>"If I had to sit in there all day," I commented, as we turned back
+toward the hotel, "I should feel as if I were buried alive. I know that
+strange things would happen to me!"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh no, they wouldn't. It's sure to be all right or a pretty little
+thing like Miss Davis couldn't have stood it for three years. It's
+lighted from the top, and there are a lot of fine things scattered
+about."</p>
+
+<p>He gave me a brief history of how the collection had been formed. The
+elder Grainger on coming to New York had bought up the contents of two
+or three great European sales <i>en bloc</i>. He knew little about the
+objects he had thus acquired, and cared less. His motive was simply that
+of the rich American to play the nobleman.</p>
+
+<p>He was still talking of this when Hugh passed us and turned round.
+Between the two men there was a stiff form of greeting. That is, it was
+stiff on Larry Strangways's side, while on Hugh's it was the nearest
+thing to no greeting at all. I could see he considered the tutor of his
+sister's son beneath him.</p>
+
+<p>"What the devil were you walking with that fellow for?" he asked, after
+Mr. Strangways had left us and while we were continuing our way up-town.
+He spoke, wonderingly rather than impatiently.</p>
+
+<p>"Because he had come from a gentleman who had offered me employment. I
+had just gone down with him to look at the outside of the house."</p>
+
+<p>I could hardly be surprised that Hugh should stop abruptly, forcing the
+stream of foot-passengers to divide into two currents about us.</p>
+
+<p>"The impertinent bounder! Offer employment&mdash;to you&mdash;my&mdash;my wife!"</p>
+
+<p>I walked on with dignity.</p>
+
+<p>"You mustn't call me that, Hugh. It's a word only to be used in its
+exact signification." He began to apologize, but I interrupted. "I'm not
+only not your wife, but as yet I haven't even promised to marry you. We
+must keep that fact unmistakably clear before us. It will prevent
+possible complications in the end."</p>
+
+<p>He spoke humbly:</p>
+
+<p>"What sort of complications?"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know; but I can see they might arise. And as for the matter of
+employment, I must have it for a lot of reasons."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't see that. Give me two or three months, Alix!"</p>
+
+<p>"But it's precisely during those two or three months, Hugh, that I
+should be left high and dry. Unless I have something to do I have no
+motive for staying here in New York."</p>
+
+<p>"What about me?"</p>
+
+<p>"I can't stay just to see you. That's the difference between a woman and
+a man. The situation is awkward enough as it is; but if I were to go on
+living here for two or three months, merely for the sake of having a few
+hours every day with you&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Before we reached the Park he saw the justice of my argument.
+Remembering what Larry Strangways had once said as to Hugh's belief that
+he was stooping to pick his diamond out of the mire, I reasoned that
+since he was marrying a working-girl it would best preserve the
+decencies if the working-girl were working. For this procedure Hugh
+himself was able to establish precedent, since we were in sight of the
+very hotel where Libby Jaynes had rubbed men's nails up to within an
+hour or two of her marriage to Tracy Allen. He pointed it out as if it
+was an historic monument, and in the same spirit I gazed at it.</p>
+
+<p>That matter settled, I attacked another as we advanced farther into the
+Park.</p>
+
+<p>"And Mr. Strangways is not a bounder, Hugh, darling. I wish you wouldn't
+call him that."</p>
+
+<p>His response was sufficiently good-natured, but it expressed that
+Brokenshire disdain for everything that didn't have money which
+specially enraged me.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I won't," he conceded. "I don't care a hang what he is."</p>
+
+<p>"I do," I declared, with some tartness. "I care that he's a gentleman
+and that he's treated as one."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, every one's a gentleman."</p>
+
+<p>"No, Hugh, every one isn't. I know men right here in New York who could
+buy and sell Mr. Strangways a thousand times, perhaps a million times
+over, and who wouldn't be worthy to valet him."</p>
+
+<p>His small wide-apart blue eyes were turned on me questioningly.</p>
+
+<p>"You don't know many men right here in New York. Who do you mean?"</p>
+
+<p>I saw that he had me there and, not wishing to be driven into a corner,
+I beat a shuffling retreat.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't mean any one in particular. I'm speaking in general." As we had
+reached an empty bench and the afternoon was hot, I suggested that we
+sit down.</p>
+
+<p>We had been silent a little while, when he asked the question I had been
+expecting.</p>
+
+<p>"Who was the person who offered you the&mdash;the&mdash;" I saw how he hated the
+word&mdash;"the employment?"</p>
+
+<p>I had already decided to betray no knowledge of matters which didn't
+concern me.</p>
+
+<p>"It's a Mr. Grainger," I said, as casually as I could.</p>
+
+<p>As he sat close to me I could feel him start.</p>
+
+<p>"Not Stacy Grainger?"</p>
+
+<p>I maintained my tone of indifference.</p>
+
+<p>"I think that is his name. Do you know him? He seems to be some one of
+importance."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, he is."</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Strangways has gone to him as secretary and, I suppose, knowing
+that I was out of a situation, he must have mentioned me."</p>
+
+<p>"For what?"</p>
+
+<p>"As I understand it, it's librarian. It seems that this Mr. Grainger has
+quite a collection&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh yes, I know." As he remained silent for some time I waited for him
+to raise objections, but he only said at last: "In that case you
+wouldn't have much to do with him. He's never there."</p>
+
+<p>"No, I fancy not," I hastened to agree, and Hugh said no more.</p>
+
+<p>He said no more, but I could see that it was because he was wrestling
+with a subject of which he couldn't perceive the bearings. As far as I
+was concerned he plainly considered it wise not to tell me that which,
+as a stranger and a foreigner, I wouldn't be likely to know. He
+consequently dropped the topic, and when he talked again it was of
+trivial things.</p>
+
+<p>A half-hour later, as we were on our way homeward, he exclaimed,
+suddenly, and apropos of nothing at all:</p>
+
+<p>"Little Alix, if you were to love anybody else I'd&mdash;I'd shoot myself."</p>
+
+<p>His innocent, boyish, inexperienced face wore such a look of misery that
+I laughed. I laughed to conceal the fact that I was near to crying.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh no, you wouldn't, Hugh. Besides, you don't see any likelihood of my
+doing it."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm not so sure about that," he grumbled.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I am, Hugh, dear." I laughed again. "I've no intention of loving
+any one else&mdash;till I've settled my account with your father."</p>
+
+
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+<h2>CHAPTER XII</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="dropcap">N</span>early a week later, in the middle of a hot afternoon, I came back from
+some shopping to wait for Hugh at the hotel. Though it was a half-hour
+before I expected him, I was too tired to go up-stairs and so went
+directly to the reception-room. It was not only cool and restful there,
+but after the glare of the streets outside, it was so dim that I took
+the place to be empty. Having gone to a mirror for a moment to
+straighten my hat and smooth the wayward tendrils of my hair, so that I
+shouldn't look disheveled when Hugh arrived, I threw myself into an
+arm-chair.</p>
+
+<p>I remember that my attitude was anything but graceful, and that I
+sighed. I sighed more than once and somewhat loudly. I was depressed,
+and as usual when depressed I felt small and desolate. It would have
+been a relief to cry; but I couldn't cry when I was expecting Hugh. I
+could only toss about in my big chair and give utterance to my pent-up
+heart a little too explosively.</p>
+
+<p>It was five or six days since Larry Strangways's call, and no real
+development of my blind alley was in sight. He had not returned, nor had
+I heard from him. On the previous evening Hugh had said, "I thought
+nothing would come of that," in a tone which carried conviction. It
+wasn't that I was eager to be Stacy Grainger's librarian; it was only
+that I wanted something to happen, something that would justify my
+staying in New York. August had passed, and with the coming in of
+September I saw the stirring of a new life in the streets; but there was
+no new life for me.</p>
+
+<p>Nor, for the matter of that, did I see any new life for Hugh. He had
+entered now on that stage of waiting on the postman which a good many
+people have found sickening. Bankers and brokers having promised to
+write when they knew of anything to suit him, he was expecting a summons
+by every delivery of letters. On his dear face I began to read the
+evidence of hope deferred. He was cheery enough; he could find fifty
+explanations to account for the fact that he hadn't yet been called; but
+brave words couldn't counteract the look of disquietude that was
+creeping day by day into his kindly eyes. On the previous evening he had
+informed me, too, that he had left his club and installed himself in a
+small hotel, not far from my own neighborhood. When I asked him why he
+had done that he said it was "to get away from a lot of the fellows who
+were always chewing the rag," but I suspected the motive of economy. For
+the motive of economy I should have had nothing but respect, if it
+hadn't been so incongruous with everything I had known of him.</p>
+
+<p>It was probably because my eyes had grown accustomed to the gloom in the
+reception-room that I noticed, suddenly, two other eyes. They were in a
+distant corner and seemed to be looking at me with the detached and
+burning stare of motor-lamps at night. For a minute I could discern no
+personality, the eyes themselves were so lustrous.</p>
+
+<p>I was about to be frightened when a man arose and restlessly moved
+toward the chimneypiece, not because there was anything there he desired
+to see, but because he couldn't continue to sit still. He was a striking
+figure, tall, spare, large-boned and powerful. The face was of the type
+which for want of a better word I can only speak of as masculine. It was
+long and lean and strong; if it was handsome it was only because every
+feature and line was cut to the same large pattern as the frame.
+Sweeping mustaches, of the kind school-girls are commonly supposed to
+love, concealed a mouth which I could have wagered would be hard, while
+the luminosity of the gaze suggested a rather hungry set of human
+qualities and passions.</p>
+
+<p>We were now two restless persons instead of one, and I was about to
+leave the room when a page came in.</p>
+
+<p>"Sorry, sir," said the honest-faced little boy, with an amusingly
+uncouth accent I find it impossible to transcribe, "but number
+four-twenty-three ain't in, so I guess she must be out."</p>
+
+<p>Startled, I rose to my feet.</p>
+
+<p>"But I'm number four-twenty-three."</p>
+
+<p>The boy turned toward me nonchalantly.</p>
+
+<p>"Didn't know you was here! That gentleman wants you."</p>
+
+<p>With this introduction he dashed away, and I was once more conscious of
+the luminous eyes bent upon me. The tall figure, too, advanced a few
+paces in my direction.</p>
+
+<p>"I asked for Miss Adare." The voice was deep and grave and harsh and
+musical all at once.</p>
+
+<p>"That's my name."</p>
+
+<p>"Mine's Grainger."</p>
+
+<p>I gasped silently, like a dying fish, before I could stammer the
+words&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Won't you sit down?"</p>
+
+<p>As he seated himself near me and in a good light, I saw that his skin
+was tanned, as if he lived on the sea or in the open air. I learned
+later from Larry Strangways that he had just come from a summer's
+yachting. His gaze studied me&mdash;not as a man studies a woman, but as a
+workman inspects a tool.</p>
+
+<p>"You probably know my errand."</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Strangways&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I told him to sound you."</p>
+
+<p>"But I'm afraid I wouldn't do."</p>
+
+<p>"Why do you think so?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because I don't know anything about the work."</p>
+
+<p>"There's no work to know anything about. All you'd have to do would be
+to sit still. You'd never have more than two or three visitors in a
+day&mdash;and most days none at all."</p>
+
+<p>"But what should I do when visitors came?"</p>
+
+<p>"Show them what they asked to see. You'd find that in the catalogue.
+You'd soon get the hang of the place. It's small. There's not much in it
+when you come to sum it up. Miss Davis will show you the ropes before
+she leaves on the first of October. I'll give you the same salary I've
+been paying her."</p>
+
+<p>He named a sum the munificence of which almost took my breath away.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, but I shouldn't be worth that."</p>
+
+<p>"It's the salary," he said, briefly, as he rose. "You can arrange with
+my secretary, Strangways, when you would like to begin. The sooner the
+better, as I understand that Miss Davis would like to get off."</p>
+
+<p>He was on his way to the door when, thinking of the tomb-like aspect of
+the place, I asked, desperately:</p>
+
+<p>"Should I be all alone?"</p>
+
+<p>He turned.</p>
+
+<p>"There's a man and his wife in the house. One of them would be always
+within call. The woman will bring you tea at half past four."</p>
+
+<p>I could hardly believe my ears. I had never heard of such solicitude.
+"But I shouldn't need tea!" I began to assure him.</p>
+
+<p>He paused for a moment, looking at me searchingly.</p>
+
+<p>"You'll have callers&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh no, I sha'n't."</p>
+
+<p>"You'll have callers," he repeated, as if I hadn't spoken, "and there'll
+be tea every day at four-thirty."</p>
+
+<p>He was gone before I could protest further, or ask any more questions.</p>
+
+<p>Hugh's explanation, when I laid the matter before him, was that Mr.
+Grainger was trying to play into the hands of that fellow, Strangways.</p>
+
+<p>"But why?" I demanded.</p>
+
+<p>"He thinks there's something between him and you."</p>
+
+<p>"But there isn't."</p>
+
+<p>"I should hope not; but, evidently, Strangways has made him think&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh no, he hasn't, Hugh. Mr. Strangways is not that kind of man. Mr.
+Grainger has some other reason for wanting me there, but I can't think
+what it is."</p>
+
+<p>"Then I shouldn't go till I knew," Hugh counseled, moodily.</p>
+
+<p>But I did. I went the next week. Larry Strangways made the arrangements,
+and, after a fortnight under Miss Davis's instructions, I found myself
+alone.</p>
+
+<p>It was not so trying as I feared, though it was monotonous. It was
+monotonous because there was so little to do. I was there each morning
+at half past nine. From one to two I had an hour for lunch. At six I
+came away. On Saturdays I had the afternoon. It was a little like being
+a prisoner, but a prisoner in a palace, a prisoner who is well paid.</p>
+
+<p>The place consisted of one big, handsome room, some sixty feet by
+thirty, resembling the libraries of great houses I had seen abroad. That
+in this case it was detached from the dwelling was, I suppose, a matter
+of architectural convenience. Book-shelves lined the walls right up to
+the cornice. The dull reds and browns and blues and greens of the
+bindings carried out the mellow effects of the Oriental rugs on the
+floor. Under the shelves there were cupboards, some of them empty,
+others stocked with portfolios of prints, European and Japanese. There
+were no pictures, but a few large pieces of old porcelain and fa&iuml;ence,
+Persian, Spanish, and Chinese, stood on the mantelpiece and tables. For
+the rest, the furnishings consisted of a bust or two, a desk or two, and
+some decorative tables and chairs.</p>
+
+<p>My chief objection to the life was its seeming pointlessness. I was hard
+at work doing nothing. The number of visitors was negligible. Once
+during the autumn an old gentleman brought some engravings to compare
+with similar examples in Mr. Grainger's collection; once a lady student
+of Shakespeare came to examine his early editions; perhaps as often as
+twice a week some wandering tourist in New York would enter and stare
+vacantly, and go as he arrived. To while away the time I read and wrote
+and did knitting and fancy-work, and at half past four every day, as
+regularly as the hands of the clock came round, I solemnly had my tea.
+It was very good tea, with cake and bread and butter in the orthodox
+style, and was brought by Mrs. Daly, the motherly old Irish caretaker of
+the house, who stumped in and stumped out, giving me, while she stayed,
+a good deal of detail as to her "sky-attic" nerves and swollen
+"varikiss" veins.</p>
+
+<p>I am bound to admit that the tea ceremony oppressed me&mdash;not that I
+didn't enjoy it in its way but because its generosity seemed overdone.
+It was not in the necessities of the case; it was, above all, not
+American. On both the occasions when Mr. Grainger honored the library
+with a call I tried to screw up my courage to ask him to let me off this
+hospitality, but I couldn't reach the point. I was not so much afraid of
+him as I was overawed. He was perfectly civil; he never treated me as
+the dust beneath his feet, like Howard Brokenshire; but any one could
+see that he was immensely and perhaps tragically preoccupied.</p>
+
+<p>I was having tea all alone on a cold afternoon in November, when the
+sound of the opening of the outer door attracted my attention. At first
+one came into a vestibule from which there was no entrance, till on my
+side I touched the spring of a closed wrought-iron grille. I had gone
+forward to see who was there and, if necessary, give the further
+admission, when to my astonishment I saw Mrs. Brokenshire.</p>
+
+<p>She was in a walking-dress with furs. The color in her cheeks might have
+been due to the cold wind, but the light in her eyes was that of
+excitement.</p>
+
+<p>"I heard you were here," she whispered, as she fluttered in, "and I've
+come to see you."</p>
+
+<p>My sense of the imprudence of this step was such that I could hardly
+welcome her. That feeling of protection which I had once before on her
+behalf came back to me.</p>
+
+<p>"Who told you?" I asked, as soon as she was seated and I was pouring her
+out a cup of tea. For the first time since taking the position I was
+glad the ceremony had not been suppressed.</p>
+
+<p>She answered, while glancing into the shadows about her.</p>
+
+<p>"Mildred told me. Hugh wrote it to her. He does write to her, you know.
+She's the only one with whom he is still in communication. She seems to
+think the poor boy is in trouble. I came to&mdash;to see if there was
+anything I could do."</p>
+
+<p>I told her I was living at the Hotel Mary Chilton and that, if necessary
+at any time, she could see me there.</p>
+
+<p>She repeated the address, but I knew it took no hold on her memory.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah yes; the Hotel Mary Chilton. I think I've heard of it. But I haven't
+many minutes, and you must tell me all you can about dear Hugh."</p>
+
+<p>As my anxiety on Hugh's account was deepening, I was the more eager to
+do as I was bid. I said he had found no employment as yet, and that in
+my opinion employment would be hard to secure. If he was willing to work
+for a year or two for next to nothing, as he would consider the salary,
+he might eventually learn the financial trade; but to expect that his
+name would be a key to open the door of any bank at which he might
+present himself was preposterous. I hadn't been able to convince him of
+that, however, and he was still hoping. But he was hoping with a sad,
+worried face that almost broke my heart.</p>
+
+<p>"And how is he off for money?"</p>
+
+<p>I said I thought his bank-account was running low. He made no complaint
+of that to me, but I noticed that he rarely now went to any of his
+clubs, and that he took his meals at the more inexpensive places. In
+taxis, too, he was careful, and in tickets for the theater. These were
+the signs by which I judged.</p>
+
+<p>Her eyes had the sweet mistiness I remembered from our last meeting.</p>
+
+<p>"I can let him have money&mdash;as much as he needs."</p>
+
+<p>I considered this.</p>
+
+<p>"But it would be Mr. Brokenshire's money, wouldn't it?"</p>
+
+<p>"It would be money Mr. Brokenshire gives me."</p>
+
+<p>"In that case I don't think Hugh could accept it. You see, he's trying
+to make himself independent of his father, so as to do what his father
+doesn't like."</p>
+
+<p>"But he can't starve."</p>
+
+<p>"He must either starve, or earn a living, or go back to his father
+and&mdash;give up."</p>
+
+<p>"Does that mean that you won't marry him unless he has money of his
+own?"</p>
+
+<p>"It means what I've said more than once before&mdash;that I can't marry him
+if he has no money of his own, unless his family come and ask me to do
+it."</p>
+
+<p>There was a little furrow between her brows.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, well, they won't do that. I would," she hastened to add,
+"because&mdash;" she smiled, like an angel&mdash;"because I believe in love; but
+they wouldn't."</p>
+
+<p>"I think Mrs. Rossiter would," I argued, "if she was left free."</p>
+
+<p>"She might; and, of course, there's Mildred. She'd do anything for Hugh,
+though she thinks . . . but neither Jack nor Pauline would give in; and
+as for Mr. Brokenshire&mdash;I believe it would break his heart."</p>
+
+<p>"Why should he feel toward me like that?" I demanded, bitterly. "How am
+I inferior to Pauline Gray, except that I have no money?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I suppose in a way that's it. It's what Mr. Brokenshire calls the
+solidarity of aristocracies. They have to hold together."</p>
+
+<p>"But aristocracy and money aren't one."</p>
+
+<p>As she rose she smiled again, distantly and dreamily. "If you were an
+American, dear Miss Adare, you'd know."</p>
+
+<p>Before she said good-by she looked deliberately about the room. It was
+not the hasty inspection I should have expected; it was tranquil, and I
+could even say that it was thorough. She made no mention of Mr.
+Grainger, but I couldn't help thinking he was in her mind.</p>
+
+<p>At the door to which I accompanied her, however, her manner changed.
+Before trusting herself to the few paces of walk running from the
+entrance to the wrought-iron gate, she glanced up and down the street.
+It was dark by this time, and the lamps were lit, but not till the
+pavement was tolerably clear did she venture out. Even then she didn't
+turn toward Fifth Avenue, which would have been her natural direction;
+but rapidly and, as I imagined, furtively, she walked the other way.</p>
+
+<p>I mentioned to no one that she had come to see me. Her kind thought of
+Hugh I was sorry to keep to myself; but I knew of no purpose to be
+served in divulging it. With my maxim to guide me it was not difficult
+to be sure that in this case right lay in silence.</p>
+
+<p>A few days later I got Hugh's doings from a new point of view. As I was
+going back to my lunch at the hotel, Mrs. Rossiter called to me from her
+motor and made me get in. The distance I had to cover being slight, she
+drove me up to Central Park and back again to have the time to talk.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear, he's crazy. He's going round to all the offices that
+practically turned him out six or eight weeks ago and begging them to
+find a place for him. Two or three of papa's old friends have written to
+ask what they could really do for him&mdash;for papa, that is&mdash;and he's sent
+them word that he'd take it as a favor if they'd show Hugh to the door."</p>
+
+<p>"Of course, if his father makes himself his enemy&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"He only makes himself his enemy in order to be his friend, dear Miss
+Adare. He's your friend, too, papa is, if you only saw it."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm afraid I don't," I said, dryly.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, you will some day, and do him justice. He's the kindest man when
+you let him have his own way."</p>
+
+<p>"Which would be to separate Hugh and me."</p>
+
+<p>"But you'd both get over that; and I know he'd do the handsome thing by
+you, as well as by him."</p>
+
+<p>"So long as we do the handsome thing by each other&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, well, you can see where that leads to. Hugh'll never be in a
+position to marry you, dear Miss Adare."</p>
+
+<p>"He will when your father comes round."</p>
+
+<p>"Nonsense, my dear! You know you're not looking forward to that, not any
+more than I am."</p>
+
+<p>Later, as I was getting out at my door, she said, as if it was an
+afterthought:</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, by the way, you know papa has made me write to Lady Cissie
+Boscobel?"</p>
+
+<p>I looked up at her from the pavement.</p>
+
+<p>"What for?"</p>
+
+<p>"To ask her to come over and spend a month or two in New York. She says
+she will if she can. She's a good deal of a girl, Cissie is. If you're
+going to keep your hold on Hugh&mdash; Well, all I can say is that Cissie
+will give you a run for your money. Of course, it's nothing to me. I
+only thought I'd tell you."</p>
+
+<p>This, too, I kept from Hugh; but I seized an early opportunity to paint
+the portrait of the imaginary charming girl he could have for a wife,
+with plenty of money to support himself and her, if he would only give
+me up. This was as we walked home one night from the theater&mdash;I was
+obliged from time to time to let him take me so that we might have a
+pretext for being together&mdash;and we strolled in the shadows of the narrow
+cross-streets.</p>
+
+<p>"Little Alix," he declared, fervently, "I could no more give you up than
+I could give up my breath or my blood. You're part of me. You're the
+most vital part of me. If you were to fail me I should die. If I were to
+fail you&mdash;But that's not worth thinking of. Look here!" He paused in a
+dark spot beside a great silent warehouse. "Look here. I'm having a
+pretty tough time. I'll confess it. I didn't mean to tell you, but I
+will. When I go to see certain people now&mdash;men I've met dozens of times
+at my father's table&mdash;what do you think happens? They have me shown to
+the door, and not too politely. These are the chaps who two months ago
+were squirming for joy at the thought of getting me. What do you think
+of that? How do you suppose it makes me feel?" I was about to break in
+with some indignant response when he continued, placidly: "Well, it all
+turns to music the minute I think of you. It's as if I'd drunk some
+glowing cordial. I'm kicked out, let us say&mdash;and it's not too much to
+say&mdash;and I'm ready to curse for all I'm worth, but I think of you. I
+remember I'm doing it for you and bearing it for you, so that one day I
+may strike the right thing and we may be together and happy forever
+afterward, and I swear to you it's as if angels were singing in the
+sky."</p>
+
+<p>I had to let him kiss me there in the shadow of the street, as if we
+were a footman and a housemaid. I had to let him kiss away my tears and
+soothe me and console me. I told him I wasn't worthy of such love, and
+that, if he would consider the fitness of things, he would go away and
+leave me, but he only kissed me the more.</p>
+
+<p>Again I was having my tea. It had been a lifeless day, and I was
+wondering how long I could endure the lifelessness. Not a soul had come
+near the place since morning, and my only approach to human intercourse
+had been in discussing Mrs. Daly's "varikiss" veins. Even that interlude
+was over, for the lady would not return for the tea things till after my
+departure. I was so lonely&mdash;I felt the uselessness of what I was doing
+so acutely&mdash;that in spite of the easy work and generous pay I was
+thinking of sending my resignation in to Mr. Grainger and looking for
+something else.</p>
+
+<p>The outer door opened swiftly and silently, and I knew some one was
+inside. I knew, too, before rising from my place, that it was Mrs.
+Brokenshire. Subconsciously I had been expecting her, though I couldn't
+have said why. Her lovely face was all asparkle.</p>
+
+<p>"I've come to see you again," she whispered, as I let her in. "I hope
+you're alone."</p>
+
+<p>I replied that I was and, choosing my words carefully, I said it was
+kind of her to keep me in mind.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh yes, I keep you in mind, and I keep Hugh. What I've really come for
+is to beg you to hand him the money of which I spoke the other day."</p>
+
+<p>She seated herself, but not before glancing about the room, either
+expectantly or fearfully. As I poured out her tea I repeated what I had
+said already on the subject of the money. She wasn't listening, however.
+When she made replies they were not to the point. All the while she
+sipped her tea and nibbled her cake her eyes had the shifting alertness
+of a watchful little bird's.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, but what does it all matter when it's a question of love?" she
+said, somewhat at a venture. "Love is the only thing, don't you think?
+It must make its opportunities as it can."</p>
+
+<p>"You mean that love can be&mdash;unscrupulous?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I shouldn't use that word."</p>
+
+<p>"It isn't the word I'm thinking of. It's the act."</p>
+
+<p>"Love is like war, isn't it? All's fair!"</p>
+
+<p>"But is it?"</p>
+
+<p>Her eyes rested on mine, not boldly, but with a certain daring.</p>
+
+<p>"Why&mdash;yes."</p>
+
+<p>"You believe that?"</p>
+
+<p>She still kept her eyes on mine. Her tone was that of a challenge.</p>
+
+<p>"Why&mdash;yes." She added, perhaps defiantly, "Don't you?"</p>
+
+<p>I said, decidedly:</p>
+
+<p>"No, I don't."</p>
+
+<p>"Then you don't love. You can't love. Love is reckless. Love&mdash;" There
+was a long pause before she dropped the two concluding words, spacing
+them apart as if to emphasize her deliberation. "Love&mdash;risks&mdash;all."</p>
+
+<p>"If it risks all it may lose all."</p>
+
+<p>The challenge was renewed.</p>
+
+<p>"Well? Isn't that better than&mdash;?"</p>
+
+<p>"It's not better than doing right," I hastened to say, "however hard it
+may be."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, but what is right? A thing can't be right if&mdash;if&mdash;" she sought for
+a word&mdash;"if it's killing you."</p>
+
+<p>As she said this there was a sound along the corridor leading from the
+house. I thought Mrs. Daly had forgotten something and was coming back.
+But the tread was different from her slow stump, and my sense of a
+danger at hand was such as the good woman never inspired.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Brokenshire made no attempt to play a part or to put me off the
+scent. She acted as if I understood what was happening. Her teacup
+resting in her lap, she sat with eyes aglow and lips slightly apart in
+a look of heavenly expectation. I could hardly believe her to be the
+dazed, stricken little creature I had seen three months ago. As the
+footsteps approached she murmured, "He's coming!" or, "Who's coming?" I
+couldn't be sure which.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Grainger entered like a man who is on his own ground and knows what
+he is about to find. There was no uncertainty in his manner and no
+apparent sense of secrecy. His head was high and his walk firm as he
+pushed his way amid tables and chairs to where we were sitting in the
+glow of a shaded light.</p>
+
+<p>I stood up as he approached, but I had time to appraise my situation. I
+saw all its little mysteries illumined as by a flash. I saw why Stacy
+Grainger had kept track of me; I saw why, in spite of my deficiencies,
+he had taken me on as his librarian; but I saw, too, that the Lord had
+delivered J. Howard Brokenshire into my hands, as Sisera into those of
+Jael, the wife of Heber the Kenite.</p>
+
+
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+<h2>CHAPTER XIII</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="dropcap">I</span> was relieved of some of my embarrassment by the fact that Mr. Grainger
+took command.</p>
+
+<p>Having bowed over Mrs. Brokenshire's hand with an empressement he made
+no attempt to conceal, he murmured the words, "I'm delighted to see you
+again." After this greeting, which might have been commonplace and was
+not, he turned to me. "Perhaps Miss Adare will give me some tea."</p>
+
+<p>I could carry out this request, listen to their scraps of conversation,
+and think my own thoughts all at the same time.</p>
+
+<p>Thinking my own thoughts was the least easy of the three, for the reason
+that thought stunned me. The facts knocked me on the head. Since before
+my engagement as Mr. Grainger's librarian this situation had been
+planned! Mrs. Brokenshire had chosen me for my part in it! She had given
+Mr. Grainger my address, which she could have learned from her mother,
+and recommended me as one with whom they would be safe!</p>
+
+<p>Their talk was only of superficial things; but it was not the clue to
+their emotions. That was in the way they talked&mdash;haltingly, falteringly,
+with glances that met and shifted and fell, or that rested on each other
+with long, mute looks, and then turned away hurriedly, as if something
+in the spirit reeled. As she gave him bits of information concerning
+the summer at Newport, she stumbled in her words, because there was no
+correlation between the sentences she formed and her fundamental
+thought. The same was true of his account of yachting on the coast of
+Maine, of Gloucester, Islesboro, and Bar Harbor. He stuttered and
+stammered and repeated himself. It was like one of those old Italian
+duets in which stupid words are sung to a passionate, heartbreaking
+melody. Nevertheless, I had enough sympathy with love, even with a
+guilty love, to have some mercy in my judgments.</p>
+
+<p>Not that I believed it to be a guilty love&mdash;as yet. That, too, I was
+obliged to think over and form my opinion about it. It was not a guilty
+love as yet; but it might easily become a guilty love. I remembered that
+Larry Strangways, with all his admiration for his employer, had refused
+him a place in his list of whole-hearted, clean-hearted men because he
+had a weakness; and I reflected that on the part of Mrs. Billing's
+daughter there might be no rigorous concept of the moralities. What I
+saw, therefore, was a man and a woman so consumed with longing for each
+other that guilt would be chiefly a matter of opportunity. To create
+that opportunity I had been brought upon the scene.</p>
+
+<br /><br />
+<a name="ILLO_3" id="ILLO_3"></a>
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%;">
+<img src="images/192a.jpg" width="345" height="426" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+<h4>I SAW A MAN AND A WOMAN CONSUMED WITH LONGING FOR EACH OTHER</h4>
+
+<p>I could see, of course, how admirably I was suited to the purpose I was
+meant to serve. In the first place, I was young, and might but dimly
+perceive&mdash;might not perceive at all&mdash;what was being done with me. In the
+next place, I was presumably too inexperienced to take a line of my own
+even if I suspected what was not for me to know. Then, I was poor and a
+stranger, and too glad of the easy work for which I was liberally paid
+not to be willing to take its bitter with its sweet. Lastly, I, too,
+was in love; and I, too, was a victim of Howard Brokenshire. If I
+couldn't approve of what I might see and hear, at least I might be
+reckoned on not to speak of it. Once more I was made to feel that,
+though I might play a subordinate r&ocirc;le of some importance, my own wishes
+and personality didn't count.</p>
+
+<p>It was obviously a minute at which to bring my maxim into operation. I
+had to do what was Right&mdash;with a capital. For that I must wait for
+inspiration, and presently I got it.</p>
+
+<p>That is, I got it by degrees. I got it first by noting in a puzzled way
+the glances which both my companions sent in my direction. They were
+sidelong glances, singularly alike, whether they came from Stacy
+Grainger's melancholy brown eyes or Mrs. Brokenshire's sweet, misty
+ones. They were timid glances, pleading, uneasy. They asked what words
+wouldn't dare to ask, and what I was too dense to understand. I sat
+sipping my tea, running hot and cold as the odiousness of my position
+struck me from the various points of view; but I made no attempt to
+move.</p>
+
+<p>They were still talking of people of whom I knew nothing, but talking
+brokenly, futilely, for the sake of hearing each other's voice, and yet
+stifling the things which it would have been fatal to them both to say,
+when Mr. Grainger got up and brought me his cup.</p>
+
+<p>"May I have another?"</p>
+
+<p>I looked up to take the cup, but he held it in his hands. He held it in
+his hands and gazed down at me. He gazed down at me with an expression
+such as I have never seen in any eyes but a dog's. As I write I blush to
+remember that, with such a mingling of hints and entreaties and
+commands, I didn't know what he was trying to convey to me. I took the
+cup, poured out his tea, handed the cup back to him&mdash;and sat.</p>
+
+<p>But after he had reached his seat the truth flashed on me. I was in the
+way; I was <i>de trop</i>. I had done part of my work in being the pretext
+for Mrs. Brokenshire's visit; now I ought, tactfully, to absent myself.
+I needn't go far; I needn't go for long. There was an alcove at the end
+of the room where one could be out of sight; there was also the corridor
+leading to the house. I could easily make an excuse; I could get up and
+move without an excuse of any kind. But I sat.</p>
+
+<p>I hated myself; I despised myself; but I sat. I drank my tea without
+knowing it; I ate my cake without tasting it&mdash;and I sat.</p>
+
+<p>The talk between my companions grew more fitful. Silence was easier for
+them&mdash;silence and that dumb interchange of looks which had the sympathy
+of something within myself. I knew that in their eyes I was a nuisance,
+a thing to be got rid of. I was so in my own&mdash;but I went on eating and
+drinking stolidly&mdash;and sat.</p>
+
+<p>It was in my mind that this was my chance to be avenged on Howard
+Brokenshire; but I didn't want my vengeance that way. I have to confess
+that I was so poor-spirited as to have little or no animosity against
+him. I could see how easy it was for him to think of me as an
+adventuress. I wanted to convince and convert him, but not to make him
+suffer. If in any sense I could be called the guardian of his interests
+I would rather have been true to the trust than not. As I sat,
+therefore, gulping down my tea as if I relished it, it was partly
+because of my protective instinct toward the exquisite creature before
+me who might not know how to protect herself&mdash;and partly because I
+couldn't help it. Mr. Grainger could order me to go, but until he did I
+meant to go on eating.</p>
+
+<p>Probably because of the insistence of my presence Mrs. Brokenshire felt
+obliged to begin to talk again. I did my best not to listen, but
+fragments of her sentences came to me.</p>
+
+<p>"My mother spent a few weeks with us in August. I&mdash;I don't think she
+and&mdash;and Mr. Brokenshire get on so well."</p>
+
+<p>Almost for the first time he was interested in what she said rather than
+in her.</p>
+
+<p>"What's the trouble?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I don't know&mdash;the whole thing." A long pause ensued, during which
+their eyes rested on each other in mute questioning. "She's changed,
+mamma is."</p>
+
+<p>"Changed in what way?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I don't know. I&mdash;I suppose she sees that she&mdash;she&mdash;miscalculated."</p>
+
+<p>It was his turn to ruminate silently, and when he spoke at last it was
+as if throwing up to the surface but one of a deep undercurrent of
+thoughts.</p>
+
+<p>"After the pounding I got three years ago she didn't believe I'd come
+back."</p>
+
+<p>She accepted this without comment. Before speaking again she sent me
+another of her frightened, pleading looks.</p>
+
+<p>"She always liked you better than any one else."</p>
+
+<p>He seconded the glance in my direction as he said, with a grim smile:</p>
+
+<p>"Which didn't prevent her going to the highest bidder."</p>
+
+<p>She colored and sighed.</p>
+
+<p>"You wouldn't be so hard on her if you knew what a fight she had to make
+during papa's lifetime. We were always in debt. You knew that, didn't
+you? Poor mamma used to say she'd save me from that if she never&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>I lost the rest of the sentence by deliberately rattling the tea things
+in pouring myself a third or a fourth cup of tea. Nothing but
+disconnected words reached me after that, but I caught the name of
+Madeline Pyne. I knew who she was, having heard her story day by day as
+it unfolded itself during my first weeks with Mrs. Rossiter. It was a
+simple tale as tales go in the twentieth century. Mrs. Pyre had been
+Mrs. Grimshaw. While she was Mrs. Grimshaw she had spent three days at a
+seaside resort with Mr. Pyne. The law having been invoked, she had
+changed her residence from the house of Mr. Grimshaw in Seventy-fifth
+Street to that of Mr. Pyne in Seventy-seventh Street, and likewise
+changed her name. Only a very discerning eye could now have told that in
+the opinion of society there was a difference between her and C&aelig;sar's
+wife. The drama was sufficiently recent to make the topic a natural one
+for an interchange of confidences. That confidences were being
+interchanged I could see; that from those confidences certain
+terrifying, passionate deductions were being drawn silently I could also
+see. I could see without hearing; I didn't need to hear. I could tell by
+her pallor and his embarrassment how each read the mind of the other,
+how each was tempted and how each recoiled. I knew that neither pointed
+the moral of the parable, for the reason that it stared them in the
+face.</p>
+
+<p>Because that subject, too, was exhausted, or because they had come to a
+place where they could say no more, they sat silent again. They looked
+at each other; they looked at me; neither would take the responsibility
+of giving me a further hint to go. Much as they desired my going, I was
+sure they were both afraid of it. I might be a nuisance and yet I was a
+safeguard. They were too near the brink of danger not to feel that,
+after all, there was something in having the safeguard there.</p>
+
+<p>A few minutes later Mrs. Brokenshire flew to shelter herself behind this
+protection. She fluttered softly to my side, beginning again to talk of
+Hugh. Knowing by this time that her interest in him was only a blind for
+her frightened essays in passion, I took up the subject but
+half-heartedly.</p>
+
+<p>"I've the money here," she confided to me, "if you'll only take charge
+of it."</p>
+
+<p>When I had declined to do this, for the reasons I had already given, her
+face brightened.</p>
+
+<p>"Then we can talk it over again." She rose as she spoke. "I can't stay
+any longer now&mdash;but we'll talk it over again. Let me see! This is
+Tuesday. If I came&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I'm always at the Hotel Mary Chilton after six," I said, significantly.</p>
+
+<p>I smiled inwardly at the way in which she took this information.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I'll come before that&mdash;and I sha'n't keep you&mdash;just to talk about
+Hugh&mdash;and see he won't take the money&mdash;perhaps on&mdash;on Thursday."</p>
+
+<p>As nominally she had come to see me, nominally it was my place to
+accompany her to the door. In this at least I got my cue, walking the
+few paces with her, while she held my hand. I gathered that, the minutes
+of temptation being past, she bore me some gratitude for having helped
+her over them. At any rate, she pressed my fingers and gave me wistful,
+teary smiles, till at last she was out in the lighted street and I had
+closed the door behind her.</p>
+
+<p>It was only half past five, and I had still thirty minutes to fill in.
+As I turned back into the room I found Mr. Grainger walking aimlessly up
+and down, inspecting a bit of lustrous fa&iuml;ence or the backs of a row of
+books, and making me feel that there was something he wished to say. His
+movements were exactly those of a man screwing up his courage or trying
+to find words.</p>
+
+<p>The simplest thing I could do was to sit down at my desk and make a
+feint at writing. I seemed to be ignoring my employer's presence, but in
+reality, as I watched him from under my lids, I was getting a better
+impression of him than on any previous occasion.</p>
+
+<p>There was nothing Olympian about him as there was about Howard
+Brokenshire. He was too young to be Olympian, being not more than
+thirty-eight. He struck me, indeed, as just a big, sinewy man of the
+type which fights and hunts and races and loves, and has dumb,
+uncomprehended longings which none of these pursuits can satisfy. In
+this he was English more than American, and Scottish more than English.
+He was certainly not the American business man as seen in hotel lobbies
+and on the stage. He might have been classed as the American
+romantic&mdash;an explorer, a missionary, or a shooter of big game, according
+to taste and income. Larry Strangways said that among Americans you most
+frequently met his like in East Africa, Manchuria, or Brazil. That he
+was in business in New York was an accident of tradition and
+inheritance. Just as an Englishman who might have been a soldier or a
+solicitor is a country gentleman because his father has left him landed
+estates, so Stacy Grainger had become a financier.</p>
+
+<p>As a financier, I understood he helped to furnish the money in
+undertakings in which other men did the work. In this respect the
+direction his interests took was what might have been expected of so
+virile a character&mdash;steel, iron, gunpowder, shells, the founding of
+cannon, the building of war-ships; the forceful, the destructive. I
+gathered from Mr. Strangways that he was forever making journeys to
+Washington, to Pittsburg, to Cape Breton, wherever money could be
+invested in mighty conquering things. It was these projects that Howard
+Brokenshire had attacked so savagely as almost to bring him to ruin,
+though he had now re-established himself as strongly as before.</p>
+
+<p>Being as terrified of him as of his rival, I prayed inwardly that he
+would go away. Once or twice in marching up and down he paused before my
+desk, and the pen almost dropped from my hand. I knew he was trying to
+formulate a hint that when Mrs. Brokenshire came again&mdash;But even on my
+part the thought would not go into words. Words made it gross, and it
+was what he must have discovered each time he approached me. Each time
+he approached me I fancied that his poetic eye grew apologetic, that his
+shoulders sagged, and that his hard, strong mouth became weak before
+syllables that would not pass the lips. Then he would veer away,
+searching doubtless some easier phrase, some more delicate suggestion,
+only to fail again.</p>
+
+<p>It was a relief when, after a last attempt, he passed into the corridor
+leading to the house. I could breathe, I could think; I could look back
+over the last half-hour and examine my conduct. I was not satisfied with
+it, because I had frustrated love&mdash;even that kind of love; and yet I
+asked myself how I could have acted differently.</p>
+
+<p>In substance I asked the same of Larry Strangways when he came to dine
+with me next day. Hugh being in Philadelphia on one of his pathetic
+cruises after work, I had invited Mr. Strangways by telephone, begging
+him to come on the ground that, having got me into this trouble, he must
+advise me as to getting out.</p>
+
+<p>"I didn't get you into the trouble," he smiled across the table. "I only
+helped to get you the job."</p>
+
+<p>"But when you got me the job, as you call it&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I knew you would be able to do the work."</p>
+
+<p>"And did you think the work would be&mdash;this?"</p>
+
+<p>"I couldn't tell anything about that. I simply knew you could do the
+work&mdash;from all the points of view."</p>
+
+<p>"And do you think I've done it?"</p>
+
+<p>"I know you've done it. You couldn't do anything else. I won't go back
+of that."</p>
+
+<p>If my heart gave a sudden leap at these words it was because of the
+tone. It betrayed that quality behind the tone to which I had been
+responding, and of which I had been afraid, ever since I knew the man.
+By a great effort I kept my words on the casual, friendly plane, as I
+said:</p>
+
+<p>"Your confidence is flattering, but it doesn't help me. What I want to
+know is this: Assuming that they love each other, should I allow myself
+to be used as the pretext for their meetings?"</p>
+
+<p>"Does it do you any harm?"</p>
+
+<p>"Does it do them any good?"</p>
+
+<p>"Couldn't you let that be their affair?"</p>
+
+<p>"How can I, when I'm dragged into it?"</p>
+
+<p>"If you're only dragged into it to the extent of this afternoon&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Only! You can use that word of a situation&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"In which you played propriety."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, it wasn't playing."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, it was; it was playing the game&mdash;as they only play it who aren't
+quitters but real sports."</p>
+
+<p>"But I'm not a sport. I've the quitter in me. I'm even thinking of
+flinging up the position&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"And leaving them to their fate."</p>
+
+<p>I smiled.</p>
+
+<p>"Couldn't I let that be their affair?"</p>
+
+<p>He, too, smiled, his head thrown back, his white teeth gleaming.</p>
+
+<p>"You think you've caught me, don't you? But you've got the shoe on the
+wrong foot. I said just now that it might be their affair as to whether
+or not it did them any good to have you as the pretext of their
+meetings; but it's surely your affair when you say they sha'n't. Their
+meetings will be one thing so long as they have you; whereas without
+you&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Then you think they'll keep meeting in any case?"</p>
+
+<p>"I've nothing to say about that. I limit myself to believing that in any
+situation that requires skilful handling your first name is
+resourcefulness."</p>
+
+<p>I shifted my ground.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, but when it's such an odious situation!"</p>
+
+<p>"No situation is odious in which you're a participant, just as no view
+is ugly where there's a garden full of flowers."</p>
+
+<p>He went on with his dinner as complacently as if he had not thrown me
+into a state of violent inward confusion. All I could do was to summon
+Hugh's image from the shades of memory into which it had withdrawn, and
+beg it to keep me true to him. The thought of being false to the man to
+whom I had actually owned my love outraged in me every sentiment akin to
+single-heartedness. In a kind of desperation I dragged Hugh's name into
+the conversation, and yet in doing so I merely laid myself open to
+another shock.</p>
+
+<p>"You can't be in love with him!"</p>
+
+<p>The words were the same as Mrs. Billing's; the emphasis was similar.</p>
+
+<p>"I am," I declared, bluntly, not so much to contradict the speaker as to
+fortify myself.</p>
+
+<p>"You may think you are&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, if I think I am, isn't it the same thing as&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Lord, no! not with love! Love is the most deceptive of the emotions&mdash;to
+people who haven't had much experience of its tricks."</p>
+
+<p>"Have you?"</p>
+
+<p>He met this frankly.</p>
+
+<p>"No; nor you. That's why you can so easily take yourself in."</p>
+
+<p>I grew cold and dignified.</p>
+
+<p>"If you think I'm taking myself in when I say that I'm in love with Hugh
+Brokenshire&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"That's certainly it."</p>
+
+<p>Though I knew my cheeks were flaming a dahlia red, I forced myself to
+look him in the eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Then I'm afraid it would be useless to try to convince you&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>He nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"Quite!"</p>
+
+<p>"So that we can only let the subject drop."</p>
+
+<p>He looked at me with mock gravity.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't see that. It's an interesting topic."</p>
+
+<p>"Possibly; but as it doesn't lead us any further&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"But it does. It leads us to where we see straighter."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, but if I don't need to see straighter than I do?"</p>
+
+<p>"We all need to see as straight as we can."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm seeing as straight as I can when I say&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, but not as straight as I can! I can see that a noble character
+doesn't always distinguish clearly between love and kindness, or between
+kindness and loyalty, or between loyalty and self-sacrifice, and that
+the higher the heart, the more likely it is to impose on itself. No one
+is so easily deceived as to love and loving as the man or the woman
+who's truly generous."</p>
+
+<p>"If I was truly generous&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I know what you are," he said, shortly.</p>
+
+<p>"Then if you know what I am you must know, too, that I couldn't do other
+than care for a man who's given up so much for my sake."</p>
+
+<p>"You couldn't do other than admire him. You couldn't do other than be
+grateful to him. You probably couldn't do other than want to stand by
+him through thick and thin&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, then?"</p>
+
+<p>"But that's not love."</p>
+
+<p>"If it isn't love it's so near to it&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Exactly&mdash;which is what I'm saying. It's so near it that you don't know
+the difference, and won't know the difference till&mdash;till the real thing
+affords you the contrast."</p>
+
+<p>I did my best to be scornful.</p>
+
+<p>"Really! You speak like an expert."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; an expert by intuition."</p>
+
+<p>I was still scornful.</p>
+
+<p>"Only that?"</p>
+
+<p>"Only that. You see," he smiled, "the expert by experience has learnt a
+little; but the expert by intuition knows it all."</p>
+
+<p>"Then, when I need information on the subject, I'll come to you."</p>
+
+<p>"And I'll promise to give it to you frankly."</p>
+
+<p>"Thanks," I said, sweetly. "But you'll wait till I come, won't you? And
+in the mean time, you'll not say any more about it."</p>
+
+<p>"Does that mean that I'm not to say any more about it ever&mdash;or only for
+to-night?"</p>
+
+<p>I knew, suddenly, what the question meant to me. I took time to see that
+I was shutting a door which my heart cried out to have left open. But I
+answered, still sweetly and with a smile:</p>
+
+<p>"Suppose we make it that you won't say any more about it&mdash;ever?"</p>
+
+<p>He gazed at me; I gazed at him. A long half-minute went by before he
+uttered the words, very slowly and deliberately:</p>
+
+<p>"I won't say any more about it&mdash;for to-night."</p>
+
+
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+<h2>CHAPTER XIV</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="dropcap">O</span>n Thursday Mr. Grainger came to the library to tea, but notwithstanding
+her suggestion Mrs. Brokenshire did not. She came, however, on Friday
+when he did not. For some time after that he came daily.</p>
+
+<p>Toward me his manner had little variation; he was courteous and distant.
+I cannot say that he ever had tea with me, for even if he accepted a
+cup, which he did from time to time, as if keeping up a r&ocirc;le, he carried
+it to some distant corner of the room where he was either examining the
+objects or making their acquaintance. He came about half past four and
+went about half past five, always appearing from the house and retiring
+by the same way. In the house itself, as I understood from Mrs. Daly, he
+displayed an interest he had not shown for years.</p>
+
+<p>"It's out of wan room and into another, and raisin' the shades and
+pushin' the furniture about, till you'd swear he was goin' to be
+married."</p>
+
+<p>I thought of Mr. Pyne, wondering if, before his trip to Atlantic City
+with Mrs. Grimshaw, he, too, had wandered about his house, appraising
+its possibilities from the point of view of a new mistress.</p>
+
+<p>On the Friday when Mrs. Brokenshire came and Mr. Grainger did not she
+made no comment on his non-appearance. She even sustained with some
+success the fiction that her visit was on my account. Only her soft
+eyes turned with a quick light toward the door leading to the house at
+every sound that might have been a footstep.</p>
+
+<p>When she talked it was chiefly about Mr. Brokenshire.</p>
+
+<p>"It's telling on him&mdash;all this trouble about Hugh."</p>
+
+<p>I was curious.</p>
+
+<p>"Telling on him in what way?"</p>
+
+<p>"It's made him older&mdash;and grayer&mdash;and the trouble with his eye comes
+oftener."</p>
+
+<p>It seemed to me that I saw an opportunity.</p>
+
+<p>"Then why doesn't he give in?"</p>
+
+<p>"Give in? Mr. Brokenshire? Why, he never gave in in his life."</p>
+
+<p>"But if he suffers?"</p>
+
+<p>"He'd rather suffer than give in. He's not an unkind man, not really, so
+long as he has his own way; but once he's thwarted&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Every one has to be thwarted some time."</p>
+
+<p>"He'd agree to that; but he'd say every one but him. That's why, when he
+first met&mdash;met me&mdash;and my mother at that time meant to have me&mdash;to have
+me marry some one else&mdash; You knew that, didn't you?"</p>
+
+<p>I reminded her that she had told me so among the rocks at Newport.</p>
+
+<p>"Did I? Perhaps I did. It's&mdash;it's rather on my mind. I had to change
+so&mdash;so suddenly. But what I was going to say was that when Mr.
+Brokenshire saw that mamma meant me to marry some one else, and that
+I&mdash;that I wanted to, there was nothing he didn't do. It was in the
+papers&mdash;and everything. But nothing would stop him till he'd got what he
+wanted."</p>
+
+<p>I pumped up my courage to say:</p>
+
+<p>"You mean, till you gave it to him."</p>
+
+<p>She bit her lip.</p>
+
+<p>"Mamma gave it to him. I had to do as I was told. You'd say, I suppose,
+that I needn't have done it, but you don't know." She hesitated before
+going on. "It&mdash;it was money. We&mdash;we had to have it. Mamma thought that
+Mr.&mdash;the man I was to have married first&mdash;would never have any more. It
+was all sorts of things on the Stock Exchange&mdash;and bulls and bears and
+things like that. There was a whole week of it&mdash;and every one knew it
+was about me. I nearly died; but mamma didn't mind. She enjoyed it. It's
+the sort of thing she would enjoy. She made me go with her to the opera
+every night. Some one always asked us to sit in their box. She put me in
+the front where the audience watched me through their opera-glasses more
+than they did the stage&mdash;and I was a kind of spectacle. There was one
+night&mdash;they were singing the 'Meistersinger'&mdash;when I felt just like Eva,
+put up as a prize for whoever could win me. But I was talking of Mr.
+Brokenshire, wasn't I? Do you think his eye will ever be any better?"</p>
+
+<p>She asked the question without change of tone. I could only reply that I
+didn't know.</p>
+
+<p>"The doctor says&mdash;that is, he's told me&mdash;that in a way it's mental. It's
+the result of the strain he's put upon his nerves by overwork and awful
+tempers. Of course, his responsibilities have been heavy, though of late
+years he's been able to shift some of them to other people's shoulders.
+And then," she went on, in her sweet, even voice, "what happened about
+me&mdash;coming to him so late in life&mdash;and&mdash;and tearing him to pieces more
+violently than if he'd been a younger man&mdash;young men get over
+things&mdash;that made it worse. Don't you see it would?"</p>
+
+<p>I said I could understand that that might be the effect.</p>
+
+<p>"Of course, if I could really be a wife to him&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, can't you?"</p>
+
+<p>She shuddered.</p>
+
+<p>"He terrifies me. When he's there I'm not a woman any more; I'm a
+captive."</p>
+
+<p>"But since you've married him&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I didn't marry him; he married me. I was as much a bargain as if I had
+been bought. And now mamma sees that&mdash;that she might have got a better
+price."</p>
+
+<p>I thought it enough to say:</p>
+
+<p>"That must make it hard for her."</p>
+
+<p>A sigh bubbled up, like that of a child who has been crying.</p>
+
+<p>"It makes it hard for me." She eyed me with a long, oblique regard.
+"Don't you think it's awful when an elderly man falls in love with a
+young girl who herself is in love with some one else?"</p>
+
+<p>I could only dodge that question.</p>
+
+<p>"All unhappiness is awful."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, but this! An elderly man!&mdash;in love! Madly in love! It's not
+natural; it's frightful; and when it's with yourself&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>She moved away from me and began to inspect the room. In spite of her
+agitation she did this more in detail than when she had been there
+before, making the round of the book-shelves much as Mr. Grainger
+himself was in the habit of doing, and gazing without comment on the
+Persian and Italian potteries. It was easy to place her as one of those
+women who live surrounded by beautiful things to which they pay no
+attention. Mr. Brokenshire's richly Italianate dwelling was to her just
+a house. It would have been equally just a house had it been Jacobean or
+Louis Quinze or in the fashion of the Brothers Adam, and she would have
+seen little or no difference in periods and styles. The books she now
+looked at were mere backs; they were bindings and titles. Since they
+belonged to Stacy Grainger she could look at them with soft, unseeing
+eyes, thinking of him. That was all. Without comment of my own I
+accompanied her, watching the quick, bird-like turnings of her head
+whenever she thought she heard a step.</p>
+
+<p>"It's nice for you here," she said, when at last she gave signs of
+going. "I&mdash;I love it. It's so quiet&mdash;and&mdash;and safe. Nobody knows I come
+to&mdash;to see you."</p>
+
+<p>Her stammering emboldened me to take a liberty.</p>
+
+<p>"But suppose they found out?"</p>
+
+<p>She was as innocent as a child as she glanced up at me and said:</p>
+
+<p>"It would still be to see you. There's no harm in that."</p>
+
+<p>"Even so, Mr. Brokenshire wouldn't approve of it."</p>
+
+<p>"But he'll never know. It's not the sort of thing any one would think
+of. I leave the motor down at Sixth Avenue, and this time of year it's
+so dark. As soon as I heard Miss Davis was leaving I thought how nice
+the place would be for you."</p>
+
+<p>Since it was useless to make the obvious correction here, I thanked her
+for her kindness, going on to add:</p>
+
+<p>"But I don't want to get into any trouble."</p>
+
+<p>"No, of course not." She began moving toward the door. "What kind of
+trouble were you thinking of?"</p>
+
+<p>I wondered whether or not, having taken one liberty, I could take
+another.</p>
+
+<p>"When I see my boat being caught in the rapids I'm afraid there's a
+cataract ahead."</p>
+
+<p>It took her some thirty seconds to seize the force of this. Having got
+it her eyes fell.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I see! And does that mean," she went on, her bosom heaving, "that
+you're afraid of the cataract on your own account&mdash;or on mine?"</p>
+
+<p>I paused in our slow drifting toward the door. She was a great lady in
+the land, and I was nobody. I had much to risk, and I risked it.</p>
+
+<p>"Should I offend you," I asked, deferentially, "if I said&mdash;on yours?"</p>
+
+<p>For an instant she became as haughty as so sweet a nature knew how to
+be, but the prompting passed.</p>
+
+<p>"No; you don't offend me," she said, after a brief pause. "We're
+friends, aren't we, in spite of&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>As she hesitated I filled in the phrase.</p>
+
+<p>"In spite of the difference between us."</p>
+
+<p>Because she was pursuing her own thoughts she allowed that to pass.</p>
+
+<p>"People have gone over cataracts&mdash;and still lived."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, but there's more to existence than life," I exclaimed, promptly.</p>
+
+<p>"There was a friend of my own," she continued, without immediate
+reference to my observation; "at least she was a friend&mdash;I suppose she
+is still&mdash;her name was Madeline Grimshaw&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Mrs. Pyne; but she wasn't Mrs. Brokenshire."</p>
+
+<p>"No; she never was so unhappy." She pressed her handkerchief against the
+two great tears that rolled down her cheeks. "She did love Mr. Grimshaw
+at one time, whereas I&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"But you say he's kind."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh yes. It isn't that. He's more than kind. He'd smother me with things
+I'd like to have. It's&mdash;it's when he comes near me&mdash;when he touches
+me&mdash;and&mdash;and his eye!"</p>
+
+<p>I knew enough of physical repulsion to be able to change my line of
+appeal. "But do you think you'd gain anything if you made him
+unhappy&mdash;now?"</p>
+
+<p>She looked at me wonderingly.</p>
+
+<p>"I shouldn't think you'd plead for him."</p>
+
+<p>I had ventured so far that I could go a little farther.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't think I'm pleading for him so much as for you."</p>
+
+<p>"Why do you plead for me? Do you think I should be&mdash;sorry?"</p>
+
+<p>"If you did what I imagine you're contemplating&mdash;yes."</p>
+
+<p>She surprised me by admitting my implication.</p>
+
+<p>"Even if I did, I couldn't be sorrier than I am."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, but existence is more than joy and sorrow."</p>
+
+<p>"You said just now that it was more than life. I suppose you mean that
+it's love."</p>
+
+<p>"I should say that it's more than love."</p>
+
+<p>"Why, what can it be?"</p>
+
+<p>I smiled apologetically.</p>
+
+<p>"Mightn't it be&mdash;right?"</p>
+
+<p>She studied me with an air of angelic sweetness.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh no, I could never believe that."</p>
+
+<p>And she went more resolutely toward the door.</p>
+
+<p>Hugh returned in good spirits from Philadelphia. He had been well
+received. His name had secured him much the same welcome as that
+accorded him on his first excursions into Wall Street. I didn't tell him
+I feared that the results would be similar, for I saw that he was
+cheered.</p>
+
+<p>To verify the love I had acknowledged to him more than once, I was eager
+to look at him again. I found a man thinner and older and shabbier than
+the Hugh who first attracted my attention by being kind to me. I could
+have borne with his being thinner and older; but that he should be
+shabbier wrung my heart.</p>
+
+<p>I considered myself engaged to him. That as yet I had not spoken the
+final word was a detail, in my mind, considering that I had so often
+rested in his arms and pillowed my head on his shoulder. The fact, too,
+that when I had first allowed myself those privileges I had taken him to
+be a strong character&mdash;the shadow of a rock in a thirsty land, I had
+called him&mdash;and that I now saw he was a weak one, bound me to him the
+more closely. I had gone to him because I needed him; but now that I saw
+he needed me I was sure I could never break away from him.</p>
+
+<p>He dined with me at the Mary Chilton on the evening of his return,
+sitting where Larry Strangways had sat only forty-eight hours
+previously. I was sorry then that I had not changed the table. To be
+face to face with two men, on exactly the same spot, on occasions so
+near together, in conditions so alike, gave me a sense of faithlessness.
+Though I wanted nothing so much as to be honest with them both, I was
+afraid of being so with neither; and yet for this I hardly knew where to
+place the blame. I suffered for Hugh because of Larry Strangways, and I
+suffered for Larry Strangways because of Hugh. If I suffered for myself
+I was scarcely aware of it, having to give so much thought to them.</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless, I regretted that I had not chosen another table, and all
+the more when Hugh brought the matter up. He had finished telling me of
+his experiences in Philadelphia. "Now what have you been doing?" he
+demanded, a smile lighting up his tired face.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, nothing much&mdash;the same old thing."</p>
+
+<p>"Seen anybody in particular?"</p>
+
+<p>I weighed my answer carefully.</p>
+
+<p>"Nobody in particular, except Mr. Strangways."</p>
+
+<p>He frowned.</p>
+
+<p>"Where did you see that fellow?"</p>
+
+<p>"Right here."</p>
+
+<p>"Right here? What do you mean by that?"</p>
+
+<p>"He came to dine with me."</p>
+
+<p>"Dine with you! And sat where I'm sitting now?"</p>
+
+<p>I tried to take this pleasantly.</p>
+
+<p>"It's the only place I've got to ask any one I want to talk to."</p>
+
+<p>"But why should you want to talk to&mdash;to&mdash;" I saw him struggling with the
+word, but it came out&mdash;"to that bounder?"</p>
+
+<p>"He's a friend of mine, Hugh. I've asked you already to remember that
+he's a gentleman."</p>
+
+<p>"Gentleman! O Lord!" He became kindly and coaxing, leaning across the
+table with an ingratiating smile. "Look here, little Alix! Don't you
+think that for my sake it's time you were beginning to drop that lot?"</p>
+
+<p>Though I revolted against the expression, I pretended to see nothing
+amiss.</p>
+
+<p>"You mean just as Libby Jaynes had to drop the barbers and the pages in
+the hotel when she became Mrs. Tracy Allen."</p>
+
+<p>He laughed nervously.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I don't go as far as that. And yet if I did&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"It wouldn't be too far." I gave him the impression that I was thinking
+the question out. "But you see, Hugh, dear, I don't see any difference
+between Mr. Strangways&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"And me?"</p>
+
+<p>"I wasn't going to say you, but between Mr. Strangways and the people
+you'd like me to know. Or rather, if I do see a difference it's that Mr.
+Strangways is so much more a man of the world than&mdash;than&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Perceiving my embarrassment, he broke in:</p>
+
+<p>"Than who?"</p>
+
+<p>I took my courage in both hands.</p>
+
+<p>"Than Mr. Rossiter, for example, or your brother, Mr. Jack Brokenshire,
+or any of the men I met when I was with your sister. If I hadn't seen
+you&mdash;the truest gentleman I ever knew&mdash;I shouldn't have supposed that
+any of them belonged to the real great world at all."</p>
+
+<p>To my relief he took this good-naturedly.</p>
+
+<p>"That's what we call social inexperience, little Alix. It's because you
+don't know how to distinguish."</p>
+
+<p>"That is, I don't know a good thing when I see it."</p>
+
+<p>"You don't know that sort of good thing&mdash;the American who counts. But
+you can learn. And if you learn you've got to take as a starting-point
+the fact that, just as there are things one does and things one doesn't
+do, so there are people one knows and people one doesn't know&mdash;and no
+one can tell you the reason why."</p>
+
+<p>"But if one asked for a reason&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"It would queer you with the right people. They don't want a reason. If
+people do want a reason&mdash;well, they've got to stay out of it. It was one
+of the things Libby Jaynes picked up as if she'd been born to it. She
+knew how to cut; she knew how to cut dead; and she cut as dead as she
+knew how."</p>
+
+<p>"But, Hugh, darling, I don't know how."</p>
+
+<p>He was all forbearance.</p>
+
+<p>"You'll learn, sweet." As for the moment the waitress was absent, he put
+out his hand and locked his fingers within mine. "You've got it in you.
+Once you've had a chance you'll knock Libby Jaynes into a cocked hat."</p>
+
+<p>I shook my head.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm not sure that you're right."</p>
+
+<p>"I know I'm right, if you do as I tell you: and to begin with you've got
+to put that fellow Strangways in his place."</p>
+
+<p>I let it go at that, having so many other things to think of that any
+mere status of my own became of no importance. I was willing that Hugh
+should marry me as Tracy Allen married Libby Jaynes, or in any other
+way, so long as I could play my part in the rest of the drama with
+right-mindedness. But it was precisely that that grew more difficult.</p>
+
+<p>When Mrs. Brokenshire and Mr. Grainger next met under what I can only
+call my chaperonage they were distinctly more at ease. The first
+stammering, shamefaced awkwardness was gone. They knew by this time what
+they had to say and said it. They had also come to understand that if I
+could not be moved I might be outwitted. By the simple expedient of
+wandering away on the plea of looking at this or that decorative object
+they obtained enough solitude to serve their purposes. Without taking
+themselves beyond my range of vision they got out of earshot.</p>
+
+<p>As far as that went I was relieved. I was not responsible for what they
+did, but only for what I did myself. I was not their keeper; I didn't
+want to be a spy on them. When, at a certain minute, as they returned
+toward me, I saw him pass a letter to her, it was entirely by chance. I
+reflected then that, while she ran no risk in using the mails in writing
+to him, it was not so with him in writing to her, and that
+communications of importance might have to pass between them. It was
+nothing to me. I was sorry to have surprised the act and tried to
+dismiss it from my mind.</p>
+
+<p>It was repeated, however, the next time they came and many times after
+that. Their comings settled into a routine of being twice a week, with
+fair regularity. Tuesdays and Fridays were their days, though not
+without variation. It was indeed this variation that saved the situation
+on a certain afternoon when otherwise all might have been lost.</p>
+
+
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+<h2>CHAPTER XV</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="dropcap">W</span>e had come to February, 1914. During the intervening months the
+conditions in which I lived and worked underwent little change. My days
+and nights were passed between the library and the Mary Chilton, with
+few social distractions, though I had some. Larry Strangways's sister,
+Mrs. Applegate, had called on me, and her house, a headquarters of New
+York philanthropies, had opened to me its kindly doors. Through Mrs.
+Applegate one or two other women came to relieve my loneliness, and now
+and then old Halifax friends visiting New York took me to theaters and
+to dinners at hotels. Ethel Rossiter was as friendly as fear of her
+father and of social conventions permitted her to be, and once or twice
+when she was quite alone I lunched with her. On each of these occasions
+she had something new to tell me.</p>
+
+<p>The first was that Hugh had met his father accidentally face to face,
+and that the parent had cut the son. Of that Hugh had told me nothing.
+According to Ethel, he was more affected by the incident than by
+anything else since the beginning of his cares. He felt it too deeply to
+speak of it even to me, to whom he spoke of everything.</p>
+
+<p>It happened, I believe at the foot of the steps of a club. Hugh, who was
+passing, saw his father coming down, and waited. Howard Brokenshire
+brought into play his faculty of seeing without seeing, and went on
+majestically, while Hugh stared after him with tears of vexation in his
+eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"He felt it the more," Mrs. Rossiter stated in her impartial way,
+"because I doubt if he had the price of his dinner in his pocket."</p>
+
+<p>It was then that she gave me to understand that if it were not that
+Mildred was lending him money he would have nothing to subsist on at
+all. Mildred had a little from her grandfather Brew, being privileged in
+this respect because she was the only one of the first Mrs.
+Brokenshire's children born at the time of the grandfather's demise. The
+legacy had been a trifle, but from this fund, which had never been his
+father's, Hugh consented to take loans.</p>
+
+<p>"Hugh, darling," I said to him the next time I had speech with him,
+"don't you see now that he's irreconcilable? He'll either starve you
+into surrender&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Never," he cried, thumping the table with his hand.</p>
+
+<p>"Or else you must take such work as you can get."</p>
+
+<p>"Such work as I can get! Do you know how much that would bring me in a
+week?"</p>
+
+<p>"Even so," I reasoned, "you'd have work and I should have work, and we'd
+live."</p>
+
+<p>He was hurt.</p>
+
+<p>"Americans don't believe in working their women," he declared, loftily.
+"If I can't give you a life in which you'll have nothing at all to do&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"But I don't want a life in which I'll have nothing at all to do," I
+cried. "Your idle women strike me as a weak point in your national
+organization. It's like the dinner-parties I've seen at some of your
+restaurants and hotels&mdash;a circle of men at one table and a circle of
+women at another. You revolve too much in separate spheres. Your women
+have too little to do with business and politics and your men with
+society and the fine arts. I'm not used to such a pitiless separation of
+the sexes. Don't let us begin it, Hugh, darling. Let me share what you
+share&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"You won't share anything sordid, little Alix, I can tell you that. When
+you're my wife you'll have nothing to think of but having a good time
+and looking your prettiest&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I should die of it," I exclaimed but this he took as a joke.</p>
+
+<p>That had passed in January. What Ethel Rossiter told me the next time I
+lunched with her was that Lady Cecilia Boscobel had accepted her
+invitation and was expected within a few weeks. She repeated what she
+had already said of her, in exactly the same words.</p>
+
+<p>"She's a good deal of a girl, Cissie is." My heart leaped and fell
+almost simultaneously. If I could only give up Hugh in such a way that
+he would have to give me up, this girl might help us out of our impasse.
+Had Mrs. Rossiter stopped there I might have made some noble vow of
+renunciation; but she went on: "If she wants Hugh she'll take him. Don't
+be under any illusion about that."</p>
+
+<p>Though my quick mettle was up, I said, docilely:</p>
+
+<p>"Oh no, I'm not. But if you mean taking him away from me&mdash;well, a good
+many people have tried it, haven't they?"</p>
+
+<p>"Cissie Boscobel hasn't tried it."</p>
+
+<p>But I was peaceably inclined.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, well," I said, "perhaps she won't. She may not think it worth her
+while."</p>
+
+<p>"If you want to know my opinion," Mrs. Rossiter insisted, as she helped
+herself to the peas which the rosebud Thomas was passing, "I think she
+will. Men aren't so plentiful over there as you seem to suppose&mdash;that
+is, men of the kind they'd marry. Lord Goldborough has no money at all,
+as you might say, and yet the girls have to be set up in big
+establishments. You've only got to look at them to see it. Cissie
+marrying a subaltern with a thousand pounds a year isn't thinkable. It
+wouldn't dress her. She's coming over here to take a look at Hugh, and
+if she likes him&mdash; Well, I told you long ago that you'd be wise to snap
+up that young Strangways. He's much better-looking than Hugh, and more
+in your own&mdash; Besides, Jim says that now that he's with"&mdash;she balked at
+the name of Grainger&mdash;"now that he's where he is he's beginning to make
+money. It doesn't take so long when people have the brains for it."</p>
+
+<p>All this gave me a feeling of mingled curiosity and fear when, a few
+weeks later, I came on Mrs. Rossiter and Lady Cecilia Boscobel looking
+into a shop window in Fifth Avenue. It was a Saturday afternoon, the day
+which I had off and on which I made my modest purchases. It was a cold,
+brisk day, with light snow whirling in tiny eddies on the ground. I was
+going northward on the sunny side. At a distance of some fifty yards I
+recognized Mrs. Rossiter's motor standing by the curb, and cast my eyes
+about for a possible glimpse of her. Moving away from the window of the
+jeweler's whence she had probably come out, she saw me approach, and
+turned at once with a word or two to the lady beside her, who also
+looked in my direction. I knew by intuition who Mrs. Rossiter's
+companion was, and that my connection with the family had been explained
+to her.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Rossiter made the presentation in her usual offhand way.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Miss Adare! I want to introduce you to Lady Cecilia Boscobel."</p>
+
+<p>We exchanged civil, remote, and non-committal salutations, each of us
+with her hands in her muff. My immediate impression was one of color, as
+it is when you see old Limoges enamels. There was more color in Lady
+Cissie's personality than in that of any one I have ever looked at. Her
+hair was red&mdash;not auburn or copper, but red&mdash;a decorative, flaming red.
+I have often noticed how slight is the difference between beautiful red
+hair and ugly. Lady Cissie's was of the shade that is generally ugly,
+but which in her case was rendered glorious by the introduction of some
+such pigment, gleaming and umber, as that which gives the peculiar hue
+to Australian gold. I had never seen such hair or hair in such
+quantities, except in certain pictures of the pre-Raphaelite
+brotherhood, for which I should have supposed there could have been no
+earthly model had my father not known Eleanor Siddall. Lady Cissie's
+eyes were gray, with a greenish light in them when she turned her head.
+Her complexion could only be compared to the kind of carnation which the
+whitest of whites is flecked in just the right spots by the rosiest
+rose. In the lips, which were full and firm, also like Eleanor
+Siddall's, the rose became carmine, to melt away into coral-pink in the
+shell-like ears. Her dress of seal-brown broadcloth, on which there was
+a sheen, was relieved by occasional touches of sage-green, and the
+numerous sable tails on her boa and muff blew this way and that way in
+the wind. In the small black hat, perched at what I can only describe as
+a triumphant angle, an orange wing became at the tip of each tiny
+topmost feather a daring line of scarlet. Nestling on the sage-green
+below the throat a row of amber beads slumbered and smoldered with lemon
+and orange and ruby lights that now and then shot out rays of crimson or
+scarlet fire.</p>
+
+<p>I thought of my own costume&mdash;naturally. I was in gray, with inexpensive
+black furs. An iridescent buckle, with hues such as you see in a
+pigeon's neck, at the side of my black-velvet toque was my only bit of
+color. I was poor Jenny Wren in contrast to a splendid bird-of-paradise.
+So be it! I could at least be a foil to this healthy, vigorous young
+beauty who was two inches taller than I, and might have my share of the
+advantages which go with all antithesis.</p>
+
+<p>The talk was desultory, and in it the English girl took no part. Mrs.
+Rossiter asked me where I was going, what I was going for, and whether
+or not she couldn't take me to my destination in her car. I declined
+this offer, explained that my errands were trivial, and examined Lady
+Cissie through the corner of my eye. On her side Lady Cissie examined me
+quite frankly&mdash;not haughtily, but distantly and rather sympathetically.
+She had come all this distance to take a look at Hugh, and I was the
+girl he loved. I counted on the fact to give poor Jenny Wren her value,
+and I think it did. At any rate, when I had answered all Mrs. Rossiter's
+questions and was moving off to continue my way up-town, Lady Cissie's
+rich lips quivered in a sort of farewell smile.</p>
+
+<p>But Hugh showed little interest when I painted her portrait verbally.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, that's the girl," he observed indifferently, "red-headed,
+long-legged, slashy-colored, laid on a bit too thick."</p>
+
+<p>"She's beautiful, Hugh."</p>
+
+<p>"Is she? Well, perhaps so. Wouldn't be my style; but every one to his
+taste."</p>
+
+<p>"It you saw her now&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I've seen her often enough, just as she's seen me."</p>
+
+<p>"She hasn't seen you as you are to-day, and neither have you seen her. A
+few years makes a difference."</p>
+
+<p>He looked at me quizzically.</p>
+
+<p>"Look here, little Alix, what are you giving us? Do you think I'd turn
+you down now&mdash;for all the Lady Cissies in the British peerage? Do you,
+now?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not, perhaps, if you put it as turning me down&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, as you turning me down, then?"</p>
+
+<p>"Our outlook is pretty dark, isn't it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Just wait."</p>
+
+<p>I ignored his pathetic boastfulness to continue my own sentence.</p>
+
+<p>"And this prospect is so brilliant. You'd have a handsome wife, a big
+income, a good position, an important family backing on both sides of
+the Atlantic&mdash;all of which would make you the man you ought to be. Now
+that I've seen her, and rather guess that she'd take you, I don't see
+how I can let you forfeit so much. I don't want to make you regret the
+day you ever saw me&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Or regret yourself the day you ever saw me."</p>
+
+<p>If I took up this challenge it was more for his sake than my own.</p>
+
+<p>"Then suppose I accept that way of putting it?"</p>
+
+<p>He looked at me solemnly, for a second or two, after which he burst out
+laughing. That I might have hesitations as to connecting myself with the
+Brokenshires was more than he could grasp. He might have minutes of
+jealousy of Larry Strangways, but his doubt could go no further. It went
+no further, even after he had seen Lady Cecilia and they had renewed
+their early acquaintance. Ethel Rossiter had managed that, of course
+with her father's connivance.</p>
+
+<p>"Fine big girl," Hugh commended, "but too showy."</p>
+
+<p>"She's not showy," I contradicted. "A thing isn't necessarily showy
+because it has bright colors. Tropical birds are not showy, nor roses,
+nor rubies&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I prefer pearls," he said, quietly. "You're a pearl, little Alix, the
+pearl of great price for which a man sells all that he has and buys it."
+Before I could respond to this kindly speech he burst out: "Good Lord!
+don't you suppose I can see what it all means? Cissie's the gay
+artificial fly that's to tempt the fish away from the little silvery
+minnow. Once I've darted after the bit of red and yellow dad will have
+hooked me. That's his game. Don't you think I see it? What dad wants is
+not that I shall have a wife I can love, but that he shall have a
+daughter-in-law with a title. You'd have to be, well, what I hope you
+will be some day, to know what that means to a man like dad. A
+son-in-law with a title&mdash;that's as common as beans to rich Americans;
+but a daughter-in-law with a title&mdash;a real, genuine British title, as
+sound as the Bank of England&mdash;that's something new. You can count on the
+fingers of one hand the American families that have got 'em"&mdash;he named
+them, one in Philadelphia, one in Chicago, one or two in New York&mdash;"and
+dad's as mad as blazes that he didn't think of the thing first. If he
+had, he'd have put Jack on to it, in spite of all Pauline's money; but
+since it's too late for that I must toe the mark. Well, I'm not going
+to, do you see? I'm going to choose my own wife, and I've chosen her.
+Birth and position mean nothing to me, for I'm as much of a Socialist as
+ever&mdash;or almost."</p>
+
+<p>With such resolution as this there was no way of reasoning, so that I
+could only go on, wondering and hoping and doing what I could for the
+best.</p>
+
+<p>What I could do for the best included watching over Mrs. Brokenshire.
+As winter progressed the task became harder and I grew the more anxious.
+So far no one suspected her visits to Mr. Grainger's library, and to the
+best of my knowledge her imprudence ended there. Further than to wander
+about the room the lovers never tried to elude me, though now and then I
+could see, without watching them, that he took her hand. Once or twice I
+thought he kissed her, but of that I was happily not sure. It was a
+relief, too, that as the days grew longer occasional visitors dropped in
+while they were there. The old gentleman interested in prints and the
+lady who studied Shakespeare came not infrequently. There were couples,
+too, who wandered in, seeking for their own purposes a half-hour of
+privacy. After all, the place was almost a public one to those who knew
+how to find it; and I was quick enough to see that in this very
+publicity lay a measure of salvation.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Brokenshire was as quick to perceive this as I. When there were
+other people there she was more at ease. Nothing was simpler then than
+for Mr. Grainger and herself to be visitors like the rest, strolling
+about or sitting in shady corners, and keeping themselves unrecognized.
+There was thus a Thursday in the early part of March when I didn't
+expect them, because it was a Thursday. They came, however, only to find
+the old gentleman interested in prints and the lady who studied
+Shakespeare already on the spot. I was never so glad of anything as of
+this accidental happening when a surprising thing occurred to me next
+day.</p>
+
+<p>It was between half past five and six on the Friday. As the lovers had
+come on the preceding day, I knew they would not appear on this, and was
+beginning to make my preparations for going home. I was actually pinning
+on my hat when the soft opening of the outer door startled me. A soft
+step sounded in the little inner vestibule, and then there came an
+equally soft, breathless standing still.</p>
+
+<p>My hands were paralyzed in their upward position at my hat; my heart
+pounded so that I could hear it; my eyes were wide with terror as they
+looked back at me from the splendid Venetian mirror before which I
+stood. I was always afraid of robbers or murderers, even though I had
+the wrought-iron grille between me and them, and Mr. or Mrs. Daly within
+call.</p>
+
+<p>Knowing that there was nothing for it but to go and see who was there,
+and suspecting that it might be Mrs. Brokenshire, after all, I dragged
+my feet across the few intervening paces. It was not Mrs. Brokenshire.
+It was a man, a man who looked inordinately big and majestic in this
+little decorative pen. I needed a few seconds in which to gaze, a few
+seconds in which to adjust my faculties, before grasping the fact that I
+saw Mrs. Brokenshire's husband. On his side, he needed something of the
+sort himself. Of all people in the world with whom he expected to find
+himself face to face I am sure I must have been the last.</p>
+
+<p>I touched the spring, however, and the little portal opened. It opened
+and he stepped in. He stepped in and stood still. He stood still and
+looked round him. If I dare to say it of one who was never timid in his
+life, he looked round him timidly. His eyes showed it, his attitude
+showed it. He had come on a hateful errand; his feet were on hateful
+ground. He expected to see something more than me&mdash;and emptiness.</p>
+
+<p>I got back some of my own self-control by being sorry for him, giving no
+indication of ever having met him before.</p>
+
+<p>"You'd like to see the library, sir," I said, as I should have said it
+to any chance visitor.</p>
+
+<p>He dropped into a large William and Mary chair, one of the show pieces,
+and placed his silk hat on the floor.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll sit down," he murmured less to me than to himself. His stick he
+dandled now across and now between his knees.</p>
+
+<p>The tea things were still on the table.</p>
+
+<p>"Would you like a cup of tea?" I asked, in genuine solicitude.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes&mdash;no." I think he would have liked it, but he probably remembered
+whose tea it was. "No," he repeated, with decision.</p>
+
+<p>He breathed heavily, with short, puffy gasps. I recalled then that Mrs.
+Brokenshire had said that his heart had been affected. As a matter of
+fact, he put his gloved left hand up to it, as people do who feel
+something giving way within.</p>
+
+<p>To relieve the embarrassment of the situation I said:</p>
+
+<p>"I could turn on all the lights and you could see the library without
+going round it."</p>
+
+<p>Withdrawing the hand at his heart, he raised it in the manner with which
+I was familiar.</p>
+
+<p>"Sit down," he commanded, as sternly as his shortness of breath allowed.</p>
+
+<p>The companion William and Mary chair being near, I slipped into it.
+Having him in three-quarters profile, I could study him without doing it
+too obviously, and could verify Mrs. Brokenshire's statements that
+Hugh's affairs were "telling on him." He was perceptibly older, in the
+way in which people look older all at once after having long kept the
+semblance of youth. The skin had grown baggy, the eyes tired; the beard
+and mustache, though as well cared for as ever, more decidedly mixed
+with gray. It was indicative of something that had begun to disintegrate
+in his self-esteem, that when his poor left eye screwed up he turned the
+terrifying right one on me with no effort to conceal the grimace.</p>
+
+<p>As it was for him to break the silence, I waited in my huge ornamental
+chair, hoping he would begin.</p>
+
+<p>"What are you doing here?"</p>
+
+<p>The voice had lost none of its soft staccato nor of its whip-lash snap.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm Mr. Grainger's librarian," I replied, meekly.</p>
+
+<p>"Since when?" he panted.</p>
+
+<p>"Since not long after I left Mrs. Rossiter."</p>
+
+<p>He took his time to think another question out.</p>
+
+<p>"How did your employer come to know about you?"</p>
+
+<p>I explained, as though he had had no knowledge of the fact, that Mrs.
+Rossiter had employed for her boy, Brokenshire, a tutor named
+Strangways. This Mr. Strangways had attracted Mr. Grainger's attention
+by some articles he had written for the financial press. An introduction
+had followed, after which Mr. Grainger had engaged the young man as his
+secretary. Hearing that Mr. Grainger had need of a librarian, Mr.
+Strangways had suggested me.</p>
+
+<p>I could see suspicion in the way in which he eyed me as well as in his
+words.</p>
+
+<p>"Had you no other recommendation?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, sir," I said, simply, "none that Mr. Grainger ever told me of."</p>
+
+<p>He let that pass.</p>
+
+<p>"And what do you do here?"</p>
+
+<p>"I show the library to visitors. If any one wishes a particular book, or
+to look at engravings, I help him to find what he wants." I thought it
+well to keep up the fiction that he had come as a sight-seer. "If you'd
+care to go over the place now, sir&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>His hand went up in a majestic waving aside of this courtesy.</p>
+
+<p>"And have you many visitors to the&mdash;to the library?"</p>
+
+<p>Though I saw the implication, I managed to elude it.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir, taking one day with another. It depends a little on the
+weather and the time of year."</p>
+
+<p>"Are they chiefly strangers&mdash;or&mdash;or do you ever see any one
+you've&mdash;you've seen before?"</p>
+
+<p>His difficulty in phrasing this question made me even more sorry for him
+than I was already. I decided, both for his sake and my own, to walk up
+frankly and take the bull by the horns. "They're generally strangers;
+but sometimes people come whom I know." I looked at him steadily as I
+continued. "I'll tell you something, sir. Perhaps I ought not to, and it
+may be betraying a secret; but you might as well know it from me as hear
+it from some one else." The expression of the face he turned on me was
+so much that of Jove, whose look could strike a man dead, that I had all
+I could do to go on. "Mrs. Brokenshire comes to see me."</p>
+
+<p>"To see&mdash;you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir, to see me."</p>
+
+<p>The staccato accent grew difficult and thick. "What for?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because she can't help it. She's sorry for me."</p>
+
+<p>There was a new attempt to ignore me and my troubles as he said:</p>
+
+<p>"Why should she be sorry for you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because she sees that you're hard on me&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I haven't meant to be hard on you, only just."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, just then; but Mrs. Brokenshire doesn't know anything about
+justice when she can be merciful. You must know that yourself, sir. I
+think she's the most beautiful woman God ever made; and she's as kind as
+she's beautiful. I'll tell you something else, sir. It will be another
+betrayal, but it will show you what she is. One day at Newport&mdash;after
+you'd spoken to me&mdash;and she saw that I was so crushed by it that all I
+could do was to creep down among the rocks and cry&mdash;she watched me, and
+followed me, and came and cried with me. And so when she heard I was
+here&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Who told her?"</p>
+
+<p>There was a measure of accusation in the tone of the question, but I
+pretended not to detect it.</p>
+
+<p>"Mrs. Rossiter, perhaps&mdash;she knows&mdash;or almost anybody. I never asked
+her."</p>
+
+<p>"Very well! What then?"</p>
+
+<p>"I was only going to say that when she heard I was here she came almost
+at once. I begged her not to&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Why? What were you afraid of?"</p>
+
+<p>"I knew you wouldn't like it. But I couldn't stop her. No one could stop
+her when it comes to her doing an act of kindness. She obeys her own
+nature because she can't do anything else. She's like a little bird that
+you can keep from flying by holding it in your hand, but as soon as your
+grasp is relaxed&mdash;it flies."</p>
+
+<p>Something of this was true, in that it was true potentially. She had
+these qualities, even if they were nipped in her as buds are nipped in a
+backward spring. I could only calm my conscience as I went along by
+saying to myself that if I saved her she would have to bear me out
+through being true to the picture I was painting, and living up to her
+real self.</p>
+
+<p>Praise of the woman he adored would have been as music to him had he
+not had something on his mind that turned music into poignancy. What it
+was I could surmise, and so be prepared for it. Not till he had been
+some time silent, probably getting his question into the right words,
+did he say:</p>
+
+<p>"And are you always alone when Mrs. Brokenshire comes?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh no, sir!" I made the tone as natural as I could. "But Mrs.
+Brokenshire doesn't seem to mind. Yesterday, for instance&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Was she here yesterday? I thought she came on&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>I broke in before he could betray himself further.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, she was here yesterday; and there was&mdash;let me see!&mdash;there was an
+old gentleman comparing his Japanese prints with Mr. Grainger's, and a
+middle-aged lady who comes to study the old editions of Shakespeare. But
+Mrs. Brokenshire didn't object to them. She sat with me and had a cup of
+tea."</p>
+
+<p>I knew I had come to dangerous ground, and was ready for my part in the
+adventure. Had he asked the question: "Was there anybody else?" I was
+resolved, in the spirit of my maxim, to tell the truth as harmlessly as
+I knew how. But I didn't think he would ask it. I reckoned on his
+unwillingness to take me into his confidence or to humiliate himself
+more than he could help. That he guessed at something behind my words I
+could easily suspect; but I was so sure he would have torn out his
+tongue rather than force his pride to cross-examine me too closely, that
+I was able to run my risk.</p>
+
+<p>As a matter of fact, he became pensive, and through the gloom of the
+half-lighted room I could see that his face was contorted twice, still
+with no effort on his part to hide his misfortune. As he took the time
+to think I could do the same, with a kind of intuition in following the
+course of his meditations. I was not surprised, therefore, when he said,
+with renewed thickness of utterance:</p>
+
+<p>"Has Mrs. Brokenshire any&mdash;any other motive in coming here than
+just&mdash;just to see you?"</p>
+
+<p>I hung my head, perhaps with a touch of that play-acting spirit which
+most women are able to command, when the time comes.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir."</p>
+
+<p>He waited again. I never heard such overtones of despair as were in the
+three words which at last he tried to toss off easily.</p>
+
+<p>"What is it?"</p>
+
+<p>I still hung my head.</p>
+
+<p>"She brings me money for poor Hugh."</p>
+
+<p>He started back, whether from anger or relief I couldn't tell, and his
+face twitched for the fourth time. In the end, I suppose, he decided
+that anger was the card he could play most skilfully.</p>
+
+<p>"So that that's what enables him to keep up his rebellion against me!"</p>
+
+<p>"No, sir," I said, humbly, "because he never takes it." I went on with
+that portrait of Mrs. Brokenshire which I vowed she would have to
+justify. "That doesn't make any difference, however, to her wonderful
+tenderness of heart in wanting him to have it. You see, sir, when any
+one's so much like an angel as she is they don't stop to consider how
+justly other people are suffering or how they've brought their troubles
+on themselves. Where there's trouble they only ask to help; where
+there's suffering their first instinct is to heal. Mrs. Brokenshire
+doesn't want to sustain your son against you; that never enters her
+head: she only wants him not&mdash;not"&mdash;my own voice shook a little&mdash;"not
+to have to go without his proper meals. He's doing that now, I
+think&mdash;sometimes, at least. Oh, sir," I ventured to plead, "you can't
+blame her, not when she's so&mdash;so heavenly." Stealing a glance at him, I
+was amazed and shocked, and not a little comforted, to see two tears
+steal down his withered cheeks. Knowing then that he would not for some
+minutes be able to control himself sufficiently to speak, I hurried on.
+"Hugh doesn't take the money, because he knows that this is something he
+must go through with on his own strength. If he can't do that he must
+give in. I think I've made that clear to him. I'm not the adventuress
+you consider me&mdash;indeed I'm not. I've told him that if he's ever
+independent I will marry him; but I shall not marry him so long as he
+isn't free to give himself away. He's putting up a big fight, and he's
+doing it so bravely, that if you only knew what he's going through you'd
+be proud of him as your son."</p>
+
+<p>Resting my case there, I waited for some response, but I waited in vain.
+He reflected, and sat silent, and crossed and uncrossed his knees. At
+last he picked up his hat from the floor and rose. I, too, rose, waiting
+beside my chair, while he flicked the dust from the crown of his hat and
+seemed to study its glossy surface as he still reflected.</p>
+
+<p>I was now altogether without a clue to what was passing in his mind,
+though I could guess at the age-long tragedy of December's love for May.
+Having seen Ibsen's "Master Builder," at Munich, and read one or two
+books on the theme with which it deals, I could, in a measure,
+supplement my own experience. It was, however, the first time I had seen
+with my own eyes this desperate yearning of age for youth, or this
+something that is almost a death-blow which youth can inflict on age. My
+father used to say that fundamentally there is no such period as age,
+that only the outer husk grows old, while the inner self, the vital
+<i>ego</i>, is young eternally. Here, it seemed to me, was an instance of the
+fact. This man was essentially as young as he had been at twenty-five;
+he had the same instincts and passions; he demanded the same things. If
+anything, he demanded them more imperiously because of the long, long
+habit of desire. Denial which thirty years ago he could have taken
+philosophically was now a source of anguish. As I looked at him I could
+see anguish on his lips, in his eyes, in the contraction of his
+forehead&mdash;the anguish of a love ridiculous to all, and to the object of
+it frightful and unnatural, for the reason that at sixty-two the skin
+had grown baggy and the heart was supposed to be dead.</p>
+
+<p>From the smoothing of the crown of his hat he glanced up suddenly. The
+whip-lash inflection was again in the timbre of the voice.</p>
+
+<p>"How much do you get here?"</p>
+
+<p>I was taken aback, but I named the amount of my salary.</p>
+
+<p>"I will give you twice as much as that for the next five years if&mdash;if
+you go back to where you came from."</p>
+
+<p>It took me a minute to seize all the implications contained in this
+little speech. I saw then that if I hoped I was making an impression, or
+getting further ahead with him, I was mistaken. Neither had my
+interpretation of Mrs. Brokenshire's character put him off the scent
+concerning her. I was so far indeed from influencing him in either her
+favor or my own that he believed that if he could get rid of me an
+obstacle would be removed.</p>
+
+<p>Tears sprang into my eyes, though they didn't fall.</p>
+
+<p>"So you blame me, sir, for everything."</p>
+
+<p>He continued to watch his gloved hand as it made the circle of the crown
+of his hat.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll make it twice what you're getting here for ten years. I'll put it
+in my will." It was no use being angry or mounting my high horse. The
+struggle with tears kept me silent as he glanced up from the rubbing of
+his hat and said in a jerky, kindly tone: "Well? What do you say?"</p>
+
+<p>I didn't know what to say; and what I did say was foolish. I should have
+known enough to suppress it before I began.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you remember, sir, that once when you were speaking to me severely,
+you said you were my friend? Well, why shouldn't I be your friend, too?"</p>
+
+<p>The look he bent down on me was that of a great personage positively
+dazed by an inferior's audacity.</p>
+
+<p>"I could be your friend," I stumbled on, in an absurd effort to explain
+myself. "I should like to be. There are&mdash;there are things I could do for
+you."</p>
+
+<p>He put on his tall hat with the air of a Charlemagne or a Napoleon
+crowning himself. This increase of authority must have made me
+desperate. It is only thus that I can account for my <i>gaffe</i>&mdash;the French
+word alone expresses it&mdash;as I dashed on, wildly:</p>
+
+<p>"I like you, sir&mdash;I can't help it. I don't know why, but I do. I like
+you in spite of&mdash;in spite of everything. And, oh, I'm so sorry for
+you&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>He moved away. There was noble, wounded offense in his manner of passing
+through the wrought-iron grille, which he closed with a little click
+behind him. He stepped out of the place as softly as he had stepped in.</p>
+
+<p>For long minutes I stood, holding to the side of the William and Mary
+chair, regretting that the interview should have ended in this way. I
+didn't cry; I had, in fact, no longer any tendency to tears. I was
+thoughtful&mdash;wondering what it was that dug the gulf between this man and
+his family and me. Ethel Rossiter had never&mdash;I could see it well enough
+now&mdash;accepted me as an equal, and even to Hugh I was only another type
+of Libby Jaynes. I was as intelligent as they, as well born, as well
+mannered, as thoroughly accustomed to the world. Why should they
+consider me an inferior? Was it because I had no money? Was it because I
+was a Canadian? Would it have made a difference if I had been an
+Englishwoman like Cissie Boscobel, or rich like any of themselves? I
+couldn't tell. All I knew was that my heart was hot within me, and since
+Howard Brokenshire wouldn't have me as a friend I wanted to act as his
+enemy. I could see how to do it. Indeed, without doing anything at all I
+could encourage, and perhaps bring about, a situation that would send
+the name of the family ringing through the press of two continents and
+break his heart. I had only to sit still&mdash;or at most to put in a word
+here and there. I am not a saint; I had my hour of temptation.</p>
+
+<p>It was a stormy hour, though I never moved from the spot where I stood.
+The storm was within. That which, as the minutes went by, became rage in
+me saw with satisfaction Howard Brokenshire brought to a desolate old
+age, and Mildred and Ethel and Jack and Pauline, in spite of their
+bravado and their high heads, all seared by the flame of notorious
+disgrace. I went so far as to gloat over poor Hugh's discomfiture,
+taking vengeance on his habit of rating me with the socially
+incompetent. As for Mrs. Brokenshire, she would be over and done with, a
+poor little gilded outcast, whose fall would be such that even as Mrs.
+Stacy Grainger she would never rise again. Like another Samson, I could
+pull down this house of pride, though, happier than Samson, I should not
+be overwhelmed in the ruin of it. From that I should be safe&mdash;with Larry
+Strangways.</p>
+
+<p>Nearly half an hour went by while I stood thus indulging in fierce
+day-dreams. I was racked and suffering. I suffered, indeed, from the
+misfortunes I saw descending on people whom at bottom of my heart I
+cared for. It was not till I began to move, till I had put on my jacket
+and was turning out the lights, that my maxim came back to me. I knew
+then that whatever happened I should stand by that, and having come to
+this understanding with myself, I was quieted.</p>
+
+
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+<h2>CHAPTER XVI</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="dropcap">H</span>aving made up my mind to adhere, however imperfectly, to the principle
+that had guided me hitherto, I was obliged to examine my conscience as
+to what I had said to Mr. Brokenshire. This I did in the evening, coming
+to the conclusion that I had told him nothing but the truth, even if it
+was not all the truth. Though I hated duplicity, I couldn't see that I
+had a right to tell him all the truth, or that to do so would be wise.
+If he could be kept, for everybody's sake, from knowing more than he
+knew already, however much or little that was, it seemed to me that
+diplomatic action on my part would be justified.</p>
+
+<p>In the line of diplomatic action I had before all things to inform Mrs.
+Brokenshire of the visit I had received. This was not so easy as it may
+seem. I could not trust to a letter, through fear of its falling into
+other hands than hers. Neither could I wait for her coming on the
+following Tuesday, since that was what I wanted to prevent. There was no
+intermediary whom I could intrust with a message, unless it was Larry
+Strangways, who knew something of the facts; but even with him the
+secret was too much to share.</p>
+
+<p>In the end I had recourse to the telephone, asking to be allowed to
+speak to Mrs. Brokenshire. I was told that she never answered the
+telephone herself, and was requested to transmit my message. Not to
+arouse suspicion, I didn't ask that she should break her rule, but
+begged that during the day she might find a minute in which to see Miss
+Adare, who was in a difficulty that involved her work. That this way of
+putting it was understood I gathered from the reply that came back to
+me. It was to the effect that as Mr. Brokenshire would be lunching with
+some men in the lower part of New York Mrs. Brokenshire would be alone
+and able to receive Miss Adare at two. Fortunately, it was a Saturday,
+so that my afternoon was free.</p>
+
+<p>Almost everybody familiar with New York knows the residence of J. Howard
+Brokenshire not far above the Museum. Built of brick with stone facings,
+it is meant to be in the style of Louis Treize. It would be quite in the
+style of Louis Treize were the stonework not too heavy and elaborate,
+and the fa&ccedil;ade too high for its length. Inside, with an incongruity many
+rich people do not mind, it is sumptuously Roman and Florentine&mdash;the
+Brokenshire villa at Newport on a larger and more lavish scale. Having
+gone over the house with Ethel Rossiter during the winter I spent with
+her, I had carried away the impression of huge unoccupied rooms, of
+heavily carved or gilded furniture, of rich brocades, of dim old masters
+in elaborate gold frames, of vitrines and vases and mirrors and
+consoles, all supplied by some princely dealer in <i>objets d'art</i> who had
+received <i>carte blanche</i> in the way of decoration. The Brokenshire
+family, with the possible exception of Mildred, cared little for the
+things with which they lived. Ethel Rossiter, in showing me over the
+house, hardly knew a Perugino from a Fragonard, and still less could she
+distinguish, between the glorious fading softness of a Flemish
+fifteenth-century tapestry and a smug and staring bit of Gobelins. Hugh
+went in and out as indifferently as in a hotel, while Jack Brokenshire's
+taste in art hardly reached beyond racing prints. Mildred liked pretty
+garlanded things <i>&agrave; la</i> Marie Antoinette, which the parental habit of
+deciding everything would never let her have. J. Howard alone made an
+effort at knowing the value, artistic and otherwise, of his possessions,
+and would sometimes, when strangers were present, point to this or that
+object with the authority of a connoisseur, which he was not.</p>
+
+<p>It was a house for life in perpetual state, with no state to maintain.
+Stafford House, Holland House, Bridgewater House, to name but a few of
+the historic mansions in London, were made spacious and splendid to meet
+a definite necessity. They belonged to days when the feudal tradition
+still obtained and there were no comfortable hotels. Great lords came to
+them with great families and great suites of retainers. Accommodation
+being the first of all needs, there was a time when every corner of
+these stately residences was lived in. But now that in England the great
+lord tends more and more to be only a simple democratic individual, and
+the wants of his relatives are easily met on a public or co-operative
+principle, the noble Palladian or Georgian dwelling either becomes a
+museum or a club, or remains a white elephant on the hands of some one
+who would gladly be rid of it. Princes and princesses of the blood royal
+rent numbered houses in squares and streets, next door to the Smiths and
+the Joneses, in preference to the draughty grandeurs of St. James's and
+Buckingham Palace, while a villa in the suburbs, with a few trees and a
+garden, is often the shelter sought by the nobility.</p>
+
+<p>But in proportion as civilization in England, to say nothing of the
+rest of Europe, puts off the burdensome to enjoy simplicity, America, it
+strikes me, chases the tail of an antiquated, disappearing stateliness.
+Rich men, just because they have the money, take upon their shoulders
+huge domestic responsibilities in which there is no object, and which it
+is probable the next generation will refuse to carry. In New York, in
+Washington, in Newport, in Chicago, they raise palaces and ch&acirc;teaux
+where they often find themselves lonely, and which they can rarely fill
+more than two or three times a year. In the case of the Howard
+Brokenshires it had ceased to be as often as that. After Ethel was
+married Mr. Brokenshire seldom entertained, his second wife having no
+heart for that kind of display. Now and then, in the course of a winter,
+a great dinner was given in the great dining-room, or the music-room was
+filled for a concert; but this was done for the sake of "killing off"
+those to whom some attention had to be shown, and not because either
+host or hostess cared for it. Otherwise the down-stairs rooms were
+silent and empty, and whatever was life in the house went on in a corner
+of the mansard.</p>
+
+<p>Thither the footman took me in a lift. Here were the rooms&mdash;a sort of
+flat&mdash;which the occupants could dominate with their personalities. They
+reminded me of those tiny chambers at Versailles to which what was human
+in poor Marie Antoinette fled for refuge from her uncomfortable
+gorgeousness as queen.</p>
+
+<p>Not that these rooms were tiny. On the contrary, the library or
+living-room into which I was ushered was as large as would be found in
+the average big house, and, notwithstanding its tapestries and massive
+furniture, was bright with sunshine and flowers. Books lay about, and
+papers and magazines, and after the tomb-like deadness of the lower
+floors one got at least the impression of life.</p>
+
+<p>From the far end of the room Mrs. Brokenshire came forward, threading
+her way between arm-chairs and taborets, and looking more exquisite, and
+also more lost, than ever. She wore what might be called a glorified
+<i>neglig&eacute;e</i>, lilac and lavender shading into violet, the train adding to
+her height. Fear had to some degree blotted out her color and put
+trouble into the sweetness of her eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Something has happened," she said at once, as she took my hand.</p>
+
+<p>I spoke as directly as she did, though a little pantingly.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; Mr. Brokenshire came to the library yesterday."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah-h!" The exclamation was no more than a long, frightened breath.
+"Then that explains things. I saw when he came home to dinner that he
+was unhappy."</p>
+
+<p>"Did he say anything?"</p>
+
+<p>"No; nothing. He was just&mdash;unhappy. Sit down and tell me."</p>
+
+<p>Staring wide-eyed at each other, we seated ourselves on the edge of two
+huge arm-chairs. Having half expected my companion to fling the gauntlet
+in her husband's face, I was relieved to find in her chiefly the dread
+of detection.</p>
+
+<p>As exactly as I could I gave her an account of what had passed between
+Mr. Brokenshire and myself, omitting only those absurd suggestions of my
+own that had sent him away in dudgeon. She listened with no more
+interruption than a question or two, after which she said, simply:</p>
+
+<p>"Then, I suppose, I can't go any more."</p>
+
+<p>"On the contrary," I corrected, "you must come just the same as ever,
+only not on the same days, or at the same hours&mdash;or&mdash;or when there's any
+one else there besides the visitors and me. If you stopped coming all of
+a sudden Mr. Brokenshire would think&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"But he thinks that already."</p>
+
+<p>"Of course, but he doesn't know&mdash;not after what I said to him." I seized
+the opportunity to beg her to play up. "You are all the things I told
+him you were, dear Mrs. Brokenshire, don't you see you are?"</p>
+
+<p>But my appeal passed unheeded.</p>
+
+<p>"What made him suspect? I thought that would be the last thing."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know. It might have been a lot of things. Once or twice I've
+rather fancied that some of the people who came there&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Her features contracted in a spasm of horror.</p>
+
+<p>"You don't mean detect&mdash;" She found the word difficult to pronounce.
+"You don't mean de-detectives watching&mdash;me?"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't say as much as that; but I've never liked Mr. Brokenshire's
+man, Spellman."</p>
+
+<p>"No, nor I. He's out now. I made sure of that before you came."</p>
+
+<p>"So he might have sent some one; or&mdash; But it's no use speculating, is
+it? when there are so many ways. What we've specially got to know is how
+to act, and I think I've told you the best method. If you don't keep
+coming&mdash;judiciously&mdash;you'll show you're conscious of having done wrong."</p>
+
+<p>She sighed plaintively.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't want to do wrong unless I can't help it. If I can't&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, but you can." I tried once more to get in my point. "You wouldn't
+be all I told Mr. Brokenshire you were if your first instinct wasn't to
+do right."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, right!" She sighed again, but impatiently. "You're always talking
+about that."</p>
+
+<p>"One has to, don't you think, when it's so important&mdash;and so easy to do
+wrong?"</p>
+
+<p>She grew mildly argumentative.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't see anything so terrible about wrong, when other people do it
+and are none the worse."</p>
+
+<p>"May not that be because you've never tried it on your own account? It
+depends a little on the grain of which one's made. The finer the grain,
+the more harm wrong can do to it&mdash;just as a fragile bit of Venetian
+glass is more easily broken than an earthenware jug, and an infinitely
+greater loss."</p>
+
+<p>But the simile was wasted. From long contemplation of her hands she
+looked up to say in a curiously coaxing tone:</p>
+
+<p>"You live at the Hotel Mary Chilton, don't you?"</p>
+
+<p>I caught her suggestion in a flash, and decided that I could let it go
+no further.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, but you couldn't come there&mdash;unless it was only to see me."</p>
+
+<p>"But what shall I do?"</p>
+
+<p>It was a kind of cry. She twisted her ringed fingers, while her eyes
+implored me to help her.</p>
+
+<p>"Do nothing," I said, gently, and yet with some severity. "If you do
+anything do just as I've said. That's all we've got to know for the
+present."</p>
+
+<p>"But I must see him. Now that I've got used to doing it&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"If you must see him, dear Mrs. Brokenshire, you will."</p>
+
+<p>"Shall I? Will you promise me?"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't have to promise you. It's the way life works. If we only trust
+to events&mdash;and to whatever it is that guides events&mdash;and&mdash;and do
+right&mdash;I must repeat it&mdash;then the thing that ought to be will shape its
+course&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, but if it doesn't?"</p>
+
+<p>"In that case we can know that it oughtn't to be."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't care whether it ought to be or not, so long as I can go on
+seeing him&mdash;somewhere."</p>
+
+<p>I had enough sympathy with her to say:</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, but don't plan for it. Let it take care of itself and happen in
+some natural way. Isn't it by mapping out things for ourselves that we
+often thwart the good that would otherwise have come to us? I remember
+reading somewhere of a lady who wrote of herself that she had been
+healed of planning, and spoke of it as a real cure. That struck me as so
+sensible. Life&mdash;not to use a greater word&mdash;knows much better what's good
+for us than we do ourselves."</p>
+
+<p>She allowed this theme to lapse, while she sat pensive.</p>
+
+<p>"What shall I say," she asked at last, "if he brings the subject up?"</p>
+
+<p>I saw another opportunity.</p>
+
+<p>"What can you say other than what I've said already? You came to me
+because you were sorry for me, and you wanted to help Hugh. He might
+regret that you should do both, but he couldn't blame you for either.
+They're only kindnesses&mdash;and we're all at liberty to be kind. Oh, don't
+you see? That's your&mdash;how shall I put it?&mdash;that's your line if Mr.
+Brokenshire ever speaks to you."</p>
+
+<p>"And suppose he tells me not to go to see you any more?"</p>
+
+<p>"Then you must stop. That will be the time. But not now when the mere
+stopping would be a kind of confession&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>And so, after many repetitions and some tears on both our parts, the
+lesson was urged home. She was less docile, however, when in the spirit
+of our new compact she came on the following Monday morning.</p>
+
+<p>"I must see him," was the burden of what she had to say. She spoke as if
+I was forbidding her and ought to lift my veto. I might even have
+inferred that in my position in Mr. Grainger's employ it was for me to
+arrange their meetings.</p>
+
+<p>"You will see him, dear Mrs. Brokenshire&mdash;if it's right," was the only
+answer I could find.</p>
+
+<p>"You don't seem to remember that I was to have married him."</p>
+
+<p>"I do, but we both have to remember that you didn't."</p>
+
+<p>"Neither did I marry Mr. Brokenshire. I was handed over to him. When
+Lady Mary Hamilton was handed over in that way to the Prince of Monaco
+the Pope annulled the marriage. We knew her afterward in Budapest,
+married to some one else. If there's such a thing as right, as you're so
+fond of saying, I ought to be considered free."</p>
+
+<p>I was holding both her hands as I said:</p>
+
+<p>"Don't try to make yourself free. Let life do it."</p>
+
+<p>"Life!" she cried, with a passionate vehemence I scarcely knew to be in
+her. "It's life that&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Treat life as a friend and not as an enemy. Trust it; wait for it.
+Don't hurry it, or force it, or be impatient with it. I can't believe
+that essentially it's hard or cruel or a curse. If it comes from God, it
+must be good and beautiful. In proportion as we cling to the good and
+beautiful we must surely get the thing we ought to have."</p>
+
+<p>Though I cannot say that she accepted this doctrine, it helped her over
+a day or two, leaving me free for the time being to give my attention to
+my own affairs. Having no natural stamina, the poor, lovely little
+creature lived on such mental and spiritual pick-me-ups as I was able to
+administer. Whenever she was specially in despair, which was every
+forty-eight or sixty hours, she came back to me, and I did what I could
+to brace her for the next short step of her way. I find it hard to
+explain the intensity of her appeal to me. I suppose I must have
+submitted to that spell of the perfect face which had bewitched Stacy
+Grainger and Howard Brokenshire. I submitted also to her child-like
+helplessness. God knows I am not a heroine. Any little fright or
+difficulty upsets me. As compared with her, however, I was a giant
+refreshed with wine. When her lip quivered, or when the sudden mist
+drifted across her eyes, obscuring their forget-me-not blue with violet,
+my yearning was exactly that which makes any woman long to take any
+suffering baby in her arms. For this reason she didn't tax my patience,
+nor had I that impulse to scold or shake her to which another woman of
+such obvious limitations would have driven me. Touched as I was by the
+aching heart, I was captivated by the perfect face; and I couldn't help
+it.</p>
+
+<p>Thus through the rest of February and into March my chief occupation was
+in keeping Howard Brokenshire's wife as true to him as the conditions
+rendered possible. In the intervals I comforted Hugh, and beat off Larry
+Strangways, and sat rigidly still while Stacy Grainger prowled round me
+with fierce, suspicious, melancholy eyes, like those of a cowed tiger.
+Afraid of him as I was, it filled me with grim inward amusement to
+discover that he was equally afraid of me. He came into the library
+from time to time, when he happened to be at his house, and like Mrs.
+Brokenshire gave me the impression that the frustration of their love
+was my fault. As I sat primly and severely at my desk, and he stalked
+round and round the room, stabbing the old gentleman who classified
+prints and the lady who collated the early editions of Shakespeare with
+contemptuous glances, I knew that in his sight I represented&mdash;poor
+me!&mdash;that virtuous respectability the sinner always holds in scorn. He
+could not be ignorant of the fact that if it hadn't been for me Mrs.
+Brokenshire would have been meeting him elsewhere, and so he held me as
+an enemy. Had he not known that I was something besides an enemy he
+would doubtless have sent me about my business.</p>
+
+<p>In one of the intervals of this portion of the drama I received a visit
+that took me by surprise. Early in the afternoon of a day in March, Mrs.
+Billing trotted into the library, followed by Lady Cecilia Boscobel. It
+was the sort of occasion on which I should have been nervous enough in
+any case, but it became terrifying when Mrs. Billing marched up to my
+desk and pointed at me with her lorgnette, saying over her shoulder,
+"There she is," as though I was a portrait.</p>
+
+<p>I struggled to my feet with what was meant to be a smile.</p>
+
+<p>"Lady Cecilia Boscobel," I stammered, "has seen me already."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, she can look at you again, can't she?"</p>
+
+<p>The English girl came to my rescue by smiling back, and murmuring a
+faint "How do you do?" She eased the situation further by saying, with a
+crisp, rapid articulation, in which every syllable was charmingly
+distinct: "Mrs. Billing thought that as we were out sight-seeing we
+might as well look at this. It's shown every day, isn't it?"</p>
+
+<p>She went on to observe that when places were shown only on certain days
+it was so tiresome. One of her father's places, Dillingham Hall, in
+Nottinghamshire, an old Tudor house, perfectly awful to live in, was
+open to the public only on the second and fourth Wednesdays, and even
+the family couldn't remember when those days came round. It was so
+awkward to be doing your hair, or worse, and have tourists stumbling in
+on you.</p>
+
+<p>I counted it to the credit of her tact and kindliness that she chatted
+in this way long enough for me to get my breath, while Mrs. Billing
+turned her lorgnette on the room with which she must have once been
+familiar. If there was to be anything like rivalry between Lady Cissie
+and me I gathered that she wouldn't stoop to petty feminine advantages.
+Dressed in dark green, with a small hat of the same color worn
+dashingly, she had that air of being the absolutely finished thing which
+the tones of her voice announced to you. My heart grew faint at the
+thought that Hugh would have to choose between this girl, so certain of
+herself, and me.</p>
+
+<p>As we were all standing, I invited my callers to sit down. To this Lady
+Cecilia acceded, though old Mrs. Billing strolled off to renew her
+acquaintance with the room. I may say here that I call her old because
+to be old was a kind of pose with her. She looked old and "dressed old"
+so as to enjoy the dictatorial privileges that go with being old, when
+as a matter of fact she was only sixty, which nowadays is young.</p>
+
+<p>"You're English, aren't you?" Lady Cecilia began, as soon as we were
+alone. "I can tell by the way you speak."</p>
+
+<p>I said I was a Canadian, that I was in New York more or less by
+accident, and might go back to my own country again.</p>
+
+<p>"How interesting! It belongs to us, Canadia, doesn't it?"</p>
+
+<p>With a slightly ironic emphasis on the proper noun I replied that
+Canadia naturally belonged to the Canadians, but that the King of Great
+Britain and Ireland was our king, and that we were very loyal to all
+that we represented.</p>
+
+<p>"Fancy! And isn't it near here?"</p>
+
+<p>All of Canada, I stated, was north of some of the United States, and
+some of it was south of others of the United States, but none of the
+more settled parts was difficult of access from New York.</p>
+
+<p>"How very odd!" was her comment on these geographical indications. "I
+think I remember that a cousin of ours was governor out there&mdash;or
+something&mdash;though perhaps it was in India."</p>
+
+<p>I named the series of British noblemen who had ruled over us since the
+confederation of the provinces in 1867, but as Lady Cecilia's kinsman
+was not among them we concluded that he must have been Viceroy of India
+or Governor-General of Australia.</p>
+
+<p>The theme served to introduce us to each other, and lasted while Mrs.
+Billing's tour of inspection kept her within earshot.</p>
+
+<p>I am bound to admit that I admired Lady Cecilia with an envy that might
+be qualified as green. She was not clever and she was not well educated,
+but her high breeding was so spontaneous. She so obviously belonged to
+spheres where no other rule obtained. Her manner was the union of polish
+and simplicity; each word she pronounced was a pleasure to the ear. In
+my own case life had been a struggle with that American-Canadian
+crudity which stamps our New World carriage and speech with commonness;
+but you could no more imagine this girl lapsing from the even tenor of
+the exquisite than you could fancy the hermit thrush failing in its
+song.</p>
+
+<p>When Mrs. Billing was quite at the other end of the room my companion's
+manner underwent a change. During a second or two of silence her eyes
+fell, while the shifting of color over the milk-whiteness of her skin
+was like the play of Canadian northern lights. I was prepared for the
+fact that beneath her poise she might be shy, and that, being shy, she
+would be abrupt.</p>
+
+<p>"You're engaged to Hugh Brokenshire, aren't you?"</p>
+
+<p>The words were whipped out fast and jerkily, partly to profit by the
+minute during which Mrs. Billing was at a distance, and partly because
+it was a matter of now-or-never with their utterance.</p>
+
+<p>I made the necessary explanations, for what seemed to me must be the
+hundredth time. I was not precisely engaged to him, but I had said I
+would marry him if either of two conditions could be carried out. I went
+on to state what those conditions were, finishing with the information
+that of the two I had practically abandoned one.</p>
+
+<p>She nodded her comprehension.</p>
+
+<p>"You see that&mdash;that they won't come round."</p>
+
+<p>"No," I replied, with some incisiveness; "they will come
+round&mdash;especially Mr. Brokenshire. It's the other condition I no longer
+expect to see fulfilled."</p>
+
+<p>If the hermit thrush could fail in its song it did it then. Lady Cecilia
+stared at me with a blankness that became awe.</p>
+
+<p>"That's the most extraordinary thing I ever heard. Ethel Rossiter must
+be wrong."</p>
+
+<p>I had a sudden suspicion.</p>
+
+<p>"Wrong about what?"</p>
+
+<p>The question put Lady Cecilia on her guard.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, nothing I need explain." But her face lighted with quick
+enthusiasm. "I call it magnificent."</p>
+
+<p>"Call what 'magnificent'?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, that you should have that conviction. When one sees any one so
+sporting&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>I began to get her idea.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I'm not sporting. I'm a perfect coward. But a sheep will make a
+stand when it's put to it."</p>
+
+<p>With her hands in her sable muff, her shapely figure was inclined
+slightly toward me.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm not sure that a sheep that makes a stand isn't braver than a lion.
+The man my sister Janet is engaged to&mdash;he's in the Inverness
+Rangers&mdash;often says that no one could be funkier than he on going into
+action; but that," she continued, her face aglow, "didn't prevent his
+being ever so many times mentioned in despatches and getting his D. S.
+O."</p>
+
+<p>"Please don't put me into that class&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"No; I won't. After all a soldier couldn't really funk things, because
+he's got everything to back him up. But you haven't. And when I think of
+you sitting here all by yourself, and expecting that great big rich Mr.
+Brokenshire and Ethel, and all of them, to come to your terms&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>To get away from a view of my situation that both consoled and
+embarrassed me, I said:</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you, Lady Cecilia, very, very much; but it isn't what you meant
+to say when you began, is it?"</p>
+
+<p>With some confusion she admitted that it wasn't.</p>
+
+<p>"Only," she went on, "that isn't worth while now."</p>
+
+<p>A hint in her tone impelled me to insist.</p>
+
+<p>"It may be. You don't know. Please tell me what it was."</p>
+
+<p>"But what's the use? It was only something Ethel Rossiter said&mdash;and she
+was wrong."</p>
+
+<p>"What makes you so sure she was wrong?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because I am. I can see." She added, reluctantly, "Ethel thought there
+was some one&mdash;some one besides Hugh&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"And what if there was?"</p>
+
+<p>Though startled by the challenge, she stood her ground.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't believe in people making each other any more unhappy than they
+can help, do you?" She had a habit of screwing up her small gray-green
+eyes into two glimmering little slits of light, with an effect of
+shyness showing through amusement and <i>diablerie</i>. "We're both girls,
+aren't we? I'm twenty, and you can't be much older. And so I
+thought&mdash;that is, I thought at first&mdash;that if you had any one else in
+mind, there'd be no use in our making each other miserable&mdash;but I see
+you haven't; and so&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"And so," I laughed, nervously, "the race must be to the swift and the
+battle to the strong. Is that it?"</p>
+
+<p>"N-no; not exactly. What I was going to say is that since&mdash;since there's
+nobody but Hugh&mdash;you won't be offended with me, will you?&mdash;I won't step
+in&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>It was my turn to be enthusiastic.</p>
+
+<p>"But that's what I call sporting!"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh no, it isn't. I haven't seen Hugh for two or three years, and
+whatever little thing there was&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>I strained forward across my desk. I know my eyes must have been
+enormous.</p>
+
+<p>"But was there&mdash;was there ever&mdash;anything?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh no; not at all. He&mdash;he never noticed me. I was only in the
+school-room, and he was a grown-up young man. If his father and mine
+hadn't been great friends&mdash;and got plans into their heads&mdash;Laura and
+Janet used to poke fun at me about it. And then we rode together and
+played tennis and golf, and so&mdash;but it was all&mdash;just nothing. You know
+how silly a girl of seventeen can be. It was nonsense. I only want you
+to know, in case he ever says anything about it&mdash;but then he never
+will&mdash;men see so little&mdash;I only want you to know that that's the way I
+feel about it&mdash;and that I didn't come over here to&mdash; I don't say that if
+in your case there had been any one else&mdash;but I see there isn't&mdash;Ethel
+Rossiter is wrong&mdash;and so if I can do anything for Hugh and yourself
+with the Brokenshires. I&mdash;I want you to make use of me."</p>
+
+<p>With a dignity oddly in contrast to this stammering confession, which
+was what it was, she rose to her feet as Mrs. Billing came back to us.</p>
+
+<p>The hook-nosed face was somber. Curiosity as to other people's business
+had for once given place in the old lady's thoughts to meditations that
+turned inward. I suppose that in some perverse fashion of her own she
+loved her daughter, and suffered from her unhappiness. There was enough
+in this room to prove to her how cruelly mere self-seeking can overreach
+itself and ruin what it tries to build.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, what are you talking about?" she snapped, as she approached us.
+"Hugh Brokenshire, I'll bet a dime."</p>
+
+<p>"Fancy!" was the stroke with which the English girl, smiling dimly,
+endeavored to counter this attack.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Billing hardly paused as she made her way toward the door.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't let her have him," she threw at Lady Cecilia. "He's not good
+enough for her. She's my kind," she went on, poking at me with her
+lorgnette. "Needs a man with brains. Come along, Cissie. Don't mind what
+she says. You grab Hugh the first chance you get. She'll have bigger
+fish to fry. Do come along. We've had enough of this."</p>
+
+<p>Lady Cissie and I shook hands with the over-acted listlessness of two
+daughters of the Anglo-Saxon race trying to carry off an emotional
+crisis as if they didn't know what it meant. But after she had gone I
+thought of her&mdash;I thought of her with her Limoges-enamel coloring, her
+luscious English voice, her English air of race, her dignity, her style,
+her youth, her na&iuml;vet&eacute;, her combination of all the qualities that make
+human beings distinguished, because there is nothing else for them to
+be. I dragged myself to the Venetian mirror and looked into it. With my
+plain gray frock, my dark complexion, and my simply arranged hair. I was
+a poor little frump whom not even the one man in five hundred could find
+attractive. I wondered how Hugh could be such a fool. I asked myself if
+he could go on being such a fool much longer. And with the thought that
+he would&mdash;and again with the thought that he wouldn't&mdash;I surprised
+myself by bursting into tears.</p>
+
+
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+<h2>CHAPTER XVII</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="dropcap">I</span>n similar small happenings April passed and we had reached the middle
+of May. Easter and the opera were over; as the warm weather was coming
+on people were already leaving town for the country, the seaside or
+Europe. Personally, I had no plans beyond spending the month of August,
+which Mr. Grainger informed me I was to have "off," in making a visit to
+my old home in Halifax. Hugh had ceased to talk of immediate marriage,
+since he had all he could do to live on what he earned in selling bonds.</p>
+
+<p>He had taken that job when Mildred could lend him no more without
+dipping into funds that had been his father's. He was still resolute on
+that point. He was resolute, too, in seeing nothing in the charms of
+Cissie Boscobel. He hated red hair, he said, making no allowance for the
+umber-red of Australian gold, and where I saw the lights of Limoges
+enamel he found no more than the garish tints of a chromolithograph.
+When I hinted that he might be the hero of some young romance on
+Cissie's part, he was contented to say "R-rot!" with a contemptuous roll
+of the first consonant.</p>
+
+<p>Larry Strangways was industrious, happy, and prospering. He enjoyed the
+men with whom his work brought him into contact, and I gathered that his
+writing for daily, weekly, and monthly publications was bringing him
+into view as a young man of originality and power. From himself I
+learned that his small inherited capital was doubling and tripling and
+quadrupling itself through association with Stacy Grainger's
+enterprises. For Stacy Grainger himself he continued to feel an
+admiration not free from an uneasiness, with regard to which he made no
+direct admissions.</p>
+
+<p>Of Mrs. Brokenshire I was seeing less. Either she had grown used to
+doing without her lover or she was meeting him in some other way. She
+still came to see me as often as once a week, but she was not so
+emotional or excitable. She might have been more affectionate than
+before, and yet it was with a dignity that gradually put me at a
+distance.</p>
+
+<p>Cissie Boscobel I didn't meet during the whole of the six weeks except
+in the company of Mrs. Rossiter. That happened when once or twice I went
+to the house to see Gladys when she was suffering from colds, or when my
+former employer drove me round the Park. Just once I got the opportunity
+to hint that Lady Cissie hadn't taken Hugh from me as yet, to which Mrs.
+Rossiter replied that that was obviously because she didn't want him.</p>
+
+<p>We were all, therefore, at a standstill, or moving so slowly that I
+couldn't perceive that we were moving at all, when in the middle of a
+May forenoon I was summoned to the telephone. I was not surprised to
+find Mr. Strangways at the other end, since he used any and every excuse
+to call me up; but his words struck me as those of a man who had taken
+leave of his senses. He plunged into them without any of the usual
+morning greetings or preliminary remarks.</p>
+
+<p>"Are you game to go to Boston by the five-o'clock train to-day?"</p>
+
+<p>I naturally said, "What?" but I said it with some emphasis.</p>
+
+<p>He repeated the question a little more anxiously.</p>
+
+<p>"Could you be ready to go to Boston by the five-o'clock train this
+afternoon?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why should I be?"</p>
+
+<p>He seemed to hesitate before replying.</p>
+
+<p>"You'd know that," he said at last, "when you got on the train."</p>
+
+<p>"Is it a joke?" I inquired, with a light laugh.</p>
+
+<p>"No; it's not a joke. It's serious. I want you to take that train and
+go."</p>
+
+<p>"But what for?"</p>
+
+<p>"I've told you you'd know that when you got on the train&mdash;or before you
+had gone very far."</p>
+
+<p>"And do you think that's information enough?"</p>
+
+<p>"It will be information enough for you when I say that a great deal may
+depend on your doing as I ask."</p>
+
+<p>I raised a new objection.</p>
+
+<p>"How can I go when I've my work to attend to here?"</p>
+
+<p>"You must be ready to give that up. If any one makes any trouble, you
+must say you've resigned the position."</p>
+
+<p>As far as was possible over the wire I got the impression of earnestness
+on his part and perhaps excitement; but I was not yet satisfied.</p>
+
+<p>"What shall I do when I get to Boston? Where shall I go?"</p>
+
+<p>"You'll see. You'll know. You'll have to act for yourself. Trust your
+own judgment as I trust it."</p>
+
+<p>"But, Mr. Strangways, I don't understand a bit," I was beginning to
+protest, when he broke in on me.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, don't you see? It will all explain itself as you go on. I can't
+tell you about it in advance. I don't know. All I can say is that
+whatever happens you'll be needed, and if you're needed you'll be able
+to play the game."</p>
+
+<p>He went on with further directions. It would be possible to take my seat
+in the train at twenty minutes before the hour of departure. I was to be
+early on the spot so as to be among the first to be in my place. I was
+to take nothing but a suit-case; but I was to put into it enough to last
+me for a week, or even for a week or two. I was to be prepared for
+roughing it, if necessary, or for anything else that developed. He would
+send me my ticket within an hour and provide me with plenty of money.</p>
+
+<p>"But what is it?" I implored again. "It sounds like spying, or the
+secret service, or something melodramatic."</p>
+
+<p>"It's none of those things. Just be ready. Wait where you are till you
+get your ticket and the money."</p>
+
+<p>"Will you bring them yourself?"</p>
+
+<p>"No. I can't; I'm too busy. I'm calling from a pay-station. Don't ring
+me up for any more questions. Just do as I've asked you, and I know
+you'll not regret it&mdash;not as long as you live."</p>
+
+<p>He put up the receiver, leaving me bewildered. My ignorance was such
+that speculation was shut out. I kept saying to myself: "It must be
+this," or, "It must be that," but with no conviction in my guesses. One
+dreadful suspicion came to me, but I firmly put it away.</p>
+
+<p>A little after twelve a special messenger arrived, bringing my ticket
+and five hundred dollars in bank-notes. I knew then that I was in for a
+genuine adventure. At one I put on my hat and coat, locked the door
+behind me, and went off to my hotel. Mentally I was leaving a work to
+which, from certain points of view, I was sorry to say good-by, but I
+could afford no backward looks.</p>
+
+<p>At the hotel I packed my belongings and left them so that they could be
+sent after me in case I should not return. I might be back the next
+morning; but then I might never come back at all. I thought of those
+villagers who from idle curiosity followed the carriage of Louis XVI.
+and Marie Antoinette as it drove out of Varennes, some of them never to
+see their native town again till they had been dragged over half the
+battle-fields of Europe. Like them I had no prevision as to where I was
+going or what was to become of me. I knew only&mdash;gloatingly, and with a
+kind of glory in the fact&mdash;that I was going at the call of Larry
+Strangways, to do his bidding, because he believed in me. But that
+thought, too, I tried to put out of my mind. In as far as it was in my
+mind I did my best to express it in terms of prose, seeing myself not as
+the heroine of a mysterious romance&mdash;a view to which I was inclined&mdash;but
+as a practical business woman, competent, up-to-date, and unafraid. I
+was afraid, mortally afraid, and I was neither up-to-date nor competent;
+but the fiction sustained me while I packed my trunks and sent a
+telegram to Hugh.</p>
+
+<p>This last I did only when it was too late for him to answer or intercept
+me.</p>
+
+<p>"Called suddenly out of town," I wrote. "May lead to a new place. Will
+write or wire as soon as possible." Having sent this off at half past
+four, I took a taxicab for the station.</p>
+
+<p>My instructions were so far carried out successfully that, with a
+colored porter wearing a red cap to precede me, I was the first to pass
+the barrier leading to the train, and the first to take my seat in the
+long, narrow parlor-car. My chair was two from the end toward the
+entrance and exit. Once enthroned within its upholstered depths I
+watched for strange occurrences.</p>
+
+<p>But I watched in vain. For a time I saw nothing but the straight, empty
+cavern of the car. Then a colored porter, as like to my own as one pea
+to another, came puffing his way in, dragging valises and other
+impedimenta, and followed by an old gentleman and his wife. These the
+porter installed in chairs toward the middle of the car, and, touching
+his cap on receipt of his tip, made hastily for the door. Similar
+arrivals came soon after that, with much stowing of luggage into
+overhead racks, and kisses, and injunctions as to conduct, and
+farewells. Within my range of vision were two elderly ladies, a smartly
+dressed young man, a couple in the disillusioned, surly stage, a couple
+who had recently been married, a clergyman, a youth of the cheap
+sporting type. To one looking for the solution of a mystery the material
+was not promising.</p>
+
+<p>The three chairs immediately in front of mine remained unoccupied. I
+kept my eye on them, of course, and presently got some reward. Shortly
+before the train pulled out of the station a shadow passed me which I
+knew to be that of Larry Strangways. He went on to the fourth seat,
+counting mine as the first, and, having reached it, turned round and
+looked at me. He looked at me gravely, with no sign of recognition
+beyond a shake of the head. I understood then that I was not to
+recognize him, and that in the adventure, however it turned out, we were
+to be as strangers.</p>
+
+<p>One more thing I saw. He had never been so pale or grim or determined in
+all the time I had known him. I had hardly supposed that it was in him
+to be so determined, so grim, or so pale. I gathered that he was taking
+our mission more to heart than I had supposed, and that, prompt in
+action as I had been, I was considering it too flippantly. Inwardly I
+prayed for nerve to support him, and for that presence of mind which
+would tell me what to do when there was anything to be done.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps it increased my zeal that he was so handsome. Straight and slim
+and upright, his features were of that lean, blond, regular type I used
+to consider Anglo-Saxon, but which, now that I have seen it in so many
+Scandinavians, I have come to ascribe to the Norse strain in our blood.
+The eyes were direct; the chin was firm; the nose as straight as an
+ancient Greek's. The relatively small mouth was adorned by a relatively
+small mustache, twisted up at the ends, of the color of the coffee-bean,
+and, to my admiring feminine appreciation, blooming on his face like a
+flower.</p>
+
+<p>His neat spring suit was also of the color of the coffee-bean, and so
+was his soft felt hat. In his shirt there were lines of tan and violet,
+and tan and violet appeared in the tie beneath which a soft collar was
+pinned with a gold safety pin. The yellow gloves that men have affected
+of late years gave a pleasant finish to this costume, which was quite
+complete when he pulled from his bag an English traveling-cap of several
+shades of tan and put it on. He also took out a book, stretching himself
+in his chair in such a way that the English traveling-cap was all I
+could henceforth see of his personality.</p>
+
+<p>I give these details because they entered into the mingled unwillingness
+and zest with which I found myself dragged on an errand to which I had
+no clue. Still less had I a clue when the train began to move, and I had
+nothing but the view of the English traveling-cap to bear me company.
+But no, I had one other detail. Before sitting down Mr. Strangways had
+carefully separated his own hand-luggage from that of the person who
+would be behind him, and which included an ulster, a walking-stick, and
+a case of golf-clubs. I inferred, therefore, that the wayfarer who owned
+one of the two chairs between Mr. Strangways and myself must be a man.
+The chair directly in front of mine remained empty.</p>
+
+<p>As we passed into the tunnel my mind lashed wildly about in search of
+explanations, the only one I could find being that Larry Strangways was
+kidnapping me. On arriving in Boston I might find myself confronted by a
+marriage license and a clergyman. If so, I said to myself, with an
+extraordinary thrill, there would be nothing for it but submission to
+this <i>force majeure</i>, though I had to admit that the averted head, the
+English traveling-cap, and the intervening ulster, walking-stick, and
+golf-clubs worked against my theory. I was dreaming in this way when the
+train emerged from the tunnel and stopped so briefly at One Hundred and
+Twenty-fifth Street that, considering it afterward, I concluded that the
+pause had been arranged for. It was just long enough for an odd little
+bundle of womanhood to be pulled and shoved on the car and thrown into
+the seat immediately in front of mine. I choose my verbs with care,
+since they give the effect produced on me. The little woman, who was
+swathed in black veils and clad in a long black shapeless coat, seemed
+not to act of her own volition and to be more dead than alive. The
+porter who had brought her in flung down her two or three bags and
+waited, significantly, though the train was already creeping its way
+onward. She was plainly unused to fending for herself, and only when, as
+a reminder, the man had touched his hat a second time did it occur to
+her what she had to do. Hastily unfastening a small bag, she pulled out
+a handful of money and thrust it at him. The man grinned and was gone,
+after which she sagged back helplessly into her seat, the satchel open
+in her lap.</p>
+
+<p>That dreadful suspicion which had smitten me earlier in the day came
+back again, but the new-comer was so stiflingly wrapped up that even I
+could not be sure. She reminded me of nothing so much as of the veiled
+Begum of Bhopal as she sat in the durbar with the other Indian
+potentates, her head done up in a bag, as seen in the pictures in the
+illustrated London papers. For a lady who wished to pass unperceived it
+was perfect&mdash;for every eye in the car was turned on her. I myself
+studied her, of course, searching for something to confirm my fears, but
+finding nothing I could take as convincing. For the matter of that, as
+she sat huddled in the enormous chair I could see little beyond a
+swathing of veils round a close-fitting hat and the folds of the long
+black coat. The easiest inference was that she might be some poor old
+thing whom her relatives were anxious to be rid of, which was, I think,
+the conclusion most of our neighbors drew. Speaking of neighbors, I had
+noticed that in spite of the disturbance caused by this curious
+entrance, Larry Strangways had not turned his head.</p>
+
+<p>I could only sit, therefore, and wait for enlightenment, or for an
+opportunity. Both came when, some half-hour later, the ticket-collectors
+passed slowly down the aisle. Other passengers got ready for them in
+advance, but the little begum in front of me did nothing. When at last
+the collectors were before her she came to herself with a start.</p>
+
+<p>She came to herself with a start, seizing her satchel awkwardly and
+spilling its contents on the floor. The tickets came out, and some
+money. The collectors picked up the tickets and began to pencil and tear
+them; the youth of the cheap sporting type and I went after the coins.
+Since I was a young woman and the lady with her head in a bag might be
+taken for an old one, I had no difficulty in securing his harvest, which
+he handed over to me with an ingratiating leer. Returning the leer as
+much in his own style as I could render it, I offered the handful of
+silver and copper to its owner. To do this I stood as directly as might
+be in front of her, and when, inadvertently, she raised her head I tried
+to look her in the eyes.</p>
+
+<p>I couldn't see them. The shimmer I caught behind the two or three veils
+might have been any one's eyes. But in the motion of the hand that took
+the money, and in the silvery tinkle of the voice that made itself as
+low as possible in murmuring the words, "Thank you!" I couldn't be
+mistaken. It was enough. If I hadn't seen her she at least had seen me,
+and so I went back to my seat.</p>
+
+<p>I had got the first part of my revelation. With the aid of the ulster,
+the walking-stick, and the golf-clubs I could guess at the rest. I knew
+now why Larry Strangways wanted me there, but I didn't know what I was
+to do. By myself I could do nothing. Unless the little begum took the
+initiative I shouldn't know where to begin. I could hardly tear off a
+disguise she had chosen to assume, nor could I take it for granted that
+she was not on legitimate business.</p>
+
+<p>But she had seen me, and there was something in that. If the owner of
+the vacant chair turned up he, too, would see me, and he wouldn't wear a
+veil. We should look each other in the eyes, and he would know that I
+knew what he was about to do. The situation would not be pleasant for
+me; but it would conceivably be much less pleasant for anybody else.</p>
+
+<p>I waited, therefore, watching the beautiful green country go tearing by.
+The smiling freshness of spring was over the hillsides on the left,
+while the setting sun gilded the tiny headlands on the right and turned
+the rapid succession of creeks and inlets and marshy pools into sheets
+of orange and red. Fire illumined the windows of many a passing house,
+to be extinguished instantaneously, and touched with occasional flames
+the cold spring-tide blue of the sea. Clumps of forsythia were in
+blossom, and here and there an apple-tree held out toward the sun a
+branch of early flowers.</p>
+
+<p>When the train stopped at New Haven I was afraid that the owner of the
+ulster and the golf-clubs would appear, and that my work, whatever it
+was to be, would be rendered the more difficult. But no new arrival
+entered. On the other hand, the passengers began to thin out as the time
+came for going to the dining-car. In the matter of food I determined to
+stay at my post if I died of starvation, especially on seeing that the
+English traveling-cap was equally courageous.</p>
+
+<p>Twilight gradually filtered into the world outside; the marshes, inlets,
+and creeks grew dim. Dim was the long, burnished line of the Sound,
+above which I could soon make out a sprinkling of wan yellow stars. Wan
+yellow lights appeared in windows where no curtains were drawn, and what
+a few minutes earlier had been twilight became quickly the night. It was
+the wistful time, the homesick, heart-searching time. If the little lady
+in front of me were to have qualms as to what she was doing they would
+come then.</p>
+
+<p>And indeed as I watched her it seemed to me that she inserted her
+handkerchief under her series of coverings as if to wipe away a tear.
+Presently she lifted two unsteady hands and began to untie her outer
+veil. When it came to finding the pins by which it was adjusted she
+fumbled so helplessly that I took it on myself to lean forward with the
+words, "Won't you allow me?" I could do this without moving round to
+where I should have been obliged to look her in the face; and it was so
+when I helped her take off the veil underneath.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm smothering," she said, very much as it might have been said by a
+little child in distress.</p>
+
+<p>She wore still another veil, but only that which was ordinarily attached
+to her hat. The car being not very brightly lighted, and most of our
+fellow-travelers having gone to dinner, she probably thought she had
+little to fear. As she gave no sign of recognition on my rendering my
+small services I subsided again into my chair.</p>
+
+<p>But I knew she was as conscious of my presence as I was of hers. It was
+not wholly surprising, then, that some twenty minutes later she should
+swing round in the revolving-chair and drop all disguises. She did it
+with the words, tearfully yet angrily spoken:</p>
+
+<p>"What are you doing here?"</p>
+
+<p>"I'm going to Boston, Mrs. Brokenshire," I replied, meekly. "Are you
+doing the same?"</p>
+
+<p>"You know what I'm doing, and you've come to spy on me."</p>
+
+<p>There is something about the wrath of the sweet, mild, gentle creature,
+not easily provoked, which is far more terrible than the rage of an
+irascible old man accustomed to furies. I quailed before it now, but not
+so much that I couldn't outwardly keep my composure.</p>
+
+<p>"If I know what you're doing, Mrs. Brokenshire," I said, gently, "it
+isn't from any information received beforehand. I didn't know you were
+to be on this train till you got in; and I haven't been sure it was you
+till this minute."</p>
+
+<p>"I've a right to do as I please," she declared, hoarsely, "without
+having people to dog me."</p>
+
+<p>"Do I strike you as the sort of person who'd do that? You've had some
+opportunity of knowing me; and have I ever done anything for which you
+didn't first give me leave? If I'm here this evening and you're here,
+too, it's pure accident&mdash;as far as I'm concerned." I added, with some
+deepening of the tone, and speaking slowly so that she should get the
+meaning of the words: "I'll only venture to surmise that accidents of
+that kind don't happen for nothing."</p>
+
+<p>I could just make out her swimming eyes as they stared at me through the
+remaining veil, which was as black and thick as a widow's.</p>
+
+<p>"What do you mean?"</p>
+
+<p>"Wouldn't that depend on what you mean?"</p>
+
+<p>"If you think you're going to stop me&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Dear Mrs. Brokenshire, I don't think anything at all. How can I? We're
+both going to Boston. By a singular set of circumstances we're seated
+side by side on the same train. What can I see more in the situation
+than that?"</p>
+
+<p>"You do see more."</p>
+
+<p>"But I'm trying not to. If you insist on betraying more, when perhaps
+I'd rather you wouldn't, well, that won't be my fault, will it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because I've given you my confidence once or twice isn't a reason why
+you should take liberties all the rest of your life."</p>
+
+<p>To this, for a minute, I made no reply.</p>
+
+<p>"That hurts me," I said at last, "but I believe that when you've
+considered it you'll see that you've been unjust to me."</p>
+
+<p>"You've suspected me ever since I knew you."</p>
+
+<p>"I've only suspected you of a sweetness and kindness and goodness which
+I don't think you've discovered in yourself. I've never said anything of
+you, and never thought anything, but what I told Mr. Brokenshire two
+months ago, that you seem to me the loveliest thing God ever made. That
+you shouldn't live up to the beauty of your character strikes me as
+impossible. I'll admit that I think that; and if you call it
+suspicion&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Her anger began to pass into a kind of childish rebellion.</p>
+
+<p>"You've always talked to me about impossible things&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I wasn't aware of it. One has to have standards of life, and do one's
+best to live up to them."</p>
+
+<p>"Why should I do my best to live up to them when other people&mdash; Look at
+Madeline Pyne, and a lot of women I know!"</p>
+
+<p>"Do you think we can ever judge by other people, or take their actions
+as an example for our own? No one person can be more bound to do right
+than another; and yet when it comes to doing wrong it might easily be
+more serious for you than for Mrs. Pyne or for me."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't see why it should be."</p>
+
+<p>"Because you have a national position, one might even say an
+international position, and Mrs. Pyne hasn't, and neither have I. If we
+do wrong, only our own little circles have to know about it, and the
+harm we can do is limited; but if you do wrong it hurts the whole
+country."</p>
+
+<p>"I must say I don't see that."</p>
+
+<p>"You're the wife of a man who might be called a national institution&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"There are just as important men in the country as he."</p>
+
+<p>"Not many&mdash;let us say, at a venture, a hundred. Think of what it means
+to be one of the hundred most conspicuous women among a population of a
+hundred millions. The responsibility must be tremendous."</p>
+
+<p>"I've never thought of myself as having any particular
+responsibility&mdash;not any more than anybody else."</p>
+
+<p>"But, of course, you have. Whatever you do gets an added significance
+from the fact that you're Mrs. Howard Brokenshire. When, for example,
+you came to me that day among the rocks at Newport, your kindness was
+the more wonderful for the simple reason that you were who you were. We
+can't get away from those considerations. When you do right, right seems
+somehow to be made more beautiful; and when you do wrong&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't think it's fair to put me in a position like that."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't put you in that position. Life does it. You were born to be
+high up. When you fall, therefore&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Don't talk about falling."</p>
+
+<p>"But it would be a fall, wouldn't it? Don't you remember, some ten or
+twelve years ago, how a Saxon crown princess left her home and her
+husband? Well, all I mean is that because of her position her story rang
+through the world. However one might pity unhappiness, or sympathize
+with a miserable love, there was something in it that degraded her
+country and her womanhood. I suppose the poor thing's inability to live
+up to a position of honor was a blow at human nature. Don't you think
+that that was what we felt? And in your case&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"You mustn't compare me with her."</p>
+
+<p>"No; I don't&mdash;exactly. All I mean is that if&mdash;if you do what&mdash;what I
+think you've started out to do&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>She raised her head defiantly.</p>
+
+<p>"And I'm going to."</p>
+
+<p>"Then by the day after to-morrow there will not be a newspaper in the
+country that won't be detailing the scandal. It will be the talk of
+every club and every fireside between the Atlantic and the Pacific, and
+Mexico and Montreal. It will be in the papers of London and Paris and
+Rome and Berlin, and there'll be a week in which you'll be the most
+discussed person in the world."</p>
+
+<p>"I've been that already&mdash;almost&mdash;when Mr. Brokenshire made his attack in
+the Stock Exchange on&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"But this would be different. In this case you'd be pointed at&mdash;it's
+what it would amount to&mdash;as a woman who had gone over to all those evil
+forces in civilization that try to break down what the good forces are
+building up. You'd do like that unhappy crown princess, you'd strike a
+blow at your country and at all womanhood. There are thousands of poor
+tempted wives all over Europe and America who'll say: 'Well, if she can
+do such things&mdash;'"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, stop!"</p>
+
+<p>I stopped. It seemed to me that for the time being I had given her
+enough to think about. We sat silent, therefore, looking out at the
+rushing dark. People who drifted back from the dining-car glanced at us,
+but soon were dozing or absorbed in books.</p>
+
+<p>We were nearing New London when she pointed to one of her bags and asked
+me if I would mind opening it. I welcomed the request as indicating a
+return of friendliness. Having extracted a parcel of sandwiches, she
+unfolded the napkin in which they were wrapped and held them out to me.
+I took a p&acirc;t&eacute; de foie-gras and followed her example in nibbling it. On
+my own responsibility I summoned the porter and asked him to bring a
+bottle of spring-water and two glasses.</p>
+
+<p>"I guess the old lady's feelin' some better," he confided, when he had
+carried out the order.</p>
+
+<p>We stopped at New London, and went on again. Having eaten three or four
+sandwiches, I declined any more, folding the remainder in the napkin and
+stowing them away. The simple meal we had shared together restored
+something of our old-time confidence.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm going to do it," she sighed, as I put the bag back in its place.
+"He's&mdash;he's somewhere on the train&mdash;in the smoking-car, I suppose.
+He's&mdash;he's not to come for me till&mdash;till we're getting near the Back Bay
+Station in Boston."</p>
+
+<p>I brought out my question simply, though I had been pondering it for
+some time. "Who'll tell Mr. Brokenshire?"</p>
+
+<p>She moved uncomfortably.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know. I haven't made any arrangements. He's in Newport for one
+or two nights, seeing to some small changes in the house. I&mdash;I had to
+take the opportunity while he was away." As if with a sudden inspiration
+she glanced round from staring out into the dark. "Would you do it?"</p>
+
+<p>I shook my head.</p>
+
+<p>"I couldn't. I've never seen a man struck dead, and&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>She swung her chair so as to face me more directly.</p>
+
+<p>"Why," she asked, trembling&mdash;"why do you say that?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because, if I told him, it's what I should have to look on at."</p>
+
+<p>She began wringing her hands.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh no, you wouldn't."</p>
+
+<p>"But I should. It would be his death-sentence at the least. It's true he
+has probably received that already&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, what are you saying? What are you talking about?"</p>
+
+<p>"Only of what every one can see. He's a stricken man&mdash;you've told me so
+yourself."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, but I said it only about Hugh. Lots of men have to go through
+troubles on account of their children."</p>
+
+<p>"But when they do they can generally get comfort from their wives."</p>
+
+<p>She seemed to stiffen.</p>
+
+<p>"It's not my fault if he can't."</p>
+
+<p>"No, of course not. But the fact remains that he doesn't&mdash;and perhaps
+it's the greatest fact of all. He adores you. His children may give him
+a great deal of anxiety but that's the sort of thing any father looks
+for and can endure. Only you're not his child; you're his wife.
+Moreover, you're the wife whom he worships with a slavish idolatry.
+Everything that nature and time and the world and wealth have made of
+him he gathers together and lays it down at your feet, contented if
+you'll only give him back a smile. You may think it pitiful&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>She shuddered.</p>
+
+<p>"I think it terrible&mdash;for me."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I may think so, too, but it's his life we're talking of. His
+tenure of that"&mdash;I looked at her steadily&mdash;"isn't very certain as it is,
+do you think? You know the condition of his heart&mdash;you've told me
+yourself&mdash;and as for his nervous system, we've only to look at his face
+and his poor eye."</p>
+
+<p>"I didn't do that. It's his whole life&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"But his whole life culminates in you. It works up to you, and you
+represent everything he values. When he learns that you've despised his
+love and dishonored his name&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Her foot tapped the floor impatiently.</p>
+
+<p>"You mustn't say things like that to me."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm only saying them, dear Mrs. Brokenshire, so that you'll know how
+they sound. It's what every one else will be saying in a day or two. You
+can't be what&mdash;what you'll be to-morrow, and still keep any one's
+respect. And so," I hurried on, as she was about to protest, "when he
+hears what you've done, you won't merely have broken his heart, you'll
+have killed him just as much as if you'd pulled out a revolver and shot
+him."</p>
+
+<p>She swung back to the window again. Her foot continued to tap the floor;
+her fingers twisted and untwisted like writhing living things. I could
+see her bosom rise and fall rapidly; her breath came in short, hard
+gasps. When I wasn't expecting it she rounded on me again, with flames
+in her eyes like those in a small tigress's.</p>
+
+<p>"You're saying all that to frighten me; but&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I'm saying it because it's true. If it frightens you&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"But it doesn't."</p>
+
+<p>"Then I've done neither good nor harm."</p>
+
+<p>"I've a right to be happy."</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly, if you can be happy this way."</p>
+
+<p>"And I can."</p>
+
+<p>"Then there's no more to be said. We can only agree with you. If you can
+be happy when you've Mr. Brokenshire on your mind, as you must have
+whether he's alive or dead&mdash;and if you can be happy when you've
+desecrated all the things your people and your country look to a woman
+in your position to uphold&mdash;then I don't think any one will say you
+nay."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, why shouldn't I be happy?" she demanded, as if I was withholding
+from her something that was her right. "Other women&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Mrs. Brokenshire, other women besides you have tried the
+experiment of Anna Kar&eacute;nina&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"What's that?"</p>
+
+<p>I gave her the gist of Tolstoi's romance&mdash;the woman who is married to an
+old man and runs away with a young one, living to see him weary of the
+position in which she places him, and dying by her own act.</p>
+
+<p>As she listened attentively, I went on before she could object to my
+parable.</p>
+
+<p>"It all amounts to the same thing. There's no happiness except in right;
+and no right that doesn't sooner or later&mdash;sooner rather than later&mdash;end
+in happiness. You've told me more than once you didn't believe that; and
+if you don't I can't help it."</p>
+
+<p>I fell back in my seat, because for the moment I was exhausted. It was
+not merely the actual situation that took the strength out of me, but
+what I dreaded when the man came for his prize from the smoking-car. I
+might count on Larry Strangways to aid me then, but as yet he had not
+recognized my struggle by so much as glancing round.</p>
+
+<p>Nor had I known till this minute how much I cared for the little
+creature before me, or how deeply I pitied the man she was deserting. I
+could see her as happier conditions would have made her, and him as he
+might have become if his nature had not been warped by pride. Any
+impulse to strike back at him had long ago died within me. It might as
+well have died, since I never had the nerve to act on it, even when I
+had the chance.</p>
+
+<p>She turned on me again, with unexpected fierceness.</p>
+
+<p>"It doesn't matter whether I believe all those things or not&mdash;now. It's
+too late. I've left home. I've&mdash;I've gone away with him."</p>
+
+<p>Though I felt like a spent prize-fighter forced back into the ring, I
+raised myself in my chair. I even smiled, dimly, in an effort to be
+encouraging.</p>
+
+<p>"You've left home and you've gone away; but you won't have gone away
+with him till&mdash;till you've actually joined him."</p>
+
+<p>"I've actually joined him already. His things are there beside that
+chair." She nodded backward. "By the time we've passed Providence he'll
+be&mdash;he'll be getting ready to come for me."</p>
+
+<p>I said, more significantly than I really understood: "But we haven't
+passed Providence as yet."</p>
+
+<p>To this she seemingly paid no attention, nor did I give it much myself.</p>
+
+<p>"When he comes," she exclaimed, lyrically, "it will be like a
+marriage&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>I ventured much as I interrupted.</p>
+
+<p>"No, it will never be like a marriage. There'll be too much that's
+unholy in it all for anything like a true marriage ever to become
+possible, not even if death or divorce&mdash;and it will probably be the one
+or the other&mdash;were to set you free."</p>
+
+<p>That she found these words arresting I could tell by the stunned way in
+which she stared.</p>
+
+<p>"Death or divorce!" she echoed, after long waiting. "He&mdash;he may divorce
+me quietly&mdash;I hope he will&mdash;but&mdash;but he won't&mdash;he won't die."</p>
+
+<p>"He'll die if you kill him," I declared, grimly. I continued to be grim.
+"He may die before long, whether you kill him or not&mdash;the chances are
+that he will. But living or dead, as I've said already, he'll stand
+between you and anything you look for as happiness&mdash;after to-night."</p>
+
+<p>She threw herself back, into the depths of her chair and moaned. Luckily
+there was no one near enough to observe the act. As we talked in low
+tones we could not be heard above the rattle of the train, and I think I
+passed as a companion or trained nurse in attendance on a nervous
+invalid.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, what's the use?" she exclaimed at last, in a fit of desperation.
+"I've done it. It's too late. Every one will know I've gone away&mdash;even
+if I get out at Providence."</p>
+
+<p>I am sorry to have to admit that the suggestion of getting out at
+Providence startled me. I had been so stupid as not to think of it, even
+when I had made the remark that we had not as yet passed that town. All
+I had foreseen was the struggle at the end of the journey, when Larry
+Strangways and I should have to fight for this woman with the powers of
+darkness, as in medieval legends angels and devils fought over a
+contested soul.</p>
+
+<p>I took up the idea with an enthusiasm I tried to conceal beneath a smile
+of engaging sweetness.</p>
+
+<p>"They may know that you've gone away; but they can also know that you've
+gone away with me."</p>
+
+<p>"With you? You're going to Boston."</p>
+
+<p>"I could wait till to-morrow. If you wanted to get off at Providence I
+could do it, too."</p>
+
+<p>"But I don't want to. I couldn't let him expect to find me here&mdash;and
+then discover that I wasn't."</p>
+
+<p>"He would be disappointed at that, of course," I reasoned, "but he
+wouldn't take it as the end of all things. If you got off at Providence
+there would be nothing irrevocable in that step, whereas there would be
+in your going on. You could go away with him later, if you found you
+had to do it; but if you continue to-night you can never come back
+again. Don't you see? Isn't it worth turning over in your mind a second
+time&mdash;especially as I'm here to help you? If you're meant to be a
+Madeline Pyne or an Anna Kar&eacute;nina, you'll get another opportunity."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh no, I sha'n't," she sobbed. "If I don't go on to-night, he'll never
+ask me again."</p>
+
+<p>"He may never ask you again in this way; but isn't it possible that
+there may eventually be other ways? Don't make me put that into plainer
+words. Just wait. Let life take charge of it." I seized both her hands.
+"Darling Mrs. Brokenshire, you don't know yourself. You're too fine to
+be ruined; you're too exquisite to be just thrown away. Even the hungry,
+passionate love of the man in the smoking-car must see that and know it.
+If he comes back here and finds you gone&mdash;or imagines that you never
+came at all&mdash;he'll only honor and love you the more, and go on wanting
+you still. Come with me. Let us go. We can't be far from Providence now.
+I can take care of you. I know just what we ought to do. I didn't come
+here to sit beside you of my own free will; but since I am here doesn't
+it seem to you as if&mdash;as if I had been sent?"</p>
+
+<p>As she was sobbing too unrestrainedly to say anything in words, I took
+the law into my own hands. The porter had already begun dusting the dirt
+from the passengers who were to descend at Providence on to those who
+were going to Boston. Making my way up to him, I had the inspiration to
+say:</p>
+
+<p>"The old lady I'm with isn't quite so well, and we're going to stop here
+for the night."</p>
+
+<p>He grinned, with a fine show of big white teeth.</p>
+
+<p>"All right, lady; I'll take care of you. Cranky old bunch, ain't she?
+Handle a good many like that between Boston and Ne' Yawk."</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Brokenshire made no resistance when I fastened the lighter of her
+two veils about her head, folding the other and putting it away. Neither
+did she resist when I drew her cloak about her and put on my own coat.
+But as the train drew into Providence station and she struggled to her
+feet in response to my touch on her arm, I was obliged to pull and drag
+and push her, till she was finally lifted to the platform.</p>
+
+<p>Before leaving the car, however, I took time to glance at the English
+traveling-cap. I noted then what I had noted throughout the journey. Not
+once did the head beneath it turn in my direction. Of whatever had
+happened since leaving the main station in New York Larry Strangways
+could say that he was wholly unaware.</p>
+
+
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+<h2>CHAPTER XVIII</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="dropcap">W</span>hat happened on the train after Mrs. Brokenshire and I had left it I
+heard from Mr. Strangways. Having got it from him in some detail, I can
+give it in my own words more easily than in his.</p>
+
+<p>I may be permitted to state here how much and how little of the romance
+between Mr. Grainger and Mrs. Brokenshire Larry Strangways knew. He knew
+next to nothing&mdash;but he inferred a good deal. From facts I gave him once
+or twice in hours of my own perplexity he had been able to get light on
+certain matters which had come under his observation as Mr. Grainger's
+confidential man, and to which otherwise he would have had no key. He
+inferred, for instance, that Mrs. Brokenshire wrote daily to her lover,
+and that occasionally, at long intervals, her lover could safely write
+to her. He inferred that when their meetings had ended in one place they
+were taken up discreetly at another, but only with difficulty and
+danger. He inferred that the man chafed against this restraint, and as
+he had got out of it with other women, he was planning to get out of it
+again. I understood that had Mrs. Brokenshire been the only such
+instance in Stacy Grainger's career Larry Strangways might not have felt
+impelled to interfere; but seeing from the beginning that his employer
+"had a weakness," he felt it only right to help me save a woman for whom
+he knew I cared.</p>
+
+<p>I have never wholly understood why he believed that the situation had
+worked up to a crisis on that particular day; but having watched the
+laying of the mine, he could hardly do anything but expect the explosion
+on the application of the match.</p>
+
+<p>When Mr. Grainger had bidden him that morning go to the station and
+secure a drawing-room, or, if that was impossible, two parlor-car seats,
+on the five-o'clock for Boston, he had reasons for following the course
+of which I have briefly given the lines. No drawing-room was available,
+because any that was not sold he bought for himself in order to set the
+stage according to his own ideas. How far he was justified in this will
+be a matter of opinion. Some may commend him, while others will accuse
+him of unwarrantable interference. My own judgment being of no
+importance I hold it in suspense, giving the incidents just as they
+occurred.</p>
+
+<p>It must be evident that as Mr. Strangways didn't know what was to happen
+he could have no plan of action. All he could arrange for was that he
+and I should be on the spot. As it is difficult for guilty lovers to
+elope while acquaintances are looking on, he was resolved that they
+should find elopement difficult. For anything else he relied on
+chance&mdash;and on me. Chance favored him in keeping Stacy Grainger out of
+sight, in putting Mrs. Brokenshire next to me, and in making the action,
+such as it was, run smoothly. Had I known that he relied on me I should
+have been more terrified than I actually was, since I was relying on
+him.</p>
+
+<p>It will be seen, then, that at the moment when Mrs. Brokenshire and I
+left the train Larry Strangways had but a vague idea of what had taken
+place. He merely conjectured from the swish of skirts that we had gone.
+His next idea was, as he phrased it, to make himself scarce on his own
+account; but in that his efforts miscarried.</p>
+
+<p>Hoping to slip into another car and thus avoid a meeting with the
+outmanoeuvered lover, he was snapping the clasp of the bag into which he
+had thrust his cap when he perceived a tall figure enter the car by the
+forward end. To escape recognition he bent his head, pretending to
+search for something on the floor. The tall figure passed, but came back
+again. It was necessary that he should come back, because of the number
+on the ticket, the ulster, the walking-stick, and the golf-clubs.</p>
+
+<p>What Stacy Grainger saw, of course, was three empty seats, with his
+secretary sitting in a fourth. The sight of the three empty seats was
+doubtless puzzling enough, but that of the secretary must have been
+bewildering. Without turning his head Mr. Strangways knew by his sixth
+and seventh senses that his employer was comparing the number on his
+ticket with that of the seat, examining the hand-luggage to make sure it
+was his own, and otherwise drawing the conclusion that his faculties
+hadn't left him. For a private secretary who had ventured so far out of
+his line of duty it was a trying minute; but he turned and glanced
+upward only on feeling a tap on his shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>"Hello, Strangways! Is it you? What's the meaning of this?"</p>
+
+<p>Strangways rose. As the question had been asked in perplexity rather
+than in anger, he could answer calmly.</p>
+
+<p>"The meaning of what, sir?"</p>
+
+<p>"Where the deuce are you going? What are you doing here?"</p>
+
+<p>"I'm going to Boston, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"What for? Who told you you could go to Boston?"</p>
+
+<p>The tone began to nettle the young man, who was not accustomed to being
+spoken to so imperiously before strangers.</p>
+
+<p>"No one told me, sir. I didn't ask permission. I'm my own master. I've
+left your employ."</p>
+
+<p>"The devil you have! Since when?"</p>
+
+<p>"Since this morning. I couldn't tell you, because when you left the
+office after I'd given you the tickets you didn't come back."</p>
+
+<p>"And do you call that decent to a man who's&mdash; But no matter!" He pointed
+to the seat next his own. "Where's the&mdash;the lady who's been sitting
+here?"</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Strangways raised his eyebrows innocently, and shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>"I haven't seen any lady, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"What? There must have been a lady here. Was to have got on at One
+Hundred and Twenty-fifth Street."</p>
+
+<p>"Possibly; I only say I didn't see her. As a matter of fact, I've been
+reading, and I don't think I looked round during the entire journey.
+Hadn't we better not speak so loud?" he suggested, in a lower tone.
+"People are listening to us."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, let them go to&mdash; Now look here, Strangways," he began again,
+speaking softly, but excitedly, "there must be some explanation to
+this."</p>
+
+<p>"Of course there must be; only I can't give it. Perhaps the porter could
+tell us. Shall I call him?"</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Grainger nodded his permission. The colored man with the flashing
+teeth came up on the broad grin, showing them.</p>
+
+<p>"Yep," he replied, in answer to the question: "they was two ladies in
+them seats all the way f'um Ne' Yawk."</p>
+
+<p>"Two ladies?" Mr. Grainger cried, incredulously.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, gen'lemen. Two different ladies. The young one she got in at the
+Grand Central&mdash;fust one in the cyar&mdash;and the ole one at a Hundred and
+Twenty-fifth Street."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you mean to say it was an old lady who got in there?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yep, gen'lemen; ole and cranky. I 'ain't handled 'em no crankier not
+since I've bin on this beat. Sick, too. They done get off at Providence,
+though they was booked right through to Boston, because the ole lady she
+couldn't go no farther."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Grainger was not a sleuth-hound, but he did what he could in the way
+of verification.</p>
+
+<p>"Did the young lady wear&mdash;wear a veil?"</p>
+
+<p>The porter scratched his head.</p>
+
+<p>"Come to think of it she did&mdash;one of them there flowery things"&mdash;his
+forefinger made little whirling designs on his coffee-colored
+skin&mdash;"what makes a kind of pattern-like all over people's face."</p>
+
+<p>Because he was frantically seeking a clue, Mr. Grainger blurted out the
+foolish question:</p>
+
+<p>"Was she&mdash;pretty?"</p>
+
+<p>To answer as a connoisseur and as man to man the African took his time.</p>
+
+<p>"Wa-al, not to say p'ooty, she wasn't&mdash;but she'd pa-ss. A little
+black-eyed thing, an' awful smart. One of 'em trained nusses like&mdash;very
+perlite, but a turr'ble boss you could see she'd be, for all she was so
+soft-spoken. Had cyare of the ole one, who was what you'd call plumb
+crazy."</p>
+
+<p>"That will do." The trail seemed not worth following any further.
+"There's some mistake," he continued, furiously. "She must be in one of
+the other cars."</p>
+
+<p>Like a collie from the leash he bounded off to make new investigations.
+In five minutes he was back again, passing up the length of the car and
+going on to examine those at the other end of the train. His face as he
+returned was livid; his manner, as far as he dared betray himself before
+a dozen or twenty spectators, that of a balked wild animal.</p>
+
+<p>"Strangways," he swore, as he dropped to the arm of his seat, "you're
+going to answer for this."</p>
+
+<p>Strangways replied, composedly:</p>
+
+<p>"I'm ready to answer for anything I know. You can't expect me to be
+responsible for what I don't know anything about."</p>
+
+<p>He slapped his knee.</p>
+
+<p>"What are you doing in that particular chair? Even if you're going to
+Boston, why aren't you somewhere else?"</p>
+
+<p>"That's easily explained. You told me to get two tickets by this train.
+Knowing that I was to travel by it myself I asked for three. I dare say
+it was stupid of me not to think that the propinquity would be open to
+objection; but as it's a public conveyance, and there's not generally
+anything secret or special about a trip of the kind&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Why in thunder didn't you get a drawing-room, as I told you to?"</p>
+
+<p>"For the reason I've given&mdash;there were none to be had. If you could have
+taken me into your confidence a little&mdash;But I suppose that wasn't
+possible."</p>
+
+<p>To this there was no response, but a series of muttered oaths that bore
+the same relation to soliloquy as a frenzied lion's growl. For some
+twenty minutes they sat in the same attitudes, Strangways quiet,
+watchful, alert, ready for any turn the situation might take, the other
+man stretched on the arm of his chair, indifferent to comfort, cursing
+spasmodically, perplexity on his forehead, rage in his eyes, and
+something that was folly, futility, and helplessness all over him.</p>
+
+<p>Almost no further conversation passed between them till they got out in
+Boston. In the crowd Strangways endeavored to go off by himself, but
+found Mr. Grainger constantly beside him. He was beside him when they
+reached the place where taxicabs were called, and ordered his porter to
+call one.</p>
+
+<p>"Get in," he said, then.</p>
+
+<p>Larry Strangways protested.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm going to&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>I must be sufficiently unlady-like to give Mr. Grainger's response just
+as it was spoken, because it strikes me as characteristic of men.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, hell! Get in. You're coming with me."</p>
+
+<p>Characteristic of men was the rest of the evening. In spite of what had
+happened&mdash;and had not happened&mdash;Messrs. Grainger and Strangways partook
+of an excellent supper together, eating and drinking with appetite, and
+smoking their cigars with what looked like an air of tranquillity.
+Though the fury of the balked wild animal returned to Stacy Grainger by
+fits and starts, it didn't interfere with his relish of his food and
+only once did it break its bounds. That was when he struck the arm of
+his chair, saying beneath his breath, and yet audibly enough for his
+secretary to hear:</p>
+
+<p>"She funked it&mdash;damn her!"</p>
+
+<p>Larry Strangways then took it on himself to say:</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know the lady, sir, to whom you refer, nor the reasons she may
+have had for funking it, but may I advise you for your own peace of mind
+to withdraw the two concluding syllables?"</p>
+
+<p>A pair of fierce, melancholy eyes rested on him for a second
+uncomprehendingly.</p>
+
+<p>"All right," the crestfallen lover groaned heavily at last. "I may as
+well take them back."</p>
+
+<p>Characteristic of women were my experiences while this was happening.</p>
+
+<p>Bundled out into the station at Providence no two poor females could
+ever have been more forlorn. Standing in the waiting-room with our bags
+around us I felt like one of those immigrant women, ignorant of the
+customs and language of the country to which they have come, I had
+sometimes seen on docks at Halifax. As for Mrs. Brokenshire, she was as
+little used to the unarranged as if she had been a royalty. Never before
+had she dropped in this way down upon the unexpected; never before had
+she been unmet, unwelcomed, and unprepared. She was
+<i>boulevers&eacute;e</i>&mdash;overturned. Were she falling from an aeroplane she could
+not have been more at a loss as to where she was going to alight. Small
+wonder was it that she should sit down on one of her own valises and
+begin to cry distressfully.</p>
+
+<p>That, for the minute, I was obliged to disregard. If she had to cry she
+must cry. I could hear the train puffing out of the station, and as far
+as that went she was safe. My first preoccupations had to do with where
+we were to go.</p>
+
+<p>For this I made inquiries of the porter, who named what he considered to
+be the two or three best hotels. I went to the ticket-office and put the
+same question, getting approximately the same answer. Then, seeing a
+well-dressed man and lady enter the station from a private car, which I
+could discern outside, I repeated my investigations, explaining that I
+had come from New York with an invalid lady who had not been well enough
+to continue the journey. They told me I could make no mistake in going
+to one of the houses already named by my previous informants; and so,
+gathering up the hand-luggage and Mrs. Brokenshire, we set forth.</p>
+
+<p>At the hotel we secured an apartment of sitting-room and two bedrooms,
+registering our names as "Miss Adare and friend." I ordered the
+daintiest supper the house could provide to be served up-stairs, with a
+small bottle of champagne to inspirit us; but, unlike the two heroes of
+the episode, neither of us could do more than taste food and drink. No
+kidnapped princess in a fairy-tale was ever more lovely or pathetic than
+Mrs. Brokenshire; no giant ogre more monstrously cruel than myself. Now
+that it was done, I figured, both in her eyes and in my own, not as a
+savior, but a capturer.</p>
+
+<p>She had dried her tears, but she had dried them resentfully. As far as
+possible she didn't look at me, but when she couldn't help it the
+reproach in her glances almost broke my heart. Though I knew I had acted
+for the best, she made me feel a bad angel, a marplot, a spoil-sport. I
+had thwarted a dream that was as full of bliss as it was of terror, and
+reduced the dramatic to the commonplace. Here she was picking at a cold
+quail in aspic face to face with me when she might have been. . . .</p>
+
+<p>I couldn't help seeing myself as she saw me, and when we had finished
+what was not a repast I put her to bed with more than the humility of a
+serving-maid. You will think me absurd, but when those tender eyes were
+turned on me with their silent rebuke, I would gladly have put her back
+on the train again and hurried her on to destruction. As the dear thing
+sobbed on her pillow I laid my head beside hers and sobbed with her.</p>
+
+<p>But I couldn't sob very long, as I still had duties to fulfil. It was
+of little use to have her under my care at Providence unless those who
+would in the end be most concerned as to her whereabouts were to know
+the facts&mdash;or the approximate facts&mdash;from the start. It was a case in
+which doubt for a night might be doubt for a lifetime; and so when she
+was sufficiently calm for me to leave her I went down-stairs.</p>
+
+<p>Though I had not referred to it again, I had made a mental note of the
+fact that Mr. Brokenshire was at Newport. If at Newport I knew he could
+be nowhere but in one hotel. Within fifteen minutes I was talking to him
+on the telephone.</p>
+
+<p>He was plainly annoyed at being called to the instrument so late as half
+past ten. When I said I was Alexandra Adare he replied that he didn't
+recognize the name.</p>
+
+<p>"I was formerly nursery governess to your daughter, Mrs. Rossiter," I
+explained. "I'm the woman who's refused as yet to marry your son, Hugh."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, that person," came the response, uttered wearily.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir; that person. I must apologize for ringing you up so late; but
+I wanted to tell you that Mrs. Brokenshire is here at Providence with
+me."</p>
+
+<p>The symptoms of distress came to me in a series of choking sounds over
+the wire. It was a good half-minute before I got the words:</p>
+
+<p>"What does that mean?"</p>
+
+<p>"It means that Mrs. Brokenshire is perfectly well in physical condition,
+but she's tired and nervous and overwrought."</p>
+
+<p>I made out that the muffled and strangled voice said:</p>
+
+<p>"I'll motor up to Providence at once. It's now half past ten. I shall be
+there between one and two. What hotel shall I find you at?"</p>
+
+<p>"Don't come, sir," I pleaded. "I had to tell you we were in Providence,
+because you could have found that out by asking where the long-distance
+call had come from; but it's most important to Mrs. Brokenshire that she
+should have a few days alone."</p>
+
+<p>"I shall judge of that. To what hotel shall I come?"</p>
+
+<p>"I beg and implore you, sir, not to come. Please believe me when I say
+that it will be better for you in the end. Try to trust me. Mrs.
+Brokenshire isn't far from a nervous breakdown; but if I can have her to
+myself for a week or two I believe I could tide her over it."</p>
+
+<p>Reproof and argument followed on this, till at last he yielded, with the
+words:</p>
+
+<p>"Where are you going?"</p>
+
+<p>Fortunately, I had thought of that.</p>
+
+<p>"To some quiet place in Massachusetts. When we're settled I shall let
+you know."</p>
+
+<p>He suggested a hotel at Lenox as suitable for such a sojourn.</p>
+
+<p>"She'd rather go where she wouldn't meet people whom she knows. The
+minute she has decided I shall communicate with you again."</p>
+
+<p>"But I can see you in the morning before you leave?"</p>
+
+<p>The accent was now that of request. The overtone in it was pitiful.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, don't try to, sir. She wants to get away from every one. It will be
+so much better for her to do just as she likes. She had got to a point
+where she had to escape from everything she knew and cared about; and so
+all of a sudden&mdash;only&mdash;only to-day&mdash;she decided to come with me. She
+doesn't need a trained nurse, because she's perfectly well. All she
+wants is some one to be with her&mdash;whom she knows she can trust. She
+hasn't even taken Ang&eacute;lique. She simply begs to be alone."</p>
+
+<p>In the end I made my point, but only after genuine beseeching on his
+part and much repetition on mine. Having said good-night to him&mdash;he
+actually used the words&mdash;I called up Ang&eacute;lique, in order to bring peace
+to a household in which the mistress's desertion would create some
+consternation.</p>
+
+<p>Ang&eacute;lique and I might have been called friends. The fact that I spoke
+French <i>comme une Fran&ccedil;aise</i>, as she often flattered me by saying, was a
+bond between us, and we had the further point of sympathy that we were
+both devoted to Mrs. Brokenshire. Besides that, there is something in
+me&mdash;I suppose it must be a plebeian streak&mdash;which enables me to
+understand servants and get along with them.</p>
+
+<p>I gave her much the same explanation as I gave to Mr. Brokenshire,
+though somewhat differently put. In addition I asked her to pack such
+selections from the simpler examples of Mrs. Brokenshire's wardrobe as
+the lady might need in a country place, and keep them in readiness to
+send. Ang&eacute;lique having expressed her relief that Mrs. Brokenshire was
+safe at a known address, in the company of a responsible attendant&mdash;a
+relief which, so she said, would be shared by the housekeeper, the chef,
+and the butler, all of whom had spent the evening in painful
+speculation&mdash;we took leave of each other, with our customary mutual
+compliments.</p>
+
+<p>Though I was so tired by this time that fainting would have been a
+solace, I called for a Boston paper and began studying the
+advertisements of country hotels. Having made a selection of these I
+consulted the manager of our present place of refuge, who strongly
+commended one of them. Thither I sent a night-letter commandeering the
+best, after which, with no more than strength to undress, I lay down on
+a couch in Mrs. Brokenshire's room. When I knew she was sleeping I, too,
+slept fitfully. About once in an hour I went softly to her bedside, and
+finding her dozing, if not sound asleep, I went softly back again.</p>
+
+<p>Between four and five we had a little scene. As I approached her bed she
+looked up and said:</p>
+
+<p>"What are we going to do in the morning?"</p>
+
+<p>Afraid to tell her all I had put in train, I gave my ideas in the form
+of suggestion.</p>
+
+<p>"No, I sha'n't do that," she said, quietly.</p>
+
+<p>She lay quite still, her cheek embossed on the pillow, and a great stray
+curl over her left shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>"Then what would you like to do?"</p>
+
+<p>"I should like to go straight back."</p>
+
+<p>"To begin the same old life all over again?"</p>
+
+<p>"To begin to see him all over again."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you think that after last night you can begin to see him in the same
+old way?"</p>
+
+<p>"I must see him in some way."</p>
+
+<p>"But isn't the way what you've still to discover?" I resolved on a bold
+stroke. "Wouldn't part of your object in going away for a time be to
+think out some method of reconciling your feeling for Mr. Grainger
+with&mdash;with your self-respect?"</p>
+
+<p>"My self-respect?" She looked as if she had never heard of such a thing.
+"What's that got to do with it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Hasn't it got everything to do with it? You can't live without it
+forever."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you mean that I've been living without it as it is?"</p>
+
+<p>"Isn't that for you to say rather than for me?"</p>
+
+<p>She was silent for a minute, after which she said, fretfully:</p>
+
+<p>"I don't think it's very nice of you to talk to me like that. You've got
+me here at your mercy, when I might have been&mdash;" A long, bubbling sigh,
+like the aftermath of tears, laid stress on the joys she had foregone.
+"He'll never forgive me now&mdash;never."</p>
+
+<p>"Wouldn't it be better, dear Mrs. Brokenshire," I asked, "to consider
+whether or not you can ever forgive him?"</p>
+
+<p>She raised herself on her elbow and looked at me. Seated in a low
+arm-chair beside her bed, in an old-rose-colored kimono, my dark hair
+hanging down my back, I was not a fascinating object of study, even in
+the light of one small, distant, shaded bedroom lamp.</p>
+
+<p>"What should I forgive him for?&mdash;for loving me?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, for loving you&mdash;in that way."</p>
+
+<p>"He loves me&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"So much that he could see you dishonored and disgraced&mdash;and shunned by
+decent people all the rest of your life&mdash;just to gratify his own
+desires. It seems to me you may have to forgive him for that."</p>
+
+<p>"He asked me to do only what I would have done willingly&mdash;if it hadn't
+been for you."</p>
+
+<p>"But he asked you. The responsibility is in that. You didn't make the
+suggestion; he did."</p>
+
+<p>"He didn't make it till I'd let him see&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Too much. Forgive me for saying it, dear Mrs. Brokenshire; but do you
+think a woman should ever go so far to meet a man as you did?"</p>
+
+<p>"I let him see that I loved him. I did that before I married Mr.
+Brokenshire."</p>
+
+<p>"You let him see more than that you loved him. You showed him that you
+didn't know how to live without him."</p>
+
+<p>"But since I didn't know how&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, but you should have known. No woman should be so dependent on a man
+as that."</p>
+
+<p>She fell back again on her pillows.</p>
+
+<p>"It's easy to see you've never been in love."</p>
+
+<p>"I have been in love&mdash;and am still; but love is not the most important
+thing in the world&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Then you differ from all the great teachers. They say it is."</p>
+
+<p>"If they do they're not speaking of sexual love."</p>
+
+<p>"What are they speaking of, then?"</p>
+
+<p>"They're speaking of another kind of love, with which the mere sexual
+has nothing to do. I'm not an ascetic, and I know the sexual has its
+place. But there's a love that's as much bigger than that as the sky is
+bigger than I am."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, but so long as one never sees it&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>I suppose it was her tone of feeble rebellion that roused my spirit and
+made me speak in a way which I should not otherwise have allowed myself.</p>
+
+<p>"You do see it, darling Mrs. Brokenshire," I declared, more sweetly than
+I felt. "I'm showing it to you." I rose and stood over her. "What do you
+suppose I'm prompted by but love? What urges me to stand by Mr.
+Brokenshire but love? What made me step in between you and Mr. Grainger
+and save him, as well as you, but love? Love isn't emotion that leaves
+you weak; it's action that makes you strong. It has to be action, and it
+has to be right action. There's no love separable from right; and until
+you grasp that fact you'll always be unhappy. I'm a mere rag in my own
+person. I've no more character than a hen. But because I've got a wee
+little hold on right&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>She broke in, peevishly, as she turned away:</p>
+
+<p>"I do wish you'd let me go to sleep."</p>
+
+<p>I got down from my high horse and went back, humbly, to my couch.
+Scarcely, however, had I lain down, when the voice came again, in
+childish complaint:</p>
+
+<p>"I think you might have kissed me."</p>
+
+<p>I had never kissed her in my life, nor had she ever shown any sign of
+permitting me this liberty. Timidly I went back to the bed; timidly I
+bent over it. But I was not prepared for the sudden intense clinging
+with which she threw her arms round my neck and drew my face down to
+hers.</p>
+
+
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+<h2>CHAPTER XIX</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="dropcap">I</span>n the morning Mrs. Brokenshire was difficult again, but I got her into
+a neat little country inn in Massachusetts by the middle of the
+afternoon. I had to be like a jailer dragging along a prisoner, but that
+could not be helped.</p>
+
+<p>On leaving Providence she insisted on spending a few days in Boston,
+where, so she said, she had friends whom she wished to see. Knowing that
+Stacy Grainger would be at one of the few hotels of which we had the
+choice, I couldn't risk a meeting. Her predominating shame, a shame she
+had no hesitation in confessing, was for having failed him. He would
+never forgive her, she moaned; he wouldn't love her any more. Not to be
+loved by him, not to be forgiven, was like death. All she demanded
+during the early hours of that day was to find him, wherever he had
+gone, and fling herself at his feet.</p>
+
+<p>Because I didn't allow her to remain in Boston we had what was almost a
+quarrel, as we jolted over the cobblestones from the southern station to
+the northern. She was now an outraged queen and now a fiery little
+termagant. Sparing me neither tears nor reproaches, neither scoldings
+nor denunciations, she nevertheless followed me obediently. Sitting
+opposite me in the parlor-car, ignoring the papers and fashion magazines
+I spread beneath her eyes, she lifted on me the piteous face of an angel
+whom I had beaten and trampled and enslaved. For this kind of sacrilege
+I had ceased, however, to be contrite. I was so tired, and had grown so
+grim, that I could have led her along in handcuffs.</p>
+
+<p>But once out in the fresh, green, northern country the joy of a budding
+and blossoming world stole into us in spite of all our cares. We
+couldn't help getting out of our own little round of thought when we saw
+fields that were carpets of green velvet, or copses of hazelnut and
+alder coming into leaf, or a farmer sowing the plowed earth with the
+swing and the stride of the <i>Semeur</i>. We couldn't help seeing wider and
+farther and more hopefully when the sky was an arch of silvery blue
+overhead, and white clouds drifted across it, and the north into which
+we were traveling began to fling up masses of rolling hills.</p>
+
+<p>She caught me by the arm.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, do look at the lambs! The darlings!"</p>
+
+<p>There they were, three or four helpless creatures, shivering in the
+sharp May wind and apparently struck by the futility of a life which
+would end in nothing but making chops. The ewes watched them maternally,
+or stood patiently to be tugged by the full woolly breasts. After that
+we kept our eyes open for other living things: for horses and cows and
+calves, for Corots and Constables&mdash;with a difference!&mdash;on the uplands of
+farms or in village highways. Once when a foal galloped madly away from
+the train, kicking up its slender hind legs, my companion actually
+laughed.</p>
+
+<p>When we got out at the station a robin was singing, the first bird we
+had heard that year. The note was so full and pure and Eden-like that it
+caught one's breath. It went with the bronze-green of maples and elms,
+with the golden westering sunshine, and with the air that was like the
+distillation of air and yet had a sharp northern tang in it. Driving in
+the motor of the inn, through the main street of the town, we saw that
+most of the white houses had a roomy Colonial dignity, and that orchards
+of apple, cherry, and plum, with acres of small fruit, surrounded them
+all. Having learned on the train that jam was the staple of the little
+town's prosperity, we could see jam everywhere. Jam was in the
+cherry-trees covered with dainty white blossoms, in the plum-trees
+showing but a flower or two, and in the apple-trees scarcely in bud. Jam
+was in the long straight lines which we were told represented
+strawberries, and in the shrubberies of currant. Jam was along the
+roadsides where the raspberry was clothing its sprawling bines with
+leaves, and wherever the blueberry gladdened the waste places with its
+millions of modest bells. Jam is a toothsome, homey thing to which no
+woman with a housekeeping heart can be insensible. The thought of it did
+something to bring Mrs. Brokenshire's thoughts back to the simple
+natural ways she had forsworn, even before reaching the hotel.</p>
+
+<p>The hotel was no more than a farm-house that had expanded itself half a
+dozen times. We traversed all sorts of narrow halls and climbed all
+sorts of narrow staircases, till at last we emerged on a corner suite,
+where the view led us straight to the balcony.</p>
+
+<p>Not that it was an extraordinary view; it was only a peaceful and a
+noble one. An undulating country held in its folds a scattering of
+lakes, working up to the lines of the southern New Hampshire hills which
+closed the horizon to the north. Green was, of course, the note of the
+landscape, melting into mauve in the mountains and saffron in the sky.
+Spacing out the perspective a mauve mist rose between the ridges, and a
+mauve light rested on the three white steeples of the town. The town
+was perhaps two hundred feet below us and a mile away, nestling in a
+feathery bower of verdure.</p>
+
+<p>When I joined Mrs. Brokenshire she was grasping the balcony rail,
+emitting little "Ohs!" and "Ahs!" of ecstasy. She drew long breaths,
+like a thirsty person drinking. She listened to the calling and
+answering of birds with face illumined and upturned. It was a bath of
+the spirit to us both. It was cleansing and healing; it was soothing and
+restful and corrective, setting what was sane within us free.</p>
+
+<p>Of all this I need say little beyond mentioning the fact that Mrs.
+Brokenshire, in spite of herself, entered into a period in which her
+taut nerves relaxed and her over-strained emotions became rested. It was
+a kind of truce of God to her. She had struggled and suffered so much
+that she was content for a time to lie still in the everlasting arms and
+be rocked and comforted. We had the simplest of rooms; we ate the
+simplest of food; we led the simplest of lives. By day we read and
+walked and talked a little and thought much; at night we slept soundly.
+Our fellow-guests were people who did the same, varying the processes
+with golf and moving pictures. For the most part they were tired people
+from the neighboring towns, seeking like ourselves a few days' respite
+from their burdens. Though they came to know who Mrs. Brokenshire was,
+they respected her privacy, never doing worse than staring after her
+when she entered the dining-room or walked on the lawns or verandas. I
+had come to love her so much that it was a joy to me to witness the
+revival of her spirit, and I looked forward to seeing her restored, not
+too reluctantly, to her husband.</p>
+
+<p>With him I had, of course, some correspondence. It was an odd
+correspondence, in which I made my customary <i>gaffe</i>. On our first
+evening at the inn I wrote to him in fulfilment of my promise,
+beginning, "Dear Mr. Brokenshire," as if I was writing to an equal. The
+acknowledgment came back: "Miss Alexandra Adare: Dear Madam," putting me
+back in my place. Accepting the rebuff, I adopted the style in sending
+him my daily bulletins.</p>
+
+<p>As a matter of fact, my time was largely passed in writing, for I had
+explanations to make to so many. My acquaintance with Mrs. Brokenshire
+having been a secret one, I was obliged to confess it to Hugh and Mrs.
+Rossiter, and even to Ang&eacute;lique. I had, in a measure, to apologize for
+it, too, setting down Mrs. Brokenshire's selection of my company to an
+invalid's eccentricity.</p>
+
+<p>So we got through May and into June, my reports to Mr. Brokenshire being
+each one better than the last. My patient never wrote to him herself,
+nor to any one. We had, in fact, been a day or two at the inn before she
+said:</p>
+
+<p>"I wonder what Mr. Brokenshire is thinking?"</p>
+
+<p>It was for me to tell her then that from the beginning I had kept him
+informed as to where she was, and that he knew I was with her. For a
+minute or two she stiffened into the <i>grande dame</i>, as she occasionally
+did.</p>
+
+<p>"You'll be good enough in future not to do such things without
+consulting me," she said, with dignity.</p>
+
+<p>That passed, and when I read to her, as I always did, the occasional
+notes with which her husband honored me, she listened without comment.
+It must have been the harder to do that since the lover's pleading ardor
+could be detected beneath all the cold formality in which he couched his
+communications.</p>
+
+<p>It was this ardor, as well as something else, that began in the end to
+make me uneasy. The something else was that Mrs. Brokenshire was writing
+letters on her own account. Coming in one day from a solitary walk, I
+found her posting one in the hall of the hotel. A few days later one for
+her was handed to me at the office, with several of my own. Recognizing
+Stacy Grainger's writing, I put it back with the words:</p>
+
+<p>"Mrs. Brokenshire will come for her letters herself."</p>
+
+<p>From that time onward she was often at her desk, and I knew when she got
+her replies by the feverishness of her manner. The truce of God being
+past, the battle was now on again.</p>
+
+<p>The first sign of it given to me was on a day when Mr. Brokenshire wrote
+in terms more definite than he had used hitherto. I read the letter
+aloud to her, as usual. He had been patient, he said, and considerate,
+which had to be admitted. Now he could deny himself no longer. As it was
+plain that his wife was better, he should come to her. He named the 20th
+as the day on which he should appear.</p>
+
+<p>"No, no," she cried, excitedly. "Not till after the twenty-third."</p>
+
+<p>"But why the twenty-third?" I asked, innocently.</p>
+
+<p>"Because I say so. You'll see." Then fearing, apparently, that she had
+betrayed something she ought to have concealed, she colored and added,
+lamely, "It will give me a little more time."</p>
+
+<p>I said nothing, but I pondered much. The 23d was no date at all that had
+anything to do with us. If it had significance it was in plans as to
+which she had not taken me into her confidence.</p>
+
+<p>So, too, when I heard her making inquiries of the maid who did the rooms
+as to the location of the Baptist church. "What on earth does she want
+to know that for?" was the question I not unnaturally asked myself. That
+she, who never went to church at all, except as an occasional act of
+high ceremonial for which she took great credit to her soul, was now
+concerned with the doctrine of baptism by immersion I did not believe.
+But I hunted up the sacred edifice myself, finding it to be situated on
+the edge of a daisied mead, slightly out of the town, on a road that
+might be described as lonely and remote. I came to the conclusion that
+if any one wanted to carry off in an automobile a lady picking
+flowers&mdash;a sort of <i>enl&egrave;vement de Proserpine</i>&mdash;this would be as good a
+place as any. How the Pluto of our drama could have come to select it,
+Heaven only knew.</p>
+
+<p>But I did as I was bid, and wrote to Mr. Brokenshire that once the 23d
+was passed he would be free to come. After that I watched, wondering
+whether or not I should have the heart or the nerve to frustrate love a
+second time, even if I got the chance.</p>
+
+<p>I didn't get the chance precisely, but on the 22nd of June I received a
+mysterious note. It was typewritten and had neither date nor address nor
+signature. Its message was simple:</p>
+
+<p>"If Miss Adare will be at the post-office at four o'clock this afternoon
+she will greatly oblige the writer of these lines and perhaps benefit a
+person who is dear to her."</p>
+
+<p>The post-office being a tolerably safe place in case of felonious
+attack, I was on the spot at five minutes before the hour. In that
+particular town it occupied a corner of a brick building which also gave
+shelter to the bank and a milliner's establishment. As the village hotel
+was opposite, I advertised my arrival by studying a display of hats
+which warranted the attention before going inside to invest in stamps.
+As I was the only applicant for this necessary of life, the swarthy,
+undersized young man who served me made kindly efforts at entertainment
+while "delivering the goods," as he expressed it.</p>
+
+<p>"English, ain't you?"</p>
+
+<p>I said, as usual, that I was a Canadian.</p>
+
+<p>He smiled at his own perspicacity.</p>
+
+<p>"Got your number, didn't I? All you Canucks have the same queer way o'
+talkin'. Two or three in the jam-factory here&mdash;only they're French."</p>
+
+<p>I knew some one had entered behind me, and, turning away from the
+wicket, I found the person I had expected. Mr. Stacy Grainger, clad
+jauntily in a gray spring suit, lifted a soft felt hat.</p>
+
+<p>He went to his point without introductory greeting.</p>
+
+<p>"It's good of you to have come. Perhaps we could talk better if we
+walked up the street. There's no one to know us or to make it awkward
+for you."</p>
+
+<p>Walking up the street he made his errand clear to me. I had partly
+guessed it before he said a word. I had guessed it from his pallor, from
+something indefinably humbled in the way he bore himself, and from the
+worried light in his romantic eyes. Being so much taller than I, he had
+to stoop toward me as he talked.</p>
+
+<p>He knew, he said, what had happened on the train. Some of it he had
+wrung from his secretary, Strangways, and the rest had been written him
+by Mrs. Brokenshire. He had been so furious at first that he might have
+been called insane. In order to give himself the pleasure of kicking
+Strangways out he had refused to accept his resignation, and had I not
+been a woman he would have sought revenge on me. He had been the more
+frantic because until getting his first note from Mrs. Brokenshire he
+hadn't known where she was. To have the person dearest to him in the
+world swept off the face of the earth after she was actually under his
+protection was enough to drive a man mad.</p>
+
+<p>Having acquiesced in this, I considered it no harm to add that if I had
+known the business on which I was setting out I should have hardly dared
+that day to take the train for Boston. Once on it, however, and in
+speech with Mrs. Brokenshire, it had seemed that there was no other
+course before me.</p>
+
+<p>"Quite so," he agreed, somewhat to my surprise. "I see that now. He's
+not altogether an ass, that fellow Strangways. I've kept him with me,
+and little by little&mdash;" He broke off abruptly to say: "And now the
+shoe's on the other foot. That's what I wanted to tell you."</p>
+
+<p>I walked on a few paces before getting the force of this figure of
+speech.</p>
+
+<p>"You mean that Mrs. Brokenshire&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Quite so. I see you get what I'd like you to know." He went on,
+brokenly: "It isn't that I don't want it myself as much as ever. I only
+see, as I didn't see before, what it would mean to her. If I were to
+take her at her word&mdash;as I must, of course, if she insists on it&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>I had to think hard while we continued to walk on beneath the leafing
+elms, and the village people watched us two as city folks.</p>
+
+<p>"It's for to-morrow, isn't it?" I asked at last.</p>
+
+<p>He nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"How did you know that?"</p>
+
+<p>"Near the Baptist church?"</p>
+
+<p>"How the deuce do you know? I motored up here last week to spy out the
+land. That seemed to me the most practicable spot, where we should be
+least observed&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>We were still walking on when I said, without quite knowing why I did
+so:</p>
+
+<p>"Why shouldn't you go away at once and leave it all to me?"</p>
+
+<p>"Leave it all to you? And what would you do?"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know. I should have to think. I could do&mdash;something."</p>
+
+<p>"But suppose she's counting on me to come?"</p>
+
+<p>"Then you would have to fail her."</p>
+
+<p>"I couldn't."</p>
+
+<p>"Not even if it was for her good?"</p>
+
+<p>He shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>"Not even if it was for her good. No one who calls himself a
+gentleman&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>I couldn't help flinging him a scornful smile.</p>
+
+<p>"Isn't it too late to think in terms like that? We've come to a place
+where such words don't apply. The best we can do is to get out of a
+difficult situation as wisely as possible, and if you'd just go away and
+leave it to me&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"She'd never forgive me. That's what I'd be afraid of."</p>
+
+<p>"There's nothing to be afraid of in doing right," I declared, a little
+sententiously. "You'll do right in going away. The rest will take care
+of itself."</p>
+
+<p>We came to the edge of the town, where there was a gate leading into a
+pasture. Over this gate we leaned and looked down on a valley of
+orchards and farms. He was sufficiently at ease to take out a cigarette
+and ask my permission to smoke.</p>
+
+<p>"What would you say of a man who treated you like that?" he asked,
+presently.</p>
+
+<p>"It wouldn't matter what I said at first, so long as I lived to thank
+him. That's what she'd do, and she'd do it soon."</p>
+
+<p>"And in the mean time?"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't see that you need think of that. If you do right&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>He groaned aloud.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, right be hanged!"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, there you go. But so long as right is hanged wrong will have it
+all its own way and you'll both get into trouble. Do right now&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"And leave her in the lurch?"</p>
+
+<p>"You wouldn't be leaving her in the lurch, because you'd be leaving her
+with me. I know her and can take care of her. If you were just failing
+her and nothing else&mdash;that would be another thing. But I'm here. If
+you'll only do what's so obviously right, Mr. Grainger, you can trust me
+with the rest."</p>
+
+<p>I said this firmly and with an air of competence, though, as a matter of
+fact, I had no idea of what I should have to do. What I wanted first was
+to get rid of him. Once alone with her, I knew I should get some kind of
+inspiration.</p>
+
+<p>He diverted the argument to himself&mdash;he wanted her so much, he would
+have to suffer so cruelly.</p>
+
+<p>"There's no question as to your suffering," I said. "You'll both have to
+suffer. That can be taken for granted. We're only thinking of the way in
+which you'll suffer least."</p>
+
+<p>"That's true," he admitted, but slowly and reluctantly.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm not a terribly rigorous moralist," I went on. "I've a lot of
+sympathy with Paolo and Francesca and with Pell&eacute;as and M&eacute;lisande. But
+you can see for yourself that all such instances end unhappily, and when
+it's happiness you're primarily in search of&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Hers&mdash;especially," he interposed, with the same deliberation and some
+of the same unwillingness.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, then, isn't your course clear? She'll never be happy with you if
+she kills the man she runs away from&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>He withdrew his cigarette and looked at me, wonderingly.</p>
+
+<p>"Kills him? What in thunder do you mean?"</p>
+
+<p>I explained my convictions. Howard Brokenshire wouldn't survive his
+wife's desertion for a month; he might not survive it for a day. He was
+a doomed man, even if his wife did not desert him at all. He, Stacy
+Grainger, was young. Mrs. Brokenshire was young. Wouldn't it be better
+for them both to wait on life&mdash;and on the other possibilities that I
+didn't care to name more explicitly?</p>
+
+<p>So he wrestled with himself, and incidentally with me, turning back at
+last toward the village inn&mdash;and his motor. While shaking my hand to say
+good-by he threw off, jerkily:</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose you know my secretary, Strangways, wants to marry you?"</p>
+
+<p>My heart seemed to stop beating.</p>
+
+<p>"He's&mdash;he's never said so to me," I managed to return, but more weakly
+than I could have wished.</p>
+
+<p>"Well he will. He's all right. He's not a fool. I'm taking him with me
+into some big things; so that if it's the money you're in doubt about&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>I had recovered myself enough to say:</p>
+
+<p>"Oh no; not at all. But if you're in his confidence I beg you to ask him
+to think no more about it. I'm engaged&mdash;or practically engaged&mdash;I may
+say that I'm engaged&mdash;to Hugh Brokenshire."</p>
+
+<p>"I see. Then you're making a mistake."</p>
+
+<p>I was moving away from him by this time so that I gave him a little
+smile.</p>
+
+<p>"If so, the circumstances are such that&mdash;that I must go on making it."</p>
+
+<p>"For God's sake don't!" he called after me.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, but I must," I returned, and so we went our ways.</p>
+
+<p>On going back to our rooms I found poor, dear little Mrs. Brokenshire
+packing a small straw suit-case. She had selected it as the only thing
+she could carry in her hand to the place of the <i>enl&egrave;vement</i>. She was
+not a packer; she was not an adept in secrecy. As I entered her room she
+looked at me with the pleading, guilty eyes of a child detected in the
+act of stealing sweets, and confessing before he is accused.</p>
+
+<p>I saw nothing, of course. I saw nothing that night. I saw nothing the
+next day. Each one of her helpless, unskilful moves was so plain to me
+that I could have wept; but I was turning over in my mind what I could
+do to let her know she was deceived. I was reproaching myself, too, for
+being so treacherous a confidante. All the great love-heroines had an
+attendant like me, who bewailed and lamented the steps their mistresses
+were taking, and yet lent a hand. Here I was, the nurse to this Juliet,
+the Brangaene to this Isolde, but acting as a counter-agent to all
+romantic schemes. I cannot say I admired myself; but what was I to do?</p>
+
+<p>To make a long story short I decided to do nothing. You may scorn me,
+oh, reader, for that; but I came to a place where I saw it would be vain
+to interfere. Even a child must sometimes be left to fight its own
+battles and stand face to face with its own fate; and how much more a
+married woman! It became the more evident to me that this was what I
+could best do for Mrs. Brokenshire in proportion as I watched the leaden
+hands and feet with which she carried out her tasks and inferred a
+leaden heart. A leaden heart is bad enough, but a leaden heart offering
+itself in vain&mdash;what lesson could go home with more effect?</p>
+
+<p>During the forenoon of the 23d each little incident cut me to the quick.
+It was so na&iuml;ve, so useless. The poor darling thought she was outwitting
+me. As if she was stealing it she stowed away her jewelry, and when she
+could no longer hide the suit-case she murmured something about articles
+to be cleaned at the village cleaner's. I took this with a feeble joke
+as to the need of economy, and when she thought she would carry down the
+things herself I commended the impulse toward exercise. I knew she
+wouldn't drive, because she didn't want a witness to her acts. As far as
+I could guess the hour at which Pluto would carry off Proserpine, it
+would be at five o'clock.</p>
+
+<p>And indeed about half past three I observed unusual signs of agitation.
+Her door was kept closed, and from behind it came sounds of a final
+opening and closing of cupboards and drawers, after which she emerged,
+wearing a dark-blue walking-suit and a hat of the <i>canoti&egrave;re</i> style,
+with a white quill feather at one side. I still made no comment, not
+even when the wan, wee, touching figure was ready to set forth.</p>
+
+<p>If her first steps were artless the last was more artless still. Instead
+of going off casually, with an implied intention to come back, she took
+leave of me with tears and protestations of affection. She had been
+harsh with me, she confessed, and seemingly indifferent to my tender
+care, but one day she might have a chance to show me how genuine was her
+gratitude. In this, too, I saw no more than the commonplace, and a
+little after four she tripped down the avenue, looking, with her
+suit-case, like a school-girl.</p>
+
+<p>I allowed her just such a handicap as her speed and mine would have
+warranted. Even then I made no attempt to overtake her. Having
+previously got what is called the lay of the land, I knew how I could
+come to her assistance by taking a short cut. I had hardened my heart by
+this time, and whatever qualms I had felt before, I was resolved now to
+spare her no drop of the wormwood that would be for her good.</p>
+
+<p>I cannot describe our respective routes without appending a map, which
+would scarcely be worth while. It will be enough if I say that she went
+round the arc of a bow and I cut across by the string. I came thus to a
+slight eminence, selected in advance, whence I could watch her descent
+of the hill by which the lower Main Street trails off into the country.
+I could follow her, too, when she deflected into a small
+cross-thoroughfare bearing the scented name of Clover Lane, in which
+there were no houses; and I should still be able to trace her course
+when she emerged on the quiet country road that would take her to her
+trysting-place. I had no intention to step in till I could do it at some
+spot on her homeward way, and thus spare her needless humiliation.</p>
+
+<p>In Clover Lane she was within a few hundred yards of her destination.
+She had only to turn a corner and she would be in sight of the flowery
+mead whence she was to be carried off. It was a pretty lane, grass-grown
+and overhung with lilacs in full bloom, such as you would find on the
+edge of any New England town. The lilacs shut her in from my view for a
+good part of the time, but not so constantly that I couldn't be a
+witness to her soul's tragedy.</p>
+
+<p>Her soul's tragedy came as a surprise to me. Closely as I had lived with
+her, I was unprepared for any such event. My first hint of it was when
+her pace through the lane began to slacken, till at last she stopped.
+That she didn't stop because she was tired I could judge by the fact
+that, though she stood stock-still, she held the light suit-case in her
+hand. I couldn't see her face, because I stood under a great elm, some
+five hundred yards away.</p>
+
+<p>Having paused and reflected for the space of three or four minutes, she
+went on again, but she went on more slowly. Her light, tripping gait had
+become a dragging of the feet, while I divined that she was still
+pondering. As it was nearly five o'clock, she couldn't be afraid of
+being before her time.</p>
+
+<p>But she stopped again, setting the suit-case down in the middle of the
+road. She turned then and looked back over the way by which she had
+come, as if regretting it. Seeing her open her small hand-bag, take out
+a handkerchief, and put it to her lips, I was sure she was repressing
+one of her baby-like sobs. My heart yearned over her, but I could only
+watch her breathlessly.</p>
+
+<p>She went on again&mdash;twenty paces, perhaps. Here she seemed to find a seat
+on a roadside boulder, for she sat down on it, her back being toward me
+and her figure almost concealed by the wayside growth. I could only
+wonder at what was passing in her mind. The whole period, of about ten
+minutes' duration, is filled in my memory with mellow afternoon light
+and perfumed air and the evening song of birds. When the village clock
+struck five she bounded up with a start.</p>
+
+<p>Again she took what might have been twenty paces, and again she came to
+a halt. Dropping the suit-case once more, she clasped her hands as if
+she was praying. As, to the best of my knowledge, her prayers were
+confined to a hasty evening and morning ritual in which there was
+nothing more than a pious, meaningless habit, I could surmise her
+present extremity. Stacy Grainger was like a god to her. If she
+renounced him now it would be an act of heroism of which I could hardly
+believe her capable.</p>
+
+<p>But, apparently, she made up her mind that she couldn't renounce him. If
+there was an answer to her prayer it was one that prompted her to snatch
+up her burden again and hurry, with a kind of skimming motion, right to
+the end of the lane. It was to the end of the lane, but not to the
+turning into the roadway. Once in the roadway she would see&mdash;or she
+thought she would see&mdash;Stacy Grainger and his automobile, and her fate
+would be sealed.</p>
+
+<p>She had still a chance before her&mdash;and from that rutted sandy juncture,
+with wild roses and wild raspberries in the hedgerows on each side, she
+reeled back as if she had been struck. I can only think of a person
+blinded by a flash of lightning who would recoil in just that way.</p>
+
+<p>For a few minutes she was hidden from my view behind the lilacs. When I
+caught sight of her again she was running like a terrified bird back
+through Clover Lane and toward the Main Street, which would take her
+home.</p>
+
+<p>I met her as she was dragging herself up the hill, white, breathless,
+exhausted. Pretending to take the situation lightly, I called as I
+approached:</p>
+
+<p>"So you didn't leave the things."</p>
+
+<p>Her answer was to drop the suit-case once again, while, regardless of
+curious eyes at windows and doors, she flew to throw herself into my
+arms.</p>
+
+<p>She never explained; I never asked for explanations. I was glad enough
+to get her back to the hotel, put her to bed, and wait on her hand and
+foot. She was saved now; Stacy Grainger, too, was saved. Each had
+deserted the other; each had the same crime to forgive. From that day
+onward she never spoke his name to me.</p>
+
+<p>But as, that evening, I went to her bedside to say good-night, she drew
+my face to hers and whispered, cryptically:</p>
+
+<p>"It will be all right now between yourself and Hugh. I know how I can
+help."</p>
+
+
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+<h2>CHAPTER XX</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="dropcap">M</span>r. Brokenshire arrived on the 26th of June, thus giving us a few days'
+grace. In the interval Mrs. Brokenshire remained in bed, neither tired
+nor ill, but white, silent, and withdrawn. Her soul's tragedy had
+plainly not ended with her skimming retreat through Clover Lane. In the
+new phase on which it had entered it was creating a woman, possibly a
+wife, where there had been only a lovely child of arrested development.
+Slipping in and out of her room, attending quietly to her wants, I was
+able to note, as never in my life before, the beneficent action of
+suffering.</p>
+
+<p>Because she was in bed, I folded my tent like the Arab and silently
+vacated my room in favor of Mr. Brokenshire. I looked for some objection
+on telling her of this, but she merely bit her lip and said nothing. I
+had asked the manager to put me in the most distant part of the most
+distant wing of the hotel, and would have stolen away altogether had it
+not been for fear that my poor, dear little lady might need me.</p>
+
+<p>As it was, I kept out of sight when Mr. Brokenshire drove up with
+secretary, valet, and chauffeur, and I contrived to take my meals at
+hours when there could be no encounter between me and the great
+personage. If I was wanted I knew I could be sent for; but the 27th
+passed and no command came.</p>
+
+<p>Once or twice I got a distant view of my enemy, as I began to call
+him&mdash;majestic, noble, stouter, too, and walking with a slight waddle of
+the hips, which had always marked his carriage and became more
+noticeable as he increased in bulk. Not having seen him for nearly three
+months, I observed that his hair and beard were grayer. During those
+first few days I was never near enough to be able to tell whether or not
+there was a change for the better or the worse in his facial affliction.</p>
+
+<p>From a chance word with the cadaverous Spellman on the 28th I learned
+that a sitting-room had been arranged in connection with the two
+bedrooms Mrs. Brokenshire and I had occupied, and that husband and wife
+were now taking their repasts in private. Later that day I saw them
+drive out together, Mrs. Brokenshire no more than a silhouette in the
+shadows of the limousine. I drew the inference that, however the soul's
+tragedy was working, it was with some reconciling grace that did what
+love had never been able to accomplish. Perhaps for her, as for me,
+there was an appeal in this vain, fatuous, suffering magnate of a coarse
+world's making that, in spite of everything, touched the springs of
+pity.</p>
+
+<p>In any case, I was content not to be sent for&mdash;and to rest. After a
+tranquil day or two my own nerves had calmed down and I enjoyed the
+delight of having nothing on my mind. It was extraordinary how remote I
+could keep myself while under the same roof with my superiors,
+especially when they kept themselves remote on their side. I had decided
+on the 1st of July as the date to which I should remain. If there was no
+demand for my services by that time I meant to consider myself free to
+go.</p>
+
+<p>But events were preparing, had long been preparing, which changed my
+life as, I suppose, they changed to a greater or less degree the
+majority of lives in the world. It was curious, too, how they arranged
+themselves, with a neatness of coincidence which weaves my own small
+drama as a visible thread&mdash;visible to me, that is&mdash;in the vast tapestry
+of human history begun so far back as to be time out of mind.</p>
+
+<p>It was the afternoon of Monday the 29th of June, 1914. Having secured a
+Boston morning paper, I had carried it off to the back veranda, which
+was my favorite retreat, because nobody else liked it. It was just
+outside my room, and looked up into a hillside wood, where there were
+birds and squirrels, and straight bronze pine-trunks wherever the
+sunlight fell aslant on them. At long intervals, too, a partridge hen
+came down with her little brood, clucking her low wooden cluck and
+pecking at tender shoots invisible to me, till she wandered off once
+more into the hidden depths of the stillness.</p>
+
+<p>But I wasn't watching for the partridge hen that afternoon. I was
+thrilled by the tale of the assassination of the Archduke Franz
+Ferdinand and the Duchess of Hohenberg, which had taken place at
+Sarajevo on the previous day. Millions of other readers, who, no more
+than I, felt their own destinies involved were being thrilled at the
+same moment. The judgment trumpet was sounding&mdash;only not as we had
+expected it. There was no blast from the sky&mdash;no sudden troop of angels.
+There was only the soundless vibration of the wire and of the Hertzian
+waves; there was only the casting of type and the rattling of
+innumerable reams of paper; and, as the Bible says, the dead could hear
+the voice, and they that heard it stood still; and the nations were
+summoned before the Throne "that was set in the midst." I was summoned,
+with my own people&mdash;though I didn't know it was a summons till
+afterward.</p>
+
+<p>The paper had fallen to my knee when I was startled to see Mr.
+Brokenshire come round the corner of my retreat. Dressed entirely in
+white, with no color in his costume save the lavender stripe in his
+shirt and collar, and the violet of his socks, handkerchief, and tie, he
+would have been the perfect type of the middle-aged exquisite had it not
+been for the pitiless distortion of his eye the minute he caught sight
+of me. That he had not stumbled on me accidentally I judged by the way
+in which he lifted a Panama of the kind that is said to be made under
+water and is costlier than the costliest feminine confection by Caroline
+Ledoux.</p>
+
+<p>I was struggling out of my wicker chair when the uplifted hand forbade
+me.</p>
+
+<p>"Be good enough to stay where you are," he commanded, but more gently
+than he had ever spoken to me. "I've some things to say to you."</p>
+
+<p>Too frightened to make a further attempt to move, I looked at him as he
+drew up a chair similar to my own, which creaked under his weight when
+he sat down in it. The afternoon being hot, and my veranda lacking air,
+which was one of the reasons why it was left to me, he mopped his brow
+with the violet handkerchief, on which an enormous monogram was
+embroidered in white. I divined his reluctance to begin not only from
+his long hesitation, but from the renewed contortion of his face. His
+hand went up to the left cheek as if to hold it in place, though with no
+success in the effort. When, at last, he spoke there was a stillness in
+his utterance suggestive of an affection extending now to the lips or
+the tongue.</p>
+
+<p>"I want you to know how much I appreciate the help you've given to Mrs.
+Brokenshire during her&mdash;her"&mdash;he had a difficulty in finding the right
+word&mdash;"during her indisposition," he finished, rather weakly.</p>
+
+<p>"I did no more than I was glad to do," I responded, as weakly as he.</p>
+
+<p>"Exactly; and yet I can't allow such timely aid to go unrewarded."</p>
+
+<p>I was alarmed. Grasping the arms of the chair, I braced myself.</p>
+
+<p>"If you mean money, sir&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"No; I mean more than money." He, too, braced himself. "I&mdash;I withdraw my
+opposition to your marriage with my son."</p>
+
+<p>The immediate change in my consciousness was in the nature of a
+dissolving view. The veranda faded away, and the hillside wood. Once
+more I saw the imaginary dining-room, and myself in a smart little
+dinner gown seating the guests; once more I saw the white-enameled
+nursery, and myself in a lace peignoir leaning over the bassinet. As in
+previous visions of the kind, Hugh was a mere shadow in the background,
+secondary to the home and the baby.</p>
+
+<p>Secondary to the home and the baby was the fact that my object was
+accomplished and that my enemy had come to his knees. Indeed, I felt no
+particular elation from that element in the case; no special sense of
+victory. Like so many realized ambitions, it seemed a matter of course,
+now that it had come. Nevertheless, it seemed to me that for my own sake
+and for the sake of the future I must have a more definite expression of
+surrender than he had yet given me.</p>
+
+<p>I remembered that Mrs. Brokenshire had said she would help me, and could
+imagine how. I summoned up everything within me that would rank as
+force of character, speaking quietly.</p>
+
+<p>"I should be sorry, sir, to have you come to this decision against your
+better judgment."</p>
+
+<p>"If you'll be kind enough to accept the fact," he said, sharply, "we can
+leave my manner of reaching it out of the discussion."</p>
+
+<p>In spite of the tone I rallied my resources.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't want to be presumptuous, sir; but if I'm to enter your family I
+should like to feel sure that you'll receive me whole-heartedly."</p>
+
+<p>"My dear young lady, isn't it assurance enough that I receive you at
+all? When I bring myself to that&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, please don't think I can't appreciate the sacrifice."</p>
+
+<p>"Then what more is to be said?"</p>
+
+<p>"But the sacrifice is the point. No girl wants to become one of a family
+which has to make such an effort to take her."</p>
+
+<p>There was already a whisper of insecurity in his tone.</p>
+
+<p>"Even so, I can't see why you shouldn't let the effort be our affair.
+Since we make it on our own responsibility&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't care anything about the responsibility, sir. All I'm thinking
+of is that the effort must be made."</p>
+
+<p>"But what did you expect?"</p>
+
+<p>"I haven't said that I expected anything. If I've been of the slightest
+help to Mrs. Brokenshire I'm happy to let the service be its own
+reward."</p>
+
+<p>"But I'm not. It isn't my habit to remain under an obligation to any
+one."</p>
+
+<p>"Nor mine," I said, demurely.</p>
+
+<p>He stared.</p>
+
+<p>"What does that mean? I don't follow you."</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps not, sir; but I quite follow you. You wish me to understand
+that, in spite of my deficiencies, you accept me as your son's wife&mdash;for
+the reason that you can't help yourself."</p>
+
+<p>Two sharp hectic spots came out on each cheek-bone.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, what if I do?"</p>
+
+<p>"I'm far too generous to put you in that position. I couldn't take you
+at a disadvantage, not even for the sake of marrying Hugh."</p>
+
+<p>I was not sure whether he was frightened or angry, but it was the one or
+the other.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you mean to say that, now&mdash;now that I'm ready&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"That I'm not? Yes, sir. That's what I do mean to say. I told you once
+that if I loved a man I shouldn't stop to consider the wishes of his
+relatives; but I've repented of that. I see now that marriage has a
+wider application than merely to individuals; and I'm not ready to enter
+any family that doesn't want me."</p>
+
+<p>I looked off into the golden dimnesses of the hillside wood in order not
+to be a witness of the struggle he was making.</p>
+
+<p>"And suppose"&mdash;it was almost a groan&mdash;"and suppose I said we&mdash;wanted
+you?"</p>
+
+<p>It was like bending an iron bar; but I gave my strength to it.</p>
+
+<p>"You'd have to say it differently from that, sir."</p>
+
+<p>He spoke hoarsely.</p>
+
+<p>"Differently&mdash;in what sense?"</p>
+
+<p>I knew I had him, as Hugh would have expressed it, where I had been
+trying to get him.</p>
+
+<p>"In the sense that if you want me you must ask me."</p>
+
+<p>He mopped his brow once more.</p>
+
+<p>"I&mdash;I have asked you."</p>
+
+<p>"You've said you withdrew your opposition. That's not enough."</p>
+
+<p>Beads or perspiration were again standing on his forehead.</p>
+
+<p>"Then what&mdash;what would be&mdash;enough?"</p>
+
+<p>"A woman can't marry any one unless she does it as something of a
+favor."</p>
+
+<p>He drew himself up.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you remember that you're talking to me?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir; and it's because I do remember it that I have to insist. With
+anybody else I shouldn't have to be so crude."</p>
+
+<p>Again he put up a struggle, and this time I watched him. If his wife had
+made the conditions I guessed at, I had nothing to do but sit still.
+Grasping the arms of his chair, he half rose as if to continue the
+interview no further, but immediately saw, as I inferred, what that
+would mean to him. He fell back again into the creaking depths of the
+chair.</p>
+
+<p>"What do you wish me to say?"</p>
+
+<p>But his stricken aspect touched me. Now that he was prepared to come to
+his knees, I had no heart to force him down on them. Since I had gained
+my point, it was foolish to battle on, or try to make the Ethiopian
+change his skin.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, sir, you've said it!" I cried, with sudden emotion. I leaned toward
+him, clasping my hands. "I see you do want me; and since you do
+I'll&mdash;I'll come."</p>
+
+<p>Having made this concession, I became humble and thankful and tactful. I
+appeased him by saying I was sensible of the honor he did me, that I was
+happy in the thought that he was to be reconciled with Hugh; and I
+inquired for Mrs. Brokenshire. Leading up to this question with an air
+of guilelessness, I got the answer I was watching for in the ashen shade
+that settled on his face.</p>
+
+<p>I forget what he replied; I was really not listening. I was calling up
+the scene in which she must have fulfilled her promise of helping Hugh
+and me. From the something crushed in him, as in the case of a man who
+knows the worst at last, I gathered that she had made a clean breast of
+it. It was awesome to think that behind this immaculate white suit with
+its violet details, behind this pink of the old beau, behind this
+moneyed authority and this power of dictation to which even the mighty
+sometimes had to bow, there was a broken heart.</p>
+
+<p>He knew now that the bird he had captured was nothing but a captured
+bird, and always longing for the forest. That his wife was willing to
+bear his name and live in his house and submit to his embraces was
+largely because I had induced her. Whether or not, in spite of his
+pompousness, he was grateful to me I didn't know; but I guessed that he
+was not. He could accept such benefits as I had secured him and yet be
+resentful toward the curious providence that had chosen me in particular
+as its instrument.</p>
+
+<p>I came out of my meditations in time to hear him say that, Mrs.
+Brokenshire being as well rested as she was, there would be no further
+hindrance to their proceeding soon to Newport.</p>
+
+<p>"And I suppose I might go back to my home," I observed, with no other
+than the best intentions.</p>
+
+<p>He made an attempt to regain the authority he had just forfeited.</p>
+
+<p>"What for?"</p>
+
+<p>"To be married," I explained&mdash;"since I am to be married."</p>
+
+<p>"But why should you be married there?"</p>
+
+<p>"Wouldn't it be the most natural thing?"</p>
+
+<p>"It wouldn't be the most natural thing for Hugh."</p>
+
+<p>"A man can be married anywhere; whereas a woman, at such a turning-point
+in her life, needs a certain backing. I've an uncle and aunt and a great
+many friends&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>The effort at a faint smile drew up the corner of his mouth and set his
+face awry.</p>
+
+<p>"You'll excuse me, my dear"&mdash;the epithet made me jump&mdash;"if I correct you
+on a point of taste. In being willing that Hugh should marry you I think
+I must draw the line at anything like parade."</p>
+
+<p>I know my eyebrows went up.</p>
+
+<p>"Parade? Parade&mdash;how?"</p>
+
+<p>The painful little smile persisted.</p>
+
+<p>"The ancient Romans, when they went to war, had a custom of bringing
+back the most conspicuous of their captives and showing them in triumph
+in the streets&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>I, too, smiled.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! I understand. But you see, sir, the comparison doesn't hold in this
+case, because none of my friends would know anything more about Hugh
+than the fact that he was an American."</p>
+
+<p>The crooked features went back into repose.</p>
+
+<p>"They'd know he was my son."</p>
+
+<p>I continued to smile, but sweetly.</p>
+
+<p>"They'd take it for granted that he was somebody's son&mdash;but they
+wouldn't know anything about you, sir. You'd be quite safe so far as
+that went. Though I don't live many hundreds of miles from New York, and
+we're fairly civilized, I had never so much as heard the name of
+Brokenshire till Mrs. Rossiter told me it was hers before she was
+married. You see, then, that there'd be no danger of my leading a
+captive in triumph. No one I know would give Hugh a second thought
+beyond being nice to the man I was marrying."</p>
+
+<p>That he was pleased with this explanation I cannot affirm, but he passed
+it over.</p>
+
+<p>"I think," was his way of responding, "that it will be better if we
+consider that you belong to us. Till your marriage to Hugh, which I
+suppose will take place in the autumn, you'll come back with us to
+Newport. There will be a whole new&mdash;how shall I put it?&mdash;a whole new
+phase of life for you to get used to. Hugh will stay with us, and I
+shall ask my daughter, Mrs. Rossiter, to be your hostess till&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>As, without finishing his sentence, he rose I followed his example.
+Though knowing in advance how futile would be the attempt to present
+myself as an equal, I couldn't submit to this calm disposition of my
+liberty and person without putting up a fight.</p>
+
+<p>"I've a great preference, sir&mdash;if you'll allow me&mdash;for being married in
+my own home, among my own people, and in the old parish church in which
+I was baptized. I really have people and a background; and it's possible
+that my sisters might come over&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>The hand went up; his tone put an end to discussion.</p>
+
+<p>"I think, my dear Alexandra, that we shall do best in considering that
+you belong to us. You'll need time to grow accustomed to your new
+situation. A step backward now might be perilous."</p>
+
+<p>My fight was ended. What could I do? I listened and submitted, while he
+went on to tell me that Mrs. Brokenshire would wish to see me during the
+day, that Hugh would be sent for and would probably arrive the next
+afternoon, and that by the end of the week we should all be settled in
+Newport. There, whenever I felt I needed instruction, I was not to be
+ashamed to ask for it. Mrs. Rossiter would explain anything of a social
+nature that I didn't understand, and he knew I could count on Mrs.
+Brokenshire's protection.</p>
+
+<p>With a comic inward grimace I swallowed all my pride and thanked him.</p>
+
+<p>As for Mrs. Brokenshire's protection, that was settled when, later in
+the afternoon, we sat on her balcony and laughed and cried together, and
+held each other's hands, as young women do when their emotions outrun
+their power of expression. She called me Alix and begged me to invent a
+name for her that would combine the dignity of Hugh's stepmother with
+our standing as friends. I chose Miladi, out of <i>Les Trois
+Mousquetaires</i>, with which she was delighted.</p>
+
+<p>I begged off from dining with them that evening, nominally because I was
+too upset by all I had lived through in the afternoon, but really for
+the reason that I couldn't bear the thought of Mr. Brokenshire calling
+me his dear Alexandra twice in the same day. Once had made my blood run
+cold. His method of shriveling up a name by merely pronouncing it is
+something that transcends my power to describe. He had ruined that of
+Adare with me forever, and now he was completing my confusion at being
+called after so lovely a creature as our queen. I have always admitted
+that, with its stately, regal suggestions, Alexandra is no symbol for a
+plain little body like me; but when Mr. Brokenshire took it on his lips
+and called me his dear I could have cried out for mercy. So I had my
+dinner by myself, munching slowly and meditating on what Mr. Brokenshire
+described as "my new situation."</p>
+
+<p>I was meditating on it still when, in the course of the following
+afternoon, I was sitting in a retired grove of the hillside wood
+waiting for Hugh to come and find me. He was to arrive about three and
+Miladi was to tell him where I was. In our crowded little inn, with its
+crowded grounds, nooks of privacy were rare.</p>
+
+<p>I had taken the Boston paper with me in order to get further details of
+the tragedy of Sarajevo. These I found absorbing. They wove themselves
+in with my thoughts of Hugh and my dreams of our life together. An
+article on Serbia, which I had found in an old magazine that morning,
+had given me, too, an understanding of the situation I hadn't had
+before. Up to that day Serbia had been but a name to me; now I began to
+see its significance. The story of this brave, patient little people,
+with its one idea&mdash;an <i>id&eacute;e fixe</i> of liberty&mdash;began to move me.</p>
+
+<p>Of all the races of Europe the Serbian impressed me as the one that had
+been most constantly thwarted in its natural ambitions&mdash;struck down
+whenever it attempted to rise. Its patriotic hopes had always been
+inconvenient to some other nation's patriotic hopes, and so had to be
+blasted systematically. England, France, Austria, Turkey, Italy, and
+Russia had taken part at various times in this circumvention, denying
+the fruits of victory after they had been won. Serbia had been the poor
+little bastard brother of Europe, kept out of the inheritance of justice
+and freedom and commerce when others were admitted to a share. For some
+of them there might have been no great share; but for little Serbia
+there was none.</p>
+
+<p>It was terrible to me that such wrong could go on, generation after
+generation, and that there should be no Nemesis. In a measure it
+contradicted my theory of right. I didn't want any one to suffer, but I
+asked why there had been no suffering. Of the nations that had knocked
+Serbia about, hedged her in by restrictions, dismembered her and kept
+her dismembered, most were prosperous. From Serbia's point of view I
+couldn't help sympathizing with the hand that had struck down at least
+one member of the House of Hapsburg; and yet in that tragic act there
+could be no adequate revenge for centuries of repression. What I wanted
+I didn't know; I suppose I didn't want anything. I was only
+wondering&mdash;wondering why, if individuals couldn't sin without paying for
+the sin they had committed, nations should sin and be immune.</p>
+
+<p>Strangely enough, these reflections did not shut out the thought of the
+lover who was coming up the hill; they blended with it; they made it
+larger and more vital. I could thank God I was marrying a man whose hand
+would always be lifted on behalf of right. I didn't know how it could be
+lifted in the cause of Serbia against the influences represented by
+Franz Ferdinand; but when one is dreaming one doesn't pause to direct
+the logical course of one's dreams. Perhaps I was only clutching at
+whatever I could say for Hugh; and at least I could say that. He was not
+a strong man in the sense of being fertile in ideas; but he was brave
+and generous, and where there was injustice his spirit would be among
+the first to be stirred by it. That conviction made me welcome him when,
+at last, I saw his stocky figure moving lower down among the pine
+trunks.</p>
+
+<p>I caught sight of him long before he discovered me, and could make my
+notes upon him. I could even make my notes upon myself, not wholly with
+my own approval. I was too business-like, too cool. There was nothing I
+possessed in the world that I would not have given for a single
+quickened heart-throb. I would have given it the more when I saw Hugh's
+pinched face and the furbished-up spring suit he had worn the year
+before.</p>
+
+<p>It was not the fact that he had worn it the year before that gave me a
+pang; it was that he must have worn it pretty steadily. I am not
+observant of men's clothes. Except that I like to see them neat, they
+are too much alike to be worth noticing. But anything not plainly
+opulent in Hugh smote me with a sense of guilt. It could so easily be
+attributed to my fault. I could so easily take it so myself. I did take
+it so myself. I said as he approached: "This man has suffered. He has
+suffered on my account. All my life must be given to making it up to
+him."</p>
+
+<p>I make no attempt to tell how we met. It was much as we had met after
+other separations, except that when he slipped to the low boulder and
+took me in his arms it was with a certainty of possession which had
+never hitherto belonged to him. There was nothing for me but to let
+myself go, and lie back in his embrace.</p>
+
+<p>I came to myself, as it were, on hearing him whisper, with his face
+close to mine:</p>
+
+<p>"You witch! You witch! How did you ever manage it?"</p>
+
+<p>I made the necessity for giving him an explanation the excuse for
+working myself free.</p>
+
+<p>"I didn't manage it. It was Mrs. Brokenshire."</p>
+
+<p>He cried out, incredulously:</p>
+
+<p>"Oh no! Not the madam!"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Hugh. It was she. She asked him. She must have begged him. That's
+all I can tell you about it."</p>
+
+<p>He was even more incredulous.</p>
+
+<p>"Then it must have been on your account rather than on mine; you can bet
+your sweet life on that!"</p>
+
+<p>"Hugh, darling, she's fond of you. She's fond of you all. If you could
+only have&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"We couldn't." For the first time he showed signs of admitting me into
+the family sense of disgrace. "Did you ever hear how dad came to marry
+her?"</p>
+
+<p>I said that something had reached me, but one couldn't put the blame for
+that on her.</p>
+
+<p>"And she's had more pull with him than we've had," he declared,
+resentfully. "You can see that by the way he's given in to her on
+this&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>I soothed him on this point, however, and we talked of a general
+reconciliation. From that we went on to the subject of our married life,
+of which his father, in the hasty interview of half an hour before, had
+briefly sketched the conditions. A place was to be found for Hugh in the
+house of Meek &amp; Brokenshire; his allowance was to be raised to twelve or
+fifteen thousand a year; we were to have a modest house, or apartment in
+New York. No date had been fixed for the wedding, so far as Hugh could
+learn; but it might be in October. We should be granted perhaps a three
+months' trip abroad, with a return to New York before Christmas.</p>
+
+<p>He gave me these details with an excitement bespeaking intense
+satisfaction. It was easy to see that, after his ten months' rebellion,
+he was eager to put his head under the Brokenshire yoke again. His
+instinct in this was similar to Ethel's and Jack's&mdash;only that they had
+never declared themselves free. I could best compare him to a horse who
+for one glorious half-hour kicks up his heels and runs away, and yet
+returns to the stable and the harness as the safest sphere of
+blessedness. Under the Brokenshire yoke he could live, move, have his
+being, and enjoy his twelve or fifteen thousand a year, without that
+onerous responsibility which comes with the exercise of choice. Under
+the Brokenshire yoke I, too, should be provided for. I should be raised
+from my lowly estate, be given a position in the world, and, though for
+a while the fact of the <i>m&eacute;salliance</i> might tell against me, it would be
+overcome in my case as in that of Libby Jaynes. His talk was a p&aelig;an on
+our luck.</p>
+
+<p>"All we'll have to do for the rest of our lives, little Alix, will be to
+get away with our thousand dollars a month. I guess we can do
+that&mdash;what? We sha'n't even have to save, because in the natural course
+of events&mdash;" He left this reference to his father's demise to go on with
+his hymn of self-congratulation. "But we've pulled it off, haven't we?
+We've done the trick. Lord! what a relief it is! What do you think I've
+been living on for the last six weeks? Chocolate and crackers for the
+most part. Lost thirty pounds in two months. But it's all right now,
+little Alix. I've got you and I mean to keep you." He asked, suddenly:
+"How did you come to know the madam so well? I'd never had a hint of it.
+You do keep some things awful close!"</p>
+
+<p>I made my answer as truthful as I could.</p>
+
+<p>"This was nothing I could tell you, Hugh. Mrs. Brokenshire was sorry for
+me ever since last year in Newport. She never dared to say anything
+about it, because she was afraid of your father and the rest of you; but
+she did pity me&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I'll be blowed! I didn't suppose she had it in her. She's always
+seemed to me like a woman walking in her sleep&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"She's waking up now. She's beginning to understand that perhaps she
+hasn't taken the right attitude toward your father; and I think she'd
+like to begin. It was to work that problem out that she decided to come
+away with me and live simply for a while. . . . She wanted to escape
+from every one, and I was the nearest to no one she could find to take
+with her; and so&mdash; If your sisters or your brother ask you any questions
+I wish you would tell them that."</p>
+
+<p>We discussed this theme in its various aspects while the afternoon light
+turned the pine trunks round us into columns of red-gold, and a soft
+wind soothed us with balsamic smells. Birds flitted and fluted overhead,
+and now and then a squirrel darted up to challenge us with the peak of
+its inquisitive sharp little nose. I chose what I thought a favorable
+moment to bring before Hugh the matter that had been so summarily
+shelved by his father. I wanted so much to be married among my own
+people and from what I could call my own home.</p>
+
+<p>His child-like, wide-apart, small blue eyes regarded me with growing
+astonishment as I made my point clear.</p>
+
+<p>"For Heaven's sake, my sweet little Alix, what do you want that for?
+Why, we can be married in Newport!"</p>
+
+<p>His emphasis on the word Newport was as if he had said Heaven.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; but you see, Hugh, darling, Newport means nothing to me&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"It will jolly well have to if&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"And my home means such a lot. If you were marrying Lady Cissie Boscobel
+you'd certainly go to Goldborough for the occasion."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, but that would be different!"</p>
+
+<p>"Different in what way?"</p>
+
+<p>He colored, and grew confused.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, don't you see?"</p>
+
+<p>"No; I'm afraid I don't."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh yes, you do, little Alix," he smiled, cajolingly. "Don't try to pull
+my leg. We can't have one of these bang-up weddings, as it is. Of course
+we can't&mdash;and we don't want it. But they'll do the decent thing by us,
+now that dad has come round at all, and let people see that they stand
+behind us. If we were to go down there to where you came from&mdash;Halifax,
+or wherever it is&mdash;it would put us back ten years with the people we
+want to keep up with."</p>
+
+<p>I submitted again, because I didn't know what else to do. I submitted,
+and yet with a rage which was the hotter for being impotent. These
+people took it so easily for granted that I had no pride, and was
+entitled to none. They allowed me no more in the way of antecedents than
+if I had been a new creation on the day when I first met Mrs. Rossiter.
+They believed in the principle of inequality of birth as firmly as if
+they had been minor German royalties. My marriage to Hugh might be valid
+in the eyes of the law, but to them it would always be more or less
+morganatic. I could only be Duchess of Hohenberg to this young prince;
+and perhaps not even that. She was noble&mdash;<i>adel</i>, as they call it&mdash;at
+the least; while I was merely a nursemaid.</p>
+
+<p>But I made another grimace&mdash;and swallowed it. I could have broken out
+with some vicious remark, which would have bewildered poor Hugh beyond
+expression and made no change in his point of view. Even if it relieved
+my pent-up bitterness, it would have left me nothing but a nursemaid;
+and, since I was to marry him, why disturb the peace? And I owed him too
+much not to marry him; of that I was convinced. He had been kind to me
+from the first day he knew me; he had been true to me in ways in which
+few men would have been true. To go back on him now would not be simply
+a change of mind; it would be an act of cruel treachery. No, I argued; I
+could do nothing but go on with it. My debt could not be paid in any
+other way. Besides, I declared to myself, with a catch in the throat,
+I&mdash;I loved him. I had said it so many times that it must be true.</p>
+
+<p>When the minute came to go down the hill and prepare for the little
+dinner at which I was to be included in the family, my thoughts reverted
+to the event that had startled the world.</p>
+
+<p>"Isn't this terrible?" I said to Hugh, indicating the paper I carried in
+my hand.</p>
+
+<p>He looked at me with the mild wondering which always made his expression
+vacuous.</p>
+
+<p>"Isn't what terrible?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, the assassinations in Bosnia."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! I saw there had been something."</p>
+
+<p>"Something!" I cried. "It's one of the most momentous things that have
+ever happened in history."</p>
+
+<p>"What makes you say that?" he inquired, turning on me the innocent stare
+of his baby-blue eyes as we sauntered between the pine trunks.</p>
+
+<p>I had to admit that I didn't know, I only felt it in my bones.</p>
+
+<p>"Aren't they always doing something of the sort down there&mdash;killing
+kings and queens, or something?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, not like this!" I paused. "You know, Hugh, Serbia is a wonderful
+little country when you've heard a bit of its story."</p>
+
+<p>"Is it?" He took out a cigarette and lit it.</p>
+
+<p>In the ardor of my sympathy I poured out on him some of the information
+I had just acquired.</p>
+
+<p>"And we're all responsible," I was finishing; "English, French,
+Russians, Austrians&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"We're not responsible&mdash;we Americans," he broke in, quietly.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I'm not so sure about that. If you inherit the civilization of the
+races from which you spring you inherit some of their crimes; and you've
+got to pay for them."</p>
+
+<p>"Not on your life!" he laughed, easily; but in the laugh there was
+something that cut me more deeply than he knew.</p>
+
+
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+<h2>CHAPTER XXI</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="dropcap">B</span>ut once we were settled in Newport, I almost forgot the tragedy of
+Sarajevo. The world, it seemed to me, had forgotten it, too; it had
+passed into history. Franz Ferdinand and Sophie Chotek being dead and
+buried, we had gone on to something else.</p>
+
+<p>Personally I had gone on to the readjustment of my life. I was with
+Ethel Rossiter as a guest. Guest or retainer, however, made little
+difference. She treated me just as before&mdash;with the same detached,
+live-and-let-live kindliness that dropped into the old habit of making
+use of me. I liked that. It kept us on a simple, natural footing. I
+could see myself writing her notes and answering her telephone calls as
+long as I lived. Except that now and then, when she thought of it, she
+called me Alix, instead of Miss Adare, she might still have been paying
+me so much a month.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I can't get over father," was the burden of her congratulations
+to me. "I knew that woman could turn him around her finger; but I didn't
+suppose she could do it like that. You played your cards well in getting
+hold of her."</p>
+
+<p>"I didn't play my cards," was my usual defense, "because I had none to
+play.'"</p>
+
+<p>"Then what on earth brought her over to your side?"</p>
+
+<p>"Life."</p>
+
+<p>"Life&mdash;fiddlesticks! It was life with a good deal of help from Alix
+Adare." She added, on one occasion: "Why didn't you take that young
+Strangways&mdash;frankly, now?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because," I smiled, "I don't believe in polyandry."</p>
+
+<p>"But you're fond of him. That's what beats me! You're fond of one man
+and you're marrying another; and yet&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>I don't know what color I turned outwardly, but within I was fire. It
+was the fire of confusion and not of indignation. I felt it safest to
+let her go on, hazarding no remarks of my own.</p>
+
+<p>"And yet&mdash;what?"</p>
+
+<p>"And yet you don't seem like a girl who'd marry for money&mdash;you really
+don't. That's one thing about you."</p>
+
+<p>I screwed up a wan smile.</p>
+
+<p>"Thanks."</p>
+
+<p>"So that I'm all in the dark. What you can see in Hugh&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"What I can see in Hugh is the kindest of men. That's a good deal to say
+of any one."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I'll be hanged if I'd marry even the kindest of men if it was for
+nothing but his kindness."</p>
+
+<p>The Jack Brokenshires were jovially non-committal, letting it go at
+that. In offering the necessary good wishes Jack contented himself with
+calling me a sly one; while Pauline, who was mannish and horsey, wrung
+my hand till she almost pulled it off, remarking that in a family like
+the Brokenshires the natural principle was, The more, the merrier.
+Acting, doubtless, on a hint from higher up, they included Hugh and me
+in a luncheon to some twenty of their cronies, whose shibboleths I
+didn't understand and among whom I was lost.</p>
+
+<p>As far as I went into general society it was so unobtrusively that I
+might be said not to have gone at all. I made no sensation as the
+affianced bride of Hugh Brokenshire. To the great fact of my engagement
+few people paid any attention, and those who referred to it did so with
+the air of forgetting it the minute afterward. It came to me with some
+pain that in his own circle Hugh was regarded more or less as a
+nonentity. I was a "queer Canadian." Newport presented to me a hard,
+polished exterior, like a porcelain wall. It was too high to climb over
+and it afforded no nooks or crevices in which I might find a niche. No
+one ever offered me the slightest hint of incivility&mdash;or of interest.</p>
+
+<p>"It's because they've too much to do and to think of," Mrs. Brokenshire
+explained to me. "They know too many people already. Their lives are too
+full. Money means nothing to them, because they've all got so much of
+it. Quiet good breeding isn't striking enough. Cleverness they don't
+care anything about&mdash;and not even for scandals outside their own close
+corporation. All the same"&mdash;I waited while she formulated her
+opinion&mdash;"all the same, a great deal could be done in Newport&mdash;in New
+York&mdash;in Washington&mdash;in America at large&mdash;if we had the right sort of
+women."</p>
+
+<p>"And haven't you?"</p>
+
+<p>"No. Our women are&mdash;how shall I say?&mdash;too small&mdash;too parochial&mdash;too
+provincial. They've no national outlook; they've no authority. Few of
+them know how to use money or to hold high positions. Our men hardly
+ever turn to them for advice on important things, because they've rarely
+any to give."</p>
+
+<p>Her remarks showed so much more of the reflecting spirit than I had ever
+seen in her before, that I was emboldened to ask:</p>
+
+<p>"Then, couldn't you show them how?"</p>
+
+<p>She shook her head.</p>
+
+<p>"No; I'm an American, like the rest. It isn't in me. It's both personal
+and national. Cissie Boscobel could do it&mdash;not because she's clever or
+has had experience, but because the tradition is there. We've no
+tradition."</p>
+
+<p>The tradition in Cissie Boscobel became evident on a day in July when
+she came to sit beside me in the grounds of the Casino. I had gone with
+Mrs. Rossiter, with whom I had been watching the tennis. When she
+drifted away with a group of her friends I was left alone. It was then
+that Lady Cecilia, in tennis things, with her racket in her hand, came
+across the grass to me. She moved with the splendid careless freedom of
+women who pass their lives outdoors and yet are trained to
+drawing-rooms.</p>
+
+<p>She didn't go to her point at once; she was, in fact, a mistress of the
+introductory. The visits she had made and the people she had met since
+our last meeting were the theme of her remarks; and now she was staying
+with the Burkes. She would remain with them for a month, after which she
+had two or three places to go to on Long Island and in the Catskills.
+She would have to be at Strath-na-Cloid in September, for the wedding of
+her sister Janet and the young man in the Inverness Rangers, who would
+then have got home from India. She would be sorry to leave. She adored
+America. Americans were such fun. Their houses were so fresh and new.
+She doted on the multiplicity of bathrooms. It would be so horrid to
+live at Strath-na-Cloid or Dillingham Hall after the cheeriness of Mrs.
+Burke's or Mrs. Rossiter's.</p>
+
+<p>Screwing up her greenish cat-like eyes till they were no more than tiny
+slits with a laugh in them, she said, with her deliciously incisive
+utterance:</p>
+
+<p>"So you've done it, haven't you?"</p>
+
+<p>"You mean that Mr. Brokenshire has come round."</p>
+
+<p>"You know, that seems to me the most wonderful thing I ever heard of!
+It's like a miracle isn't it? You've hardly lifted a finger&mdash;and yet
+here it is." She leaned forward, her firm hands grasping the racket that
+lay across her knees. "I want to tell you how much I admire you. You're
+splendid! You're not a bit like a Colonial, are you?"</p>
+
+<p>Since she meant well, I mastered my indignation.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh yes, I am. I'm exactly like a Colonial, and very proud of the fact."</p>
+
+<p>"Fancy! And are all Colonials like you?"</p>
+
+<p>"All that aren't a great deal cleverer and better."</p>
+
+<p>"Fancy!" she breathed again. "I must tell them when I go home. They
+don't know it, you know." She added, in a slight change of key: "I'm so
+glad Hugh is going to have a wife like you."</p>
+
+<p>It was on my tongue to say, "He'd be much better off with a wife like
+you"; but I made it:</p>
+
+<p>"What do you think it will do for him?"</p>
+
+<p>"It will bring him out. Hugh is splendid in his way&mdash;just as you
+are&mdash;only he needs bringing out, don't you think?"</p>
+
+<p>"He hasn't needed bringing out in the last ten months," I declared, with
+some emphasis. "See what he's done&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"And yet he didn't pull it off, did he? You managed that. You'll manage
+a lot of other things for him, too. I must go back to the others," she
+continued, getting up. "They're waiting for me to make up the set. But I
+wanted to tell you I'm&mdash;I'm glad&mdash;without&mdash;without any&mdash;any reserves."</p>
+
+<p>I think there were tears in her narrow eyes, as I know there were in my
+own; but she beat such a hasty retreat that I could not be very sure of
+it.</p>
+
+<p>Mildred Brokenshire was a surprise to me. I had hardly ever seen her
+till she sent for me in order to talk about Hugh. I found her lying on a
+couch in a dim corner of her big, massively furnished room, her face no
+more than a white pain-pinched spot in the obscurity. After having
+kissed me she made me sit at a distance, nominally to get the breeze
+through an open window, but really that I might not have to look at her.</p>
+
+<p>In an unnaturally hollow, tragic voice she said it was a pleasure to her
+that Hugh should have got at last the woman he loved, especially after
+having made such a fight for her. Though she didn't know me, she was
+sure I had fine qualities; otherwise Hugh would not have cared for me as
+he did. He was a dear boy, and a good wife could make much of him. He
+lacked initiative in the way that was unfortunately common among rich
+men's sons, especially in America; but the past winter had shown that he
+was not deficient in doggedness. She wondered if I loved him as much as
+he loved me.</p>
+
+<p>There was that in this suffering woman, so far withdrawn from our
+struggles in the world outside, which prompted me to be as truthful as
+the circumstances rendered possible.</p>
+
+<p>"I love him enough, dear Miss Brokenshire," I said, with some emotion,
+"to be eager to give my life to the object of making him happy."</p>
+
+<p>She accepted this in silence. At least it was silence for a time, after
+which she said, in measured, organ-like tones:</p>
+
+<p>"We can't make other people happy, you know. We can only do our
+duty&mdash;and let their happiness take care of itself. They must make
+themselves happy! It's a mistake for any of us to feel responsible for
+more than doing right. "When we do right other people must make the best
+they can of it."</p>
+
+<p>"I believe that, too," I responded, earnestly&mdash;"only that it's sometimes
+so hard to tell what is right."</p>
+
+<p>There was again an interval of silence. The voice, when it came out of
+the dimness, might have been that of the Pythian virgin oracle. The
+utterances I give were not delivered consecutively, but in answer to
+questions and observations of my own.</p>
+
+<p>"Right, on the whole, is what we've been impelled to do when we've been
+conscientiously seeking the best way. . . . Forces catch us, often
+contradictory and bewildering forces, and carry us to a certain act, or
+to a certain line of action. Very well, then; be satisfied. Don't go
+back. Don't torture yourself with questionings. Don't dig up what has
+already been done. That's done! Nothing can undo it. Accept it as it is.
+If there's a wrong or a mistake in it life will take care of it. . . .
+Life is not a blind impulse, working blindly. It's a beneficent,
+rectifying power. It's dynamic. It's a perpetual unfolding. It's a fire
+that utilizes as fuel everything that's cast into it. . . ."</p>
+
+<p>And yet when I kissed her to say good-by I got the impression that she
+didn't like me or that she didn't trust me. I was not always liked, but
+I was generally trusted. The idea that this Brokenshire seeress, this
+suffering priestess whose whole life was to lie on a couch and think,
+and think, and think, had reserves in her consciousness on my account
+was painful. I said so to Hugh that evening.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, you mustn't take Mildred's gassing too seriously," he advised.
+"Gets a lot of ideas in her head: but&mdash;poor thing&mdash;what else can she do?
+Since she doesn't know anything about real life, she just spins
+theories on the subject. Whatever you want to know, little Alix, I'll
+tell you."</p>
+
+<p>"Thanks," I said, dryly, explaining the shiver which ran through me by
+the fact that we were sitting in the loggia, in the open air.</p>
+
+<p>"Then we'll go in."</p>
+
+<p>"No, no!" I protested. "I like it much better out here."</p>
+
+<p>But he was on his feet.</p>
+
+<p>"We'll go in. I can't have my sweet little Alix taking cold. I'm here to
+protect her. She must do what I tell her. We'll go in."</p>
+
+<p>And we went in. It was one of the things I was learning, that my kind
+Hugh would kill me with kindness. It was part of his way of taking
+possession. If he could help it he wouldn't leave me for an hour
+unwatched; nor would he let me lift a hand.</p>
+
+<p>"There are servants to do that," he would say. "It's one of the things
+little Alix will have to get accustomed to."</p>
+
+<p>"I can't get accustomed to doing nothing, Hugh."</p>
+
+<p>"You'll have plenty to do in having a good time."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, but I must have more than that in life."</p>
+
+<p>"In your old life, perhaps; but everything is to be different now. Don't
+be afraid, little Alix; you'll learn."</p>
+
+<p>"Learn what? It seems to me you're taking the possibility of ever
+learning anything away."</p>
+
+<p>This was a joke. Over it he laughed heartily.</p>
+
+<p>"You won't know yourself, little Alix, when I've had you for a year."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Brokenshire's compliments to me were in a similar vein. He seemed
+always to be in search of the superior position he had lost on the day
+we sat looking up into the hillside wood. His dear Alexandra must never
+forget her social inexperience. In being raised to a higher level I was
+to watch the manners of those about me. I was to copy them, as people
+learning French or Italian try to catch an accent which is not that of
+their mother tongue. They probably do it badly; but that is better than
+not doing it at all. I could never be an Ethel Rossiter or a Daisy
+Burke, but I could become an imitation. Imitations being to the house of
+Brokenshire like paste diamonds or fish-glue pearls, my gratitude for
+the effort they made in accepting me had to be the more humble.</p>
+
+<p>And yet on occasions I tried to get justice for myself.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm not altogether without knowledge of the world, Mr. Brokenshire," I
+said, after one of his kindly, condescending lectures. "Not only in
+Canada, but in England, and to some slight extent abroad, I've had
+opportunities&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, yes; but this is different. You've had opportunities, as you say.
+But there you were looking on from the outside, while here you'll be
+living from within."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, but I wasn't looking on from the outside&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>His hand went up; his pitiful crooked smile was meant to express
+tolerance. "You'll pardon me, my dear; but we gain nothing by discussing
+that point. You'll see it yourself when you've been one of us a little
+longer. Meantime, if you watch the women about you and study them&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>We left it there. I always left it there. But I did begin to see that
+there was a difference between me and the women whom Hugh and his father
+wished me to take as my models. I had hitherto not observed this
+variation in type&mdash;I might possibly call it this distinction between
+national ideals&mdash;during my two years under the Stars and Stripes; and I
+find a difficulty in expressing it, for the reason that to anything I
+say so many exceptions can be made. The immense class of wage-earning
+women would be exceptions; mothers and housekeepers would again be
+exceptions; exceptions would be all women engaged in political or social
+or philanthropic service to the country; but when this allowance has
+been made there still remain a multitude of American women economically
+independent, satisfied to be an incubus on the land. They dress, they
+entertain, they go to entertainments, they live gracefully. When they
+can't help it they bear children; but they bear as few as possible.
+Otherwise they are not much more than pleasing forms of vegetation, idle
+of body and mind; and the American man, as a rule, loves to have it so.</p>
+
+<p>"The American man," Mrs. Rossiter had said to me once, "likes
+figurines." Hugh was a rebel to that doctrine, she had added then; but
+his rebellion had been short-lived. He had come back to the standard of
+his countrymen. He had chosen me, he used to say, because I was a woman
+of whom a Socialist might make his star; and now I was to be put in a
+vitrine.</p>
+
+<p>Canadian women, as a class, are not made for the vitrine. Their instinct
+is to be workers in the world and mates for men. They have no very high
+opinion of their privileges; they are not self-analytical. They rarely
+think of themselves as the birds and flowers of the human race, or as
+other than creatures to put their shoulders to the wheel in the ways of
+which God made them mistresses. Not ashamed to know how to bake and brew
+and mend and sew, they rule the house with a practically French
+economy. I was brought up in that way; not ignorant of books or of
+social amenities, but with the assumption that I was in this world to
+contribute something to it by my usefulness. I hadn't contributed much,
+Heaven only knows; but the impulse to work was instinctive.</p>
+
+<p>And as Hugh's wife I began to see that I should be lifted high and dry
+into a sphere where there was nothing to be done. I should dress and I
+should amuse myself; I should amuse myself and I should dress. It was
+all Mrs. Rossiter did; it was all Mrs. Brokenshire did&mdash;except that to
+her, poor soul, amusement had become but gall and bitterness. Still,
+with the large exceptions which I cheerfully concede, it was the
+American ideal, so far as I could get hold of it; and I began to feel
+that, in the long run, it would stifle me.</p>
+
+<p>It was a kind of feminine Nirvana. It offered me nothing to strive for,
+nothing to wait for in hope, nothing to win gloriously. The wife of
+Larry Strangways, whoever she turned out to be, would have a goal before
+her, high up and far ahead, with the incentive of lifelong striving.
+Hugh Brokenshire's wife would have everything done for her, as it was
+done for Mildred. Like Mildred she would have nothing to do but think
+and think and think&mdash;or train herself to not thinking at all. Little by
+little I saw myself being steered toward this fate; and, like St. Peter,
+when I thought thereon I wept.</p>
+
+<p>I had taken to weeping all alone in my pretty room, which looked out on
+shrubberies and gardens. I should probably have shrubberies and gardens
+like them some day; so that weeping was the more foolish. Every one
+considered me fortunate. All my Canadian and English friends spoke of me
+as a lucky girl, and, in their downright, practical way, said I was
+"doing very well for myself."</p>
+
+<p>Of course I was&mdash;which made it criminal on my part not to take the
+Brokenshire view of things with equanimity. I tried to. I bent my will
+to it. I bent my spirit to it. In the end I might have succeeded if the
+heavenly trumpet had not sounded again, with another blast from
+Sarajevo.</p>
+
+
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+<h2>CHAPTER XXII</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="dropcap">A</span>s I have already said, I had almost forgotten Sarajevo. The illustrated
+papers had shown us a large coffin raised high and a small one set low,
+telling us of unequal rank, even at the Great White Throne. I had a
+thought for that from time to time; but otherwise Franz Ferdinand and
+Sophie Chotek were less to me than C&aelig;sar or Napoleon.</p>
+
+<p>But toward the end of July there was a sudden rumbling. It was like that
+first disquieting low note of the "Rheingold," rising from elemental
+depths, presaging love and adventure and war and death and defeat and
+triumph, and the end of the old gods and the burning of their Valhalla.
+I cannot say that any of us knew its significance; but it was arresting.</p>
+
+<p>"What does it mean?"</p>
+
+<p>I think Cissie Boscobel was the first to ask me that question, to which
+I could only reply by asking it in my own turn. What did it mean&mdash;this
+ultimatum from Vienna to Belgrade? Did it mean anything? Could it
+possibly mean what dinner-table diplomats hinted at between a laugh and
+a look of terror?</p>
+
+<p>Hugh and I were descending the Rossiter lawn on a bright afternoon near
+the end of July. Cissie, who was passing with some of the Burkes, ran
+over the grass toward us. Had we seen the papers? Had we read the
+Austrian note? Could we make anything out of it?</p>
+
+<p>I recall her as an extraordinarily vivid picture against the background
+of blue sea, in white, with a green-silk tunic embroidered in peacock's
+feathers, with long jade ear-rings and big jade beads, and a
+jade-colored plume in a black-lace hat cocked on her flaming hair as she
+alone knew how to cock it. I merely want to point out here that to
+Cissie Boscobel and me the questions she asked already possessed a
+measure of life-and-death importance; while to Hugh they had none at
+all.</p>
+
+<p>I remember him as he stood aloof from us, strong and stocky and
+summer-like in his white flannels, a type of that safe and separated
+America which could afford to look on at Old World tragedies and feel
+them of no personal concern. To him Cissie Boscobel and I, with anxiety
+in our eyes and something worse already clutching at our hearts, were
+but two girls talking of things they didn't understand and of no great
+interest, anyway.</p>
+
+<p>"Come along, little Alix!" he interrupted, gaily. "Cissie will excuse
+us. The madam is waiting to motor us over to South Portsmouth, and I
+don't want to keep her waiting. You know," he explained, proudly, "she
+thinks this little girl is a peach!"</p>
+
+<p>Cissie ran back to join the Burkes and we continued our way along the
+Cliff Walk to Mr. Brokenshire's. Hugh had come for me in order that we
+might have the stroll together.</p>
+
+<p>I gave him my view of the situation as we went along, though in it there
+was nothing original.</p>
+
+<p>"You see, if Austria attacks Serbia, then Russia must attack Austria; in
+which case Germany will attack Russia, and France will attack Germany.
+Then England will certainly have to pitch in."</p>
+
+<p>"But we won't. We shall be out of it."</p>
+
+<p>The complacency of his tone nettled me.</p>
+
+<p>"But I sha'n't be out of it, Hugh."</p>
+
+<p>He laughed.</p>
+
+<p>"You? What could you do, little lightweight?"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know; but whatever it was I should want to be doing it."</p>
+
+<p>This joke might have been characterized as a screamer. He threw back his
+head with a loud guffaw.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, of all the little spitfires!" Catching me by the arm, he hugged
+me to him, as we were hidden in a rocky nook of the path. "Why, you're a
+regular Amazon! A soldier in your way would be no more than a ninepin in
+a bowling-alley."</p>
+
+<p>I didn't enter into the spirit of this pleasantry. On the contrary, I
+concealed my anger in endeavoring to speak with dignity.</p>
+
+<p>"And, what's more, Hugh, than not being out of it myself, I don't see
+how I could marry a man who was. Of course, no such war will come to
+pass. It couldn't! The world has gone beyond that sort of madness. We
+know too well the advantages of peace. But if it should break out&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I'll buy you a popgun with the very first shot that's fired."</p>
+
+<p>But in August, when the impossible had happened, when Germany had
+invaded Belgium, and France had moved to her eastern frontier, and
+Russia was pouring into Prussia, and English troops were on foreign
+continental soil for the first time in fifty years, Hugh's indifference
+grew painful. He was perhaps not more indifferent than any one else with
+whom I was thrown, but to me he seemed so because he was so near me. He
+read the papers; he took a sporting interest in the daily events; but it
+resembled&mdash;to my mind at least&mdash;the interest of an eighteenth-century
+farmer's lad excited at a cockfight. It was somewhat in the spirit of
+"Go it, old boy!" to each side indifferently.</p>
+
+<p>If he took sides at all it was rather on that to which Cissie Boscobel
+and I were nationally opposed; but this, we agreed, was to tease us. So
+far as opinions of his own were concerned, he was neutral. He meant by
+that that he didn't care a jot who lost or who won, so long as America
+was out of the fray and could eat its bread in safety.</p>
+
+<p>"There are more important things than safety," I said to him,
+scornfully, one day.</p>
+
+<p>"Such as&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>But when I gave him what seemed to me the truisms of life he was
+contented to laugh in my face.</p>
+
+<p>Cissie Boscobel was more patient with him than I was. I have always
+admired in the English that splendid tolerance which allows to others
+the same liberty of thinking they claim for themselves; but in this
+instance I had none of it. Hugh was too much a part of myself. When he
+said, as he was fond of saying, "If Germany gets at poor degenerate old
+England she'll crumple her up," Lady Cissie could fling him a pitying,
+confident smile, with no venom in it whatever, while I became bitter or
+furious.</p>
+
+<p>Fortunately, Mr. Brokenshire was called to New York on business
+connected with the war, so that his dear Alexandra was delivered for a
+while from his daily condescensions. Though Hugh didn't say so in actual
+words, I inferred that the struggle would further enrich the house of
+Meek &amp; Brokenshire. Of the vast sums it would handle a commission would
+stick to its fingers, and if the business grew too heavy for the usual
+staff to deal with Hugh's own energies were to be called into play. His
+father, he told me, had said so. It would be an eye-opener to Cousin
+Andrew Brew, he crowed, to see him helping to finance the European War
+within a year after that slow-witted nut had had the hardihood to refuse
+him!</p>
+
+<p>In the Brokenshire villa the animation was comparable to a suppressed
+fever. Mr. Brokenshire came back as often as he could. Thereupon there
+followed whispered conferences between him and Jack, between him and Jim
+Rossiter, between him and kindred magnates, between three and four and
+six and eight of them together, with a ceaseless stream of telegrams, of
+the purport of which we women knew nothing. We gave dinners and lunches,
+and bathed at Bailey's, and played tennis at the Casino, and lived in
+our own little lady-like Paradise, shut out from the interests
+convulsing the world. Knitting had not yet begun. The Red Cross had
+barely issued its appeals. America, with the speed of the
+Franco-Prussian War in mind, was still under the impression that it
+could hardly give its philanthropic aid before the need for it would be
+over.</p>
+
+<p>Of all our little coterie Lady Cissie and I alone perhaps took the sense
+of things to heart. Even with us, it was the heart that acted rather
+than the intelligence. So far as intelligence went, we were convinced
+that, once Great Britain lifted her hand, all hostile nations would
+tremble. That was a matter of course. It amazed us that people round us
+should talk of our enemy's efficiency. The word was just coming into
+use, always with the implication that the English were inefficient and
+unprepared.</p>
+
+<p>That would have made us laugh if those who said such things hadn't said
+them like Hugh, with detached, undisturbed deliberation, as a matter
+that was nothing to them. Many of them hoped, and hoped ardently, that
+the side represented by England, Russia, and France would be victorious;
+but if it wasn't, America would still be able to sit down to eat and
+drink, and rise up to play, as we were doing at the moment, while
+nothing could shake her from her ease.</p>
+
+<p>Owing to our kinship in sentiment, Lady Cissie and I drew closer
+together. We gave each other bits of information in which no one else
+would have had an interest. She was getting letters from England; I from
+England and Canada. Her brother Leatherhead had been ordered to France
+with his regiment&mdash;was probably there. Her brother Rowan, who had been
+at Sandhurst, had got his commission. The young man her sister Janet was
+engaged to had sailed with the Rangers for Marseilles and would go at
+once to the front instead of coming home. If he could get leave the
+young couple would be married hastily, after which he would return to
+his duty. My sister Louise wrote that her husband's ship was in the
+North Sea and that her news of him was meager. The husband of my sister
+Victoria, who had had a staff appointment at Gibraltar, had been ordered
+to rejoin his regiment; and he, too, would soon be in Belgium.</p>
+
+<p>From Canada I heard of that impulse toward recruiting which was
+thrilling the land from the Island of Vancouver, in the Pacific, to that
+of Cape Breton, in the Atlantic, and in which the multitudes were of one
+heart and one soul. Men came from farms, factories, and fisheries; they
+came from banks and shops and mines. They tramped hundreds of miles,
+from the Yukon, from Ungava, and from Hudson Bay. They arrived in troops
+or singly, impelled by nothing but that love which passes the love of
+women&mdash;the love of race, the love of country, the love of honor, the
+love of something vast and intangible and inexplicable, that comes as
+near as possible to that love of man which is almost the love of God.</p>
+
+<p>I can proudly say that among my countrymen it was this, and it was
+nothing short of this. They were as far from the fray as their neighbors
+to the south, and as safe. Belgium and Serbia meant less to most of them
+than to the people of San Francisco, Chicago, and New York; but a great
+cause, almost indefinable to thought, meant everything. To that cause
+they gave themselves&mdash;not sparingly or grudgingly, but like Araunah the
+Jebusite to David the son of Jesse, "as a king gives unto a king."</p>
+
+<p>Men are wonderful to me&mdash;all men of all races. They face hardship so
+cheerfully and dangers so gaily, and death so serenely. This is true of
+men not only in war, but in peace&mdash;of men not only as saints, but as
+sinners. And among men it seems to me that our Colonial men are in the
+first rank of the manliest. Frenchman, German, Austrian, Italian,
+Russian, Englishman, and Turk had each some visible end to gain. They
+couldn't help going. They couldn't help fighting. Our men had nothing to
+gain that mortal eyes could see. They have endured, "as seeing Him who
+is invisible."</p>
+
+<p>They have come from the far ends of the earth, and are still
+coming&mdash;turning their backs on families and business and pleasure and
+profit and hope. They have counted the world well lost for love&mdash;for a
+true love&mdash;a man's love&mdash;a redemptive love if ever there was one; for
+"greater love hath no man than this, that a man lay down his life for
+his friends."</p>
+
+<p>But when, with my heart flaming, I spoke of this to Lady Cecilia, she
+was cold. "Fancy!" was the only comment she ever made on the subject.
+Toward my own intensity of feeling she was courteous; but she plainly
+felt that in a war in which the honors would be to the professional
+soldier, and to the English professional soldier first of all, Colonials
+were out of place. It was somewhat presumptuous of them to volunteer.</p>
+
+<p>She was a splendid character&mdash;with British limitations. Among those
+limitations her attitude toward Colonials was, as I saw things, the
+first. She rarely spoke of Canadians or Australians; it was always of
+Colonials, with a delicately disdainful accent on the word impossible to
+transcribe. Geography, either physical or ethnic, was no more her strong
+point than it is that of other women; and I think she took Colonials to
+be a kind of race of aborigines, like the Maoris or the Hottentots&mdash;only
+that by some freak of nature they were white. So, whenever my heart was
+so hot that I could contain myself no longer, and I poured out my
+foolish tales of the big things we hoped to do for the empire and the
+world, the dear thing would merely utter her dazed, "Fancy!" and strike
+me dumb.</p>
+
+<p>And it all threw me back on the thought of Larry Strangways. Reader, if
+you suppose that I had forgotten him you are making a mistake.
+Everything made my heart cry out for him&mdash;Hugh's inanity; his father's
+lumbering dignity; Mildred's sepulchral apothegms, which were deeper
+than I could fathom and higher than I could scale; Cissie Boscobel's
+stolid scorn of my country; and Newport's whole attitude of taking no
+notice of me or mine. Whenever I had minutes of rebellion or stress it
+was on Larry Strangways I called, with an agonized appeal to him to come
+to me. It was a purely rhetorical appeal, let me say in passing. As it
+would never reach him, he could not respond to it; but it relieved my
+repressed emotions to send it out on the wings of the spirit. It was
+the only vehicle I could trust; and even that betrayed me&mdash;for he came.</p>
+
+<p>He came one hot afternoon about the 20th of August. His card was brought
+to me by the rosebud Thomas as I was taking a siesta up-stairs.</p>
+
+<p>"Tell Mr. Strangways I shall come down at once," I said to my footman
+knight; but after he had gone I sat still.</p>
+
+<p>I sat still to estimate my strength. If Larry Strangways made such an
+appeal to me as I had made to him, should I have the will-power to
+resist him? I could only reply that I must have it! There was no other
+way. When Hugh had been so true to me it was impossible to be other than
+true to him. It was no longer a question of love, but of right: and I
+couldn't forsake my maxim.</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless, when I threw off my dressing-gown instinct compelled me to
+dress at my prettiest. To be sure, my prettiest was only a flowered
+muslin and a Leghorn hat, in which I resembled the vicar's daughter in a
+Royal Academy picture; but if I was never to see Larry Strangways again
+I wanted the vision in his heart to be the most decent possible. As I
+dressed I owned to myself that I loved him. I had never done so before,
+because I had never known it&mdash;or rather, I had known it from that
+evening on the train when I had seen nothing but his traveling-cap; only
+I had strangled the knowledge in my heart. I meant to strangle it again.
+I should strangle it the minute I went down-stairs. But for this little
+interval, just while I was fastening my gown and pinning on my hat, it
+seemed to me of no great harm to let the unfortunate passion come out
+for a breath in the sunlight.</p>
+
+<p>And yet, after having rehearsed all the romantic speeches I should make
+in giving him up forever, he never mentioned love to me at all. On the
+contrary, he had on that gleaming smile which, from the beginning of our
+acquaintance, was like the flash of a sword held up between him and me.
+When he came forward from a corner of the long, dim drawing-room all the
+embarrassment was on my side.</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose you wonder what brings me," were the words he uttered when
+shaking hands.</p>
+
+<p>I tried to murmur politely that, whatever it was, I was glad to see
+him&mdash;only the words refused to form themselves.</p>
+
+<p>"Can't we go out?" he asked, as I cast about me for chairs. "It's so
+stuffy in here."</p>
+
+<p>I led the way through the hall, picking up a rose-colored parasol of
+Mrs. Rossiter's as we passed the umbrella-stand.</p>
+
+<p>"How much money have you got?" he asked, abruptly, as soon as we were on
+the terrace.</p>
+
+<p>I made an effort to gather my wits from the far fields into which they
+had wandered.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you mean in ready cash? Or how much do I own in all?"</p>
+
+<p>"How much in all?"</p>
+
+<p>I told him&mdash;just a few thousand dollars, the wreckage of what my father
+had left. My total income, apart from what I earned, was about four
+hundred dollars a year.</p>
+
+<p>"I want it," he said, as we descended the steps to the lower terrace.
+"How soon could you let me have it?"</p>
+
+<p>I made the reckoning as we went down the lawn toward the sea. I should
+have to write to my uncle, who would sell my few bonds and forward me
+the proceeds. Mr. Strangways himself said that would take a week.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm going to make a small fortune for you," he laughed, in explanation.
+"All the nations of the earth are beginning to send to us for munitions,
+and Stacy Grainger is right on the spot with the goods. There'll be a
+demand for munitions for years to come&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, not for years to come!" I exclaimed. "Only till the end of the
+war."</p>
+
+<p>"'But the end is not by and by,'" he quoted from the Bible. "It's a long
+way off from by and by&mdash;believe me! We're up against the struggle
+mankind has been getting ready for ever since it's had a history. I
+don't want just to make money out of it; but, since money's to be
+made&mdash;since we can't help making it&mdash;I want you to be in on it."</p>
+
+<p>I didn't thank him, because I had something else on my mind.</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps you don't know that I'm engaged to Hugh Brokenshire. We're to
+be married before we move back to New York."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I do know it. That's the reason I'm suggesting this. You'll want
+some money of your own, in order to feel independent. If you don't have
+it the Brokenshire money will break you down."</p>
+
+<p>I don't know what I said, or whether I was able to say anything. There
+was something in this practical care-taking interest that moved me more
+than any love declaration he could have made. He was renouncing me in
+everything but his protection. That was going with me. That was watching
+over me. There was no one to watch over me in the whole world with just
+this sort of devotion.</p>
+
+<p>I suppose we talked. We must have said something as we descended the
+slope; I must have stammered some sort of appreciation. All I can
+clearly remember is that, as we reached the steps going down to the
+Cliff Walk, Hugh was coming up.</p>
+
+<p>I had forgotten that this sort of encounter was possible. I had
+forgotten Hugh. When I saw his innocent, blank face staring up at us I
+felt I was confronting my doom.</p>
+
+<p>"Well!" he ejaculated, as though he had caught us in some criminal
+conspiracy.</p>
+
+<p>As it was for me to explain, I said, limply:</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Strangways has been good enough to offer to make some money for me,
+Hugh. Isn't that kind of him?"</p>
+
+<p>Hugh grew slowly crimson. His voice shook with passion. He came up one
+step.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Strangways will be kinder still in minding his own business."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Hugh!"</p>
+
+<p>"Don't be offended, Mr. Brokenshire," Larry Strangways said, peaceably.
+"I merely had the opportunity to advise Miss Adare as to her
+investments&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I shall advise Miss Adare as to her investments. It happens that she's
+engaged to me!"</p>
+
+<p>"But she's not married to you. An engagement is not a marriage; it's
+only a preliminary period in which two persons agree to consider whether
+or not a marriage between them would be possible. Since that's the
+situation at present, I thought it no harm to tell Miss Adare that if
+she puts her money into some of the new projects for ammunition that I
+know about&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"And I'm sure she's not interested."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Strangways bowed.</p>
+
+<p>"That will be for her to decide. I understood her to say&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Whatever you understood her to say, sir, Miss Adare is not interested!
+Good afternoon." He nodded to me to come down the steps. "I was just
+coming over for you. Shall we walk along together?"</p>
+
+<p>I backed away from him toward the stone balustrade.</p>
+
+<p>"But, Hugh, I can't leave Mr. Strangways like this. He's come all the
+way from New York on purpose to&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Then I shall defray his expense and pay him for his time; but if we're
+going at all, dear&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>At a sign of the eyes from Larry Strangways I mastered my wrath at this
+insolence, and spoke meekly:</p>
+
+<p>"I didn't know we were going anywhere in particular."</p>
+
+<p>"And you'll excuse me, Mr. Brokenshire," our visitor interrupted, "if I
+say that I can't be dismissed in this way by any one but Miss Adare
+herself. You must remember she isn't your wife&mdash;that she's still a free
+agent. Perhaps, if I explain the matter a little further&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Hugh put up his hand in stately imitation of his father.</p>
+
+<p>"Please! There's no need of that."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, but there is, Hugh!"</p>
+
+<p>"You see," Mr. Strangways reasoned, "it's more than a question of making
+money. We shall make money, of course; but that's only incidental. What
+I'm really asking Miss Adare to do is to help one of the most glorious
+causes to which mankind has ever given itself&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>I started toward him impulsively.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! Do you feel like that?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not like that; that's all I feel. I live it! I've no other thought."</p>
+
+<p>It was curious to see how the force of this all-absorbing topic swept
+Hugh away from the merely personal standpoint.</p>
+
+<p>"And you call yourself an American?" he demanded, hotly.</p>
+
+<p>"I call myself a man. I don't emphasize the American. This thing
+transcends what we call nationality."</p>
+
+<p>Hugh shouted, somewhat in the tone of a man kicking against the pricks:</p>
+
+<p>"Not what I call nationality! It's got nothing to do with us."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, but it will have something to do with us! It isn't merely a
+European struggle; it's a universal one. Sooner or later you'll see
+mankind divided into just two camps."</p>
+
+<p>Hugh warmed to the discussion.</p>
+
+<p>"Even if we do, it still doesn't follow that we'll all be in your camp."</p>
+
+<p>"That depends on whether we're among those driving forward or those
+kicking back. The American people has been in the first of these classes
+hitherto; it remains to be seen whether or not it's there still. But if
+it isn't as a nation I can tell you that some of us will be there as
+individuals."</p>
+
+<p>Hugh's tone was one of horror.</p>
+
+<p>"You mean that you'd go and fight?"</p>
+
+<p>"That's about the size of it."</p>
+
+<p>"Then you'd be a traitor to your country for getting her into trouble."</p>
+
+<p>"If I had to choose between being a traitor to my country and a traitor
+to my manhood I'd take the first. Fortunately, no such alternative will
+be thrust upon us. Miss Adare pointed out to me once that there couldn't
+be two right courses, each opposed to the other. Right and rights must
+be harmonious. If I'm true to myself I'm true to my country; and I can't
+be true to my country unless I do my 'bit,' as the phrase begins to go,
+for the good of the human race."</p>
+
+<p>"And you're really going?" I asked, breathlessly.</p>
+
+<p>"As soon as I can arrange things with Mr."&mdash;but he remembered he was
+speaking to a Brokenshire&mdash;"as soon as I can arrange things with&mdash;with
+my boss. He's willing to let me go, and to keep my job for me if I come
+back. He'll take charge of my small funds and of any Miss Adare
+intrusts to me. He asked me to give her that message. When it's settled
+I shall start for Canada."</p>
+
+<p>"That'll do you no good," Hugh stated, triumphantly. "They won't enlist
+Americans there."</p>
+
+<p>Larry Strangways smiled.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, there are ways! If there's nothing else for it I'll swear in as a
+Canadian."</p>
+
+<p>"You'd do that!" In different tones the exclamation came from Hugh and
+me, simultaneously.</p>
+
+<p>I can still see Larry Strangways with his proud, fair head held high.</p>
+
+<p>"I'd do anything rather than not fight. My American birthright is as
+dear to me as it is to any one; but we've reached a time when such
+considerations must go by the board. For the matter of that, the more
+closely we can now identify the Briton and the American, the better it
+will be for the world."</p>
+
+<p>He explained this at some length. The theme was so engrossing that even
+Hugh was willing to listen to the argument. People were talking already
+of a world federation which would follow the war and unite all the
+nations in approximate brotherhood. Larry Strangways didn't believe in
+that as a possibility; at least he didn't believe in it as an immediate
+possibility. There were just two nations fitted to understand each other
+and act together, and if they couldn't fraternize and sympathize it was
+of no use to expect that miracle from races who had nothing in common.
+Get the United States and the British Empire to stand shoulder to
+shoulder, and sooner or later the other peoples would line up beside
+them.</p>
+
+<p>But you must begin at the beginning. Unless you started as an acorn you
+couldn't be an oak; if you were not willing to be a baby you could
+never become a man. There must be no more Hague conferences, with their
+vast programs and ineffective means. The failure of that dream was
+evident. We must be practical; we mustn't soar beyond the possible. The
+possible and the practical lay in British and American institutions and
+commonly understood principles. The world had an asset in them that had
+never been worked. To work it was the task not primarily of governments,
+but, first and before everything, of individuals. It was up to the
+British and American man and woman in their personal lives and opinions.</p>
+
+<p>I interrupted to say that it was up to the American man and woman first
+of all; that British willingness to co-operate with America was far more
+ready than any similar sentiment on the American side.</p>
+
+<p>Hugh threw the stress on efficiency. America was so thorough in her
+methods that she couldn't co-operate with British muddling.</p>
+
+<p>"What is efficiency?" Larry Strangways asked. "It's the best means of
+doing what you want to do, isn't it? Well, then, efficiency is a matter
+of your ambitions. There's the efficiency of the watch-dog who loves his
+master and guards the house, and there's the efficiency of the tiger in
+the jungle. One has one's choice."</p>
+
+<p>It was not a question, he continued to reason, as to who began this
+war&mdash;whether it was a king or a czar or a kaiser. It was not a question
+of English and German competition, or of French or Russian aggression,
+or fear of it. The inquiry went back of all that. It went back beyond
+modern Europe, beyond the Middle Ages, beyond Rome and Assyria and
+Egypt. It was a battle of principles rather than of nations&mdash;the last
+great struggle between reason and force&mdash;the fight between the instinct
+of some men to rule other men and the contrary instinct, implanted more
+or less in all men, that they shall hold up their heads and rule
+themselves.</p>
+
+<p>It was part of the impulse of the human race to forge ahead and upward.
+The powers that worked against liberty had been arming themselves, not
+merely for a generation or a century, but since the beginning of time,
+for just this trial of strength. The effort would be colossal and it
+would be culminating; no human being would be spared taking part in it.
+If America didn't come in of her own accord she would be compelled to
+come in; and meantime he, Larry Strangways, was going of free will.</p>
+
+<p>He didn't express it in just this way. He put it humbly, colloquially,
+with touches of slang.</p>
+
+<p>"I've got to be on the job, Miss Adare, and there are no two ways about
+it," were the words in which he ended. "I've just run down from New York
+to speak about&mdash;about the money; and&mdash;and to bid you good-by." He
+glanced toward Hugh. "Possibly, in view of the fact that I'm so soon to
+be off&mdash;and may not come back, you know," he added, with a laugh&mdash;"Mr.
+Brokenshire won't mind if&mdash;if we shake hands."</p>
+
+<p>I can say to Hugh's credit that he gave us a little while together.
+Going down the steps he had mounted, he called back, over his shoulder:</p>
+
+<p>"I'm going off for a walk, dear. I shall return in exactly fifteen
+minutes; and I expect you to be ready for me then."</p>
+
+<p>But when we were alone we had little or nothing to say. I recall that
+quarter of an hour as a period of emotional paralysis. I knew and he
+knew that each second ticked off an instant that all the rest of our
+lives we should long for in vain; and yet we didn't know how to make use
+of it.</p>
+
+<p>We began to wander slowly up the slope. We did it aimlessly, stopping
+when we were only a few yards away from the steps. We talked about the
+money. We talked about his going to Canada. We talked about the breaking
+off, so far as we knew, of all intercourse between Mr. Grainger and Mrs.
+Brokenshire. But we said nothing about ourselves. We said nothing about
+anything but what was superficial and trite and lame.</p>
+
+<p>Once or twice Larry Strangways took out his watch and glanced at it, as
+if to underscore the fact that the sands were slipping away. I kept my
+face hidden as much as possible beneath the rose-colored parasol. So far
+as I could judge, he looked over my head. We still had said
+nothing&mdash;there was still nothing we could say&mdash;when, beneath the bank of
+the lawn, and moving back in our direction, we saw the crown of Hugh's
+Panama.</p>
+
+<p>"Good-by!" Larry Strangways said, then.</p>
+
+<p>"Good-by!"</p>
+
+<p>My hand rested in his without pressure; without pressure his had taken
+mine. I think his eyes made one last wild, desperate appeal to me but if
+so I was unable to respond to it.</p>
+
+<p>I don't know how it happened that he turned his back and walked firmly
+up the lawn. I don't know how it happened that I also turned and took
+the necessary steps toward Hugh. All I can say is&mdash;and I can say it only
+in this way&mdash;all I can say is, I felt that I had died.</p>
+
+<p>That is, I felt that I had died except for one queer, bracing echo which
+suddenly come back to me. It was in the words Mildred Brokenshire had
+used, and which, at the time, I had thought too deep for me to
+understand:</p>
+
+<p>"Life is not a blind impulse working blindly. It is a beneficent
+rectifying power."</p>
+
+
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+<h2>CHAPTER XXIII</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="dropcap">A</span>s Hugh Brokenshire and I were walking along the Ocean Drive a few days
+after Larry Strangways had come and gone, the dear lad got some
+satisfaction from charging me with inconsistency.</p>
+
+<p>"You're certainly talking about England and Canada to-day very
+differently from what you used to."</p>
+
+<p>"Am I? Well, if it seems so it's because you don't understand the
+attitude of Canadians toward their mother country. As a country, as a
+government, England has been magnificently true to us always. It's only
+between Englishmen and Canadians as individuals that irritation arises,
+and for that most Canadians don't care. The Englishman snubs and the
+Canadian grows bumptious. I don't think the Canadian would grow
+bumptious if the Englishman didn't snub. Both snubbing and bumptiousness
+are offensive to me; but that, I suppose, is because I'm over-sensitive.
+And yet one forgets sensitiveness when it comes to anything really
+national. In that we're one, with as perfect a solidarity as that which
+binds Oregon to Florida. You'll never find one of us who isn't proud to
+serve when England gives the orders."</p>
+
+<p>"To be snubbed by her for serving."</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly; to be snubbed by her for serving! It's all we look for; it's
+all we shall ever get. No one need make any mistake about that. In
+Canada we're talking of sending fifty thousand troops to the front. We
+may send five hundred thousand and we shall still be snubbed. But we're
+not such children as to go into a cause in the hope that some one will
+give us sweets. We do it for the Cause. We know, too, that it isn't
+exactly injustice on the English side; it's only ungraciousness."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, they're long on ungraciousness, all right."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; they're very long on ungraciousness&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Even dad feels that. You should hear him cuss after he's been kotowing
+to some British celebrity&mdash;and given him the best of all he's got&mdash;and
+put him up at the good clubs. They bring him letters in shoals, you
+know&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I'm afraid it has to be admitted that the best-mannered among them are
+often rude from our transatlantic point of view; and yet the very
+rudeness is one of the defects of their good qualities. You can no more
+take the ungraciousness out of the English character than you can take
+the hardness out of granite; but if granite wasn't hard it wouldn't
+serve its purposes. We Canadians know that, don't you see? We allow for
+it in advance, just as you allow for the clumsiness of the elephant for
+the sake of his strength and sagacity. We're not angels
+ourselves&mdash;neither you Americans nor we Canadians; and yet we like to
+get the credit for such small merits as we possess."</p>
+
+<p>Hugh whipped off the blossom of a roadside flower as he swung his stick.</p>
+
+<p>"All they give us credit for is money."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, they certainly give you a great deal of credit for that!" I
+laughed. "They make a golden calf of you. They fall down and worship
+you, like the children of Israel in the wilderness. When we're as rich
+as we shall be some day they'll do the same by us."</p>
+
+<p>Within a week my intercourse with Hugh had come to be wholly along
+international lines. We were no longer merely a man and a woman; we were
+types; we were points of view. The world-struggle&mdash;the time-struggle, as
+Larry Strangways would have called it&mdash;had broken out in us. The
+interlocking of human destinies had become apparent. As positively as
+Franz Ferdinand and Sophie Chotek, we had our part in the vast drama.
+Even Hugh, against all his inclinations to hang back, was obliged to
+take his share. So lost were we in the theme that, as we tramped along,
+we had not a thought for the bracing wind, the ruffled seas, the dashing
+of surf over ledges, or the exquisite, gentle savagery of the rocky
+flowering uplands, with villas marking the sky-line as they do on the
+C&ocirc;te d'Azur.</p>
+
+<p>I was the more willing to discuss the subject since I felt it a kind of
+mission from Mr. Strangways to carry out the object he had so much at
+heart. I was to be&mdash;so far as so humble a body as I could be it&mdash;an
+interpreter of the one country to the other. I reckoned that if I
+explained and explained and explained, and didn't let myself grow tired
+of explaining, some little shade of the distrust which each of the great
+English-speaking nations has for its fellow might be scrubbed away. I
+couldn't do much, but the value of all effort is in proportion to the
+opportunity. So I began with Hugh.</p>
+
+<p>"You see, Hugh, peoples are like people. Each of us has his weak points
+as well as his strong ones; but we don't necessarily hate each other on
+that account. You've lived in England, and you know the English rub you
+up the wrong way. I've lived there, too, and had exactly the same
+experience. But we go through just that thing with lots of individuals
+with whom we manage to be very good friends. You and your brother Jack,
+for instance, don't hit it off so very well; and yet you contrive to be
+Brokenshires together and uphold the honor of the family."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm a Socialist and Jack's a snob&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"That's it. Mentally you're the world apart. But, as you've objects in
+common to work for, you get along fairly well. Now why shouldn't the
+Englishman and the American do the same? Why should they always see how
+much they differ instead of how much they are alike? Why should they
+always underscore each other's faults when by seeing each other's good
+points they could benefit not only themselves, but the world? If there
+was an entente, let us say, between the British Empire and the United
+States&mdash;not exactly an alliance, perhaps, if people are afraid of the
+word&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>He stopped and wheeled round suddenly, suspicion in his small,
+myosotis-colored eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Look here, little Alix; isn't this the dope that fresh guy Strangways
+was handing out the other day?"</p>
+
+<p>I flushed, but I didn't stammer.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't care whether it is or not. Besides, it isn't dope; it's food;
+it's medicine; it's a remedy for the ills of this poor old civilization.
+We've got it in our power, we English-speaking peoples&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"You haven't," he declared, coolly. "Your country would still be the
+goat."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," I agreed, "Canada would still be the goat; but we don't mind
+that. We're used to it. You'll always have a fling at us on one side and
+England on the other; but we're like the strong, good-natured boy who
+doesn't resent kicks and cuffs because he knows he can grow and thrive
+in spite of them."</p>
+
+<p>He put his hand on my arm and spoke in the kindly tone that reminded me
+of his father.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear little girl, you can drop it. It won't go down. Suppose we keep
+to the sort of thing you can tackle. You see, when you've married me
+you'll be an American. Then you'll be out of it."</p>
+
+<p>I was hurt. I was furious. The expression, too, was getting on my
+nerves. I began to wish I was out of it. Since I couldn't be in it,
+marriage might prove a Lethe bath, in which I should forget I had
+anything to do with it. Sheer desperation made me cry out:</p>
+
+<p>"Very well, then, Hugh! If we're to be married, can't we be married
+quickly? Then I shall have it off my mind."</p>
+
+<p>There was not only a woeful decline of spirit in his response, but a
+full acceptance of the Brokenshire yoke.</p>
+
+<p>"We can't be married any quicker than dad says. But I'll talk to him."</p>
+
+<p>He made no objection, however, when, a little later, I received from my
+uncle a draft for my entire fortune and announced my intention of
+handing the sum over to Mr. Strangways for investment. Hugh probably
+looked on the amount as too insignificant to talk about; in addition to
+which some Brokenshire instinct for the profitable may have led him to
+appreciate a thing so good as to make it folly to say nay to it. The
+result was that I heard from Larry Strangways, in letters which added
+nothing to my comfort.</p>
+
+<p>I don't know what I expected him to say; but, whatever it was, he didn't
+say it. He wasn't curt; his letters were not short. On the contrary, he
+wrote at length, and brought up subjects that had nothing to do with
+certificates of stock. But they were all political or international, or
+related in one way or another to the ideal of his heart&mdash;England and
+America! The British Empire and the United States! The brotherhood of
+democracies! Why in thunder had the bally world waited so long for the
+coalition of dominating influences which alone could keep it straight?
+Why dream of the impossible when the practical had not as yet been
+tried? Why talk peace, peace, when there was no peace at The Hague, if a
+full and controlling sympathy could be effected nearer home&mdash;let us say
+at Ottawa? He was going to Canada to enlist; he would start in a few
+days' time; but he was doing it not merely to fight for the Cause; he
+was going to be one man, at least, just a straggling democratic
+scout&mdash;one of a forlorn hope, if you chose to call it so&mdash;to offer his
+life to a union of which the human race had the same sort of need as
+human beings of wedlock.</p>
+
+<p>And in all this there was no reference to me. He might not have loved
+me; I might not have loved him. I answered the letters in the vein in
+which they were written, and once or twice showed my replies to Hugh.</p>
+
+<p>"Forget it!" was his ordinary comment. "The American eagle is too wise
+an old bird to be caught with salt on its tail."</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps it was because Larry Strangways made no appeal to me that I gave
+myself to forwarding his work with a more enthusiastic zeal. I had to do
+it quietly, for fear of offending Hugh; but I got my opportunities&mdash;that
+is, I got my opportunities to talk, though I saw I made no impression.</p>
+
+<p>I was only a girl&mdash;the queer Canadian who had been Ethel Rossiter's
+nursery governess and whom the Brokenshire family, for unexplained
+reasons, had accepted as Hugh's future wife. What could I know about
+matters at which statesmen had always shied? It was preposterous that I
+should speak of them; it was presumptuous. Nobody told me that; I saw it
+in people's eyes.</p>
+
+<p>And I should have seen it in their eyes more plainly if they had been
+interested. No one was. An entente between the United States and the
+British Empire might have been an alliance between Bolivia and
+Beluchistan. It wasn't merely fashionable folk who wouldn't think of it;
+no one would. I knew plenty of people by this time. I knew townspeople
+of Newport, and summer residents, and that intermediate group of retired
+admirals and professors who come in between the two. I knew shop people
+and I knew servants, all with their stake in the country, their stake in
+the world. Not a soul among them cared a hang.</p>
+
+<p>And then, threatening to put me entirely out of business, we got the
+American war refugees and the English visitors. I group them together
+because they belonged together. They belonged together for the reason
+that there was nothing each one of them didn't know&mdash;by hearsay from
+some one who knew it by hearsay. The American war refugees had all been
+in contact with people in England whom they characterized as well
+informed. The English visitors were well informed because they were
+English visitors. Some of them told prodigious secrets which they had
+indirectly from Downing Street. Others gave the reasons why General
+Isleworth had been superseded in his command, and the part Mrs.
+Lamingford, that beautiful American, had played in the scandal. From
+others we learned that Lady Hull, with her baleful charm, was the
+influence really responsible for the shortage of shells.</p>
+
+<p>War was shown to us by our English visitors not as a mighty, pitiless
+contest, but as a series of social, sexual, and political intrigues, in
+which women pulled the strings. I know it was talk; but talk it was. For
+weeks, for months, we had it with the greater number of our meals.
+Wherever there were English guests&mdash;women of title they often were, or
+eccentric public men&mdash;we had an orgy of tales in which the very entrails
+of English reputations were torn out. No one was spared&mdash;-not even the
+Highest in the Land. All the American could do was to listen
+open-mouthed; and open-mouthed he listened.</p>
+
+<p>I will say for the English that they have no disloyalty but that of
+chatter; but the plain American could not be expected to know that. To
+him the chatter was gospel truth. He has none of that facility for
+discounting gossip on the great which the Englishman learns with his
+mother tongue. The American heard it greedily; he was avid for more. He
+retailed it at dinners and teas, and in that Reading-room which is
+really a club. Naturally enough! From what our English visitors told us
+about themselves, their statesmen, their generals, their admirals were
+footlers at the best, and could, moreover, be described by a vigorous
+compound Anglo-Saxon word in the Book of Revelations.</p>
+
+<p>And the English papers were no better. All the important ones, weeklies
+as well as dailies, were sent to Mr. Brokenshire, and copies lay about
+at Mr. Rossiter's. They sickened me. I stopped reading them. There was
+good in them, doubtless; but what I chiefly found was a wild tempest of
+abuse of this party or that party, of this leading man or that leading
+man, with the effect on the imagination of a ship going down amid the
+curses and confusion of officers and passengers alike. It may have
+sounded well in England; very likely it did; but in America it was
+horrible. I mention it here only because, in this babel of voices, my
+own faint pipe on behalf of a league of democracies could no more be
+heard than the tinkle of a sacring bell amid the shrieking and bursting
+of shells.</p>
+
+<p>I was often tempted to say no more about it and let the world go to pot.
+Then I thought of Larry Strangways, offering his life for an ideal as to
+which I was unwilling to speak a word. So I would begin my litany of
+Bolivia and Beluchistan over again, crooning it into the ears of people,
+both gentle and simple, who, in the matter of response, might never have
+heard the names of the two countries I mentioned together.</p>
+
+<p>A few lines from one of Larry Strangways's letters, written from
+Valcartier, prompted me to persevere in this course:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>People are no more interested here than they are on our side of
+the border; but it's got to come, for all that. What we need is
+a public opinion; and a public opinion can only be created by
+writing and talk. Thank the Lord, you and I can talk if we are
+not very strong on writing! and talk we must! Bigger streams
+have risen from smaller springs. The mustard seed is the least
+of all seeds; but it grows to be the greatest of herbs.</p></div>
+
+<p>It might have been easier to call forth a responsive spark had we
+realized that there was a war. But we hadn't&mdash;not in the way that the
+fact came to us afterward. In spite of the taking of Namur, Li&egrave;ge,
+Maubeuge, the advance on Paris, and the rolling back on the Marne, we
+had seen no more than chariots and horses of fire in the clouds. It was
+not only distant, it was phantom-like. We read the papers; we heard of
+horrors; American war refugees and English visitors alike piled up the
+agonies, to which we listened eagerly; we saw the moneyed magnates come
+and go in counsel with Mr. Brokenshire; we knitted and sewed and
+subscribed to funds; but, so far as vital participation went, Hugh was
+right in saying we were out of it.</p>
+
+<p>And then a shot fell into our midst, smiting us with awe.</p>
+
+<p>Cissie Boscobel, Hugh, another young man, and I had been playing tennis
+one September morning on Mrs. Rossiter's courts. The other young man
+having left for Bailey's Beach, the remaining three of us were
+sauntering back toward the house when a lad, whom Cissie recognized as
+belonging to the Burkes' establishment, came running up with a telegram.
+As it was for Cissie she stood still to read it, while Hugh and I
+strolled on. Once or twice I glanced back toward her; but she still held
+the brief lines up before her as if she couldn't make out their meaning.</p>
+
+<p>When she rejoined us, as she presently did, I noticed that her color had
+died out, though there was otherwise no change in her unless it was in
+stillness. The question was as to whether we should go to Bailey's or
+not. I didn't want to go and Hugh declared he wouldn't go without me.</p>
+
+<p>"We'll put it up to Cissie," he said, as we reached the house. "If she
+goes we'll all go."</p>
+
+<p>"I think I won't go," she answered, quietly; adding, without much change
+of tone, "Leatherhead's been killed in action."</p>
+
+<p>So there really was a war! Hugh's deep "Oh!" was in Itself like the
+distant rumble of guns.</p>
+
+
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+<h2>CHAPTER XXIV</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="dropcap">T</span>here was nothing to be done for Lady Cecilia because she took her
+bereavement with so little fuss. She asked for no sympathy; so far as I
+ever saw, she shed no tears. If on that particular spot in the
+neighborhood of Ypres a man had had to fall for his country, she was
+proud that it had been a Boscobel. She put on a black frock and ordered
+her maid to take the jade-green plume out of a black hat; but, except
+that she declined invitations, she went about as usual. As the first
+person we knew to be touched by the strange new calamity of war, we made
+a kind of heroine of her, treating her with an almost romantic
+reverence; but she herself never seemed aware of it. It was my first
+glimpse of that unflinching British heroism of which I have since seen
+much, and it impressed me.</p>
+
+<p>We began to dream together of being useful; our difficulty was that we
+didn't see the way. War had not yet made its definite claims on women
+and girls, and knitting till our muscles ached was not a sufficient
+outlet for our energies. Had I been in Cissie's place, I should have
+gone home at once; but I suspected that, in spite of all her brave words
+to me, she couldn't quite kill the hope that kept her lingering on.</p>
+
+<p>My own ambitions being distasteful to Hugh, I was obliged to repress
+them, doing so with the greater regret because some of the courses I
+suggested would have done him good. They would have utilized the
+physical strength with which he was blessed, and delivered him from that
+material well-being to which he returned with the more child-like
+rejoicing because of having been without it.</p>
+
+<p>"Hugh, dear," I said to him once, "couldn't we be married soon and go
+over to France or England? Then we should see whether there wasn't
+something we could do."</p>
+
+<p>"Not on your life, little Alix!" was his laughing response. "Since as
+Americans we're out of it, out of it we shall stay."</p>
+
+<p>Over replies like this, of which there were many, I was gnashing my
+teeth helplessly when, all at once, I was called on to see myself as
+others saw me, so getting a surprise.</p>
+
+<p>The first note of warning came to me in a few words from Ethel Rossiter.
+I was scribbling her notes one morning as she lay in bed, when it
+occurred to me to say:</p>
+
+<p>"If I'm going to be married, I suppose I ought to be doing something
+about clothes."</p>
+
+<p>She murmured, listlessly:</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I wouldn't be in a hurry about that, if I were you."</p>
+
+<p>I went on writing.</p>
+
+<p>"I haven't been in a hurry, have I? But I shall certainly want some
+things I haven't got now."</p>
+
+<p>"Then you can get them after you're married. When are you to be married,
+anyhow?"</p>
+
+<p>As the question was much on my mind, I looked up from my task and said:</p>
+
+<p>"Well&mdash;when?"</p>
+
+<p>"Don't you know?"</p>
+
+<p>"No. Do you?"</p>
+
+<p>She shook her head.</p>
+
+<p>"I didn't know but what father had said something about it."</p>
+
+<p>"He hasn't&mdash;not a word." I resumed my scribbling. "It's a queer thing
+for him to have to settle, don't you think? One might have supposed it
+would have been left to me."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, you don't know father!" It was as if throwing off something of no
+importance that she added, "Of course, he can see that you're not in
+love with Hugh."</p>
+
+<p>Amazed at this reading of my heart, I bent my head to hide my confusion.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know why you should say that," I stammered at last, "when you
+can't help seeing I'm quite true to him."</p>
+
+<p>She shrugged her beautiful shoulders, of which one was bare.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, true! What's the good of that?" She went on, casually: "By the by,
+do call up Daisy Burke and tell her I sha'n't go to that luncheon of
+theirs. They're going to have old lady Billing, who's coming to stay at
+father's; and you don't catch me with that lot except when I can't help
+it." She reverted to the topic of a minute before. "I don't blame you,
+of course. I suppose, if I were in your place, it's what I should do
+myself. It's what I thought you'd try for&mdash;you remember, don't you?&mdash;as
+long ago as when we were in Halifax. But naturally enough other people
+don't&mdash;" I failed to learn, however, what other people didn't, because
+of a second reversion in theme: "Do make up something civil to say to
+Daisy, and tell her I won't come."</p>
+
+<p>We dropped the subject, chiefly because I was afraid to go on with it;
+but when I met old Mrs. Billing I received a similar shock. Having gone
+to Mr. Brokenshire's to pay her my respects, I was told she was on the
+terrace. As a matter of fact, she was making her way toward the hall,
+and awkwardly carried a book, a sunshade, and the stump of a cigarette.
+Dutifully I went forward in the hope of offering my services.</p>
+
+<p>"Get out of my sight!" was her response to my greetings. "I can't bear
+to look at you."</p>
+
+<p>Brushing past me without further words, she entered the house.</p>
+
+<p>"What did she mean?" I asked of Cissie Boscobel, to whom I heard that
+Mrs. Billing had given her own account of the incident.</p>
+
+<p>Lady Cecilia was embarrassed.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, nothing! She's just so very odd."</p>
+
+<p>But I insisted:</p>
+
+<p>"She must have meant something. Had it anything to do with Hugh?"</p>
+
+<p>Reluctantly Lady Cissie let it out. Mrs. Billing had got the idea that I
+was marrying Hugh for his money; and, though in the past she had not
+disapproved of this line of action, she had come to think it no road to
+happiness. Having taken the trouble to give me more than one hint that I
+should many the man I was in love with she was now disappointed in my
+character.</p>
+
+<p>"You know how much truth there is in all that, don't you?" I said,
+evasively.</p>
+
+<p>Lady Cissie did her best to support me, though between her words and her
+inflection there was a curious lack of correspondence.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh yes&mdash;certainly!"</p>
+
+<p>I got the reaction of her thought, however, some minutes later, when she
+said, apropos of nothing in our conversation:</p>
+
+<p>"Since Janet can't be married this month, I needn't go home for a long
+time."</p>
+
+<p>But knowing that this suggestion was in the air, I was the better able
+to interpret Mildred's oracular utterance the next time I sat at the
+foot of the couch, in the darkened room.</p>
+
+<p>"One can't be true to another," she said, in reply to some feeler of my
+own, "unless one is true to oneself, and one can't be true to oneself
+unless one follows the highest of one's instincts."</p>
+
+<p>I said, inwardly: "Ah! Now I know the reason for her distrust of me."
+Aloud I made it:</p>
+
+<p>"But that throws us back on the question as to what one's highest
+instincts are."</p>
+
+<p>There was the pause that preceded all her expressions of opinion.</p>
+
+<p>"On the principle that it is more blessed to give than to receive, I
+suppose our highest promptings are those which urge us to give most of
+ourselves."</p>
+
+<p>"And when one gives all of oneself that one can dispose of?"</p>
+
+<p>"One has then to consider the importance or the unimportance of what one
+has to withhold."</p>
+
+<p>Of all the things that had been said to me this was the most disturbing.
+It had seemed to me hitherto that the essence of my duty lay in marrying
+Hugh. If I married him, I argued, I should have done my best to make up
+to him for all he had undergone for my sake. I saw myself as owing him a
+debt. The refusal to pay it would have implied a kind of moral
+bankruptcy. Considering myself solvent, and also considering myself
+honest, I felt I had no choice. Since I could pay, I must pay. The
+reasoning was the more forcible because I liked Hugh and was grateful
+to him. I could be tolerably happy with him, and would make him a good
+wife.</p>
+
+<p>To make him a good wife I had choked back everything I had ever felt for
+Larry Strangways; I had submitted to all the Brokenshire repressions; I
+had made myself humble and small before Hugh and his father, and
+accepted the status of a Libby Jaynes. My heart cried out like any other
+woman's heart&mdash;it cried out for my country in the hour of its stress; it
+cried out for my home in what I tried to make the hour of my happiness;
+when it caught me unawares it cried out for the man I loved. But all
+this I mastered as our Canadian men were mastering their longings and
+regrets on saying their good-bys. What was to be done was to be done,
+and done willingly. Willingly I meant to marry Hugh, not because he was
+the man I would have chosen before all others, but because, when no one
+else in the world was giving me a thought, he had had the astonishing
+goodness to choose me. And now&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>With Mrs. Brokenshire the situation was different. She believed I was in
+love with Hugh and that the others were doing me a wrong. Moreover, she
+informed me one day that I was making my way in Newport. People who
+noticed me once noticed me again. The men beside whom I sat at the
+occasional lunches and dinners I attended often spoke of me to the
+hostess on going away, and there could be no better sign than that. They
+said that, though I "wasn't long on looks," I had ideas and knew how to
+express them. She ventured to hope that this kindly opinion might, in
+the end, soften Mr. Brokenshire.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you mean that he isn't softened as it is?"</p>
+
+<p>She answered, indirectly:</p>
+
+<p>"He's not accustomed to be forced&mdash;and he feels I've forced him."</p>
+
+<p>It was her first reference to what she had done for Hugh and me. In its
+way it gave me permission to say:</p>
+
+<p>"But isn't it a question of the <i>quid pro quo</i>? If you granted him
+something for something he granted you in return&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>But the expression on her face forbade my going on. I have never seen
+such a parting to human lips, or so haunting, so lost a look in human
+eyes. It told me everything. It was a confession of all the things she
+never could have said. "Better is it," says the Book of Ecclesiastes,
+"that thou shouldest not vow, than that thou shouldest vow and not pay."
+She had vowed and not paid. She had got her price and hadn't fulfilled
+her bargain. She couldn't; she never would. It was beyond her. The big
+moneyed man who at that minute was helping to finance a good part of
+Europe, who was a power not only in a city or a country, but the world,
+had been tricked by a woman; and I in my poor little person was the
+symbol of his discomfiture.</p>
+
+<p>No wonder he found it hard to forgive me! No wonder that whenever I came
+where he was he treated me to some kindly hint or correction which was
+no sufficient veil for his scorn! As I had never to my knowledge been
+hated by any one, it was terrible to feel myself an object of abhorrence
+to a man of such high standing in the world. Our eyes couldn't meet
+without my seeing that his passions were seething to the boiling-point.
+If he could have struck me dead with a look I think he would have done
+it. And I didn't hate him; I was too sorry for him. I could have liked
+him if he had let me.</p>
+
+<p>I had, consequently, much to think about. I thought and I prayed. It was
+not a minute at which to do anything hurriedly. To a spirit so hot as
+mine it would have been a relief to lash out at them all; but, as I had
+checked myself hitherto, I checked myself again. I reasoned that if I
+kept close to right, right would take care of me. Not being a
+theologian, I felt free to make some closeness of identity between right
+and God. I might have defined right as God in action, or God as right in
+conjunction with omnipotence, intelligence, and love; but I had no need
+for exactness of terms. In keeping near to right I knew I must be near
+to God: and near to God I could let myself go so far that no power on
+earth would seem strong enough to save me&mdash;and yet I should be saved.</p>
+
+<p>I went on then with a kind of fearlessness. If I was to marry Hugh I was
+convinced that I should be supported; if not, I was equally convinced
+that something would hold me back.</p>
+
+<p>"If anything should happen," I said to Cissie Boscobel one day, "I want
+you to look after Hugh."</p>
+
+<p>The dawn seemed to break over her, though she only said, tremulously:</p>
+
+<p>"Happen&mdash;how?"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know. Perhaps nothing will. But if it does&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>She slipped away, doubtless so as not to hear more.</p>
+
+<p>And then one evening, when I was not thinking especially about it, the
+Cloud came down on the Mountain; the voice spoke out of it, and my
+course was made plain.</p>
+
+<p>But before that night I also had received a cablegram. It was from my
+sister Louise, to say that the <i>King Arthur</i>, her husband's ship, had
+been blown up in the North Sea, and that he was among the lost.</p>
+
+<p>So the call was coming to me more sharply than I had yet heard it. With
+Lady Cecilia's example in mind, I said little to those about me beyond
+mentioning the fact. I suppose they showed me as much sympathy as the
+sweeping away of a mere brother-in-law demanded. They certainly said
+they were sorry, and hinted that that was what nations let themselves in
+for when they were so rash as to go to war.</p>
+
+<p>"Think we'd ever expose our fellows like that?" was Hugh's comment. "Not
+on your life!"</p>
+
+<p>But they didn't make a heroine of me as they did with Lady Cissie; not
+that I cared about that. I only hoped that the fact that my
+brother-in-law's name was in all the American accounts of the incident
+would show them that I belonged to some one, and that some one belonged
+to me. If it did I never perceived it. Perhaps the loss of a mere
+captain in the navy was a less gallant occurrence than the death in
+action of a Lord Leatherhead; perhaps we were already getting used to
+the toll of war; but, whatever the reason, Lady Cissie was still, to all
+appearances, the only sufferer. Within a day or two a black dress was my
+sole reminder that the <i>King Arthur</i> had gone down; and, even to Hugh, I
+made no further reference to the catastrophe.</p>
+
+<p>And then came the evening when, as Larry Strangways said on my telling
+him about it, "the fat was all in the fire."</p>
+
+<p>It was the occasion of what had become the annual dinner at Mr.
+Brokenshire's in honor of Mrs. Billing&mdash;a splendid function. Nothing
+short of a splendid function would have satisfied the old lady, who had
+the gift of making even the great afraid of her. The event was the more
+magnificent for the reason that, in addition to the mother of the
+favorite, a number of brother princes of finance, in Newport for
+conference with our host, were included among the guests. Of these one
+was staying in the house, one with the Jack Brokenshires, and two at a
+hotel. I was seated between the two who were at the hotel because they
+were socially unimportant. Even Mr. Brokenshire had sometimes to extend
+his domestic hospitality to business friends for the sake of business,
+when perhaps he should have preferred to show his attentions in clubs.</p>
+
+<p>The chief scene, if I may so call it, was played to the family alone in
+Mildred's sitting-room, after the guests had gone; but there was a
+curtain-raiser at the dinner-table before the assembled company. I give
+bits of the conversation, not because they were important, but because
+of what they led up to.</p>
+
+<p>We were twenty-four, seated on great Italian chairs, which gave each of
+us the feeling of being a sovereign on a throne. It took all the men of
+the establishment, as well as those gathered in from the Jack
+Brokenshires' and Mrs. Rossiter's, to wait on us, a detail by which in
+the end I profited. The gold service had been sent down from the vaults
+in New York, so that the serving-plates were gold, as well as the plates
+for some of the other courses. Gold vases and bowls held the roses that
+adorned the table, and gold spoons and forks were under our hands. It
+was the first time I had ever been able to notice with my own eyes how
+nearly the rich American can rival the state of kings and emperors.</p>
+
+<p>It goes without saying that all the women had put on their best, and
+that the jewels were as precious metals in the days of Solomon; they
+were "nothing accounted of." Diamonds flashed, rubies broke out in fire,
+and emeralds said unspeakable things all up and down the table; the rows
+and ropes and circlets of pearls made one think of the gates of
+Paradise. I was the only one not so bedecked, getting that contrast of
+simplicity which is the compensation of the poor. The ring Hugh had
+given me, a sapphire set in diamonds, was my only ornament; and yet the
+neat austerity of my black evening frock rendered me conspicuous.</p>
+
+<p>It also goes without saying that I had no right to be conspicuous, being
+the person of least consequence at the board. Mr. Brokenshire not only
+felt that himself, but he liked me to feel it; and he not only liked me
+to feel it, but he liked others to see that his great, broad spirit
+admitted me among his family and friends from noble promptings of
+tolerance. I was expected to play up to this generosity and to present
+the foil of humility to the glory of the other guests and the beauty of
+the table decorations.</p>
+
+<p>In general I did this, and had every intention of doing it again.
+Nothing but what perhaps were the solecisms of my immediate neighbors
+caused my efforts to miscarry. I had been informed by Mrs. Brokenshire
+beforehand that they were socially dull, that one of them was "awful,"
+and that my powers would be taxed to keep them in conversation. My
+mettle being up, I therefore did my best.</p>
+
+<p>The one who was awful proved to be a Mr. Samuel Russky, whose claim to
+be present sprang from the fact that he was a member of a house that had
+the power to lend a great deal of money. He was a big man, of a mingled
+Slavic and Oriental cast of countenance, and had nothing more awful
+about him than a tendency to overemphasis. On my right I had Mr. John G.
+Thorne, whose face at a glance was as guileless as his name till
+contemplation revealed to you depth beyond depth of that peculiar
+astuteness of which only the American is master. I am sure that when we
+sat down to table neither of these gentlemen had any intention of taking
+a hand in my concerns, and are probably ignorant to this day of ever
+having done so; but the fact remains.</p>
+
+<p>It begins with my desire to oblige Mrs. Brokenshire by trying to make
+the dinner a success. Having to lift the heaviest corner, so to speak, I
+gave myself to the task first with one of my neighbors and then with the
+other. They responded so well that as early as when the terrapin was
+reached I was doing it with both. As there was much animation about the
+table, there was nothing at that time to call attention to our talk.</p>
+
+<p>Naturally, it was about the war. From the war we passed to the attitude
+of the United States toward the struggle; and from that what could I do
+but glide to the topics as to which I felt myself a mouthpiece for Larry
+Strangways? It was a chance. Here were two men obviously of some
+influence in the country, and neither of them of very strong
+convictions, so far as I could judge, on any subject but that of
+floating foreign bonds. As the dust from a butterfly's wing might turn
+the scale with one or both of them, I endeavored to throw at least that
+much weight on the side of a British and American entente.</p>
+
+<p>At something I said, Mr. Russky, with the slightest hint of a Yiddish
+pronunciation, complained that I spoke as if all Americans were
+"Anglo-Zaxons"; whereas it was well known that the "Anglo-Zaxon" element
+among them was but a percentage, which was destined to grow less.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm not putting it on that ground," I argued, with some zeal, taking up
+a point as to which one of Larry Strangways's letters had enlightened
+me. "I see well enough that the American ideal isn't one of nationality,
+but of principle. When the federation of the States was completed it was
+on the basis not of a common Anglo-Saxon origin, but on that of the
+essential unity of mankind. Mere nationality was left out of the
+question. All nations were welcomed, with the idea of welding them into
+one."</p>
+
+<p>"And England," Mr. Russky declared, somewhat more loudly than was
+necessary for my hearing him, "is still bound up in her Anglo-Zaxondon."</p>
+
+<p>"Not a bit of it!" I returned. "Her spirit is exactly the same as that
+of this country. Except this country, where is there any other of which
+the gates and ports and homes and factories have been open to all
+nations as hers have been? They've landed on her shores in thousands and
+thousands, without passports and without restraint, welcomed and
+protected even when they've been taking the bread out of the born
+Englishman's mouth. Look at the number of foreigners they've been
+obliged to round up since the war began&mdash;for the simple reason that
+they'd become so many as to be a peril. It's the same not only in the
+British Islands, but in every part of the British Empire. Always the
+same reception for all, with liberty for all. My own country, in
+proportion to its population, is as full of citizens of foreign birth as
+this is. They've been fathered and mothered from the minute they landed
+at Halifax. Poles and Ruthenians and Slovaks and Icelanders have been
+given the same advantages as ourselves. I'm not boasting of this, Mr.
+Russky. I'm only saying that, though we've never defined the principle
+in a constitution, our instinct toward mankind is the same as yours."</p>
+
+<p>It was here Mr. Thorne broke in, saying that sympathy in the United
+States was all for France.</p>
+
+<p>"I can understand that," I said. "You often find in a family that the
+sympathy of each of the members is for some one outside. But that
+doesn't keep them from being a family, or from acting in important
+moments with a family's solidarity."</p>
+
+<p>"And, personally," Mr. Thorne went on, "I don't care for England."</p>
+
+<p>I laughed politely in his face.</p>
+
+<p>"And do you, a business man, say that? I thought business was carried on
+independently of personal regard. You might conceivably not like Mr.
+Warren or Mr. Casemente"&mdash;I named the two other banker guests&mdash;"or even
+Mr. Brokenshire; but you do business with them as if you loved them, and
+quite successfully, too. In the same way the Briton and the American
+might put personal fancies out of the question and co-operate for great
+ends."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, but, young lady," Mr. Russky exclaimed, so noisily as to draw
+attention, "you forget that we're far from the scene of European
+disputes, and that our wisest course is to keep out of them!"</p>
+
+<p>I fell back again on what I had learned from Larry Strangways.</p>
+
+<p>"But you're not far from the past of mankind. You inherit that as much
+as any European; and it isn't an inheritance that can be limited
+geographically." I still quoted one of Larry Strangways's letters,
+knowing it by heart. "Every Russian and German and Jew and Italian and
+Scotchman who lands in New York brings a portion of it with him and
+binds the responsibility of the New World more closely to the sins of
+the Old. Oceans and continents will not separate us from sins. As we can
+never run away from our past, Americans must help to expiate what they
+and their ancestors have done in the countries from which they came.
+This isn't going to be a local war or a twentieth-century war. It's the
+struggle of all those who have had to bear the burdens of the world
+against those who have made them bear them."</p>
+
+<p>"If that was the case," Mr. Russky said, doubtfully, "Americans would be
+all on one side."</p>
+
+<p>"They will be all on one side&mdash;when they see it. The question is, Will
+they see it soon enough?"</p>
+
+<p>Being so interested I didn't notice that our immediate neighbors were
+listening, nor did I observe, what Cissie Boscobel told me afterward,
+that Hugh was dividing disquieting looks between me and his father. I
+did try to divert Mr. Thorne to giving his attention to Mrs. Burke, who
+was his neighbor on the right, but I couldn't make him take the hint. It
+was, in fact, he who said:</p>
+
+<p>"We've too many old grudges against England to keep step with her now."</p>
+
+<p>I smiled engagingly.</p>
+
+<p>"But you've no old grudges against the British Empire, have you?"</p>
+
+<p>"What do you mean?"</p>
+
+<p>"You've no old grudges against Canada, or Australia, or the West Indies,
+or New Zealand, or the Cape?"</p>
+
+<p>"N-no."</p>
+
+<p>"Nor even against Scotland or Wales or Ireland?"</p>
+
+<p>"N-no."</p>
+
+<p>"You recognize in all those countries a spirit more or less akin to your
+own, and one with which you can sympathize?"</p>
+
+<p>"Y-yes."</p>
+
+<p>"Then isn't that my point? You speak of England, and you see the
+southern end of an island between the North Sea and the Atlantic; but
+that's all you see. You forget Scotland and Ireland and Canada and
+Australia and South Africa. You think I'm talking of a country three
+thousand miles away, whereas it comes right up to your doors. It's on
+the borders of Maine and Michigan and Minnesota, and all along your
+line. That isn't Canada alone; it's the British Empire. It's the country
+with which you Americans have more to do than with any other in the
+world. It's the one you have to think of first. You may like some other
+better, but you can't get away from having it as your most pressing
+consideration the minute you pass your own frontiers. That," I declared,
+with a little laugh, "is what makes my entente important."</p>
+
+<p>"Important for England or for America?" Mr. Russky, as a citizen of the
+country he thought had most to give, was on his guard.</p>
+
+<p>"Important for the world!" I said, emphatically. "England and
+America&mdash;the British Empire and the United States&mdash;are both secondary in
+what I'm trying to say. I speak of them only as the two that can most
+easily line up together. When they've done that the rest will follow
+their lead. It's not to be an offensive and defensive alliance, or
+directed against any other power. It would be a starting-point, the
+beginning of world peace. It would also be an instance of what could be
+accomplished in the long run among all the nations of the world by
+mutual tolerance and common sense."</p>
+
+<p>As I made a little mock oratorical flourish there was a laugh from our
+part of the table. Some one sitting opposite called out, "Good!" I
+distinctly heard Mrs. Billing's cackle of a "Brava!" I ought to say,
+too, that, afraid of even the appearance of "holding forth," I had kept
+my tone lowered, addressing myself to my left-hand companion. If others
+stopped talking and listened it was because of the compulsion of the
+theme. It was a burning theme. It was burning in hearts and minds that
+had never given it a conscious thought; and, now that for a minute it
+was out in the open, it claimed them. True, it was an occasion meant to
+be kept free from the serious; but even in Newport we were beginning to
+understand that occasions kept free from the serious were over&mdash;perhaps
+for the rest of our time.</p>
+
+<p>After that the conversation in our neighborhood became general. With the
+exception of Hugh, who was not far away, every one joined in, aptly or
+inaptly, as the case might be, with pros and cons and speculations and
+anecdotes and flashes of wit, and a far deeper interest than I should
+have predicted. As Mrs. Brokenshire whispered after we regained the
+drawing-room, it had made the dinner go; and a number of women whom I
+hadn't known before came up and talked to me.</p>
+
+<p>But all that was only the curtain-raiser. It was not till the family
+were assembled in Mildred's room up-stairs that the real play began.</p>
+
+
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+<h2>CHAPTER XXV</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="dropcap">M</span>ildred's big, heavily furnished room was as softly lighted as usual. As
+usual, she herself, in white, with a rug across her feet, lay on her
+couch, withdrawn from the rest. She never liked to have any one near
+her, unless it was Hugh; she never entered into general talk. When
+others were present she remained silent, as she did on this evening.
+Whatever passed through her mind she gave out to individuals when she
+was alone with them.</p>
+
+<p>The rest of the party were scattered about, standing or sitting. There
+were Jack and Pauline, Jim and Ethel Rossiter, Mrs. Billing, Mrs.
+Brokenshire, Cissie Boscobel, who was now staying with the Brokenshires,
+and Hugh. The two banker guests had gone back to the smoking-room. As I
+entered, Mr. Brokenshire was standing in his customary position of
+command, a little like a pasha in his seraglio, his back to the empty
+fireplace. With his handsome head and stately form, he would have been a
+truly imposing figure had it not been for his increased stoutness and
+the occasional working of his face.</p>
+
+<p>I had come up-stairs with some elation. The evening might have been
+called mine. Most of the men, on rejoining us in the drawing-room, had
+sought a word with me, and those who didn't know me inquired who I was.
+I could hardly help the hope that Mr. Brokenshire might see I was worth
+my salt, and that on becoming a member of his family I should bring my
+contribution.</p>
+
+<p>But on the way up-stairs Hugh gave me a hint that in that I might be
+mistaken.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, little Alix, you certainly gave poor old dad a shock this time."</p>
+
+<p>"A shock?" I asked, in not unnatural astonishment.</p>
+
+<p>"Your fireworks."</p>
+
+<p>"Fireworks! What on earth do you mean?"</p>
+
+<p>"It's always a shock when fireworks go off too close to you; and
+especially when it's in church."</p>
+
+<p>As we had reached the door of Mildred's room, I searched my conduct
+during dinner to see in what I had offended.</p>
+
+<p>It is possible my entry might have passed unnoticed if Mrs. Brokenshire,
+with the kindest intentions, had not come forward to the threshold and
+taken me by the hand. As if making a presentation, she led me toward the
+august figure before the fireplace.</p>
+
+<p>"Our little girl," she said, in the hope of doing me a good turn,
+"distinguished herself to-night, didn't she?"</p>
+
+<p>He must have been stung to sudden madness by the sight of the two of us
+together. In general he controlled himself in public. He was often
+cruel, but with a quiet subtle cruelty to which even the victims often
+didn't know how to take exception. But to-night the long-gathering fury
+of passion was incapable of further restraint. Behind it there was all
+the explosive force of a lifetime of pride, complacence, and self-love.
+The exquisite creature&mdash;a vision of soft rose, with six strings of
+pearls&mdash;who was parading her bargain, as you might say, without having
+paid for it, excited him to the point of frenzy. I saw later, what I
+didn't understand at the time, that he was striking at her through me.
+He was willing enough to strike at me, since I was the nobody who had
+forced herself into his family; but she was his first aim.</p>
+
+<p>Having looked at me disdainfully, he disdainfully looked away.</p>
+
+<p>"She certainly gave us an exhibition!" he said, with his incisive,
+whip-lash quietude.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Brokenshire dropped my hand.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Howard!"</p>
+
+<p>I think she backed away toward the nearest chair. I was vaguely
+conscious of curious eyes in the dimness about me as I stood alone
+before my critic.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm sorry if I've done anything wrong, Mr. Brokenshire," I said,
+meekly. "I didn't mean to."</p>
+
+<p>He looked over my head, speaking casually, as one who takes no interest
+in the subject.</p>
+
+<p>"All the great stupidities have been committed by people who didn't mean
+to&mdash;but there they are!"</p>
+
+<p>I continued to be meek.</p>
+
+<p>"I didn't know I had been stupid."</p>
+
+<p>"The stupid never do."</p>
+
+<p>"And I don't think I have been," I added, with rising spirit.</p>
+
+<p>Though there was consternation in the room behind me, Mr. Brokenshire
+merely said:</p>
+
+<p>"Unfortunately, you must let others judge of that."</p>
+
+<p>"But how?" I insisted. "If I have been, wouldn't it be a kindness on
+your part to tell me in what way?"</p>
+
+<p>He pretended not merely indifference, but reluctance.</p>
+
+<p>"Isn't that obvious?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not to me&mdash;and I don't think to any one else."</p>
+
+<p>"What do you call it when one&mdash;you compel me to speak frankly&mdash;what do
+you call it when one exposes one's ignorance of&mdash;of fundamental things
+before a roomful of people who've never set eyes on one before?"</p>
+
+<p>Since no one, not even Hugh, was brave enough to stand up for me, I had
+to do it for myself.</p>
+
+<p>"But I didn't know I had."</p>
+
+<p>"Probably not. It's what I warned you of, if you'll take the trouble to
+remember. I said&mdash;or it amounted to that&mdash;that until you'd learned the
+ways of the people who are generally recognized as <i>comme il faut</i>,
+you'd be wise in keeping yourself&mdash;unobtrusive."</p>
+
+<p>"And may I ask whether one becomes obtrusive merely in talking of public
+affairs?"</p>
+
+<p>"You'll pardon me for giving you a lesson before others; but, since you
+invite it&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Quite so, Mr. Brokenshire, I do invite it."</p>
+
+<p>"Then I can only say that in what we call good society we become
+obtrusive in talking of things we know nothing about."</p>
+
+<p>"But surely one can set an idea going, even if one hasn't sounded all
+its depths. And as for the relations between this country and the
+British Empire&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Well-bred women leave such subjects to statesmen."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; we've done so. We've left them to statesmen and"&mdash;I couldn't
+resist the temptation to say it&mdash;"and we've left them to financiers; but
+we can't look at Europe and be proud of the result. We women, well bred
+or otherwise, couldn't make things worse even if we were to take a hand;
+and we might make them better."</p>
+
+<p>He was not moved from his air of slightly bored indifference.</p>
+
+<p>"Then you must wait for women with some knowledge of the subject."</p>
+
+<p>"But, Mr. Brokenshire, I have some knowledge of the subject! Though I'm
+neither English nor American, I'm both. I've only to shift from one side
+of my mind to the other to be either. Surely, when it comes to the
+question of a link between the two countries I love I'm qualified to put
+in a plea for it."</p>
+
+<p>I think his nerves were set further on edge because I dared to argue the
+point, though he would probably have been furious if I had not. His tone
+was still that of a man deigning no more than to fling out an occasional
+stinging remark.</p>
+
+<p>"As a future member of my family, you're not qualified to make yourself
+ridiculous before my friends. To take you humorously was the kindest
+thing they could do."</p>
+
+<p>I saw an opportunity.</p>
+
+<p>"Then wouldn't it be equally kind, sir, if you were to follow their
+example?"</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Billing's hen-like crow came out of the obscurity:</p>
+
+<p>"She's got you there!"</p>
+
+<p>The sound incited him. He became not more irritable, but cruder.</p>
+
+<p>"Unhappily, that's beyond my power. I have to blush for my son Hugh."</p>
+
+<p>Hugh spoke out of the darkness, his voice trembling with the fear of his
+own hardihood in once more braving Jove.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh no, dad! You must take that back."</p>
+
+<p>The father wheeled round in the new direction. He was losing command of
+the ironic courtesy he secured by his air of indifference, and growing
+coarser.</p>
+
+<p>"My poor boy! I can't take it back. You're like myself&mdash;in that you can
+only be fooled when you put your trust in a woman."</p>
+
+<p>It was Mrs. Brokenshire's turn:</p>
+
+<p>"Howard&mdash;please!"</p>
+
+<p>In the cry there was the confession of the woman who has vowed and not
+paid, and yet begs to be spared the blame.</p>
+
+<p>Jack Brokenshire sprang to his feet and hurried forward, laying his hand
+on his father's arm.</p>
+
+<p>"Say, dad&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>But Mr. Brokenshire shook off the hand, refusing to be placated. He
+looked at his wife, who had risen, confusedly, from her chair and was
+backing away from him to the other side of the room.</p>
+
+<p>"I said poor Hugh was being fooled by a woman; and he is. He's marrying
+some one who doesn't care a hang about him and who's in love with
+another man. He may not be the first in the family to do that, but I
+merely make the statement that he's doing it."</p>
+
+<p>Hugh leaped forward.</p>
+
+<p>"She's not in love with another man!"</p>
+
+<p>"Ask her."</p>
+
+<p>He clutched me by the wrist.</p>
+
+<p>"You're not, are you?" he pleaded. "Tell father you're not."</p>
+
+<p>I was so sorry for Hugh that I hardly thought of myself. I was benumbed.
+The suddenness of the attack had been like a blow from behind that stuns
+you without taking away your consciousness. In any case Mr. Brokenshire
+gave me no time, for he laughed gratingly.</p>
+
+<p>"She can't do that, my boy, because she is. Everybody knows it. I know
+it&mdash;and Ethel and Mildred and Cissie. They're all here and they can
+contradict me if I'm saying what isn't so."</p>
+
+<p>"But she may not know it herself," Mrs. Billing croaked. "A girl is
+often the last to make that discovery."</p>
+
+<p>"Ask her."</p>
+
+<p>Hugh obeyed, still clutching my wrist.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm asking you, little Alix. You're not, are you?"</p>
+
+<p>I could say nothing. Apart from the fact that I didn't knew what to say,
+I was dumbfounded by the way in which it had all come upon me. The only
+words that occurred to me were:</p>
+
+<p>"I think Mr. Brokenshire is ill."</p>
+
+<p>Oddly enough. I was convinced of that. It was the one assuaging fact. He
+might hate me, but he wouldn't have made me the object of this mad-bull
+rush if he had been in his right mind. He was not in his right mind; he
+was merely a blood-blinded animal as he went on:</p>
+
+<p>"Ask her again, Hugh. You're the only one she's been able to keep in the
+dark; but then"&mdash;his eyes followed his wife, who was still slowly
+retreating&mdash;"but then that's nothing new. She'll let you believe
+anything&mdash;till she gets you. That's always the game with women of the
+sort. But once you're fast in her clutches&mdash;then, my boy, look out!"</p>
+
+<p>I heard Pauline whisper, "Jack, for Heaven's sake, do something!"</p>
+
+<p>Once more Jack's hand was laid on his parent's arm, with his foolish
+"Say, dad&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Once more the restraining hand was shaken off. The cutting tones were
+addressed to Hugh:</p>
+
+<p>"You see what a hurry she's been in to be married, don't you? How many
+times has she asked you to do it up quick? She's been afraid that you'd
+slip through her fingers." He turned toward me. "Don't be alarmed, my
+dear. We shall keep our word. You've worked hard to capture the
+position, and I shall not deny that you've been clever in your attacks.
+You deserve what you've won, and you shall have it. But all in good
+time. Don't rush. The armies in Europe are showing us that you must
+intrench yourself where you are if you want, in the end, to push
+forward. You push a little too hard."</p>
+
+<p>Poor Hugh had gone white. He was twisting my wrist as if he would wring
+it off, though I felt no pain till afterward.</p>
+
+<p>"Tell me!" he whispered. "Tell me! You're&mdash;you're not marrying me
+for&mdash;for my money, are you?"</p>
+
+<p>I could have laughed hysterically.</p>
+
+<p>"Hugh, don't be an idiot!" came, scornfully, from Ethel Rossiter.</p>
+
+<p>I could see her get up, cross the room, and sit down on the edge of
+Mildred's couch, where the two engaged in a whispered conversation. Jim
+Rossiter, too, got up and tiptoed his sleek, slim person out of the
+room. Cissie Boscobel followed him. They talked in low tones at the head
+of the stairs outside. I found voice at last:</p>
+
+<p>"No, Hugh; I never thought of marrying you for that reason. I was doing
+it only because it seemed to me right."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Brokenshire emitted a sound, meant to be a laugh:</p>
+
+<p>"Right! Oh, my God!"</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Brokenshire was now no more than a pale-rose shadow on the farther
+side of the room, but she came to my aid:</p>
+
+<p>"She was, Howard. Please believe her. She was, really!"</p>
+
+<p>"Thanks, darling, for the corroboration! It comes well from you. Where
+there's a question of right you're an authority."</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Billing's hoarse, prolonged "Ha-a!" implied every shade of
+comprehension. I saw the pale-rose shadow sink down on a sofa, all in a
+little heap, like something shot with smokeless powder.</p>
+
+<p>Hugh was twisting my wrist again and whispering:</p>
+
+<p>"Alix, tell me. Speak! What are you marrying me for? What about the
+other fellow? Is it Strangways? Speak!"</p>
+
+<p>"I've given you the only answer I can, Hugh. If you can't believe in my
+doing right&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"What were you in such a hurry for? Was that the reason&mdash;what dad
+says&mdash;that you were afraid you wouldn't&mdash;hook me?"</p>
+
+<p>I looked him hard in the eye. Though we were speaking in the lowest
+possible tones, there was a sudden stillness in the room, as though
+every one was hanging on my answer.</p>
+
+<p>"Have I ever given you cause to suspect me of that?" I asked, after
+thinking of what I ought to say.</p>
+
+<p>Three words oozed themselves out like three drops of his own blood. They
+were the distillation of two years' uncertainty:</p>
+
+<p>"Well&mdash;sometimes&mdash;yes."</p>
+
+<p>Either he dropped my wrist or I released myself. I only remember that I
+was twisting the sapphire-and-diamond ring on my finger.</p>
+
+<p>"What made you think so?" I asked, dully.</p>
+
+<p>"A hundred things&mdash;everything!" He gave a great gasp. "Oh, little Alix!"</p>
+
+<p>Turning away suddenly, he leaned his head against the mantelpiece, while
+his shoulders heaved.</p>
+
+<p>It came to me that this was the moment to make an end of it all; but I
+saw Mrs. Rossiter get up from her conference with Mildred and come
+forward. She did it leisurely, pulling up one shoulder of her d&eacute;collet&eacute;
+gown as she advanced.</p>
+
+<p>"Hugh, don't be a baby!" she said, in passing. "Father, you ought to be
+ashamed of yourself!"</p>
+
+<p>If the heavens had fallen my amazement might have been less. She went on
+in a purely colloquial tone, extricating the lace of her corsage from a
+spray of diamond flowers as she spoke:</p>
+
+<p>"I'll tell you why she was marrying Hugh. It was for two or three
+reasons, every one of them to her credit. Any one who knows her and
+doesn't see that must be an idiot. She was marrying him, first, because
+he was kind to her. None of the rest of us was, unless it was Mrs.
+Brokenshire; and she was afraid to show it for fear you'd jump on her,
+father. The rest of us have treated Alix Adare like brutes. I know I
+have."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh no!" I protested, though I could scarcely make myself audible.</p>
+
+<p>"But Hugh was nice to her. He was nice to her from the start. And she
+couldn't forget it. No nice girl would. When he asked her to marry him
+she felt she had to. And then, when he put up his great big bluff of
+earning a living&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"It wasn't a bluff," Hugh contradicted, his face still buried in his
+hands.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, perhaps it wasn't," she admitted, imperturbably. "If you, father,
+hadn't driven him to it with your heroics&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"If you call it heroics that I should express my will&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh your will! You seem to think that no one's got a will but you. Here
+we are, all grown up, two of us married, and you still try to keep us as
+if we were five years old. We're sick of it, and it's time some of us
+spoke. Jack's afraid to, and Mildred's too good; so it's up to me to say
+what I think."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Brokenshire's first shock having passed, he got back something of
+his lordly manner, into which he threw an infusion of the misunderstood.</p>
+
+<p>"And you've said it sufficiently. When my children turn against me&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Nonsense, father! Your children don't do anything of the sort. We're
+perfect sheep. You drive us wherever you like. But, however much we can
+stand ourselves, we can't help kicking when you attack some one who
+doesn't quite belong to us and who's a great deal better than we are."</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Billing crowed again:</p>
+
+<p>"Brava, Ethel! Never supposed you had the pluck."</p>
+
+<p>Ethel turned her attention to the other side of her corsage.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, it isn't a question of pluck; it's one of exasperation. Injustice
+after a while gets on one's nerves. I've had a better chance of knowing
+Alix Adare than any one; and you can take it from me that, when it comes
+to a question of breeding, she's the genuine pearl and we're only
+imitations&mdash;all except Mildred."</p>
+
+<p>Both of Mr. Brokenshire's handsome hands went up together. He took a
+step forward as if to save Mrs. Rossiter from a danger.</p>
+
+<p>"My daughter!"</p>
+
+<p>The pale-rose heap on the other side of the room raised its dainty head.</p>
+
+<p>"It's true, Howard; it's true! Please believe it!"</p>
+
+<p>Ethel went on in her easy way:</p>
+
+<p>"If Alix Adare has made any mistake it's been in ignoring her own
+wishes&mdash;I may say her own heart&mdash;in order to be true to us. The Lord
+knows she can't have respected us much, or failed to see that, judged by
+her standards, we're as common as grass when you compare it to orchids.
+But because she is an orchid she couldn't do anything but want to give
+us back better than she ever got from us; and so&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh no; it wasn't that!" I tried to interpose.</p>
+
+<p>"It's no dishonor to her not to be in love with Hugh," she pursued,
+evenly. "She may have thought she was once; but what girl hasn't thought
+she was in love a dozen times? A fine day in April will make any one
+think it's summer already; but when June comes they know the difference.
+It was April when Hugh asked her; and now it's June. I'll confess for
+her. She is in love with&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Please!" I broke in.</p>
+
+<p>She gave me another surprise.</p>
+
+<p>"Do run and get me my fan. It's over by Mildred. There's a love!"</p>
+
+<p>I had to do her bidding. The picture of the room stamped itself on my
+brain, though I didn't think of it at the time. It seemed rather empty.
+Jack had retired to one window, where he was smoking a cigarette;
+Pauline was at another, looking out at the moonlight on the water. Mrs.
+Billing sat enthroned in the middle, taking a subordinate place for
+once. Mrs. Brokenshire was on the sofa by the wall. The murmur of
+Ethel's voice, but no words, reached me as I stooped beside Mildred's
+couch to pick up the fan.</p>
+
+<p>The invalid took my hand. Her voice had the deep, low murmur of the sea.</p>
+
+<p>"You must forgive my father."</p>
+
+<p>"I do," I was able to say. "I&mdash;I like him in spite of everything&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"And as for my brother, you'll remember what we agreed upon once&mdash;that
+where we can't give all, our first consideration must be the value of
+what we withhold."</p>
+
+<p>I thanked her and went back with the fan. As I passed Mrs. Billing she
+snapped at me, with the enigmatic words:</p>
+
+<p>"You're a puss!"</p>
+
+<p>When I drew near to the group by the fireplace, Mrs. Rossiter was saying
+to Hugh:</p>
+
+<p>"And as for her marrying you for your money&mdash;well, you're crazy! I
+suppose she likes money as well as anybody else; but she would have
+married you to be loyal. She would have married you two months ago if
+father had been willing; and if you'd been willing you could now have
+been in England or France together, trying to do some good. If a woman
+marries one man when she's in love with another the right or the wrong
+depends on her motives. Who knows but what I may have done it myself? I
+don't say I haven't. And so&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>But I had taken off the ring on my way across the room. Having returned
+the fan to Ethel, I went up to Hugh, who looked round at me over his
+shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>"Hugh, darling," I said, very softly, "I feel that I ought to give you
+back this."</p>
+
+<p>He put out his hand mechanically, not thinking of what I was about to
+offer. On seeing it he drew back his hand quickly, and the ring dropped
+on the floor. I can hear it still, rolling with a little rattle among
+the fire-irons.</p>
+
+<p>In making my curtsy to Mr. Brokenshire I raised my eyes to his face. It
+seemed to me curiously stricken. After all her years of submission Mrs.
+Rossiter's rebellion must have made him feel like an autocrat dethroned.
+I repeated my curtsy to Mrs. Billing, who merely stared at me through
+her lorgnette&mdash;to Jack and Pauline, who took no notice, who perhaps
+didn't see me&mdash;to Mrs. Brokenshire, who was again a little rose-colored
+heap&mdash;and to Mildred, who raised her long, white hand.</p>
+
+<p>In the hall outside Cissie Boscobel rose and came toward me.</p>
+
+<p>"You must look after Hugh," I said to her, breathlessly, as I sped on my
+way.</p>
+
+<p>She did. As I hurried down the stairs I heard her saying:</p>
+
+<p>"No, Hugh, no! She wants to go alone."</p>
+
+
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+<h2>POSTSCRIPT</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="dropcap">I</span> am writing in the dawn of a May morning in 1917.</p>
+
+<p>Before me lies a sickle of white beach some four or five miles in curve.
+Beyond that is the Atlantic, a mirror of leaden gray. Woods and fields
+bank themselves inland; here a dewy pasture, there a stretch of plowed
+earth recently sown and harrowed; elsewhere a grove of fir or maple or a
+hazel copse. From a little wooden house on the other side of the
+crescent of white sand a pillar of pale smoke is going straight up into
+the windless air. In the woods round me the birds, which have only just
+arrived from Florida, from the West Indies, from Brazil, are chirruping
+sleepily. They will doze again presently, to awake with the sunrise into
+the chorus of full song. Halifax lies some ten or twelve miles to the
+westward. This house is my uncle's summer residence, which he has lent
+to my husband and me for the latter's after-cure.</p>
+
+<p>I am used to being up at this hour, or at any hour, owing to my
+experience in nursing. As a matter of fact, I am restless with the
+beginning of day, fearing lest my husband may need me. He is in the next
+room. If he stirs I can hear him. In this room my baby is sleeping in
+his little bassinet. It is not the bassinet of my dreams, nor is this
+the white-enameled nursery, nor am I wearing a delicate lace peignoir.
+It is all much more beautiful than that, because it is as it is. My
+baby's name is John Howard Brokenshire Strangways, though we shorten it
+to Broke, which, in the English fashion, we pronounce Brook.</p>
+
+<p>You will see why I wanted to call him by this name; but for that I must
+hark back to the night when I returned the ring to dear Hugh Brokenshire
+and fled. It is like a dream to me now, that night; but a dream still
+vivid enough to recall.</p>
+
+<p>On escaping Hugh and making my way down-stairs I was lucky enough to
+find Thomas, my rosebud footman knight. Poor lad! The judgment trumpet
+was sounding for him, as for Franz Ferdinand and Sophie Chotek and the
+rest of us. He went back to England shortly after that and was killed
+the next year at the Dardanelles. But there he was for the moment,
+standing with the wraps of the Rossiter party.</p>
+
+<p>"Thomas, call the motor," I said, hurriedly. "Be quick! I'm going home,
+alone, and you must come with me. I've things for you to do. Mr. Jack
+Brokenshire will bring Mrs. Rossiter."</p>
+
+<p>On the way I explained my program to him through the window. I had been
+called suddenly to New York. There was a train from Boston to that city
+which would stop at Providence at two. I thought there was one from
+Newport to Providence about twelve-thirty, and it was now a quarter past
+eleven. If there was such a train I must take it; if there wasn't, the
+motor must run me up to Providence, for which there was still time. I
+should delay only long enough to pack a suit-case. For the use I was
+making of him and the chauffeur, as well as of the vehicle, I should be
+responsible to my hosts.</p>
+
+<p>Both the men being my tacitly sworn friends, there was no questioning of
+my authority. I fell back, therefore, into the depths of the limousine
+with the first sense of relief I had had since the day I accepted my
+position with Mrs. Rossiter. Something seemed to roll off me. I realized
+all at once that I had never, during the whole of the two years, been
+free from that necessity of picking my steps which one must have in
+walking on a tight-rope. Now it was delicious. I could have wished that
+the drive along Ochre Point Avenue had been thirty times as long.</p>
+
+<p>For Hugh I had no feeling of compunction. It was so blissful to be free.
+Cissie Boscobel, I knew, would make up to him for all I had failed to
+give, and would give more. Let me say at once that when, a few weeks
+later, the man Lady Janet Boscobel was engaged to had also been killed
+at the front, and her parents had begged Cissie to go home, Hugh was her
+escort on the journey. It was the beginning of an end which I think is
+in sight, of a healing which no one wishes so eagerly as I.</p>
+
+<p>For the last two years Cissie has been mothering Belgian children
+somewhere in the neighborhood of Poperinghe, and Hugh has been in the
+American Ambulance Corps before Verdun. That was Cissie's work, made
+easier, perhaps, by some recollection he retained of me. When he has a
+few days' leave&mdash;so Ethel Rossiter writes me&mdash;he spends it at
+Goldborough Castle or Strath-na-Cloid. I ran across Cissie when for a
+time I was helping in first-aid work not far behind the lines at Neuve
+Chapelle.</p>
+
+<p>I had been taking care of her brother Rowan&mdash;Lord Ovingdean, he calls
+himself now, hesitating to follow his brother as Lord Leatherhead, and
+using one of his father's other secondary titles&mdash;and she had come to
+see him. I hadn't supposed till then that we were such friends. We
+talked and talked and talked, and still would have gone on talking. I
+can understand what she sees in Hugh, though I could never feel it for
+him with her intensity. I hope her devotion will be rewarded soon, and
+I think it will.</p>
+
+<p>I had a premonition of this as I drove along Ochre Point Avenue that
+night. It helped me to the joy of liberty, to rightness of heart. As I
+threw the things into my suit-case I could have sung. S&eacute;raphine, who was
+up, waiting for her mistress, being also my friend, promised to finish
+my packing after I had gone, so that Mrs. Rossiter would have nothing to
+do but send my boxes after me. It couldn't have been half an hour after
+my arrival at the house before I was ready to drive away again.</p>
+
+<p>I was in the down-stairs hall, going out to the motor, when a great
+black form appeared in the doorway. My knees shook under me; my
+happiness came down like a shot bird. Mr. Brokenshire advanced and stood
+under the many-colored Oriental hall lantern. I clung for support to the
+pilaster that finished the balustrade of the stairway.</p>
+
+<p>There was gentleness in his voice, in spite of its whip-lash abruptness.</p>
+
+<p>"Where are you going?"</p>
+
+<p>I could hardly reply, my heart pounded with such fright.</p>
+
+<p>"To&mdash;to New York, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"What for?"</p>
+
+<p>"Be-because," I faltered. "I want to&mdash;to get away."</p>
+
+<p>"Why do you want to get away?"</p>
+
+<p>"For&mdash;for every reason."</p>
+
+<p>"But suppose I don't want you to go?"</p>
+
+<p>"I should still have to be gone."</p>
+
+<p>He said in a hoarse whisper:</p>
+
+<p>"I want you to stay&mdash;and&mdash;and marry Hugh."</p>
+
+<p>I clasped my hands.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, but how can I?"</p>
+
+<p>"He's willing to forget what you've said&mdash;what my daughter Ethel has
+said; and I'm willing to forget it, too."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you mean as to my being in love with some one else? But I am."</p>
+
+<p>"Not more than you were at the beginning of the evening. You were
+willing to marry him then."</p>
+
+<p>"But he didn't know then what he's had to learn since. I hoped to have
+kept it from him always. I may have been wrong&mdash;I suppose I was; but I
+had nothing but good motives."</p>
+
+<p>There was a strange drop in his voice as he said, "I know you hadn't."</p>
+
+<p>I couldn't help taking a step nearer him.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, do you? Then I'm so glad. I thought&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>He turned slightly away from me, toward a huge ugly fish in a glass
+case, which Mr. Rossiter believed to be a proof of his sportsmanship and
+an ornament to the hall.</p>
+
+<p>"I've had great trials," he said, after a pause&mdash;"great trials!"</p>
+
+<br /><br />
+<a name="ILLO_4" id="ILLO_4"></a>
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%;">
+<img src="images/410a.jpg" width="299" height="432" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+<h4>"I'VE HAD GREAT TRIALS . . . I'VE ALWAYS BEEN MISJUDGED.
+. . . THEY'VE PUT ME DOWN AS HARD AND PROUD"</h4>
+
+<p>"I know," I agreed, softly.</p>
+
+<p>He walked toward the fish and seemed to be studying it.</p>
+
+<p>"They've&mdash;they've&mdash;broken me down."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, don't say that, sir!"</p>
+
+<p>"It's true." His finger outlined the fish's skeleton from head to tail.
+"The things I said to-night&mdash;" He seemed hung up there. He traced the
+fish's skeleton back from tail to head. "Have we been unkind to you?" he
+demanded, suddenly, wheeling round in my direction.</p>
+
+<p>I thought it best to speak quite truthfully.</p>
+
+<p>"Not unkind, sir&mdash;exactly."</p>
+
+<p>"But what did Ethel mean? She said we'd been brutes to you. Is that
+true?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, sir; not in my sense. I haven't felt it."</p>
+
+<p>He tapped his foot with the old imperiousness. "Then&mdash;what?"</p>
+
+<p>We were so near the fundamentals that again I felt I ought to give him
+nothing but the facts.</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose Mrs. Rossiter meant that sometimes I should have been glad of
+a little more sympathy, and always of more&mdash;courtesy." I added: "From
+you, sir, I shouldn't have asked for more than courtesy."</p>
+
+<p>Though only his profile was toward me and the hall was dim, I could see
+that his face was twitching. "And&mdash;and didn't you get it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Do you think I did?"</p>
+
+<p>"I never thought anything about it."</p>
+
+<p>"Exactly; but any one in my position does. Even if we could do without
+courtesy between equals&mdash;and I don't think we can&mdash;from the higher to
+the lower&mdash;from you to me, for instance&mdash;it's indispensable. I don't
+remember that I ever complained of it, however. Mrs. Rossiter must have
+seen it for herself."</p>
+
+<p>"I didn't want you to marry Hugh," he began, again, after a long pause;
+"but I'd given in about it. I shouldn't have minded it so much if&mdash;if my
+wife&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>He broke off with a distressful, choking sound in the throat, and a
+twisting of the head, as if he couldn't get his breath. That passed and
+he began once more.</p>
+
+<p>"I've had great trials. . . . My wife! . . . And then the burden of this
+war. . . . They think&mdash;they think I don't care anything about it
+but&mdash;but just to make money. . . . I've always been misjudged. . . .
+They've put me down as hard and proud, when&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I could have liked you, sir," I interrupted, boldly. "I told you so
+once, and it offended you. But I've never been able to help it. I've
+always felt that there was something big and fine in you&mdash;if you'd only
+set it free."</p>
+
+<p>His reply to this was to turn away from his contemplation of the fish
+and say:</p>
+
+<p>"Why don't you come back?"</p>
+
+<p>I was sure it was best to be firm.</p>
+
+<p>"Because I can't, sir. The episode is&mdash;is over. I'm sorry, and yet I'm
+glad. What I'm doing is right. I suppose everything has been right&mdash;even
+what happened between me and Hugh. I don't think it will do him any
+harm&mdash;Cissie Boscobel is there&mdash;and it's done me good. It's been a
+wonderful experience; but it's over. It would be a mistake for me to go
+back now&mdash;a mistake for all of us. Please let me go, sir; and just
+remember of me that I'm&mdash;I'm&mdash;grateful."</p>
+
+<p>He regarded me quietly and&mdash;if I may say so&mdash;curiously. There was
+something in his look, something broken, something defeated, something,
+at long last, kind, that made me want to cry.</p>
+
+<p>I was crying inwardly when he turned about, without another word, and
+walked toward the door.</p>
+
+<p>It must have been the impulse to say a silent good-by to him that sent
+me slowly down the hall, though I was scarcely aware of moving. He had
+gone out into the dark and I was under the Oriental lamp, when he
+suddenly reappeared, coming in my direction rapidly. I would have leaped
+back if I hadn't refused to show fear. As it was, I stood still. I was
+only conscious of an overwhelming pity, terror, and amazement as he
+seized me and kissed me hotly on the brow. Then he was gone.</p>
+
+<p>But it was that kiss which made all the difference in my afterthought of
+him. It was a confession on his part, too, and a bit of self-revelation.
+Behind it lay a nature of vast, splendid qualities&mdash;strong, noble,
+dominating, meant to be used for good&mdash;all ruined by self-love. Of the
+Brokenshire family, of whom I am so fond and to whom I owe so much, he
+was the one toward whom, by some blind, spontaneous, subconscious
+sympathy of my own, I have been most urgently attracted. If his soul was
+twisted by passions as his face became twisted by them, too&mdash;well, who
+is there among us of whom something of the sort may not be said; and yet
+God has patience with us all.</p>
+
+<p>Howard Brokenshire and I were foes, and we fought; but we fought as so
+many thousands, so many millions, have fought in the short time since
+that day; we fought as those who, when the veils are suddenly stripped
+away, when they are helpless on the battle-field after the battle, or on
+hospital cots lined side by side, recognize one another as men and
+brethren. And so, when my baby was born I called him after him. I wanted
+the name as a symbol&mdash;not only to myself, but to the Brokenshire
+family&mdash;that there was no bitterness in my heart.</p>
+
+<p>At present let me say that, though pained, I was scarcely surprised to
+read in the New York papers on the following afternoon that Mr. J.
+Howard Brokenshire, the eminent financier, had, on the previous evening,
+been taken with a paralytic seizure while in his motor on the way from
+his daughter's house to his own. He was conscious when carried indoors,
+but he had lost the power of speech. The doctors indicated overwork in
+connection with foreign affairs as the predisposing cause.</p>
+
+<p>From Mrs. Rossiter I heard as each successive shock overtook him. Very
+pitifully the giant was laid low. Very tenderly&mdash;so Ethel has written
+me&mdash;Mrs. Brokenshire has watched over him&mdash;and yet, I suppose, with a
+terrible tragic expectation in her heart, which no one but myself, and
+perhaps Stacy Grainger, can have shared with her. Howard Brokenshire
+died on that early morning when his country went to war.</p>
+
+<p>I stayed in New York just long enough to receive my boxes from Newport.
+On getting out of the train at Halifax Larry Strangways received me in
+his arms.</p>
+
+<p>And this time I saw no little dining-room, with myself seating the
+guests; I saw no bassinet and no baby. I saw nothing but him. I knew
+nothing but him. He was all to me. It was the difference.</p>
+
+<p>And not the least of my surprises, when I came to find out, was the fact
+that it was Jim Rossiter who had sent him there&mdash;Jim Rossiter, whom I
+had rather despised as a selfish, cat-like person, with not much thought
+beyond "ridin' and racin'," and pills and medicinal waters. That was
+true of him; and yet he took the trouble to get into touch with Stacy
+Grainger&mdash;as a Brokenshire only by affinity, he could do it&mdash;to use his
+influence at Washington and Ottawa to get Larry Strangways a week's
+leave from Princess Patricia's regiment&mdash;to watch over my movements in
+New York and know the train I should take&mdash;and wire to Larry Strangways
+the hour of my arrival. When I think of it I grow maudlin at the thought
+of the good there is in every one.</p>
+
+<p>We were married within the week at the old church which was once a
+center for Loyalist refugees from New England, beneath which some of
+them lie buried, and where I was baptized. When my husband returned to
+Valcartier I went&mdash;to be near him&mdash;to Quebec. After he sailed for
+England I, too, sailed, and met him there. I kept near him in England,
+taking such nursing training as I could while he trained in other ways.
+I was not many miles away from him when, in the spring of the next
+year, he was badly cut up at Bois Grenier, near Neuve Chapelle.</p>
+
+<p>He was one of the two or three Canadians to hold a listening post
+half-way between the hostile lines, where they could hear the slightest
+movement of the enemy and signal back. A Maxim swept the dugout at
+intervals, and now and then a shell burst near them. My husband was
+wounded in a leg and his right arm was shattered.</p>
+
+<p>When I was permitted to see him at Amiens the arm had been taken off and
+the doctors were doing what they could to save the leg. Fortunately,
+they have succeeded; and now he walks with no more than a noticeable
+limp. He is a captain in Princess Patricia's regiment and a D. S. O.</p>
+
+<p>Later he was taken to the American Women's Hospital, at Paignton, in
+Devonshire, and there again I had the joy of being near him. I couldn't
+take care of him&mdash;I had not the skill, and perhaps my nerve would have
+failed me&mdash;but I worked in the kitchen and was sometimes allowed to take
+him his food and feed him. I think the hope, the expectation, of my
+doing this was what brought him out of the profound silence into which
+he was plunged when he arrived.</p>
+
+<p>That was the only sign of mental suffering I ever saw in him. For the
+physical suffering he never seemed to care. But something deep and far
+off, and beyond the beyond of self-consciousness, seemed to have been
+reached by what he had seen and heard and done. It was said of Lazarus,
+after his recall to life by Christ, that he never spoke of what he had
+experienced in those four days; and I can say as much of my husband.</p>
+
+<p>When his mind reverts to the months in France and Flanders he grows
+dumb. He grows dumb and his spirit moves away from me. It moves away
+from me and from everything that is of this world. It is among scenes
+past speech, past understanding, past imagining. He is Lazarus back in
+the world, but with secrets in his keeping which no one may learn but
+those who have learned them where he did.</p>
+
+<p>When he came to Paignton he was far removed from us; but little by
+little he reapproached. I helped to restore him; and then, when the baby
+was born, the return to earth was quickened.</p>
+
+<p>To have my baby I went over to Torquay, where I had six quiet contented
+weeks in a room overlooking the peacock-blue waters of Tor Bay, with the
+kindly roof that sheltered my husband in the distance. When I had
+recovered I went to a cottage at Paignton, where, when he left the
+hospital, he joined me. As the healing of the leg has been so slow, we
+have been in the lovely Devon country ever since, till, a few weeks ago,
+the British Government allowed us to cross on the ship that brought the
+British Commissioners to Washington.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>I have just been in to look at him. He is sound asleep, lying on his
+left side, the coverlet sagging slightly at the shoulder where the right
+arm is gone. He is getting accustomed to using his left hand, but not
+rapidly. Meantime he is my other baby; and, in a way, I love to have it
+so. I can be more to him. In proportion as he needs me the bond is
+closer.</p>
+
+<p>He is a grave man now. The smile that used to flash like a sword between
+us is never there any more. When he smiles it is with a long, slow smile
+that comes from far away&mdash;perhaps from life as it was before the war. It
+is a sweet smile, a brave one, one infinitely touching; and it pierces
+me to the heart.</p>
+
+<p>He didn't have to forfeit his American citizenship in becoming one of
+the glorious Princess Pats. They were glad to have him on any terms. He
+is an American and I am one. I thought I became one without feeling any
+difference. It seemed to me I had been born one, just as I had been born
+a subject of the dear old queen. But on the night of our landing in
+Halifax, a military band came and played the "Star-spangled Banner"
+before my uncle's door, and I burst into the first tears I had shed
+since my marriage.</p>
+
+<p>Through everything else I had been upheld; but at the strains of that
+anthem, and all it implied, I broke down helplessly. When we went to the
+door and my husband stood to listen to the cheering of my friends, in
+his khaki with the empty sleeve, and the fine, stirring, noble air was
+played again, his eyes, as well as mine, were wet.</p>
+
+<p>It recalled to me what he said once when I was allowed to relieve the
+night nurse and sit beside him at Paignton. He woke in the small hours
+and smiled at me&mdash;his distant, dreamy smile. His only words&mdash;words he
+seemed to bring with him out of the lands of sleep, in which perhaps he
+lived again what now was past for him&mdash;his only words were:</p>
+
+<p>"You know the Stars and Stripes were at Bois Grenier."</p>
+
+<p>"How?" I asked, to humor him, thinking him delirious.</p>
+
+<p>He laughed&mdash;the first thing that could be called a laugh since they had
+brought him there.</p>
+
+<p>"Sewn or my undershirt&mdash;over my heart! It will be there again," he
+added, "floating openly!"</p>
+
+<p>And almost immediately he fell asleep once more.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>And, after all, it is to be there again&mdash;floating openly. The
+time-struggle has taken it and will carry it aloft. It has taken other
+flags, too&mdash;flags of Asia; flags of South America; flags of the islands
+of the seas. As my husband predicted long ago, mankind is divided into
+just two camps. So be it! God knows I don't want war. I have been too
+near it, and too closely touched by it, ever to wish again to hear a
+cannon-shot or see a sword. But I suppose it is all a part of the great
+War in Heaven.</p>
+
+<p>Michael and his angels are fighting, and the dragon is fighting and his
+angels. By that I do not mean that all the good is on one side and all
+the evil on the other. God forbid! There is good and evil on both sides.
+On both sides doubtless evil is being purged away and the new, true man
+is coming to his own.</p>
+
+<p>If I think most of the spiritualization of France, and the consecration
+of the British Empire, and the coming of a new manhood to the United
+States, it is because these are the countries I know best. I should be
+sorry, I should be hopeless, were I not to believe that, above
+bloodshed, and cruelty, and hatred, and lust, and suffering, and all
+that is abominable, the Holy Ghost is breathing on every nation of
+mankind.</p>
+
+<p>When it is all over, and we have begun to live again, there will be a
+great Renaissance. It will be what the word implies&mdash;a veritable New
+Birth. The sword shall be beaten to a plowshare and the spear to a
+pruning-hook. "Nation shall not lift up sword against nation, neither
+shall they learn war any more."</p>
+
+<p>So, in this gray light, growing so silvery that as day advances it
+becomes positively golden, I turn to my Bible. It is extraordinary how
+comforting the Bible has become in these days when hearts have been
+lifted up into long-unexplored regions of terror and courage. Men and
+women who had given up reading it, men and women who have never read it
+at all, turn its pages with trembling hands and find the wisdom of the
+ages. And so I read what for the moment have become to me its most
+strengthening words:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>In your patience possess ye your souls. . . . There shall be
+signs in the sun, and in the moon, and in the stars; and upon
+the earth distress of nations, with perplexity; the sea and the
+waves roaring; men's hearts failing them for fear, and for
+looking after those things which are coming on the earth; for
+the powers of heaven shall be shaken. . . . And when these
+things begin to come to pass, then look up, and lift up your
+heads; for your redemption draweth nigh.</p></div>
+
+<p>That is what I believe&mdash;that through this travail of the New Birth for
+all mankind redemption is on the way.</p>
+
+<p>It is coming like the sunrise I now see over the ocean. In it are the
+glories that never were on land or sea. It paints the things which have
+never entered into the heart of man, but which God has prepared for them
+that love him. It is the future; it is Heaven. Not a future that no man
+will live to see; not a Heaven beyond death and the blue sky. It is a
+future so nigh as to be at the doors; it is the Kingdom of Heaven within
+us.</p>
+
+<p>Meantime there is saffron pulsating into emerald, and emerald into rose,
+and rose into lilac, and lilac into pearl, and pearl into the great gray
+canopy that has hardly as yet been touched with light.</p>
+
+<p>And the great gray ocean is responding a fleck of color here, a hint of
+glory there; and now, stealing westward, from wavelet to wavelet,
+stealing and ever stealing, nearer and still more near, a wide, golden
+pathway, as if some Mighty One were coming straight to me. "Even so,
+come, Lord Jesus."</p>
+
+<p>Even so I look up, and lift up my head. Even so I possess my soul in
+patience.</p>
+
+<p>Even so, too, I think of Mildred Brokenshire's words:</p>
+
+<p>"Life is not a blind impulse, working blindly. It is a beneficent,
+rectifying power."</p>
+
+
+<br /><br />
+<h3>THE END</h3>
+
+
+<br /><br />
+<div class="footnotes">
+<h4>FOOTNOTES:</h4>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> This was said before the Great War. It is now supposed that
+when peace is made there will be a change in English opinion. With my
+knowledge of my country&mdash;the British Empire&mdash;I permit myself to doubt
+it. There is a proverb which begins, "When the devil was sick." I shall,
+however, be glad if I am proved wrong.&mdash;Alexandra Adare.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+<br /><br />
+<b>Transcriber's Notes:</b><br />
+original hyphenation, spelling and grammar have been preserved as in the original<br />
+Page 8, "won't he Miss" changed to "won't be Miss"<br />
+Page 32, "was to indignant" changed to "was too indignant"<br />
+Page 43, "what is is" changed to "what it is"<br />
+Page 72, "shoulder. "No" changed to "shoulder, "No"<br />
+Page 84, "Glady's" changed to "Gladys's"<br />
+Page 85, "Glady's" changed to "Gladys's"<br />
+Page 93, "presisted" changed to "persisted"<br />
+Page 129, "waistcoat. a slate-colored" changed to "waistcoat, a slate-colored"<br />
+Page 150, "come an and" changed to "come and"<br />
+Page 178, "stammer the words" changed to "stammer the words&mdash;"<br />
+Page 211, "well received His" changed to "well received. His"<br />
+Page 230, "your hand but" changed to "your hand, but"<br />
+Page 235, "put in it my" changed to "put it in my"<br />
+Page 235, "'I could be" changed to '"I could be'<br />
+Page 268, "at last "but" changed to "at last, "but"<br />
+Page 293, "'So much that" changed to '"So much that'<br />
+Page 297, "The darlings!'" changed to 'The darlings!"'<br />
+Page 312, "ligthning" changed to "lightning"<br />
+Page 333, "must be true" changed to "must be true."<br />
+Page 334, "broke in, quietly" changed to "broke in, quietly."<br />
+Page 398, "dumfounded" changed to "dumbfounded"<br />
+Page 409, "want you so stay" changed to "want you to stay"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The High Heart, by Basil King
+
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+ </body>
+</html>
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The High Heart, by Basil King
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The High Heart
+
+Author: Basil King
+
+Release Date: March 3, 2011 [EBook #35463]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE HIGH HEART ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Barbara Watson, Ross Cooling and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Canada Team at
+http://www.pgdpcanada.net (This file was produced from
+images generously made available by The Internet
+Archive/Canadian Libraries)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Books by the
+ AUTHOR OF "THE INNER SHRINE"
+
+ [BASIL KING]
+
+ THE HIGH HEART. Illustrated.
+ THE LIFTED VEIL. Illustrated.
+ THE SIDE OF THE ANGELS. Illustrated.
+ THE LETTER OF THE CONTRACT. Illustrated.
+ THE WAY HOME. Illustrated.
+ THE WILD OLIVE. Illustrated.
+ THE INNER SHRINE. Illustrated.
+ THE STREET CALLED STRAIGHT. Illustrated.
+ LET NOT MAN PUT ASUNDER. Post 8vo.
+ IN THE GARDEN OF CHARITY. Post 8vo.
+ THE STEPS OF HONOR. Post 8vo.
+ THE GIANT'S STRENGTH. Post 8vo.
+
+
+ HARPER & BROTHERS, NEW YORK
+ Established 1817
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: "I've been thinking a good deal during the past few weeks
+of your law of Right"]
+
+
+
+
+ THE HIGH HEART
+
+ BY
+ BASIL KING
+
+ AUTHOR OF
+ "_The Inner Shrine_" "_The Lifted Veil_" _Etc._
+
+ ILLUSTRATED
+
+
+
+ HARPER & BROTHERS PUBLISHERS
+ NEW YORK AND LONDON
+
+
+
+
+ The High Heart
+
+ Copyright, 1917, by Harper & Brothers
+ Printed in the United States of America
+ Published September, 1917
+
+
+
+
+ ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+
+ "I've Been Thinking a Good Deal During the
+ Past Few Weeks of Your Law of Right" _Frontispiece_
+
+ The Marriage She Had Missed Was on Her Mind.
+ It Created an Obsession or a Broken Heart,
+ I Wasn't Quite Sure Which _Facing p._ 118
+
+ I Saw a Man and a Woman Consumed with Longing
+ for Each Other " 192
+
+ "I've Had Great Trials . . . I've Always Been
+ Misjudged. . . . They've Put Me Down as
+ Hard and Proud" " 410
+
+
+
+
+ THE HIGH HEART
+
+
+ CHAPTER I
+
+
+I could not have lived in the Brokenshire circle for nearly a year
+without recognizing the fact that in the eyes of his family J. Howard,
+as he was commonly called by the world, was the Great Dispenser; but my
+first intimation that he meant to act in that capacity toward me came
+from Larry Strangways, on a bright July morning during the summer of
+1913, when we were at Newport.
+
+I was crossing the lawn, going toward the sea, with little Gladys
+Rossiter, to whom I acted as companion in the hours when she was out of
+the nursery, with a specific duty to speak French. Larry Strangways was
+tutor to the Rossiter boy, and in our relative positions we were bound
+to exercise toward each other a good deal of discretion. We fraternized
+with constraint. We fraternized because--well, chiefly because we
+couldn't help it. In the mocking flare of his eye, which contradicted
+the assumed young gravity of his manner, I read an opinion of the
+Rossiter household and of the Brokenshire family in general similar to
+my own. That would have been enough for mutual comprehension had there
+been no instinctive sympathies between us; but there were. Allowing for
+the fact that we were of different nationalities, we had the same kind
+of antecedents; we spoke the same kind of social language; we had the
+same kind of aims in life. Neither of us regarded the position in the
+Rossiter establishment as a permanent status. He was a tutor merely for
+the minute, while feeling his way to that first rung of the ladder which
+I was convinced would lead him to some high place in American life. I
+was a nursery governess only on the way to getting married. Matrimony
+was the continent toward which more or less consciously I had been
+traveling for five or six years, without having actually descried a
+port. In this connection I may relate a little incident which had taken
+place between myself and Mrs. Rossiter after I had accepted my situation
+in her family. It will retard my meeting with Larry Strangways on the
+lawn, but it will throw light on it when it comes.
+
+I had met Mrs. Rossiter, who was J. Howard Brokenshire's daughter, in
+the way that is known as socially. I never understood why she should
+have taken a house for the summer in our quiet old town of Halifax,
+unless she was urged to it by the vague restlessness which was one of
+her characteristics. But there she was in a roomy old brick mansion I
+had known all my life, with gardens and conservatories and lawns running
+down to the fiord or back-harbor which we call the Northwest Arm, and a
+fine English air of seclusion. In our easy, neighborly way she was well
+received, and made herself agreeable. She flirted with the officers of
+both Army and Navy enough to create talk without raising scandal; and
+she was sufficiently good-natured to be civil to us girls, among whom
+she singled me out for attentions. I attributed this kindness to our
+recent bereavement and financial crash, which had left me poor after
+twenty-four years of comfort, and was proportionately grateful. It was
+partly gratitude, and partly a natural love of children, and partly a
+special affection for the exquisite thing herself, that drew me to
+little Gladys Rossiter, to playing with her on the lawns, and rowing her
+on the Arm, and--as I had been for three or four years at school in
+Paris--dropping into a habit of lisping French to her. As the child
+liked me the mother left her more and more to my care, gaining thus the
+greater scope for her innocuous flirtations.
+
+It was toward the end of the summer that Mrs. Rossiter began to sigh, "I
+don't know how I shall ever tear Gladys away from you," and, "I do wish
+you were coming with us."
+
+I wished it in a way myself, since I was rather at a loss as to what to
+do. I had never expected to have to earn a living; I had expected to get
+married. My two elder sisters, Louise and Victoria, had married easily
+enough, the one in the Navy, the other in the Army; but with me suitors
+seemed to lag. They came and saw--but they never went far enough for
+conquest. I couldn't understand it. I was not stupid; I was not ugly;
+and I was generally spoken of as having charm. But there was the fact
+that I was twenty-four, with scarcely a penny, and drawing nearer and
+nearer to the end of my expedients. I was not without some social
+experience, having kept house in a generous way for my widowed father,
+till his death, some two years before the summer when I met Mrs.
+Rossiter, brought with it our financial collapse. If he hadn't left a
+lot of old books--_Canadiana_, the pamphlets were called--and rare first
+editions of all kinds, which I took over to London and sold at
+Sothbey's, I shouldn't have had enough on which to dress. This business
+being settled, I stayed as long as I decently could with Louise at
+Southsea and Victoria at Gibraltar; but no man asked me to marry him
+during the course of either visit. Had there been a sign of any such
+possibility the sisters would have put themselves out to keep me; but as
+nothing warranted them in doing so they let me go. An uncle and aunt
+having offered to give me shelter for a time at Halifax, there was
+nothing left for it but to go back and renew the search for my fortunes
+in my native town.
+
+When, therefore, Mrs. Rossiter, in her pretty, helpless way said to me
+one day, "Why shouldn't you come with me, dear Miss Adare?" I jumped
+inwardly at the opportunity, though I smiled and replied in an offhand
+manner, "Oh, that would have to be discussed."
+
+Mrs. Rossiter admitted the truth of this observation somewhat pensively.
+I know now that I took her up with too much promptitude.
+
+"Yes, of course," she returned, absently, and the subject was dropped.
+
+It was taken up again, however, and our bargain made. On Mrs. Rossiter's
+part it was made astutely, not in the matter of money, but in the way in
+which she shifted me from the position of a friend into that of a
+retainer. It was done with the most perfect tact, but it was done. I had
+no complaint to make. What she wanted was a nursery governess. My own
+first preoccupations were food and shelter for which I should not be
+dependent on my kin. We came to the incident I am about to relate very
+gradually; but when we did come to it I had no difficulty in seeing that
+it had been in the back of Mrs. Rossiter's mind from the first. It had
+been the cause of that second thought on the day when I had taken her up
+too readily.
+
+She began by telling me about her father. Beyond the fact that some man
+who seemed to be specially well informed would occasionally say with
+awe, "She's J. Howard Brokenshire's daughter," I knew nothing whatever
+about him. But I began to see him now as the central sun round whom all
+the Brokenshires revolved. They revolved round him, not so much from
+adoration or even from natural affection as from some tremendous rotary
+force to which there was no resistance.
+
+Up to this time I had heard no more of American life than American life
+had heard of me. The great country south of our border was scarcely on
+my map. The Halifax in which I was born and grew up was not the bustling
+Canadian port, dependent on its hinterland, it is to-day; it was an
+outpost of England, with its face always turned to the Atlantic and the
+east. My own face had been turned the same way. My home had been
+literally a jumping-off place, in that when we left it we never expected
+to go in any but the one direction. I had known Americans when they came
+into our midst as summer visitors, but only in the way one knows the
+stars which dawn and fade and leave no trace of their passage on actual
+happenings.
+
+In the course of Mrs. Rossiter's confidences I began to see a vast
+cosmogony beyond my own personal sun, with J. Howard Brokenshire as the
+pivot of the new universe. With a curious little shock of surprise I
+discovered that there could be other solar systems besides the one to
+which I was accustomed, and that Canada was not the whole of North
+America. It was like looking through a telescope which Mrs. Rossiter
+held to my eye, a telescope through which I saw the nebular evidence of
+an immense society, wealthy, confused, more intellectual than our own,
+but more provincial too, perhaps; more isolated, more timid, more
+conservative, less instinct with the great throb of national and
+international impulse which all of us feel who live on the imperial red
+line and, therefore, less daring, but interesting all the same. I began
+to glow with the spirit of adventure. My position as a nursery governess
+presented the opportunities not merely of a Livingstone or a Stanley,
+but of a Galileo or a Copernicus.
+
+I learned that Mrs. Rossiter's mother had been a Miss Brew, and that the
+Brews were a great family in Boston. She was the mother of all Mr.
+Brokenshire's children. By looks and hints and sighs I gathered from
+Mrs. Rossiter that her father's second marriage had been a trial to his
+family. Not that there had been any social descent. On the contrary, the
+present Mrs. Brokenshire had been Editha Billing, of Philadelphia, and
+there could be nothing better than that. It was a question of fitness,
+of necessity, of age. "There was no need for him to marry again at all,"
+Mrs. Rossiter complained. "If she'd only been a middle-aged woman," she
+said to me later, "we might not have felt. . . . But she's younger than
+Mildred and only a year or two older than I am." "Oh yes," was another
+remark, "she's pretty; very pretty . . . but I often--wonder."
+
+She described her brothers and her sister by degrees. One day she told
+me about Mildred, another about Jack, so coming toward her point.
+Mildred was the eldest of the family, a great invalid. She had been
+thrown from her horse years before while hunting in England, and had
+injured her spine. Jack had just gone into business with his father, and
+had married Pauline Gray, of Baltimore. Though she didn't say it in so
+many words I judged that it was not a happy marriage in the highest
+sense--that Jack was somewhat light of love, while Pauline "went her own
+way" to a degree that made her talked about. It was not till the day
+before her departure for New York that Mrs. Rossiter mentioned her
+younger brother, Hugh.
+
+I was helping her to pack--that is, I was helping the maid while Mrs.
+Rossiter directed. Just at that minute, however, she was standing up,
+shaking out the folds of an evening dress. She seemed to peep at me
+round its garnishings as she said, apropos of nothing:
+
+"There's my brother Hugh. He's the youngest of us all--just twenty-six.
+He has no occupation as yet--he's just studying languages and things. My
+father wants him to go into diplomacy." As I caught her eye there was a
+smile in it, but a special kind of smile. It was the smile to go with
+the sensible, kindly, coaxing inflection with which she said, "You'll
+leave him alone, won't you?"
+
+I took the dress out of her hand to carry it to the maid in the next
+room.
+
+"Leave him alone--how?"
+
+She flushed to a lovely pink.
+
+"Oh, you know what I mean. I don't have to explain."
+
+"You mean that in my position in the household it will be for me to--to
+keep out of his way?"
+
+"It's you who put it like that, dear Miss Adare--"
+
+"But it's the way you want me to put it?"
+
+"Well, if I admit that it is?"
+
+"Then I don't think I care for the place."
+
+"What?"
+
+I stated my position more simply.
+
+"If I'm to have nothing to do with your brother, Mrs. Rossiter, I don't
+want to go."
+
+In the audacity of this response she saw something that amused her, for,
+snatching the dress from my hand, she ran with it into the next room,
+laughing.
+
+During the following winter in New York and the early summer of the next
+year in Newport I saw a good deal of Mr. Hugh Brokenshire, but never
+with any violent restriction on the part of Mrs. Rossiter. I say
+violent with intention, for she did intervene when she could do so. Only
+once did I hear that she knew he was kind to me, and that was from Larry
+Strangways. It was an observation he had overheard as it passed from
+Mrs. Rossiter to her husband, and which, in the spirit of our silent
+_camaraderie_, he thought it right to hand along.
+
+"I can't be responsible for Hugh!" Mrs. Rossiter had said. "He's old
+enough to look after himself. If he wants a row with father he must have
+it; and he seems to me in a fair way to get it. If he does it will be
+his own fault; it won't be Miss Adare's."
+
+Fortified by this acquittal, I went on my way as quietly as I could,
+though I cannot say I was free from perturbation.
+
+Perturbation caught me like a whiff of wind as I saw Larry Strangways
+deflect from his course across the lawn and come in my direction. I knew
+he wouldn't have done that unless he felt himself authorized; and
+nothing could give him the authorization but something in the way of a
+message or command. To all observers we were strangers. We should have
+been strangers even to each other had it not been for that freemasonry
+of caste, that secret mutual comprehension, which transcends speech and
+opportunities of meeting, and which, on our part, at least, had little
+expression beyond smiles and flying glances.
+
+Of course he was good-looking. It has often seemed to me the privilege
+of ineligible men to be tall and slim and straight, with just such a
+flash in the eye and just such a beam about the mouth as belonged to
+Larry Strangways. Instinct had told me from the first that it would be
+wise for me to avoid him, while prudence, as I have hinted, gave him the
+same indication to keep at a distance from me. Luckily he didn't live
+in the house, but in lodgings in the town. We hardly ever met face to
+face, and then only under the eye of Mrs. Rossiter when each of us
+marshaled a pupil to lunch or to tea.
+
+As the collie at his heels and the wire-haired terrier at ours made a
+bee-line for each other the children kept them company, which gave us
+space for those few minutes of privacy the occasion apparently demanded.
+Though he lifted his hat formally, and did his best to preserve the
+decorum of our official situations, the prank in his eye flung out that
+signal to which I could never do anything but respond.
+
+"I've a message for you, Miss Adare."
+
+I managed to stammer out the word "Indeed?" I couldn't be surprised, and
+yet I could hardly stand erect from fear.
+
+He glanced at the children to make sure they were out of earshot.
+
+"It's from the great man himself--indirectly."
+
+I was so near to collapse that I could only say, "Indeed?" again, though
+I rallied sufficiently to add, "I didn't know he was aware of my
+existence."
+
+"Apparently he wasn't--but he is now. He desires you--I give you the
+verb as Spellman, the secretary, passed it on to me--he desires you to
+be in the breakfast loggia here at three this afternoon."
+
+I could barely squeak the words out:
+
+"Does he mean that he's coming to see me?"
+
+"That, it seems, isn't necessary for you to know. Your business is to be
+there. There's quite a subtle point in the limitation. Being there,
+you'll see what will happen next. It isn't good for you to be told too
+much at a time."
+
+My spirit began to revive.
+
+"I'm not his servant. I'm Mrs. Rossiter's. If he wants anything of me
+why doesn't he say so through her?"
+
+"'Sh, 'sh, Miss Adare! You mustn't dictate to God, or say he should act
+in this way or in that."
+
+"But he's not God."
+
+"Oh, as to that--well, you'll see." He added, with his light laugh,
+"What will you bet that I don't know what it's all about?"
+
+"Oh, I bet you do."
+
+"Then," he warned, "you're up against it."
+
+I was getting on my mettle.
+
+"Perhaps I am--but I sha'n't be alone."
+
+"No; but you'll be made to feel alone."
+
+"Even so--"
+
+As I was anxious to keep from boasting beforehand, I left the sentence
+there.
+
+"Yes?" he jogged. "Even so--what?"
+
+"Oh, nothing. I only mean that I'm not afraid of him--that is," I
+corrected, "I'm not afraid of him fundamentally."
+
+He laughed again. "Not afraid of him fundamentally! That's fine!"
+Something in his glance seemed to approve of me. "No, I don't believe
+you are; but I wonder a little why not."
+
+I reflected, gazing beyond his shoulder, down the velvety slopes of the
+lawn, and across the dancing blue sea to the islets that were mere
+specks on the horizon. In the end I decided to speak soberly. "I'm not
+afraid of him," I said at last, "because I've got a sure thing."
+
+"You mean him?"
+
+I knew the reference was to Hugh Brokenshire. "If I mean him," I
+replied, after a minute's thinking, "it's only as the greater includes
+the less, or as the universal includes everything."
+
+He whistled under his breath.
+
+"Does that mean anything? Or is it just big talk?"
+
+Half shy and half ashamed of going on with what I had to say, I was
+obliged to smile ruefully.
+
+"It's big talk because it's a big principle. I don't know how to manage
+it with anything small." I tried to explain further, knowing that my
+dark skin flushed to a kind of dahlia-red while I was doing so. "I don't
+know whether I've read it--or whether I heard it--or whether I've just
+evolved it--but I seem to have got hold of--of--don't laugh too hard,
+please--of the secret of success."
+
+"Good for you! I hope you're not going to be stingy with it."
+
+"No; I'll tell you--partly because I want to talk about it to some one,
+and just at present there's no one else."
+
+"Thanks!"
+
+"The secret of success, as I reason it out, must be something that will
+protect a weak person against a strong one--me, for instance, against J.
+Howard Brokenshire--and work everything out all right. There," I cried,
+"I've said the word."
+
+"You've said a number. Which is the one?"
+
+Anxiety not to seem either young or didactic or a prig made my tone
+apologetic.
+
+"There's such a thing as Right, written with a capital. If I persist in
+doing Right--still with a capital--then nothing but right can come of
+it."
+
+"Oh, can't it!"
+
+"I know it sounds like a platitude--"
+
+"No, it doesn't," he interrupted, rudely, "because a platitude is
+something obviously true; and this isn't."
+
+I felt some relief.
+
+"Oh, isn't it? Then I'm glad. I thought it must be."
+
+"You won't go on thinking it. Suppose you do right and somebody else
+does wrong?"
+
+"Then I should be willing to back my way against his. Don't you see?
+That's the point. That's the secret I'm telling you about. Right works;
+wrong doesn't."
+
+"That's all very fine--"
+
+"It's all very fine because it's so. Right is--what's the word William
+James put into the dictionary?"
+
+He suggested pragmatism.
+
+"That's it. Right is pragmatic, which I suppose is the same thing as
+practical. Wrong must be impractical; it must be--"
+
+"I shouldn't bank too confidently on that in dealing with the great J.
+Howard."
+
+"But I'm going to bank on it. It's where I'm to have him at a
+disadvantage. If he does wrong while I do right, why, then I'll get him
+on the hip."
+
+"How do you know he's going to do wrong?"
+
+"I don't. I merely surmise it. If he does right--"
+
+"He'll get you on the hip."
+
+"No, because there can't be a right for him which isn't a right for me.
+There can't be two rights, each contrary to the other. That's not in
+common sense. If he does right then I shall be safe--whichever way I
+have to take it. Don't you see? That's where the success comes in as
+well as the secret. It can't be any other way. Please don't think I'm
+talking in what H. G. Wells calls the tin-pot style--but one must
+express oneself somehow. I'm not afraid, because I feel as if I'd got
+something that would hang about me like a magic cloak. Of course for
+you--a man--a magic cloak may not be necessary; but I assure you that
+for a girl like me, out in the world on her own--"
+
+He, too, sobered down from his chaffing mood.
+
+"But in this case what is going to be Right--written with a capital?"
+
+I had just time to reply, "Oh, that I shall have to see!" when the
+children and dogs came scampering up and our conversation was over.
+
+On returning from my walk with Gladys I informed Mrs. Rossiter of the
+order I had received. I could see her distressed look in the mirror
+before which she sat doing something to her hair.
+
+"Oh, dear!" she sighed, "it's just what I was afraid of. Now I suppose
+he'll want you to leave."
+
+"That is, he'll want you to send me away."
+
+"It's the same thing," she said, fretfully, and sat with hands lying
+idly in her lap.
+
+She stared out of the window. It was a large bow window, with a
+window-seat cushioned in flowered chintz. Couch, curtains, and
+easy-chairs reproduced this Enchanted Garden effect, forming a
+paradisiacal background for her intensely modern and somewhat neurotic
+prettiness. I had seen her sit by the half-hour like this, gazing over
+the shrubberies, lawns, and waves, with a yearning in her eyes like that
+of some twentieth-century Blessed Damozel.
+
+It was her unhappy hour of the day. Between getting up at nine or ten
+and descending languidly to lunch, life was always a great load to her.
+It pressed on one too weak to bear its weight and yet too conscientious
+to throw it off, though, as a matter of fact, this melancholy was only
+the reaction of her nerves from the mild excitements of the night
+before. I was generally with her during some portion of this forenoon
+time, reading her notes and answering them, speaking for her at the
+telephone, or keeping her company and listening to her confidences while
+she nibbled without appetite at a bit of toast and sipped her tea.
+
+To put matters on the common footing I said:
+
+"Is there anything you'd like me to do, Mrs. Rossiter?"
+
+She ignored this question, murmuring in a way she had, through
+half-closed lips, as if mere speech was more than she was equal to: "And
+just when we were getting on so well--and the way Gladys adores you--"
+
+"And the way I adore Gladys."
+
+"Oh, well, you don't spoil the child, like that Miss Phips. I suppose
+it's your sensible English bringing up."
+
+"Not English," I interrupted.
+
+"Canadian then. It's almost the same thing." She went on without
+transition of tone: "Mr. Millinger was there again last night. He was on
+my left. I do wish they wouldn't keep putting him next to me. It makes
+everything look so pointed--especially with Harry Scott glowering at me
+from the other end of the table. He hardly spoke to Daisy Burke, whom
+he'd taken in. I must say she was a fright. And Mr. Millinger so
+imprudent! I'm really terrified that Jim will hear gossip when he comes
+down from New York--or notice something." There was the slightest
+dropping of the soft fluting voice as she continued: "I've never
+pretended to love Jim Rossiter more than any man I've ever seen. That
+was one of papa's matches. He's a born match-maker, you know, just as
+he's a born everything else. I suppose you didn't think of that. But
+since I am Jim's wife--"
+
+As I was the confidante of what she called her affairs--a role for which
+I was qualified by residence in British garrison towns--I interposed
+diplomatically, "But so long as Mr. Millinger hasn't said anything, not
+any more than Mr. Scott--"
+
+"Oh, if I were to allow men to say things, where should I be? You can go
+far with a man without letting him come to that. It's something I should
+think you'd have known--with your sensible bringing up--and the heaps of
+men you had there in Halifax--and I suppose at Southsea and Gibraltar,
+too." It was with a hint of helpless complaint that she added, "You
+remember that I asked you to leave him alone, now don't you?"
+
+"Oh, I remember--quite. And suppose I did--and he didn't leave me
+alone?"
+
+"Of course there's that, though it won't have any effect on papa. You
+are unusual, you know. Only one man in five hundred would notice it; but
+there always is that man. It's what I was afraid of about Hugh from the
+first. You're different--and it's the sort of thing he'd see."
+
+"Different from what?" I asked, with natural curiosity.
+
+Her reply was indirect.
+
+"Oh, well, we Americans have specialized too much on the girl. You're
+not half as good-looking as plenty of other girls in Newport, and when
+it comes to dress--"
+
+"Oh, I'm not in their class, I know."
+
+"No; it's what you seem not to know. You aren't in their class--but it
+doesn't seem to matter. If it does matter, it's rather to your
+advantage."
+
+"I'm afraid I don't see that."
+
+"No, you wouldn't. You're not sufficiently subtle. You're really not
+subtle at all, in the way an American girl would be." She picked up the
+thread she had dropped. "The fact is we've specialized so much on the
+girl that our girls are too aware of themselves to be wholly human.
+They're like things wound up to talk well and dress well and exhibit
+themselves to advantage and calculate their effects--and lack character.
+We've developed the very highest thing in exquisite girl-mechanics--a
+work of art that has everything but a soul." She turned half round to
+where I stood respectfully, my hands resting on the back of an
+easy-chair. She was lovely and pathetic and judicial all at once. "The
+difference about you is that you seem to spring right up out of the soil
+where you're standing--just like an English country house. You belong to
+your background. Our girls don't. They're too beautiful for their
+background, too expensive, too produced. Take any group of girls here in
+Newport--they're no more in place in this down-at-the-heel old town than
+a flock of parrakeets in a New England wood. It's really inartistic,
+though we don't know it. You're more of a woman and less of a lovely
+figurine. But that won't appeal to papa. He likes figurines. Most
+American men do. Hugh is an exception, and I was afraid he'd see in you
+just what I've seen myself. But it won't go down with papa."
+
+"If it goes down with Hugh--" I began, meekly.
+
+"Papa is a born match-maker, which I don't suppose you know. He made my
+match and he made Jack's. Oh, we're--we're satisfied now--in a way; and
+I suppose Hugh will be, too, in the long run." I wanted to speak, but
+she tinkled gently on: "Papa has his designs for him, which I may as
+well tell you at once. He means him to marry Lady Cissie Boscobel. She's
+Lord Goldborough's daughter, and papa and he are very intimate. Papa
+knew him when we lived in England before grandpapa died. Papa has done
+things for him in the American money-market, and when we're in England
+he does things for us. Two or three of our men have married earls'
+daughters during the last few years, and it hasn't turned out so badly.
+Papa doesn't want not to be in the swim."
+
+"Does"--I couldn't pronounce Hugh's name again--"does your brother know
+of Mr. Brokenshire's intentions?"
+
+"Yes. I told him so. I told him when I began to see that he was noticing
+you."
+
+"And may I ask what he said?"
+
+"It would be no use telling you that, because, whatever he said, he'd
+have to do as papa told him in the end."
+
+"But suppose he doesn't?"
+
+"You can't suppose he doesn't. He will. That's all that can be said
+about it." She turned fully round on me, gazing at me with the largest
+and sweetest and tenderest eyes. "As for you, dear Miss Adare," she
+murmured, sympathetically, "when papa comes to see you this afternoon,
+as apparently he means to do, he'll grind you to powder. If there's
+anything smaller than powder he'll grind you to that. After he's gone we
+sha'n't be able to find you. You'll be dust."
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER II
+
+
+At five minutes to three, precisely, I took my seat in the breakfast
+loggia.
+
+The front of the house with the garden looked toward Ochre Point Avenue.
+The so-called breakfast loggia was thrown out from the dining-room in
+the direction of the sea. Here the family and their guests could gather
+on warm evenings, and in fine weather eat in the open air. Paved with
+red tiles, it was furnished with a long oak table, ornately carved, and
+some heavy old oak chairs that might have come from a monastery. Steamer
+chairs and wicker easy-chairs were scattered on the grass outside. On
+the left the loggia was screened from the neighboring property by a
+hedge of rambler roses that now ran the gamut of shades from crimson to
+sea-shell pink, while on the right it commanded a view of the two
+terraces supporting the house, with their long straight lines of
+flowers. The house itself had been built piecemeal, and was now a low,
+rambling succession of pavilions or _corps de logis_, to which a series
+of rose-colored awnings gave the only unifying principle.
+
+Just now it was a house deserted by every one but the servants and
+myself. Mrs. Rossiter, having gone out to luncheon, had been careful not
+to return, and even the children had been sent over to Mrs. Jack
+Brokenshire, on the pretext of playing with her baby, but really to be
+out of the way. From Hugh I had had no sign of life since the previous
+afternoon. As to whether his father was coming as his enemy, his master,
+or his interpreter I could do nothing but conjecture.
+
+But as far as I could I kept myself from conjecturing; holding my
+faculties in suspense. I had enough to do in assuring myself that I was
+not afraid--fundamentally. Superficially I was terrified. I should have
+been terrified had the great man but passed me in the hall and cast a
+look at me. He had passed me in the hall on occasions, but as he had
+never cast the look I had escaped. He had struck me then as a master of
+that art of seeing without seeing which I had hitherto thought of as
+feminine. Even when he stopped and spoke to Gladys he seemed not to know
+that I occupied the ground I stood on. I cannot say I enjoyed this
+treatment. I was accustomed to being seen. Moreover, I had lived with
+people who were courteous to inferiors, however cavalier with equals.
+The great J. Howard was neither courteous nor cavalier toward me, for
+the reason that where I was he apparently saw nothing but a vacuum.
+
+Out to the loggia I took my work-basket and some sewing. Having no idea
+from which of the several approaches my visitor would come on me, I drew
+up one of the heavy arm-chairs and sat facing toward the sea. With the
+basket on the table beside me and my sewing in my hands I felt
+indefinably more mistress of myself.
+
+It was a still afternoon and hot, with scarcely a sound but the pounding
+of the surf on the ledges at the foot of the lawn. Though the sky was
+blue overhead, a dark low bank rose out of the horizon, foretelling a
+change of wind with fog. In the air the languorous scent of roses and
+honeysuckle mingled with the acrid tang of the ocean.
+
+I felt extraordinarily desolate. Not since hearing what the lawyer had
+told me on the afternoon of my father's funeral had I seemed so entirely
+alone. The fact that for nearly twenty-four hours Hugh had got no word
+to me threw me back upon myself. "You'll be made to feel alone," Mr.
+Strangways had said in the morning; and I was. I didn't blame Hugh. I
+had purposely left the matter in such a way that there was nothing he
+could say or do till after his father had spoken. He was probably
+waiting impatiently; I had, indeed, no doubt about that; but the fact
+remained that I, a girl, a stranger, in a certain sense a foreigner, was
+to make the best of my situation without help. J. Howard Brokenshire
+could grind me to powder--when he had gone away I should be dust.
+
+"If I do right, nothing but right can come of it."
+
+The maxim was my only comfort. By sheer force of repeating it I got
+strength to thread my needle and go on with my seam, till on the stroke
+of three the dread personage appeared.
+
+I saw him from the minute he mounted the steps that led up from the
+Cliff Walk to Mr. Rossiter's lawn. He was accompanied by Mrs.
+Brokenshire, while a pair of greyhounds followed them. Having reached
+the lawn, they crossed it diagonally toward the loggia. Because of the
+heat and the up-hill nature of the way, they advanced slowly, which gave
+me leisure to observe.
+
+Mrs. Brokenshire's presence had almost caused my heart to stop beating.
+I could imagine no motive for her coming but one I refused to accept. If
+the mission was to be unfriendly, she surely would have stayed away; but
+that it could be other than unfriendly was beyond my strength to hope.
+
+I had never seen her before except in glimpses or at a distance. I
+noticed now that she was a little thing, looking the smaller for the
+stalwart six-foot-two beside which she walked. She was in white and
+carried a white parasol. I saw that her face was one of the most
+beautiful in features and finish I had ever looked into. Each trait was
+quite amazingly perfect. The oval was perfect; the coloring was perfect;
+mouth and nose and forehead might have been made to a measured scale.
+The finger of personified Art could have drawn nothing more exquisite
+than the arch of the eyebrows, or more delicately fringed than the lids.
+It might have been a doll's face, or the face for the cover of an
+American magazine, had it not been saved by something I hadn't the time
+to analyze, though I was later to know what it was.
+
+As for him, he was as perfect in his way as she in hers. When I say that
+he wore white shoes, white-duck trousers, a navy-blue jacket, and a
+yachting-cap I give no idea of the something noble in his personality.
+He might have been one of the more ornamental Italian princes of
+immemorial lineage. A Jove with a Vandyke beard one could have called
+him, and if you add to that the conception of Jove the Thunderer, Jove
+with the look that could strike a man dead, perhaps the description
+would be as good as any. He was straight and held his head high. He
+walked with a firm setting of his feet that impressed you with the fact
+that some one of importance was coming.
+
+It is not my purpose to speak of this man from the point of view of the
+ordinary member of the public. Of that I know next to nothing. I was
+dimly aware that his wealth and his business interests made him
+something of a public character; but apart from having heard him
+mentioned as a financier I could hardly have told what his profession
+was. So, too, with questions of morals. I have been present when, by
+hints rather than actual words, he was introduced as a profligate and a
+hypocrite; and I have also known people of good judgment who upheld him
+both as man and as citizen. On this subject no opinion of mine would be
+worth giving. I have always relegated the matter into that limbo of
+disputed facts with which I have nothing to do. I write of him only as I
+saw him in daily life, or at least in direct intercourse, and with that
+my testimony must end. Other people have been curious with regard to
+those aspects of his character on which I can throw no light. To me he
+became interesting chiefly because he was one of those men who from a
+kind of naive audacity, perhaps an unthinking audacity, don't hesitate
+to play the part of the Almighty.
+
+When they drew near enough to the loggia I stood up, my sewing in my
+hand. The two greyhounds, who had outdistanced them, came sniffing to
+the threshold and stared at me. I felt myself an object to be stared at,
+though I had taken pains with my appearance and knew that I was neat.
+Neatness, I may say in passing, is my strong point. Where many other
+girls can stand expensive dressing I am at my best when meticulously
+tidy. The shape of my head makes the simplest styles of doing the hair
+the most distinguished. My figure lends itself to country clothes and
+the tailor-made. In evening dress I can wear the cheapest and flimsiest
+thing, so long as it is dependent only on its lines. I was satisfied,
+therefore, with the way I looked, and when I say I felt myself an object
+to be stared at I speak only of my consciousness of isolation.
+
+I cannot affirm, however, that J. Howard Brokenshire stared at me. He
+stared; but only at the general effects in which I was a mere detail.
+The loggia being open on all sides, he paused for half a second to take
+it and its contents in. I went with the contents. I looked at him; but
+nothing in the glance he cast over me recognized me as a human being. I
+might have been the table; I might have been the floor; for him I was
+hardly in existence.
+
+I wonder if you have ever stood under the gaze of one who considered you
+too inferior for notice. The sensation is quite curious. It produces not
+humiliation or resentment so much as an odd apathy. You sink in your own
+sight; you go down; you understand that abjection of slaves which kept
+them from rising against their masters. Negatively at least you concede
+the right that so treats you. You are meek and humble at once; and yet
+you can be strong. I think I never felt so strong as when I saw that
+cold, deep eye, which was steely and fierce and most inconsistently
+sympathetic all in one quick flash, sweep over me and pay me no
+attention. _Ecce Femina_ I might have been saying to myself, as a
+pendant in expression to the _Ecce Homo_ of the Praetorium.
+
+He moved aside punctiliously at the lower of the two steps that led up
+to the loggia to let his wife precede him. As she came in I think she
+gave me a salutation that was little more than a quiver of the lids.
+Having closed her parasol, she slipped into one of the arm-chairs not
+far from the table.
+
+Now that he was at close quarters, with his work before him, he
+proceeded to the task at once. In the act of laying his hat and stick on
+a chair he began with the question, "Your name is--?"
+
+The voice had a crisp gentleness that seemed to come from the effort to
+despatch business with the utmost celerity and spend no unnecessary
+strength on words. The fact that he must have heard my name from Hugh
+was plainly to play no part in our discussion. I was so unutterably
+frightened that when I tried to whisper the word "Adare" hardly a sound
+came forth.
+
+As he raised himself from the placing of his cap and stick he was
+obliged to utter a sharp, "What?"
+
+"Adare."
+
+"Oh. Adare!"
+
+It is not a bad name as names go; we like to fancy ourselves connected
+with the famous Fighting Adares of the County Limerick; but on J. Howard
+Brokenshire's lips it had the undiscriminating commonness of Smith or
+Jones. I had never been ashamed of it before.
+
+"And you're one of my daughter's--"
+
+"I'm her nursery governess."
+
+"Sit down."
+
+As he took the chair at the end of the table I dropped again into that
+at the side from which I had risen. It was then that something happened
+which left me for a second in doubt as to whether to take it as comic or
+catastrophic. His left eye closed; his left nostril quivered; he winked.
+To avoid having to face this singular phenomenon a second time I lowered
+my eyes and began mechanically to sew.
+
+"Put that down!"
+
+I placed the work on the table and once more looked at him. The striking
+eyes were again as striking as ever. In their sympathetic hardness there
+was nothing either ribald or jocose.
+
+I suppose my scrutiny annoyed him, though I was unconscious of more than
+a mute asking for orders. He pointed to a distant chair, a chair in a
+corner, just within the loggia as you come from the direction of the
+dining-room.
+
+"Sit there."
+
+I know now that his wink distressed him. It was something which at that
+time had come upon him recently, and that he could neither control nor
+understand. A less imposing man, a man to whom personal impressiveness
+was less of an asset in daily life and work, would probably have been
+less disturbed by it; but to J. Howard Brokenshire it was a trial in
+more ways than one. Curiously, too, when the left eye winked the right
+grew glassy and quite terrible.
+
+Not knowing that he was sensitive in this respect, I took my retreat to
+the corner as a kind of symbolic banishment.
+
+"Hadn't I better stand up?" I asked, proudly, when I had reached my
+chair.
+
+"Be good enough to sit down."
+
+I seemed to fall backward. The tone had the effect of a shot. If I had
+ever felt small and foolish in my life it was then. I flushed to my
+darkest crimson. Angry and humiliated, I was obliged to rush to my maxim
+in order not to flash back in some indignant retort.
+
+And then another thing happened of which I was unable at the minute to
+get the significance. Mrs. Brokenshire sprang up with the words:
+
+"You're quite right, Howard. It's ever so much cooler over here by the
+edge. I never felt anything so stuffy as the middle of this place. It
+doesn't seem possible for air to get into it."
+
+While speaking she moved with incomparable daintiness to a chair
+corresponding to mine and diagonally opposite. With the length and width
+of the loggia between us we exchanged glances. In hers she seemed to
+say, "If you are banished I shall be banished too"; in mine I tried to
+express gratitude. And yet I was aware that I might have misunderstood
+both movement and look entirely.
+
+My next surprise was in the words Mr. Brokenshire addressed to me. He
+spoke in the soft, slightly nasal staccato which I am told had on his
+business associates the effect of a whip-lash.
+
+"We've come over to tell you, Miss--Miss Adare, how much we appreciate
+your attitude toward our boy, Hugh. I understand from him that he's
+offered to marry you, and that very properly in your situation you've
+declined. The boy is foolish, as you evidently see. He meant nothing; he
+could do nothing. You're probably not without experience of a similar
+kind among the sons of your other employers. At the same time, as you
+doubtless expect, we sha'n't let you suffer by your prudence--"
+
+It was a bad beginning. Had he made any sort of appeal to me, however
+unkindly worded, I should probably have yielded. But the tradition of
+the Fighting Adares was not in me for nothing, and after a smothering
+sensation which rendered me speechless I managed to stammer out:
+
+"Won't you allow me to say that--"
+
+The way in which his large, white, handsome hand went up was meant to
+impose silence upon me while he himself went on:
+
+"In order that you may not be annoyed by my son's folly in the future
+you will leave my daughter's employ, you'll leave Newport--you'll be
+well advised, indeed, in going back to your own country, which I
+understand to be the British provinces. You will lose nothing, however,
+by this conduct, as I've given you to understand. Three--four--five
+thousand dollars--I think five ought to be sufficient--generous, in
+fact--"
+
+"But I've not refused him," I was able at last to interpose. "I--I mean
+to accept him."
+
+There was an instant of stillness during which one could hear the
+pounding of the sea.
+
+"Does that mean that you want me to raise your price?"
+
+"No, Mr. Brokenshire. I have no price. If it means anything at all that
+has to do with you, it's to tell you that I'm mistress of my acts and
+that I consider your son--he's twenty-six--to be master of his."
+
+There was a continuation of the stillness. His voice when he spoke was
+the gentlest sound I had ever heard in the way of human utterance. If it
+were not for the situation it could have been considered kind:
+
+"Anything at all that has to do with me? You seem to attach no
+importance to the fact that Hugh is my son."
+
+I do not know how words came to me. They seemed to flow from my lips
+independently of thought.
+
+"I attach importance only to the fact that he's a man. Men who are never
+anything but their father's sons aren't men."
+
+"And yet a father has some rights."
+
+"Yes, sir; some. He has the right to follow where his grown-up children
+lead. He hasn't the right to lead and require his grown-up children to
+follow."
+
+He shifted his ground. "I'm obliged to you for your opinion, but at
+present it's not to the point--"
+
+I broke in breathlessly: "Pardon me, sir; it's exactly to the point. I'm
+a woman; Hugh's a man. We're--we're in love with each other; it's all we
+have to be concerned with."
+
+"Not quite; you've got to be concerned--with me."
+
+"Which is what I deny."
+
+"Oh, denial won't do you any good. I didn't come to hear your denials,
+or your affirmations, either. I've come to tell you what to do."
+
+"But if I know that already?"
+
+"That's quite possible--if you mean to play your game as doubtless
+you've played it before. I only want to warn you--"
+
+I looked toward Mrs. Brokenshire for help, but her eyes were fixed on
+the floor, on which she was drawing what seemed like a design with the
+tip of her parasol. The greyhounds were stretched at her feet. I could
+do nothing but speak for myself, which I did with a calmness that
+surprised me.
+
+"Mr. Brokenshire," I interrupted, "you are a man and I'm a woman. What's
+more, you're a strong man, while I'm a woman with no protection at all.
+I ask you--do you think you're playing a man's part in insulting me?"
+
+His tone grew kind almost to affection. "My dear young lady, you
+misunderstand me. Insult couldn't be further from my thoughts. I'm
+speaking entirely for your own sake. You're young; you're very pretty; I
+won't say you've no knowledge of the world because I see you have--"
+
+"I've a good deal of knowledge of the world."
+
+"Only not such knowledge as would warrant you in pitting yourself
+against me."
+
+"But I don't. If you'd leave me alone--"
+
+"Let us keep to what we're talking of. I'm sorry for you; I really am.
+You're at the beginning of what might euphemistically--do you know the
+meaning of the word?--be called a career. I should like to save you from
+it; that's all. It's why I'm speaking to you very plainly and using
+language that can't be misunderstood. There's nothing original in your
+proceeding, believe me. Nearly every family of the standing of mine has
+had to reckon with something of the sort. Where there are young men, and
+young women of--what do you want me to say?--young women who mean to do
+the best they can for themselves--let us put it in that way--"
+
+"I'm a gentleman's daughter," I broke in, weakly.
+
+He smiled. "Oh yes; you're all gentlemen's daughters. Neither is there
+anything original in that."
+
+"Mrs. Rossiter will tell you that my father was a judge in Canada--"
+
+"The detail doesn't interest me."
+
+"No, but it interests me. It gives me a sense of being equal to--"
+
+"If you please! We'll not go into that."
+
+"But I must speak. If I'm to marry Hugh you must let me tell you who I
+am."
+
+"It's not necessary. You're not to marry Hugh. Let that be absolutely
+understood. Once you've accepted the fact--"
+
+"I could only accept it from Hugh himself."
+
+"That's foolish. Hugh will do as I tell him."
+
+"But why should he in this case?"
+
+"That again is something we needn't discuss. All that matters, my dear
+young lady, is your own interest. I'm working for that, don't you see,
+against yourself--"
+
+I burst out, "But why shouldn't I marry him?"
+
+He leaned on the table, tapping gently with his hand. "Because we don't
+want you to. Isn't that enough?"
+
+I ignored this. "If it's because you don't know anything about me I
+could tell you."
+
+"Oh, but we do know something about you. We know, for example, since
+you compel me to say it, that you're a little person of no importance
+whatever."
+
+"My family is one of the best in Canada."
+
+"And admitting that that's so, who would care what constituted a good
+family in Canada? To us here it means nothing; in England it would mean
+still less. I've had opportunities of judging how Canadians are regarded
+in England, and I assure you it's nothing to make you proud."
+
+Of the several things he had said to sting me I was most sensitive to
+this. I, too, had had opportunities of judging, and knew that if
+anything could make one ashamed of being a British colonial of any kind
+it would be British opinion of colonials.
+
+"My father used to say--"
+
+He put up his large, white hand. "Another time. Let us keep to the
+subject before us."
+
+I omitted the mention of my father to insist on a theory as to which I
+had often heard him express himself: "If it's part of the subject before
+us that I'm a Canadian and that Canadians are ground between the upper
+and lower millstones of both English and American contempt--"
+
+"Isn't that another digression?"
+
+"Not really," I hurried on, determined to speak, "because if I'm a
+sufferer by it, you are, too, in your degree. It's part of the
+Anglo-Saxon tradition for those who stay behind to despise those who go
+out as pioneers. The race has always done it. It isn't only the British
+who've despised their colonists. The people of the Eastern States
+despised those who went out and peopled the Middle West; those in the
+Middle West despised those who went farther West." I was still quoting
+my father. "It's something that defies reason and eludes argument. It's
+a base strain in the blood. It's like that hierarchy among servants by
+which the lady's maid disdains the cook, and the cook disdains the
+kitchen-maid, and the proudest are those who've nothing to be proud of.
+For you to look down on me because I'm a Canadian, when the commonest of
+Englishmen, with precisely the same justification, looks down on you--"
+
+"Dear young lady," he broke in, soothingly, "you're talking wildly.
+You're speaking of things you know nothing about. Let us get back to
+what we began with. My son has offered to marry you--"
+
+"He didn't offer to marry me. He asked me--he begged me--to marry him."
+
+"The way of putting it is of no importance."
+
+"Ah, but it is."
+
+"I mean that, however he expressed it--however you express it--the
+result must be the same."
+
+I nerved myself to look at him steadily. "I mean to accept him. When he
+asked me yesterday I said I wouldn't give him either a Yes or a No till
+I knew what you and his family thought of it. But now that I do know--"
+
+"You're determined to try the impossible."
+
+"It won't be the impossible till he tells me so."
+
+He seemed for a second or two to study me. "Suppose I accepted you as
+what you say you are--as a young woman of good antecedents and honorable
+character. Would you still persist in the effort to force yourself on a
+family that didn't want you?"
+
+I confess that in the language Mr. Strangways and I had used in the
+morning, he had me here "on the hip." To force myself on a family that
+didn't want me would normally have been the last of my desires. But I
+was fighting now for something that went beyond my desires--something
+larger--something national, as I conceived of nationality--something
+human--though I couldn't have said exactly what it was. I answered only
+after long deliberation.
+
+"I couldn't stop to consider a family. My object would be to marry the
+man who loved me--and whom I loved."
+
+"So that you'd face the humiliation--"
+
+"It wouldn't be humiliation, because it would have nothing to do with
+me. It would pass into another sphere."
+
+"It wouldn't be another sphere to him."
+
+"I should have to let him take care of that. It's all I can manage to
+look out for myself--"
+
+There seemed to be some admiration in his tone.
+
+"Which you seem marvelously well fitted to do."
+
+"Thank you."
+
+"In fact, it's one of the ways in which you betray yourself. An innocent
+girl--"
+
+I strained forward in my chair. "Wouldn't it be fair for you to tell me
+what you mean by the word innocent?"
+
+"I mean a girl who has no special ax to grind--"
+
+I could hear my foot tapping on the floor, but I was too indignant to
+restrain myself. "Even that figure of speech leaves too much to the
+imagination."
+
+He studied me again. "You're very sharp."
+
+"Don't I need to be," I demanded, "with an enemy of your acumen?"
+
+"But I'm not your enemy. It's what you don't seem to see. I'm your
+friend. I'm trying to keep you out of a situation that would kill you if
+you got into it."
+
+I think I laughed. "Isn't death preferable to dishonor?" I saw my
+mistake in the quickness with which Mrs. Brokenshire looked up. "There
+are more kinds of dishonor than one," I explained, loftily, "and to me
+the blackest would be in allowing you to dictate to me."
+
+"My dear young woman, I dictate to men--"
+
+"Oh, to men!"
+
+"I see! You presume on your womanhood. It's a common American expedient,
+and a cheap one. But I don't stop for that."
+
+"You may not stop for womanhood, Mr. Brokenshire; but neither does
+womanhood stop for you."
+
+He rose with an air of weary patience. "I'm afraid we sha'n't gain
+anything by talking further--"
+
+"I'm afraid not." I, too, rose, advancing to the table. We confronted
+each other across it, while one of the dogs came nosing to his master's
+hand. I had barely the strength to gasp on: "We've had our talk and you
+see where I am. I ask nothing but the exercise of human liberty--and the
+measure of respect I conceive to be due to every one. Surely you, an
+American, a representative of what America is supposed to stand for,
+can't think of it as too much."
+
+"If America is supposed to stand for your marrying my son--"
+
+"America stands, so I've been told by Americans, for the reasonable
+freedom of the individual. If Hugh wants to marry me--"
+
+"Hugh will marry the woman I approve of."
+
+"Then that apparently is what we must put to the test."
+
+I was now so near to tears that I suppose he saw an opening to his own
+advantage. Coming round the table, he stood looking down at me with that
+expression which I can only describe as sympathetic. With all the
+dominating aggressiveness which either forced you to give in to him or
+urged you to fight him till you dropped, there was that about him which
+left you with a lingering suspicion that he might be right. It was the
+man who might be right who was presently sitting easily on the edge of
+the table, so that his face was on a level with my own, and saying in a
+kindly voice:
+
+"Now look here! Let's be reasonable. I don't want to be unfair to you,
+or to say anything a man isn't justified in saying to a woman. I'm
+willing to throw the whole blame on Hugh--"
+
+"I'm not," I declared, hotly.
+
+"That's generous; but I'm speaking of myself. I'm willing to throw the
+whole blame on Hugh, because he's my son. I'll absolve you, if you like,
+because you're a stranger and a girl, and consider you a victim--"
+
+"I'm not a victim," I insisted. "I'm only a human being, asking for a
+human being's rights."
+
+He shrugged his shoulders. "Oh, rights! Who knows what rights are?"
+
+"I do. That is," I corrected, "I know my own."
+
+"Oh, of course! One always knows one's own. One's own rights are
+everything one can get. Now you can't get Hugh; but you can get five
+thousand dollars. That's a lot of money. There are men all over the
+United States who'd cut off a hand for it. You won't have to cut off a
+hand. You only need to be a good, sensible little girl and--get out."
+Perhaps he thought I was yielding, for he tapped his side pocket as he
+went on speaking. "It won't take a minute. I've got a check-book here--a
+stroke of the pen--"
+
+My work was lying on the table a few inches away. Leaning forward
+deliberately I put it into the basket, which I tucked under my arm. I
+looked at Mrs. Brokenshire, who was leaning forward and looking at me. I
+inclined my head with a slight salutation, to which she did not respond,
+and turned away. Of him I took no notice.
+
+"So it's war."
+
+I was half-way to the dining-room when I heard him say that. As I paused
+to look back he was still sitting sidewise on the edge of the table,
+swinging a leg and staring after me.
+
+"No, sir," I said, quietly. "It takes two to fight, and I should never
+think of being one."
+
+"You know, of course, that I shall have no mercy on you."
+
+"No, sir; I don't."
+
+"Then you can know it now. I'm sorry for you; but I can't afford to
+spare you. Bigger things than you have come in my way--and have been
+blasted."
+
+Mrs. Brokenshire made a quick little movement behind his back. It told
+me nothing I understood then, though I was able to interpret it later. I
+could only say, in a voice that shook with the shaking of my whole body:
+
+"You couldn't blast me, sir, because--because--"
+
+"Yes? Because--what? I should like to know."
+
+There was a robin hopping on the lawn outside and I pointed to it. "You
+couldn't blast a little bird like that with a bombshell."
+
+"Oh, birds have been shot."
+
+"Yes, sir; with a fowling-piece; but not with a howitzer. The one is too
+big; the other is too small."
+
+I was about to drop him a little courtesy when I saw him wink. It was a
+grotesque, amusing wink that quivered and twisted till it finally
+closed the left eye. If he had been a less handsome man the effect would
+have been less absurd.
+
+I made my courtesy the deeper, bending my head and lowering my eyes so
+as to spare him the knowledge that I saw.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER III
+
+
+"He attacked my country. I think I could forgive him everything but
+that."
+
+It was an hour after Mr. and Mrs. Brokenshire had left me. I was half
+crying by this time--that is, half crying in the way one cries from
+rage, and yet laughing nervously, in flashes, at the same time. From the
+weakness of sheer excitement I had dropped to one of the steps leading
+down to the Cliff Walk, while Larry Strangways leaned on the stone post.
+I had met him there as I was going out and he was coming toward the
+house. We couldn't but stop to exchange a word, especially with his
+knowledge of the situation. He took what I had to say with the light,
+gleaming, non-committal smile which he brought to bear on everything. I
+was glad of that because it kept him detached. I didn't want him any
+nearer to me than he was.
+
+"Attacked your country? Do you mean England?"
+
+"No; Canada. England is my grandmother; but Canada's my mother. He said
+you all despised her."
+
+"Oh no, we don't. He was trying to put something over on you."
+
+"Your 'No, we don't' lacks conviction; but I don't mind you. I shouldn't
+mind him if I hadn't seen so much of it."
+
+"So much of what?"
+
+"Being looked down upon geographically. Of all the ways of being proud,"
+I declared, indignantly, "that which depends on your merely accidental
+position with regard to land and water strikes me as the most
+poor-spirited. I can't imagine any one dragging himself down to it who
+had another rag of a reason for self-respect. As a matter of fact, I
+don't believe any one ever does. The people I've heard express
+themselves on the subject--well, I'll give you an illustration: There
+was a woman at Gibraltar--a major's wife, a big, red-faced woman. Her
+name was Arbuthnot--her father was a dean or something--a big, red-faced
+woman, with one of those screechy, twangy English voices that cut you
+like a saw--you know there are some--a good many--and they don't know
+it. Well, she was saying something sneering about Canadians. I was
+sitting opposite--it was at a dinner-party--and so I leaned across the
+table and asked her why she didn't like them. She said colonials were
+such dreadful form. I held her with my eye"--I showed him how--"and made
+myself small and demure as I said, 'But, dear lady, how clever of you!
+Who would ever have supposed that you'd know that?' My sister Vic
+pitched into me about it after we got home. She said the Arbuthnot
+person didn't understand what I meant--nor any one else at the table,
+they're so awfully thick-skinned--and that it's better to let them
+alone. But that's the kind of person who--"
+
+He tried to comfort me. "They'll come round in time. One of these days
+England will see what she owes to her colonists and do them justice."
+
+"Never!" I declared, vehemently. "It will be always the same--till we
+knock the Empire to pieces. Then they'll respect us. Look at the Boer
+War. Didn't our men sacrifice everything to go out that long
+distance--and win battles--and lay down their lives--only to have the
+English say afterward--especially the army people--that they were more
+trouble than they were worth? It will be always the same. When we've
+given our last penny and shed our last drop of blood they'll still tell
+us we've been nothing but a nuisance. You may live to see it and
+remember that I said so. If when Shakespeare wrote that it's sharper
+than a serpent's tooth to have a thankless child he'd gone on to add
+that it's the very dickens to have a picturesque, self-satisfied old
+grandmother who thinks her children's children should give her
+everything and take kicks instead of ha'pence for their pay, he'd have
+been up to date. Mind you, we don't object to giving our last penny and
+shedding our last drop of blood; we only hate being abused and sneered
+at for doing it."
+
+I warmed to my subject as I dabbed fiercely at my eyes.
+
+"I'll tell you what the typical John Bull is like. He's like those
+men--big, flabby men they generally are--who'll be brutes to you so long
+as you're civil to them, but will climb down the minute you begin to hit
+back. Look at the way they treat you Americans! They can't do enough for
+you--because you snap your fingers in their faces and show them you
+don't care a hang about them. They come over here, and give you
+lectures, and marry your girls, and pocket your money, and adopt your
+bad form as delightful originality--and respect you. Now that earls'
+daughters are beginning to cast an eye on your millionaires--Mrs.
+Rossiter told me that--they won't leave you a rag to your back. But with
+us who've been faithful and loyal they're all the other way. I can
+hardly tell you the small pin-pricking indignities to which my sisters
+and I have been subjected for being Canadians. And they'll never change.
+It will never be otherwise, no matter what we do, no matter what we
+become, no matter if we give our bodies to be burned, as the Bible says.
+It will never be otherwise--not till we imitate you and strike them in
+the face. _Then_ you'll see how they'll come round."[1]
+
+He still smiled, with an aloofness in which there was a beam of
+sweetness. "I had no idea that you were such a little rebel."
+
+"I'm not a rebel. I'm loyal to the King. That is, I'm loyal to the great
+Anglo-Saxon ideal of which the King is the symbol--and I suppose he's as
+good a symbol as any other, especially as he's already there. The
+English are only partly Anglo-Saxon. 'Saxon and Norman and Dane are
+they'--didn't Tennyson say that? Well, there's a lot that's Norman, and
+a lot that's Dane, and a lot that's Scotch and Irish and rag-tag in
+them. But they're saved by the pure Anglo-Saxon ideal in so far as they
+hold to it--just as you'll be, with all your mixed bloods--and just as
+we shall be ourselves. It's like salt in the meat, it's like grace in
+the Christian religion--it's the thing that saves, and I'm loyal to
+that. My father used to say that it's the fact that English and
+Canadians and Australians are all devoted to the same principle that
+holds us together as an Empire, and not the subservience of distant
+lands to a Parliament sitting at Westminster. And so it is. We don't
+always like each other; but that doesn't matter. What does matter is
+that we should betray the fact that we don't like each other to
+outsiders--and so give them a handle against us."
+
+"You mean that J. Howard should be in a position to side with the
+English in looking down on you as a Canadian?"
+
+"Yes, and that the English should give him that position. He's an
+American and an enemy--every American is an enemy to England _au fond_.
+Oh yes, he is! You needn't deny it! It's something fundamental, deeper
+down than anything you understand. Even those of you who like England
+are hostile to her at heart and would be glad to see her in trouble. So,
+I say, he's an American and an enemy, and yet they hand me, their child
+and their friend, over to him to be trampled on. He's had opportunities
+of judging how Canadians are regarded in England, he says--and he
+assures me it's nothing to be proud of. That's it. I've had
+opportunities too--and I have to admit that he's right. Don't you see?
+That's what enrages me. As far as their liking us and our not liking
+them is concerned, why, it's all in the family. So long as it's kept in
+the family it's like the pick that Louise and Vic have always had on me.
+I'm the youngest and the plainest--"
+
+"Oh, you're the plainest, are you? What on earth are they like?"
+
+"They're quite good-looking, and they're awfully chic. But that's in
+parentheses. What I mean is that they're always hectoring me because I'm
+not attractive--"
+
+"Really?"
+
+"I'm not fishing for compliments. I'm too busy and too angry for that. I
+want to go on talking about what we're talking about."
+
+"But I want to know why they said you were unattractive."
+
+"Well, perhaps they didn't say it. What they have said is this, and it's
+what Mrs. Rossiter says--she said it to-day--that I'm only attractive to
+one man in five hundred--"
+
+"But very attractive to him?"
+
+"No; she didn't say that. She merely admitted that her brother Hugh was
+that man--"
+
+He interrupted with something I wished at the time he hadn't said, and
+which I tried to ignore:
+
+"He's the man in that five hundred--and I know another in another five
+hundred, which makes two in a thousand. You'd soon get up to a high
+percentage, when you think of all the men there are in the world."
+
+As he had never hinted at anything of the kind before, it gave me--how
+shall I put it?--I can only think of the word fright--it gave me a
+little fright. It made me uneasy. It was nothing, really. It was spoken
+with that gleaming smile of his which seemed to put distance between him
+and me--between him and everything else that was serious--and yet
+subconsciously I felt as one feels on hearing the first few notes, in an
+opera or a symphony, of that arresting phrase which is to work up into a
+great motive. I tried to get back to my original theme, rising to move
+on as I did so.
+
+"Good gracious!" I cried. "Isn't the world big enough for us all? Why
+should we go about saying unkind and untrue things of one other, when
+each of us is an essential part of a composite whole? Isn't it the foot
+saying to the hand I have no need of thee, and the eye saying the same
+thing to the nose? We've got something you haven't got, and you've got
+something we haven't got. Why shouldn't we be appreciative toward each
+other, and make our exchange with mutual respect as we do with trade
+commodities?"
+
+It was probably to urge me on to talk that he said, with a challenging
+smile: "What have you Canadians got that we haven't? Why, we could buy
+and sell you."
+
+"Oh no, you couldn't; because our special contribution toward the
+civilization of the American continent isn't a thing for sale. It can be
+given; it can be inherited; it can be caught; but it can't be
+purchased."
+
+"Indeed? What is this elusive endowment?"
+
+I answered frankly enough: "I don't know. It's there--and I can't tell
+you what it is. Ever since I've been living among you I've felt how much
+we resemble each other--what a difference. I think--mind you, I only
+think--that what it consists in is a sense of the _comme il faut_. We're
+simpler than you; and less intellectual; and poorer, of course; and
+less, much less, self-analytical; and yet we've got a knowledge of
+what's what that you couldn't command with money. None of the
+Brokenshires have it at all, and, as far as I can see, none of their
+friends. They command it with money, and the difference is like having a
+copy of a work of art instead of the original. It gives them the air of
+being--I'm using Mrs. Rossiter's word--of being produced. Now we
+Canadians are not produced. We just come--but we come the right
+way--without any hooting or tooting or beating of tin pans or
+self-advertisement. We just are--and we say nothing about it. Let me
+make an example of what Mrs. Rossiter was discussing this morning. There
+are lots of pretty girls in my country--as many to the hundred as you
+have here--but we don't make a fuss about them or talk as if we'd
+ordered a special brand from the Creator. We grow them as you grow
+flowers in a garden, at the mercy of the air and sunshine. You grow
+yours like plants in a hothouse, to be exhibited in horticultural shows.
+Please don't think I'm bragging--"
+
+He laughed aloud. "Oh no!"
+
+"Well, I'm not," I insisted. "You asked me a question and I'm trying to
+answer it--and incidentally to justify my own existence, which J. Howard
+has called into question. You've got lots to offer us, and many of us
+come and take it thankfully. What we can offer to you is a simpler and
+healthier and less self-conscious standard of life, with a great deal
+less talk about it--with no talk about it at all, if you could get
+yourselves down to that--and a willingness to be instead of an
+everlasting striving to become. You won't recognize it or take it, of
+course. No one ever does. Nations seem to me insane, and ruled by insane
+governments. Don't the English need the Germans, and the Germans the
+French, and the French the Austrians, and the Austrians the Russians,
+and so on? Why on earth should the foot be jealous of the nose? But
+there! You're simply making me say things--and laughing at me all the
+while--so I'm off to take my walk. We'll get even with J. Howard and all
+the first-class powers some day, and till then--_au revoir_."
+
+I had waved my hand to him and gone some paces into the fog that had
+begun to blow in when he called to me.
+
+"Wait a minute. I've something to tell you."
+
+I turned, without going back.
+
+"I'm--I'm leaving."
+
+I was so amazed that I retraced a step or two toward him. "What?"
+
+His smile underwent a change. It grew frozen and steely instead of being
+bright with a continuous play suggesting summer lightning, which had
+been its usual quality.
+
+"My time is up at the end of the month--and I've asked Mr. Rossiter not
+to expect me to go on."
+
+I was looking for something of the sort sooner or later, but now that it
+had come I saw how lonely I should be.
+
+"Oh! Where are you going? Have you got anything in particular?"
+
+"I'm going as secretary to Stacy Grainger."
+
+"I've some connection with that name," I said, absently, "though I can't
+remember what it is."
+
+"You've probably heard of him. He's a good deal in the public eye."
+
+"Have you known him long?" I asked, for the sake of speaking, though I
+was only thinking of myself.
+
+"Never knew him at all." He came nearer to me. "I've a confession to
+make, though it won't be of interest to you. All the while I've been
+here, playing with little Broke Rossiter, I've been--don't laugh--I've
+been contributing to the press--_moi qui vous parle_!"
+
+"What about?"
+
+"Oh, politics and finance and foreign policy and public things in
+general. Always had a taste that way. Now it seems that something I
+wrote for the _Providence Express_--people read it a good deal--has
+attracted the attention of the great Stacy. Yes, he's great, too--J.
+Howard's big rival for--"
+
+I began to recall something I had heard. "Wasn't there a story about him
+and Mr. Brokenshire and Mrs. Brokenshire?"
+
+"That's the man. Well, he's noticed my stuff, and written to the
+editor--and to me, and I'm to go to him."
+
+I was still thinking of myself and the loss of his _camaraderie_. "I
+hope he's going to pay you well."
+
+"Oh, for me it will be wealth."
+
+"It will probably be more than that. It will be the first long step up."
+
+He nodded confidently. "I hope so."
+
+I had again begun to move away when he stopped me the second time.
+
+"Miss Adare, what's your first name? Mine's Lawrence, as you know."
+
+If I laughed a little it was to conceal my discomfort at this abrupt
+approach to the intimate.
+
+"I'm rather sorry for my name," I said, apologetically. "You see my
+father was one of those poetically loyal Canadians who rather overdo the
+thing. My eldest sister should have been Victoria, because Victoria was
+the queen. But the Duchess of Argyll was in Canada at that time--and
+very nice to father and mother--and so the first of us had to be Louise.
+He couldn't begin on the queens till there was a second one. That's poor
+Vic; while I'm--I know you'll shout--I'm Alexandra. If there'd been a
+fourth she'd have been a Mary; but poor mother died and the series
+stopped."
+
+He shook hands rather gravely. "Then I shall think of you as Alexandra."
+
+"If you are going to think of me at all," I managed to say, with a
+little _moue_, "put me down as Alix. That's what I've always been
+called."
+
+[Footnote 1: This was said before the Great War. It is now supposed that
+when peace is made there will be a change in English opinion. With my
+knowledge of my country--the British Empire--I permit myself to doubt
+it. There is a proverb which begins, "When the devil was sick." I shall,
+however, be glad if I am proved wrong.--Alexandra Adare.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+
+I was glad of the fog. It was cool and refreshing; it was also
+concealing. I could tramp along under its protection with little or no
+fear of being seen. Wearing tweeds, thick boots, and a felt hat, I was
+prepared for wet, and as a Canadian girl I was used to open air in all
+weathers. The few stragglers generally to be seen on the Cliff Walk
+having rushed to their houses for shelter, I had the rocks and the
+breakers, the honeysuckle and the patches of dog-roses, to myself. In
+the back of my mind I was fortified, too, by the knowledge that dampness
+curls my hair into pretty little tendrils, so that if I did meet any one
+I should be looking at my best.
+
+The path is like no other in the world. I have often wondered why the
+American writer-up of picturesque bits didn't make more of it. Trouville
+has its _Plage_, and Brighton its King's Road, and Nice its Promenade
+des Anglais, but in no other kingdom of leisure that I know anything
+about will you find the combination of qualities, wild and subdued, that
+mark this ocean-front of the island of Aquidneck. Neither will you
+easily come elsewhere so near to a sense of the primitive human
+struggle, of the crude social clash, of the war of the rights of
+man--Fisherman's Rights, as this coast historically knows them--against
+encroachment, privilege, and seclusion. As you crunch the gravel, and
+press the well-rolled turf, and sniff the scent of the white and red
+clover and Queen Anne's lace that fringe the precipice leaning over the
+sea, you feel in the air those elements of conflict that make drama.
+
+In clinging to the edge of the cliff, in twisting round every curve of
+the shore line, in running up hill and down dale, under crags and over
+them, the path is, of course, not the only one of its kind. You will
+find the same thing anywhere on the south coast of England or the north
+coast of France. But in the sum of human interest it sucks into the
+three miles of its course I can think of nothing else that resembles it.
+As guaranteeing the rights of the fisherman it is, so I believe,
+inalienable public property. The fisherman can walk on it, sit on it,
+fish from it, right into eternity. So much he has secured from the past
+history of colony and state; but he has done it at the cost of making
+himself offensive to the gentlemen whose lawns he hems as a seamstress
+hems a skirt.
+
+It is a hem like a serpent, with a serpent's sinuosity and grace, but
+also with a serpent's hatefulness to those who can do nothing but accept
+it as a fact. Since, as a fact, it cannot be abolished it has to be put
+up with; and since it has to be put up with the means must needs be
+found to deal with it effectively. Effectively it has been dealt with.
+Money, skill, and imagination have been spent on it, to adorn it, or
+disguise it, or sink it out of sight. The architect, the landscape
+gardener, and the engineer have all been called into counsel. On
+Fisherman's Rights the smile and the frown are exercised by turns, each
+with its phase of ingenuity. Along one stretch of a hundred yards bland
+recognition borders the way with roses or spans the miniature chasms
+with decorative bridges; along the next shuddering refinement grows a
+hedge or digs a trench behind which the obtrusive wayfarer may pass
+unseen. But shuddering refinement and bland recognition alike withdraw
+into themselves as far as broad lawns and lofty terraces permit them to
+retire, leaving to the owner of Fisherman's Rights the enjoyment of
+ocher and umber rocks and sea and sky and grain-fields yellowing on far
+headlands.
+
+It gave me the nearest thing to glee I ever felt in Newport. It was
+bracing and open and free. It suggested comparisons with scrambles along
+Nova-Scotian shores or tramps on the moors in Scotland. I often hated
+the fine weather; it was oppressive; it was strangling. But a day like
+this, with its whiffs of wild wind and its handfuls of salt slashing
+against eyes and mouth and nostrils, was not only exhilarating, it was
+glorious. I was glad, too, that the prim villas and pretentious
+chateaux, most of them out of proportion to any scale of housekeeping of
+which America is capable, could only be descried like castles in a dream
+through the swirling, diaphanous drift. I could be alone to rage and
+fume--or fly onward with a speed that was in itself a relief.
+
+I could be alone till, on climbing the slope of a shorn and wind-swept
+bluff, I saw a square-shouldered figure looming on the crest. It was no
+more than a deepening of the texture of the fog, but I knew its lines.
+Skimming up the ascent with a little cry, I was in Hugh's arms, my head
+on his burly breast.
+
+I think it was his burliness that made the most definite appeal to me.
+He was so sturdy and strong, and I was so small and desolate. From the
+beginning, when he first used to come near me, I felt his presence, as
+the Bible says, like the shadow of a rock in a thirsty land. That was in
+my early homesick time, before I had seized the new way of living and
+the new national point of view. The fact, too, that, as I expressed it
+to myself, I was in the second cabin when I had always been accustomed
+to the first, inspired a discomfort for which unwittingly I sought
+consolation. Nobody thought of me as other than Mrs. Rossiter's
+retainer, but this one kindly man.
+
+I noticed his kindliness almost before I noticed him, just as, I think,
+he noticed my loneliness almost before he noticed me. He opened doors
+for me when I went in or out; he served me with things if he happened to
+be there at tea; he dropped into a chair beside me when I was the only
+member of a group whom no one spoke to. If Gladys was of the company I
+was of it too, with a nominal footing but a virtual exclusion. The men
+in the Rossiter circle were of the four hundred and ninety-nine to whom
+I wasn't attractive; the women were all civil--from a distance.
+Occasionally some nice old lady would ask me where I came from and if I
+liked my work, or talk to me of new educational methods in a way which,
+with my bringing up, was to me as so much Greek; but I never got any
+other sign of friendliness. Only this short, stockily built young
+fellow, with the small, blue eyes, ever recognized me as a human being
+with the average yearning for human intercourse.
+
+During the winter in New York he never went further than that. I
+remembered Mrs. Rossiter's recommendation and "let him alone." I knew
+how to do it. He was not the first man I had ever had to deal with, even
+if no one had asked me to marry him. I accepted his small, kindly acts
+with that shade of discretion which defined the distance between us. As
+far as I could observe, he himself had no disposition to cross the lines
+I set--not till we moved to Newport.
+
+There was a fortnight between our going there and his--a fortnight which
+seemed to work a change in him. The Hugh Brokenshire I met on one of my
+first rambles along the cliffs was not the Hugh Brokenshire I had last
+seen in Fifth Avenue. Perhaps I was not the same myself. In the new
+surroundings I had missed him--a little. I will not say that his absence
+had meant an aching void to me; but where I had had a friend, now I had
+none--since I was unable to count Larry Strangways. Had it not been for
+this solitude I should have been less receptive to his comings when he
+suddenly began to pursue me.
+
+Pursuit is the only word I can use. I found him everywhere, quiet,
+deliberate, persistent. If he had been ten or even five years older I
+could have taken his advances without uneasiness. But he was only
+twenty-six and a dependent. He had no work; apart from his allowance
+from his father he had no means. And yet when, on the day before my
+chronicle begins, he stole upon me as I sat in a sheltered nook below
+the cliffs to which I was fond of retreating when I had time--when he
+stole upon me there, and kissed me and kissed me and kissed me, I
+couldn't help confessing that I loved him.
+
+I must leave to some woman who has had to fend for herself the task of
+telling what it means when a man comes to offer her his heart and his
+protection. It goes without saying that it means more to her than to the
+sheltered woman, for it means things different and more wonderful. It is
+the expected unexpected come to pass; it is the impossible achieved. It
+is not only success; it is success with an aureole of glory.
+
+I suppose I must be parasitical by nature, for I never have conceived of
+life as other than dependent on some man who would love me and take care
+of me. Even when no such man appeared and I was forced out to earn my
+bread, I looked upon the need as temporary only. In the loneliest of
+times at Mrs. Rossiter's, at periods when I didn't see a man for weeks,
+the hero never seemed farther away than just behind the scenes. I
+confess to minutes when I thought he tarried unnecessarily long; I
+confess to terrified questionings as to what would happen were he never
+to come at all; I confess to solitary watches of the night in company
+with fears and tears; but I cannot confess to anything more than a low
+burning of that lamp of hope which never went out entirely.
+
+When, therefore, Hugh Brokenshire offered me what he had to offer me I
+felt for a few minutes--ten, fifteen, twenty perhaps--that sense of the
+fruition of the being which I am sure comes to us but rarely in this
+life, and perhaps is a foretaste of eternity. I was like a creature that
+has long been struggling up to some higher state--and has reached it.
+
+I am ashamed to say, too, that my first consciousness came in pictures
+to which the dear young man himself was only incidental. Two scenes in
+particular that for ten years past had been only a little below the
+threshold of my consciousness came out boldly, like developed
+photographs. I was the center of both. In one I saw a dainty little
+dining-room, where the table was laid. The damask was beautiful; the
+silver rich; the glasses crystalline. Wearing an inexpensive but
+extremely chic little gown, I was seating the guests. The other picture
+was more dim, but only in the sense that the room was deliciously
+darkened. It had white furnishings, a little white cot, and toys. In its
+very center was a bassinet, and I was leaning over it, wearing a
+delicate lace peignoir.
+
+Ought I to blush to say that while Hugh stammered out his impassioned
+declarations I was seeing these two tableaux emerging from the state of
+only half-acknowledged dreams into real possibility? I dare say. I
+merely affirm that it was so. Since the dominant craving of my nature
+was to have a home and a baby, I saw the baby and the home before I
+could realize a husband or a father, or bring my mind to the definite
+proposals faltered by poor Hugh.
+
+But I did bring my mind to them, with the result of which I have already
+given a sufficient indication. Even in admitting that I loved him I
+thrust and parried and postponed. The whole idea was too big for me to
+grapple with on the spur of a sudden moment. I suggested his talking the
+matter over with his father chiefly to gain time.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But to rest in his arms had only a subordinate connection with the great
+issue I had to face. It was a joy in itself. It was a pledge of the
+future, even if I were never to take anything but the pledge. After my
+shifts and struggles and anxieties I could feel the satisfaction of
+knowing it was in my power to let them all roll off. If I were never to
+do it, if I were to go back to my uncertainties, this minute would
+mitigate the trial in advance. I might fight for existence during all
+the rest of my life, and yet I should still have the bliss of
+remembering that some one was willing to fight for me.
+
+He released me at last, since there might be people in Newport as
+indifferent to weather as ourselves.
+
+"What happened?" he asked then, with an eagerness which almost choked
+the question in its utterance. "Was it awful?"
+
+I was too nearly hysterical to enter on anything like a recital. "It
+might have been worse," I half laughed and half sobbed, trying to
+recover my breath and dry my eyes.
+
+His spirit seemed to leap at the answer. "Do you mean to say you got
+concessions from him--or anything like that?"
+
+I couldn't help clinging to the edge of his raincoat. "Did you expect me
+to?"
+
+"I didn't know but what, when he saw you--"
+
+"Oh, but he didn't see me. That was part of the difficulty. He looked
+where I was--but he didn't find anything there."
+
+He laughed, with a hint of disappointment. "I know what you mean; but
+you mustn't be surprised. He'll see you yet." He clasped me again. "I
+didn't see you at first, little girl; I swear I didn't. You're like
+that. A fellow must look at you twice before he knows that you're there;
+but when he begins to take notice--" I struggled out of his embrace,
+while he continued: "It's the same with all the great things--with
+pictures and mountains and cathedrals, and so on. Often thought about it
+when we've been abroad. See something once and pass it by. Next time you
+look at it a little. Third time it begins to grow on you. Fourth time
+you've found a wonder. You're a wonder, little Alix, do you know it?"
+
+"Oh no, I'm not. I must warn you, Hugh darling, that I'm very prosaic
+and practical and ordinary. You mustn't put me on a pedestal--"
+
+"Put you on a pedestal? You were born on a pedestal. You're the woman
+I've seen in hopes and dreams--"
+
+We began to walk on, coming to a little hollow that dipped near enough
+to the shore to allow of our scrambling over the rocks to where we could
+sit down among them. As we were here below the thickest belt of the fog
+line, I could see him in a way that had been impossible on the bluff.
+
+If he was good-looking it was only in the handsome-ugly sense. Mrs.
+Rossiter often said he was the one member of the family who inherited
+from the Brews of Boston, a statement I could verify from the first Mrs.
+Brokenshire's portrait by Carolus-Duran. Hugh's features were not
+ill-formed so much as they were out of proportion to each other,
+becoming thus a mere jumble of organs. The blue eyes were too small and
+too wide apart; the forehead was too broad for its height; the nose,
+which started at the same fine angle as his father's, changed in
+mid-course to a knob; the upper lip was intended to be long, but
+half-way in its descent took a notion to curve upward, making a hollow
+for a tender, youthful, fair mustache that didn't quite meet in the
+center and might have been applied with a camel's-hair brush; the lower
+lip turned outward with a little fullness that spilled over in a little
+fall, giving to the whole expression something lovably good-natured.
+
+Because the sea boiled over the ledges and scraped on the pebbles with a
+screechy sound we were obliged to sit close together in order to make
+ourselves heard. His arm about me was amazingly protective. I felt safe.
+
+The account of his interview with his father was too incoherent to give
+me more than the idea that they had talked somewhat at cross-purposes.
+To Hugh's statement that he wished to marry Miss Adare, the little
+nursery governess at Ethel's, his father had responded by reading a
+letter from Lord Goldborough inviting Hugh to his place in Scotland for
+the shooting.
+
+"It would be well for you to accept," the father commented, as he
+folded the letter. "I've cabled to Goldborough to say you'd sail on--"
+
+"But, father, how can I sail when I've asked Miss Adare to marry me?"
+
+To this the reply was the mention of the steamer and the date. He went
+on to say, however: "If you've asked any one to marry you it's absurd,
+of course. But I'll take care of that. If you go by that boat you'll
+reach London in plenty of time to fit out at your tailor's and still be
+at Strath-na-Cloid by the twelfth. In case you're short of money--"
+
+Apparently they got no further than that. To Hugh's assertions and
+objections his father had but one response. It was a response, as I
+understood, which confronted the younger man like a wall he had neither
+the force to break down nor the agility to climb over, and left him
+staring at a blank.
+
+Then followed another outburst which to my unaccustomed ear was as wild,
+sweet music. It wasn't merely that he loved me, he adored me; it wasn't
+merely that I was young and pretty and captivating with a sly,
+unobtrusive fascination that held you enchanted when it held you at all.
+I was mistress of the wisdom of the ages. Among the nice expensively
+dressed young girls with whom he danced and rode and swam and flirted,
+Hugh had never seen any one who could "hold a candle" to me in knowledge
+of human nature and the world. It wasn't that I had seen more than they
+or done more than they; it was that I had a mind through which every
+impression filtered and came out as something of my own. It was what he
+had always been looking for in a woman, and had given up the hope of
+finding. He spoke as if he was forty. He was serious himself, he
+averred; he had reflected, and held original convictions. Though a rich
+man's son, with corresponding prospects, his heart was with the masses
+and he labeled himself a Socialist.
+
+It was not the same thing to be a Socialist now, he explained to me, as
+it had been twenty years before, since so many men of education and
+position had adopted this system of opinion. In fact, his own conversion
+had been partly due to young Lord Ernest Hayes, of the British Embassy,
+who had spent the preceding summer at Newport, though his inclinations
+had gone in this direction ever since he had begun to think. It was
+because I was so open-eyed and so sincere that he had been drawn to me
+as soon as he had started in to notice me. It was true that he had
+noticed me first of all because I was in a subordinate position and
+alone, but, having done so, he had found a queen disguised as a working
+girl. I was a queen of the vital things in life, a queen of
+intelligence, of sympathy, of the defiance of convention, of everything
+that was great. I was the woman a Socialist could love, of whom a
+Socialist could make his star.
+
+"If father would only give me credit for being twenty-six and a man,"
+the dear boy went on earnestly, "with a man's responsibility to society
+and the human race! But he doesn't. He thinks I ought to quit being a
+Socialist because he tells me to--or else he doesn't think at all. Nine
+times out of ten, when I begin to say what I believe, he talks of
+something else--just as he did last night in bringing up the
+Goldboroughs."
+
+I found the opportunity for which I had been looking during his
+impassioned rhapsody. The mention of the Goldboroughs gave me that kind
+of chill about the heart which the mist imparted to the hands and face.
+
+"You know them all very well," I said, when I found an opening in which
+I could speak.
+
+"Oh yes," he admitted, indifferently. "Known them all my life. Father
+represented Meek & Brokenshire in England till my grandfather died.
+Goldborough used to be an impecunious chap, land poor, till he and
+father began to pull together. Father's been able to give him tips on
+the market, and he's given father-- Well, dad's always had a taste for
+English swells. Never could stand the Continental kind--gilt gingerbread
+he's called 'em--and so, well, you can see."
+
+I admitted that I could see, going on to ask what the Goldborough family
+consisted of.
+
+There was Lord Leatherhead, the eldest son; then there were two younger
+sons, one in the army and one preparing for the Church; and there were
+three girls.
+
+"Any of the daughters married?" I ventured, timidly.
+
+There was nothing forced in the indifference with which he made his
+explanations. Laura was married to a banker named Bell; Janet, he
+thought he had heard, was engaged to a chap in the Inverness Rangers;
+Cecilia--Cissie they usually called her--was to the best of his
+knowledge still wholly free, but the best of his knowledge did not go
+far.
+
+I pumped up my courage again. "Is she--nice?"
+
+"Oh, nice enough." He really didn't know much about her. She was
+generally away at school when he had been at Goldborough Castle. When
+she was there he hadn't seen more than a long-legged, gawky girl, rather
+good at tennis, with red hair hanging down her back.
+
+Satisfied with these replies, I went on to tell him of my interview with
+his father an hour or two before. Of this he seized on one point with
+some ecstasy.
+
+"So you told him you'd take me! Oh, Alix--gosh!"
+
+The exclamation was a sigh of relief as well as of rapture. I could
+smile at it because it was so boyish and American, especially as he
+clasped me again and held me in a way that almost stopped my breath.
+When I freed myself, however, I said, with a show of firmness:
+
+"Yes, Hugh; it's what I said to him; but it's not what I'm going to
+repeat to you."
+
+"Not what you're going to repeat to me? But if you said it to him--"
+
+"I'm still not obliged to accept you--to-day."
+
+"But if you mean to accept me at all--"
+
+"Yes, I mean to accept you--if all goes well."
+
+"But what do you mean by that?"
+
+"I mean--if your family should want me."
+
+I could feel his clasp relax as he said: "Oh, if you're going to wait
+for that!"
+
+"Hugh, darling, how can I not wait for it? I told him I couldn't stop to
+consider a family; but--but I see I must."
+
+"Oh, but why? We shall lose everything if you do that. To wait for my
+family to want you to marry me--"
+
+I detached myself altogether from his embrace, pretending to arrange my
+skirts about my feet. He leaned forward, his fingers interlocked, his
+elbows on his knees, his kind young face disconsolate.
+
+"When I talked to your father," I tried to explain, "I saw chiefly the
+individual's side of the question of marriage. There is that side; but
+there's another. Marriage doesn't concern a man and a woman alone; it
+concerns a family--sometimes two."
+
+His cry came out with the explosive force of a slowly gathering groan.
+"Oh, rot, Alix!" He went on to expostulate: "Can't you see? If we were
+to go now and buy a license--and be married by the first clergyman we
+met--the family couldn't say a word."
+
+"Exactly; it's just what I do see. Since you want it I could force
+myself on them--the word is your father's--and they'd have no choice but
+to accept me."
+
+"Well, then?"
+
+"Hugh, dear, I--I can't do it that way."
+
+"Then what way could you do it?"
+
+"I'm not sure yet. I haven't thought of it. I only know in advance that
+even if I told you I'd marry you against--against all their wishes, I
+couldn't keep my promise in the end."
+
+"That is," he said, bitterly, "you think more of them than you do of
+me."
+
+I put my hand on his clasped fingers. "Nonsense. I--I love you. Don't
+you see I do? How could I help loving you when you've been so kind to
+me? But marriage is always a serious thing to a woman; and when it comes
+to marriage into a family that would look on me as a great
+misfortune--Hugh, darling, I don't see how I could ever face it."
+
+"I do," he declared, promptly. "It isn't so bad as you think. Families
+come round. There was Tracy Allen. Married a manicure. The Allens kicked
+up a row at first--wouldn't see Tracy and all that; but now--"
+
+"Yes, but, Hugh, I'm not a manicure."
+
+"You're a nursery governess."
+
+"By accident--and a little by misfortune. I wasn't a nursery governess
+when I first knew your sister."
+
+"But what difference does that make?"
+
+"It makes this difference: that a manicure would probably not think of
+herself as your equal. She'd expect coldness at first, and be prepared
+for it."
+
+"Well, couldn't you?"
+
+"No, because, you see, I'm your equal."
+
+He hunched his big shoulders impatiently. "Oh, Alix, I don't go into
+that. I'm a Socialist. I don't care what you are."
+
+"But you see I do. I don't want to expose myself to being looked down
+upon, and perhaps despised, for the rest of my life, because my family
+is quite as good as your own."
+
+He turned slowly from peering into the fog-bank to fix on me a look of
+which the tenderness and pity and incredulity seemed to stab me. I felt
+the helplessness of a sane person insisting on his sanity to some one
+who believes him mad.
+
+"Don't let us talk about those things, darling little Alix," he begged,
+gently. "Let's do the thing in style, like Tracy Allen, without any
+flummery or fluff. What's family--once you get away from the idea? When
+I sink it I should think that you could afford to do it too. If I take
+you as Tracy Allen took Libby Jaynes--that was her name, I remember
+now--not a very pretty girl--but if I take you as he took her, and you
+take me as she took him--"
+
+"But, Hugh, I can't. If I were Libby Jaynes, it's possible I could; but
+as it is--"
+
+And in the end he came round to my point of view. That is to say, he
+appreciated my unwillingness to reward Mrs. Rossiter's kindness to me by
+creating a scandal, and he was not without some admiration for what he
+called my "magnanimity toward his old man" in hesitating to drive him to
+extremes.
+
+And yet it was Hugh himself who drove him to extremes, over questions
+which I hardly raised. That was some ten days later, when Hugh refused
+point-blank to sail on the steamer his father had selected to take him
+on the way to Strath-na-Cloid. I was, of course, not present at the
+interview, but having heard of it from Hugh, and got his account
+corroborated by Ethel Rossiter, I can describe it much as it took place.
+
+I may say here, perhaps, that I still remained with Mrs. Rossiter. My
+marching orders, expected from hour to hour, didn't come. Mrs. Rossiter
+herself explained this delay to me some four days after that scene in
+the breakfast loggia which had left me in a state of curiosity and
+suspense.
+
+"Father seems to think that if he insisted on your leaving it would make
+Hugh's asking you to marry him too much a matter of importance."
+
+"And doesn't he himself consider it a matter of importance?"
+
+Mrs. Rossiter patted a tress of her brown hair into place. "No, I don't
+think he does."
+
+Perhaps nothing from the beginning had made me more inwardly indignant
+than the simplicity of this reply. I had imagined him raging against me
+in his heart and forming deep, dark plans to destroy me.
+
+"It would be a matter of importance to most people," I said, trying not
+to betray my feeling of offense.
+
+"Most people aren't father," Mrs. Rossiter contented herself with
+replying, still occupied with her tress of hair.
+
+It was the confidential hour of the morning in her big chintzy room. The
+maid having departed, I had been answering notes and was still sitting
+at the desk. It was the first time she had broached the subject in the
+four days which had been to me a period of so much restlessness.
+Wondering at this detachment, I had the boldness to question her.
+
+"Doesn't it seem important to you?"
+
+She threw me a glance over her shoulder, turning back to the mirror at
+once. "What have I got to do with it? It's father's affair--and Hugh's."
+
+"And mine, too, I suppose?" I hazarded, interrogatively.
+
+To this she said nothing. Her silence gave me to understand what so many
+other little things impressed upon me--that I didn't count. What Hugh
+did or didn't do was a matter for the Brokenshires to feel and for J.
+Howard Brokenshire to deal with. Ethel Rossiter herself was neither for
+me nor against me. I was her nursery governess, and useful as an
+unofficial companion-secretary. As long as it was not forbidden she
+would keep me in that capacity; when the order came she would send me
+away. As for anything I had to suffer, that was my own lookout. Hugh
+would be managed by his father, and from that fate there was no appeal.
+There was nothing, therefore, to worry Mrs. Rossiter. She could dismiss
+the whole matter, as she presently did, to discuss her troubles over the
+rival attentions of Mr. Millinger and Mr. Scott, and to protest against
+their making her so conspicuous. She had the kindness to say, however,
+just as she was leaving the house for Bailey's Beach:
+
+"I don't talk to you about this affair of Hugh's because I really don't
+see much of father. It's his business, you see, and nothing for me to
+interfere with. With that woman there I hardly ever go to their house,
+and he doesn't often come here. Her mother's with them, too, just
+now--that's old Mrs. Billing--a harpy if ever there was one--and with
+all the things people are saying! If father only knew! But, of course,
+he'll be the last one to hear it."
+
+She was getting into her car by this time and I seized no more; but at
+lunch I had a few minutes in which to bring my searchings of heart
+before Larry Strangways.
+
+It was not often we took this repast alone with the children, but it had
+to happen sometimes. Mrs. Rossiter had telephoned from Bailey's that she
+had accepted the invitation of some friends and we were not to expect
+her. We should lunch, however, she informed me, in the breakfast loggia,
+where the open air would act as chaperon and insure the necessary
+measure of propriety.
+
+So long as Broke and Gladys were present we were as demure as if we had
+met by chance in the restaurant car of a train. With the coffee the
+children begged to be allowed to play with the dogs on the grass, which
+left us for a few minutes as man and woman.
+
+"How is everything?" he asked at once, taking on that smile which seemed
+to put him outside the sphere of my interests.
+
+I shrugged my shoulders and looked down at the spoon with which I was
+dabbling in my cup. "Oh, just the same," I glanced up to say. "Tell me.
+Have people in this country no other measure of your standing but that
+of money?"
+
+"Have they any such measure in any country?"
+
+I was beginning with the words, "Why, yes," when he interrupted me.
+
+"Think."
+
+"I am thinking," I insisted. "In England and Canada and the British
+Empire generally--"
+
+"You attach some importance to birth. Yes; so do we here--when it goes
+with money. Without the basis of that support neither you nor we give
+what is so deliciously called birth the honor of a second thought."
+
+"Oh yes, we do--"
+
+"When it's your only asset--yes; but you do it alone. No one else pays
+it any attention."
+
+I colored. "That's rather cruel--"
+
+"It's not a bit more cruel than the fact. Take your case and mine as an
+illustration. As the estimate of birth goes in this country, I'm as well
+born as the majority. My ancestors were New-Englanders, country doctors
+and lawyers and ministers--especially the ministers. But as long as I
+haven't the cash I'm only a tutor, and eat at the second table. Jim
+Rossiter's forebears were much the same as mine; but the fact that he
+has a hundred thousand dollars a year and I've hardly got two is the
+only thing that would be taken into consideration, by any one in either
+the United Kingdom or the United States. It would be the same if I
+descended from Crusaders. If I've got nothing but that and my character
+to recommend me--" He raised his hand and snapped his fingers with a
+scornful laugh. "Take your case," he hurried on as I was about to speak.
+"You're probably like me, sprung of a line of professional men--"
+
+"And soldiers," I interrupted, proudly. "The first of my family to
+settle in Canada was a General Adare in the middle of the seventeen
+hundreds. He'd been in the garrison at Halifax and chose to remain in
+Nova Scotia." Perhaps there was some boastfulness in my tone as I added,
+"He came of the famous Fighting Adares of the County Limerick."
+
+"And all that isn't worth a row of pins--except to yourself. If you
+were the daughter of a miner who'd struck it rich you'd be a candidate
+for the British peerage. You'd be received in the best houses in London;
+you could marry a duke and no one would say you nay. As it is--"
+
+"As it is," I said, tremulously, "I'm just a nursery governess, and
+there's no getting away from the fact."
+
+"Not until you get away from the condition."
+
+"So that when I told Hugh Brokenshire the other day that in point of
+family I was his equal--"
+
+"He probably didn't believe you."
+
+The memory of Hugh's look still rankled in me. "No, I don't think he
+did."
+
+"Of course he didn't. As the world counts--as we all count--no poor
+family, however noble, is the equal of any rich family, however base."
+There was that transformation of his smile from something sunny to
+something hard which I had noticed once before, as he went on to add,
+"If you want to marry Hugh Brokenshire--"
+
+"Which I do," I interposed, defiantly.
+
+"Then you must enter into his game as he enters into it himself. He
+thinks of himself as doing the big romantic thing. He's marrying a poor
+girl who has nothing but herself as guaranty. That your
+great-grandfather was a general and one of the--what did you call
+them?--Fighting Adares of the County Cork would mean no more to him than
+if you said you were descended from the Lacedaemonians and the dragon's
+teeth. As far as that goes, you might as well be an immigrant girl from
+Sweden; you might as well be a cook. He's stooping to pick up his
+diamond from the mire, instead of buying it from a jeweler's window.
+Very well, then, you must let him stoop. You mustn't try to
+underestimate his condescension. You mustn't tell him you were once in
+a jeweler's window, and only fell into the mire by chance--"
+
+"Because," I smiled, "the mire is where I belong, until I'm taken out of
+it."
+
+"We belong," he stated, judicially, "where the world puts us. If we're
+wise we'll stay there--till we can meet the world's own terms for
+getting out."
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER V
+
+
+I come at last to Hugh's defiance of his father. It took place not only
+without my incitement, but without my knowledge. No one could have been
+more sick with misgiving than I when I learned that the boy had left his
+father's house and gone to a hotel. If I was to blame at all it was in
+mentioning from time to time his condition of dependence.
+
+"You haven't the right to defy your father's wishes," I said to him. "so
+long as you're living on his money. What it comes to is that he pays you
+to do as he tells you. If you don't do as he tells you, you're not
+earning your allowance honestly."
+
+The point of view was new to him. "But if I was making a living of my
+own?"
+
+"Ah, that would be different."
+
+"You'd marry me then?"
+
+I considered this. "It would still have to depend," I was obliged to say
+at last.
+
+"Depend on what?"
+
+"On the degree to which you made yourself your own master."
+
+"I should be my own master if I earned a good income."
+
+I admitted this.
+
+"Very well," he declared, with decision. "I shall earn it."
+
+I didn't question his power to do that. I had heard so much of the
+American man's ability to make money that I took it for granted, as I
+did a bird's capacity for flight. As far as Hugh was concerned, it
+seemed to me more a matter of intention than of opportunity. I reasoned
+that if he made up his mind to be independent, independent he would be.
+It would rest with him. It was not of the future I was thinking so much
+as of the present; and in the present I was chiefly dodging his plea
+that we settle the matter by taking the law into our own hands.
+
+"It won't be as bad as you think," he kept urging. "Father would be sure
+to come round to you if you were my wife. He never quarrels with the
+accomplished fact. That's been part of the secret of his success. He'll
+fight a thing as long as he can; but when it's carried over his head no
+one knows better than he how to make the best of it."
+
+"But, Hugh, I don't want to have him make the best of it that way--at
+least, so long as you're not your own master."
+
+One day at the Casino he pointed out Libby Jaynes to me. I was there in
+charge of the children, and he managed to slip over from the tennis he
+was playing for a word:
+
+"There she is--that girl with the orange-silk sweater."
+
+The point of his remark was that Libby Jaynes was one of a group of half
+a dozen people, and was apparently received at Newport like anybody
+else. The men were in flannels; the women in the short skirts and easy
+attitudes developed by a sporting life. The silk sweater in its
+brilliant hues was to the Casino grounds as the parrot to Brazilian
+woods. Libby Jaynes wasn't pretty; her lips were too widely parted and
+her teeth too big; but her figure was adapted to the costume of the day,
+and her head to the slouching panama. She wore both with a decided
+_chic_. She was the orange spot where there was another of purple and
+another of pink and another of bright emerald-green. As far as I could
+see no one remembered that she had ever rubbed men's finger-nails in the
+barber's room of a hotel, and she certainly betrayed no sign of it. It
+was what Hugh begged me to observe. If I liked I could within a year be
+a member of this privileged troop instead of an outsider looking on.
+"You'd be just as good as she is," he declared with a naivete I couldn't
+help taking with a smile.
+
+I was about to say, "But I don't feel inferior to her as it is," when I
+recalled the queer look of incredulity he had given me on the beach.
+
+And then one morning I heard he had quarreled with his father. It was
+Hugh who told me first, but Mrs. Rossiter gave me all the details within
+an hour afterward.
+
+It appeared that they had had a dinner-party in honor of old Mrs.
+Billing which had gone off with some success. The guests having left,
+the family had gathered in Mildred's sitting-room to give the invalid an
+account of the entertainment. It was one of those domestic reunions on
+which the household god insisted from time to time, so that his wife
+should seem to have that support from his children which both he and she
+knew she didn't have. The Jack Brokenshires were there, and Hugh, and
+Ethel Rossiter.
+
+It was exactly the scene for a tragi-comedy, and had the kind of setting
+theatrical producers liked before the new scene-painters set the note of
+allegorical simplicity. Mildred had the best corner room up-stairs,
+though, like the rest of the house, her surroundings suffered from her
+father's taste for the Italianate and over-rich. Heavy dark cabinets,
+heavy dark chairs, gilt candelabra, and splendidly brocaded stuffs threw
+the girl's wan face and weak figure into prominence. I think she often
+sighed for pretty papers and cretonnes, for Sevres and colored prints,
+but she took her tapestries and old masters and majolica as decreed by a
+power she couldn't question. When everything was done for her comfort
+the poor thing had nothing to do for herself.
+
+The room had the further resemblance to a scene on the stage since, as I
+was given to understand, no one felt the reality of the friendliness
+enacted. To all J. Howard's children it was odious that he should
+worship a woman who was younger than Mildred and very little older than
+Ethel. They had loved their mother, who had been plain. They resented
+the fact that their father had got hold of her money for himself, had
+made her unhappy, and had forgotten her. That he should have become
+infatuated with a girl who was their own contemporary would have been a
+humiliation to them in any case; but when the story of his fight for her
+became public property, when it was the joke of the Stock Exchange and
+the subject of leading articles in the press, they could only hold their
+heads high and carry the situation with bravado. It was a proof of his
+grip on New York that he could put Editha Billing where he wished to see
+her, and find no authority, social or financial, bold enough to question
+him; it was equally a proof of his dominance in his family that neither
+son nor daughter could treat his new wife with anything but deference.
+She was the _maitresse en titre_ to whom even the princes and princesses
+had to bow.
+
+They were bowing on this evening by treating old Mrs. Billing as if they
+liked her and counted her one of themselves. As the mother of the
+favorite she could reasonably claim this homage, and no one refused it
+but poor Hugh. He turned his back on it. Mildred being obliged to lie on
+a couch, he put himself at her feet, refusing thus to be witness of what
+he called a flattering hypocrisy that sickened him. That went on in the
+dimly, richly lighted room behind him, where the others sat about,
+pretending to be gay.
+
+Then the match went into the gunpowder all at once.
+
+"I'm the more glad the evening has been pleasant," J. Howard observed,
+blandly, "since we may consider it a farewell to Hugh. He's sailing
+on--"
+
+Hugh merely said over his shoulder, "No, father; I'm not."
+
+The startled silence was just long enough to be noticed before the
+father went on, as if he had not been interrupted:
+
+"He's sailing on--"
+
+"No, father; I'm not."
+
+There was no change in Hugh's tone any more than in his parent's. I
+gathered from Mrs. Rossiter that all present held their breaths as if in
+expectation that this blasphemer would be struck dead. Mentally they
+stood off, too, like the chorus in an opera, to see the great tragedy
+acted to the end without interference of their own. Jack Brokenshire,
+who was fingering an extinct cigar, twiddled it nervously at his lips.
+Pauline clasped her hands and leaned forward in excitement. Mrs.
+Brokenshire affected to hear nothing and arranged her five rows of
+pearls. Mrs. Billing, whom Mrs. Rossiter described as a condor with lace
+on her head and diamonds round her shrunken neck, looked from one to
+another through her lorgnette, which she fixed at last on her
+son-in-law. Ethel Rossiter kept herself detached. Knowing that Hugh had
+been riding for a fall, she expected him now to come his cropper.
+
+It caused some surprise to the lookers-on that Mr. Brokenshire should
+merely press the electric bell. "Tell Mr. Spellman to come here," he
+said, quietly, to the footman who answered his ring.
+
+Mr. Spellman appeared, a smooth-shaven man of indefinite age, with dark
+shadows in the face, and cadaverous. His master instructed him with a
+word or two. There was silence during the minute that followed the man's
+withdrawal, a silence ominous with expectation. When Spellman had
+returned and handed a long envelope to his employer and withdrawn again,
+the suspended action was renewed.
+
+Hugh, who was playing in seeming unconcern with the tassel of Mildred's
+dressing-gown, had given no attention to the small drama going on behind
+him.
+
+"Hugh, here's father," Mildred whispered.
+
+Her white face was drawn; she was fond of Hugh; she seemed to scent the
+catastrophe. Hugh continued to play with the tassel without glancing
+upward.
+
+It was not J. Howard's practice to raise his voice or to speak with
+emphasis except when the occasion demanded it. He was very gentle now as
+his hand slipped over Hugh's shoulder.
+
+"Hugh, here's your ticket and your letter of credit. I asked Spellman to
+see to them when he was in New York."
+
+The young man barely turned his head. "Thank you, father; but I don't
+want them. I can't go over--because I'm going to marry Miss Adare."
+
+As it was no time for the chorus of an opera to intervene, all waited
+for what would happen next. Old Mrs. Billing, turning her lorgnette on
+the rebellious boy, saw nothing but the back of his head. The father's
+hand wavered for a minute over the son's shoulder and let the envelope
+fall. Hugh continued to play with the tassel.
+
+For once Howard Brokenshire was disconcerted. Having stepped back a pace
+or two, he said in his quiet voice, "What did you say, Hugh?"
+
+The answer was quite distinct. "I said I was going to marry Miss Adare."
+
+"Who's that?"
+
+"You know perfectly well, father. She's Ethel's nursery governess.
+You've been to see her, and she's told you she's going to marry me."
+
+"Oh, but I thought that was over and done with."
+
+"No, you didn't, father. Please don't try to come that. I told you
+nearly a fortnight ago that I was perfectly serious--and I am."
+
+"Oh, are you? Well, so am I. The Goldboroughs are expecting you for the
+twelfth--"
+
+"The Goldboroughs can go to--"
+
+"Hugh!" It was Mildred who cut him short with a cry that was almost a
+petition.
+
+"All right, Milly," he assured her under his breath. "I'm not going to
+make a scene."
+
+That J. Howard expected to become the principal in a duel, under the
+eyes of excited witnesses, I do not think. If he had chosen to speak
+when witnesses were present, it was because of his assumption that
+Hugh's submission would be thus more easily secured. As it was his
+policy never to enter into a conflict of authorities, or of will against
+will, he was for the moment nonplussed. I have an idea he would have
+retired gracefully, waiting for a more convenient opportunity, had it
+not been for old Mrs. Billing's lorgnette.
+
+It will, perhaps, not interrupt my narrative too much if I say here that
+of all the important women he knew he was most afraid of her. She had
+coached him when he was a beginner in life and she an established young
+woman of the world. She must then have had a certain _beaute du diable_
+and that nameless thing which men find exciting in women. I have been
+told that she was an example of the modern Helen of Troy, over whom men
+fight while she holds the stakes, and I can believe it. Her history was
+said to be full of dramatic episodes, though I never knew what they
+were. Even at sixty, which was the age at which I saw her, she had that
+kind of presence which challenges and dares. She was ugly and hook-nosed
+and withered; but she couldn't be overlooked. To me she suggested that
+Madame Poisson who so carefully prepared her daughter to become the
+Marquise de Pompadour. Stacy Grainger, I believe, was the Louis XV. of
+her earlier plans, though, like a born strategist, she changed her
+methods when reasons arose for doing so. I shall return to this later in
+my story. At present I only want to say that I do not believe that Mr.
+Brokenshire would have pushed things to an issue that night had her
+lorgnette not been there to provoke him.
+
+"Has it occurred to you, Hugh," he asked, in his softest tones, on
+reaching a stand before the chimney which was filled with dwarfed potted
+palms, "that I pay you an allowance of six thousand dollars a year?"
+
+Hugh continued to play with the tassel of Mildred's gown. "Yes, father;
+and as a Socialist I don't think it right. I've been coming to the
+decision that--"
+
+"You'll spare us your poses and let the Socialist nonsense drop. I
+simply want to remind you--"
+
+"I can't let the Socialist nonsense drop, father, because--"
+
+The tartness of the tone betrayed a rising irritation.
+
+"Be good enough to turn round this way. I don't understand what you're
+saying. Perhaps you'll take a chair, and leave poor Mildred alone."
+
+Mildred whispered: "Oh, Hugh, be careful. I'll do anything for you if
+you won't get him worked up. It'll hurt his face--and his poor eye."
+
+Hugh slouched--the word is Mrs. Rossiter's--to a nearby chair, where he
+sat down in a hunched position, his hands in his trousers pockets and
+his feet thrust out before him. The attitude was neither graceful nor
+respectful to the company.
+
+"It's no use talking, father," he declared, sulkily, "because I've said
+my last word."
+
+"Oh no, you haven't, for I haven't said my first."
+
+In the tone in which Hugh cried out there must have been something of
+the plea of a little boy before he is punished:
+
+"Please don't give me any orders, father, because I sha'n't be able to
+obey them."
+
+"Hugh, your expression 'sha'n't be able to obey' is not in the
+vocabulary with which I'm familiar."
+
+"But it's in the one with which I am."
+
+"Then you've probably learnt it from Ethel's little servant--I've
+forgotten the name--"
+
+Hugh spoke with spirit. "She's not a servant; and her name is Alexandra
+Adare. Please, dad, try to fix it in your memory. You'll find you'll
+have a lot of use for it."
+
+"Don't be impertinent."
+
+"I'm not impertinent. I'm stating a fact. I ask every one here to
+remember that name--"
+
+"We needn't bring any one else into this foolish business. It's between
+you and me. Even so, I wish to have no argument."
+
+"Nor I."
+
+"Then in that case we understand each other. You'll be with the
+Goldboroughs for the twelfth--"
+
+Hugh spoke very distinctly: "Father--I'm--not--going."
+
+In the silence that followed one could hear the ticking of the
+mantelpiece clock.
+
+"Then may I ask where you are going?"
+
+Hugh raised himself from his sprawling attitude, holding his bulky young
+figure erect. "I'm going to earn a living."
+
+Some one, perhaps old Mrs. Billing, laughed. The father continued to
+speak with great if dangerous courtesy.
+
+"Ah? Indeed! That's interesting. And may I ask at what?"
+
+"At what I can find."
+
+"That's more interesting still. Earning a living in New York is like the
+proverbial looking for the needle in the haystack. The needle is there,
+but it takes--"
+
+"Very good eyesight to detect it. All right, dad. I shall be on the
+job."
+
+"Good! And when do you propose to begin?"
+
+It had not been Hugh's intention to begin at any time in particular,
+but, thus challenged, he said, boldly, "To-morrow."
+
+"That's excellent. But why put it off so long? I should think you'd
+start out--to-night."
+
+Mrs. Billing's "Ha-a!" subdued and prolonged, was like that tense
+exclamation which the spectators utter at some exiting moment of a game.
+It took no sides, but it did justice to a sporting situation. As Hugh
+told me the story on the following day he confessed that more than any
+other occurrence it put the next move "up to him." According to Ethel
+Rossiter he lumbered heavily to his feet and crossed the room toward his
+father. He began to speak as he neared the architectural chimneypiece,
+merely throwing the words at J. Howard as he passed.
+
+"All right, father. Since you wish it--"
+
+"Oh no. My wishes are out of it. As you defy those I've expressed,
+there's no more to be said."
+
+Hugh paused in his walk, his hands in the pockets of his dinner-jacket,
+and eyed his father obliquely. "I don't defy your wishes, dad. I only
+claim the right, as a man of twenty-six, to live my own life. If you
+wouldn't make yourself God--"
+
+The handsome hand went up. "We'll not talk about that, if you please.
+I'd no intention of discussing the matter any longer. I merely thought
+that if I were in the situation in which you've placed yourself, I
+should be--getting busy. Still, if you want to stay the night--"
+
+"Oh, not in the least." Hugh was as nonchalant as he had the power to
+make himself. "Thanks awfully, father, all the same." He looked round on
+the circle where each of the chorus sat with an appropriate expression
+of horror--that is, with the exception of the old lady Billing, who,
+with her lorgnette still to her eyes, nodded approval of so much spirit.
+"Good night, every one," Hugh continued, coolly, and made his way toward
+the door.
+
+He had nearly reached it when Mildred cried out: "Hugh! Hughie! You're
+not going away like that!"
+
+He retraced his steps to the couch, where he stooped, pressed his
+sister's thin fingers, and kissed her. In doing so he was able to
+whisper:
+
+"Don't worry, Milly dear. Going to be all right. Shall be a man now. See
+you soon again." Having raised himself, he nodded once more. "Good
+night, every one."
+
+Mrs. Rossiter said that he was so much like a young fellow going to his
+execution that she couldn't respond by a word.
+
+Hugh then marched up to his father and held out his hand. "Good night,
+dad. We needn't have any ill-feeling even if we don't agree."
+
+But the Great Dispenser didn't see him. An imposing figure standing with
+his hands behind his back, he kept his fingers clasped. Looking through
+his son as if he was no more than air, he remarked to the company in
+general:
+
+"I don't think I've ever seen Daisy Burke appear better than she did
+to-night. She's usually so badly dressed." He turned with a little
+deferential stoop to where Mrs. Brokenshire--whom Ethel Rossiter
+described as a rigid, exquisite thing staring off into vacancy--sat on a
+small upright chair. "What do you think, darling?"
+
+Hugh could hear the family trying to rally to the hint that had thus
+been given them, and doing their best to discuss the merits and demerits
+of Daisy Burke, as he stood in the big, square hall outside, wondering
+where he should seek shelter.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VI
+
+
+What Hugh did in the end was simple. Finding the footman who was
+accustomed to valet him, he ordered him to bring a supply of linen and
+some suits to a certain hotel early on the following morning. He then
+put on a light overcoat and a cap and left the house.
+
+The first few steps from the door he closed behind him gave him, so he
+told me next day, the strangest feeling he had ever experienced. He was
+consciously venturing forth into life without any of his usual supports.
+What those supports had been he had never realized till then. He had
+always been stayed by some one else's authority and buoyed all round by
+plenty of money. Now he felt, to change the simile as he changed it
+himself, as if he had been thrown out of the nest before having learnt
+to fly. As he walked resolutely down the dark driveway toward Ochre
+Point Avenue he was mentally hovering and balancing and trembling, with
+a tendency to flop. There was no longer a downy bed behind him; no
+longer a parent bill to bring him his daily worm. The outlook which had
+been one thing when he was within that imposing, many-lighted mansion
+became another now that he was turning his back on it permanently and in
+the dark.
+
+This he confessed when he had surprised me by appearing at the breakfast
+loggia, where I was having my coffee with little Gladys Rossiter
+somewhere between half past eight and nine. He was not an early riser,
+except when the tide enticed him to get up at some unusual hour to take
+his dip, and even then he generally went back to bed. To see him coming
+through the shrubbery now, carefully dressed, pallid and grave, half
+told me his news before he had spoken.
+
+Luckily Gladys was too young to follow anything we said, so that after
+having joyfully kissed her uncle Hugh she went on with her bread and
+milk. Hugh took a cup of coffee, sitting sidewise to the table of which
+only one end was spread, while I was at the head. It was the hour of the
+day when we were safest. Mrs. Rossiter never left her room before eleven
+at earliest, and no one else whom we were afraid of was likely to be
+about.
+
+"Well, the fat's all in the fire, little Alix," were the words in which
+he announced his position. "I'm out on my own at last."
+
+I could risk nothing in the way of tenderness, partly because of the
+maid who was coming and going, and partly because that was something
+Gladys would understand. I tried to let him see by my eyes, however, the
+sympathy I felt. I knew he was taking the new turn of events soberly,
+and soberly, with an immense semi-maternal yearning over him, I couldn't
+help taking it myself.
+
+He told his tale quietly, with almost no interruption on my part. I was
+pleased to note that he expressed nothing in the way of recrimination
+toward his father. With the exception of an occasional fling at old Mrs.
+Billing, whom he seemed to regard as a joss or a bottle imp, he was
+temperate, too, in his remarks about everybody else. I liked his
+sporting attitude and told him so.
+
+"Oh, there's nothing sporting in it," he threw off with a kind of
+serious carelessness. "I'm a man; that's all. As I look back over the
+past I seem to have been a doll."
+
+I asked him what were his plans. He said he was going to apply to his
+cousin, Andrew Brew, of Boston, going on to tell me more about the Brews
+than I had ever heard. He was surprised that I knew nothing of the
+important house of Brew, Borrodaile & Co., of Boston, who did such an
+important business with England and Europe in general. I replied that in
+Canada all my connections had been with the law, and with Service people
+in England. I noticed, as I had noticed before in saying things like
+that, that, in common with most American business men, he looked on the
+Army and Navy as inferior occupations. There was no money in either.
+That in itself was sufficient to condemn them in the eyes of a
+gentleman.
+
+I forgot to be nettled, as I sometimes had been, because of finding
+myself so deeply immersed in his interests. Up to that minute, too, I
+had had no idea that he had so much pride of birth. He talked of the
+Brews and the Brokenshires as if they had been Bourbons and
+Hohenzollerns, making me feel a veritable Libby Jaynes never to have
+heard of them. Of the Brews in particular he spoke with reverence. There
+had been Brews in Boston, he said, since the year one. Like all other
+American families, as I came to know later, they were descended from
+three brothers. In Norfolk and Suffolk they had been, so I
+guessed--though Hugh passed the subject over with some vagueness--of
+comparatively humble stock, but under the American flag they had
+acquired money, a quasi-nobility and coats of arms. To hear a man
+boasting, however modestly--and he was modest--of these respectable
+nobodies, who had simply earned money and saved it, made me blush
+inwardly in such a way that I vowed never to mention the Fighting Adares
+again.
+
+I could do this with no diminution of my feeling for poor Hugh. His
+artless glory in a line of ancestry of which the fame had never gone
+beyond the shores of Massachusetts Bay was, after all, a harmless bit of
+vanity. It took nothing away from his kindness, his good intentions, or
+his solid worth. When he asked me how I should care to live in Boston I
+replied that I should like it very much. I had always heard of it as a
+pleasant city of English characteristics and affiliations.
+
+Wherever he was, I told him, I should be at home--if I made up my mind
+to marry him.
+
+"But you have made up your mind, haven't you?" he asked, anxiously.
+
+I was obliged to reply with frankness, "Not quite, Hugh, because--"
+
+"Then what's the use of my getting into this hole, if it isn't to be
+with you?"
+
+"You mean by the hole the being, as you call it, out on your own? But I
+thought you did that to be a Socialist--and a man."
+
+"I've done it because father won't let me marry you any other way."
+
+"Then if that's all, Hugh--"
+
+"But it isn't all," he interrupted, hastily. "I don't say but what if
+father had given us his blessing, and come down with another six
+thousand a year--we could hardly scrub along on less--I'd have taken it
+and been thankful. But now that he hasn't--well, I can see that it's
+all for the best. It's--it's brought me out, as you might say, and
+forced me to a decision."
+
+I harked back to the sentence in which he had broken in on me. "If it
+was all, Hugh, then that would oblige me to make up my mind at once. I
+couldn't be the means of compelling you to break with your family and
+give up a large income."
+
+He cried out impatiently, "Alix, what the dickens is a family and a
+large income to me in comparison with you?"
+
+I must say that his intensity touched me. Tears sprang into my eyes. I
+risked Gladys's presence to say: "Hugh, darling, I love you. I can't
+tell you what your generosity and nobleness mean to me. I hadn't
+imagined that there was a man like you in the world. But if you could be
+in my place--"
+
+He pushed aside his coffee-cup to lean with both arms on the table and
+look me fiercely in the eyes. "If I can't be in your place, Alix, I've
+seen women who were, and who didn't beat so terribly about the bush.
+Look at the way Libby Jaynes married Tracy Allen. She didn't talk about
+his family or his giving up a big income. She trusted him."
+
+"And I trust you; only--" I broke off, to get at him from another point
+of view. "Do you know Libby Jaynes personally?"
+
+He nodded.
+
+"Is she--is she anything like me?"
+
+"No one is like you," he exclaimed, with something that was almost
+bitterness in the tone. "Isn't that what I'm trying to make you see?
+You're the one of your kind in the world. You've got me where a woman
+has never got a man before. I'd give up everything--I'd starve--I'd
+lick dust--but I'd follow you to the ends of the earth, and I'd cling to
+you and keep you." He, too, risked Gladys's presence. "But you're so
+damn cool, Alix--"
+
+"Oh no, I'm not, Hugh, daring," I pleaded on my own behalf. "I may seem
+like that on the outside, because--oh, because I've such a lot to think
+of, and I have to think for us two. That's why I'm asking you if you
+found Libby Jaynes like me."
+
+He looked puzzled. "She's--she's decent." he said, as if not knowing
+what else to say.
+
+"Yes, of course; but I mean--does she strike you as having had my kind
+of ways? Or my kind of antecedents?"
+
+"Oh, antecedents! Why talk about them?"
+
+"It's what you've been doing, isn't it, for the past half-hour?"
+
+"Oh, mine, yes; because I want you to see that I've got a big asset in
+Cousin Andrew Brew. I know he'll do anything for me, and if you'll trust
+me, Alix--"
+
+"I do trust you, Hugh, and as soon as you have anything like what would
+make you independent, and justified in braving your family's
+disapproval--"
+
+He took an apologetic tone. "I said just now that we couldn't scrape
+along on less than twelve thousand a year--"
+
+To me the sum seemed ridiculously enormous. "Oh, I'm sure we could."
+
+"Well, that's what I've been thinking," he said, wistfully. "That figure
+was based on having the Brokenshire position to keep up. But if we were
+to live in Boston, where less would be expected of us, we could manage,
+I should think, on ten."
+
+Even that struck me as too much. "On five, Hugh," I declared, with
+confidence. "I know I could manage on five, and have everything we
+needed."
+
+He smiled at my eagerness. "Oh, well, darling, I sha'n't ask you to come
+down to that. Ten will be the least."
+
+To me this was riches. I saw the vision of the dainty dining-room again,
+and the nursery with the bassinet; but I saw Hugh also in the
+background, a little shadowy, perhaps, a little like a dream as an
+artist embodies it in a picture, and yet unmistakably himself. I spoke
+reservedly, however, far more reservedly than I felt, because I hadn't
+yet made my point quite clear to him.
+
+"I'm sure we could be comfortable on that. When you get it--"
+
+I hadn't realized that this was the detail as to which he was most
+sensitive.
+
+"There you go again! When I get it! Do you think I sha'n't get it?"
+
+I felt my eyebrows going up in surprise. "Why, no, Hugh, dear. I suppose
+you know what you can get and what you can't. I was only going to say
+that when you do get it I shall feel as if you were free to give
+yourself away, and that I shouldn't have"--I tried to smile at him--"and
+that I shouldn't have the air of--of stealing you from your family.
+Can't you see, dear? You keep quoting Libby Jaynes at me; but in my
+opinion she did steal Tracy Allen. That the Allens have made the best of
+it has nothing to do with the original theft."
+
+"Theft is a big word."
+
+"Not bigger than the thing. For Libby Jaynes it was possibly all right.
+I'm not condemning her. But it wouldn't be all right for me."
+
+"Why not? What's the difference?"
+
+"I can't explain it to you, Hugh, if you don't see it already. It's a
+difference of tradition."
+
+"But what's difference of tradition got to do with love? Since you admit
+that you love me, and I certainly love you--"
+
+"Yes, I admit that I love you, but love is not the only thing in the
+world."
+
+"It's the biggest thing in the world."
+
+"Possibly; and yet it isn't necessarily the surest guide in conduct.
+There's honor, for instance. If one had to take love without honor, or
+honor without love, surely one would choose the latter."
+
+"And what would you call love without honor in this case?"
+
+I reflected. "I'd call it doing this thing--getting engaged or married,
+whichever you like--just because we have the physical power to do it,
+and making the family, especially the father, to whom you're indebted
+for everything you are, unhappy."
+
+"He doesn't mind making you and me unhappy."
+
+"But that's his responsibility. We haven't got to do what's right for
+him; we've only got to do what's right for ourselves." I fell back on my
+maxim, "If we do right, only right will come of it, whatever the wrong
+it seems to threaten now."
+
+"But if I made ten thousand a year of my own--"
+
+"I should consider you free. I should feel free myself. I should feel
+free on less than so big an income."
+
+His spirits began to return.
+
+"I don't call that big. We should have to pinch like the devil to keep
+our heads above water--no motor--no butler--"
+
+"I've never had either," I smiled at him, "nor a lot of the things that
+go with them. Not having them might be privations to you--"
+
+"Not when you were there, little Alix. You can bet your sweet life on
+that."
+
+We laughed together over the expression, and as Broke came bounding out
+to his breakfast, with the cry, "Hello, Uncle Hughie!" we lapsed into
+that language of signs and nods and cryptic things which we mutually
+understood to elude his sharp young wits. By this method of _double
+entendre_ Hugh gave me to understand his intention of going to Boston by
+an afternoon train. He thought it possible he might stay there. The
+friendliness of Cousin Andrew Brew would probably detain him till he
+should go to work, which was likely to be in a day or two. Even if he
+had to wait a week he would prefer to do so at Boston, where he had not
+only ties of blood, but acquaintances and interests dating back to his
+Harvard days, which had ended three years before.
+
+In the mean time, my position might prove to be precarious. He
+recognized that, making it an excuse for once more forcing on me his
+immediate protection. Marriage was not named by word on Broke's account,
+but I understood that if I chose we could be marred within an hour or
+two, go to Boston together, and begin our common life without further
+delays.
+
+My answer to this being what it had been before, we discussed, over the
+children's heads, the chances that could befall me before night. Of
+these the one most threatening was that I might be sent away in
+disgrace. If sent away in disgrace I should have to go on the instant. I
+might be paid for a month or two ahead; it was probable I should be. It
+was J. Howard's policy to deal with his cashiered employees with that
+kind of liberality, so as to put himself more in the right. But I
+should have to go with scarcely the time to pack my boxes, as Hugh had
+gone himself, and must know of a place where I could take shelter.
+
+I didn't know of any such refuge. My sojourn under Mrs. Rossiter's roof
+had been remarkably free from contacts or curiosities of my own. Hugh
+knew no more than I. I could, therefore, only ask his consent to my
+consulting Mr. Strangways, a proposal to which he agreed. This I was
+able to do when Larry came for Broke, not many minutes after Hugh had
+taken his departure.
+
+I could talk to him the more freely because of his knowledge of my
+relation to Hugh. With the fact that I was in love with another man kept
+well in the foreground between us, he could acquit me of those ulterior
+designs on himself the suspicion of which is so disturbing to a woman's
+friendship with a man. As the maid was clearing the table, as Broke had
+to go to his lessons, as Gladys had to be remanded to the nursery while
+I attended to Mrs. Rossiter's telephone calls and correspondence, our
+talk was squeezed in during the seconds in which we retreated through
+the dining-room into the main part of the house.
+
+"The long and short of it is," Larry Strangways summed up, when I had
+confided to him my fears of being sent about my business as soon as Hugh
+had left for Boston--"the long and the short of it is that I shall have
+to look you up another job."
+
+It is almost absurd to point out that the idea was new to me. In going
+to Mrs. Rossiter I had never thought of starting out on a career of
+earning a living professionally, as you might say. I clung to the
+conception of myself as a lady, with all sorts of possibilities in the
+way of genteel interventions of Providence coming in between me and a
+lifetime of work. I had always supposed that if I left Mrs. Rossiter I
+should go back to my uncle and aunt at Halifax. After all, if Hugh was
+going to marry me, it would be no more than correct that he should do it
+from under their wing. Larry Strangways's suggestions of another job
+threw open a vista of places I should fill in the future little short of
+appalling to a woman instinctively looking for a man to come and support
+her.
+
+I shelved these considerations, however, to say, as casually as I could:
+"Why should you do it? Why shouldn't I look out for myself?"
+
+"Because when I've gone to Stacy Grainger it may be right in my line."
+
+"But I'd rather you didn't have me on your mind."
+
+He laughed--uneasily, as it seemed to me. "Perhaps it's too late for
+that."
+
+It was another of the things I was sorry to hear him say. I could only
+reply, still on the forced casual note: "But it's not too late for me to
+look after my own affairs. What I'm chiefly concerned with is that if I
+have to leave here--to-night, let us say--I sha'n't in the least know
+where to go."
+
+He was ready for me in the event of this contingency. I suspected that
+he had already considered it. He had a married sister in New York, a
+Mrs. Applegate, a woman of philanthropic interests, a director on the
+board of a Home for Working-Girls. Again I shied at the word. He must
+have seen that I did, for he went on, with a smile in which I detected a
+gleam of mockery:
+
+"You are a working-girl, aren't you?"
+
+I answered with the kind of humility I can only describe as spirited,
+and which was meant to take the wind out of his sails:
+
+"I suppose so--as long as I'm working." But I gave him a flying upward
+glance as I asked the imprudent question, "Is that how you've thought of
+me?"
+
+I was sorry to have said it as soon as the words were out. I didn't want
+to know what he thought of me. It was something with which I was so
+little concerned that I colored with embarrassment at having betrayed so
+much futile curiosity. Apparently he saw that, too, hastening to come to
+my relief.
+
+"I've thought of you," he laughed, when we had reached the main
+stairway, "as a clever little woman, with a special set of aptitudes,
+who ought to be earning more money than she's probably getting here; and
+when I'm with Stacy Grainger--"
+
+Grateful for this turning of the current into the business-like and
+commonplace, I called Gladys, who was lagging in the dining-room with
+Broke, and went on my way up-stairs.
+
+Mrs. Rossiter was sitting up in bed, her breakfast before her on a light
+wicker tray that stood on legs. It was an abstemious breakfast,
+carefully selected from foods containing most nutrition with least
+adipose deposit. She had reached the age, within sight of the thirties,
+when her figure was becoming a matter for consideration. It was almost
+the only personal detail as to which she had as yet any cause for
+anxiety. Her complexion was as bright as at eighteen; her brown hair,
+which now hung in a loose, heavy coil over her left shoulder, was thick
+and silky and long; her eyes were clear, her lips ruby. I always noticed
+that she waked with the sleepy softness of a flower uncurling to the
+sun. In the great walnut bed, of which the curves were gilded _a la_
+Louis Quinze, she made me think of that Jeanne Becu who became Comtesse
+du Barry, in the days of her indolence and luxury.
+
+Having no idea as to how she would receive me, I was not surprised that
+it should be as usual. Since I had entered her employ she was never what
+I should call gracious, but she was always easy and familiar. Sometimes
+she was petulant; often she was depressed; but beyond a belief that she
+inspired tumultuous passions in young men there was no pose about her
+nor any haughtiness. I was not afraid of her, therefore; I was only
+uneasy as to the degree in which she would let herself be used against
+me as a tool.
+
+"The letters are here on the bed," was her response to my greeting,
+which I was careful to make in the form in which I made it every day.
+
+Taking the small arm-chair at the bedside, I sorted the pile. The notes
+she had not glanced at for herself I read aloud, penciling on the
+margins the data for the answers. Some I replied to by telephone, which
+stood within her reach on the _table de nuit_; for a few I sat down at
+the desk and wrote. I was doing the latter, and had just scribbled the
+words "Mrs. James Worthington Rossiter will have much pleasure in
+accepting--" when she said, in a slightly querulous tone:
+
+"I should think you'd do something about Hugh--the way he goes on."
+
+I continued to write as I asked, "How does he go on?"
+
+"Like an idiot."
+
+"Has he been doing anything new?"
+
+My object being to get a second version of the story Hugh had told me, I
+succeeded. Mrs. Rossiter's facts were practically the same as her
+brother's, only viewed from a different angle. As she presented the case
+Hugh had been merely preposterous, dashing his head against a stone
+wall, with nothing he could gain by the exercise.
+
+"The idea of his saying he'll not go to the Goldboroughs for the
+twelfth! Of course he'll go. Since father means him to do it, he will."
+
+I was addressing an envelope, and went on with my task. "But I thought
+you said he'd left home?"
+
+"Oh, well, he'll come back."
+
+"But suppose he doesn't? Suppose he goes to work?"
+
+"Pff! The idea! He won't keep that up long."
+
+I was glad to be sitting with my back to her. To disguise the quaver in
+my voice I licked the flap of the envelope as I said:
+
+"But he'll have to if he means to support a wife."
+
+"Support a wife? What nonsense! Father means him to marry Cissie
+Boscobel, as I've told you already--and he'll fix them up with a good
+income."
+
+"But apparently Hugh doesn't see things that way. He's told me--"
+
+"Oh, he'd tell you anything."
+
+"He's told me," I persisted, boldly, "that he--he loves me; and he's
+made me say that--that I love him."
+
+"And that's where you're so foolish, dear Miss Adare. You let him take
+you in. It isn't that he's not sincere; I don't say that for a minute.
+But people can't go about marrying every one they love, now can they? I
+should think you'd have seen that--with the heaps of men you had there
+at Halifax--hardly room to step over them."
+
+I said, slyly, "I never saw them that way."
+
+"Oh, well, I did. And by the way, I wonder what's become of that Captain
+Venables. He was a case! He could take more liberties in a
+half-hour--don't you think?"
+
+"He never took any liberties with me."
+
+"Then that must have been your fault. Talk about Mr. Millinger! Our men
+aren't in it with yours--not when it comes to the real thing."
+
+I got back to the subject in which I was most interested by saying, as I
+spread another note before me:
+
+"It seems to be the real thing with Hugh."
+
+"Oh, I dare say it is. It was the real thing with Jack. I don't
+say"--her voice took on a tender tremolo--"I don't say that it wasn't
+the real thing with me. But that didn't make any difference to father.
+It was the real thing with Pauline Gray--when she was down there at
+Baltimore; but when father picked her out for Jack, because of her money
+and his relations with old Mr. Gray--"
+
+I couldn't help half turning round, to cry out in tones of which I was
+unable to conceal the exasperation: "But I don't see how you can all let
+yourselves be hooked by the nose like that--not even by Mr.
+Brokenshire!"
+
+Her fatalistic resignation gave me a sense of helplessness.
+
+"Oh, well, you will before father has done with you--if Hugh goes on
+this way. Father's only playing with you so far."
+
+"He can't touch me," I declared, indignantly.
+
+"But he can touch Hugh. That's all he needs to know, as far as you're
+concerned." She asked, in another tone, "What are you answering now?"
+
+I told her it was the invitation to Mrs. Allen's dance.
+
+"Then tear it up and say I can't go. Say I've a previous engagement. I'd
+forgotten that they had that odious Mrs. Tracy Allen there."
+
+I tore up the sheet slowly, throwing the fragments into the waste-paper
+basket.
+
+"Why is she odious?"
+
+"Because she is." She dropped for a second into the tone of the early
+friendly days in Halifax. "My dear, she was a shop-girl--or worse. I've
+forgotten what she was, but it was awful, and I don't mean to meet her."
+
+I began to write the refusal.
+
+"She goes about with very good people, doesn't she?"
+
+"She doesn't go about with me, nor with some others I know, I can tell
+you that. If she did it would queer us."
+
+In the hope of drawing out some such repudiation as that which I felt
+myself, I said, dryly: "Hugh tells me that if I married him I could be
+as good as she is--by this time next year."
+
+I got nothing for my pains.
+
+"That wouldn't help you much--not among the people who count."
+
+There was white anger underneath my meekness.
+
+"But perhaps I could get along with the people who don't count."
+
+"Yes, you might--but Hugh wouldn't."
+
+She dismissed the subject as one in which she took only a secondary
+interest to say that old Mrs. Billing was coming to lunch, and that
+Gladys and I should have to take that repast up-stairs. She was never
+direct in her denunciations of her father's second marriage. She brought
+them in by reference and innuendo, like a prisoner who keeps in mind the
+fact that walls have ears. She gave me to understand, however, that she
+considered Mrs. Billing a witch out of "Macbeth" or a wicked old
+vulture--I could take my choice of comparisons--and she hated having her
+in the house. She wouldn't do it only that, in ways she could hardly
+understand, Mrs. Billing was the power behind the throne. She didn't
+loathe her stepmother, she said in effect, so much as she loathed her
+father's attitude toward her. I have never forgotten the words she used
+in this connection, dropping her voice and glancing about her, afraid
+she might be overheard. "It's as if God himself had become the slave of
+some silly human woman just because she had a pretty face." The sentence
+not only betrayed the Brokenshire attitude of mind toward J. Howard, but
+sent a chill down my back.
+
+Having finished my notes and addressed them I rose to return to Gladys;
+but there was still an unanswered question in my mind. I asked it,
+standing for a minute beside the bed:
+
+"Then you don't want me to go away?"
+
+She arched her lovely eyebrows. "Go away? What for?"
+
+"Because of the danger of my marrying Hugh."
+
+She gave a little laugh. "Oh, there's no danger of that."
+
+"But there is," I insisted. "He's asked me a number of times to go with
+him to the nearest clergyman, and settle the question once for all."
+
+"Only you don't do it. There you are! What father doesn't want doesn't
+happen; and what he does want does. That's all there is to be said."
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VII
+
+
+As a matter of fact, that was all Mrs. Rossiter and I did say. I was so
+relieved at not being thrown out of house and home on the instant that I
+went back to Gladys and her lisping in French almost cheerily. You will
+think me pusillanimous--and I was. I didn't want to go to Mrs. Applegate
+and the Home for Working-Girls. As far as food and shelter were
+concerned I liked them well enough where I was. I liked Mrs. Rossiter
+too. I should be sorry to give the impression that she was supercilious
+or unkind. She was neither the one nor the other. If she betrayed little
+sentiment or sympathy toward me, it was because of admitting me into
+that feminine freemasonry in which the emotional is not called for. I
+might suffer while she remained indifferent; I might be killed on the
+spot while she wouldn't shed a tear; and yet there was a heartless,
+good-natured, live-and-let-live detachment about her which left me with
+nothing but good-will.
+
+Then, too, I knew that when I married Hugh she would do nothing of her
+own free will against me. She would not brave her father's decree, but
+she wouldn't be intolerant; she might think Hugh had been a fool, but
+when she could do so surreptitiously she would invite him and me to
+dinner.
+
+As this was a kind of recognition in advance, I could not be otherwise
+than grateful.
+
+It made waiting for Hugh the easier. I calculated that if he entered
+into some sort of partnership with his cousin Andrew Brew--I didn't in
+the least know what--we might be married within a month or two. At
+furthest it might be about the time when Mrs. Rossiter removed to New
+York, which would make it October or November. I could then slip quietly
+back to Halifax, be quietly married, and quietly settle with Hugh in
+Boston. In the mean time I was glad not to be disturbed.
+
+I spent, therefore, a pleasant morning with my pupil, and ate a pleasant
+lunch, watching from the gable window of the school-room the great
+people assemble in the breakfast loggia in honor of the Marquise de
+Pompadour's mother. I am not sure that old Madame Poisson ever went to
+court; but if she did I know the courtiers must have shown her just such
+deference as that which Mrs. Rossiter's guests exhibited to this
+withered old lady with the hooked nose and the lorgnette.
+
+I was curious about the whole entertainment. It was not the only one of
+the kind I had seen from a distance since coming to Mrs. Rossiter, and I
+couldn't help comparisons with the same kind of thing as done in the
+ways with which I was familiar. Here it was less a luncheon than it was
+an exquisite thing on the stage, rehearsed to the last point. In
+England, in Canada, luncheon would be something of a friendly haphazard,
+primarily for the sake of getting food, secondly as a means to a
+scrambling, jolly sort of social intercourse, and hardly at all a
+ceremonial. Here the ceremonial came first. Hostess and guests seemed
+alike to be taking part in a rite of seeing and being seen. The food,
+which was probably excellent, was a matter of slight importance. The
+social intercourse amounted to nothing, since they all knew one another
+but too well, and had no urgent vitality of interests in any case. The
+rite was the thing. Every detail was prepared for that. Silver,
+porcelain, flowers, doilies, were of the most expensive and the most
+correct. The guests were dressed to perfection--a little too well,
+according to the English standard, but not too well for a function. As a
+function it was beautiful, an occasion of privilege, a proof of
+attainment. It was the best thing of its kind America could show. Those
+who had money could alone present the passport that would give the right
+of admission.
+
+If I had a criticism to make, it was that the guests were too much
+alike. They were all business men, and the wives or widows of business
+men. The two or three who did nothing but live on inherited incomes were
+business men in heart and in blood. Granted that in the New World the
+business man must be dominant, it was possible to have too much of him.
+Having too much of him lowered the standard of interest, narrowed the
+circle of taste. In the countries I knew the business man might be
+present at such a festivity, but there would be something to give him
+color, to throw him into relief. There would be a touch of the creative
+or the intellectual, of the spiritual or the picturesque. The company
+wouldn't be all of a gilded drab. There would be a writer or a painter
+or a politician or an actor or a soldier or a priest. There would be
+something that wasn't money before it was anything else. Here there was
+nothing. Birds of a feather were flocking together, and they were all
+parrots or parrakeets. They had plumage, but no song. They drove out the
+thrushes and the larks and the wild swans. Their shrill screeches and
+hoarse shouts came up in a not wholly pleasant babel to the open window
+where I sat looking down and Gladys hovered and hopped, wondering if
+Thomas, the rosy-cheeked footman, would remember to bring us some of the
+left-over ice-cream.
+
+I thought it was a pity. With elements as good as could be found
+anywhere to form a Society--that fusion of all varieties of achievement
+to which alone the word written with a capital can be applied--there was
+no one to form it. It was a woman's business; and for the role of
+hostess in the big sense the American woman, as far as I could judge,
+had little or no aptitude. She was too timid, too distrustful of
+herself, too much afraid of doing the wrong thing or of knowing the
+wrong people. She was so little sure of her standing that, as Mrs.
+Rossiter expressed it, she could be "queered" by shaking hands with
+Libby Jaynes. She lacked authority. She could stand out in a throng by
+her dress or her grace, but she couldn't lead or combine or co-ordinate.
+She could lend a charming hand where some one else was the Lady Holland
+or the Madame de Stael, but she couldn't take the seemingly
+heterogeneous types represented by the writer, the painter, the
+politician, the actor, the soldier, the priest, and the business man and
+weld them into the delightful, promiscuous, entertaining whole to be
+found, in its greater or lesser degree, according to size or importance
+of place, almost anywhere within the borders of the British Empire. I
+came to the conclusion that this was why there were few "great houses"
+in America and fewer women of importance.
+
+It was why, too, the guests were subordinated to the ceremonial. It
+couldn't be any other way. With flint and steel you can get a spark; but
+where you have nothing but flint or nothing but steel, friction produces
+no light. The American hostess, in so far as she exists, rarely hopes
+for anything from the clash of minds, and therefore centers her
+attention on her doilies. It must be admitted that she has the most
+tasteful doilies in the world. There is a pathos in the way in which,
+for want of the courage to get interesting human specimens together, she
+spends her strength on the details of her rite. It is like the instinct
+of women who in default of babies lavish their passion on little dogs.
+One can say that it is _faute de mieux_. _Faute de mieux_ was, I am
+sure, the reason why Ethel Rossiter took her table appointments with
+what seemed to me such extraordinary seriousness. When all was said and
+done it was the only real thing to care about.
+
+I repeat that I thought it was a pity. I had dreams, as I looked down,
+of what I could do with the same use of money, the same position of
+command. I had dreams that the Brokenshires accepted me, that Hugh came
+into the means that would be his in the ordinary course. I saw myself
+standing at the head of the stairway of a fine big house in Washington
+or New York. People were streaming upward, and I was shaking hands with
+a delightful, smiling _desinvolture_. I saw men and women of all the
+ranks and orders of conspicuous accomplishment, each contributing a
+gift--some nothing but beauty, some nothing but wit, some nothing but
+money, some nothing but position, some nothing but fame, some nothing
+but national importance. The Brokenshire clan was there, and the
+Billings and the Grays and the Burkes; but statesmen and diplomatists,
+too, were there, and those leaders in the world of the pen and the brush
+and the buskin of whom, oddly enough, I saw Larry Strangways, with his
+eternal defensive smile, emerging from the crowd as chief. I was wearing
+diamonds, black velvet, and a train, waving in my disengaged hand a
+spangled fan.
+
+From these visions I was roused by Gladys, who came prancing from the
+stair-head.
+
+"_V'la, Mademoiselle! V'la Thomas et le ice-cream!_"
+
+Having consumed this dainty, we watched the company wander about the
+terraces and lawns and finally drift away. I was getting Gladys ready
+for her walk when Thomas, with a pitying expression on his boyish face,
+came back to say that Mr. Brokenshire would like to speak with me
+down-stairs.
+
+I was never so near fainting in my life. I had barely the strength to
+gasp, "Very well, Thomas, I'll come," and to send Gladys to her nurse.
+Thomas watched me with his good, kind, sympathetic eyes. Like the other
+servants, he must have known something of my secret and was on my side.
+I called him the _bouton de rose_, partly because his clean, pink cheeks
+suggested a Killarney breaking into flower, and partly because in his
+waiting on Gladys and me he had the yearning, care-taking air of a
+fatherly little boy. Just now he could only march down the passage ahead
+of me, throw open the door of my bedroom as if he was lord chamberlain
+to a queen, and give me a look which seemed to say, "If I can be your
+liege knight against this giant, pray, dear lady, command me." I threw
+him my thanks in a trumped-up smile, which he returned with such sweet
+encouragement as to nearly unman me.
+
+I stayed in my room only long enough to be sure that I was neat,
+smoothing my hair and picking one or two threads from my white-linen
+suit. The suit had scarlet cuffs and a scarlet belt, and as there was a
+scarlet flush beneath my summer tan, like the color under the glaze of a
+Chinese jar, I could see for myself that my appearance was not
+ineffective.
+
+The _bouton de rose_ was in waiting at the foot of the stairs as I came
+down. Through the hall and the dining-room he ushered me royally; but as
+I came out on the breakfast loggia my royalty stopped with what I can
+only describe as a bump.
+
+The guests had gone, but the family remained. The last phase of the
+details of the rite were also on the table. All the doilies were there,
+and the magnificent lace centerpiece which Mrs. Rossiter had at various
+times called on me to admire. The old Spode dessert service was the more
+dimly, anciently brilliant because of the old polished oak, and so were
+the glasses and finger-bowls picked out in gold.
+
+Mr. Brokenshire, whom I had seen from my window strolling with some
+ladies on the lawn, had returned to the foot of the table, opposite to
+the door by which I came out, where he now sat in a careless, sidewise
+attitude, fingering his cigar. Old Mrs. Billing, who was beside him on
+his right, put up her lorgnette immediately I appeared in the entrance.
+Mrs. Rossiter had dropped into a chance chair half-way down the table on
+the left; but Mrs. Brokenshire, oddly enough, was in that same seat in
+the far corner to which she had retreated on the occasion of my
+summoning ten days before. I wondered whether this was by intention or
+by chance, though I was presently to know.
+
+Terrified though I was, I felt salvation to lie in keeping a certain
+dignity. I made, therefore, something between a bow and a courtesy,
+first to Mr. Brokenshire, then to Mrs. Billing, then to Mrs. Rossiter,
+and lastly to Mrs. Brokenshire, to whom I raised my eyes and looked all
+the way diagonally across the loggia. I took my time in making these
+four distinct salutations, though in response I was only stared at.
+After that there was a space of some seconds in which I merely stood, in
+my pose of _Ecce Femina_!
+
+"Sit down!"
+
+The command came, of course, from J. Howard. The chair to which I had
+once before been banished being still in its corner, I slipped into it.
+
+"I wished to speak to you, Miss--a--Miss--"
+
+He glanced helplessly toward his daughter, who supplied the name.
+
+"Ah yes. I wished to speak to you, Miss Adare, because my son has been
+acting very foolishly."
+
+I made my tone as meek as I could, scarcely daring to lift my eyes from
+the floor. "Wouldn't it be well, sir, to talk to him about that?"
+
+Mrs. Billing's lorgnette came down. She glanced toward her son-in-law as
+though finding the point well taken.
+
+He went on imperturbably. "I've said all I mean to say to him. My
+present appeal is to you."
+
+"Oh, then this is an--appeal?"
+
+He seemed to hesitate, to reflect. "If you choose to take it so," he
+admitted, stiffly.
+
+"It surely isn't as I choose to take it, sir; it's as you choose to
+mean."
+
+"Don't bandy words."
+
+"But I must use words, sir. I only want to be sure that you're making an
+appeal to me, and not giving me commands."
+
+He spoke sharply. "I wish you to understand that you're inducing a young
+man to act in a way he is going to find contrary to his interests."
+
+I could barely nerve myself to look up at him. "If by the 'young man'
+you mean Mr. Hugh Brokenshire, then I'm inducing him to do nothing
+whatever; unless," I added, "you call it an inducement that I--I"--I was
+bound to force the word out--"unless you call it an inducement that I
+love him."
+
+"But that's it," Mrs. Rossiter broke in. "That's what my father means.
+If you'd stop caring anything about him you wouldn't give him
+encouragement."
+
+I looked at her with a dim, apologetic smile. It was a time, I felt, to
+speak not only with more courage, but with more sentiment than I was
+accustomed to use in expressing myself.
+
+"I'm afraid I can't give my heart, and take it back, like that."
+
+"I can," she returned, readily. She spoke as if it was a matter of
+cracking her knuckles or wagging her ears. "If I don't want to like a
+person I don't do it. It's training and self-command."
+
+"You're fortunate," I said, quietly. Why I should have glanced again at
+Mrs. Brokenshire I hardly know; but I did so, as I added: "I've had no
+training of that kind--and I doubt if many women have."
+
+Mrs. Brokenshire, who was gazing at me with the same kind of fascinated
+stare as on the former occasion, faintly, but quite perceptibly,
+inclined her head. In this movement I was sure I had the key to the
+mystery that seemed to surround her.
+
+"All this," J. Howard declared, magisterially, "is beside the point. If
+you've told my son that you'd marry him--"
+
+"I haven't."
+
+"Or even given him to understand that you would--"
+
+"I've only given him to understand that I'd marry him--on conditions."
+
+"Indeed? And would it be discreet on my part to inquire the terms you've
+been kind enough to lay down?"
+
+I pulled myself together and spoke firmly. "The first is that I'll marry
+him--if his family come to me and express a wish to have me as a sister
+and a daughter."
+
+Old Mrs. Billing emitted the queer, cracked cackle of a hen when it
+crows, but she put up her lorgnette and examined me more closely. Ethel
+Rossiter gasped audibly, moving her chair a little farther round in my
+direction. Mrs. Brokenshire stared with concentrated intensity, but
+somehow, I didn't know why, I felt that she was backing me up.
+
+The great man contented himself with saying, "Oh, you will!"
+
+I ignored the tone to speak with a decision and a spirit I was far from
+feeling.
+
+"Yes, sir, I will. I shall not steal him from you--not so long as he's
+dependent."
+
+"That's very kind. And may I ask--"
+
+"You haven't let me tell you my other condition."
+
+"True. Go on."
+
+I panted the words out as best I could. "I've told him I'd marry him--if
+he rendered himself independent; if he earned his own money and became a
+man."
+
+"Ah! And you expect one or the other of these miracles to take place?"
+
+"I expect both."
+
+Though the words uttered themselves, without calculation or expectation
+on my part, they gave me so much of the courage of conviction that I
+held up my head. To my surprise Mrs. Billing didn't crow again or so
+much as laugh. She only gasped out that long "Ha-a!" which proclaims
+the sporting interest, of which both Hugh and Ethel Rossiter had told me
+in the morning.
+
+Mr. Brokenshire seemed to brace himself, leaning forward, with his elbow
+on the table and his cigar between the fingers of his raised right hand.
+His eyes were bent on me--fine eyes they were!--as if in kindly
+amusement.
+
+"My good girl," he said, in his most pitying voice, "I wish I could tell
+you how sorry for you I am. Neither of these dreams can possibly come
+true--"
+
+My blood being up, I interrupted with some force. "Then in that case,
+Mr. Brokenshire, you can be quite easy in your mind, for I should never
+marry your son." Having made this statement, I followed it up by saying,
+"Since that is understood, I presume there's no object in my staying any
+longer." I was half rising when his hand went up.
+
+"Wait. We'll tell you when to go. You haven't yet got my point. Perhaps
+I haven't made it clear. I'm not interested in your hopes--"
+
+"No, sir; of course not; nor I in yours."
+
+"I haven't inquired as to that--but we'll let it pass. We're both
+apparently interested in my son."
+
+I gave a little bow of assent.
+
+"I said I wished to make an appeal to you."
+
+I made another little bow of assent.
+
+"It's on his behalf. You could do him a great kindness. You could make
+him understand--I gather that he's under your influence to some degree;
+you're a clever girl, I can see that--but you could make him understand
+that in fancying he'll marry you he's starting out on a task in which
+there's no hope whatever."
+
+"But there is."
+
+"Pardon me, there isn't. By your own showing there isn't. You've laid
+down conditions that will never be fulfilled."
+
+"What makes you say that?"
+
+"My knowledge of the world."
+
+"Oh, but would you call that knowledge of the world?" I was swept along
+by the force of an inner indignation which had become reckless.
+"Knowledge of the world," I hurried on, "implies knowledge of the human
+heart, and you've none of that at all." I could see him flush.
+
+"My good girl, we're here to speak of you, not of me--"
+
+"Surely we're here to speak of us both, since at any minute I choose I
+can marry your son. If I don't marry him it's because I don't choose;
+but when I do choose--"
+
+Again the hand went up. "Yes, of course; but that's not what we want
+specially to hear. Let us assume, as you say, that you can marry my son
+at any time you choose. You don't choose, for the reason that you're
+astute enough to see that your last state would be worse than the first.
+To enter a family that would disown you at once--"
+
+I kept down my tone, though I couldn't master my excitement. "That's not
+my reason. If I don't marry him it's precisely because I have the power.
+There are people--cowards they are at heart, as a rule--who because they
+have the power use it to be insolent, especially to those who are
+weaker. I'm not one of those. There's a _noblesse oblige_ that compels
+one in spite of everything. In dealing with an elderly man, who I
+suppose loves his son, and with a lady who's been so kind to me as Mrs.
+Rossiter--"
+
+"You've been hired, and you're paid. There's no special call for
+gratitude."
+
+"Gratitude is in the person who feels it; but that isn't what I
+specially want to say."
+
+"What you specially want to say apparently is--"
+
+"That I'm not afraid of you, sir; I'm not afraid of your family or your
+money or your position or anything or any one you can control. If I
+don't marry Hugh, it's for the reason that I've given, and for no other.
+As long as he's dependent on your money I shall not marry him till you
+come and beg me to do it--and that I shall expect of you."
+
+He smiled tolerantly. "That is, till you've brought us to our knees."
+
+I could barely pipe, but I stood to my guns. "If you like the
+expression, sir--yes. I shall not marry Hugh--so long as you support
+him--till I've brought you to your knees."
+
+If I expected the heavens to fall at this I was disappointed. All J.
+Howard did was to lean on his arm toward Mrs. Billing and talk to her
+privately. Mrs. Rossiter got up and went to her father, entering also
+into a whispered colloquy. Once or twice he glanced backward to his
+wife, but she was now gazing sidewise in the direction of the house and
+over the lines of flowers that edged the terraces.
+
+When Mrs. Rossiter had gone back to her seat, and J. Howard had raised
+himself from his conversation with Mrs. Billing, he began again to
+address me tranquilly:
+
+"I hoped you might have sympathized with my hopes for Hugh, and have
+helped to convince him how useless his plans for a marriage between him
+and you must be."
+
+I answered with decision: "No; I can't do that."
+
+"I should have appreciated it--"
+
+"That I can quite understand."
+
+"And some day have shown you that I'm acting for your good."
+
+"Oh, sir," I cried, "whatever else you do, you'll let my good be my own
+affair, will you not?"
+
+I thought I heard Mrs. Billing say, "Brava!" At any rate, she tapped her
+fingers together as if in applause. I began to feel a more lenient
+spirit toward her.
+
+"I'm quite willing to do that," my opponent said, in a moderate,
+long-suffering tone, "now that I see that you refuse to take Hugh's good
+into consideration. So long as you encourage him in his present
+madness--"
+
+"I'm not doing that."
+
+He took no notice of the interruption. "--I'm obliged to regard him as
+nothing to me."
+
+"That must be between you and your son."
+
+"It is. I'm only asking you to note that you--ruin him."
+
+"No, no," I began to protest, but he silenced me with a movement of his
+hand.
+
+"I'm not a hard man naturally," he went on, in his tranquil voice, "but
+I have to be obeyed."
+
+"Why?" I demanded. "Why should you be obeyed more than any one else?"
+
+"Because I mean to be. That must be enough--"
+
+"But it isn't," I insisted. "I've no intention of obeying you--"
+
+He broke in with some haste: "Oh, there's no question of you, my dear
+young lady. I've nothing to do with you. I'm speaking of my son. He must
+obey me, or take the consequences. And the consequences will last as
+long as he lives. I'm not one to speak rashly, or to speak twice. So
+that's what I'm putting to you. Do you think--do you honestly
+think--that you're improving your position by ruining a man who sooner
+or later--sooner rather than later--will lay his ruin at your door and
+loathe you? Come now! You're a clever girl. The case is by no means
+beyond you. Think, and think straight."
+
+"I am thinking, sir. I'm thinking so straight that I see right through
+you. My father used to say--"
+
+"No reminiscence, please."
+
+"Very well, then; we'll let the reminiscence go. But you're thinking of
+committing a crime, a crime against Hugh, a crime against yourself, a
+crime against love, every kind of love--and that's the worst crime of
+all--and you haven't the moral courage to shoulder the guilt yourself;
+you're trying to shuffle it off on me."
+
+"My good woman--"
+
+But nothing could silence me now. I leaned forward, with hands clasped
+in my lap, and merely looked at him. My voice was low, but I spoke
+rapidly:
+
+"You're talking to bewilder me, to throw dust in my eyes, to snare me
+into taking the blame for what you're doing of your own free act. It's a
+kind of reasoning which some girls would be caught by, but I'm not one
+of them. If Hugh is ruined in the sense you mean, it's his father who
+will ruin him--but even that is not the worst. What's worst, what's
+dastardly, what's not merely unworthy of a man like you but unworthy of
+any man--of anything that calls itself a male--is that you, with all
+your resources of every kind, should try to foist your responsibilities
+off on a woman who has no resources whatever. That I shouldn't have
+believed of any of your sex--if it hadn't happened to myself."
+
+But my eloquence left him as unmoved as before. He whispered with Mrs.
+Billing. The old lady was animated, making beats and lunges with her
+lorgnette.
+
+"So that what it comes to," he said to me at last, lifting himself up
+and speaking in a tired voice, "is that you really mean to pit yourself
+against me."
+
+"No, sir; but that you mean to pit yourself against me." Something
+compelled me to add: "And I can tell you now that you'll be beaten in
+the end."
+
+Perhaps he didn't hear me, for he rose and, stooping, carried on his
+discussion with Mrs. Billing. There was a long period in which no one
+paid any further attention to my presence; in fact, no one paid any
+attention to me any more. To my last words I expected some retort, but
+none came. Ethel Rossiter joined her father at the end of the table, and
+when Mrs. Billing also rose the conversation went on _a trois_. Mrs.
+Brokenshire alone remained seated and aloof.
+
+But the moment came when her husband turned toward her. Not having been
+dismissed, I merely stood and looked on. What I saw then passed quickly,
+so quickly that it took a minute of reflection before I could put two
+and two together.
+
+Having taken one step toward his wife, Howard Brokenshire stood still,
+abruptly, putting his hand suddenly to the left side of his face. His
+wife, too, put up her hand, but palm outward and as if to wave him back.
+At the same time she averted her face--and I knew it was his eye.
+
+It was over before either of the other two women perceived anything.
+Presently, all four were out on the grass, strolling along in a little
+chattering group together. My dismissal having come automatically, as
+you might say, I was free to go.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VIII
+
+
+An hour later I had what up to then I must call the greatest surprise of
+my life.
+
+I was crying by myself on the shore, in that secluded corner among the
+rocks where Hugh had first told me that he loved me. As a rule, I don't
+cry easily. I did it now chiefly from being overwrought. I was desolate.
+I missed Hugh. The few days or few weeks that must pass before I could
+see him again stretched before me like a century. All whom I could call
+my own were so far away. Even had they been near, they would probably,
+with the individualism of our race, have left me to shift for myself.
+Louise and Victoria had always given me to understand that, though they
+didn't mind lending me an occasional sisterly hand, my life was my own
+affair. It would have been a relief to talk the whole thing out
+philosophically with Larry Strangways. As I came from the house I tried,
+for the first time since knowing him, to throw myself in his path; but,
+as usual when one needs a friend, he was nowhere to be seen.
+
+I could, therefore, only scramble down to my favorite corner among the
+rocks. Not that it was really a scramble. As a matter of fact, the path
+was easy if you knew where to find it; but it was hidden from the
+ordinary passer on the Cliff Walk, first by a boulder, round which you
+had to slip, and then by a tangle of wild rosebines, wild raspberries,
+and Queen Anne's lace. It was something like a secret door, known only
+to the Rossiter household, their servants, and their friends. Once you
+had passed it you had a measure of the public privacy you get in a box
+at the theater or the opera. You had space and ease and a wide outlook,
+with no fear of intrusion.
+
+I cannot say that I was unhappy. I was rather in that state of mind
+which the American people, with its gift for the happy, unexpected word,
+have long spoken of as "mad." I was certainly mad. I was mad with J.
+Howard Brokenshire first of all; I was mad with his family for having
+got up and left me without so much as a nod; I was mad with Hugh for
+having made me fall in love with him; I was mad with Larry Strangways
+for not having been on the spot; and I was most of all mad with myself.
+I had been boastful and bumptious; I had been disrespectful and absurd.
+It was foolish to make worse enemies than I had already. Mrs. Rossiter
+wouldn't keep me now. There would be no escape from Mrs. Applegate and
+the Home for Working-Girls.
+
+The still summer beauty of the afternoon added to my wretchedness. All
+round and before me there was luxury and joyousness and sport. The very
+sea was in a playful mood, lapping at my feet like a tamed, affectionate
+leviathan, and curling round the ledges in the offing with delicate
+lace-like spouts of spume. Sea-gulls swooped and hovered with hoarse
+cries and a lovely effect of silvery wings. Here and there was a sail on
+the blue, or the smoke of a steamer or a war-ship. Eastons Point, some
+two or three miles away, was a long, burnished line of ripening wheat.
+To right and to left of me were broken crags, red-yellow, red-brown,
+red-green, where lovers and happy groups could perch or nestle
+carelessly, thrusting trouble for the moment to a distance. I had to
+bring my trouble with me. If it had not been for trouble I shouldn't
+have been there. There wasn't a soul in the world who would fight to
+take my part but Hugh, and I was, in all my primary instincts, a
+clinging, parasitic thing that hated to stand alone.
+
+There was nothing for it then but crying, and I did that to the best of
+my ability; not loudly, of course, or vulgarly, but gently and
+sentimentally, with an immense pity for myself. I cried for what had
+happened that day and for what had happened yesterday. I cried for
+things long past, which I had omitted to cry for at the time. When I had
+finished with these I went further back to dig up other ignominies, and
+I cried for them. I cried for my father and mother and my orphaned
+condition; I cried for the way in which my father--who was a good, kind
+man, _du reste_--had lived on his principal, and left me with scarcely a
+penny to my name; I cried for my various disappointments in love, and
+for the girl friends who had predeceased me. I massed all these motives
+together and cried for them in bulk. I cried for Hugh and the brilliant
+future we should have on the money he would make. I cried for Larry
+Strangways and the loneliness his absence would entail on me. I cried
+for the future as well as for the past and if I could have thought of a
+future beyond the future I should have cried for that. It was delicious
+and sad and consoling all at once; and when I had no more tears I felt
+almost as if Hugh's strong arm had been about me, and I was comforted.
+
+I was just wiping my eyes and wondering whether at the moment of going
+homeward my nose would be too red, when I heard a quiet step. I thought
+I must be mistaken. It was so unlikely that any one would be there at
+this hour of the day--the servants generally came down at night--that
+for a minute I didn't turn. It was the uncomfortable sense that some one
+was behind me that made me look back at last, when I caught the flutter
+of lace and the shimmer of pale-rose taffeta. Mrs. Brokenshire had worn
+lace and pale-rose taffeta at the lunch.
+
+Fear and amazement wrestled in my soul together. Struggling to my feet,
+I turned round as slowly as I could.
+
+"Don't get up," she said in a sweet, quiet voice. "I'll come and sit
+down beside you, if I may." She had already seated herself on a low flat
+rock as she said, "I saw you were crying, so I waited."
+
+I am not usually at a loss for words, but I was then. I stuttered and
+stammered and babbled, without being able to say anything articulate.
+Indeed, I had nothing articulate to say. The mind had suspended its
+action.
+
+My impressions were all subconscious, but registered exactly. She was
+the most exquisite production I had ever seen in human guise. Her
+perfection was that of some lovely little bird in which no color fails
+to shade harmoniously into some other color, in which no single feather
+is out of place. The word I used of her was _soignee_--that which is
+smoothed and curled and polished and caressed till there is not an
+eyelash which hasn't received its measure of attention. I don't mean
+that she was artificial, or that her effects were too thought out. She
+was no more artificial than a highly cultivated flower is artificial, or
+a many-faceted diamond, or a King Charles spaniel, or anything else that
+is carefully bred or cut or shaped. She was the work of some specialist
+in beauty, who had no aim in view but to give to the world the loveliest
+thing possible.
+
+When I had mastered my confusion sufficiently I sat down with the words,
+rather lamely spoken:
+
+"I didn't know any one was here. I hope I haven't kept you standing
+long."
+
+"No; but I was watching you. I came down only a few minutes after you
+did. You see, I was afraid--when we came away from Mrs. Rossiter's--that
+you might be unhappy."
+
+"I'm not as unhappy as I was," I faltered, without knowing what I said,
+and was rewarded to see her smile.
+
+It was an innocent smile, without glee, a little sad in fact, but full
+of unutterable things like a very young child's. I had never seen such
+teeth, so white, so small, so regular.
+
+"I'm glad of that," she said, simply. "I thought if some--some other
+woman was near you, you mightn't feel so--so much alone. That's why I
+watched round and followed you."
+
+I could have fallen at her feet, but I restricted myself to saying:
+
+"Thank you very much. It does make a difference." I got courage to add,
+however, with a smile of my own, "I see you know."
+
+"Yes, I know. I've thought about you a good deal since that day about a
+fortnight ago--you remember?"
+
+"Oh yes, I remember. I'm not likely to forget, am I? Only, you see, I
+had no idea--if I had, I mightn't have felt so--so awfully forlorn."
+
+Her eyes rested upon me. I can only say of them that they were sweet and
+lovely, which is saying nothing at all. Sweet and lovely are the words
+that come to me when I think of her, and they are so lamentably
+overworked. She seemed to study me with a child-like unconsciousness.
+
+"Yes," she said at last, "I suppose you do feel forlorn. I didn't think
+of that or--or I might have managed to come to you before."
+
+"That you should have come now," I said, warmly, "is the kindest thing
+one human being ever did for another."
+
+Again there was the smile, a little to one side of the mouth, wistful,
+wan.
+
+"Oh no, it isn't. I've really come on my own account." I waited for some
+explanation of this, but she only went on: "Tell me about yourself. How
+did you come here? Ethel Rossiter has never really said anything about
+you. I should like to know."
+
+Her manner had the gentle command that queens and princesses and very
+rich women unconsciously acquire. I tried to obey her, but found little
+to say. Uttered to her my facts were so meager. I told her of my father
+and mother, of my father's mania for old books, of Louise and Victoria
+and their husbands, of my visits abroad; but I felt her attention
+wandering. That is, I felt she was interested not in my data, but in me.
+Halifax and Canada and British army and navy life and rare first
+editions were outside the range of her ken. Paris she knew; and London
+she knew; but not from any point of view from which I could speak of
+them. I could see she was the well-placed American who knows some of the
+great English houses and all of the great English hotels, but nothing of
+that Britannic backbone of which I might have been called a rib. She
+broke in presently, not apropos of anything I was saying, with the
+words:
+
+"How old are you?"
+
+I told her I was twenty-four.
+
+"I'm twenty-nine."
+
+I said I had understood as much from Mrs. Rossiter, but that I could
+easily have supposed her no older than myself. This was true. Had there
+not been that something mournful in her face which simulates maturity I
+could have thought of her as nothing but a girl. If I stood in awe of
+her it was only of what I guessed at as a sorrow.
+
+She went on to give me two or three details of her life, with nearly all
+of which I was familiar through hints from Hugh and Ethel Rossiter.
+
+"We're really Philadelphians, my mother and I. We've lived a good deal
+in New York, of course, and abroad. I was at school in Paris, too, at
+the Convent des Abeilles." She wandered on, somewhat inconsequentially,
+with facts of this sort, when she added, suddenly: "I was to have
+married some one else."
+
+I knew then that I had the clue to her thought. The marriage she had
+missed was on her mind. It created an obsession or a broken heart, I
+wasn't quite sure which. It was what she wanted to talk about, though
+her glance fell before the spark of intelligence in mine.
+
+[Illustration: THE MARRIAGE SHE HAD MISSED WAS ON HER MIND. IT CREATED
+AN OBSESSION OR A BROKEN HEART, I WASN'T QUITE SURE WHICH]
+
+Since there was nothing I could say in actual words, I merely murmured
+sympathetically. At the same time there came to me, like the slow
+breaking of a dawn, an illuminating glimpse of the great J. Howard's
+life. I seemed to be admitted into its secret, into a perception of its
+weak spot, more fully than his wife had any notion of. She would never,
+I was sure, see what she was betraying to me from my point of view. She
+would never see how she was giving him away. She wouldn't even see how
+she was giving away herself--she was so sweet, and gentle, and
+child-like, and unsuspecting.
+
+I don't know for how many seconds her quiet, inconsequential speech
+trickled on without my being able to follow it. I came to myself again,
+as it were, on hearing her say:
+
+"And if you do love him, oh, don't give him up!"
+
+I grasped the fact then that I had lost something about Hugh, and did my
+best to catch up with it.
+
+"I don't mean to, if either of my conditions is fulfilled. You heard
+what they were."
+
+"Oh, but if I were you I wouldn't make them. That's where I think you're
+wrong. If you love him--"
+
+"I couldn't steal him from his family, even if I loved him."
+
+"Oh, but it wouldn't be stealing. When two people love each other
+there's nothing else to think about."
+
+"And yet that might sometimes be dangerous doctrine."
+
+"If there was never any danger there'd never be any courage. And courage
+is one of the finest things in life."
+
+"Yes, of course; but even courage can carry one very far."
+
+"Nothing can carry us so far as love. I see that now. It's why I'm
+anxious about poor Hugh. I--I know a man who--who loves a woman whom
+he--he couldn't marry, and--" She caught herself up. "I'm fond of Hugh,
+you see, even though he doesn't like me. I wish he understood, that they
+all understood--that--that it isn't my fault. If I could have had my
+way--" She righted herself here with a slight change of tense. "If I
+could have my way, Hugh would marry the woman he's in love with and
+who's in love with him."
+
+I tried to enroll her decisively on my side.
+
+"So that you don't agree with Mr. Brokenshire."
+
+Her immediate response was to color with a soft, suffused rose-pink like
+that of the inside of shells. Her eyes grew misty with a kind of
+helplessness. She looked at me imploringly, and looked away. One might
+have supposed that she was pleading with me to be let off answering.
+Nevertheless, when she spoke at last, her words brought me to a new
+phase of her self-revelation.
+
+"Why aren't you afraid of him?"
+
+"Oh, but I am."
+
+"Yes, but not like--" Again she saved herself. "Yes, but not like--so
+many people. You may be afraid of him inside, but you fight."
+
+"Any one fights for right."
+
+There was a repetition of the wistful smile, a little to the left corner
+of the mouth.
+
+"Oh, do they? I wish I did. Or rather I wish I had."
+
+"It's never too late," I declared, with what was meant to be
+encouragement.
+
+There was a queer little gleam in her eye, like that which comes into
+the pupil of a startled bird.
+
+"So I've heard some one else say. I suppose it's true--but it frightens
+me."
+
+I was quite strangely uneasy. Hints of her story came back to me, but I
+had never heard it completely enough to be able to piece the fragments
+together. It was new for me to imagine myself called on to protect any
+one--I needed protection so much for myself!--but I was moved with a
+protective instinct toward her. It was rather ridiculous, and yet it was
+so.
+
+"Only one must be sure one is right before one fights, mustn't one?" was
+all I could think of saying.
+
+She responded dreamily, looking seaward.
+
+"Don't you think there may be worse things than wrong?"
+
+This being so contrary to my pet principles, I answered, emphatically,
+that I didn't think so at all. I brought out my maxim that if you did
+right nothing but right could come of it; but she surprised me by
+saying, simply, "I don't believe that."
+
+I was a little indignant.
+
+"But it's not a matter of believing; it's one of proving, of
+demonstration."
+
+"I've done right, and wrong came of it."
+
+"Oh, but it couldn't--not in the long run."
+
+"Well, then I did wrong. That's what I've been afraid of, and what--what
+some one else tells me." If a pet bird could look at you with a
+challenging expression it was the thing she did. "Now what do you say?"
+
+I really didn't know what to say. I spoke from instinct, and some common
+sense.
+
+"If one's done wrong, or made a mistake, I suppose the only way one can
+rectify it is to begin again to do right. Right must have a rectifying
+power."
+
+"But if you've made a mistake the mistake is there, unless you go back
+and unmake it. If you don't, isn't it what they call building on a bad
+foundation?"
+
+"I dare say it is; and yet you can't push a material comparison too far
+when you're thinking of spiritual things. This is spiritual, isn't it? I
+suppose one can't really do evil and expect good to come of it; but one
+can overcome evil with good."
+
+She looked at me with a sweet mistiness.
+
+"I've no doubt that's true, but it's very deep. It's too deep for me."
+She rose with an air of dismissing the subject, though she continued to
+speak of it allusively. "You know so much about it. I could see you did
+from the first. If I was to tell you the whole story--but, of course, I
+can't do that. No, don't get up. I have to run away, because we're
+expecting people to tea; but I should have liked staying to talk with
+you. You're awfully clever, aren't you? I suppose it must be living
+round in those queer places--Gibraltar, didn't you say? I've seen
+Gibraltar, but only from the steamer, on the way to Naples. I felt that
+I was with you from that very first time I saw you. I'd seen you before,
+of course, with little Gladys, but not to notice you. I never noticed
+you till I heard that Hugh was in love with you. That was just before
+Mr. Brokenshire took me over--you remember!--that day. He wanted me to
+see how easily he could deal with people who opposed him; but I didn't
+think he succeeded very well. He made you go and sit at a distance. That
+was to show you he had the power. Did you notice what I did? Oh, I'm
+glad. I wanted you to understand that if it was a question of love I
+was--I was with you. You saw that, didn't you? Oh, I'm glad. I must run
+away now. We've people to tea; but some time, if I can manage it, I'll
+come again."
+
+She had begun slipping up the path, like a great rose-colored moth in
+the greenery, when she turned to say:
+
+"I can never do anything for you, I'm too afraid of him; but I'm on your
+side."
+
+After she had gone I began putting two and two together. What her visit
+did for me especially was to distract my mind. I got a better
+perspective on my own small drama in seeing it as incidental to a larger
+one. That there was a large one here I had no doubt, though I could
+neither seize nor outline its proportions. As far as I could judge of my
+visitor I found her dazed by the magnitude of the thing that had
+happened to her, whatever that was. She was good and kind; she hadn't a
+thought that wasn't tender; normally she would have been the devoted,
+clinging type of wife I longed to be myself; and yet some one's passion,
+or some one's ambition, or both in collusion, had caught her like a bird
+in a net.
+
+It was perhaps because she was a woman and I was a woman and J. Howard
+was a man that my reactions concerned themselves chiefly with him. I
+thought of him throughout the afternoon. I began to get new views of
+him. I wondered if he knew of himself what I knew. I supposed he did. I
+supposed he must. He couldn't have been married two or three years to
+this sweet stricken creature without seeing that her heart wasn't his.
+Furthermore, he couldn't have beheld, as he and I had beheld that
+afternoon, the hand that went up palm outward, without divining a horror
+of his person that was more than a shrinking from his poor contorted
+eye. For love the contorted eye would have meant more love, since it
+would have been love with its cognate of pity; but not so that uplifted
+hand and that instinctive waving of him back. There was more than an
+involuntary repulsion in that, more than an instant of abhorrence. What
+there was he must have discovered, he must have tasted, from the minute
+he first took her in his arms.
+
+I was sorry for him. I could throw enough of the masculine into my
+imagination to know how he must adore a creature of such perfected
+charm. She was the sort of woman men would adore, especially the men
+whose ideal lies first of all in the physical. For them it would mean
+nothing that she lacked mentality, that the pendulum of her nature had
+only a limited swing; that she was as good as she looked would be
+enough, seeing that she looked like an angel straight out of heaven. In
+spite of poor J. Howard's kingly suavity I knew he must have minutes of
+sheer animal despair, of fierce and bitter suffering.
+
+Mrs. Rossiter spoke to me that evening with a suggestion of reprimand,
+which was letting me off easily. I was so sure of my dismissal, that
+when I returned to the house from the shore I expected some sort of
+_lettre de conge_; but I found nothing. I had had supper with Gladys and
+put her to bed when the maid brought me a message to say that Mrs.
+Rossiter would like me to come down and see her dress, as she was going
+out to dinner.
+
+I was admiring the dress, which was a new one, when she said, rather
+fretfully:
+
+"I wish you wouldn't talk like that to father. It upsets him so."
+
+I was adjusting a slight fullness at the back, which made it the easier
+for me to answer.
+
+"I wouldn't if he didn't talk like that to me. What can I do? I have to
+say something."
+
+She was peering into the cheval glass over her shoulder, giving her
+attention to two things at once.
+
+"I mean your saying you expected both of those preposterous things to
+happen. Of course, you don't--nor either of them--and it only rubs him
+up the wrong way."
+
+I was too meek now to argue the point. Besides, I was preoccupied with
+the widening interests in which I found myself involved. To probe the
+security of my position once more, I said:
+
+"I wonder you stand it--that you don't send me away."
+
+She was still twisting in front of the cheval glass.
+
+"Don't you think that shoulder-strap is loose? It really looks as if the
+whole thing would slip off me. If he can stand it I can," she added, as
+a matter of secondary concern.
+
+"Oh, then he can stand it." I felt the shoulder-strap. "No, I think it's
+all right, if you don't wriggle too much."
+
+"I'm sure it's going to come down--and there I shall be. He has to stand
+it, don't you see, or let you think that you wound him?"
+
+I was frankly curious.
+
+"Do I wound him?"
+
+"He'd never let you know it if you did. The fact that he ignores you and
+lets you stay on with me is the only thing by which I can judge. If you
+didn't hurt him at all he'd tell me to send you about your business."
+She turned from the glass. "Well, if you say that strap is all right I
+suppose it must be, but I don't feel any too sure." She was picking up
+her gloves and her fan which the maid had laid out, when she said,
+suddenly: "If you're so keen on getting married, for goodness' sake why
+don't you take that young Strangways?"
+
+My sensation can only be compared to that of a person who has got a
+terrific blow on the head from a trip-hammer. I seemed to wonder why I
+hadn't been crushed or struck dead. As it was, I felt that I could never
+move again from the spot on which I stood. I was vaguely conscious of
+something outraged within me and yet was too stunned to resent it. I
+could only gasp, feebly, after what seemed an interminable time: "In the
+first place, I'm not so awfully keen on getting married--"
+
+She was examining her gloves.
+
+"There, that stupid Seraphine has put me out two lefts. No, she hasn't;
+it's all right. Stuff, my dear! Every girl is keen on getting married."
+
+"And then," I stammered on, "Mr. Strangways has never given me the
+chance."
+
+"Oh, well, he will. Do hand me my wrap, like a love." I was putting the
+wrap over her shoulders as she repeated: "Oh, well, he will. I can tell
+by the way he looks at you. It would be ever so much more suitable. Jim
+says he'll be a first-class man in time--if you don't rush in like an
+idiot and marry Hugh."
+
+"I may marry Hugh," I tried to say, loftily, "but I hope I sha'n't do it
+like an idiot."
+
+She swept toward the stairway, but she had left me with subjects for
+thought not only for that evening, but for the next day and the next.
+Now that the first shock was over I managed to work up the proper sense
+of indignity. I told myself I was hurt and offended. She shouldn't have
+mentioned such a thing. I wouldn't have stood it from one of my own
+sisters. I had never thought of Larry Strangways in any such way, and to
+do so disturbed our relations. To begin with, I wasn't in love with him;
+and to end with, he was too poor. Not that I was looking for a rich
+husband; but neither was I a lunatic. It would be years before he could
+think of marrying, if there were no other consideration; and in the mean
+time there was Hugh.
+
+There was Hugh with his letters from Boston, full of high ambitious
+hopes. Cousin Andrew Brew had written from Bar Harbor that he was coming
+to town in a day or two and would give him the interview he demanded.
+Already Hugh had his eye on a little house on Beacon Hill--so like a
+corner of Mayfair, he wrote, if Mayfair stood on an eminence--in which
+we could be as snug as two love-birds. I was composing in my mind the
+letter I should write to my aunt in Halifax, asking to be allowed to
+come back for the wedding.
+
+I filled in the hours wondering how Larry Strangways looked at me when
+there was only Mrs. Rossiter as spectator. I knew how he looked at me
+when I was looking back--it was with that gleaming smile which defied
+you to see behind it, as the sun defies you to see behind its rays. But
+I wanted to know how he looked at me when my head was turned another
+way; to know how the sun appears when you view it through a telescope
+that nullifies its defensive. For that I had only my imagination, since
+he had obtained two or three days' leave to go to New York to see his
+new employer. He had warned me to betray no hint as to the new
+employer's name, since there was a feud between the Brokenshire clan and
+Stacy Grainger which I connected vaguely with the story I had heard of
+Mrs. Brokenshire.
+
+Then on the fourth day Hugh came back. He appeared as he had on saying
+good-by, while I was breakfasting with Gladys in the open air and Broke
+was with his mother. Hugh was more pallid than when he went away; he was
+positively woe-begone. Everything that was love in me leaped into flame
+at sight of his honest, sorry face.
+
+I think I can tell his story best by giving it in my own words, in the
+way of direct narration. He didn't tell it to me all at once, but bit by
+bit, as new details occurred to him. The picture was slow in printing
+itself on my mind, but when I got it it was with satisfactory
+exactitude.
+
+He had been three days at the hotel in Boston before learning that
+Cousin Andrew Brew was actually in town and would see him at the bank at
+eleven on a certain morning. Hugh was on the moment. The promptitude
+with which his relative sprang up in his seat, somewhat as if impelled
+by a piece of mechanism, was truly cordial. Not less was the handshake
+and the formula of greeting. The sons of J. Howard Brokenshire were
+always welcome guests among their Boston kin, on whom they shed a
+pleasant luster of metropolitan glory. While the Brews and Borrodailes
+prided themselves on what they called their Boston provinciality and
+didn't believe to be provinciality at all, they enjoyed the New York
+connection.
+
+"Hello, Hugh! Glad to see you. Come in. Sit down. Looking older than
+when I saw you last. Growing a mustache. Not married yet? Sit down and
+tell us all about it. What can I do for you? Sit down."
+
+Hugh took the comfortable little upright arm-chair that stood at the
+corner of his cousin's desk, while the latter resumed the seat of honor.
+Knowing that the banker's time was valuable, and feeling that he would
+reveal his aptitude for business by going to the point at once, the
+younger man began his tale. He had just reached the fact that he had
+fallen in love with a little girl on whose merits he wouldn't enlarge,
+since all lovers had the same sort of things to say, though he was surer
+of his data than others of his kind, when there was a tinkle at the desk
+telephone.
+
+"Excuse me."
+
+During the conversation in which Cousin Andrew then engaged Hugh was
+able to observe the long-established, unassuming comfort of this
+friendly office, which suggested the cozy air that hangs about the
+smoking-rooms of good old English inns. There was a warm worn carpet on
+the floor; deep leather arm-chairs showed the effect of contact with two
+generations of moneyed backs; on the walls the lithographed heads of
+Brews and Borrodailes bore witness to the firm's respectability. In the
+atmosphere a faint odor of tobacco emphasized the human associations.
+
+Cousin Andrew emphasized them, too. "Now!" He put down the receiver and
+turned to Hugh with an air of relief at being able to give him his
+attention. He was a tall, thin man with a head like a nut. It would have
+been an expressionless nut had it not been for a facile tight-lipped
+smile that creased his face as stretching creases rubber. Coming and
+going rapidly, it gave him the appearance of mirth, creating at each end
+of a long, mobile mouth two concentric semicircles cutting deep into the
+cheeks that would have been of value to a low comedian. A slate-colored
+morning suit, a white pique edge to the opening of the waistcoat, a
+slate-colored tie with a pearl in it, emphasized the union of dignity
+and lightness which were the keynotes to Cousin Andrew's character.
+Blended as they were, they formed a delightfully debonair combination,
+bringing down to your own level a man who was somebody in the world of
+finance. It was part of his endearing quality that he liked you to see
+him as a jolly good fellow no whit better than yourself. He was fond of
+gossip and of the lighter topics of the moment. He was also fond of
+dancing, and frequented most of the gatherings, private and public, for
+the cultivation of that art which was the vogue of the year before the
+Great War. With his tall, limber figure he passed for less than his age
+of forty-three till you got him at close quarters.
+
+On the genial "Now!" in which there was an inflection of command Hugh
+went on with his tale, telling of his breach with his father and his
+determination to go into business for himself.
+
+"I ought to be independent, anyhow, at my age," he declared. "I've my
+own views, and it's only right to confess to you that I'm a bit of a
+Socialist. That won't make any difference, however, to our working
+together, Cousin Andrew, for, to make a long story short, I've looked in
+to tell you that I've come to the place where I should like to accept
+your kind offer."
+
+The statement was received with cheerful detachment, while Cousin Andrew
+threw himself forward with his arms on his desk, rubbing his long, thin
+hands together.
+
+"My kind offer? What was that?"
+
+Hugh was slightly dashed.
+
+"About my coming to you if ever I wanted to go into business."
+
+"Oh! You're going into business?"
+
+Hugh named the places and dates at which, during the past few years,
+Cousin Andrew had offered his help to his young kinsman if ever it was
+needed.
+
+Cousin Andrew tossed himself back in his chair with one of his brisk,
+restless movements.
+
+"Did I say that? Well, if I did I'll stick to it." There was another
+tinkle at the telephone. "Excuse me."
+
+Hugh had time for reflection and some irritation. He had not expected to
+be thrust into the place of a petitioner, or to have to make
+explanations galling to his pride. He had counted not only on his
+cousinship, but on his position in the world as J. Howard Brokenshire's
+son. It seemed to him that Cousin Andrew was disposed to undervalue
+that.
+
+"I don't want to hold you to anything you don't care for, Cousin
+Andrew," he began, when his relative had again put the receiver aside,
+"but I understood--"
+
+"Oh, that's all right. I've no doubt I said it. I do recall something of
+the sort, vaguely, at a time when I thought your father might want-- In
+any case we can fix you up. Sure to be something you can do. When'd you
+like to begin?"
+
+Hugh expressed his willingness to be put into office at once.
+
+"Just so. Turn you over to old Williamson. He licks the young ones into
+shape. Suppose your father'll think it hard of us to go against him. But
+on the other hand he may be pleased--he'll know you're in safe hands."
+
+It was a delicate thing for Hugh to attempt, but as he was going into
+business not from an irresistible impulse toward a financial career, but
+in order to make enough money to marry on, he felt obliged to ask, in
+such terms as he could command, how much money he should make.
+
+"Just so!" Cousin Andrew took up the receiver again. "Want to speak to
+Mr. Williamson. . . . Oh, Williamson, how much is Duffers getting now?
+. . . And how much before that? . . . Good! Thanks!"
+
+The result of these investigations was communicated to Hugh. He should
+receive Duffers's pay, and when he had earned it should come in for
+Duffers's promotion. The immediate effect was to make him look startled
+and blank. "What?" was his only question; but it contained several
+shades of incredulity.
+
+Cousin Andrew took this dismay in good part.
+
+"Why, what did you expect?"
+
+Hugh could only stammer:
+
+"I thought it would be more."
+
+"How much more?"
+
+Hugh sought an answer that wouldn't betray the ludicrous figure of his
+hopes.
+
+"Well, enough to live on as a married man at least."
+
+The banker's good nature was proved by the creases of his rubber smile.
+
+"What did you think you'd be worth to us--with no backing from your
+father?"
+
+The question was of the kind commonly called a poser. Hugh had not, so I
+understood from him, hitherto thought of his entering his kinsfolks'
+banking-house as primarily a matter of earning capacity. It wasn't to be
+like working for "any old firm." He had prefigured it as becoming a
+component part of a machine that turned out money of which he would get
+his share, that share being in proportion to the dignity of the house
+itself and bearing a relation to his blood connection with the
+dominating partners. When Cousin Andrew had repeated his question Hugh
+was obliged to reply:
+
+"I wasn't thinking of that so much as of what you'd be worth to me."
+
+"We could be worth a good deal to you in time."
+
+There was a ray of hope.
+
+"How long a time?"
+
+"Oh, twenty or thirty years, perhaps, if you work and save. Of course,
+if you had capital to bring in--but you haven't, have you? Didn't Cousin
+Sophy, your mother, leave everything to your father? I thought so. Mind
+you, I'm putting out of the question all thought of your father's coming
+round and putting money in for you. I'm talking of the thing on the
+ground on which you've put it."
+
+Hugh had no heart to resent the quirks and grimaces in Cousin Andrew's
+smile. He had all he could do in taking his leave in a way to save his
+face and cast the episode behind him. The banker lent himself to this
+effort with good-humored grace, accompanying his relative to the door of
+the room, where he shook him by the shoulder as he turned the knob.
+
+"Thought you'd go right in as a director? Not the first youngster who's
+had that idea, and you'll not be the last. Good-by. Let me hear from you
+if you change your mind." He called after him, as the door was about to
+close: "Best try to fix it up with your father, Hugh. As for the
+girl--well, there'll be others, and more in your line."
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER IX
+
+
+On that first morning I got no more than the gist of what had happened
+during Hugh's visit to his cousin Andrew Brew. Hugh announced it in fact
+by a metaphor as soon as we had exchanged greetings and he had sat down
+at the table with his arm over Gladys's shoulder.
+
+"Well, little Alix, I got it where the chicken got the ax."
+
+"Where was that?" I asked, innocently, for the figure of speech was new
+to me.
+
+"In the neck."
+
+Neither of us laughed. His tone was so lugubrious as to preclude
+laughing. But I understood. I may say that by the time he had given me
+the outline of what he had to say I understood more than he. I might
+have seen poor Hugh's limitations before; but I never had. During the
+old life in Halifax I had known plenty of young men brought up in
+comfort who couldn't earn a living when the time came to do it. If I had
+never classed Hugh among the number, it was because the Brokenshires
+were all so rich that I supposed they must have some secret prescription
+for wringing money from the air. Besides, Hugh was an American; and
+American and money were words I was accustomed to pronounce together. I
+never questioned his ability to have any reasonable income he
+named--till now. Now I began to see him as he must have seen himself
+during those first few minutes after turning his back on the parental
+haven, alone and in the dark.
+
+I cannot say that for the moment I had any of the qualms of fear. My
+yearning over him was too motherly for that. I wanted to comfort and, as
+far as possible, to encourage him. Something within me whispered, too,
+the words, "It's going to be up to me." I meant--or that which spoke in
+me meant--that the whole position was reversed. I had been taking my
+ease hitherto, believing that the strong young man who had asked me to
+marry him would do the necessary work. It was to be up to him. My part
+was to be the passive bliss of having some one to love me and maintain
+me. That Hugh loved me I knew; that in one way or another he would be
+able to maintain me I took for granted. With a Brokenshire, I assumed,
+that would be the last of cares. And now I saw in a flash that I was
+wrong; that I who was nothing but a parasite by nature would somehow
+have to give my strong young man support.
+
+When all was said that he could say at the moment I took the
+responsibility of sending Gladys indoors with the maid who was waiting
+on the table, after which I asked Hugh to walk down the lawn with me. A
+stone balustrade ran above the Cliff Walk, and here was a bit of
+shrubbery where no one could observe us from the house, while passers on
+the Cliff Walk could see us only by looking upward. At that hour in the
+morning even they were likely to be rare.
+
+"Hugh, darling," I said, "this is becoming very, very serious. You're
+throwing yourself out of house and home and your father's good-will for
+my sake. We must think about it, Hugh--"
+
+His answer was to seize me in his arms--we were sufficiently screened
+from view--and crush his lips against mine in a way that made speech
+impossible.
+
+Again I must make a confession. It was his doing that sort of thing that
+paralyzed my judgment. You will blame me, perhaps, but, oh, reader, have
+you any idea of what it is never to have had a man wild to kiss you
+before? Never before to have had any one adore you? Never before to have
+been the greatest of all blessings to so much as the least among his
+brethren? The experience was new to me. I had no rule of thumb by which
+to measure it. I could only think that the man who wanted me with so mad
+a desire must have me, no matter what reserves I might have preferred to
+make on my own account.
+
+I struggled, however, and with some success. For the first time I
+clearly perceived that occasions might arise in which, between love and
+marriage, one might have to make a distinction. Ethel Rossiter's dictum
+came back to me: "People can't go about marrying every one they love,
+now can they?" It came to me as a terrible possibility that I might be
+doomed to love Hugh all my life, and equally doomed to refuse him. If I
+didn't, the responsibilities would be "up to me." If besides loving him
+I were to accept him and marry him, it would be for me to see that the
+one possible condition was fulfilled. I should have to bring J. Howard
+to his knees.
+
+When he got breath to say anything it was with a mere hot muttering into
+my face, as he held me with my head thrown back:
+
+"I know what I'm doing, little Alix. You mustn't ask me to count the
+cost. The cost only makes you the more precious. Since I have to suffer
+for you I'll suffer, but I'll never give you up. Do you take me for a
+fellow who'd weigh money or comfort in the balances with you?"
+
+"No, Hugh," I whispered. His embrace was enough to strangle me.
+
+"Well, then, never ask me to think about this thing again, I've thought
+all I'm going to. As I mean to get you anyhow, little Alix, you may as
+well promise now, this very minute, that whatever happens you'll be my
+wife."
+
+But I didn't promise. First I got him to release me on the ground that
+some bathers, after a dip at Eastons Beach, were going by, with their
+heads on a level with our feet. Then I asked the natural question:
+
+"What do you think of doing now?"
+
+He said he was going to let no mushrooms spring in his footsteps, and
+that he was taking a morning train for New York. He talked about bankers
+and brokers and moneyed things in general in a way I couldn't follow,
+though I could see that in spite of Cousin Andrew Brew's rejection he
+still expected great things of himself. Like me, he seemed to feel that
+there was a faculty for conjuring money in the very name of Brokenshire.
+Never having known what it was to be without as much money as he wanted,
+never having been given to suppose that such an eventuality could come
+to pass, it was perhaps not strange that he should consider his power of
+commanding a large income to be in the nature of things. Bankers and
+brokers would be glad to have him as their associate from the mere fact
+that he was his father's son.
+
+I endeavored to throw a cup of cold water on too much certainty, by
+saying:
+
+"But, Hugh, dear, won't you have to begin at the beginning? Wasn't that
+what your cousin Andrew Brew--?"
+
+"Cousin Andrew Brew is an ass. He's one great big Boston
+stick-in-the-mud. He wouldn't know which side his bread was buttered on,
+not if it was buttered on both."
+
+"Still," I persisted, "you'll have to begin at the beginning."
+
+"Well, I shouldn't be the first."
+
+"No, but you might be the first to do it with a clog round his feet in
+the shape of a person like me. How many years did your cousin
+say--twenty or thirty, wasn't it?"
+
+"R-rot, little Alix!" He brought out the interjection with a
+contemptuous roll. "It might be twenty or thirty years for a numskull
+like Duffers, but for me! There are ways by which a man who's in the
+business already, as you might say, goes skimming over the ground the
+common herd have to tramp. Look at the gentlemen-rankers in your own
+army. They enlist as privates, and in two or three years they're in the
+officers' mess with a commission. That comes of their education and--"
+
+"That's often true, I admit. I've known of several cases in my own
+experience. But even two or three years--"
+
+"Wouldn't you wait for me?"
+
+He asked the question with a sharpness that gave me something like a
+stab.
+
+"Yes, of course, Hugh, if I promised you. And yet to bind you by such a
+promise doesn't seem to me fair."
+
+"I'll take care of that," he declared, manfully. "As a matter of fact,
+when father sees how determined I am, he'll only be too happy to do the
+handsome thing and come down with the brass."
+
+"You think he's bluffing then?" I threw some conviction into my tone as
+I added, "I don't."
+
+"He's not bluffing to his own knowledge; but he is--"
+
+"To yours. But isn't it his knowledge that we've got to go by? We must
+expect the worst, even if we hope for the best."
+
+"And what it all comes to is--"
+
+"Is that you're facing a very hard time, Hugh, and I don't feel that I
+can accept the responsibility of encouraging you to do it."
+
+"But, good Lord, Alix, you're not encouraging me. It's the other way
+round. You're a perfect wet blanket; you're an ice-water shower. I'm
+doing this thing on my own--"
+
+"You know, Hugh, I've seen your father since you went away."
+
+His face brightened.
+
+"Good! And did he show any signs of tacking to the wind?"
+
+"Not a bit. He said you would be ruined, and that I should ruin you."
+
+"The deuce you will! That's where he's got the wrong number, poor old
+dad! I hope you told him you would marry me--and let him have it
+straight."
+
+I made no reply to that, going on to tell him all that was said as to
+bringing J. Howard to his knees.
+
+He roared with ironic laughter.
+
+"You did have the gall!"
+
+"Then you think they'll never, never accept me?"
+
+"Not that way; not beforehand."
+
+Hot rage rose within me, against him and them and this scorn of my
+personality.
+
+"I think they will."
+
+"Not on your life! Dad wouldn't do it, not if I was on my death-bed and
+needed you to come and raise me up. Milly is the only one; and even she
+thinks I'm the craziest idiot--"
+
+"Very well, then, Hugh," I said, quickly; "I'm afraid we must consider
+it all--"
+
+He gathered me into his arms as he had done before, and once more
+stopped my protests. Once more, too, I yielded to this masculine
+argument.
+
+"For you and me there's nothing but love," he murmured, with his cheek
+pressed close against mine.
+
+"Oh no, Hugh," I managed to say, when I had struggled free. "There's
+honor--and perhaps there's pride." It gave some relief to what I
+conceived of as the humiliation he unconsciously heaped on me to be able
+to add: "As a matter of fact, pride and honor, in me, are as inseparable
+as the oxygen and hydrogen that go to make up water."
+
+He was obliged to leave it there, since he had no more than the time to
+catch his train for New York. It was, however, the sense of pride and
+honor that calmed my nerves when Mrs. Rossiter asked me to take little
+Gladys to see her grandfather in the afternoon. I had done it from time
+to time all through the summer, but not since Hugh had declared his love
+for me. If I went now, I reasoned, it would have to be on a new footing;
+and if it was on a new footing something might come of the visit in
+spite of my fears.
+
+We started a little after three, as Gladys had to be back in time for
+her early supper and bed. Chips, the wire-haired terrier, was nominally
+at our heels, but actually nosing the shrubbery in front of us, or
+scouring the lawns on our right with a challenging bark to any of his
+kind who might be within earshot to come down and contest our passage.
+
+"_Qu'il est drole, ce Chips! N'est-ce-pas, mademoiselle?_" Gladys would
+exclaim from time to time, to which I would make some suitable and
+instructive rejoinder.
+
+Her hand was in mine; her eyes as they laughed up at me were of the
+color of the blue convolvulus. In her little smocked liberty silk, with
+a leghorn hat trimmed with a wreath of tiny roses, she made me yearn for
+that bassinet between which and myself there were such stormy seas to
+cross. Everything was to be up to me. That was the great solemnity from
+which my mind couldn't get away. I was to be the David to confront
+Goliath, without so much as a sling or a stone. What I was to do, and
+how I was to do it, I knew no more than I knew of commanding an army. I
+could only take my stand on the maxim of which I was making a
+foundation-stone. I went so far as to believe that if I did right more
+right would unfold itself. It would be like following a trail through a
+difficult wood, a trail of which you observe all the notches and steps
+and signs, sometimes with misgivings, often with the fear that you're
+astray, but on which a moment arrives when you see with delight that
+you're coming out to the clearing. So I argued as I prattled with Gladys
+of such things as were in sight, of ships and lobster-pots and little
+dogs, giving her a new word as occasion served, and trying to keep my
+mind from terrors and remote anticipations.
+
+If you know Newport at all you know J. Howard Brokenshire's place in the
+neighborhood of Ochre Point. Anyone would name it as you passed by. J.
+Howard didn't build the house; he bought it from some people who, it
+seemed, hadn't found in Newport the hospitality of which they were in
+search. It is gloomy and fortress-like, as if the architect had planned
+a Palazzo Strozzi which he hadn't the courage to carry out. That it is
+incongruous with its surroundings goes without saying; but then it is
+not more incongruous than anything else. I had been long enough in
+America to see that for the man who could build on American soil a house
+which would have some relation to its site--as they can do in Mexico,
+and as we do to a lesser degree in Canada--fame and fortune would be in
+store.
+
+The entrance hall was baronial and richly Italianate. One's first
+impressions were of gilding and red damask. When one's eye lighted on a
+chest or settle, one could smell the stale incense in a Sienese or Pisan
+sacristy. At the foot of the great stairway ebony slaves held gilded
+torches in which were electric lights.
+
+Both the greyhounds came sniffing to meet Chips, and J. Howard, who had
+seen our approach across the lawn as we came from the Cliff Walk,
+emerged from the library to welcome his grandchild. He wore a suit of
+light-gray check, and was as imposingly handsome as usual. Gladys ran to
+greet him with a childish cry. On seizing her he tossed her into the air
+and kissed her.
+
+I stood in the middle of the hall, waiting. On previous occasions I had
+done the same thing; but then I had not been, as one might say,
+"introduced." I wondered if he would acknowledge the introduction now or
+give me a glance. But he didn't. Setting Gladys down, he took her by the
+hand and returned to the library.
+
+There was nothing new in this. It had happened to me before. Left like
+an empty motor-car till there was need for me again, I had sometimes
+seated myself in one of the huge ecclesiastical hall chairs, and
+sometimes, if the door chanced to be open, had wandered out to the
+veranda. As it was open this afternoon, I strolled toward the glimpse of
+green lawn, and the sparkle of blue sea which gleamed at the end of the
+hall.
+
+It was a possibility I had foreseen. Mrs. Brokenshire might be there. I
+might get into further touch with the mystery of her heart.
+
+Mrs. Brokenshire was not on the veranda, but Mrs. Billing was. She was
+seated in a low easy-chair, reading a French novel, and had been smoking
+cigarettes. An inlaid Oriental taboret, on which were a gold
+cigarette-case and ash-tray, stood beside her on the red-tiled floor.
+
+I had forgotten all about her, as seemingly she had forgotten about me.
+Her surprise in seeing me appear was not greater than mine at finding
+her. Instinctively she took up her lorgnette, which was lying in her
+lap, but put it down without using it.
+
+"So it's you," was her greeting.
+
+"I beg your pardon, madam," I stammered, respectfully. "I didn't know
+there was anybody here."
+
+I was about to withdraw when she said, commandingly:
+
+"Wait." I waited, while she went on: "You're a little spitfire. Did you
+know it?"
+
+The voice was harsh, with the Quaker drawl I have noticed in the older
+generation of Philadelphians; but the tone wasn't hostile. On the
+contrary, there was something in it that invited me to play up. I played
+up, demurely, however, saying, with a more emphatic respectfulness:
+
+"No, madam; I didn't."
+
+"Well, you can know it now. Who are you?" She made the quaint little
+gesture with which I have seen English princesses summon those they
+wished to talk to. "Come over here where I can get a look at you."
+
+I moved nearer, but she didn't ask me to sit down. In answer to her
+question I said, simply, "I'm a Canadian."
+
+"Oh, a Canadian! That's neither fish, flesh, nor fowl. It's nothing."
+
+"No, madam, nothing but a point of view."
+
+"What do you mean by that?"
+
+I repeated something of my father's:
+
+"The point of view of the Englishman who understands America or of the
+American who understands England, as one chooses to put it. The Canadian
+is the only person who does both."
+
+"Oh, indeed? I'm not a Canadian--and yet I flatter myself I know my
+England pretty well."
+
+I made so bold as to smile dimly.
+
+"Knowing and understanding are different things, madam, aren't they? The
+Canadian understands America because he is an American; he understands
+England because he is an Englishman. It's only of him that that can be
+said. You're quite right when you label him a point of view rather than
+a citizen or a subject."
+
+"I didn't label him anything of the kind. I don't know anything about
+him, and I don't care. What are you besides being a Canadian?"
+
+"Nothing, madam," I said, humbly.
+
+"Nothing? What do you mean?"
+
+"I mean that there's nothing about me, that I have or am, that I don't
+owe to my country."
+
+"Oh, stuff! That's the way we used to talk in the United States forty
+years ago."
+
+"That's the way we talk in Canada still, madam--and feel."
+
+"Oh, well, you'll get over it as we did--when you're more of a people."
+
+"Most of us would prefer to be less of a people, and not get over it."
+
+She put up her lorgnette.
+
+"Who was your father? What sort of people do you come from?"
+
+I tried to bring out my small store of personal facts, but she paid them
+no attention. When I said that my father had been a judge of the
+Supreme Court of Nova Scotia I might have been calling him a voivode of
+Montenegro or the president of a zemstvo. It was too remote from herself
+for her mind to take in. I could see her, however, examining my
+features, my hands, my dress, with the shrewd, sharp eyes of a
+connoisseur in feminine appearance.
+
+She broke into the midst of my recital with the words:
+
+"You can't be in love with Hugh Brokenshire."
+
+Fearing attack from an unexpected quarter, I clasped my hands with some
+emotion.
+
+"Oh, but, madam, why not?"
+
+The reply nearly knocked me down.
+
+"Because you're too sensible a girl. He's as stupid as an owl."
+
+"He's very good and kind," was all I could find to say.
+
+"Yes; but what's that? A girl like you needs more than a man who's only
+good and kind. Heavens above, you'll want some spice in your life!"
+
+I maintained my meek air as I said:
+
+"I could do without the spice if I could be sure of bread and butter."
+
+"Oh, if you're marrying for a home let me tell you you won't get it.
+Hugh'll never be able to offer you one, and his father wouldn't let him
+if he was."
+
+I decided to be bold.
+
+"But you heard what I said the other day, madam. I expect his father to
+come round."
+
+She uttered the queer cackle that was like a hen when it crows.
+
+"Oh, you do, do you? You don't know Howard Brokenshire. You could break
+him more easily than you could bend him--and you can't break him. Good
+Lord, girl, I've tried!"
+
+"But I haven't," I returned, quietly. "Now I'm going to."
+
+"How? What with? You can't try if you've nothing to try on."
+
+"I have."
+
+"For Heaven's sake--what?"
+
+I was going to say, "Right"; but I knew it would sound sententious. I
+had been sententious enough in talking about my country. Now I only
+smiled.
+
+"You must let me keep that as a secret," I answered, mildly.
+
+She gave herself what I can only call a hitch in her chair.
+
+"Then may I be there to see."
+
+"I hope you may be, madam."
+
+"Oh, I'll come," she cackled. "Don't worry about that. Just let me know.
+You'll have to fight like the devil. I suppose you know that."
+
+I replied that I did.
+
+"And when it's all over you'll have got nothing for your pains."
+
+"I shall have had the fight."
+
+She looked hard at me before speaking.
+
+"Good girl!" The tone was that of a spectator who calls out, "Good hit!"
+or, "Good shot!" at a game. "If that's all you want--"
+
+"No; I want Hugh."
+
+"Then I hope you won't get him. He's as big a dolt as his father, and
+that's saying a great deal." Terrified, I glanced over my shoulder at
+the house, but she went on imperturbably: "Oh, I know he's in there; but
+what do I care? I'm not saying anything behind his back that I haven't
+said to his face. He doesn't bear me any malice, either, I'll say that
+for him."
+
+"Nobody could--" I began, deferentially.
+
+"Nobody had better. But that's neither here nor there. All I'm telling
+you is to have nothing to do with Hugh Brokenshire. Never mind the
+money; what you need is a husband with brains. Don't I know? Haven't I
+been through it? My husband was kind and good, just like Hugh
+Brokenshire--and, O Lord! The sins of the father are visited on the
+children, too. Look at my daughter--pretty as a picture and not the
+brains of a white mouse." She nodded at me fiercely, "You're my kind. I
+can see that. Mind what I say--and be off."
+
+She turned abruptly to her book, hitching her chair a little away from
+me. Accepting my dismissal, I said in the third person, as though I was
+speaking to a royalty:
+
+"Madam flatters me too much; but I'm glad I intruded, for the minute,
+just to hear her say that."
+
+I had made my courtesy and reached the door leading inward when she
+called after me:
+
+"You're a puss. Do you know it?"
+
+Not feeling it necessary to respond in words, I merely smiled over my
+shoulder and entered the house.
+
+In one of the big chairs I waited a half-hour before J. Howard came out
+of the library with his grandchild. He had given her a doll which she
+hugged in her left arm, while her right hand was in his. The farewell
+scene was pretty, and took place in the middle of the hall.
+
+"Now run away," he said, genially, after much kissing and petting, "and
+give my love to mamma."
+
+He might have been shooing the sweet thing off into the air. There was
+no reference whatever to any one to take care of her. His eyes rested on
+me, but only as they rested on the wall behind me. I must say it was
+well done--if one has to do that sort of thing at all. Feeling myself,
+as his regard swept me, no more than a part of the carved
+ecclesiastical chair to which I stood clinging, I wondered how I was
+ever to bring this man to seeing me.
+
+I debated the question inwardly while I chatted with Gladys on the way
+homeward. I was obliged, in fact, to brace myself, to reason it out
+again that right was self-propagating and wrong necessarily sterile.
+Right I figured as a way which seemed to finish in a blind alley or
+cul-de-sac, but which, as one neared what seemed to be its end, led off
+in a new direction. Nearing the end of that there would be still a new
+lead, and so one would go on.
+
+And, sure enough, the new lead came within the next half-hour, though I
+didn't recognize it for what it was till afterward.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER X
+
+
+As we passed the Jack Brokenshire cottage, Larry Strangways and Broke,
+with Noble, the collie, bounding beside them, came racing down the lawn
+to overtake us. It was natural then that for the rest of the way Chips
+and Noble should form one company, Broke and his sister another, while
+we two elders strolled along behind them.
+
+It was the hour of the day for strolling. The mellow afternoon light was
+of the kind that brings something new into life, something we should be
+glad to keep if we knew how to catch it. It was not merely that grass
+and leaf and sea had a shimmer of gold on them. There was a sweet
+enchantment in the atmosphere, a poignant wizardry, a suggestion of
+emotions both higher and lower than those of our poor mortal scale. They
+made one reluctant to hurry one's footsteps, and slow in the return to
+that sheerly human shelter we call home. All along the path, down among
+the rocks, out in the water, up on the lawns, there were people, gentle
+and simple alike, who lingered and idled and paused to steep themselves
+in this magic.
+
+I have to admit that we followed their example. Anything served as an
+excuse for it, the dogs and the children doing the same from a similar
+instinct. I got the impression, too, that my companion was less in the
+throes of the discretion we had imposed upon ourselves, for the reason
+that his term as a mere educational lackey was drawing to a close. It
+had, in fact, only two more days to run. Then August would come and he
+would desert us.
+
+As it might be my last opportunity to surprise him into looking at me in
+the way Mrs. Rossiter had observed, I kept my eye on him pretty closely.
+I cannot say that I detected any change that flattered me. Tall and
+straight and splendidly poised, he was as smilingly impenetrable as
+ever. Like Howard Brokenshire, he betrayed no wound, even if I had
+inflicted one. It was a little exasperating. I was more than piqued.
+
+I told him I hadn't heard of his return from New York and asked how he
+had fared. His reply was enthusiastic. He had seen Stacy Grainger and
+was eager to be his henchman.
+
+"He's got that about him," he declared, "that would make anybody glad to
+work for him."
+
+He described his personal appearance, brawny and spare with the
+attributes of race. It was an odd comment on the laws of heredity that
+his grandfather was said to have begun life as a peddler, and yet there
+he was a _grand seigneur_ to the finger-tips. I said that Howard
+Brokenshire was also a _grand seigneur_, to which he replied that Howard
+Brokenshire was a monument. American conditions had raised him, and on
+those conditions he stood as a statue on its pedestal. His position was
+so secure that all he had to do was stand. It was for this reason that
+he could be so dictatorial. He was safely fastened to his base; nothing
+short of seismic convulsion of the whole economic world was likely to
+knock him off. In the course of that conversation I learned more of the
+origin of the Brokenshire fortunes than I had ever before heard.
+
+It was the great-grandfather of J. Howard who apparently had laid the
+foundation-stone on which later generations built so well. That
+patriarch, so I understood, had been a farmer in the Connecticut Valley.
+His method of finance was no more esoteric than that of lending out
+small sums of money at a high rate of interest. Occasionally he took
+mortgages on his neighbors' farms, with the result that he became in
+time something of a landed proprietor. When the suburbs of a city had
+spread over one of the possessions thus acquired, the foundation-stone
+to which I have referred might have been considered well and truly laid.
+
+About the year 1830, his son migrated to New York. The firm of Meek &
+Brokenshire, of which the fame was to go through two continents, was
+founded when Van Buren was in the presidential seat and Victoria just
+coming to the throne. It seems there was a Meek in those days, though at
+the time of which I am writing nothing remained of him but a syllable.
+
+It was after the Civil War, however, when the grandson of the
+Connecticut Valley veteran was in power, that the house of Meek &
+Brokenshire forged to the front rank among financial agencies. It formed
+European affiliations. It became the financial representative of a great
+European power. John H. Brokenshire, whose name was distinguished from
+that of his more famous son only by a distribution of initials, had a
+house at Hyde Park Corner as well as one in New York. He was the first
+American banker to become something of an international magnate. The
+development of his country made him so. With the vexed questions of
+slavery and secession settled, with the phenomenal expansion of the
+West, with the freer uses of steam and electricity, with the tightening
+of bonds between the two hemispheres, that pedestal was being raised on
+which J. Howard was to pose with such decorative effectiveness.
+
+His posing began on his father's death in the year 1898. Up to that time
+he had represented the house in England, the post being occupied now by
+his younger brother James. Polished manners, a splendid appearance, and
+an authoritative air imported to New York a touch of the Court of St.
+James's. Mrs. Billing had called him a dolt. Perhaps he was one. If so
+he was a dolt raised up and sustained by all that was powerful in the
+United States. It was with these vast influences rather than with the
+man himself that, as Larry Strangways talked, I began to see I was in
+conflict.
+
+In Stacy Grainger, I gathered, the contemporaneous development of the
+country had produced something different, just as the same piece of
+ground will grow an oak or a rose-bush, according to the seed. People
+with a taste for social antithesis called him the grandson of a peddler.
+Mr. Strangways considered this description below the level of the
+ancestral Grainger's occupation. In the days of scattered farms and
+difficult communications throughout Illinois, Wisconsin, and Minnesota
+he might better have been termed an itinerant merchant. He was the
+traveling salesman who delivered the goods. His journeys being made by
+river boats and ox-teams, he began to see the necessity of steam. He was
+of the group who projected the system of railways, some of which failed
+and some of which succeeded, through the regions west of Lake Superior.
+Later he forsook the highways for a more feverish life in the incipient
+Chicago. His wandering years having given him an idea of the value of
+this focal point, he put his savings into land. The phoenix rise of the
+city after the great fire made him a man of some wealth. Out of the
+financial crash of 1873 he became richer. His son grew richer still on
+the panic of 1893, when he, too, descended on New York. It was he who
+became a power on the Stock Exchange and bought the big house with which
+parts of my narrative will have to do.
+
+All I want to say now is that as I strolled with Larry Strangways along
+that sunny walk, and as he ran on about Brokenshires and Graingers, I
+got my first bit of insight into the immense American romance which the
+nineteenth century unfolded. I saw it was romance, gigantic, race-wide.
+For the first time in my life I realized that there were other tales to
+make men proud besides the story of the British Empire.
+
+I could see that Larry Strangways was proud--proud and anxious. I had
+never seen this side of him before. Pride was in the way in which he
+held his fine young head; there was anxiety in his tone, and now and
+then in the flash of his eye, in spite of his efforts not to be too
+serious.
+
+It was about the country that he talked--its growth, its vastness. Even
+as recently as when he was a boy it was still a manageable thing, with a
+population reckoned at no more than seventy or eighty millions. It had
+been homogeneous in spirit if not in blood, and those who had come from
+other lands, and been welcomed and adopted, accepted their new situation
+with some gratitude. Patriotism was still a word with a meaning, and if
+it now and then became spread-eagleism it was only as the waves when
+thrown too far inland become froth. The wave was the thing and it hadn't
+ebbed.
+
+"And do you think it has ebbed now?" I asked.
+
+He didn't answer this question directly.
+
+"We're becoming colossal. We shall soon count our people by the hundred
+million and more. Of these relatively few will have got our ideals.
+Some will reject them. There are mutterings already of other standards
+to which we must be taught to conform. Some of our own best people of
+pure Anglo-Saxon descent are losing heart and renouncing and denouncing
+the democratic tradition, though they've nothing to put in its place.
+And we're growing so huge--with a hugeness that threatens to make us
+lethargic."
+
+I tried to be encouraging.
+
+"You seem to me anything but that."
+
+"National lethargy can easily exist side by side with individual energy.
+Take China, for instance. There are few peoples in the world more
+individually diligent than the Chinese; and yet when it comes to
+national stirring it's a country as difficult to move as an unwieldy
+overfed giant. It's flabby and nerveless and inert. It's spread half
+over Asia, and it has the largest and most industrious population in the
+world; and yet it's a congeries of inner weaknesses, and a prey to any
+one who chooses to attack it."
+
+"And you think this country is on the way to being the China of the
+west?"
+
+"I don't say on the way. There's danger of it. In proportion as we too
+become unwieldy and overfed, the circulation of that national impulse
+which is like blood grows slower. The elephant is a heavily moving beast
+in comparison with the lion."
+
+"But it's the more intelligent," I argued, still with a disposition to
+be encouraging.
+
+"Intelligence won't save it when the lion leaps on its back."
+
+"Then what will?"
+
+"That's what we want to find out."
+
+"And how are you going to do it?"
+
+"By men. We've come to a time when the country is going to need stronger
+men than it ever had, and more of them."
+
+I suppose it is because I am a woman that I have to bring all questions
+to the personal.
+
+"And is your Stacy Grainger going to be one?"
+
+He walked on a few paces without replying, his head in the air.
+
+"No," he said, at last, "I don't think so. He's got a weakness."
+
+"What kind of weakness?"
+
+"I'm not going to tell you," he laughed. "It's enough to say that it's
+one which I think will put him out of commission for the job." He gave
+me some inkling, however, of what he meant when he added: "The country's
+coming to a place where it will need disinterested men, and
+whole-hearted men, and clean-hearted men, if it's going to pull through.
+It's extraordinary how deficient we've been in leaders who've had any of
+these characteristics, to say nothing of all three."
+
+"Is the United States singular in that?"
+
+He spoke in a half-jesting tone probably to hide the fact that he was so
+much in earnest.
+
+"No; perhaps not. But it's got to have them if it's going to be saved.
+Moreover," he went on, "it must find them among the young men. The older
+men are all steeped and branded and tarred and feathered with the
+materialism of the nineteenth century. They're perfectly sodden. They
+see no patriotism except in loyalty to a political machine; and no
+loyalty to a political machine except for what they can get out of it.
+From our Presidents down most of them will sacrifice any law of right
+to the good of a party. They don't realize that nine times out of ten
+the good of a party is the evil of the common weal; and our older men
+will never learn the fact. If we can't wake the younger men, we're done
+for."
+
+"And are you going to wake them?"
+
+"I'm going to be awake myself. That's all I can be responsible for. If I
+can find another fellow who's awake I'll follow him."
+
+"Why not lead him? I should think you could."
+
+He turned around on me. I shall never forget the gleam in his eye.
+
+"No one is ever going to get away with this thing who thinks of
+leadership. There are times in the history of countries when men are
+called on to give up everything and be true to an ideal. I believe that
+time is approaching. It may come into Europe in one way and to America
+in another; but it's coming to us all. There'll be a call for--for--" he
+hesitated at the word, uttering it only with an apologetic laugh--"for
+consecration."
+
+I was curious.
+
+"And what do you mean by that--by consecration?"
+
+He reflected before answering.
+
+"I suppose I mean knowing what this country stands for, and being true
+to it oneself through thick and thin. There'll be thin and there'll be
+thick--plenty of them both--but it will be a question of the value of
+the individual. If there had been ten righteous men in Sodom and
+Gomorrah, they wouldn't have been destroyed. I take that as a kind of
+figure. A handful of disinterested, whole-hearted, clean-hearted, and
+perhaps I ought to add stout-hearted Americans, who know what they
+believe and live by it, will hold the fort against all efforts, within
+and without, to pull it down." He paused in his walk, obliging me to do
+the same. "I've been thinking a good deal," he smiled, "during the past
+few weeks of your law of Right--with a capital. I laughed at it when you
+first spoke of it--"
+
+"Oh, hardly that," I interposed.
+
+"But I've come to believe that it will work."
+
+"I'm so glad."
+
+"In fact, it's the only thing that will work."
+
+"Exactly," I exclaimed, enthusiastically.
+
+"We must stand by it, we younger men, just as the younger men of the
+late fifties stood by the principles represented by Lincoln. I believe
+in my heart that the need is going to be greater for us than it was for
+them, and if we don't respond to it, then may the Lord have mercy on our
+souls."
+
+I give this scrap of conversation because it introduced a new note into
+my knowledge of Americans. I had not supposed that any Americans felt
+like that. In the Rossiter circle I never saw anything but an immense
+self-satisfaction. Money and what money could do was, I am sure, the
+only topic of their thought. Their ideas of position and privilege were
+all spuriously European. Nothing was indigenous. Except for their sense
+of money, their aims were as foreign to the soil as their pictures,
+their tapestries, their furniture, and their clothes. Even stranger I
+found the imitation of Europe in tastes which Europe was daily giving
+up. But in Larry Strangways, it seemed to me, I found something native,
+something that really lived and cared. It caused me to look at him with
+a new interest.
+
+His jesting tone allowed me to take my cue in the same vein.
+
+"I'm tremendously flattered, Mr. Strangways, that you should have found
+anything in my ideas that could be turned to good account."
+
+He laughed shortly and rather hardly.
+
+"Oh, if it was only that!"
+
+It was another of the things I wished he hadn't said, but with the words
+he started on again, walking so fast for a few paces that I made no
+effort to keep up with him. When he waited till I rejoined him we fell
+again to talking of Stacy Grainger. At the first opportunity I asked the
+question that was chiefly on my mind.
+
+"Wasn't there something at one time between him and Mrs. Brokenshire?"
+
+He marched on with head erect.
+
+"I believe so," he admitted, reluctantly, but not till some seconds had
+passed.
+
+"There was a big fight, wasn't there," I persisted, "between him and Mr.
+Brokenshire--over Editha Billing--on the Stock Exchange--or something
+like that?"
+
+Again he allowed some seconds to go by.
+
+"So I've heard."
+
+I fished out of my memory such tag ends of gossip as had reached me, I
+could hardly tell from where.
+
+"Didn't Mr. Brokenshire attack his interests--railways and steel and
+things--and nearly ruin him?"
+
+"I believe there was some such talk."
+
+I admired the way in which he refused to lend himself to the spread of
+the legend; but I insisted on going on, because the idea of this
+conflict of modern giants, with a beautiful maiden as the prize,
+appealed to my imagination.
+
+"And didn't old Mrs. Billing shift round all of a sudden from the man
+who seemed to be going under to--?"
+
+He cut the subject short by giving it another twist.
+
+"Grainger's been unlucky. His whole family have been unlucky. It's an
+instance of tragedy haunting a race such as one reads of in mythology
+and now and then in modern history--the house of Atreus, for example,
+and the Stuarts, and the Hapsburgs, and so on."
+
+I questioned him as to this, only to learn of a series of accidents,
+suicides, and sudden deaths, leaving Stacy as the last of his line,
+lonely and picturesque.
+
+At the foot of the steps leading up to the Rossiter lawn Larry
+Strangways paused again. The children and dogs having preceded us and
+being safe on their own grounds, we could consider them off our minds.
+
+"What do you know about old books?" he asked, suddenly.
+
+The question took me so much by surprise that I could only say:
+
+"What makes you think I know anything?"
+
+"Didn't your father have a library full of them? And didn't you
+catalogue them and sell them in London?"
+
+I admitted this, but added that even that undertaking had left me very
+ignorant of the subject.
+
+"Yes; but it's a beginning. If you know the Greek or Russian alphabet
+it's a very good point from which to go on and learn the language."
+
+"But why should I learn that language?"
+
+"Because I know a man who's going to have a vacancy soon for a
+librarian. It's a private library, rather a famous one in New York, and
+the young lady at present in command is leaving to be married."
+
+I smiled pleasantly.
+
+"Yes; but what has that got to do with me?"
+
+"Didn't I tell you I was going to look you up another job?"
+
+"Oh! And so you've looked me up this!"
+
+"No, I didn't. It looked me up. The owner of the library mentioned the
+fact as a great bore. It was his father who made the collection in the
+days of the first great American splurge. Stacy Grainger has added a rug
+or a Chinese jar from time to time, but he doesn't give a hang for the
+lot."
+
+"Oh, so it's his."
+
+"Yes; it's his. He says he feels inclined to shut the place up; but I
+told him it was a pity to do that since I knew the very young lady for
+the post."
+
+I dropped the subject there, because of a new inspiration.
+
+"If Mr. Grainger has places at his command, couldn't he do something for
+poor Hugh?"
+
+"Why poor Hugh? I thought he was--"
+
+I gave him a brief account of the fiasco in Boston, venturing to betray
+Hugh's confidence for the sake of some possible advantage. Mr.
+Strangways only shrugged his shoulders.
+
+"Of course," he said. "What could you expect?" I was sure he was looking
+down on me with the expression Mrs. Rossiter had detected, though I
+didn't dare to lift an eye to catch him in the act. "You really mean to
+marry him?"
+
+"Mean to marry him is not the term," I answered, with the decision which
+I felt the situation called for. "I mean to marry him only--on
+conditions."
+
+"Oh, on conditions! What kind of conditions?"
+
+I named them to him as I had named them to others. First that Hugh
+should become independent.
+
+He repeated his short, hard laugh.
+
+"I don't believe you had better bank on that."
+
+"Perhaps not," I admitted. "But I've another string to my bow. His
+family may come and ask me."
+
+He almost shouted.
+
+"Never!"
+
+It was the tone they all took, and which especially enraged me. I kept
+my voice steady, however, as I said, "That remains to be seen."
+
+"It doesn't remain to be seen, because I can tell you now that they
+won't."
+
+"And I can tell you now that they will," I said, with an assurance that,
+on the surface at least, was quite as strong as his own.
+
+He laughed again, more shortly, more hardly.
+
+"Oh, well!"
+
+The laugh ended in a kind of sigh. I noted the sigh as I noted the
+laugh, and their relation to each other. Both reached me, touching
+something within me that had never yet been stirred. Physically it was
+like the prick of the spur to a spirited animal, it sent me bounding up
+the steps. I was off as from a danger; and though I would have given
+much to see the expression with which he stood gazing after me, I would
+not permit myself so much as to glance back.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XI
+
+
+The steps by which I came to be Stacy Grainger's librarian could easily
+be traced, though to do so with much detail would be tedious.
+
+After Hugh's departure for New York my position with Mrs. Rossiter soon
+became untenable. The reports that reached Newport of the young man's
+doings in the city were not merely galling to the family pride, but
+maddening to his father's sense of pre-eminence. Hugh was actually going
+from door to door, as you might say, in Wall Street and Broad Street,
+only to be turned away.
+
+"He's making the most awful fool of himself," Mrs. Rossiter informed me
+one morning, "and papa's growing furious. Jim writes that every one is
+laughing at him, and, of course, they know it's all about some girl."
+
+I held my tongue at this. That they should be laughing at poor Hugh was
+a new example of the world's falsity. His letters to me were only a
+record of half-promises and fair speeches, but he found every one of
+them encouraging. Nowhere had he met with the brutal treatment he had
+received at the hands of Cousin Andrew Brew. The minute his card went in
+to never so great a banker or broker, he was received with a welcome. If
+no one had just the right thing to offer him, no one had turned him
+down. It was explained to him that it was largely a matter of the off
+season--for his purpose August was the worst month in the year--and of
+the lack of an opening which it would be worth the while of a man of his
+quality to fill. Later, perhaps! The two words, courteously spoken, gave
+the gist of all his interviews. He had every reason to feel satisfied.
+
+In the mean while he was comfortable at his club--his cash in hand would
+hold out to Christmas and beyond--and in the matter of energy, he wrote,
+not a mushroom was springing in his tracks. He was on the job early and
+late, day in and day out. The off season which was obviously a
+disadvantage in some respects had its merits in others, since it would
+be known, when things began to look up again, that he was available for
+any big house that could get him. That there would be competition in
+this respect every one had given him to understand. All this he told me
+in letters as full of love as they were of business, written in a great,
+sprawling, unformed, boyish hand, and with an occasional bit of phonetic
+spelling which made his protestations the more touching.
+
+But Jim Rossiter's sources of information were of another kind.
+
+"Get your father to do something to stop him," he wrote to his wife.
+"He's making the whole house of Meek & Brokenshire a laughing-stock."
+
+There came, in fact, a Saturday when Mr. Rossiter actually appeared for
+the week-end.
+
+"He wouldn't be doing that," Mrs. Rossiter almost sobbed to me, on
+receipt of the telegram announcing his approach, "unless things were
+pretty bad."
+
+Though I dreaded his coming, I was speedily reassured. Whatever the
+object of Mr. Rossiter's visit, I, in my own person, had nothing to do
+with it. On the afternoon of his arrival he came out to where I was
+knocking the croquet balls about with Gladys on the lawn, and was as
+polite as he had been through the winter in New York. He was always
+polite even to the maids, to whom he scrupulously said good-morning. His
+wistful desire to be liked by every one was inspired by the same sort of
+impulse as the jovial _bonhomie_ of Cousin Andrew Brew. He was a little,
+weazened man, with face and legs like a jockey, which I think he would
+gladly have been. Racin' and ridin', as he called them, were the
+amusements in which he found most pleasure, while his health was his
+chief preoccupation. He took pills before and after all his meals and a
+variety of medicinal waters. During the winter under his roof my own
+conversation with him had been entirely on the score of his complaints.
+
+In just the same way he sauntered up now. He talked of his lack of
+appetite and the beastly cooking at clubs. Expecting him to broach the
+subject of Hugh, I got myself ready; but he did nothing of the kind. He
+was merely amiable and, as far as I could judge, indifferent. Within ten
+minutes he had sauntered away again, leading Gladys by the hand.
+
+I saw then that in common with the other Brokenshires he considered that
+I didn't count. Hugh could be dealt with independently of me. So long as
+I was useful to his wife, there was no reason why I should be disturbed.
+I was too light a thing to be weighed in their balances.
+
+Next day there was a grand family council and on Monday Jack Brokenshire
+accompanied his brother-in-law to New York. Hugh wrote me of their
+threats and flatteries, their beseechings and cajoleries. He was to come
+to his senses; he was to be decent to his father; he was to quit being a
+fool. I gathered that for forty-eight hours they had put him through
+most of the tortures known to fraternal inquisition; but he wrote me he
+would bear it all and more, for the sake of winning me.
+
+Nor would he allow them to have everything their own way. That he wrote
+me, too. When it came to the question of marriage he bade them look at
+home. Each of them was an instance of what J. Howard could do in the
+matrimonial line, and what a mess he and they had made of it! He asked
+Jack in so many words how much he would have been in love with Pauline
+Gray if she hadn't had a big fortune, and, now that he had got her money
+and her, how true he was to his compact. Who were Trixie Delorme and
+Baby Bevan, he demanded, with a knowledge of Jack's affairs which
+compelled the elder brother to tell him to mind his own business.
+
+Hugh laughed scornfully at that.
+
+"I can mind my own business, Jack, and still keep an eye on yours,
+seeing that you and Pauline are the talk of the town. If she doesn't
+divorce you within the next five years, it will be because you've
+already divorced her. Even that won't be as big a scandal as your going
+on living together."
+
+Mr. Rossiter intervened on this and did his best to calm the younger
+brother down:
+
+"Ah, cut that out now, Hugh!"
+
+But Hugh rounded on him, shaking off the hand that had been laid on his
+arm.
+
+"You're a nice one, Jim, to come with your mealy-mouthed talk to me.
+Look at Ethel! If I'd married a woman as you married her--or if I'd been
+married as she married you--just because your father was a partner in
+Meek & Brokenshire and it was well to keep the money in the family--if
+I'd done that I'd shut up. I'd consider myself too low-down a cur to be
+kicked. What kind of a wife is Ethel to you? What kind of a husband are
+you to her? What kind of a father do you make to the children who hardly
+know you by sight? And now, just because I'm trying to be a man, and
+decent, and true to the girl I love, you come sneaking round to tell me
+she's not good enough. What do I care whether she's good enough or not,
+so long as she isn't like Ethel and Pauline? You can go back and tell
+them so."
+
+Jack Brokenshire came back, but I think he kept this confidence to
+himself. What he told, however, was enough to produce a good deal of
+gloom in the family. Though Mrs. Rossiter didn't cease to be nice to me
+in her non-committal way, I began to reason that there were limits even
+to indifference. I had made up my mind to go and was working out some
+practical way of going, when an incident hastened my departure.
+
+Doing an errand one day for Mrs. Rossiter in the shopping part of
+Bellevue Avenue, I saw old Mrs. Billing going by in an open motor
+landaulette. She signaled to me to stop, and, poking the chauffeur in
+the back through the open window, made him draw up at the curb.
+
+"I've got something for you," she said, without other form of greeting.
+She began to stir things round in her bag. "I thought you'd like it.
+I've been carrying it about with me for the last three or four
+days--ever since Jack Brokenshire got back from New York. Where the
+dickens is the thing? Ah, here!" She handed me out a crumpled card.
+"That's all, Antoine," she continued to the man. "Drive on."
+
+I was left with the card in my hand, finding it to be an advertisement
+for the Hotel Mary Chilton, a place of entertainment for women alone, in
+a central and reputable part of New York.
+
+By the time I got back to Mrs. Rossiter's I had solved what had at first
+been a puzzle, and, having reported on my errand, I gave my resignation
+verbally. I saw then--what old Mrs. Billing had also seen--that it was
+time. Mrs. Rossiter expressed no relief, but she made no attempt to
+dissuade me. That she was sorry she allowed me to see. She didn't speak
+of Hugh; but on the morning when I went she gave up her engagements to
+stay at home with me. As I said good-by she threw her arms round my neck
+and kissed me. I could feel on my cheek tears of hers as well as tears
+of my own, as I drew down my veil.
+
+Hugh met me at the station in New York, and we dined at a restaurant
+together. He came for me next morning, and we lunched and dined at
+restaurants again. When we did the same on the third day that sense of
+being in a false position which had been with me from the first, and
+which argument couldn't counteract, began to be disquieting. On the
+fourth day I tried to make excuses and remain at the hotel, but when he
+insisted I was obliged to let him take me out once more. The people at
+the Mary Chilton were kindly, but I was afraid they would regard me with
+suspicion. I was afraid of some other things, besides.
+
+For one thing I was afraid of Hugh. He began again to plead with me to
+marry him. Even he admitted that we couldn't continue to "go round
+together like that." We went to the most expensive restaurants, he
+argued, where there were plenty of people who would know him. When they
+saw him every day with a girl they didn't know, they would draw their
+own conclusions. As in a situation similar to theirs I would have drawn
+my own, I brought my bit of Bohemianism to a speedy end.
+
+There followed some days during which it seemed to me I was deprived of
+any outlook. I could hardly see what I was there for. I could hardly see
+what I was living for. Never till then had I realized how, in normal
+conditions, each day is linked to the day before as well as to the
+morrow. Here the link was gone. I left nothing undone when I went to
+bed; I had nothing to get up for in the morning. My reason for existing
+had suddenly been snuffed out.
+
+It was a time for the testing of my faith. I was near the end of my
+_cul-de-sac_, and yet I saw no further development ahead. If the
+continuous unfolding of right on which, to use Larry Strangways's
+expression, I had banked, were to come to a stop, I should be left not
+only without a duty, but without a law. Of the two possibilities it was
+the latter I dreaded most. One can live if one has a motive theory
+within one; without it-- And then, just as I was coming to the last
+stretches of what seemed a blind alley and no more, my confidence was
+justified. Larry Strangways called on me.
+
+I have not said that on coming to New York I had decided to let my
+acquaintance with him end. He made me uneasy. I was terrified by the
+thought that he might be in love with me. Why I was terrified I didn't
+know; I only knew I was. I did not tell him, therefore, when I left Mrs.
+Rossiter; and in the whirlpool of New York I considered that I was
+swallowed up. But here was his card, and he himself waiting in the
+drawing-room below.
+
+Naturally my first question was as to how he had found me out. This he
+laughed off, pretending to be annoyed with me for coming to the city
+without telling him. I could see, however, that he was in spirits much
+too high to allow of his being seriously annoyed with anything. Life
+promised well with him. He enjoyed his work, and for his employer he
+had that eager personal devotion which is always a herald of success.
+After having run away from him, as it were, I was now a little irritated
+at seeing that he hadn't missed me.
+
+But he did not take his leave without a bit of information that puzzled
+me beyond expression. He was going out of Mr. Grainger's office that
+morning, he said, with a bundle of letters which he was to answer, when
+his master observed, casually:
+
+"The young lady of whom you spoke to me as qualified to take Miss
+Davis's place is at the Hotel Mary Chilton. Go and see her and get her
+opinion as to accepting the job!"
+
+I was what the French call _atterree_--knocked flat.
+
+"But how on earth could he know?"
+
+Larry Strangways laughed.
+
+"Oh, don't ask me. He knows anything he wants to know. He's got the
+flair of a detective. I don't try to fathom him. But the point is that
+the position is there for you to take or to leave."
+
+I tried to bring my mind back from the fact that this important man, a
+total stranger to me, was in some way interested in my destiny.
+
+"What can I do but leave it, when I know no more about it than I do of
+sailing a ship?"
+
+"Oh yes, you do. You know what books are, and you know what rare books
+are. For the rest, all you'd have to do would be to consult the
+catalogue. I don't know what the duties are; but if Miss Davis is up to
+them I guess you would be, too. She's a sweet, pretty kitten of a
+thing--daughter of one of Stacy Grainger's old pals who came to
+grief--but I don't believe she knows much more about a book than the
+cover from the print. Anyhow, I've given you the message with neither
+more nor less than he said. Look here!" he exclaimed, suddenly. "Why
+shouldn't you put on your hat and walk down the street with me, so that
+I could show you where the library is? It's not ten minutes away. I've
+never been inside it, but every one knows what it looks like."
+
+Consulting my wrist-watch, I objected that it was but twenty minutes to
+the time when Hugh was due to come and take me to walk in Central Park,
+returning to the hotel to tea.
+
+"Oh, let him go to the deuce! We can be there and back in twenty
+minutes, and you can leave a message for him at the office."
+
+So we started. The Mary Chilton is in one of the cross-streets between
+Fifth and Sixth Avenues. I discovered that Stacy Grainger's house was on
+the corner of Fifth Avenue and a corresponding cross-street a little
+farther down-town. It is a big brownstone house, in the eighteen-seventy
+style, of the type which all round it has been turned into offices and
+shops. All its many windows were blinded in a yellowish holland staff,
+giving to the whole building an aspect sealed and dead.
+
+I shuddered.
+
+"I hope I shouldn't have to work there."
+
+"No. The house has been shut up for years." He named the hotel
+overlooking the Park at which Stacy Grainger actually lived. "Anybody
+else would have sold the place; but he has a lot of queer sentiment
+about him. Of the two or three devotions in his life one of the most
+intense is to his father's memory. I believe the old fellow committed
+suicide in that house, and the son hallows it as he would a grave."
+
+"Cheerful!"
+
+"Oh, cheerful isn't the word one would associate with him first--"
+
+"Or last, apparently."
+
+"No, or last; but he's got other qualities to which cheerfulness is as
+small change to gold. All I want you to see is that he keeps this
+property, which is worth half a million at the least, from motives which
+the immense majority wouldn't understand. It gives you a clue to the
+man."
+
+"But what I want," I said, with nervous flippancy, for I was afraid of
+meeting Hugh, "is a clue to the library."
+
+"There it is."
+
+"That?"
+
+He had pointed to a small, low, rectangular building I had seen a
+hundred times, without the curiosity to wonder what it was. It stood
+behind the house, in the center of a grass-plot, and was approached from
+the cross-street, through a small wrought-iron gate. Built of
+brownstone, without a window, and with no other ornament than a frieze
+in relief below the eave, it suggested a tomb. At the back was a kind of
+covered cloister connecting with the house.
+
+"If I had to sit in there all day," I commented, as we turned back
+toward the hotel, "I should feel as if I were buried alive. I know that
+strange things would happen to me!"
+
+"Oh no, they wouldn't. It's sure to be all right or a pretty little
+thing like Miss Davis couldn't have stood it for three years. It's
+lighted from the top, and there are a lot of fine things scattered
+about."
+
+He gave me a brief history of how the collection had been formed. The
+elder Grainger on coming to New York had bought up the contents of two
+or three great European sales _en bloc_. He knew little about the
+objects he had thus acquired, and cared less. His motive was simply that
+of the rich American to play the nobleman.
+
+He was still talking of this when Hugh passed us and turned round.
+Between the two men there was a stiff form of greeting. That is, it was
+stiff on Larry Strangways's side, while on Hugh's it was the nearest
+thing to no greeting at all. I could see he considered the tutor of his
+sister's son beneath him.
+
+"What the devil were you walking with that fellow for?" he asked, after
+Mr. Strangways had left us and while we were continuing our way up-town.
+He spoke, wonderingly rather than impatiently.
+
+"Because he had come from a gentleman who had offered me employment. I
+had just gone down with him to look at the outside of the house."
+
+I could hardly be surprised that Hugh should stop abruptly, forcing the
+stream of foot-passengers to divide into two currents about us.
+
+"The impertinent bounder! Offer employment--to you--my--my wife!"
+
+I walked on with dignity.
+
+"You mustn't call me that, Hugh. It's a word only to be used in its
+exact signification." He began to apologize, but I interrupted. "I'm not
+only not your wife, but as yet I haven't even promised to marry you. We
+must keep that fact unmistakably clear before us. It will prevent
+possible complications in the end."
+
+He spoke humbly:
+
+"What sort of complications?"
+
+"I don't know; but I can see they might arise. And as for the matter of
+employment, I must have it for a lot of reasons."
+
+"I don't see that. Give me two or three months, Alix!"
+
+"But it's precisely during those two or three months, Hugh, that I
+should be left high and dry. Unless I have something to do I have no
+motive for staying here in New York."
+
+"What about me?"
+
+"I can't stay just to see you. That's the difference between a woman and
+a man. The situation is awkward enough as it is; but if I were to go on
+living here for two or three months, merely for the sake of having a few
+hours every day with you--"
+
+Before we reached the Park he saw the justice of my argument.
+Remembering what Larry Strangways had once said as to Hugh's belief that
+he was stooping to pick his diamond out of the mire, I reasoned that
+since he was marrying a working-girl it would best preserve the
+decencies if the working-girl were working. For this procedure Hugh
+himself was able to establish precedent, since we were in sight of the
+very hotel where Libby Jaynes had rubbed men's nails up to within an
+hour or two of her marriage to Tracy Allen. He pointed it out as if it
+was an historic monument, and in the same spirit I gazed at it.
+
+That matter settled, I attacked another as we advanced farther into the
+Park.
+
+"And Mr. Strangways is not a bounder, Hugh, darling. I wish you wouldn't
+call him that."
+
+His response was sufficiently good-natured, but it expressed that
+Brokenshire disdain for everything that didn't have money which
+specially enraged me.
+
+"Well, I won't," he conceded. "I don't care a hang what he is."
+
+"I do," I declared, with some tartness. "I care that he's a gentleman
+and that he's treated as one."
+
+"Oh, every one's a gentleman."
+
+"No, Hugh, every one isn't. I know men right here in New York who could
+buy and sell Mr. Strangways a thousand times, perhaps a million times
+over, and who wouldn't be worthy to valet him."
+
+His small wide-apart blue eyes were turned on me questioningly.
+
+"You don't know many men right here in New York. Who do you mean?"
+
+I saw that he had me there and, not wishing to be driven into a corner,
+I beat a shuffling retreat.
+
+"I don't mean any one in particular. I'm speaking in general." As we had
+reached an empty bench and the afternoon was hot, I suggested that we
+sit down.
+
+We had been silent a little while, when he asked the question I had been
+expecting.
+
+"Who was the person who offered you the--the--" I saw how he hated the
+word--"the employment?"
+
+I had already decided to betray no knowledge of matters which didn't
+concern me.
+
+"It's a Mr. Grainger," I said, as casually as I could.
+
+As he sat close to me I could feel him start.
+
+"Not Stacy Grainger?"
+
+I maintained my tone of indifference.
+
+"I think that is his name. Do you know him? He seems to be some one of
+importance."
+
+"Oh, he is."
+
+"Mr. Strangways has gone to him as secretary and, I suppose, knowing
+that I was out of a situation, he must have mentioned me."
+
+"For what?"
+
+"As I understand it, it's librarian. It seems that this Mr. Grainger has
+quite a collection--"
+
+"Oh yes, I know." As he remained silent for some time I waited for him
+to raise objections, but he only said at last: "In that case you
+wouldn't have much to do with him. He's never there."
+
+"No, I fancy not," I hastened to agree, and Hugh said no more.
+
+He said no more, but I could see that it was because he was wrestling
+with a subject of which he couldn't perceive the bearings. As far as I
+was concerned he plainly considered it wise not to tell me that which,
+as a stranger and a foreigner, I wouldn't be likely to know. He
+consequently dropped the topic, and when he talked again it was of
+trivial things.
+
+A half-hour later, as we were on our way homeward, he exclaimed,
+suddenly, and apropos of nothing at all:
+
+"Little Alix, if you were to love anybody else I'd--I'd shoot myself."
+
+His innocent, boyish, inexperienced face wore such a look of misery that
+I laughed. I laughed to conceal the fact that I was near to crying.
+
+"Oh no, you wouldn't, Hugh. Besides, you don't see any likelihood of my
+doing it."
+
+"I'm not so sure about that," he grumbled.
+
+"Well, I am, Hugh, dear." I laughed again. "I've no intention of loving
+any one else--till I've settled my account with your father."
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XII
+
+
+Nearly a week later, in the middle of a hot afternoon, I came back from
+some shopping to wait for Hugh at the hotel. Though it was a half-hour
+before I expected him, I was too tired to go up-stairs and so went
+directly to the reception-room. It was not only cool and restful there,
+but after the glare of the streets outside, it was so dim that I took
+the place to be empty. Having gone to a mirror for a moment to
+straighten my hat and smooth the wayward tendrils of my hair, so that I
+shouldn't look disheveled when Hugh arrived, I threw myself into an
+arm-chair.
+
+I remember that my attitude was anything but graceful, and that I
+sighed. I sighed more than once and somewhat loudly. I was depressed,
+and as usual when depressed I felt small and desolate. It would have
+been a relief to cry; but I couldn't cry when I was expecting Hugh. I
+could only toss about in my big chair and give utterance to my pent-up
+heart a little too explosively.
+
+It was five or six days since Larry Strangways's call, and no real
+development of my blind alley was in sight. He had not returned, nor had
+I heard from him. On the previous evening Hugh had said, "I thought
+nothing would come of that," in a tone which carried conviction. It
+wasn't that I was eager to be Stacy Grainger's librarian; it was only
+that I wanted something to happen, something that would justify my
+staying in New York. August had passed, and with the coming in of
+September I saw the stirring of a new life in the streets; but there was
+no new life for me.
+
+Nor, for the matter of that, did I see any new life for Hugh. He had
+entered now on that stage of waiting on the postman which a good many
+people have found sickening. Bankers and brokers having promised to
+write when they knew of anything to suit him, he was expecting a summons
+by every delivery of letters. On his dear face I began to read the
+evidence of hope deferred. He was cheery enough; he could find fifty
+explanations to account for the fact that he hadn't yet been called; but
+brave words couldn't counteract the look of disquietude that was
+creeping day by day into his kindly eyes. On the previous evening he had
+informed me, too, that he had left his club and installed himself in a
+small hotel, not far from my own neighborhood. When I asked him why he
+had done that he said it was "to get away from a lot of the fellows who
+were always chewing the rag," but I suspected the motive of economy. For
+the motive of economy I should have had nothing but respect, if it
+hadn't been so incongruous with everything I had known of him.
+
+It was probably because my eyes had grown accustomed to the gloom in the
+reception-room that I noticed, suddenly, two other eyes. They were in a
+distant corner and seemed to be looking at me with the detached and
+burning stare of motor-lamps at night. For a minute I could discern no
+personality, the eyes themselves were so lustrous.
+
+I was about to be frightened when a man arose and restlessly moved
+toward the chimneypiece, not because there was anything there he desired
+to see, but because he couldn't continue to sit still. He was a striking
+figure, tall, spare, large-boned and powerful. The face was of the type
+which for want of a better word I can only speak of as masculine. It was
+long and lean and strong; if it was handsome it was only because every
+feature and line was cut to the same large pattern as the frame.
+Sweeping mustaches, of the kind school-girls are commonly supposed to
+love, concealed a mouth which I could have wagered would be hard, while
+the luminosity of the gaze suggested a rather hungry set of human
+qualities and passions.
+
+We were now two restless persons instead of one, and I was about to
+leave the room when a page came in.
+
+"Sorry, sir," said the honest-faced little boy, with an amusingly
+uncouth accent I find it impossible to transcribe, "but number
+four-twenty-three ain't in, so I guess she must be out."
+
+Startled, I rose to my feet.
+
+"But I'm number four-twenty-three."
+
+The boy turned toward me nonchalantly.
+
+"Didn't know you was here! That gentleman wants you."
+
+With this introduction he dashed away, and I was once more conscious of
+the luminous eyes bent upon me. The tall figure, too, advanced a few
+paces in my direction.
+
+"I asked for Miss Adare." The voice was deep and grave and harsh and
+musical all at once.
+
+"That's my name."
+
+"Mine's Grainger."
+
+I gasped silently, like a dying fish, before I could stammer the
+words--
+
+"Won't you sit down?"
+
+As he seated himself near me and in a good light, I saw that his skin
+was tanned, as if he lived on the sea or in the open air. I learned
+later from Larry Strangways that he had just come from a summer's
+yachting. His gaze studied me--not as a man studies a woman, but as a
+workman inspects a tool.
+
+"You probably know my errand."
+
+"Mr. Strangways--"
+
+"Yes, I told him to sound you."
+
+"But I'm afraid I wouldn't do."
+
+"Why do you think so?"
+
+"Because I don't know anything about the work."
+
+"There's no work to know anything about. All you'd have to do would be
+to sit still. You'd never have more than two or three visitors in a
+day--and most days none at all."
+
+"But what should I do when visitors came?"
+
+"Show them what they asked to see. You'd find that in the catalogue.
+You'd soon get the hang of the place. It's small. There's not much in it
+when you come to sum it up. Miss Davis will show you the ropes before
+she leaves on the first of October. I'll give you the same salary I've
+been paying her."
+
+He named a sum the munificence of which almost took my breath away.
+
+"Oh, but I shouldn't be worth that."
+
+"It's the salary," he said, briefly, as he rose. "You can arrange with
+my secretary, Strangways, when you would like to begin. The sooner the
+better, as I understand that Miss Davis would like to get off."
+
+He was on his way to the door when, thinking of the tomb-like aspect of
+the place, I asked, desperately:
+
+"Should I be all alone?"
+
+He turned.
+
+"There's a man and his wife in the house. One of them would be always
+within call. The woman will bring you tea at half past four."
+
+I could hardly believe my ears. I had never heard of such solicitude.
+"But I shouldn't need tea!" I began to assure him.
+
+He paused for a moment, looking at me searchingly.
+
+"You'll have callers--"
+
+"Oh no, I sha'n't."
+
+"You'll have callers," he repeated, as if I hadn't spoken, "and there'll
+be tea every day at four-thirty."
+
+He was gone before I could protest further, or ask any more questions.
+
+Hugh's explanation, when I laid the matter before him, was that Mr.
+Grainger was trying to play into the hands of that fellow, Strangways.
+
+"But why?" I demanded.
+
+"He thinks there's something between him and you."
+
+"But there isn't."
+
+"I should hope not; but, evidently, Strangways has made him think--"
+
+"Oh no, he hasn't, Hugh. Mr. Strangways is not that kind of man. Mr.
+Grainger has some other reason for wanting me there, but I can't think
+what it is."
+
+"Then I shouldn't go till I knew," Hugh counseled, moodily.
+
+But I did. I went the next week. Larry Strangways made the arrangements,
+and, after a fortnight under Miss Davis's instructions, I found myself
+alone.
+
+It was not so trying as I feared, though it was monotonous. It was
+monotonous because there was so little to do. I was there each morning
+at half past nine. From one to two I had an hour for lunch. At six I
+came away. On Saturdays I had the afternoon. It was a little like being
+a prisoner, but a prisoner in a palace, a prisoner who is well paid.
+
+The place consisted of one big, handsome room, some sixty feet by
+thirty, resembling the libraries of great houses I had seen abroad. That
+in this case it was detached from the dwelling was, I suppose, a matter
+of architectural convenience. Book-shelves lined the walls right up to
+the cornice. The dull reds and browns and blues and greens of the
+bindings carried out the mellow effects of the Oriental rugs on the
+floor. Under the shelves there were cupboards, some of them empty,
+others stocked with portfolios of prints, European and Japanese. There
+were no pictures, but a few large pieces of old porcelain and faience,
+Persian, Spanish, and Chinese, stood on the mantelpiece and tables. For
+the rest, the furnishings consisted of a bust or two, a desk or two, and
+some decorative tables and chairs.
+
+My chief objection to the life was its seeming pointlessness. I was hard
+at work doing nothing. The number of visitors was negligible. Once
+during the autumn an old gentleman brought some engravings to compare
+with similar examples in Mr. Grainger's collection; once a lady student
+of Shakespeare came to examine his early editions; perhaps as often as
+twice a week some wandering tourist in New York would enter and stare
+vacantly, and go as he arrived. To while away the time I read and wrote
+and did knitting and fancy-work, and at half past four every day, as
+regularly as the hands of the clock came round, I solemnly had my tea.
+It was very good tea, with cake and bread and butter in the orthodox
+style, and was brought by Mrs. Daly, the motherly old Irish caretaker of
+the house, who stumped in and stumped out, giving me, while she stayed,
+a good deal of detail as to her "sky-attic" nerves and swollen
+"varikiss" veins.
+
+I am bound to admit that the tea ceremony oppressed me--not that I
+didn't enjoy it in its way but because its generosity seemed overdone.
+It was not in the necessities of the case; it was, above all, not
+American. On both the occasions when Mr. Grainger honored the library
+with a call I tried to screw up my courage to ask him to let me off this
+hospitality, but I couldn't reach the point. I was not so much afraid of
+him as I was overawed. He was perfectly civil; he never treated me as
+the dust beneath his feet, like Howard Brokenshire; but any one could
+see that he was immensely and perhaps tragically preoccupied.
+
+I was having tea all alone on a cold afternoon in November, when the
+sound of the opening of the outer door attracted my attention. At first
+one came into a vestibule from which there was no entrance, till on my
+side I touched the spring of a closed wrought-iron grille. I had gone
+forward to see who was there and, if necessary, give the further
+admission, when to my astonishment I saw Mrs. Brokenshire.
+
+She was in a walking-dress with furs. The color in her cheeks might have
+been due to the cold wind, but the light in her eyes was that of
+excitement.
+
+"I heard you were here," she whispered, as she fluttered in, "and I've
+come to see you."
+
+My sense of the imprudence of this step was such that I could hardly
+welcome her. That feeling of protection which I had once before on her
+behalf came back to me.
+
+"Who told you?" I asked, as soon as she was seated and I was pouring her
+out a cup of tea. For the first time since taking the position I was
+glad the ceremony had not been suppressed.
+
+She answered, while glancing into the shadows about her.
+
+"Mildred told me. Hugh wrote it to her. He does write to her, you know.
+She's the only one with whom he is still in communication. She seems to
+think the poor boy is in trouble. I came to--to see if there was
+anything I could do."
+
+I told her I was living at the Hotel Mary Chilton and that, if necessary
+at any time, she could see me there.
+
+She repeated the address, but I knew it took no hold on her memory.
+
+"Ah yes; the Hotel Mary Chilton. I think I've heard of it. But I haven't
+many minutes, and you must tell me all you can about dear Hugh."
+
+As my anxiety on Hugh's account was deepening, I was the more eager to
+do as I was bid. I said he had found no employment as yet, and that in
+my opinion employment would be hard to secure. If he was willing to work
+for a year or two for next to nothing, as he would consider the salary,
+he might eventually learn the financial trade; but to expect that his
+name would be a key to open the door of any bank at which he might
+present himself was preposterous. I hadn't been able to convince him of
+that, however, and he was still hoping. But he was hoping with a sad,
+worried face that almost broke my heart.
+
+"And how is he off for money?"
+
+I said I thought his bank-account was running low. He made no complaint
+of that to me, but I noticed that he rarely now went to any of his
+clubs, and that he took his meals at the more inexpensive places. In
+taxis, too, he was careful, and in tickets for the theater. These were
+the signs by which I judged.
+
+Her eyes had the sweet mistiness I remembered from our last meeting.
+
+"I can let him have money--as much as he needs."
+
+I considered this.
+
+"But it would be Mr. Brokenshire's money, wouldn't it?"
+
+"It would be money Mr. Brokenshire gives me."
+
+"In that case I don't think Hugh could accept it. You see, he's trying
+to make himself independent of his father, so as to do what his father
+doesn't like."
+
+"But he can't starve."
+
+"He must either starve, or earn a living, or go back to his father
+and--give up."
+
+"Does that mean that you won't marry him unless he has money of his
+own?"
+
+"It means what I've said more than once before--that I can't marry him
+if he has no money of his own, unless his family come and ask me to do
+it."
+
+There was a little furrow between her brows.
+
+"Oh, well, they won't do that. I would," she hastened to add,
+"because--" she smiled, like an angel--"because I believe in love; but
+they wouldn't."
+
+"I think Mrs. Rossiter would," I argued, "if she was left free."
+
+"She might; and, of course, there's Mildred. She'd do anything for Hugh,
+though she thinks . . . but neither Jack nor Pauline would give in; and
+as for Mr. Brokenshire--I believe it would break his heart."
+
+"Why should he feel toward me like that?" I demanded, bitterly. "How am
+I inferior to Pauline Gray, except that I have no money?"
+
+"Well, I suppose in a way that's it. It's what Mr. Brokenshire calls the
+solidarity of aristocracies. They have to hold together."
+
+"But aristocracy and money aren't one."
+
+As she rose she smiled again, distantly and dreamily. "If you were an
+American, dear Miss Adare, you'd know."
+
+Before she said good-by she looked deliberately about the room. It was
+not the hasty inspection I should have expected; it was tranquil, and I
+could even say that it was thorough. She made no mention of Mr.
+Grainger, but I couldn't help thinking he was in her mind.
+
+At the door to which I accompanied her, however, her manner changed.
+Before trusting herself to the few paces of walk running from the
+entrance to the wrought-iron gate, she glanced up and down the street.
+It was dark by this time, and the lamps were lit, but not till the
+pavement was tolerably clear did she venture out. Even then she didn't
+turn toward Fifth Avenue, which would have been her natural direction;
+but rapidly and, as I imagined, furtively, she walked the other way.
+
+I mentioned to no one that she had come to see me. Her kind thought of
+Hugh I was sorry to keep to myself; but I knew of no purpose to be
+served in divulging it. With my maxim to guide me it was not difficult
+to be sure that in this case right lay in silence.
+
+A few days later I got Hugh's doings from a new point of view. As I was
+going back to my lunch at the hotel, Mrs. Rossiter called to me from her
+motor and made me get in. The distance I had to cover being slight, she
+drove me up to Central Park and back again to have the time to talk.
+
+"My dear, he's crazy. He's going round to all the offices that
+practically turned him out six or eight weeks ago and begging them to
+find a place for him. Two or three of papa's old friends have written to
+ask what they could really do for him--for papa, that is--and he's sent
+them word that he'd take it as a favor if they'd show Hugh to the door."
+
+"Of course, if his father makes himself his enemy--"
+
+"He only makes himself his enemy in order to be his friend, dear Miss
+Adare. He's your friend, too, papa is, if you only saw it."
+
+"I'm afraid I don't," I said, dryly.
+
+"Oh, you will some day, and do him justice. He's the kindest man when
+you let him have his own way."
+
+"Which would be to separate Hugh and me."
+
+"But you'd both get over that; and I know he'd do the handsome thing by
+you, as well as by him."
+
+"So long as we do the handsome thing by each other--"
+
+"Oh, well, you can see where that leads to. Hugh'll never be in a
+position to marry you, dear Miss Adare."
+
+"He will when your father comes round."
+
+"Nonsense, my dear! You know you're not looking forward to that, not any
+more than I am."
+
+Later, as I was getting out at my door, she said, as if it was an
+afterthought:
+
+"Oh, by the way, you know papa has made me write to Lady Cissie
+Boscobel?"
+
+I looked up at her from the pavement.
+
+"What for?"
+
+"To ask her to come over and spend a month or two in New York. She says
+she will if she can. She's a good deal of a girl, Cissie is. If you're
+going to keep your hold on Hugh-- Well, all I can say is that Cissie
+will give you a run for your money. Of course, it's nothing to me. I
+only thought I'd tell you."
+
+This, too, I kept from Hugh; but I seized an early opportunity to paint
+the portrait of the imaginary charming girl he could have for a wife,
+with plenty of money to support himself and her, if he would only give
+me up. This was as we walked home one night from the theater--I was
+obliged from time to time to let him take me so that we might have a
+pretext for being together--and we strolled in the shadows of the narrow
+cross-streets.
+
+"Little Alix," he declared, fervently, "I could no more give you up than
+I could give up my breath or my blood. You're part of me. You're the
+most vital part of me. If you were to fail me I should die. If I were to
+fail you--But that's not worth thinking of. Look here!" He paused in a
+dark spot beside a great silent warehouse. "Look here. I'm having a
+pretty tough time. I'll confess it. I didn't mean to tell you, but I
+will. When I go to see certain people now--men I've met dozens of times
+at my father's table--what do you think happens? They have me shown to
+the door, and not too politely. These are the chaps who two months ago
+were squirming for joy at the thought of getting me. What do you think
+of that? How do you suppose it makes me feel?" I was about to break in
+with some indignant response when he continued, placidly: "Well, it all
+turns to music the minute I think of you. It's as if I'd drunk some
+glowing cordial. I'm kicked out, let us say--and it's not too much to
+say--and I'm ready to curse for all I'm worth, but I think of you. I
+remember I'm doing it for you and bearing it for you, so that one day I
+may strike the right thing and we may be together and happy forever
+afterward, and I swear to you it's as if angels were singing in the
+sky."
+
+I had to let him kiss me there in the shadow of the street, as if we
+were a footman and a housemaid. I had to let him kiss away my tears and
+soothe me and console me. I told him I wasn't worthy of such love, and
+that, if he would consider the fitness of things, he would go away and
+leave me, but he only kissed me the more.
+
+Again I was having my tea. It had been a lifeless day, and I was
+wondering how long I could endure the lifelessness. Not a soul had come
+near the place since morning, and my only approach to human intercourse
+had been in discussing Mrs. Daly's "varikiss" veins. Even that interlude
+was over, for the lady would not return for the tea things till after my
+departure. I was so lonely--I felt the uselessness of what I was doing
+so acutely--that in spite of the easy work and generous pay I was
+thinking of sending my resignation in to Mr. Grainger and looking for
+something else.
+
+The outer door opened swiftly and silently, and I knew some one was
+inside. I knew, too, before rising from my place, that it was Mrs.
+Brokenshire. Subconsciously I had been expecting her, though I couldn't
+have said why. Her lovely face was all asparkle.
+
+"I've come to see you again," she whispered, as I let her in. "I hope
+you're alone."
+
+I replied that I was and, choosing my words carefully, I said it was
+kind of her to keep me in mind.
+
+"Oh yes, I keep you in mind, and I keep Hugh. What I've really come for
+is to beg you to hand him the money of which I spoke the other day."
+
+She seated herself, but not before glancing about the room, either
+expectantly or fearfully. As I poured out her tea I repeated what I had
+said already on the subject of the money. She wasn't listening, however.
+When she made replies they were not to the point. All the while she
+sipped her tea and nibbled her cake her eyes had the shifting alertness
+of a watchful little bird's.
+
+"Oh, but what does it all matter when it's a question of love?" she
+said, somewhat at a venture. "Love is the only thing, don't you think?
+It must make its opportunities as it can."
+
+"You mean that love can be--unscrupulous?"
+
+"Oh, I shouldn't use that word."
+
+"It isn't the word I'm thinking of. It's the act."
+
+"Love is like war, isn't it? All's fair!"
+
+"But is it?"
+
+Her eyes rested on mine, not boldly, but with a certain daring.
+
+"Why--yes."
+
+"You believe that?"
+
+She still kept her eyes on mine. Her tone was that of a challenge.
+
+"Why--yes." She added, perhaps defiantly, "Don't you?"
+
+I said, decidedly:
+
+"No, I don't."
+
+"Then you don't love. You can't love. Love is reckless. Love--" There
+was a long pause before she dropped the two concluding words, spacing
+them apart as if to emphasize her deliberation. "Love--risks--all."
+
+"If it risks all it may lose all."
+
+The challenge was renewed.
+
+"Well? Isn't that better than--?"
+
+"It's not better than doing right," I hastened to say, "however hard it
+may be."
+
+"Ah, but what is right? A thing can't be right if--if--" she sought for
+a word--"if it's killing you."
+
+As she said this there was a sound along the corridor leading from the
+house. I thought Mrs. Daly had forgotten something and was coming back.
+But the tread was different from her slow stump, and my sense of a
+danger at hand was such as the good woman never inspired.
+
+Mrs. Brokenshire made no attempt to play a part or to put me off the
+scent. She acted as if I understood what was happening. Her teacup
+resting in her lap, she sat with eyes aglow and lips slightly apart in
+a look of heavenly expectation. I could hardly believe her to be the
+dazed, stricken little creature I had seen three months ago. As the
+footsteps approached she murmured, "He's coming!" or, "Who's coming?" I
+couldn't be sure which.
+
+Mr. Grainger entered like a man who is on his own ground and knows what
+he is about to find. There was no uncertainty in his manner and no
+apparent sense of secrecy. His head was high and his walk firm as he
+pushed his way amid tables and chairs to where we were sitting in the
+glow of a shaded light.
+
+I stood up as he approached, but I had time to appraise my situation. I
+saw all its little mysteries illumined as by a flash. I saw why Stacy
+Grainger had kept track of me; I saw why, in spite of my deficiencies,
+he had taken me on as his librarian; but I saw, too, that the Lord had
+delivered J. Howard Brokenshire into my hands, as Sisera into those of
+Jael, the wife of Heber the Kenite.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XIII
+
+
+I was relieved of some of my embarrassment by the fact that Mr. Grainger
+took command.
+
+Having bowed over Mrs. Brokenshire's hand with an empressement he made
+no attempt to conceal, he murmured the words, "I'm delighted to see you
+again." After this greeting, which might have been commonplace and was
+not, he turned to me. "Perhaps Miss Adare will give me some tea."
+
+I could carry out this request, listen to their scraps of conversation,
+and think my own thoughts all at the same time.
+
+Thinking my own thoughts was the least easy of the three, for the reason
+that thought stunned me. The facts knocked me on the head. Since before
+my engagement as Mr. Grainger's librarian this situation had been
+planned! Mrs. Brokenshire had chosen me for my part in it! She had given
+Mr. Grainger my address, which she could have learned from her mother,
+and recommended me as one with whom they would be safe!
+
+Their talk was only of superficial things; but it was not the clue to
+their emotions. That was in the way they talked--haltingly, falteringly,
+with glances that met and shifted and fell, or that rested on each other
+with long, mute looks, and then turned away hurriedly, as if something
+in the spirit reeled. As she gave him bits of information concerning
+the summer at Newport, she stumbled in her words, because there was no
+correlation between the sentences she formed and her fundamental
+thought. The same was true of his account of yachting on the coast of
+Maine, of Gloucester, Islesboro, and Bar Harbor. He stuttered and
+stammered and repeated himself. It was like one of those old Italian
+duets in which stupid words are sung to a passionate, heartbreaking
+melody. Nevertheless, I had enough sympathy with love, even with a
+guilty love, to have some mercy in my judgments.
+
+Not that I believed it to be a guilty love--as yet. That, too, I was
+obliged to think over and form my opinion about it. It was not a guilty
+love as yet; but it might easily become a guilty love. I remembered that
+Larry Strangways, with all his admiration for his employer, had refused
+him a place in his list of whole-hearted, clean-hearted men because he
+had a weakness; and I reflected that on the part of Mrs. Billing's
+daughter there might be no rigorous concept of the moralities. What I
+saw, therefore, was a man and a woman so consumed with longing for each
+other that guilt would be chiefly a matter of opportunity. To create
+that opportunity I had been brought upon the scene.
+
+[Illustration: I SAW A MAN AND A WOMAN CONSUMED WITH LONGING FOR EACH
+OTHER]
+
+I could see, of course, how admirably I was suited to the purpose I was
+meant to serve. In the first place, I was young, and might but dimly
+perceive--might not perceive at all--what was being done with me. In the
+next place, I was presumably too inexperienced to take a line of my own
+even if I suspected what was not for me to know. Then, I was poor and a
+stranger, and too glad of the easy work for which I was liberally paid
+not to be willing to take its bitter with its sweet. Lastly, I, too,
+was in love; and I, too, was a victim of Howard Brokenshire. If I
+couldn't approve of what I might see and hear, at least I might be
+reckoned on not to speak of it. Once more I was made to feel that,
+though I might play a subordinate role of some importance, my own wishes
+and personality didn't count.
+
+It was obviously a minute at which to bring my maxim into operation. I
+had to do what was Right--with a capital. For that I must wait for
+inspiration, and presently I got it.
+
+That is, I got it by degrees. I got it first by noting in a puzzled way
+the glances which both my companions sent in my direction. They were
+sidelong glances, singularly alike, whether they came from Stacy
+Grainger's melancholy brown eyes or Mrs. Brokenshire's sweet, misty
+ones. They were timid glances, pleading, uneasy. They asked what words
+wouldn't dare to ask, and what I was too dense to understand. I sat
+sipping my tea, running hot and cold as the odiousness of my position
+struck me from the various points of view; but I made no attempt to
+move.
+
+They were still talking of people of whom I knew nothing, but talking
+brokenly, futilely, for the sake of hearing each other's voice, and yet
+stifling the things which it would have been fatal to them both to say,
+when Mr. Grainger got up and brought me his cup.
+
+"May I have another?"
+
+I looked up to take the cup, but he held it in his hands. He held it in
+his hands and gazed down at me. He gazed down at me with an expression
+such as I have never seen in any eyes but a dog's. As I write I blush to
+remember that, with such a mingling of hints and entreaties and
+commands, I didn't know what he was trying to convey to me. I took the
+cup, poured out his tea, handed the cup back to him--and sat.
+
+But after he had reached his seat the truth flashed on me. I was in the
+way; I was _de trop_. I had done part of my work in being the pretext
+for Mrs. Brokenshire's visit; now I ought, tactfully, to absent myself.
+I needn't go far; I needn't go for long. There was an alcove at the end
+of the room where one could be out of sight; there was also the corridor
+leading to the house. I could easily make an excuse; I could get up and
+move without an excuse of any kind. But I sat.
+
+I hated myself; I despised myself; but I sat. I drank my tea without
+knowing it; I ate my cake without tasting it--and I sat.
+
+The talk between my companions grew more fitful. Silence was easier for
+them--silence and that dumb interchange of looks which had the sympathy
+of something within myself. I knew that in their eyes I was a nuisance,
+a thing to be got rid of. I was so in my own--but I went on eating and
+drinking stolidly--and sat.
+
+It was in my mind that this was my chance to be avenged on Howard
+Brokenshire; but I didn't want my vengeance that way. I have to confess
+that I was so poor-spirited as to have little or no animosity against
+him. I could see how easy it was for him to think of me as an
+adventuress. I wanted to convince and convert him, but not to make him
+suffer. If in any sense I could be called the guardian of his interests
+I would rather have been true to the trust than not. As I sat,
+therefore, gulping down my tea as if I relished it, it was partly
+because of my protective instinct toward the exquisite creature before
+me who might not know how to protect herself--and partly because I
+couldn't help it. Mr. Grainger could order me to go, but until he did I
+meant to go on eating.
+
+Probably because of the insistence of my presence Mrs. Brokenshire felt
+obliged to begin to talk again. I did my best not to listen, but
+fragments of her sentences came to me.
+
+"My mother spent a few weeks with us in August. I--I don't think she
+and--and Mr. Brokenshire get on so well."
+
+Almost for the first time he was interested in what she said rather than
+in her.
+
+"What's the trouble?"
+
+"Oh, I don't know--the whole thing." A long pause ensued, during which
+their eyes rested on each other in mute questioning. "She's changed,
+mamma is."
+
+"Changed in what way?"
+
+"Oh, I don't know. I--I suppose she sees that she--she--miscalculated."
+
+It was his turn to ruminate silently, and when he spoke at last it was
+as if throwing up to the surface but one of a deep undercurrent of
+thoughts.
+
+"After the pounding I got three years ago she didn't believe I'd come
+back."
+
+She accepted this without comment. Before speaking again she sent me
+another of her frightened, pleading looks.
+
+"She always liked you better than any one else."
+
+He seconded the glance in my direction as he said, with a grim smile:
+
+"Which didn't prevent her going to the highest bidder."
+
+She colored and sighed.
+
+"You wouldn't be so hard on her if you knew what a fight she had to make
+during papa's lifetime. We were always in debt. You knew that, didn't
+you? Poor mamma used to say she'd save me from that if she never--"
+
+I lost the rest of the sentence by deliberately rattling the tea things
+in pouring myself a third or a fourth cup of tea. Nothing but
+disconnected words reached me after that, but I caught the name of
+Madeline Pyne. I knew who she was, having heard her story day by day as
+it unfolded itself during my first weeks with Mrs. Rossiter. It was a
+simple tale as tales go in the twentieth century. Mrs. Pyre had been
+Mrs. Grimshaw. While she was Mrs. Grimshaw she had spent three days at a
+seaside resort with Mr. Pyne. The law having been invoked, she had
+changed her residence from the house of Mr. Grimshaw in Seventy-fifth
+Street to that of Mr. Pyne in Seventy-seventh Street, and likewise
+changed her name. Only a very discerning eye could now have told that in
+the opinion of society there was a difference between her and Caesar's
+wife. The drama was sufficiently recent to make the topic a natural one
+for an interchange of confidences. That confidences were being
+interchanged I could see; that from those confidences certain
+terrifying, passionate deductions were being drawn silently I could also
+see. I could see without hearing; I didn't need to hear. I could tell by
+her pallor and his embarrassment how each read the mind of the other,
+how each was tempted and how each recoiled. I knew that neither pointed
+the moral of the parable, for the reason that it stared them in the
+face.
+
+Because that subject, too, was exhausted, or because they had come to a
+place where they could say no more, they sat silent again. They looked
+at each other; they looked at me; neither would take the responsibility
+of giving me a further hint to go. Much as they desired my going, I was
+sure they were both afraid of it. I might be a nuisance and yet I was a
+safeguard. They were too near the brink of danger not to feel that,
+after all, there was something in having the safeguard there.
+
+A few minutes later Mrs. Brokenshire flew to shelter herself behind this
+protection. She fluttered softly to my side, beginning again to talk of
+Hugh. Knowing by this time that her interest in him was only a blind for
+her frightened essays in passion, I took up the subject but
+half-heartedly.
+
+"I've the money here," she confided to me, "if you'll only take charge
+of it."
+
+When I had declined to do this, for the reasons I had already given, her
+face brightened.
+
+"Then we can talk it over again." She rose as she spoke. "I can't stay
+any longer now--but we'll talk it over again. Let me see! This is
+Tuesday. If I came--"
+
+"I'm always at the Hotel Mary Chilton after six," I said, significantly.
+
+I smiled inwardly at the way in which she took this information.
+
+"Oh, I'll come before that--and I sha'n't keep you--just to talk about
+Hugh--and see he won't take the money--perhaps on--on Thursday."
+
+As nominally she had come to see me, nominally it was my place to
+accompany her to the door. In this at least I got my cue, walking the
+few paces with her, while she held my hand. I gathered that, the minutes
+of temptation being past, she bore me some gratitude for having helped
+her over them. At any rate, she pressed my fingers and gave me wistful,
+teary smiles, till at last she was out in the lighted street and I had
+closed the door behind her.
+
+It was only half past five, and I had still thirty minutes to fill in.
+As I turned back into the room I found Mr. Grainger walking aimlessly up
+and down, inspecting a bit of lustrous faience or the backs of a row of
+books, and making me feel that there was something he wished to say. His
+movements were exactly those of a man screwing up his courage or trying
+to find words.
+
+The simplest thing I could do was to sit down at my desk and make a
+feint at writing. I seemed to be ignoring my employer's presence, but in
+reality, as I watched him from under my lids, I was getting a better
+impression of him than on any previous occasion.
+
+There was nothing Olympian about him as there was about Howard
+Brokenshire. He was too young to be Olympian, being not more than
+thirty-eight. He struck me, indeed, as just a big, sinewy man of the
+type which fights and hunts and races and loves, and has dumb,
+uncomprehended longings which none of these pursuits can satisfy. In
+this he was English more than American, and Scottish more than English.
+He was certainly not the American business man as seen in hotel lobbies
+and on the stage. He might have been classed as the American
+romantic--an explorer, a missionary, or a shooter of big game, according
+to taste and income. Larry Strangways said that among Americans you most
+frequently met his like in East Africa, Manchuria, or Brazil. That he
+was in business in New York was an accident of tradition and
+inheritance. Just as an Englishman who might have been a soldier or a
+solicitor is a country gentleman because his father has left him landed
+estates, so Stacy Grainger had become a financier.
+
+As a financier, I understood he helped to furnish the money in
+undertakings in which other men did the work. In this respect the
+direction his interests took was what might have been expected of so
+virile a character--steel, iron, gunpowder, shells, the founding of
+cannon, the building of war-ships; the forceful, the destructive. I
+gathered from Mr. Strangways that he was forever making journeys to
+Washington, to Pittsburg, to Cape Breton, wherever money could be
+invested in mighty conquering things. It was these projects that Howard
+Brokenshire had attacked so savagely as almost to bring him to ruin,
+though he had now re-established himself as strongly as before.
+
+Being as terrified of him as of his rival, I prayed inwardly that he
+would go away. Once or twice in marching up and down he paused before my
+desk, and the pen almost dropped from my hand. I knew he was trying to
+formulate a hint that when Mrs. Brokenshire came again--But even on my
+part the thought would not go into words. Words made it gross, and it
+was what he must have discovered each time he approached me. Each time
+he approached me I fancied that his poetic eye grew apologetic, that his
+shoulders sagged, and that his hard, strong mouth became weak before
+syllables that would not pass the lips. Then he would veer away,
+searching doubtless some easier phrase, some more delicate suggestion,
+only to fail again.
+
+It was a relief when, after a last attempt, he passed into the corridor
+leading to the house. I could breathe, I could think; I could look back
+over the last half-hour and examine my conduct. I was not satisfied with
+it, because I had frustrated love--even that kind of love; and yet I
+asked myself how I could have acted differently.
+
+In substance I asked the same of Larry Strangways when he came to dine
+with me next day. Hugh being in Philadelphia on one of his pathetic
+cruises after work, I had invited Mr. Strangways by telephone, begging
+him to come on the ground that, having got me into this trouble, he must
+advise me as to getting out.
+
+"I didn't get you into the trouble," he smiled across the table. "I only
+helped to get you the job."
+
+"But when you got me the job, as you call it--"
+
+"I knew you would be able to do the work."
+
+"And did you think the work would be--this?"
+
+"I couldn't tell anything about that. I simply knew you could do the
+work--from all the points of view."
+
+"And do you think I've done it?"
+
+"I know you've done it. You couldn't do anything else. I won't go back
+of that."
+
+If my heart gave a sudden leap at these words it was because of the
+tone. It betrayed that quality behind the tone to which I had been
+responding, and of which I had been afraid, ever since I knew the man.
+By a great effort I kept my words on the casual, friendly plane, as I
+said:
+
+"Your confidence is flattering, but it doesn't help me. What I want to
+know is this: Assuming that they love each other, should I allow myself
+to be used as the pretext for their meetings?"
+
+"Does it do you any harm?"
+
+"Does it do them any good?"
+
+"Couldn't you let that be their affair?"
+
+"How can I, when I'm dragged into it?"
+
+"If you're only dragged into it to the extent of this afternoon--"
+
+"Only! You can use that word of a situation--"
+
+"In which you played propriety."
+
+"Oh, it wasn't playing."
+
+"Yes, it was; it was playing the game--as they only play it who aren't
+quitters but real sports."
+
+"But I'm not a sport. I've the quitter in me. I'm even thinking of
+flinging up the position--"
+
+"And leaving them to their fate."
+
+I smiled.
+
+"Couldn't I let that be their affair?"
+
+He, too, smiled, his head thrown back, his white teeth gleaming.
+
+"You think you've caught me, don't you? But you've got the shoe on the
+wrong foot. I said just now that it might be their affair as to whether
+or not it did them any good to have you as the pretext of their
+meetings; but it's surely your affair when you say they sha'n't. Their
+meetings will be one thing so long as they have you; whereas without
+you--"
+
+"Then you think they'll keep meeting in any case?"
+
+"I've nothing to say about that. I limit myself to believing that in any
+situation that requires skilful handling your first name is
+resourcefulness."
+
+I shifted my ground.
+
+"Oh, but when it's such an odious situation!"
+
+"No situation is odious in which you're a participant, just as no view
+is ugly where there's a garden full of flowers."
+
+He went on with his dinner as complacently as if he had not thrown me
+into a state of violent inward confusion. All I could do was to summon
+Hugh's image from the shades of memory into which it had withdrawn, and
+beg it to keep me true to him. The thought of being false to the man to
+whom I had actually owned my love outraged in me every sentiment akin to
+single-heartedness. In a kind of desperation I dragged Hugh's name into
+the conversation, and yet in doing so I merely laid myself open to
+another shock.
+
+"You can't be in love with him!"
+
+The words were the same as Mrs. Billing's; the emphasis was similar.
+
+"I am," I declared, bluntly, not so much to contradict the speaker as to
+fortify myself.
+
+"You may think you are--"
+
+"Well, if I think I am, isn't it the same thing as--"
+
+"Lord, no! not with love! Love is the most deceptive of the emotions--to
+people who haven't had much experience of its tricks."
+
+"Have you?"
+
+He met this frankly.
+
+"No; nor you. That's why you can so easily take yourself in."
+
+I grew cold and dignified.
+
+"If you think I'm taking myself in when I say that I'm in love with Hugh
+Brokenshire--"
+
+"That's certainly it."
+
+Though I knew my cheeks were flaming a dahlia red, I forced myself to
+look him in the eyes.
+
+"Then I'm afraid it would be useless to try to convince you--"
+
+He nodded.
+
+"Quite!"
+
+"So that we can only let the subject drop."
+
+He looked at me with mock gravity.
+
+"I don't see that. It's an interesting topic."
+
+"Possibly; but as it doesn't lead us any further--"
+
+"But it does. It leads us to where we see straighter."
+
+"Yes, but if I don't need to see straighter than I do?"
+
+"We all need to see as straight as we can."
+
+"I'm seeing as straight as I can when I say--"
+
+"Oh, but not as straight as I can! I can see that a noble character
+doesn't always distinguish clearly between love and kindness, or between
+kindness and loyalty, or between loyalty and self-sacrifice, and that
+the higher the heart, the more likely it is to impose on itself. No one
+is so easily deceived as to love and loving as the man or the woman
+who's truly generous."
+
+"If I was truly generous--"
+
+"I know what you are," he said, shortly.
+
+"Then if you know what I am you must know, too, that I couldn't do other
+than care for a man who's given up so much for my sake."
+
+"You couldn't do other than admire him. You couldn't do other than be
+grateful to him. You probably couldn't do other than want to stand by
+him through thick and thin--"
+
+"Well, then?"
+
+"But that's not love."
+
+"If it isn't love it's so near to it--"
+
+"Exactly--which is what I'm saying. It's so near it that you don't know
+the difference, and won't know the difference till--till the real thing
+affords you the contrast."
+
+I did my best to be scornful.
+
+"Really! You speak like an expert."
+
+"Yes; an expert by intuition."
+
+I was still scornful.
+
+"Only that?"
+
+"Only that. You see," he smiled, "the expert by experience has learnt a
+little; but the expert by intuition knows it all."
+
+"Then, when I need information on the subject, I'll come to you."
+
+"And I'll promise to give it to you frankly."
+
+"Thanks," I said, sweetly. "But you'll wait till I come, won't you? And
+in the mean time, you'll not say any more about it."
+
+"Does that mean that I'm not to say any more about it ever--or only for
+to-night?"
+
+I knew, suddenly, what the question meant to me. I took time to see that
+I was shutting a door which my heart cried out to have left open. But I
+answered, still sweetly and with a smile:
+
+"Suppose we make it that you won't say any more about it--ever?"
+
+He gazed at me; I gazed at him. A long half-minute went by before he
+uttered the words, very slowly and deliberately:
+
+"I won't say any more about it--for to-night."
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XIV
+
+
+On Thursday Mr. Grainger came to the library to tea, but notwithstanding
+her suggestion Mrs. Brokenshire did not. She came, however, on Friday
+when he did not. For some time after that he came daily.
+
+Toward me his manner had little variation; he was courteous and distant.
+I cannot say that he ever had tea with me, for even if he accepted a
+cup, which he did from time to time, as if keeping up a role, he carried
+it to some distant corner of the room where he was either examining the
+objects or making their acquaintance. He came about half past four and
+went about half past five, always appearing from the house and retiring
+by the same way. In the house itself, as I understood from Mrs. Daly, he
+displayed an interest he had not shown for years.
+
+"It's out of wan room and into another, and raisin' the shades and
+pushin' the furniture about, till you'd swear he was goin' to be
+married."
+
+I thought of Mr. Pyne, wondering if, before his trip to Atlantic City
+with Mrs. Grimshaw, he, too, had wandered about his house, appraising
+its possibilities from the point of view of a new mistress.
+
+On the Friday when Mrs. Brokenshire came and Mr. Grainger did not she
+made no comment on his non-appearance. She even sustained with some
+success the fiction that her visit was on my account. Only her soft
+eyes turned with a quick light toward the door leading to the house at
+every sound that might have been a footstep.
+
+When she talked it was chiefly about Mr. Brokenshire.
+
+"It's telling on him--all this trouble about Hugh."
+
+I was curious.
+
+"Telling on him in what way?"
+
+"It's made him older--and grayer--and the trouble with his eye comes
+oftener."
+
+It seemed to me that I saw an opportunity.
+
+"Then why doesn't he give in?"
+
+"Give in? Mr. Brokenshire? Why, he never gave in in his life."
+
+"But if he suffers?"
+
+"He'd rather suffer than give in. He's not an unkind man, not really, so
+long as he has his own way; but once he's thwarted--"
+
+"Every one has to be thwarted some time."
+
+"He'd agree to that; but he'd say every one but him. That's why, when he
+first met--met me--and my mother at that time meant to have me--to have
+me marry some one else-- You knew that, didn't you?"
+
+I reminded her that she had told me so among the rocks at Newport.
+
+"Did I? Perhaps I did. It's--it's rather on my mind. I had to change
+so--so suddenly. But what I was going to say was that when Mr.
+Brokenshire saw that mamma meant me to marry some one else, and that
+I--that I wanted to, there was nothing he didn't do. It was in the
+papers--and everything. But nothing would stop him till he'd got what he
+wanted."
+
+I pumped up my courage to say:
+
+"You mean, till you gave it to him."
+
+She bit her lip.
+
+"Mamma gave it to him. I had to do as I was told. You'd say, I suppose,
+that I needn't have done it, but you don't know." She hesitated before
+going on. "It--it was money. We--we had to have it. Mamma thought that
+Mr.--the man I was to have married first--would never have any more. It
+was all sorts of things on the Stock Exchange--and bulls and bears and
+things like that. There was a whole week of it--and every one knew it
+was about me. I nearly died; but mamma didn't mind. She enjoyed it. It's
+the sort of thing she would enjoy. She made me go with her to the opera
+every night. Some one always asked us to sit in their box. She put me in
+the front where the audience watched me through their opera-glasses more
+than they did the stage--and I was a kind of spectacle. There was one
+night--they were singing the 'Meistersinger'--when I felt just like Eva,
+put up as a prize for whoever could win me. But I was talking of Mr.
+Brokenshire, wasn't I? Do you think his eye will ever be any better?"
+
+She asked the question without change of tone. I could only reply that I
+didn't know.
+
+"The doctor says--that is, he's told me--that in a way it's mental. It's
+the result of the strain he's put upon his nerves by overwork and awful
+tempers. Of course, his responsibilities have been heavy, though of late
+years he's been able to shift some of them to other people's shoulders.
+And then," she went on, in her sweet, even voice, "what happened about
+me--coming to him so late in life--and--and tearing him to pieces more
+violently than if he'd been a younger man--young men get over
+things--that made it worse. Don't you see it would?"
+
+I said I could understand that that might be the effect.
+
+"Of course, if I could really be a wife to him--"
+
+"Well, can't you?"
+
+She shuddered.
+
+"He terrifies me. When he's there I'm not a woman any more; I'm a
+captive."
+
+"But since you've married him--"
+
+"I didn't marry him; he married me. I was as much a bargain as if I had
+been bought. And now mamma sees that--that she might have got a better
+price."
+
+I thought it enough to say:
+
+"That must make it hard for her."
+
+A sigh bubbled up, like that of a child who has been crying.
+
+"It makes it hard for me." She eyed me with a long, oblique regard.
+"Don't you think it's awful when an elderly man falls in love with a
+young girl who herself is in love with some one else?"
+
+I could only dodge that question.
+
+"All unhappiness is awful."
+
+"Ah, but this! An elderly man!--in love! Madly in love! It's not
+natural; it's frightful; and when it's with yourself--"
+
+She moved away from me and began to inspect the room. In spite of her
+agitation she did this more in detail than when she had been there
+before, making the round of the book-shelves much as Mr. Grainger
+himself was in the habit of doing, and gazing without comment on the
+Persian and Italian potteries. It was easy to place her as one of those
+women who live surrounded by beautiful things to which they pay no
+attention. Mr. Brokenshire's richly Italianate dwelling was to her just
+a house. It would have been equally just a house had it been Jacobean or
+Louis Quinze or in the fashion of the Brothers Adam, and she would have
+seen little or no difference in periods and styles. The books she now
+looked at were mere backs; they were bindings and titles. Since they
+belonged to Stacy Grainger she could look at them with soft, unseeing
+eyes, thinking of him. That was all. Without comment of my own I
+accompanied her, watching the quick, bird-like turnings of her head
+whenever she thought she heard a step.
+
+"It's nice for you here," she said, when at last she gave signs of
+going. "I--I love it. It's so quiet--and--and safe. Nobody knows I come
+to--to see you."
+
+Her stammering emboldened me to take a liberty.
+
+"But suppose they found out?"
+
+She was as innocent as a child as she glanced up at me and said:
+
+"It would still be to see you. There's no harm in that."
+
+"Even so, Mr. Brokenshire wouldn't approve of it."
+
+"But he'll never know. It's not the sort of thing any one would think
+of. I leave the motor down at Sixth Avenue, and this time of year it's
+so dark. As soon as I heard Miss Davis was leaving I thought how nice
+the place would be for you."
+
+Since it was useless to make the obvious correction here, I thanked her
+for her kindness, going on to add:
+
+"But I don't want to get into any trouble."
+
+"No, of course not." She began moving toward the door. "What kind of
+trouble were you thinking of?"
+
+I wondered whether or not, having taken one liberty, I could take
+another.
+
+"When I see my boat being caught in the rapids I'm afraid there's a
+cataract ahead."
+
+It took her some thirty seconds to seize the force of this. Having got
+it her eyes fell.
+
+"Oh, I see! And does that mean," she went on, her bosom heaving, "that
+you're afraid of the cataract on your own account--or on mine?"
+
+I paused in our slow drifting toward the door. She was a great lady in
+the land, and I was nobody. I had much to risk, and I risked it.
+
+"Should I offend you," I asked, deferentially, "if I said--on yours?"
+
+For an instant she became as haughty as so sweet a nature knew how to
+be, but the prompting passed.
+
+"No; you don't offend me," she said, after a brief pause. "We're
+friends, aren't we, in spite of--"
+
+As she hesitated I filled in the phrase.
+
+"In spite of the difference between us."
+
+Because she was pursuing her own thoughts she allowed that to pass.
+
+"People have gone over cataracts--and still lived."
+
+"Ah, but there's more to existence than life," I exclaimed, promptly.
+
+"There was a friend of my own," she continued, without immediate
+reference to my observation; "at least she was a friend--I suppose she
+is still--her name was Madeline Grimshaw--"
+
+"Yes, Mrs. Pyne; but she wasn't Mrs. Brokenshire."
+
+"No; she never was so unhappy." She pressed her handkerchief against the
+two great tears that rolled down her cheeks. "She did love Mr. Grimshaw
+at one time, whereas I--"
+
+"But you say he's kind."
+
+"Oh yes. It isn't that. He's more than kind. He'd smother me with things
+I'd like to have. It's--it's when he comes near me--when he touches
+me--and--and his eye!"
+
+I knew enough of physical repulsion to be able to change my line of
+appeal. "But do you think you'd gain anything if you made him
+unhappy--now?"
+
+She looked at me wonderingly.
+
+"I shouldn't think you'd plead for him."
+
+I had ventured so far that I could go a little farther.
+
+"I don't think I'm pleading for him so much as for you."
+
+"Why do you plead for me? Do you think I should be--sorry?"
+
+"If you did what I imagine you're contemplating--yes."
+
+She surprised me by admitting my implication.
+
+"Even if I did, I couldn't be sorrier than I am."
+
+"Oh, but existence is more than joy and sorrow."
+
+"You said just now that it was more than life. I suppose you mean that
+it's love."
+
+"I should say that it's more than love."
+
+"Why, what can it be?"
+
+I smiled apologetically.
+
+"Mightn't it be--right?"
+
+She studied me with an air of angelic sweetness.
+
+"Oh no, I could never believe that."
+
+And she went more resolutely toward the door.
+
+Hugh returned in good spirits from Philadelphia. He had been well
+received. His name had secured him much the same welcome as that
+accorded him on his first excursions into Wall Street. I didn't tell him
+I feared that the results would be similar, for I saw that he was
+cheered.
+
+To verify the love I had acknowledged to him more than once, I was eager
+to look at him again. I found a man thinner and older and shabbier than
+the Hugh who first attracted my attention by being kind to me. I could
+have borne with his being thinner and older; but that he should be
+shabbier wrung my heart.
+
+I considered myself engaged to him. That as yet I had not spoken the
+final word was a detail, in my mind, considering that I had so often
+rested in his arms and pillowed my head on his shoulder. The fact, too,
+that when I had first allowed myself those privileges I had taken him to
+be a strong character--the shadow of a rock in a thirsty land, I had
+called him--and that I now saw he was a weak one, bound me to him the
+more closely. I had gone to him because I needed him; but now that I saw
+he needed me I was sure I could never break away from him.
+
+He dined with me at the Mary Chilton on the evening of his return,
+sitting where Larry Strangways had sat only forty-eight hours
+previously. I was sorry then that I had not changed the table. To be
+face to face with two men, on exactly the same spot, on occasions so
+near together, in conditions so alike, gave me a sense of faithlessness.
+Though I wanted nothing so much as to be honest with them both, I was
+afraid of being so with neither; and yet for this I hardly knew where to
+place the blame. I suffered for Hugh because of Larry Strangways, and I
+suffered for Larry Strangways because of Hugh. If I suffered for myself
+I was scarcely aware of it, having to give so much thought to them.
+
+Nevertheless, I regretted that I had not chosen another table, and all
+the more when Hugh brought the matter up. He had finished telling me of
+his experiences in Philadelphia. "Now what have you been doing?" he
+demanded, a smile lighting up his tired face.
+
+"Oh, nothing much--the same old thing."
+
+"Seen anybody in particular?"
+
+I weighed my answer carefully.
+
+"Nobody in particular, except Mr. Strangways."
+
+He frowned.
+
+"Where did you see that fellow?"
+
+"Right here."
+
+"Right here? What do you mean by that?"
+
+"He came to dine with me."
+
+"Dine with you! And sat where I'm sitting now?"
+
+I tried to take this pleasantly.
+
+"It's the only place I've got to ask any one I want to talk to."
+
+"But why should you want to talk to--to--" I saw him struggling with the
+word, but it came out--"to that bounder?"
+
+"He's a friend of mine, Hugh. I've asked you already to remember that
+he's a gentleman."
+
+"Gentleman! O Lord!" He became kindly and coaxing, leaning across the
+table with an ingratiating smile. "Look here, little Alix! Don't you
+think that for my sake it's time you were beginning to drop that lot?"
+
+Though I revolted against the expression, I pretended to see nothing
+amiss.
+
+"You mean just as Libby Jaynes had to drop the barbers and the pages in
+the hotel when she became Mrs. Tracy Allen."
+
+He laughed nervously.
+
+"Oh, I don't go as far as that. And yet if I did--"
+
+"It wouldn't be too far." I gave him the impression that I was thinking
+the question out. "But you see, Hugh, dear, I don't see any difference
+between Mr. Strangways--"
+
+"And me?"
+
+"I wasn't going to say you, but between Mr. Strangways and the people
+you'd like me to know. Or rather, if I do see a difference it's that Mr.
+Strangways is so much more a man of the world than--than--"
+
+Perceiving my embarrassment, he broke in:
+
+"Than who?"
+
+I took my courage in both hands.
+
+"Than Mr. Rossiter, for example, or your brother, Mr. Jack Brokenshire,
+or any of the men I met when I was with your sister. If I hadn't seen
+you--the truest gentleman I ever knew--I shouldn't have supposed that
+any of them belonged to the real great world at all."
+
+To my relief he took this good-naturedly.
+
+"That's what we call social inexperience, little Alix. It's because you
+don't know how to distinguish."
+
+"That is, I don't know a good thing when I see it."
+
+"You don't know that sort of good thing--the American who counts. But
+you can learn. And if you learn you've got to take as a starting-point
+the fact that, just as there are things one does and things one doesn't
+do, so there are people one knows and people one doesn't know--and no
+one can tell you the reason why."
+
+"But if one asked for a reason--"
+
+"It would queer you with the right people. They don't want a reason. If
+people do want a reason--well, they've got to stay out of it. It was one
+of the things Libby Jaynes picked up as if she'd been born to it. She
+knew how to cut; she knew how to cut dead; and she cut as dead as she
+knew how."
+
+"But, Hugh, darling, I don't know how."
+
+He was all forbearance.
+
+"You'll learn, sweet." As for the moment the waitress was absent, he put
+out his hand and locked his fingers within mine. "You've got it in you.
+Once you've had a chance you'll knock Libby Jaynes into a cocked hat."
+
+I shook my head.
+
+"I'm not sure that you're right."
+
+"I know I'm right, if you do as I tell you: and to begin with you've got
+to put that fellow Strangways in his place."
+
+I let it go at that, having so many other things to think of that any
+mere status of my own became of no importance. I was willing that Hugh
+should marry me as Tracy Allen married Libby Jaynes, or in any other
+way, so long as I could play my part in the rest of the drama with
+right-mindedness. But it was precisely that that grew more difficult.
+
+When Mrs. Brokenshire and Mr. Grainger next met under what I can only
+call my chaperonage they were distinctly more at ease. The first
+stammering, shamefaced awkwardness was gone. They knew by this time what
+they had to say and said it. They had also come to understand that if I
+could not be moved I might be outwitted. By the simple expedient of
+wandering away on the plea of looking at this or that decorative object
+they obtained enough solitude to serve their purposes. Without taking
+themselves beyond my range of vision they got out of earshot.
+
+As far as that went I was relieved. I was not responsible for what they
+did, but only for what I did myself. I was not their keeper; I didn't
+want to be a spy on them. When, at a certain minute, as they returned
+toward me, I saw him pass a letter to her, it was entirely by chance. I
+reflected then that, while she ran no risk in using the mails in writing
+to him, it was not so with him in writing to her, and that
+communications of importance might have to pass between them. It was
+nothing to me. I was sorry to have surprised the act and tried to
+dismiss it from my mind.
+
+It was repeated, however, the next time they came and many times after
+that. Their comings settled into a routine of being twice a week, with
+fair regularity. Tuesdays and Fridays were their days, though not
+without variation. It was indeed this variation that saved the situation
+on a certain afternoon when otherwise all might have been lost.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XV
+
+
+We had come to February, 1914. During the intervening months the
+conditions in which I lived and worked underwent little change. My days
+and nights were passed between the library and the Mary Chilton, with
+few social distractions, though I had some. Larry Strangways's sister,
+Mrs. Applegate, had called on me, and her house, a headquarters of New
+York philanthropies, had opened to me its kindly doors. Through Mrs.
+Applegate one or two other women came to relieve my loneliness, and now
+and then old Halifax friends visiting New York took me to theaters and
+to dinners at hotels. Ethel Rossiter was as friendly as fear of her
+father and of social conventions permitted her to be, and once or twice
+when she was quite alone I lunched with her. On each of these occasions
+she had something new to tell me.
+
+The first was that Hugh had met his father accidentally face to face,
+and that the parent had cut the son. Of that Hugh had told me nothing.
+According to Ethel, he was more affected by the incident than by
+anything else since the beginning of his cares. He felt it too deeply to
+speak of it even to me, to whom he spoke of everything.
+
+It happened, I believe at the foot of the steps of a club. Hugh, who was
+passing, saw his father coming down, and waited. Howard Brokenshire
+brought into play his faculty of seeing without seeing, and went on
+majestically, while Hugh stared after him with tears of vexation in his
+eyes.
+
+"He felt it the more," Mrs. Rossiter stated in her impartial way,
+"because I doubt if he had the price of his dinner in his pocket."
+
+It was then that she gave me to understand that if it were not that
+Mildred was lending him money he would have nothing to subsist on at
+all. Mildred had a little from her grandfather Brew, being privileged in
+this respect because she was the only one of the first Mrs.
+Brokenshire's children born at the time of the grandfather's demise. The
+legacy had been a trifle, but from this fund, which had never been his
+father's, Hugh consented to take loans.
+
+"Hugh, darling," I said to him the next time I had speech with him,
+"don't you see now that he's irreconcilable? He'll either starve you
+into surrender--"
+
+"Never," he cried, thumping the table with his hand.
+
+"Or else you must take such work as you can get."
+
+"Such work as I can get! Do you know how much that would bring me in a
+week?"
+
+"Even so," I reasoned, "you'd have work and I should have work, and we'd
+live."
+
+He was hurt.
+
+"Americans don't believe in working their women," he declared, loftily.
+"If I can't give you a life in which you'll have nothing at all to do--"
+
+"But I don't want a life in which I'll have nothing at all to do," I
+cried. "Your idle women strike me as a weak point in your national
+organization. It's like the dinner-parties I've seen at some of your
+restaurants and hotels--a circle of men at one table and a circle of
+women at another. You revolve too much in separate spheres. Your women
+have too little to do with business and politics and your men with
+society and the fine arts. I'm not used to such a pitiless separation of
+the sexes. Don't let us begin it, Hugh, darling. Let me share what you
+share--"
+
+"You won't share anything sordid, little Alix, I can tell you that. When
+you're my wife you'll have nothing to think of but having a good time
+and looking your prettiest--"
+
+"I should die of it," I exclaimed but this he took as a joke.
+
+That had passed in January. What Ethel Rossiter told me the next time I
+lunched with her was that Lady Cecilia Boscobel had accepted her
+invitation and was expected within a few weeks. She repeated what she
+had already said of her, in exactly the same words.
+
+"She's a good deal of a girl, Cissie is." My heart leaped and fell
+almost simultaneously. If I could only give up Hugh in such a way that
+he would have to give me up, this girl might help us out of our impasse.
+Had Mrs. Rossiter stopped there I might have made some noble vow of
+renunciation; but she went on: "If she wants Hugh she'll take him. Don't
+be under any illusion about that."
+
+Though my quick mettle was up, I said, docilely:
+
+"Oh no, I'm not. But if you mean taking him away from me--well, a good
+many people have tried it, haven't they?"
+
+"Cissie Boscobel hasn't tried it."
+
+But I was peaceably inclined.
+
+"Oh, well," I said, "perhaps she won't. She may not think it worth her
+while."
+
+"If you want to know my opinion," Mrs. Rossiter insisted, as she helped
+herself to the peas which the rosebud Thomas was passing, "I think she
+will. Men aren't so plentiful over there as you seem to suppose--that
+is, men of the kind they'd marry. Lord Goldborough has no money at all,
+as you might say, and yet the girls have to be set up in big
+establishments. You've only got to look at them to see it. Cissie
+marrying a subaltern with a thousand pounds a year isn't thinkable. It
+wouldn't dress her. She's coming over here to take a look at Hugh, and
+if she likes him-- Well, I told you long ago that you'd be wise to snap
+up that young Strangways. He's much better-looking than Hugh, and more
+in your own-- Besides, Jim says that now that he's with"--she balked at
+the name of Grainger--"now that he's where he is he's beginning to make
+money. It doesn't take so long when people have the brains for it."
+
+All this gave me a feeling of mingled curiosity and fear when, a few
+weeks later, I came on Mrs. Rossiter and Lady Cecilia Boscobel looking
+into a shop window in Fifth Avenue. It was a Saturday afternoon, the day
+which I had off and on which I made my modest purchases. It was a cold,
+brisk day, with light snow whirling in tiny eddies on the ground. I was
+going northward on the sunny side. At a distance of some fifty yards I
+recognized Mrs. Rossiter's motor standing by the curb, and cast my eyes
+about for a possible glimpse of her. Moving away from the window of the
+jeweler's whence she had probably come out, she saw me approach, and
+turned at once with a word or two to the lady beside her, who also
+looked in my direction. I knew by intuition who Mrs. Rossiter's
+companion was, and that my connection with the family had been explained
+to her.
+
+Mrs. Rossiter made the presentation in her usual offhand way.
+
+"Oh, Miss Adare! I want to introduce you to Lady Cecilia Boscobel."
+
+We exchanged civil, remote, and non-committal salutations, each of us
+with her hands in her muff. My immediate impression was one of color, as
+it is when you see old Limoges enamels. There was more color in Lady
+Cissie's personality than in that of any one I have ever looked at. Her
+hair was red--not auburn or copper, but red--a decorative, flaming red.
+I have often noticed how slight is the difference between beautiful red
+hair and ugly. Lady Cissie's was of the shade that is generally ugly,
+but which in her case was rendered glorious by the introduction of some
+such pigment, gleaming and umber, as that which gives the peculiar hue
+to Australian gold. I had never seen such hair or hair in such
+quantities, except in certain pictures of the pre-Raphaelite
+brotherhood, for which I should have supposed there could have been no
+earthly model had my father not known Eleanor Siddall. Lady Cissie's
+eyes were gray, with a greenish light in them when she turned her head.
+Her complexion could only be compared to the kind of carnation which the
+whitest of whites is flecked in just the right spots by the rosiest
+rose. In the lips, which were full and firm, also like Eleanor
+Siddall's, the rose became carmine, to melt away into coral-pink in the
+shell-like ears. Her dress of seal-brown broadcloth, on which there was
+a sheen, was relieved by occasional touches of sage-green, and the
+numerous sable tails on her boa and muff blew this way and that way in
+the wind. In the small black hat, perched at what I can only describe as
+a triumphant angle, an orange wing became at the tip of each tiny
+topmost feather a daring line of scarlet. Nestling on the sage-green
+below the throat a row of amber beads slumbered and smoldered with lemon
+and orange and ruby lights that now and then shot out rays of crimson or
+scarlet fire.
+
+I thought of my own costume--naturally. I was in gray, with inexpensive
+black furs. An iridescent buckle, with hues such as you see in a
+pigeon's neck, at the side of my black-velvet toque was my only bit of
+color. I was poor Jenny Wren in contrast to a splendid bird-of-paradise.
+So be it! I could at least be a foil to this healthy, vigorous young
+beauty who was two inches taller than I, and might have my share of the
+advantages which go with all antithesis.
+
+The talk was desultory, and in it the English girl took no part. Mrs.
+Rossiter asked me where I was going, what I was going for, and whether
+or not she couldn't take me to my destination in her car. I declined
+this offer, explained that my errands were trivial, and examined Lady
+Cissie through the corner of my eye. On her side Lady Cissie examined me
+quite frankly--not haughtily, but distantly and rather sympathetically.
+She had come all this distance to take a look at Hugh, and I was the
+girl he loved. I counted on the fact to give poor Jenny Wren her value,
+and I think it did. At any rate, when I had answered all Mrs. Rossiter's
+questions and was moving off to continue my way up-town, Lady Cissie's
+rich lips quivered in a sort of farewell smile.
+
+But Hugh showed little interest when I painted her portrait verbally.
+
+"Yes, that's the girl," he observed indifferently, "red-headed,
+long-legged, slashy-colored, laid on a bit too thick."
+
+"She's beautiful, Hugh."
+
+"Is she? Well, perhaps so. Wouldn't be my style; but every one to his
+taste."
+
+"It you saw her now--"
+
+"Oh, I've seen her often enough, just as she's seen me."
+
+"She hasn't seen you as you are to-day, and neither have you seen her. A
+few years makes a difference."
+
+He looked at me quizzically.
+
+"Look here, little Alix, what are you giving us? Do you think I'd turn
+you down now--for all the Lady Cissies in the British peerage? Do you,
+now?"
+
+"Not, perhaps, if you put it as turning me down--"
+
+"Well, as you turning me down, then?"
+
+"Our outlook is pretty dark, isn't it?"
+
+"Just wait."
+
+I ignored his pathetic boastfulness to continue my own sentence.
+
+"And this prospect is so brilliant. You'd have a handsome wife, a big
+income, a good position, an important family backing on both sides of
+the Atlantic--all of which would make you the man you ought to be. Now
+that I've seen her, and rather guess that she'd take you, I don't see
+how I can let you forfeit so much. I don't want to make you regret the
+day you ever saw me--"
+
+"Or regret yourself the day you ever saw me."
+
+If I took up this challenge it was more for his sake than my own.
+
+"Then suppose I accept that way of putting it?"
+
+He looked at me solemnly, for a second or two, after which he burst out
+laughing. That I might have hesitations as to connecting myself with the
+Brokenshires was more than he could grasp. He might have minutes of
+jealousy of Larry Strangways, but his doubt could go no further. It went
+no further, even after he had seen Lady Cecilia and they had renewed
+their early acquaintance. Ethel Rossiter had managed that, of course
+with her father's connivance.
+
+"Fine big girl," Hugh commended, "but too showy."
+
+"She's not showy," I contradicted. "A thing isn't necessarily showy
+because it has bright colors. Tropical birds are not showy, nor roses,
+nor rubies--"
+
+"I prefer pearls," he said, quietly. "You're a pearl, little Alix, the
+pearl of great price for which a man sells all that he has and buys it."
+Before I could respond to this kindly speech he burst out: "Good Lord!
+don't you suppose I can see what it all means? Cissie's the gay
+artificial fly that's to tempt the fish away from the little silvery
+minnow. Once I've darted after the bit of red and yellow dad will have
+hooked me. That's his game. Don't you think I see it? What dad wants is
+not that I shall have a wife I can love, but that he shall have a
+daughter-in-law with a title. You'd have to be, well, what I hope you
+will be some day, to know what that means to a man like dad. A
+son-in-law with a title--that's as common as beans to rich Americans;
+but a daughter-in-law with a title--a real, genuine British title, as
+sound as the Bank of England--that's something new. You can count on the
+fingers of one hand the American families that have got 'em"--he named
+them, one in Philadelphia, one in Chicago, one or two in New York--"and
+dad's as mad as blazes that he didn't think of the thing first. If he
+had, he'd have put Jack on to it, in spite of all Pauline's money; but
+since it's too late for that I must toe the mark. Well, I'm not going
+to, do you see? I'm going to choose my own wife, and I've chosen her.
+Birth and position mean nothing to me, for I'm as much of a Socialist as
+ever--or almost."
+
+With such resolution as this there was no way of reasoning, so that I
+could only go on, wondering and hoping and doing what I could for the
+best.
+
+What I could do for the best included watching over Mrs. Brokenshire.
+As winter progressed the task became harder and I grew the more anxious.
+So far no one suspected her visits to Mr. Grainger's library, and to the
+best of my knowledge her imprudence ended there. Further than to wander
+about the room the lovers never tried to elude me, though now and then I
+could see, without watching them, that he took her hand. Once or twice I
+thought he kissed her, but of that I was happily not sure. It was a
+relief, too, that as the days grew longer occasional visitors dropped in
+while they were there. The old gentleman interested in prints and the
+lady who studied Shakespeare came not infrequently. There were couples,
+too, who wandered in, seeking for their own purposes a half-hour of
+privacy. After all, the place was almost a public one to those who knew
+how to find it; and I was quick enough to see that in this very
+publicity lay a measure of salvation.
+
+Mrs. Brokenshire was as quick to perceive this as I. When there were
+other people there she was more at ease. Nothing was simpler then than
+for Mr. Grainger and herself to be visitors like the rest, strolling
+about or sitting in shady corners, and keeping themselves unrecognized.
+There was thus a Thursday in the early part of March when I didn't
+expect them, because it was a Thursday. They came, however, only to find
+the old gentleman interested in prints and the lady who studied
+Shakespeare already on the spot. I was never so glad of anything as of
+this accidental happening when a surprising thing occurred to me next
+day.
+
+It was between half past five and six on the Friday. As the lovers had
+come on the preceding day, I knew they would not appear on this, and was
+beginning to make my preparations for going home. I was actually pinning
+on my hat when the soft opening of the outer door startled me. A soft
+step sounded in the little inner vestibule, and then there came an
+equally soft, breathless standing still.
+
+My hands were paralyzed in their upward position at my hat; my heart
+pounded so that I could hear it; my eyes were wide with terror as they
+looked back at me from the splendid Venetian mirror before which I
+stood. I was always afraid of robbers or murderers, even though I had
+the wrought-iron grille between me and them, and Mr. or Mrs. Daly within
+call.
+
+Knowing that there was nothing for it but to go and see who was there,
+and suspecting that it might be Mrs. Brokenshire, after all, I dragged
+my feet across the few intervening paces. It was not Mrs. Brokenshire.
+It was a man, a man who looked inordinately big and majestic in this
+little decorative pen. I needed a few seconds in which to gaze, a few
+seconds in which to adjust my faculties, before grasping the fact that I
+saw Mrs. Brokenshire's husband. On his side, he needed something of the
+sort himself. Of all people in the world with whom he expected to find
+himself face to face I am sure I must have been the last.
+
+I touched the spring, however, and the little portal opened. It opened
+and he stepped in. He stepped in and stood still. He stood still and
+looked round him. If I dare to say it of one who was never timid in his
+life, he looked round him timidly. His eyes showed it, his attitude
+showed it. He had come on a hateful errand; his feet were on hateful
+ground. He expected to see something more than me--and emptiness.
+
+I got back some of my own self-control by being sorry for him, giving no
+indication of ever having met him before.
+
+"You'd like to see the library, sir," I said, as I should have said it
+to any chance visitor.
+
+He dropped into a large William and Mary chair, one of the show pieces,
+and placed his silk hat on the floor.
+
+"I'll sit down," he murmured less to me than to himself. His stick he
+dandled now across and now between his knees.
+
+The tea things were still on the table.
+
+"Would you like a cup of tea?" I asked, in genuine solicitude.
+
+"Yes--no." I think he would have liked it, but he probably remembered
+whose tea it was. "No," he repeated, with decision.
+
+He breathed heavily, with short, puffy gasps. I recalled then that Mrs.
+Brokenshire had said that his heart had been affected. As a matter of
+fact, he put his gloved left hand up to it, as people do who feel
+something giving way within.
+
+To relieve the embarrassment of the situation I said:
+
+"I could turn on all the lights and you could see the library without
+going round it."
+
+Withdrawing the hand at his heart, he raised it in the manner with which
+I was familiar.
+
+"Sit down," he commanded, as sternly as his shortness of breath allowed.
+
+The companion William and Mary chair being near, I slipped into it.
+Having him in three-quarters profile, I could study him without doing it
+too obviously, and could verify Mrs. Brokenshire's statements that
+Hugh's affairs were "telling on him." He was perceptibly older, in the
+way in which people look older all at once after having long kept the
+semblance of youth. The skin had grown baggy, the eyes tired; the beard
+and mustache, though as well cared for as ever, more decidedly mixed
+with gray. It was indicative of something that had begun to disintegrate
+in his self-esteem, that when his poor left eye screwed up he turned the
+terrifying right one on me with no effort to conceal the grimace.
+
+As it was for him to break the silence, I waited in my huge ornamental
+chair, hoping he would begin.
+
+"What are you doing here?"
+
+The voice had lost none of its soft staccato nor of its whip-lash snap.
+
+"I'm Mr. Grainger's librarian," I replied, meekly.
+
+"Since when?" he panted.
+
+"Since not long after I left Mrs. Rossiter."
+
+He took his time to think another question out.
+
+"How did your employer come to know about you?"
+
+I explained, as though he had had no knowledge of the fact, that Mrs.
+Rossiter had employed for her boy, Brokenshire, a tutor named
+Strangways. This Mr. Strangways had attracted Mr. Grainger's attention
+by some articles he had written for the financial press. An introduction
+had followed, after which Mr. Grainger had engaged the young man as his
+secretary. Hearing that Mr. Grainger had need of a librarian, Mr.
+Strangways had suggested me.
+
+I could see suspicion in the way in which he eyed me as well as in his
+words.
+
+"Had you no other recommendation?"
+
+"No, sir," I said, simply, "none that Mr. Grainger ever told me of."
+
+He let that pass.
+
+"And what do you do here?"
+
+"I show the library to visitors. If any one wishes a particular book, or
+to look at engravings, I help him to find what he wants." I thought it
+well to keep up the fiction that he had come as a sight-seer. "If you'd
+care to go over the place now, sir--"
+
+His hand went up in a majestic waving aside of this courtesy.
+
+"And have you many visitors to the--to the library?"
+
+Though I saw the implication, I managed to elude it.
+
+"Yes, sir, taking one day with another. It depends a little on the
+weather and the time of year."
+
+"Are they chiefly strangers--or--or do you ever see any one
+you've--you've seen before?"
+
+His difficulty in phrasing this question made me even more sorry for him
+than I was already. I decided, both for his sake and my own, to walk up
+frankly and take the bull by the horns. "They're generally strangers;
+but sometimes people come whom I know." I looked at him steadily as I
+continued. "I'll tell you something, sir. Perhaps I ought not to, and it
+may be betraying a secret; but you might as well know it from me as hear
+it from some one else." The expression of the face he turned on me was
+so much that of Jove, whose look could strike a man dead, that I had all
+I could do to go on. "Mrs. Brokenshire comes to see me."
+
+"To see--you?"
+
+"Yes, sir, to see me."
+
+The staccato accent grew difficult and thick. "What for?"
+
+"Because she can't help it. She's sorry for me."
+
+There was a new attempt to ignore me and my troubles as he said:
+
+"Why should she be sorry for you?"
+
+"Because she sees that you're hard on me--"
+
+"I haven't meant to be hard on you, only just."
+
+"Well, just then; but Mrs. Brokenshire doesn't know anything about
+justice when she can be merciful. You must know that yourself, sir. I
+think she's the most beautiful woman God ever made; and she's as kind as
+she's beautiful. I'll tell you something else, sir. It will be another
+betrayal, but it will show you what she is. One day at Newport--after
+you'd spoken to me--and she saw that I was so crushed by it that all I
+could do was to creep down among the rocks and cry--she watched me, and
+followed me, and came and cried with me. And so when she heard I was
+here--"
+
+"Who told her?"
+
+There was a measure of accusation in the tone of the question, but I
+pretended not to detect it.
+
+"Mrs. Rossiter, perhaps--she knows--or almost anybody. I never asked
+her."
+
+"Very well! What then?"
+
+"I was only going to say that when she heard I was here she came almost
+at once. I begged her not to--"
+
+"Why? What were you afraid of?"
+
+"I knew you wouldn't like it. But I couldn't stop her. No one could stop
+her when it comes to her doing an act of kindness. She obeys her own
+nature because she can't do anything else. She's like a little bird that
+you can keep from flying by holding it in your hand, but as soon as your
+grasp is relaxed--it flies."
+
+Something of this was true, in that it was true potentially. She had
+these qualities, even if they were nipped in her as buds are nipped in a
+backward spring. I could only calm my conscience as I went along by
+saying to myself that if I saved her she would have to bear me out
+through being true to the picture I was painting, and living up to her
+real self.
+
+Praise of the woman he adored would have been as music to him had he
+not had something on his mind that turned music into poignancy. What it
+was I could surmise, and so be prepared for it. Not till he had been
+some time silent, probably getting his question into the right words,
+did he say:
+
+"And are you always alone when Mrs. Brokenshire comes?"
+
+"Oh no, sir!" I made the tone as natural as I could. "But Mrs.
+Brokenshire doesn't seem to mind. Yesterday, for instance--"
+
+"Was she here yesterday? I thought she came on--"
+
+I broke in before he could betray himself further.
+
+"Yes, she was here yesterday; and there was--let me see!--there was an
+old gentleman comparing his Japanese prints with Mr. Grainger's, and a
+middle-aged lady who comes to study the old editions of Shakespeare. But
+Mrs. Brokenshire didn't object to them. She sat with me and had a cup of
+tea."
+
+I knew I had come to dangerous ground, and was ready for my part in the
+adventure. Had he asked the question: "Was there anybody else?" I was
+resolved, in the spirit of my maxim, to tell the truth as harmlessly as
+I knew how. But I didn't think he would ask it. I reckoned on his
+unwillingness to take me into his confidence or to humiliate himself
+more than he could help. That he guessed at something behind my words I
+could easily suspect; but I was so sure he would have torn out his
+tongue rather than force his pride to cross-examine me too closely, that
+I was able to run my risk.
+
+As a matter of fact, he became pensive, and through the gloom of the
+half-lighted room I could see that his face was contorted twice, still
+with no effort on his part to hide his misfortune. As he took the time
+to think I could do the same, with a kind of intuition in following the
+course of his meditations. I was not surprised, therefore, when he said,
+with renewed thickness of utterance:
+
+"Has Mrs. Brokenshire any--any other motive in coming here than
+just--just to see you?"
+
+I hung my head, perhaps with a touch of that play-acting spirit which
+most women are able to command, when the time comes.
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+He waited again. I never heard such overtones of despair as were in the
+three words which at last he tried to toss off easily.
+
+"What is it?"
+
+I still hung my head.
+
+"She brings me money for poor Hugh."
+
+He started back, whether from anger or relief I couldn't tell, and his
+face twitched for the fourth time. In the end, I suppose, he decided
+that anger was the card he could play most skilfully.
+
+"So that that's what enables him to keep up his rebellion against me!"
+
+"No, sir," I said, humbly, "because he never takes it." I went on with
+that portrait of Mrs. Brokenshire which I vowed she would have to
+justify. "That doesn't make any difference, however, to her wonderful
+tenderness of heart in wanting him to have it. You see, sir, when any
+one's so much like an angel as she is they don't stop to consider how
+justly other people are suffering or how they've brought their troubles
+on themselves. Where there's trouble they only ask to help; where
+there's suffering their first instinct is to heal. Mrs. Brokenshire
+doesn't want to sustain your son against you; that never enters her
+head: she only wants him not--not"--my own voice shook a little--"not
+to have to go without his proper meals. He's doing that now, I
+think--sometimes, at least. Oh, sir," I ventured to plead, "you can't
+blame her, not when she's so--so heavenly." Stealing a glance at him, I
+was amazed and shocked, and not a little comforted, to see two tears
+steal down his withered cheeks. Knowing then that he would not for some
+minutes be able to control himself sufficiently to speak, I hurried on.
+"Hugh doesn't take the money, because he knows that this is something he
+must go through with on his own strength. If he can't do that he must
+give in. I think I've made that clear to him. I'm not the adventuress
+you consider me--indeed I'm not. I've told him that if he's ever
+independent I will marry him; but I shall not marry him so long as he
+isn't free to give himself away. He's putting up a big fight, and he's
+doing it so bravely, that if you only knew what he's going through you'd
+be proud of him as your son."
+
+Resting my case there, I waited for some response, but I waited in vain.
+He reflected, and sat silent, and crossed and uncrossed his knees. At
+last he picked up his hat from the floor and rose. I, too, rose, waiting
+beside my chair, while he flicked the dust from the crown of his hat and
+seemed to study its glossy surface as he still reflected.
+
+I was now altogether without a clue to what was passing in his mind,
+though I could guess at the age-long tragedy of December's love for May.
+Having seen Ibsen's "Master Builder," at Munich, and read one or two
+books on the theme with which it deals, I could, in a measure,
+supplement my own experience. It was, however, the first time I had seen
+with my own eyes this desperate yearning of age for youth, or this
+something that is almost a death-blow which youth can inflict on age. My
+father used to say that fundamentally there is no such period as age,
+that only the outer husk grows old, while the inner self, the vital
+_ego_, is young eternally. Here, it seemed to me, was an instance of the
+fact. This man was essentially as young as he had been at twenty-five;
+he had the same instincts and passions; he demanded the same things. If
+anything, he demanded them more imperiously because of the long, long
+habit of desire. Denial which thirty years ago he could have taken
+philosophically was now a source of anguish. As I looked at him I could
+see anguish on his lips, in his eyes, in the contraction of his
+forehead--the anguish of a love ridiculous to all, and to the object of
+it frightful and unnatural, for the reason that at sixty-two the skin
+had grown baggy and the heart was supposed to be dead.
+
+From the smoothing of the crown of his hat he glanced up suddenly. The
+whip-lash inflection was again in the timbre of the voice.
+
+"How much do you get here?"
+
+I was taken aback, but I named the amount of my salary.
+
+"I will give you twice as much as that for the next five years if--if
+you go back to where you came from."
+
+It took me a minute to seize all the implications contained in this
+little speech. I saw then that if I hoped I was making an impression, or
+getting further ahead with him, I was mistaken. Neither had my
+interpretation of Mrs. Brokenshire's character put him off the scent
+concerning her. I was so far indeed from influencing him in either her
+favor or my own that he believed that if he could get rid of me an
+obstacle would be removed.
+
+Tears sprang into my eyes, though they didn't fall.
+
+"So you blame me, sir, for everything."
+
+He continued to watch his gloved hand as it made the circle of the crown
+of his hat.
+
+"I'll make it twice what you're getting here for ten years. I'll put it
+in my will." It was no use being angry or mounting my high horse. The
+struggle with tears kept me silent as he glanced up from the rubbing of
+his hat and said in a jerky, kindly tone: "Well? What do you say?"
+
+I didn't know what to say; and what I did say was foolish. I should have
+known enough to suppress it before I began.
+
+"Do you remember, sir, that once when you were speaking to me severely,
+you said you were my friend? Well, why shouldn't I be your friend, too?"
+
+The look he bent down on me was that of a great personage positively
+dazed by an inferior's audacity.
+
+"I could be your friend," I stumbled on, in an absurd effort to explain
+myself. "I should like to be. There are--there are things I could do for
+you."
+
+He put on his tall hat with the air of a Charlemagne or a Napoleon
+crowning himself. This increase of authority must have made me
+desperate. It is only thus that I can account for my _gaffe_--the French
+word alone expresses it--as I dashed on, wildly:
+
+"I like you, sir--I can't help it. I don't know why, but I do. I like
+you in spite of--in spite of everything. And, oh, I'm so sorry for
+you--"
+
+He moved away. There was noble, wounded offense in his manner of passing
+through the wrought-iron grille, which he closed with a little click
+behind him. He stepped out of the place as softly as he had stepped in.
+
+For long minutes I stood, holding to the side of the William and Mary
+chair, regretting that the interview should have ended in this way. I
+didn't cry; I had, in fact, no longer any tendency to tears. I was
+thoughtful--wondering what it was that dug the gulf between this man and
+his family and me. Ethel Rossiter had never--I could see it well enough
+now--accepted me as an equal, and even to Hugh I was only another type
+of Libby Jaynes. I was as intelligent as they, as well born, as well
+mannered, as thoroughly accustomed to the world. Why should they
+consider me an inferior? Was it because I had no money? Was it because I
+was a Canadian? Would it have made a difference if I had been an
+Englishwoman like Cissie Boscobel, or rich like any of themselves? I
+couldn't tell. All I knew was that my heart was hot within me, and since
+Howard Brokenshire wouldn't have me as a friend I wanted to act as his
+enemy. I could see how to do it. Indeed, without doing anything at all I
+could encourage, and perhaps bring about, a situation that would send
+the name of the family ringing through the press of two continents and
+break his heart. I had only to sit still--or at most to put in a word
+here and there. I am not a saint; I had my hour of temptation.
+
+It was a stormy hour, though I never moved from the spot where I stood.
+The storm was within. That which, as the minutes went by, became rage in
+me saw with satisfaction Howard Brokenshire brought to a desolate old
+age, and Mildred and Ethel and Jack and Pauline, in spite of their
+bravado and their high heads, all seared by the flame of notorious
+disgrace. I went so far as to gloat over poor Hugh's discomfiture,
+taking vengeance on his habit of rating me with the socially
+incompetent. As for Mrs. Brokenshire, she would be over and done with, a
+poor little gilded outcast, whose fall would be such that even as Mrs.
+Stacy Grainger she would never rise again. Like another Samson, I could
+pull down this house of pride, though, happier than Samson, I should not
+be overwhelmed in the ruin of it. From that I should be safe--with Larry
+Strangways.
+
+Nearly half an hour went by while I stood thus indulging in fierce
+day-dreams. I was racked and suffering. I suffered, indeed, from the
+misfortunes I saw descending on people whom at bottom of my heart I
+cared for. It was not till I began to move, till I had put on my jacket
+and was turning out the lights, that my maxim came back to me. I knew
+then that whatever happened I should stand by that, and having come to
+this understanding with myself, I was quieted.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XVI
+
+
+Having made up my mind to adhere, however imperfectly, to the principle
+that had guided me hitherto, I was obliged to examine my conscience as
+to what I had said to Mr. Brokenshire. This I did in the evening, coming
+to the conclusion that I had told him nothing but the truth, even if it
+was not all the truth. Though I hated duplicity, I couldn't see that I
+had a right to tell him all the truth, or that to do so would be wise.
+If he could be kept, for everybody's sake, from knowing more than he
+knew already, however much or little that was, it seemed to me that
+diplomatic action on my part would be justified.
+
+In the line of diplomatic action I had before all things to inform Mrs.
+Brokenshire of the visit I had received. This was not so easy as it may
+seem. I could not trust to a letter, through fear of its falling into
+other hands than hers. Neither could I wait for her coming on the
+following Tuesday, since that was what I wanted to prevent. There was no
+intermediary whom I could intrust with a message, unless it was Larry
+Strangways, who knew something of the facts; but even with him the
+secret was too much to share.
+
+In the end I had recourse to the telephone, asking to be allowed to
+speak to Mrs. Brokenshire. I was told that she never answered the
+telephone herself, and was requested to transmit my message. Not to
+arouse suspicion, I didn't ask that she should break her rule, but
+begged that during the day she might find a minute in which to see Miss
+Adare, who was in a difficulty that involved her work. That this way of
+putting it was understood I gathered from the reply that came back to
+me. It was to the effect that as Mr. Brokenshire would be lunching with
+some men in the lower part of New York Mrs. Brokenshire would be alone
+and able to receive Miss Adare at two. Fortunately, it was a Saturday,
+so that my afternoon was free.
+
+Almost everybody familiar with New York knows the residence of J. Howard
+Brokenshire not far above the Museum. Built of brick with stone facings,
+it is meant to be in the style of Louis Treize. It would be quite in the
+style of Louis Treize were the stonework not too heavy and elaborate,
+and the facade too high for its length. Inside, with an incongruity many
+rich people do not mind, it is sumptuously Roman and Florentine--the
+Brokenshire villa at Newport on a larger and more lavish scale. Having
+gone over the house with Ethel Rossiter during the winter I spent with
+her, I had carried away the impression of huge unoccupied rooms, of
+heavily carved or gilded furniture, of rich brocades, of dim old masters
+in elaborate gold frames, of vitrines and vases and mirrors and
+consoles, all supplied by some princely dealer in _objets d'art_ who had
+received _carte blanche_ in the way of decoration. The Brokenshire
+family, with the possible exception of Mildred, cared little for the
+things with which they lived. Ethel Rossiter, in showing me over the
+house, hardly knew a Perugino from a Fragonard, and still less could she
+distinguish, between the glorious fading softness of a Flemish
+fifteenth-century tapestry and a smug and staring bit of Gobelins. Hugh
+went in and out as indifferently as in a hotel, while Jack Brokenshire's
+taste in art hardly reached beyond racing prints. Mildred liked pretty
+garlanded things _a la_ Marie Antoinette, which the parental habit of
+deciding everything would never let her have. J. Howard alone made an
+effort at knowing the value, artistic and otherwise, of his possessions,
+and would sometimes, when strangers were present, point to this or that
+object with the authority of a connoisseur, which he was not.
+
+It was a house for life in perpetual state, with no state to maintain.
+Stafford House, Holland House, Bridgewater House, to name but a few of
+the historic mansions in London, were made spacious and splendid to meet
+a definite necessity. They belonged to days when the feudal tradition
+still obtained and there were no comfortable hotels. Great lords came to
+them with great families and great suites of retainers. Accommodation
+being the first of all needs, there was a time when every corner of
+these stately residences was lived in. But now that in England the great
+lord tends more and more to be only a simple democratic individual, and
+the wants of his relatives are easily met on a public or co-operative
+principle, the noble Palladian or Georgian dwelling either becomes a
+museum or a club, or remains a white elephant on the hands of some one
+who would gladly be rid of it. Princes and princesses of the blood royal
+rent numbered houses in squares and streets, next door to the Smiths and
+the Joneses, in preference to the draughty grandeurs of St. James's and
+Buckingham Palace, while a villa in the suburbs, with a few trees and a
+garden, is often the shelter sought by the nobility.
+
+But in proportion as civilization in England, to say nothing of the
+rest of Europe, puts off the burdensome to enjoy simplicity, America, it
+strikes me, chases the tail of an antiquated, disappearing stateliness.
+Rich men, just because they have the money, take upon their shoulders
+huge domestic responsibilities in which there is no object, and which it
+is probable the next generation will refuse to carry. In New York, in
+Washington, in Newport, in Chicago, they raise palaces and chateaux
+where they often find themselves lonely, and which they can rarely fill
+more than two or three times a year. In the case of the Howard
+Brokenshires it had ceased to be as often as that. After Ethel was
+married Mr. Brokenshire seldom entertained, his second wife having no
+heart for that kind of display. Now and then, in the course of a winter,
+a great dinner was given in the great dining-room, or the music-room was
+filled for a concert; but this was done for the sake of "killing off"
+those to whom some attention had to be shown, and not because either
+host or hostess cared for it. Otherwise the down-stairs rooms were
+silent and empty, and whatever was life in the house went on in a corner
+of the mansard.
+
+Thither the footman took me in a lift. Here were the rooms--a sort of
+flat--which the occupants could dominate with their personalities. They
+reminded me of those tiny chambers at Versailles to which what was human
+in poor Marie Antoinette fled for refuge from her uncomfortable
+gorgeousness as queen.
+
+Not that these rooms were tiny. On the contrary, the library or
+living-room into which I was ushered was as large as would be found in
+the average big house, and, notwithstanding its tapestries and massive
+furniture, was bright with sunshine and flowers. Books lay about, and
+papers and magazines, and after the tomb-like deadness of the lower
+floors one got at least the impression of life.
+
+From the far end of the room Mrs. Brokenshire came forward, threading
+her way between arm-chairs and taborets, and looking more exquisite, and
+also more lost, than ever. She wore what might be called a glorified
+_negligee_, lilac and lavender shading into violet, the train adding to
+her height. Fear had to some degree blotted out her color and put
+trouble into the sweetness of her eyes.
+
+"Something has happened," she said at once, as she took my hand.
+
+I spoke as directly as she did, though a little pantingly.
+
+"Yes; Mr. Brokenshire came to the library yesterday."
+
+"Ah-h!" The exclamation was no more than a long, frightened breath.
+"Then that explains things. I saw when he came home to dinner that he
+was unhappy."
+
+"Did he say anything?"
+
+"No; nothing. He was just--unhappy. Sit down and tell me."
+
+Staring wide-eyed at each other, we seated ourselves on the edge of two
+huge arm-chairs. Having half expected my companion to fling the gauntlet
+in her husband's face, I was relieved to find in her chiefly the dread
+of detection.
+
+As exactly as I could I gave her an account of what had passed between
+Mr. Brokenshire and myself, omitting only those absurd suggestions of my
+own that had sent him away in dudgeon. She listened with no more
+interruption than a question or two, after which she said, simply:
+
+"Then, I suppose, I can't go any more."
+
+"On the contrary," I corrected, "you must come just the same as ever,
+only not on the same days, or at the same hours--or--or when there's any
+one else there besides the visitors and me. If you stopped coming all of
+a sudden Mr. Brokenshire would think--"
+
+"But he thinks that already."
+
+"Of course, but he doesn't know--not after what I said to him." I seized
+the opportunity to beg her to play up. "You are all the things I told
+him you were, dear Mrs. Brokenshire, don't you see you are?"
+
+But my appeal passed unheeded.
+
+"What made him suspect? I thought that would be the last thing."
+
+"I don't know. It might have been a lot of things. Once or twice I've
+rather fancied that some of the people who came there--"
+
+Her features contracted in a spasm of horror.
+
+"You don't mean detect--" She found the word difficult to pronounce.
+"You don't mean de-detectives watching--me?"
+
+"I don't say as much as that; but I've never liked Mr. Brokenshire's
+man, Spellman."
+
+"No, nor I. He's out now. I made sure of that before you came."
+
+"So he might have sent some one; or-- But it's no use speculating, is
+it? when there are so many ways. What we've specially got to know is how
+to act, and I think I've told you the best method. If you don't keep
+coming--judiciously--you'll show you're conscious of having done wrong."
+
+She sighed plaintively.
+
+"I don't want to do wrong unless I can't help it. If I can't--"
+
+"Oh, but you can." I tried once more to get in my point. "You wouldn't
+be all I told Mr. Brokenshire you were if your first instinct wasn't to
+do right."
+
+"Oh, right!" She sighed again, but impatiently. "You're always talking
+about that."
+
+"One has to, don't you think, when it's so important--and so easy to do
+wrong?"
+
+She grew mildly argumentative.
+
+"I don't see anything so terrible about wrong, when other people do it
+and are none the worse."
+
+"May not that be because you've never tried it on your own account? It
+depends a little on the grain of which one's made. The finer the grain,
+the more harm wrong can do to it--just as a fragile bit of Venetian
+glass is more easily broken than an earthenware jug, and an infinitely
+greater loss."
+
+But the simile was wasted. From long contemplation of her hands she
+looked up to say in a curiously coaxing tone:
+
+"You live at the Hotel Mary Chilton, don't you?"
+
+I caught her suggestion in a flash, and decided that I could let it go
+no further.
+
+"Yes, but you couldn't come there--unless it was only to see me."
+
+"But what shall I do?"
+
+It was a kind of cry. She twisted her ringed fingers, while her eyes
+implored me to help her.
+
+"Do nothing," I said, gently, and yet with some severity. "If you do
+anything do just as I've said. That's all we've got to know for the
+present."
+
+"But I must see him. Now that I've got used to doing it--"
+
+"If you must see him, dear Mrs. Brokenshire, you will."
+
+"Shall I? Will you promise me?"
+
+"I don't have to promise you. It's the way life works. If we only trust
+to events--and to whatever it is that guides events--and--and do
+right--I must repeat it--then the thing that ought to be will shape its
+course--"
+
+"Ah, but if it doesn't?"
+
+"In that case we can know that it oughtn't to be."
+
+"I don't care whether it ought to be or not, so long as I can go on
+seeing him--somewhere."
+
+I had enough sympathy with her to say:
+
+"Yes, but don't plan for it. Let it take care of itself and happen in
+some natural way. Isn't it by mapping out things for ourselves that we
+often thwart the good that would otherwise have come to us? I remember
+reading somewhere of a lady who wrote of herself that she had been
+healed of planning, and spoke of it as a real cure. That struck me as so
+sensible. Life--not to use a greater word--knows much better what's good
+for us than we do ourselves."
+
+She allowed this theme to lapse, while she sat pensive.
+
+"What shall I say," she asked at last, "if he brings the subject up?"
+
+I saw another opportunity.
+
+"What can you say other than what I've said already? You came to me
+because you were sorry for me, and you wanted to help Hugh. He might
+regret that you should do both, but he couldn't blame you for either.
+They're only kindnesses--and we're all at liberty to be kind. Oh, don't
+you see? That's your--how shall I put it?--that's your line if Mr.
+Brokenshire ever speaks to you."
+
+"And suppose he tells me not to go to see you any more?"
+
+"Then you must stop. That will be the time. But not now when the mere
+stopping would be a kind of confession--"
+
+And so, after many repetitions and some tears on both our parts, the
+lesson was urged home. She was less docile, however, when in the spirit
+of our new compact she came on the following Monday morning.
+
+"I must see him," was the burden of what she had to say. She spoke as if
+I was forbidding her and ought to lift my veto. I might even have
+inferred that in my position in Mr. Grainger's employ it was for me to
+arrange their meetings.
+
+"You will see him, dear Mrs. Brokenshire--if it's right," was the only
+answer I could find.
+
+"You don't seem to remember that I was to have married him."
+
+"I do, but we both have to remember that you didn't."
+
+"Neither did I marry Mr. Brokenshire. I was handed over to him. When
+Lady Mary Hamilton was handed over in that way to the Prince of Monaco
+the Pope annulled the marriage. We knew her afterward in Budapest,
+married to some one else. If there's such a thing as right, as you're so
+fond of saying, I ought to be considered free."
+
+I was holding both her hands as I said:
+
+"Don't try to make yourself free. Let life do it."
+
+"Life!" she cried, with a passionate vehemence I scarcely knew to be in
+her. "It's life that--"
+
+"Treat life as a friend and not as an enemy. Trust it; wait for it.
+Don't hurry it, or force it, or be impatient with it. I can't believe
+that essentially it's hard or cruel or a curse. If it comes from God, it
+must be good and beautiful. In proportion as we cling to the good and
+beautiful we must surely get the thing we ought to have."
+
+Though I cannot say that she accepted this doctrine, it helped her over
+a day or two, leaving me free for the time being to give my attention to
+my own affairs. Having no natural stamina, the poor, lovely little
+creature lived on such mental and spiritual pick-me-ups as I was able to
+administer. Whenever she was specially in despair, which was every
+forty-eight or sixty hours, she came back to me, and I did what I could
+to brace her for the next short step of her way. I find it hard to
+explain the intensity of her appeal to me. I suppose I must have
+submitted to that spell of the perfect face which had bewitched Stacy
+Grainger and Howard Brokenshire. I submitted also to her child-like
+helplessness. God knows I am not a heroine. Any little fright or
+difficulty upsets me. As compared with her, however, I was a giant
+refreshed with wine. When her lip quivered, or when the sudden mist
+drifted across her eyes, obscuring their forget-me-not blue with violet,
+my yearning was exactly that which makes any woman long to take any
+suffering baby in her arms. For this reason she didn't tax my patience,
+nor had I that impulse to scold or shake her to which another woman of
+such obvious limitations would have driven me. Touched as I was by the
+aching heart, I was captivated by the perfect face; and I couldn't help
+it.
+
+Thus through the rest of February and into March my chief occupation was
+in keeping Howard Brokenshire's wife as true to him as the conditions
+rendered possible. In the intervals I comforted Hugh, and beat off Larry
+Strangways, and sat rigidly still while Stacy Grainger prowled round me
+with fierce, suspicious, melancholy eyes, like those of a cowed tiger.
+Afraid of him as I was, it filled me with grim inward amusement to
+discover that he was equally afraid of me. He came into the library
+from time to time, when he happened to be at his house, and like Mrs.
+Brokenshire gave me the impression that the frustration of their love
+was my fault. As I sat primly and severely at my desk, and he stalked
+round and round the room, stabbing the old gentleman who classified
+prints and the lady who collated the early editions of Shakespeare with
+contemptuous glances, I knew that in his sight I represented--poor
+me!--that virtuous respectability the sinner always holds in scorn. He
+could not be ignorant of the fact that if it hadn't been for me Mrs.
+Brokenshire would have been meeting him elsewhere, and so he held me as
+an enemy. Had he not known that I was something besides an enemy he
+would doubtless have sent me about my business.
+
+In one of the intervals of this portion of the drama I received a visit
+that took me by surprise. Early in the afternoon of a day in March, Mrs.
+Billing trotted into the library, followed by Lady Cecilia Boscobel. It
+was the sort of occasion on which I should have been nervous enough in
+any case, but it became terrifying when Mrs. Billing marched up to my
+desk and pointed at me with her lorgnette, saying over her shoulder,
+"There she is," as though I was a portrait.
+
+I struggled to my feet with what was meant to be a smile.
+
+"Lady Cecilia Boscobel," I stammered, "has seen me already."
+
+"Well, she can look at you again, can't she?"
+
+The English girl came to my rescue by smiling back, and murmuring a
+faint "How do you do?" She eased the situation further by saying, with a
+crisp, rapid articulation, in which every syllable was charmingly
+distinct: "Mrs. Billing thought that as we were out sight-seeing we
+might as well look at this. It's shown every day, isn't it?"
+
+She went on to observe that when places were shown only on certain days
+it was so tiresome. One of her father's places, Dillingham Hall, in
+Nottinghamshire, an old Tudor house, perfectly awful to live in, was
+open to the public only on the second and fourth Wednesdays, and even
+the family couldn't remember when those days came round. It was so
+awkward to be doing your hair, or worse, and have tourists stumbling in
+on you.
+
+I counted it to the credit of her tact and kindliness that she chatted
+in this way long enough for me to get my breath, while Mrs. Billing
+turned her lorgnette on the room with which she must have once been
+familiar. If there was to be anything like rivalry between Lady Cissie
+and me I gathered that she wouldn't stoop to petty feminine advantages.
+Dressed in dark green, with a small hat of the same color worn
+dashingly, she had that air of being the absolutely finished thing which
+the tones of her voice announced to you. My heart grew faint at the
+thought that Hugh would have to choose between this girl, so certain of
+herself, and me.
+
+As we were all standing, I invited my callers to sit down. To this Lady
+Cecilia acceded, though old Mrs. Billing strolled off to renew her
+acquaintance with the room. I may say here that I call her old because
+to be old was a kind of pose with her. She looked old and "dressed old"
+so as to enjoy the dictatorial privileges that go with being old, when
+as a matter of fact she was only sixty, which nowadays is young.
+
+"You're English, aren't you?" Lady Cecilia began, as soon as we were
+alone. "I can tell by the way you speak."
+
+I said I was a Canadian, that I was in New York more or less by
+accident, and might go back to my own country again.
+
+"How interesting! It belongs to us, Canadia, doesn't it?"
+
+With a slightly ironic emphasis on the proper noun I replied that
+Canadia naturally belonged to the Canadians, but that the King of Great
+Britain and Ireland was our king, and that we were very loyal to all
+that we represented.
+
+"Fancy! And isn't it near here?"
+
+All of Canada, I stated, was north of some of the United States, and
+some of it was south of others of the United States, but none of the
+more settled parts was difficult of access from New York.
+
+"How very odd!" was her comment on these geographical indications. "I
+think I remember that a cousin of ours was governor out there--or
+something--though perhaps it was in India."
+
+I named the series of British noblemen who had ruled over us since the
+confederation of the provinces in 1867, but as Lady Cecilia's kinsman
+was not among them we concluded that he must have been Viceroy of India
+or Governor-General of Australia.
+
+The theme served to introduce us to each other, and lasted while Mrs.
+Billing's tour of inspection kept her within earshot.
+
+I am bound to admit that I admired Lady Cecilia with an envy that might
+be qualified as green. She was not clever and she was not well educated,
+but her high breeding was so spontaneous. She so obviously belonged to
+spheres where no other rule obtained. Her manner was the union of polish
+and simplicity; each word she pronounced was a pleasure to the ear. In
+my own case life had been a struggle with that American-Canadian
+crudity which stamps our New World carriage and speech with commonness;
+but you could no more imagine this girl lapsing from the even tenor of
+the exquisite than you could fancy the hermit thrush failing in its
+song.
+
+When Mrs. Billing was quite at the other end of the room my companion's
+manner underwent a change. During a second or two of silence her eyes
+fell, while the shifting of color over the milk-whiteness of her skin
+was like the play of Canadian northern lights. I was prepared for the
+fact that beneath her poise she might be shy, and that, being shy, she
+would be abrupt.
+
+"You're engaged to Hugh Brokenshire, aren't you?"
+
+The words were whipped out fast and jerkily, partly to profit by the
+minute during which Mrs. Billing was at a distance, and partly because
+it was a matter of now-or-never with their utterance.
+
+I made the necessary explanations, for what seemed to me must be the
+hundredth time. I was not precisely engaged to him, but I had said I
+would marry him if either of two conditions could be carried out. I went
+on to state what those conditions were, finishing with the information
+that of the two I had practically abandoned one.
+
+She nodded her comprehension.
+
+"You see that--that they won't come round."
+
+"No," I replied, with some incisiveness; "they will come
+round--especially Mr. Brokenshire. It's the other condition I no longer
+expect to see fulfilled."
+
+If the hermit thrush could fail in its song it did it then. Lady Cecilia
+stared at me with a blankness that became awe.
+
+"That's the most extraordinary thing I ever heard. Ethel Rossiter must
+be wrong."
+
+I had a sudden suspicion.
+
+"Wrong about what?"
+
+The question put Lady Cecilia on her guard.
+
+"Oh, nothing I need explain." But her face lighted with quick
+enthusiasm. "I call it magnificent."
+
+"Call what 'magnificent'?"
+
+"Why, that you should have that conviction. When one sees any one so
+sporting--"
+
+I began to get her idea.
+
+"Oh, I'm not sporting. I'm a perfect coward. But a sheep will make a
+stand when it's put to it."
+
+With her hands in her sable muff, her shapely figure was inclined
+slightly toward me.
+
+"I'm not sure that a sheep that makes a stand isn't braver than a lion.
+The man my sister Janet is engaged to--he's in the Inverness
+Rangers--often says that no one could be funkier than he on going into
+action; but that," she continued, her face aglow, "didn't prevent his
+being ever so many times mentioned in despatches and getting his D. S.
+O."
+
+"Please don't put me into that class--"
+
+"No; I won't. After all a soldier couldn't really funk things, because
+he's got everything to back him up. But you haven't. And when I think of
+you sitting here all by yourself, and expecting that great big rich Mr.
+Brokenshire and Ethel, and all of them, to come to your terms--"
+
+To get away from a view of my situation that both consoled and
+embarrassed me, I said:
+
+"Thank you, Lady Cecilia, very, very much; but it isn't what you meant
+to say when you began, is it?"
+
+With some confusion she admitted that it wasn't.
+
+"Only," she went on, "that isn't worth while now."
+
+A hint in her tone impelled me to insist.
+
+"It may be. You don't know. Please tell me what it was."
+
+"But what's the use? It was only something Ethel Rossiter said--and she
+was wrong."
+
+"What makes you so sure she was wrong?"
+
+"Because I am. I can see." She added, reluctantly, "Ethel thought there
+was some one--some one besides Hugh--"
+
+"And what if there was?"
+
+Though startled by the challenge, she stood her ground.
+
+"I don't believe in people making each other any more unhappy than they
+can help, do you?" She had a habit of screwing up her small gray-green
+eyes into two glimmering little slits of light, with an effect of
+shyness showing through amusement and _diablerie_. "We're both girls,
+aren't we? I'm twenty, and you can't be much older. And so I
+thought--that is, I thought at first--that if you had any one else in
+mind, there'd be no use in our making each other miserable--but I see
+you haven't; and so--"
+
+"And so," I laughed, nervously, "the race must be to the swift and the
+battle to the strong. Is that it?"
+
+"N-no; not exactly. What I was going to say is that since--since there's
+nobody but Hugh--you won't be offended with me, will you?--I won't step
+in--"
+
+It was my turn to be enthusiastic.
+
+"But that's what I call sporting!"
+
+"Oh no, it isn't. I haven't seen Hugh for two or three years, and
+whatever little thing there was--"
+
+I strained forward across my desk. I know my eyes must have been
+enormous.
+
+"But was there--was there ever--anything?"
+
+"Oh no; not at all. He--he never noticed me. I was only in the
+school-room, and he was a grown-up young man. If his father and mine
+hadn't been great friends--and got plans into their heads--Laura and
+Janet used to poke fun at me about it. And then we rode together and
+played tennis and golf, and so--but it was all--just nothing. You know
+how silly a girl of seventeen can be. It was nonsense. I only want you
+to know, in case he ever says anything about it--but then he never
+will--men see so little--I only want you to know that that's the way I
+feel about it--and that I didn't come over here to-- I don't say that if
+in your case there had been any one else--but I see there isn't--Ethel
+Rossiter is wrong--and so if I can do anything for Hugh and yourself
+with the Brokenshires. I--I want you to make use of me."
+
+With a dignity oddly in contrast to this stammering confession, which
+was what it was, she rose to her feet as Mrs. Billing came back to us.
+
+The hook-nosed face was somber. Curiosity as to other people's business
+had for once given place in the old lady's thoughts to meditations that
+turned inward. I suppose that in some perverse fashion of her own she
+loved her daughter, and suffered from her unhappiness. There was enough
+in this room to prove to her how cruelly mere self-seeking can overreach
+itself and ruin what it tries to build.
+
+"Well, what are you talking about?" she snapped, as she approached us.
+"Hugh Brokenshire, I'll bet a dime."
+
+"Fancy!" was the stroke with which the English girl, smiling dimly,
+endeavored to counter this attack.
+
+Mrs. Billing hardly paused as she made her way toward the door.
+
+"Don't let her have him," she threw at Lady Cecilia. "He's not good
+enough for her. She's my kind," she went on, poking at me with her
+lorgnette. "Needs a man with brains. Come along, Cissie. Don't mind what
+she says. You grab Hugh the first chance you get. She'll have bigger
+fish to fry. Do come along. We've had enough of this."
+
+Lady Cissie and I shook hands with the over-acted listlessness of two
+daughters of the Anglo-Saxon race trying to carry off an emotional
+crisis as if they didn't know what it meant. But after she had gone I
+thought of her--I thought of her with her Limoges-enamel coloring, her
+luscious English voice, her English air of race, her dignity, her style,
+her youth, her naivete, her combination of all the qualities that make
+human beings distinguished, because there is nothing else for them to
+be. I dragged myself to the Venetian mirror and looked into it. With my
+plain gray frock, my dark complexion, and my simply arranged hair. I was
+a poor little frump whom not even the one man in five hundred could find
+attractive. I wondered how Hugh could be such a fool. I asked myself if
+he could go on being such a fool much longer. And with the thought that
+he would--and again with the thought that he wouldn't--I surprised
+myself by bursting into tears.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XVII
+
+
+In similar small happenings April passed and we had reached the middle
+of May. Easter and the opera were over; as the warm weather was coming
+on people were already leaving town for the country, the seaside or
+Europe. Personally, I had no plans beyond spending the month of August,
+which Mr. Grainger informed me I was to have "off," in making a visit to
+my old home in Halifax. Hugh had ceased to talk of immediate marriage,
+since he had all he could do to live on what he earned in selling bonds.
+
+He had taken that job when Mildred could lend him no more without
+dipping into funds that had been his father's. He was still resolute on
+that point. He was resolute, too, in seeing nothing in the charms of
+Cissie Boscobel. He hated red hair, he said, making no allowance for the
+umber-red of Australian gold, and where I saw the lights of Limoges
+enamel he found no more than the garish tints of a chromolithograph.
+When I hinted that he might be the hero of some young romance on
+Cissie's part, he was contented to say "R-rot!" with a contemptuous roll
+of the first consonant.
+
+Larry Strangways was industrious, happy, and prospering. He enjoyed the
+men with whom his work brought him into contact, and I gathered that his
+writing for daily, weekly, and monthly publications was bringing him
+into view as a young man of originality and power. From himself I
+learned that his small inherited capital was doubling and tripling and
+quadrupling itself through association with Stacy Grainger's
+enterprises. For Stacy Grainger himself he continued to feel an
+admiration not free from an uneasiness, with regard to which he made no
+direct admissions.
+
+Of Mrs. Brokenshire I was seeing less. Either she had grown used to
+doing without her lover or she was meeting him in some other way. She
+still came to see me as often as once a week, but she was not so
+emotional or excitable. She might have been more affectionate than
+before, and yet it was with a dignity that gradually put me at a
+distance.
+
+Cissie Boscobel I didn't meet during the whole of the six weeks except
+in the company of Mrs. Rossiter. That happened when once or twice I went
+to the house to see Gladys when she was suffering from colds, or when my
+former employer drove me round the Park. Just once I got the opportunity
+to hint that Lady Cissie hadn't taken Hugh from me as yet, to which Mrs.
+Rossiter replied that that was obviously because she didn't want him.
+
+We were all, therefore, at a standstill, or moving so slowly that I
+couldn't perceive that we were moving at all, when in the middle of a
+May forenoon I was summoned to the telephone. I was not surprised to
+find Mr. Strangways at the other end, since he used any and every excuse
+to call me up; but his words struck me as those of a man who had taken
+leave of his senses. He plunged into them without any of the usual
+morning greetings or preliminary remarks.
+
+"Are you game to go to Boston by the five-o'clock train to-day?"
+
+I naturally said, "What?" but I said it with some emphasis.
+
+He repeated the question a little more anxiously.
+
+"Could you be ready to go to Boston by the five-o'clock train this
+afternoon?"
+
+"Why should I be?"
+
+He seemed to hesitate before replying.
+
+"You'd know that," he said at last, "when you got on the train."
+
+"Is it a joke?" I inquired, with a light laugh.
+
+"No; it's not a joke. It's serious. I want you to take that train and
+go."
+
+"But what for?"
+
+"I've told you you'd know that when you got on the train--or before you
+had gone very far."
+
+"And do you think that's information enough?"
+
+"It will be information enough for you when I say that a great deal may
+depend on your doing as I ask."
+
+I raised a new objection.
+
+"How can I go when I've my work to attend to here?"
+
+"You must be ready to give that up. If any one makes any trouble, you
+must say you've resigned the position."
+
+As far as was possible over the wire I got the impression of earnestness
+on his part and perhaps excitement; but I was not yet satisfied.
+
+"What shall I do when I get to Boston? Where shall I go?"
+
+"You'll see. You'll know. You'll have to act for yourself. Trust your
+own judgment as I trust it."
+
+"But, Mr. Strangways, I don't understand a bit," I was beginning to
+protest, when he broke in on me.
+
+"Oh, don't you see? It will all explain itself as you go on. I can't
+tell you about it in advance. I don't know. All I can say is that
+whatever happens you'll be needed, and if you're needed you'll be able
+to play the game."
+
+He went on with further directions. It would be possible to take my seat
+in the train at twenty minutes before the hour of departure. I was to be
+early on the spot so as to be among the first to be in my place. I was
+to take nothing but a suit-case; but I was to put into it enough to last
+me for a week, or even for a week or two. I was to be prepared for
+roughing it, if necessary, or for anything else that developed. He would
+send me my ticket within an hour and provide me with plenty of money.
+
+"But what is it?" I implored again. "It sounds like spying, or the
+secret service, or something melodramatic."
+
+"It's none of those things. Just be ready. Wait where you are till you
+get your ticket and the money."
+
+"Will you bring them yourself?"
+
+"No. I can't; I'm too busy. I'm calling from a pay-station. Don't ring
+me up for any more questions. Just do as I've asked you, and I know
+you'll not regret it--not as long as you live."
+
+He put up the receiver, leaving me bewildered. My ignorance was such
+that speculation was shut out. I kept saying to myself: "It must be
+this," or, "It must be that," but with no conviction in my guesses. One
+dreadful suspicion came to me, but I firmly put it away.
+
+A little after twelve a special messenger arrived, bringing my ticket
+and five hundred dollars in bank-notes. I knew then that I was in for a
+genuine adventure. At one I put on my hat and coat, locked the door
+behind me, and went off to my hotel. Mentally I was leaving a work to
+which, from certain points of view, I was sorry to say good-by, but I
+could afford no backward looks.
+
+At the hotel I packed my belongings and left them so that they could be
+sent after me in case I should not return. I might be back the next
+morning; but then I might never come back at all. I thought of those
+villagers who from idle curiosity followed the carriage of Louis XVI.
+and Marie Antoinette as it drove out of Varennes, some of them never to
+see their native town again till they had been dragged over half the
+battle-fields of Europe. Like them I had no prevision as to where I was
+going or what was to become of me. I knew only--gloatingly, and with a
+kind of glory in the fact--that I was going at the call of Larry
+Strangways, to do his bidding, because he believed in me. But that
+thought, too, I tried to put out of my mind. In as far as it was in my
+mind I did my best to express it in terms of prose, seeing myself not as
+the heroine of a mysterious romance--a view to which I was inclined--but
+as a practical business woman, competent, up-to-date, and unafraid. I
+was afraid, mortally afraid, and I was neither up-to-date nor competent;
+but the fiction sustained me while I packed my trunks and sent a
+telegram to Hugh.
+
+This last I did only when it was too late for him to answer or intercept
+me.
+
+"Called suddenly out of town," I wrote. "May lead to a new place. Will
+write or wire as soon as possible." Having sent this off at half past
+four, I took a taxicab for the station.
+
+My instructions were so far carried out successfully that, with a
+colored porter wearing a red cap to precede me, I was the first to pass
+the barrier leading to the train, and the first to take my seat in the
+long, narrow parlor-car. My chair was two from the end toward the
+entrance and exit. Once enthroned within its upholstered depths I
+watched for strange occurrences.
+
+But I watched in vain. For a time I saw nothing but the straight, empty
+cavern of the car. Then a colored porter, as like to my own as one pea
+to another, came puffing his way in, dragging valises and other
+impedimenta, and followed by an old gentleman and his wife. These the
+porter installed in chairs toward the middle of the car, and, touching
+his cap on receipt of his tip, made hastily for the door. Similar
+arrivals came soon after that, with much stowing of luggage into
+overhead racks, and kisses, and injunctions as to conduct, and
+farewells. Within my range of vision were two elderly ladies, a smartly
+dressed young man, a couple in the disillusioned, surly stage, a couple
+who had recently been married, a clergyman, a youth of the cheap
+sporting type. To one looking for the solution of a mystery the material
+was not promising.
+
+The three chairs immediately in front of mine remained unoccupied. I
+kept my eye on them, of course, and presently got some reward. Shortly
+before the train pulled out of the station a shadow passed me which I
+knew to be that of Larry Strangways. He went on to the fourth seat,
+counting mine as the first, and, having reached it, turned round and
+looked at me. He looked at me gravely, with no sign of recognition
+beyond a shake of the head. I understood then that I was not to
+recognize him, and that in the adventure, however it turned out, we were
+to be as strangers.
+
+One more thing I saw. He had never been so pale or grim or determined in
+all the time I had known him. I had hardly supposed that it was in him
+to be so determined, so grim, or so pale. I gathered that he was taking
+our mission more to heart than I had supposed, and that, prompt in
+action as I had been, I was considering it too flippantly. Inwardly I
+prayed for nerve to support him, and for that presence of mind which
+would tell me what to do when there was anything to be done.
+
+Perhaps it increased my zeal that he was so handsome. Straight and slim
+and upright, his features were of that lean, blond, regular type I used
+to consider Anglo-Saxon, but which, now that I have seen it in so many
+Scandinavians, I have come to ascribe to the Norse strain in our blood.
+The eyes were direct; the chin was firm; the nose as straight as an
+ancient Greek's. The relatively small mouth was adorned by a relatively
+small mustache, twisted up at the ends, of the color of the coffee-bean,
+and, to my admiring feminine appreciation, blooming on his face like a
+flower.
+
+His neat spring suit was also of the color of the coffee-bean, and so
+was his soft felt hat. In his shirt there were lines of tan and violet,
+and tan and violet appeared in the tie beneath which a soft collar was
+pinned with a gold safety pin. The yellow gloves that men have affected
+of late years gave a pleasant finish to this costume, which was quite
+complete when he pulled from his bag an English traveling-cap of several
+shades of tan and put it on. He also took out a book, stretching himself
+in his chair in such a way that the English traveling-cap was all I
+could henceforth see of his personality.
+
+I give these details because they entered into the mingled unwillingness
+and zest with which I found myself dragged on an errand to which I had
+no clue. Still less had I a clue when the train began to move, and I had
+nothing but the view of the English traveling-cap to bear me company.
+But no, I had one other detail. Before sitting down Mr. Strangways had
+carefully separated his own hand-luggage from that of the person who
+would be behind him, and which included an ulster, a walking-stick, and
+a case of golf-clubs. I inferred, therefore, that the wayfarer who owned
+one of the two chairs between Mr. Strangways and myself must be a man.
+The chair directly in front of mine remained empty.
+
+As we passed into the tunnel my mind lashed wildly about in search of
+explanations, the only one I could find being that Larry Strangways was
+kidnapping me. On arriving in Boston I might find myself confronted by a
+marriage license and a clergyman. If so, I said to myself, with an
+extraordinary thrill, there would be nothing for it but submission to
+this _force majeure_, though I had to admit that the averted head, the
+English traveling-cap, and the intervening ulster, walking-stick, and
+golf-clubs worked against my theory. I was dreaming in this way when the
+train emerged from the tunnel and stopped so briefly at One Hundred and
+Twenty-fifth Street that, considering it afterward, I concluded that the
+pause had been arranged for. It was just long enough for an odd little
+bundle of womanhood to be pulled and shoved on the car and thrown into
+the seat immediately in front of mine. I choose my verbs with care,
+since they give the effect produced on me. The little woman, who was
+swathed in black veils and clad in a long black shapeless coat, seemed
+not to act of her own volition and to be more dead than alive. The
+porter who had brought her in flung down her two or three bags and
+waited, significantly, though the train was already creeping its way
+onward. She was plainly unused to fending for herself, and only when, as
+a reminder, the man had touched his hat a second time did it occur to
+her what she had to do. Hastily unfastening a small bag, she pulled out
+a handful of money and thrust it at him. The man grinned and was gone,
+after which she sagged back helplessly into her seat, the satchel open
+in her lap.
+
+That dreadful suspicion which had smitten me earlier in the day came
+back again, but the new-comer was so stiflingly wrapped up that even I
+could not be sure. She reminded me of nothing so much as of the veiled
+Begum of Bhopal as she sat in the durbar with the other Indian
+potentates, her head done up in a bag, as seen in the pictures in the
+illustrated London papers. For a lady who wished to pass unperceived it
+was perfect--for every eye in the car was turned on her. I myself
+studied her, of course, searching for something to confirm my fears, but
+finding nothing I could take as convincing. For the matter of that, as
+she sat huddled in the enormous chair I could see little beyond a
+swathing of veils round a close-fitting hat and the folds of the long
+black coat. The easiest inference was that she might be some poor old
+thing whom her relatives were anxious to be rid of, which was, I think,
+the conclusion most of our neighbors drew. Speaking of neighbors, I had
+noticed that in spite of the disturbance caused by this curious
+entrance, Larry Strangways had not turned his head.
+
+I could only sit, therefore, and wait for enlightenment, or for an
+opportunity. Both came when, some half-hour later, the ticket-collectors
+passed slowly down the aisle. Other passengers got ready for them in
+advance, but the little begum in front of me did nothing. When at last
+the collectors were before her she came to herself with a start.
+
+She came to herself with a start, seizing her satchel awkwardly and
+spilling its contents on the floor. The tickets came out, and some
+money. The collectors picked up the tickets and began to pencil and tear
+them; the youth of the cheap sporting type and I went after the coins.
+Since I was a young woman and the lady with her head in a bag might be
+taken for an old one, I had no difficulty in securing his harvest, which
+he handed over to me with an ingratiating leer. Returning the leer as
+much in his own style as I could render it, I offered the handful of
+silver and copper to its owner. To do this I stood as directly as might
+be in front of her, and when, inadvertently, she raised her head I tried
+to look her in the eyes.
+
+I couldn't see them. The shimmer I caught behind the two or three veils
+might have been any one's eyes. But in the motion of the hand that took
+the money, and in the silvery tinkle of the voice that made itself as
+low as possible in murmuring the words, "Thank you!" I couldn't be
+mistaken. It was enough. If I hadn't seen her she at least had seen me,
+and so I went back to my seat.
+
+I had got the first part of my revelation. With the aid of the ulster,
+the walking-stick, and the golf-clubs I could guess at the rest. I knew
+now why Larry Strangways wanted me there, but I didn't know what I was
+to do. By myself I could do nothing. Unless the little begum took the
+initiative I shouldn't know where to begin. I could hardly tear off a
+disguise she had chosen to assume, nor could I take it for granted that
+she was not on legitimate business.
+
+But she had seen me, and there was something in that. If the owner of
+the vacant chair turned up he, too, would see me, and he wouldn't wear a
+veil. We should look each other in the eyes, and he would know that I
+knew what he was about to do. The situation would not be pleasant for
+me; but it would conceivably be much less pleasant for anybody else.
+
+I waited, therefore, watching the beautiful green country go tearing by.
+The smiling freshness of spring was over the hillsides on the left,
+while the setting sun gilded the tiny headlands on the right and turned
+the rapid succession of creeks and inlets and marshy pools into sheets
+of orange and red. Fire illumined the windows of many a passing house,
+to be extinguished instantaneously, and touched with occasional flames
+the cold spring-tide blue of the sea. Clumps of forsythia were in
+blossom, and here and there an apple-tree held out toward the sun a
+branch of early flowers.
+
+When the train stopped at New Haven I was afraid that the owner of the
+ulster and the golf-clubs would appear, and that my work, whatever it
+was to be, would be rendered the more difficult. But no new arrival
+entered. On the other hand, the passengers began to thin out as the time
+came for going to the dining-car. In the matter of food I determined to
+stay at my post if I died of starvation, especially on seeing that the
+English traveling-cap was equally courageous.
+
+Twilight gradually filtered into the world outside; the marshes, inlets,
+and creeks grew dim. Dim was the long, burnished line of the Sound,
+above which I could soon make out a sprinkling of wan yellow stars. Wan
+yellow lights appeared in windows where no curtains were drawn, and what
+a few minutes earlier had been twilight became quickly the night. It was
+the wistful time, the homesick, heart-searching time. If the little lady
+in front of me were to have qualms as to what she was doing they would
+come then.
+
+And indeed as I watched her it seemed to me that she inserted her
+handkerchief under her series of coverings as if to wipe away a tear.
+Presently she lifted two unsteady hands and began to untie her outer
+veil. When it came to finding the pins by which it was adjusted she
+fumbled so helplessly that I took it on myself to lean forward with the
+words, "Won't you allow me?" I could do this without moving round to
+where I should have been obliged to look her in the face; and it was so
+when I helped her take off the veil underneath.
+
+"I'm smothering," she said, very much as it might have been said by a
+little child in distress.
+
+She wore still another veil, but only that which was ordinarily attached
+to her hat. The car being not very brightly lighted, and most of our
+fellow-travelers having gone to dinner, she probably thought she had
+little to fear. As she gave no sign of recognition on my rendering my
+small services I subsided again into my chair.
+
+But I knew she was as conscious of my presence as I was of hers. It was
+not wholly surprising, then, that some twenty minutes later she should
+swing round in the revolving-chair and drop all disguises. She did it
+with the words, tearfully yet angrily spoken:
+
+"What are you doing here?"
+
+"I'm going to Boston, Mrs. Brokenshire," I replied, meekly. "Are you
+doing the same?"
+
+"You know what I'm doing, and you've come to spy on me."
+
+There is something about the wrath of the sweet, mild, gentle creature,
+not easily provoked, which is far more terrible than the rage of an
+irascible old man accustomed to furies. I quailed before it now, but not
+so much that I couldn't outwardly keep my composure.
+
+"If I know what you're doing, Mrs. Brokenshire," I said, gently, "it
+isn't from any information received beforehand. I didn't know you were
+to be on this train till you got in; and I haven't been sure it was you
+till this minute."
+
+"I've a right to do as I please," she declared, hoarsely, "without
+having people to dog me."
+
+"Do I strike you as the sort of person who'd do that? You've had some
+opportunity of knowing me; and have I ever done anything for which you
+didn't first give me leave? If I'm here this evening and you're here,
+too, it's pure accident--as far as I'm concerned." I added, with some
+deepening of the tone, and speaking slowly so that she should get the
+meaning of the words: "I'll only venture to surmise that accidents of
+that kind don't happen for nothing."
+
+I could just make out her swimming eyes as they stared at me through the
+remaining veil, which was as black and thick as a widow's.
+
+"What do you mean?"
+
+"Wouldn't that depend on what you mean?"
+
+"If you think you're going to stop me--"
+
+"Dear Mrs. Brokenshire, I don't think anything at all. How can I? We're
+both going to Boston. By a singular set of circumstances we're seated
+side by side on the same train. What can I see more in the situation
+than that?"
+
+"You do see more."
+
+"But I'm trying not to. If you insist on betraying more, when perhaps
+I'd rather you wouldn't, well, that won't be my fault, will it?"
+
+"Because I've given you my confidence once or twice isn't a reason why
+you should take liberties all the rest of your life."
+
+To this, for a minute, I made no reply.
+
+"That hurts me," I said at last, "but I believe that when you've
+considered it you'll see that you've been unjust to me."
+
+"You've suspected me ever since I knew you."
+
+"I've only suspected you of a sweetness and kindness and goodness which
+I don't think you've discovered in yourself. I've never said anything of
+you, and never thought anything, but what I told Mr. Brokenshire two
+months ago, that you seem to me the loveliest thing God ever made. That
+you shouldn't live up to the beauty of your character strikes me as
+impossible. I'll admit that I think that; and if you call it
+suspicion--"
+
+Her anger began to pass into a kind of childish rebellion.
+
+"You've always talked to me about impossible things--"
+
+"I wasn't aware of it. One has to have standards of life, and do one's
+best to live up to them."
+
+"Why should I do my best to live up to them when other people-- Look at
+Madeline Pyne, and a lot of women I know!"
+
+"Do you think we can ever judge by other people, or take their actions
+as an example for our own? No one person can be more bound to do right
+than another; and yet when it comes to doing wrong it might easily be
+more serious for you than for Mrs. Pyne or for me."
+
+"I don't see why it should be."
+
+"Because you have a national position, one might even say an
+international position, and Mrs. Pyne hasn't, and neither have I. If we
+do wrong, only our own little circles have to know about it, and the
+harm we can do is limited; but if you do wrong it hurts the whole
+country."
+
+"I must say I don't see that."
+
+"You're the wife of a man who might be called a national institution--"
+
+"There are just as important men in the country as he."
+
+"Not many--let us say, at a venture, a hundred. Think of what it means
+to be one of the hundred most conspicuous women among a population of a
+hundred millions. The responsibility must be tremendous."
+
+"I've never thought of myself as having any particular
+responsibility--not any more than anybody else."
+
+"But, of course, you have. Whatever you do gets an added significance
+from the fact that you're Mrs. Howard Brokenshire. When, for example,
+you came to me that day among the rocks at Newport, your kindness was
+the more wonderful for the simple reason that you were who you were. We
+can't get away from those considerations. When you do right, right seems
+somehow to be made more beautiful; and when you do wrong--"
+
+"I don't think it's fair to put me in a position like that."
+
+"I don't put you in that position. Life does it. You were born to be
+high up. When you fall, therefore--"
+
+"Don't talk about falling."
+
+"But it would be a fall, wouldn't it? Don't you remember, some ten or
+twelve years ago, how a Saxon crown princess left her home and her
+husband? Well, all I mean is that because of her position her story rang
+through the world. However one might pity unhappiness, or sympathize
+with a miserable love, there was something in it that degraded her
+country and her womanhood. I suppose the poor thing's inability to live
+up to a position of honor was a blow at human nature. Don't you think
+that that was what we felt? And in your case--"
+
+"You mustn't compare me with her."
+
+"No; I don't--exactly. All I mean is that if--if you do what--what I
+think you've started out to do--"
+
+She raised her head defiantly.
+
+"And I'm going to."
+
+"Then by the day after to-morrow there will not be a newspaper in the
+country that won't be detailing the scandal. It will be the talk of
+every club and every fireside between the Atlantic and the Pacific, and
+Mexico and Montreal. It will be in the papers of London and Paris and
+Rome and Berlin, and there'll be a week in which you'll be the most
+discussed person in the world."
+
+"I've been that already--almost--when Mr. Brokenshire made his attack in
+the Stock Exchange on--"
+
+"But this would be different. In this case you'd be pointed at--it's
+what it would amount to--as a woman who had gone over to all those evil
+forces in civilization that try to break down what the good forces are
+building up. You'd do like that unhappy crown princess, you'd strike a
+blow at your country and at all womanhood. There are thousands of poor
+tempted wives all over Europe and America who'll say: 'Well, if she can
+do such things--'"
+
+"Oh, stop!"
+
+I stopped. It seemed to me that for the time being I had given her
+enough to think about. We sat silent, therefore, looking out at the
+rushing dark. People who drifted back from the dining-car glanced at us,
+but soon were dozing or absorbed in books.
+
+We were nearing New London when she pointed to one of her bags and asked
+me if I would mind opening it. I welcomed the request as indicating a
+return of friendliness. Having extracted a parcel of sandwiches, she
+unfolded the napkin in which they were wrapped and held them out to me.
+I took a pate de foie-gras and followed her example in nibbling it. On
+my own responsibility I summoned the porter and asked him to bring a
+bottle of spring-water and two glasses.
+
+"I guess the old lady's feelin' some better," he confided, when he had
+carried out the order.
+
+We stopped at New London, and went on again. Having eaten three or four
+sandwiches, I declined any more, folding the remainder in the napkin and
+stowing them away. The simple meal we had shared together restored
+something of our old-time confidence.
+
+"I'm going to do it," she sighed, as I put the bag back in its place.
+"He's--he's somewhere on the train--in the smoking-car, I suppose.
+He's--he's not to come for me till--till we're getting near the Back Bay
+Station in Boston."
+
+I brought out my question simply, though I had been pondering it for
+some time. "Who'll tell Mr. Brokenshire?"
+
+She moved uncomfortably.
+
+"I don't know. I haven't made any arrangements. He's in Newport for one
+or two nights, seeing to some small changes in the house. I--I had to
+take the opportunity while he was away." As if with a sudden inspiration
+she glanced round from staring out into the dark. "Would you do it?"
+
+I shook my head.
+
+"I couldn't. I've never seen a man struck dead, and--"
+
+She swung her chair so as to face me more directly.
+
+"Why," she asked, trembling--"why do you say that?"
+
+"Because, if I told him, it's what I should have to look on at."
+
+She began wringing her hands.
+
+"Oh no, you wouldn't."
+
+"But I should. It would be his death-sentence at the least. It's true he
+has probably received that already--"
+
+"Oh, what are you saying? What are you talking about?"
+
+"Only of what every one can see. He's a stricken man--you've told me so
+yourself."
+
+"Yes, but I said it only about Hugh. Lots of men have to go through
+troubles on account of their children."
+
+"But when they do they can generally get comfort from their wives."
+
+She seemed to stiffen.
+
+"It's not my fault if he can't."
+
+"No, of course not. But the fact remains that he doesn't--and perhaps
+it's the greatest fact of all. He adores you. His children may give him
+a great deal of anxiety but that's the sort of thing any father looks
+for and can endure. Only you're not his child; you're his wife.
+Moreover, you're the wife whom he worships with a slavish idolatry.
+Everything that nature and time and the world and wealth have made of
+him he gathers together and lays it down at your feet, contented if
+you'll only give him back a smile. You may think it pitiful--"
+
+She shuddered.
+
+"I think it terrible--for me."
+
+"Well, I may think so, too, but it's his life we're talking of. His
+tenure of that"--I looked at her steadily--"isn't very certain as it is,
+do you think? You know the condition of his heart--you've told me
+yourself--and as for his nervous system, we've only to look at his face
+and his poor eye."
+
+"I didn't do that. It's his whole life--"
+
+"But his whole life culminates in you. It works up to you, and you
+represent everything he values. When he learns that you've despised his
+love and dishonored his name--"
+
+Her foot tapped the floor impatiently.
+
+"You mustn't say things like that to me."
+
+"I'm only saying them, dear Mrs. Brokenshire, so that you'll know how
+they sound. It's what every one else will be saying in a day or two. You
+can't be what--what you'll be to-morrow, and still keep any one's
+respect. And so," I hurried on, as she was about to protest, "when he
+hears what you've done, you won't merely have broken his heart, you'll
+have killed him just as much as if you'd pulled out a revolver and shot
+him."
+
+She swung back to the window again. Her foot continued to tap the floor;
+her fingers twisted and untwisted like writhing living things. I could
+see her bosom rise and fall rapidly; her breath came in short, hard
+gasps. When I wasn't expecting it she rounded on me again, with flames
+in her eyes like those in a small tigress's.
+
+"You're saying all that to frighten me; but--"
+
+"I'm saying it because it's true. If it frightens you--"
+
+"But it doesn't."
+
+"Then I've done neither good nor harm."
+
+"I've a right to be happy."
+
+"Certainly, if you can be happy this way."
+
+"And I can."
+
+"Then there's no more to be said. We can only agree with you. If you can
+be happy when you've Mr. Brokenshire on your mind, as you must have
+whether he's alive or dead--and if you can be happy when you've
+desecrated all the things your people and your country look to a woman
+in your position to uphold--then I don't think any one will say you
+nay."
+
+"Well, why shouldn't I be happy?" she demanded, as if I was withholding
+from her something that was her right. "Other women--"
+
+"Yes, Mrs. Brokenshire, other women besides you have tried the
+experiment of Anna Karenina--"
+
+"What's that?"
+
+I gave her the gist of Tolstoi's romance--the woman who is married to an
+old man and runs away with a young one, living to see him weary of the
+position in which she places him, and dying by her own act.
+
+As she listened attentively, I went on before she could object to my
+parable.
+
+"It all amounts to the same thing. There's no happiness except in right;
+and no right that doesn't sooner or later--sooner rather than later--end
+in happiness. You've told me more than once you didn't believe that; and
+if you don't I can't help it."
+
+I fell back in my seat, because for the moment I was exhausted. It was
+not merely the actual situation that took the strength out of me, but
+what I dreaded when the man came for his prize from the smoking-car. I
+might count on Larry Strangways to aid me then, but as yet he had not
+recognized my struggle by so much as glancing round.
+
+Nor had I known till this minute how much I cared for the little
+creature before me, or how deeply I pitied the man she was deserting. I
+could see her as happier conditions would have made her, and him as he
+might have become if his nature had not been warped by pride. Any
+impulse to strike back at him had long ago died within me. It might as
+well have died, since I never had the nerve to act on it, even when I
+had the chance.
+
+She turned on me again, with unexpected fierceness.
+
+"It doesn't matter whether I believe all those things or not--now. It's
+too late. I've left home. I've--I've gone away with him."
+
+Though I felt like a spent prize-fighter forced back into the ring, I
+raised myself in my chair. I even smiled, dimly, in an effort to be
+encouraging.
+
+"You've left home and you've gone away; but you won't have gone away
+with him till--till you've actually joined him."
+
+"I've actually joined him already. His things are there beside that
+chair." She nodded backward. "By the time we've passed Providence he'll
+be--he'll be getting ready to come for me."
+
+I said, more significantly than I really understood: "But we haven't
+passed Providence as yet."
+
+To this she seemingly paid no attention, nor did I give it much myself.
+
+"When he comes," she exclaimed, lyrically, "it will be like a
+marriage--"
+
+I ventured much as I interrupted.
+
+"No, it will never be like a marriage. There'll be too much that's
+unholy in it all for anything like a true marriage ever to become
+possible, not even if death or divorce--and it will probably be the one
+or the other--were to set you free."
+
+That she found these words arresting I could tell by the stunned way in
+which she stared.
+
+"Death or divorce!" she echoed, after long waiting. "He--he may divorce
+me quietly--I hope he will--but--but he won't--he won't die."
+
+"He'll die if you kill him," I declared, grimly. I continued to be grim.
+"He may die before long, whether you kill him or not--the chances are
+that he will. But living or dead, as I've said already, he'll stand
+between you and anything you look for as happiness--after to-night."
+
+She threw herself back, into the depths of her chair and moaned. Luckily
+there was no one near enough to observe the act. As we talked in low
+tones we could not be heard above the rattle of the train, and I think I
+passed as a companion or trained nurse in attendance on a nervous
+invalid.
+
+"Oh, what's the use?" she exclaimed at last, in a fit of desperation.
+"I've done it. It's too late. Every one will know I've gone away--even
+if I get out at Providence."
+
+I am sorry to have to admit that the suggestion of getting out at
+Providence startled me. I had been so stupid as not to think of it, even
+when I had made the remark that we had not as yet passed that town. All
+I had foreseen was the struggle at the end of the journey, when Larry
+Strangways and I should have to fight for this woman with the powers of
+darkness, as in medieval legends angels and devils fought over a
+contested soul.
+
+I took up the idea with an enthusiasm I tried to conceal beneath a smile
+of engaging sweetness.
+
+"They may know that you've gone away; but they can also know that you've
+gone away with me."
+
+"With you? You're going to Boston."
+
+"I could wait till to-morrow. If you wanted to get off at Providence I
+could do it, too."
+
+"But I don't want to. I couldn't let him expect to find me here--and
+then discover that I wasn't."
+
+"He would be disappointed at that, of course," I reasoned, "but he
+wouldn't take it as the end of all things. If you got off at Providence
+there would be nothing irrevocable in that step, whereas there would be
+in your going on. You could go away with him later, if you found you
+had to do it; but if you continue to-night you can never come back
+again. Don't you see? Isn't it worth turning over in your mind a second
+time--especially as I'm here to help you? If you're meant to be a
+Madeline Pyne or an Anna Karenina, you'll get another opportunity."
+
+"Oh no, I sha'n't," she sobbed. "If I don't go on to-night, he'll never
+ask me again."
+
+"He may never ask you again in this way; but isn't it possible that
+there may eventually be other ways? Don't make me put that into plainer
+words. Just wait. Let life take charge of it." I seized both her hands.
+"Darling Mrs. Brokenshire, you don't know yourself. You're too fine to
+be ruined; you're too exquisite to be just thrown away. Even the hungry,
+passionate love of the man in the smoking-car must see that and know it.
+If he comes back here and finds you gone--or imagines that you never
+came at all--he'll only honor and love you the more, and go on wanting
+you still. Come with me. Let us go. We can't be far from Providence now.
+I can take care of you. I know just what we ought to do. I didn't come
+here to sit beside you of my own free will; but since I am here doesn't
+it seem to you as if--as if I had been sent?"
+
+As she was sobbing too unrestrainedly to say anything in words, I took
+the law into my own hands. The porter had already begun dusting the dirt
+from the passengers who were to descend at Providence on to those who
+were going to Boston. Making my way up to him, I had the inspiration to
+say:
+
+"The old lady I'm with isn't quite so well, and we're going to stop here
+for the night."
+
+He grinned, with a fine show of big white teeth.
+
+"All right, lady; I'll take care of you. Cranky old bunch, ain't she?
+Handle a good many like that between Boston and Ne' Yawk."
+
+Mrs. Brokenshire made no resistance when I fastened the lighter of her
+two veils about her head, folding the other and putting it away. Neither
+did she resist when I drew her cloak about her and put on my own coat.
+But as the train drew into Providence station and she struggled to her
+feet in response to my touch on her arm, I was obliged to pull and drag
+and push her, till she was finally lifted to the platform.
+
+Before leaving the car, however, I took time to glance at the English
+traveling-cap. I noted then what I had noted throughout the journey. Not
+once did the head beneath it turn in my direction. Of whatever had
+happened since leaving the main station in New York Larry Strangways
+could say that he was wholly unaware.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XVIII
+
+
+What happened on the train after Mrs. Brokenshire and I had left it I
+heard from Mr. Strangways. Having got it from him in some detail, I can
+give it in my own words more easily than in his.
+
+I may be permitted to state here how much and how little of the romance
+between Mr. Grainger and Mrs. Brokenshire Larry Strangways knew. He knew
+next to nothing--but he inferred a good deal. From facts I gave him once
+or twice in hours of my own perplexity he had been able to get light on
+certain matters which had come under his observation as Mr. Grainger's
+confidential man, and to which otherwise he would have had no key. He
+inferred, for instance, that Mrs. Brokenshire wrote daily to her lover,
+and that occasionally, at long intervals, her lover could safely write
+to her. He inferred that when their meetings had ended in one place they
+were taken up discreetly at another, but only with difficulty and
+danger. He inferred that the man chafed against this restraint, and as
+he had got out of it with other women, he was planning to get out of it
+again. I understood that had Mrs. Brokenshire been the only such
+instance in Stacy Grainger's career Larry Strangways might not have felt
+impelled to interfere; but seeing from the beginning that his employer
+"had a weakness," he felt it only right to help me save a woman for whom
+he knew I cared.
+
+I have never wholly understood why he believed that the situation had
+worked up to a crisis on that particular day; but having watched the
+laying of the mine, he could hardly do anything but expect the explosion
+on the application of the match.
+
+When Mr. Grainger had bidden him that morning go to the station and
+secure a drawing-room, or, if that was impossible, two parlor-car seats,
+on the five-o'clock for Boston, he had reasons for following the course
+of which I have briefly given the lines. No drawing-room was available,
+because any that was not sold he bought for himself in order to set the
+stage according to his own ideas. How far he was justified in this will
+be a matter of opinion. Some may commend him, while others will accuse
+him of unwarrantable interference. My own judgment being of no
+importance I hold it in suspense, giving the incidents just as they
+occurred.
+
+It must be evident that as Mr. Strangways didn't know what was to happen
+he could have no plan of action. All he could arrange for was that he
+and I should be on the spot. As it is difficult for guilty lovers to
+elope while acquaintances are looking on, he was resolved that they
+should find elopement difficult. For anything else he relied on
+chance--and on me. Chance favored him in keeping Stacy Grainger out of
+sight, in putting Mrs. Brokenshire next to me, and in making the action,
+such as it was, run smoothly. Had I known that he relied on me I should
+have been more terrified than I actually was, since I was relying on
+him.
+
+It will be seen, then, that at the moment when Mrs. Brokenshire and I
+left the train Larry Strangways had but a vague idea of what had taken
+place. He merely conjectured from the swish of skirts that we had gone.
+His next idea was, as he phrased it, to make himself scarce on his own
+account; but in that his efforts miscarried.
+
+Hoping to slip into another car and thus avoid a meeting with the
+outmanoeuvered lover, he was snapping the clasp of the bag into which he
+had thrust his cap when he perceived a tall figure enter the car by the
+forward end. To escape recognition he bent his head, pretending to
+search for something on the floor. The tall figure passed, but came back
+again. It was necessary that he should come back, because of the number
+on the ticket, the ulster, the walking-stick, and the golf-clubs.
+
+What Stacy Grainger saw, of course, was three empty seats, with his
+secretary sitting in a fourth. The sight of the three empty seats was
+doubtless puzzling enough, but that of the secretary must have been
+bewildering. Without turning his head Mr. Strangways knew by his sixth
+and seventh senses that his employer was comparing the number on his
+ticket with that of the seat, examining the hand-luggage to make sure it
+was his own, and otherwise drawing the conclusion that his faculties
+hadn't left him. For a private secretary who had ventured so far out of
+his line of duty it was a trying minute; but he turned and glanced
+upward only on feeling a tap on his shoulder.
+
+"Hello, Strangways! Is it you? What's the meaning of this?"
+
+Strangways rose. As the question had been asked in perplexity rather
+than in anger, he could answer calmly.
+
+"The meaning of what, sir?"
+
+"Where the deuce are you going? What are you doing here?"
+
+"I'm going to Boston, sir."
+
+"What for? Who told you you could go to Boston?"
+
+The tone began to nettle the young man, who was not accustomed to being
+spoken to so imperiously before strangers.
+
+"No one told me, sir. I didn't ask permission. I'm my own master. I've
+left your employ."
+
+"The devil you have! Since when?"
+
+"Since this morning. I couldn't tell you, because when you left the
+office after I'd given you the tickets you didn't come back."
+
+"And do you call that decent to a man who's-- But no matter!" He pointed
+to the seat next his own. "Where's the--the lady who's been sitting
+here?"
+
+Mr. Strangways raised his eyebrows innocently, and shook his head.
+
+"I haven't seen any lady, sir."
+
+"What? There must have been a lady here. Was to have got on at One
+Hundred and Twenty-fifth Street."
+
+"Possibly; I only say I didn't see her. As a matter of fact, I've been
+reading, and I don't think I looked round during the entire journey.
+Hadn't we better not speak so loud?" he suggested, in a lower tone.
+"People are listening to us."
+
+"Oh, let them go to-- Now look here, Strangways," he began again,
+speaking softly, but excitedly, "there must be some explanation to
+this."
+
+"Of course there must be; only I can't give it. Perhaps the porter could
+tell us. Shall I call him?"
+
+Mr. Grainger nodded his permission. The colored man with the flashing
+teeth came up on the broad grin, showing them.
+
+"Yep," he replied, in answer to the question: "they was two ladies in
+them seats all the way f'um Ne' Yawk."
+
+"Two ladies?" Mr. Grainger cried, incredulously.
+
+"Yes, gen'lemen. Two different ladies. The young one she got in at the
+Grand Central--fust one in the cyar--and the ole one at a Hundred and
+Twenty-fifth Street."
+
+"Do you mean to say it was an old lady who got in there?"
+
+"Yep, gen'lemen; ole and cranky. I 'ain't handled 'em no crankier not
+since I've bin on this beat. Sick, too. They done get off at Providence,
+though they was booked right through to Boston, because the ole lady she
+couldn't go no farther."
+
+Mr. Grainger was not a sleuth-hound, but he did what he could in the way
+of verification.
+
+"Did the young lady wear--wear a veil?"
+
+The porter scratched his head.
+
+"Come to think of it she did--one of them there flowery things"--his
+forefinger made little whirling designs on his coffee-colored
+skin--"what makes a kind of pattern-like all over people's face."
+
+Because he was frantically seeking a clue, Mr. Grainger blurted out the
+foolish question:
+
+"Was she--pretty?"
+
+To answer as a connoisseur and as man to man the African took his time.
+
+"Wa-al, not to say p'ooty, she wasn't--but she'd pa-ss. A little
+black-eyed thing, an' awful smart. One of 'em trained nusses like--very
+perlite, but a turr'ble boss you could see she'd be, for all she was so
+soft-spoken. Had cyare of the ole one, who was what you'd call plumb
+crazy."
+
+"That will do." The trail seemed not worth following any further.
+"There's some mistake," he continued, furiously. "She must be in one of
+the other cars."
+
+Like a collie from the leash he bounded off to make new investigations.
+In five minutes he was back again, passing up the length of the car and
+going on to examine those at the other end of the train. His face as he
+returned was livid; his manner, as far as he dared betray himself before
+a dozen or twenty spectators, that of a balked wild animal.
+
+"Strangways," he swore, as he dropped to the arm of his seat, "you're
+going to answer for this."
+
+Strangways replied, composedly:
+
+"I'm ready to answer for anything I know. You can't expect me to be
+responsible for what I don't know anything about."
+
+He slapped his knee.
+
+"What are you doing in that particular chair? Even if you're going to
+Boston, why aren't you somewhere else?"
+
+"That's easily explained. You told me to get two tickets by this train.
+Knowing that I was to travel by it myself I asked for three. I dare say
+it was stupid of me not to think that the propinquity would be open to
+objection; but as it's a public conveyance, and there's not generally
+anything secret or special about a trip of the kind--"
+
+"Why in thunder didn't you get a drawing-room, as I told you to?"
+
+"For the reason I've given--there were none to be had. If you could have
+taken me into your confidence a little--But I suppose that wasn't
+possible."
+
+To this there was no response, but a series of muttered oaths that bore
+the same relation to soliloquy as a frenzied lion's growl. For some
+twenty minutes they sat in the same attitudes, Strangways quiet,
+watchful, alert, ready for any turn the situation might take, the other
+man stretched on the arm of his chair, indifferent to comfort, cursing
+spasmodically, perplexity on his forehead, rage in his eyes, and
+something that was folly, futility, and helplessness all over him.
+
+Almost no further conversation passed between them till they got out in
+Boston. In the crowd Strangways endeavored to go off by himself, but
+found Mr. Grainger constantly beside him. He was beside him when they
+reached the place where taxicabs were called, and ordered his porter to
+call one.
+
+"Get in," he said, then.
+
+Larry Strangways protested.
+
+"I'm going to--"
+
+I must be sufficiently unlady-like to give Mr. Grainger's response just
+as it was spoken, because it strikes me as characteristic of men.
+
+"Oh, hell! Get in. You're coming with me."
+
+Characteristic of men was the rest of the evening. In spite of what had
+happened--and had not happened--Messrs. Grainger and Strangways partook
+of an excellent supper together, eating and drinking with appetite, and
+smoking their cigars with what looked like an air of tranquillity.
+Though the fury of the balked wild animal returned to Stacy Grainger by
+fits and starts, it didn't interfere with his relish of his food and
+only once did it break its bounds. That was when he struck the arm of
+his chair, saying beneath his breath, and yet audibly enough for his
+secretary to hear:
+
+"She funked it--damn her!"
+
+Larry Strangways then took it on himself to say:
+
+"I don't know the lady, sir, to whom you refer, nor the reasons she may
+have had for funking it, but may I advise you for your own peace of mind
+to withdraw the two concluding syllables?"
+
+A pair of fierce, melancholy eyes rested on him for a second
+uncomprehendingly.
+
+"All right," the crestfallen lover groaned heavily at last. "I may as
+well take them back."
+
+Characteristic of women were my experiences while this was happening.
+
+Bundled out into the station at Providence no two poor females could
+ever have been more forlorn. Standing in the waiting-room with our bags
+around us I felt like one of those immigrant women, ignorant of the
+customs and language of the country to which they have come, I had
+sometimes seen on docks at Halifax. As for Mrs. Brokenshire, she was as
+little used to the unarranged as if she had been a royalty. Never before
+had she dropped in this way down upon the unexpected; never before had
+she been unmet, unwelcomed, and unprepared. She was
+_bouleversee_--overturned. Were she falling from an aeroplane she could
+not have been more at a loss as to where she was going to alight. Small
+wonder was it that she should sit down on one of her own valises and
+begin to cry distressfully.
+
+That, for the minute, I was obliged to disregard. If she had to cry she
+must cry. I could hear the train puffing out of the station, and as far
+as that went she was safe. My first preoccupations had to do with where
+we were to go.
+
+For this I made inquiries of the porter, who named what he considered to
+be the two or three best hotels. I went to the ticket-office and put the
+same question, getting approximately the same answer. Then, seeing a
+well-dressed man and lady enter the station from a private car, which I
+could discern outside, I repeated my investigations, explaining that I
+had come from New York with an invalid lady who had not been well enough
+to continue the journey. They told me I could make no mistake in going
+to one of the houses already named by my previous informants; and so,
+gathering up the hand-luggage and Mrs. Brokenshire, we set forth.
+
+At the hotel we secured an apartment of sitting-room and two bedrooms,
+registering our names as "Miss Adare and friend." I ordered the
+daintiest supper the house could provide to be served up-stairs, with a
+small bottle of champagne to inspirit us; but, unlike the two heroes of
+the episode, neither of us could do more than taste food and drink. No
+kidnapped princess in a fairy-tale was ever more lovely or pathetic than
+Mrs. Brokenshire; no giant ogre more monstrously cruel than myself. Now
+that it was done, I figured, both in her eyes and in my own, not as a
+savior, but a capturer.
+
+She had dried her tears, but she had dried them resentfully. As far as
+possible she didn't look at me, but when she couldn't help it the
+reproach in her glances almost broke my heart. Though I knew I had acted
+for the best, she made me feel a bad angel, a marplot, a spoil-sport. I
+had thwarted a dream that was as full of bliss as it was of terror, and
+reduced the dramatic to the commonplace. Here she was picking at a cold
+quail in aspic face to face with me when she might have been. . . .
+
+I couldn't help seeing myself as she saw me, and when we had finished
+what was not a repast I put her to bed with more than the humility of a
+serving-maid. You will think me absurd, but when those tender eyes were
+turned on me with their silent rebuke, I would gladly have put her back
+on the train again and hurried her on to destruction. As the dear thing
+sobbed on her pillow I laid my head beside hers and sobbed with her.
+
+But I couldn't sob very long, as I still had duties to fulfil. It was
+of little use to have her under my care at Providence unless those who
+would in the end be most concerned as to her whereabouts were to know
+the facts--or the approximate facts--from the start. It was a case in
+which doubt for a night might be doubt for a lifetime; and so when she
+was sufficiently calm for me to leave her I went down-stairs.
+
+Though I had not referred to it again, I had made a mental note of the
+fact that Mr. Brokenshire was at Newport. If at Newport I knew he could
+be nowhere but in one hotel. Within fifteen minutes I was talking to him
+on the telephone.
+
+He was plainly annoyed at being called to the instrument so late as half
+past ten. When I said I was Alexandra Adare he replied that he didn't
+recognize the name.
+
+"I was formerly nursery governess to your daughter, Mrs. Rossiter," I
+explained. "I'm the woman who's refused as yet to marry your son, Hugh."
+
+"Oh, that person," came the response, uttered wearily.
+
+"Yes, sir; that person. I must apologize for ringing you up so late; but
+I wanted to tell you that Mrs. Brokenshire is here at Providence with
+me."
+
+The symptoms of distress came to me in a series of choking sounds over
+the wire. It was a good half-minute before I got the words:
+
+"What does that mean?"
+
+"It means that Mrs. Brokenshire is perfectly well in physical condition,
+but she's tired and nervous and overwrought."
+
+I made out that the muffled and strangled voice said:
+
+"I'll motor up to Providence at once. It's now half past ten. I shall be
+there between one and two. What hotel shall I find you at?"
+
+"Don't come, sir," I pleaded. "I had to tell you we were in Providence,
+because you could have found that out by asking where the long-distance
+call had come from; but it's most important to Mrs. Brokenshire that she
+should have a few days alone."
+
+"I shall judge of that. To what hotel shall I come?"
+
+"I beg and implore you, sir, not to come. Please believe me when I say
+that it will be better for you in the end. Try to trust me. Mrs.
+Brokenshire isn't far from a nervous breakdown; but if I can have her to
+myself for a week or two I believe I could tide her over it."
+
+Reproof and argument followed on this, till at last he yielded, with the
+words:
+
+"Where are you going?"
+
+Fortunately, I had thought of that.
+
+"To some quiet place in Massachusetts. When we're settled I shall let
+you know."
+
+He suggested a hotel at Lenox as suitable for such a sojourn.
+
+"She'd rather go where she wouldn't meet people whom she knows. The
+minute she has decided I shall communicate with you again."
+
+"But I can see you in the morning before you leave?"
+
+The accent was now that of request. The overtone in it was pitiful.
+
+"Oh, don't try to, sir. She wants to get away from every one. It will be
+so much better for her to do just as she likes. She had got to a point
+where she had to escape from everything she knew and cared about; and so
+all of a sudden--only--only to-day--she decided to come with me. She
+doesn't need a trained nurse, because she's perfectly well. All she
+wants is some one to be with her--whom she knows she can trust. She
+hasn't even taken Angelique. She simply begs to be alone."
+
+In the end I made my point, but only after genuine beseeching on his
+part and much repetition on mine. Having said good-night to him--he
+actually used the words--I called up Angelique, in order to bring peace
+to a household in which the mistress's desertion would create some
+consternation.
+
+Angelique and I might have been called friends. The fact that I spoke
+French _comme une Francaise_, as she often flattered me by saying, was a
+bond between us, and we had the further point of sympathy that we were
+both devoted to Mrs. Brokenshire. Besides that, there is something in
+me--I suppose it must be a plebeian streak--which enables me to
+understand servants and get along with them.
+
+I gave her much the same explanation as I gave to Mr. Brokenshire,
+though somewhat differently put. In addition I asked her to pack such
+selections from the simpler examples of Mrs. Brokenshire's wardrobe as
+the lady might need in a country place, and keep them in readiness to
+send. Angelique having expressed her relief that Mrs. Brokenshire was
+safe at a known address, in the company of a responsible attendant--a
+relief which, so she said, would be shared by the housekeeper, the chef,
+and the butler, all of whom had spent the evening in painful
+speculation--we took leave of each other, with our customary mutual
+compliments.
+
+Though I was so tired by this time that fainting would have been a
+solace, I called for a Boston paper and began studying the
+advertisements of country hotels. Having made a selection of these I
+consulted the manager of our present place of refuge, who strongly
+commended one of them. Thither I sent a night-letter commandeering the
+best, after which, with no more than strength to undress, I lay down on
+a couch in Mrs. Brokenshire's room. When I knew she was sleeping I, too,
+slept fitfully. About once in an hour I went softly to her bedside, and
+finding her dozing, if not sound asleep, I went softly back again.
+
+Between four and five we had a little scene. As I approached her bed she
+looked up and said:
+
+"What are we going to do in the morning?"
+
+Afraid to tell her all I had put in train, I gave my ideas in the form
+of suggestion.
+
+"No, I sha'n't do that," she said, quietly.
+
+She lay quite still, her cheek embossed on the pillow, and a great stray
+curl over her left shoulder.
+
+"Then what would you like to do?"
+
+"I should like to go straight back."
+
+"To begin the same old life all over again?"
+
+"To begin to see him all over again."
+
+"Do you think that after last night you can begin to see him in the same
+old way?"
+
+"I must see him in some way."
+
+"But isn't the way what you've still to discover?" I resolved on a bold
+stroke. "Wouldn't part of your object in going away for a time be to
+think out some method of reconciling your feeling for Mr. Grainger
+with--with your self-respect?"
+
+"My self-respect?" She looked as if she had never heard of such a thing.
+"What's that got to do with it?"
+
+"Hasn't it got everything to do with it? You can't live without it
+forever."
+
+"Do you mean that I've been living without it as it is?"
+
+"Isn't that for you to say rather than for me?"
+
+She was silent for a minute, after which she said, fretfully:
+
+"I don't think it's very nice of you to talk to me like that. You've got
+me here at your mercy, when I might have been--" A long, bubbling sigh,
+like the aftermath of tears, laid stress on the joys she had foregone.
+"He'll never forgive me now--never."
+
+"Wouldn't it be better, dear Mrs. Brokenshire," I asked, "to consider
+whether or not you can ever forgive him?"
+
+She raised herself on her elbow and looked at me. Seated in a low
+arm-chair beside her bed, in an old-rose-colored kimono, my dark hair
+hanging down my back, I was not a fascinating object of study, even in
+the light of one small, distant, shaded bedroom lamp.
+
+"What should I forgive him for?--for loving me?"
+
+"Yes, for loving you--in that way."
+
+"He loves me--"
+
+"So much that he could see you dishonored and disgraced--and shunned by
+decent people all the rest of your life--just to gratify his own
+desires. It seems to me you may have to forgive him for that."
+
+"He asked me to do only what I would have done willingly--if it hadn't
+been for you."
+
+"But he asked you. The responsibility is in that. You didn't make the
+suggestion; he did."
+
+"He didn't make it till I'd let him see--"
+
+"Too much. Forgive me for saying it, dear Mrs. Brokenshire; but do you
+think a woman should ever go so far to meet a man as you did?"
+
+"I let him see that I loved him. I did that before I married Mr.
+Brokenshire."
+
+"You let him see more than that you loved him. You showed him that you
+didn't know how to live without him."
+
+"But since I didn't know how--"
+
+"Ah, but you should have known. No woman should be so dependent on a man
+as that."
+
+She fell back again on her pillows.
+
+"It's easy to see you've never been in love."
+
+"I have been in love--and am still; but love is not the most important
+thing in the world--"
+
+"Then you differ from all the great teachers. They say it is."
+
+"If they do they're not speaking of sexual love."
+
+"What are they speaking of, then?"
+
+"They're speaking of another kind of love, with which the mere sexual
+has nothing to do. I'm not an ascetic, and I know the sexual has its
+place. But there's a love that's as much bigger than that as the sky is
+bigger than I am."
+
+"Yes, but so long as one never sees it--"
+
+I suppose it was her tone of feeble rebellion that roused my spirit and
+made me speak in a way which I should not otherwise have allowed myself.
+
+"You do see it, darling Mrs. Brokenshire," I declared, more sweetly than
+I felt. "I'm showing it to you." I rose and stood over her. "What do you
+suppose I'm prompted by but love? What urges me to stand by Mr.
+Brokenshire but love? What made me step in between you and Mr. Grainger
+and save him, as well as you, but love? Love isn't emotion that leaves
+you weak; it's action that makes you strong. It has to be action, and it
+has to be right action. There's no love separable from right; and until
+you grasp that fact you'll always be unhappy. I'm a mere rag in my own
+person. I've no more character than a hen. But because I've got a wee
+little hold on right--"
+
+She broke in, peevishly, as she turned away:
+
+"I do wish you'd let me go to sleep."
+
+I got down from my high horse and went back, humbly, to my couch.
+Scarcely, however, had I lain down, when the voice came again, in
+childish complaint:
+
+"I think you might have kissed me."
+
+I had never kissed her in my life, nor had she ever shown any sign of
+permitting me this liberty. Timidly I went back to the bed; timidly I
+bent over it. But I was not prepared for the sudden intense clinging
+with which she threw her arms round my neck and drew my face down to
+hers.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XIX
+
+
+In the morning Mrs. Brokenshire was difficult again, but I got her into
+a neat little country inn in Massachusetts by the middle of the
+afternoon. I had to be like a jailer dragging along a prisoner, but that
+could not be helped.
+
+On leaving Providence she insisted on spending a few days in Boston,
+where, so she said, she had friends whom she wished to see. Knowing that
+Stacy Grainger would be at one of the few hotels of which we had the
+choice, I couldn't risk a meeting. Her predominating shame, a shame she
+had no hesitation in confessing, was for having failed him. He would
+never forgive her, she moaned; he wouldn't love her any more. Not to be
+loved by him, not to be forgiven, was like death. All she demanded
+during the early hours of that day was to find him, wherever he had
+gone, and fling herself at his feet.
+
+Because I didn't allow her to remain in Boston we had what was almost a
+quarrel, as we jolted over the cobblestones from the southern station to
+the northern. She was now an outraged queen and now a fiery little
+termagant. Sparing me neither tears nor reproaches, neither scoldings
+nor denunciations, she nevertheless followed me obediently. Sitting
+opposite me in the parlor-car, ignoring the papers and fashion magazines
+I spread beneath her eyes, she lifted on me the piteous face of an angel
+whom I had beaten and trampled and enslaved. For this kind of sacrilege
+I had ceased, however, to be contrite. I was so tired, and had grown so
+grim, that I could have led her along in handcuffs.
+
+But once out in the fresh, green, northern country the joy of a budding
+and blossoming world stole into us in spite of all our cares. We
+couldn't help getting out of our own little round of thought when we saw
+fields that were carpets of green velvet, or copses of hazelnut and
+alder coming into leaf, or a farmer sowing the plowed earth with the
+swing and the stride of the _Semeur_. We couldn't help seeing wider and
+farther and more hopefully when the sky was an arch of silvery blue
+overhead, and white clouds drifted across it, and the north into which
+we were traveling began to fling up masses of rolling hills.
+
+She caught me by the arm.
+
+"Oh, do look at the lambs! The darlings!"
+
+There they were, three or four helpless creatures, shivering in the
+sharp May wind and apparently struck by the futility of a life which
+would end in nothing but making chops. The ewes watched them maternally,
+or stood patiently to be tugged by the full woolly breasts. After that
+we kept our eyes open for other living things: for horses and cows and
+calves, for Corots and Constables--with a difference!--on the uplands of
+farms or in village highways. Once when a foal galloped madly away from
+the train, kicking up its slender hind legs, my companion actually
+laughed.
+
+When we got out at the station a robin was singing, the first bird we
+had heard that year. The note was so full and pure and Eden-like that it
+caught one's breath. It went with the bronze-green of maples and elms,
+with the golden westering sunshine, and with the air that was like the
+distillation of air and yet had a sharp northern tang in it. Driving in
+the motor of the inn, through the main street of the town, we saw that
+most of the white houses had a roomy Colonial dignity, and that orchards
+of apple, cherry, and plum, with acres of small fruit, surrounded them
+all. Having learned on the train that jam was the staple of the little
+town's prosperity, we could see jam everywhere. Jam was in the
+cherry-trees covered with dainty white blossoms, in the plum-trees
+showing but a flower or two, and in the apple-trees scarcely in bud. Jam
+was in the long straight lines which we were told represented
+strawberries, and in the shrubberies of currant. Jam was along the
+roadsides where the raspberry was clothing its sprawling bines with
+leaves, and wherever the blueberry gladdened the waste places with its
+millions of modest bells. Jam is a toothsome, homey thing to which no
+woman with a housekeeping heart can be insensible. The thought of it did
+something to bring Mrs. Brokenshire's thoughts back to the simple
+natural ways she had forsworn, even before reaching the hotel.
+
+The hotel was no more than a farm-house that had expanded itself half a
+dozen times. We traversed all sorts of narrow halls and climbed all
+sorts of narrow staircases, till at last we emerged on a corner suite,
+where the view led us straight to the balcony.
+
+Not that it was an extraordinary view; it was only a peaceful and a
+noble one. An undulating country held in its folds a scattering of
+lakes, working up to the lines of the southern New Hampshire hills which
+closed the horizon to the north. Green was, of course, the note of the
+landscape, melting into mauve in the mountains and saffron in the sky.
+Spacing out the perspective a mauve mist rose between the ridges, and a
+mauve light rested on the three white steeples of the town. The town
+was perhaps two hundred feet below us and a mile away, nestling in a
+feathery bower of verdure.
+
+When I joined Mrs. Brokenshire she was grasping the balcony rail,
+emitting little "Ohs!" and "Ahs!" of ecstasy. She drew long breaths,
+like a thirsty person drinking. She listened to the calling and
+answering of birds with face illumined and upturned. It was a bath of
+the spirit to us both. It was cleansing and healing; it was soothing and
+restful and corrective, setting what was sane within us free.
+
+Of all this I need say little beyond mentioning the fact that Mrs.
+Brokenshire, in spite of herself, entered into a period in which her
+taut nerves relaxed and her over-strained emotions became rested. It was
+a kind of truce of God to her. She had struggled and suffered so much
+that she was content for a time to lie still in the everlasting arms and
+be rocked and comforted. We had the simplest of rooms; we ate the
+simplest of food; we led the simplest of lives. By day we read and
+walked and talked a little and thought much; at night we slept soundly.
+Our fellow-guests were people who did the same, varying the processes
+with golf and moving pictures. For the most part they were tired people
+from the neighboring towns, seeking like ourselves a few days' respite
+from their burdens. Though they came to know who Mrs. Brokenshire was,
+they respected her privacy, never doing worse than staring after her
+when she entered the dining-room or walked on the lawns or verandas. I
+had come to love her so much that it was a joy to me to witness the
+revival of her spirit, and I looked forward to seeing her restored, not
+too reluctantly, to her husband.
+
+With him I had, of course, some correspondence. It was an odd
+correspondence, in which I made my customary _gaffe_. On our first
+evening at the inn I wrote to him in fulfilment of my promise,
+beginning, "Dear Mr. Brokenshire," as if I was writing to an equal. The
+acknowledgment came back: "Miss Alexandra Adare: Dear Madam," putting me
+back in my place. Accepting the rebuff, I adopted the style in sending
+him my daily bulletins.
+
+As a matter of fact, my time was largely passed in writing, for I had
+explanations to make to so many. My acquaintance with Mrs. Brokenshire
+having been a secret one, I was obliged to confess it to Hugh and Mrs.
+Rossiter, and even to Angelique. I had, in a measure, to apologize for
+it, too, setting down Mrs. Brokenshire's selection of my company to an
+invalid's eccentricity.
+
+So we got through May and into June, my reports to Mr. Brokenshire being
+each one better than the last. My patient never wrote to him herself,
+nor to any one. We had, in fact, been a day or two at the inn before she
+said:
+
+"I wonder what Mr. Brokenshire is thinking?"
+
+It was for me to tell her then that from the beginning I had kept him
+informed as to where she was, and that he knew I was with her. For a
+minute or two she stiffened into the _grande dame_, as she occasionally
+did.
+
+"You'll be good enough in future not to do such things without
+consulting me," she said, with dignity.
+
+That passed, and when I read to her, as I always did, the occasional
+notes with which her husband honored me, she listened without comment.
+It must have been the harder to do that since the lover's pleading ardor
+could be detected beneath all the cold formality in which he couched his
+communications.
+
+It was this ardor, as well as something else, that began in the end to
+make me uneasy. The something else was that Mrs. Brokenshire was writing
+letters on her own account. Coming in one day from a solitary walk, I
+found her posting one in the hall of the hotel. A few days later one for
+her was handed to me at the office, with several of my own. Recognizing
+Stacy Grainger's writing, I put it back with the words:
+
+"Mrs. Brokenshire will come for her letters herself."
+
+From that time onward she was often at her desk, and I knew when she got
+her replies by the feverishness of her manner. The truce of God being
+past, the battle was now on again.
+
+The first sign of it given to me was on a day when Mr. Brokenshire wrote
+in terms more definite than he had used hitherto. I read the letter
+aloud to her, as usual. He had been patient, he said, and considerate,
+which had to be admitted. Now he could deny himself no longer. As it was
+plain that his wife was better, he should come to her. He named the 20th
+as the day on which he should appear.
+
+"No, no," she cried, excitedly. "Not till after the twenty-third."
+
+"But why the twenty-third?" I asked, innocently.
+
+"Because I say so. You'll see." Then fearing, apparently, that she had
+betrayed something she ought to have concealed, she colored and added,
+lamely, "It will give me a little more time."
+
+I said nothing, but I pondered much. The 23d was no date at all that had
+anything to do with us. If it had significance it was in plans as to
+which she had not taken me into her confidence.
+
+So, too, when I heard her making inquiries of the maid who did the rooms
+as to the location of the Baptist church. "What on earth does she want
+to know that for?" was the question I not unnaturally asked myself. That
+she, who never went to church at all, except as an occasional act of
+high ceremonial for which she took great credit to her soul, was now
+concerned with the doctrine of baptism by immersion I did not believe.
+But I hunted up the sacred edifice myself, finding it to be situated on
+the edge of a daisied mead, slightly out of the town, on a road that
+might be described as lonely and remote. I came to the conclusion that
+if any one wanted to carry off in an automobile a lady picking
+flowers--a sort of _enlevement de Proserpine_--this would be as good a
+place as any. How the Pluto of our drama could have come to select it,
+Heaven only knew.
+
+But I did as I was bid, and wrote to Mr. Brokenshire that once the 23d
+was passed he would be free to come. After that I watched, wondering
+whether or not I should have the heart or the nerve to frustrate love a
+second time, even if I got the chance.
+
+I didn't get the chance precisely, but on the 22nd of June I received a
+mysterious note. It was typewritten and had neither date nor address nor
+signature. Its message was simple:
+
+"If Miss Adare will be at the post-office at four o'clock this afternoon
+she will greatly oblige the writer of these lines and perhaps benefit a
+person who is dear to her."
+
+The post-office being a tolerably safe place in case of felonious
+attack, I was on the spot at five minutes before the hour. In that
+particular town it occupied a corner of a brick building which also gave
+shelter to the bank and a milliner's establishment. As the village hotel
+was opposite, I advertised my arrival by studying a display of hats
+which warranted the attention before going inside to invest in stamps.
+As I was the only applicant for this necessary of life, the swarthy,
+undersized young man who served me made kindly efforts at entertainment
+while "delivering the goods," as he expressed it.
+
+"English, ain't you?"
+
+I said, as usual, that I was a Canadian.
+
+He smiled at his own perspicacity.
+
+"Got your number, didn't I? All you Canucks have the same queer way o'
+talkin'. Two or three in the jam-factory here--only they're French."
+
+I knew some one had entered behind me, and, turning away from the
+wicket, I found the person I had expected. Mr. Stacy Grainger, clad
+jauntily in a gray spring suit, lifted a soft felt hat.
+
+He went to his point without introductory greeting.
+
+"It's good of you to have come. Perhaps we could talk better if we
+walked up the street. There's no one to know us or to make it awkward
+for you."
+
+Walking up the street he made his errand clear to me. I had partly
+guessed it before he said a word. I had guessed it from his pallor, from
+something indefinably humbled in the way he bore himself, and from the
+worried light in his romantic eyes. Being so much taller than I, he had
+to stoop toward me as he talked.
+
+He knew, he said, what had happened on the train. Some of it he had
+wrung from his secretary, Strangways, and the rest had been written him
+by Mrs. Brokenshire. He had been so furious at first that he might have
+been called insane. In order to give himself the pleasure of kicking
+Strangways out he had refused to accept his resignation, and had I not
+been a woman he would have sought revenge on me. He had been the more
+frantic because until getting his first note from Mrs. Brokenshire he
+hadn't known where she was. To have the person dearest to him in the
+world swept off the face of the earth after she was actually under his
+protection was enough to drive a man mad.
+
+Having acquiesced in this, I considered it no harm to add that if I had
+known the business on which I was setting out I should have hardly dared
+that day to take the train for Boston. Once on it, however, and in
+speech with Mrs. Brokenshire, it had seemed that there was no other
+course before me.
+
+"Quite so," he agreed, somewhat to my surprise. "I see that now. He's
+not altogether an ass, that fellow Strangways. I've kept him with me,
+and little by little--" He broke off abruptly to say: "And now the
+shoe's on the other foot. That's what I wanted to tell you."
+
+I walked on a few paces before getting the force of this figure of
+speech.
+
+"You mean that Mrs. Brokenshire--"
+
+"Quite so. I see you get what I'd like you to know." He went on,
+brokenly: "It isn't that I don't want it myself as much as ever. I only
+see, as I didn't see before, what it would mean to her. If I were to
+take her at her word--as I must, of course, if she insists on it--"
+
+I had to think hard while we continued to walk on beneath the leafing
+elms, and the village people watched us two as city folks.
+
+"It's for to-morrow, isn't it?" I asked at last.
+
+He nodded.
+
+"How did you know that?"
+
+"Near the Baptist church?"
+
+"How the deuce do you know? I motored up here last week to spy out the
+land. That seemed to me the most practicable spot, where we should be
+least observed--"
+
+We were still walking on when I said, without quite knowing why I did
+so:
+
+"Why shouldn't you go away at once and leave it all to me?"
+
+"Leave it all to you? And what would you do?"
+
+"I don't know. I should have to think. I could do--something."
+
+"But suppose she's counting on me to come?"
+
+"Then you would have to fail her."
+
+"I couldn't."
+
+"Not even if it was for her good?"
+
+He shook his head.
+
+"Not even if it was for her good. No one who calls himself a
+gentleman--"
+
+I couldn't help flinging him a scornful smile.
+
+"Isn't it too late to think in terms like that? We've come to a place
+where such words don't apply. The best we can do is to get out of a
+difficult situation as wisely as possible, and if you'd just go away and
+leave it to me--"
+
+"She'd never forgive me. That's what I'd be afraid of."
+
+"There's nothing to be afraid of in doing right," I declared, a little
+sententiously. "You'll do right in going away. The rest will take care
+of itself."
+
+We came to the edge of the town, where there was a gate leading into a
+pasture. Over this gate we leaned and looked down on a valley of
+orchards and farms. He was sufficiently at ease to take out a cigarette
+and ask my permission to smoke.
+
+"What would you say of a man who treated you like that?" he asked,
+presently.
+
+"It wouldn't matter what I said at first, so long as I lived to thank
+him. That's what she'd do, and she'd do it soon."
+
+"And in the mean time?"
+
+"I don't see that you need think of that. If you do right--"
+
+He groaned aloud.
+
+"Oh, right be hanged!"
+
+"Yes, there you go. But so long as right is hanged wrong will have it
+all its own way and you'll both get into trouble. Do right now--"
+
+"And leave her in the lurch?"
+
+"You wouldn't be leaving her in the lurch, because you'd be leaving her
+with me. I know her and can take care of her. If you were just failing
+her and nothing else--that would be another thing. But I'm here. If
+you'll only do what's so obviously right, Mr. Grainger, you can trust me
+with the rest."
+
+I said this firmly and with an air of competence, though, as a matter of
+fact, I had no idea of what I should have to do. What I wanted first was
+to get rid of him. Once alone with her, I knew I should get some kind of
+inspiration.
+
+He diverted the argument to himself--he wanted her so much, he would
+have to suffer so cruelly.
+
+"There's no question as to your suffering," I said. "You'll both have to
+suffer. That can be taken for granted. We're only thinking of the way in
+which you'll suffer least."
+
+"That's true," he admitted, but slowly and reluctantly.
+
+"I'm not a terribly rigorous moralist," I went on. "I've a lot of
+sympathy with Paolo and Francesca and with Pelleas and Melisande. But
+you can see for yourself that all such instances end unhappily, and when
+it's happiness you're primarily in search of--"
+
+"Hers--especially," he interposed, with the same deliberation and some
+of the same unwillingness.
+
+"Well, then, isn't your course clear? She'll never be happy with you if
+she kills the man she runs away from--"
+
+He withdrew his cigarette and looked at me, wonderingly.
+
+"Kills him? What in thunder do you mean?"
+
+I explained my convictions. Howard Brokenshire wouldn't survive his
+wife's desertion for a month; he might not survive it for a day. He was
+a doomed man, even if his wife did not desert him at all. He, Stacy
+Grainger, was young. Mrs. Brokenshire was young. Wouldn't it be better
+for them both to wait on life--and on the other possibilities that I
+didn't care to name more explicitly?
+
+So he wrestled with himself, and incidentally with me, turning back at
+last toward the village inn--and his motor. While shaking my hand to say
+good-by he threw off, jerkily:
+
+"I suppose you know my secretary, Strangways, wants to marry you?"
+
+My heart seemed to stop beating.
+
+"He's--he's never said so to me," I managed to return, but more weakly
+than I could have wished.
+
+"Well he will. He's all right. He's not a fool. I'm taking him with me
+into some big things; so that if it's the money you're in doubt about--"
+
+I had recovered myself enough to say:
+
+"Oh no; not at all. But if you're in his confidence I beg you to ask him
+to think no more about it. I'm engaged--or practically engaged--I may
+say that I'm engaged--to Hugh Brokenshire."
+
+"I see. Then you're making a mistake."
+
+I was moving away from him by this time so that I gave him a little
+smile.
+
+"If so, the circumstances are such that--that I must go on making it."
+
+"For God's sake don't!" he called after me.
+
+"Oh, but I must," I returned, and so we went our ways.
+
+On going back to our rooms I found poor, dear little Mrs. Brokenshire
+packing a small straw suit-case. She had selected it as the only thing
+she could carry in her hand to the place of the _enlevement_. She was
+not a packer; she was not an adept in secrecy. As I entered her room she
+looked at me with the pleading, guilty eyes of a child detected in the
+act of stealing sweets, and confessing before he is accused.
+
+I saw nothing, of course. I saw nothing that night. I saw nothing the
+next day. Each one of her helpless, unskilful moves was so plain to me
+that I could have wept; but I was turning over in my mind what I could
+do to let her know she was deceived. I was reproaching myself, too, for
+being so treacherous a confidante. All the great love-heroines had an
+attendant like me, who bewailed and lamented the steps their mistresses
+were taking, and yet lent a hand. Here I was, the nurse to this Juliet,
+the Brangaene to this Isolde, but acting as a counter-agent to all
+romantic schemes. I cannot say I admired myself; but what was I to do?
+
+To make a long story short I decided to do nothing. You may scorn me,
+oh, reader, for that; but I came to a place where I saw it would be vain
+to interfere. Even a child must sometimes be left to fight its own
+battles and stand face to face with its own fate; and how much more a
+married woman! It became the more evident to me that this was what I
+could best do for Mrs. Brokenshire in proportion as I watched the leaden
+hands and feet with which she carried out her tasks and inferred a
+leaden heart. A leaden heart is bad enough, but a leaden heart offering
+itself in vain--what lesson could go home with more effect?
+
+During the forenoon of the 23d each little incident cut me to the quick.
+It was so naive, so useless. The poor darling thought she was outwitting
+me. As if she was stealing it she stowed away her jewelry, and when she
+could no longer hide the suit-case she murmured something about articles
+to be cleaned at the village cleaner's. I took this with a feeble joke
+as to the need of economy, and when she thought she would carry down the
+things herself I commended the impulse toward exercise. I knew she
+wouldn't drive, because she didn't want a witness to her acts. As far as
+I could guess the hour at which Pluto would carry off Proserpine, it
+would be at five o'clock.
+
+And indeed about half past three I observed unusual signs of agitation.
+Her door was kept closed, and from behind it came sounds of a final
+opening and closing of cupboards and drawers, after which she emerged,
+wearing a dark-blue walking-suit and a hat of the _canotiere_ style,
+with a white quill feather at one side. I still made no comment, not
+even when the wan, wee, touching figure was ready to set forth.
+
+If her first steps were artless the last was more artless still. Instead
+of going off casually, with an implied intention to come back, she took
+leave of me with tears and protestations of affection. She had been
+harsh with me, she confessed, and seemingly indifferent to my tender
+care, but one day she might have a chance to show me how genuine was her
+gratitude. In this, too, I saw no more than the commonplace, and a
+little after four she tripped down the avenue, looking, with her
+suit-case, like a school-girl.
+
+I allowed her just such a handicap as her speed and mine would have
+warranted. Even then I made no attempt to overtake her. Having
+previously got what is called the lay of the land, I knew how I could
+come to her assistance by taking a short cut. I had hardened my heart by
+this time, and whatever qualms I had felt before, I was resolved now to
+spare her no drop of the wormwood that would be for her good.
+
+I cannot describe our respective routes without appending a map, which
+would scarcely be worth while. It will be enough if I say that she went
+round the arc of a bow and I cut across by the string. I came thus to a
+slight eminence, selected in advance, whence I could watch her descent
+of the hill by which the lower Main Street trails off into the country.
+I could follow her, too, when she deflected into a small
+cross-thoroughfare bearing the scented name of Clover Lane, in which
+there were no houses; and I should still be able to trace her course
+when she emerged on the quiet country road that would take her to her
+trysting-place. I had no intention to step in till I could do it at some
+spot on her homeward way, and thus spare her needless humiliation.
+
+In Clover Lane she was within a few hundred yards of her destination.
+She had only to turn a corner and she would be in sight of the flowery
+mead whence she was to be carried off. It was a pretty lane, grass-grown
+and overhung with lilacs in full bloom, such as you would find on the
+edge of any New England town. The lilacs shut her in from my view for a
+good part of the time, but not so constantly that I couldn't be a
+witness to her soul's tragedy.
+
+Her soul's tragedy came as a surprise to me. Closely as I had lived with
+her, I was unprepared for any such event. My first hint of it was when
+her pace through the lane began to slacken, till at last she stopped.
+That she didn't stop because she was tired I could judge by the fact
+that, though she stood stock-still, she held the light suit-case in her
+hand. I couldn't see her face, because I stood under a great elm, some
+five hundred yards away.
+
+Having paused and reflected for the space of three or four minutes, she
+went on again, but she went on more slowly. Her light, tripping gait had
+become a dragging of the feet, while I divined that she was still
+pondering. As it was nearly five o'clock, she couldn't be afraid of
+being before her time.
+
+But she stopped again, setting the suit-case down in the middle of the
+road. She turned then and looked back over the way by which she had
+come, as if regretting it. Seeing her open her small hand-bag, take out
+a handkerchief, and put it to her lips, I was sure she was repressing
+one of her baby-like sobs. My heart yearned over her, but I could only
+watch her breathlessly.
+
+She went on again--twenty paces, perhaps. Here she seemed to find a seat
+on a roadside boulder, for she sat down on it, her back being toward me
+and her figure almost concealed by the wayside growth. I could only
+wonder at what was passing in her mind. The whole period, of about ten
+minutes' duration, is filled in my memory with mellow afternoon light
+and perfumed air and the evening song of birds. When the village clock
+struck five she bounded up with a start.
+
+Again she took what might have been twenty paces, and again she came to
+a halt. Dropping the suit-case once more, she clasped her hands as if
+she was praying. As, to the best of my knowledge, her prayers were
+confined to a hasty evening and morning ritual in which there was
+nothing more than a pious, meaningless habit, I could surmise her
+present extremity. Stacy Grainger was like a god to her. If she
+renounced him now it would be an act of heroism of which I could hardly
+believe her capable.
+
+But, apparently, she made up her mind that she couldn't renounce him. If
+there was an answer to her prayer it was one that prompted her to snatch
+up her burden again and hurry, with a kind of skimming motion, right to
+the end of the lane. It was to the end of the lane, but not to the
+turning into the roadway. Once in the roadway she would see--or she
+thought she would see--Stacy Grainger and his automobile, and her fate
+would be sealed.
+
+She had still a chance before her--and from that rutted sandy juncture,
+with wild roses and wild raspberries in the hedgerows on each side, she
+reeled back as if she had been struck. I can only think of a person
+blinded by a flash of lightning who would recoil in just that way.
+
+For a few minutes she was hidden from my view behind the lilacs. When I
+caught sight of her again she was running like a terrified bird back
+through Clover Lane and toward the Main Street, which would take her
+home.
+
+I met her as she was dragging herself up the hill, white, breathless,
+exhausted. Pretending to take the situation lightly, I called as I
+approached:
+
+"So you didn't leave the things."
+
+Her answer was to drop the suit-case once again, while, regardless of
+curious eyes at windows and doors, she flew to throw herself into my
+arms.
+
+She never explained; I never asked for explanations. I was glad enough
+to get her back to the hotel, put her to bed, and wait on her hand and
+foot. She was saved now; Stacy Grainger, too, was saved. Each had
+deserted the other; each had the same crime to forgive. From that day
+onward she never spoke his name to me.
+
+But as, that evening, I went to her bedside to say good-night, she drew
+my face to hers and whispered, cryptically:
+
+"It will be all right now between yourself and Hugh. I know how I can
+help."
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XX
+
+
+Mr. Brokenshire arrived on the 26th of June, thus giving us a few days'
+grace. In the interval Mrs. Brokenshire remained in bed, neither tired
+nor ill, but white, silent, and withdrawn. Her soul's tragedy had
+plainly not ended with her skimming retreat through Clover Lane. In the
+new phase on which it had entered it was creating a woman, possibly a
+wife, where there had been only a lovely child of arrested development.
+Slipping in and out of her room, attending quietly to her wants, I was
+able to note, as never in my life before, the beneficent action of
+suffering.
+
+Because she was in bed, I folded my tent like the Arab and silently
+vacated my room in favor of Mr. Brokenshire. I looked for some objection
+on telling her of this, but she merely bit her lip and said nothing. I
+had asked the manager to put me in the most distant part of the most
+distant wing of the hotel, and would have stolen away altogether had it
+not been for fear that my poor, dear little lady might need me.
+
+As it was, I kept out of sight when Mr. Brokenshire drove up with
+secretary, valet, and chauffeur, and I contrived to take my meals at
+hours when there could be no encounter between me and the great
+personage. If I was wanted I knew I could be sent for; but the 27th
+passed and no command came.
+
+Once or twice I got a distant view of my enemy, as I began to call
+him--majestic, noble, stouter, too, and walking with a slight waddle of
+the hips, which had always marked his carriage and became more
+noticeable as he increased in bulk. Not having seen him for nearly three
+months, I observed that his hair and beard were grayer. During those
+first few days I was never near enough to be able to tell whether or not
+there was a change for the better or the worse in his facial affliction.
+
+From a chance word with the cadaverous Spellman on the 28th I learned
+that a sitting-room had been arranged in connection with the two
+bedrooms Mrs. Brokenshire and I had occupied, and that husband and wife
+were now taking their repasts in private. Later that day I saw them
+drive out together, Mrs. Brokenshire no more than a silhouette in the
+shadows of the limousine. I drew the inference that, however the soul's
+tragedy was working, it was with some reconciling grace that did what
+love had never been able to accomplish. Perhaps for her, as for me,
+there was an appeal in this vain, fatuous, suffering magnate of a coarse
+world's making that, in spite of everything, touched the springs of
+pity.
+
+In any case, I was content not to be sent for--and to rest. After a
+tranquil day or two my own nerves had calmed down and I enjoyed the
+delight of having nothing on my mind. It was extraordinary how remote I
+could keep myself while under the same roof with my superiors,
+especially when they kept themselves remote on their side. I had decided
+on the 1st of July as the date to which I should remain. If there was no
+demand for my services by that time I meant to consider myself free to
+go.
+
+But events were preparing, had long been preparing, which changed my
+life as, I suppose, they changed to a greater or less degree the
+majority of lives in the world. It was curious, too, how they arranged
+themselves, with a neatness of coincidence which weaves my own small
+drama as a visible thread--visible to me, that is--in the vast tapestry
+of human history begun so far back as to be time out of mind.
+
+It was the afternoon of Monday the 29th of June, 1914. Having secured a
+Boston morning paper, I had carried it off to the back veranda, which
+was my favorite retreat, because nobody else liked it. It was just
+outside my room, and looked up into a hillside wood, where there were
+birds and squirrels, and straight bronze pine-trunks wherever the
+sunlight fell aslant on them. At long intervals, too, a partridge hen
+came down with her little brood, clucking her low wooden cluck and
+pecking at tender shoots invisible to me, till she wandered off once
+more into the hidden depths of the stillness.
+
+But I wasn't watching for the partridge hen that afternoon. I was
+thrilled by the tale of the assassination of the Archduke Franz
+Ferdinand and the Duchess of Hohenberg, which had taken place at
+Sarajevo on the previous day. Millions of other readers, who, no more
+than I, felt their own destinies involved were being thrilled at the
+same moment. The judgment trumpet was sounding--only not as we had
+expected it. There was no blast from the sky--no sudden troop of angels.
+There was only the soundless vibration of the wire and of the Hertzian
+waves; there was only the casting of type and the rattling of
+innumerable reams of paper; and, as the Bible says, the dead could hear
+the voice, and they that heard it stood still; and the nations were
+summoned before the Throne "that was set in the midst." I was summoned,
+with my own people--though I didn't know it was a summons till
+afterward.
+
+The paper had fallen to my knee when I was startled to see Mr.
+Brokenshire come round the corner of my retreat. Dressed entirely in
+white, with no color in his costume save the lavender stripe in his
+shirt and collar, and the violet of his socks, handkerchief, and tie, he
+would have been the perfect type of the middle-aged exquisite had it not
+been for the pitiless distortion of his eye the minute he caught sight
+of me. That he had not stumbled on me accidentally I judged by the way
+in which he lifted a Panama of the kind that is said to be made under
+water and is costlier than the costliest feminine confection by Caroline
+Ledoux.
+
+I was struggling out of my wicker chair when the uplifted hand forbade
+me.
+
+"Be good enough to stay where you are," he commanded, but more gently
+than he had ever spoken to me. "I've some things to say to you."
+
+Too frightened to make a further attempt to move, I looked at him as he
+drew up a chair similar to my own, which creaked under his weight when
+he sat down in it. The afternoon being hot, and my veranda lacking air,
+which was one of the reasons why it was left to me, he mopped his brow
+with the violet handkerchief, on which an enormous monogram was
+embroidered in white. I divined his reluctance to begin not only from
+his long hesitation, but from the renewed contortion of his face. His
+hand went up to the left cheek as if to hold it in place, though with no
+success in the effort. When, at last, he spoke there was a stillness in
+his utterance suggestive of an affection extending now to the lips or
+the tongue.
+
+"I want you to know how much I appreciate the help you've given to Mrs.
+Brokenshire during her--her"--he had a difficulty in finding the right
+word--"during her indisposition," he finished, rather weakly.
+
+"I did no more than I was glad to do," I responded, as weakly as he.
+
+"Exactly; and yet I can't allow such timely aid to go unrewarded."
+
+I was alarmed. Grasping the arms of the chair, I braced myself.
+
+"If you mean money, sir--"
+
+"No; I mean more than money." He, too, braced himself. "I--I withdraw my
+opposition to your marriage with my son."
+
+The immediate change in my consciousness was in the nature of a
+dissolving view. The veranda faded away, and the hillside wood. Once
+more I saw the imaginary dining-room, and myself in a smart little
+dinner gown seating the guests; once more I saw the white-enameled
+nursery, and myself in a lace peignoir leaning over the bassinet. As in
+previous visions of the kind, Hugh was a mere shadow in the background,
+secondary to the home and the baby.
+
+Secondary to the home and the baby was the fact that my object was
+accomplished and that my enemy had come to his knees. Indeed, I felt no
+particular elation from that element in the case; no special sense of
+victory. Like so many realized ambitions, it seemed a matter of course,
+now that it had come. Nevertheless, it seemed to me that for my own sake
+and for the sake of the future I must have a more definite expression of
+surrender than he had yet given me.
+
+I remembered that Mrs. Brokenshire had said she would help me, and could
+imagine how. I summoned up everything within me that would rank as
+force of character, speaking quietly.
+
+"I should be sorry, sir, to have you come to this decision against your
+better judgment."
+
+"If you'll be kind enough to accept the fact," he said, sharply, "we can
+leave my manner of reaching it out of the discussion."
+
+In spite of the tone I rallied my resources.
+
+"I don't want to be presumptuous, sir; but if I'm to enter your family I
+should like to feel sure that you'll receive me whole-heartedly."
+
+"My dear young lady, isn't it assurance enough that I receive you at
+all? When I bring myself to that--"
+
+"Oh, please don't think I can't appreciate the sacrifice."
+
+"Then what more is to be said?"
+
+"But the sacrifice is the point. No girl wants to become one of a family
+which has to make such an effort to take her."
+
+There was already a whisper of insecurity in his tone.
+
+"Even so, I can't see why you shouldn't let the effort be our affair.
+Since we make it on our own responsibility--"
+
+"I don't care anything about the responsibility, sir. All I'm thinking
+of is that the effort must be made."
+
+"But what did you expect?"
+
+"I haven't said that I expected anything. If I've been of the slightest
+help to Mrs. Brokenshire I'm happy to let the service be its own
+reward."
+
+"But I'm not. It isn't my habit to remain under an obligation to any
+one."
+
+"Nor mine," I said, demurely.
+
+He stared.
+
+"What does that mean? I don't follow you."
+
+"Perhaps not, sir; but I quite follow you. You wish me to understand
+that, in spite of my deficiencies, you accept me as your son's wife--for
+the reason that you can't help yourself."
+
+Two sharp hectic spots came out on each cheek-bone.
+
+"Well, what if I do?"
+
+"I'm far too generous to put you in that position. I couldn't take you
+at a disadvantage, not even for the sake of marrying Hugh."
+
+I was not sure whether he was frightened or angry, but it was the one or
+the other.
+
+"Do you mean to say that, now--now that I'm ready--"
+
+"That I'm not? Yes, sir. That's what I do mean to say. I told you once
+that if I loved a man I shouldn't stop to consider the wishes of his
+relatives; but I've repented of that. I see now that marriage has a
+wider application than merely to individuals; and I'm not ready to enter
+any family that doesn't want me."
+
+I looked off into the golden dimnesses of the hillside wood in order not
+to be a witness of the struggle he was making.
+
+"And suppose"--it was almost a groan--"and suppose I said we--wanted
+you?"
+
+It was like bending an iron bar; but I gave my strength to it.
+
+"You'd have to say it differently from that, sir."
+
+He spoke hoarsely.
+
+"Differently--in what sense?"
+
+I knew I had him, as Hugh would have expressed it, where I had been
+trying to get him.
+
+"In the sense that if you want me you must ask me."
+
+He mopped his brow once more.
+
+"I--I have asked you."
+
+"You've said you withdrew your opposition. That's not enough."
+
+Beads or perspiration were again standing on his forehead.
+
+"Then what--what would be--enough?"
+
+"A woman can't marry any one unless she does it as something of a
+favor."
+
+He drew himself up.
+
+"Do you remember that you're talking to me?"
+
+"Yes, sir; and it's because I do remember it that I have to insist. With
+anybody else I shouldn't have to be so crude."
+
+Again he put up a struggle, and this time I watched him. If his wife had
+made the conditions I guessed at, I had nothing to do but sit still.
+Grasping the arms of his chair, he half rose as if to continue the
+interview no further, but immediately saw, as I inferred, what that
+would mean to him. He fell back again into the creaking depths of the
+chair.
+
+"What do you wish me to say?"
+
+But his stricken aspect touched me. Now that he was prepared to come to
+his knees, I had no heart to force him down on them. Since I had gained
+my point, it was foolish to battle on, or try to make the Ethiopian
+change his skin.
+
+"Oh, sir, you've said it!" I cried, with sudden emotion. I leaned toward
+him, clasping my hands. "I see you do want me; and since you do
+I'll--I'll come."
+
+Having made this concession, I became humble and thankful and tactful. I
+appeased him by saying I was sensible of the honor he did me, that I was
+happy in the thought that he was to be reconciled with Hugh; and I
+inquired for Mrs. Brokenshire. Leading up to this question with an air
+of guilelessness, I got the answer I was watching for in the ashen shade
+that settled on his face.
+
+I forget what he replied; I was really not listening. I was calling up
+the scene in which she must have fulfilled her promise of helping Hugh
+and me. From the something crushed in him, as in the case of a man who
+knows the worst at last, I gathered that she had made a clean breast of
+it. It was awesome to think that behind this immaculate white suit with
+its violet details, behind this pink of the old beau, behind this
+moneyed authority and this power of dictation to which even the mighty
+sometimes had to bow, there was a broken heart.
+
+He knew now that the bird he had captured was nothing but a captured
+bird, and always longing for the forest. That his wife was willing to
+bear his name and live in his house and submit to his embraces was
+largely because I had induced her. Whether or not, in spite of his
+pompousness, he was grateful to me I didn't know; but I guessed that he
+was not. He could accept such benefits as I had secured him and yet be
+resentful toward the curious providence that had chosen me in particular
+as its instrument.
+
+I came out of my meditations in time to hear him say that, Mrs.
+Brokenshire being as well rested as she was, there would be no further
+hindrance to their proceeding soon to Newport.
+
+"And I suppose I might go back to my home," I observed, with no other
+than the best intentions.
+
+He made an attempt to regain the authority he had just forfeited.
+
+"What for?"
+
+"To be married," I explained--"since I am to be married."
+
+"But why should you be married there?"
+
+"Wouldn't it be the most natural thing?"
+
+"It wouldn't be the most natural thing for Hugh."
+
+"A man can be married anywhere; whereas a woman, at such a turning-point
+in her life, needs a certain backing. I've an uncle and aunt and a great
+many friends--"
+
+The effort at a faint smile drew up the corner of his mouth and set his
+face awry.
+
+"You'll excuse me, my dear"--the epithet made me jump--"if I correct you
+on a point of taste. In being willing that Hugh should marry you I think
+I must draw the line at anything like parade."
+
+I know my eyebrows went up.
+
+"Parade? Parade--how?"
+
+The painful little smile persisted.
+
+"The ancient Romans, when they went to war, had a custom of bringing
+back the most conspicuous of their captives and showing them in triumph
+in the streets--"
+
+I, too, smiled.
+
+"Oh! I understand. But you see, sir, the comparison doesn't hold in this
+case, because none of my friends would know anything more about Hugh
+than the fact that he was an American."
+
+The crooked features went back into repose.
+
+"They'd know he was my son."
+
+I continued to smile, but sweetly.
+
+"They'd take it for granted that he was somebody's son--but they
+wouldn't know anything about you, sir. You'd be quite safe so far as
+that went. Though I don't live many hundreds of miles from New York, and
+we're fairly civilized, I had never so much as heard the name of
+Brokenshire till Mrs. Rossiter told me it was hers before she was
+married. You see, then, that there'd be no danger of my leading a
+captive in triumph. No one I know would give Hugh a second thought
+beyond being nice to the man I was marrying."
+
+That he was pleased with this explanation I cannot affirm, but he passed
+it over.
+
+"I think," was his way of responding, "that it will be better if we
+consider that you belong to us. Till your marriage to Hugh, which I
+suppose will take place in the autumn, you'll come back with us to
+Newport. There will be a whole new--how shall I put it?--a whole new
+phase of life for you to get used to. Hugh will stay with us, and I
+shall ask my daughter, Mrs. Rossiter, to be your hostess till--"
+
+As, without finishing his sentence, he rose I followed his example.
+Though knowing in advance how futile would be the attempt to present
+myself as an equal, I couldn't submit to this calm disposition of my
+liberty and person without putting up a fight.
+
+"I've a great preference, sir--if you'll allow me--for being married in
+my own home, among my own people, and in the old parish church in which
+I was baptized. I really have people and a background; and it's possible
+that my sisters might come over--"
+
+The hand went up; his tone put an end to discussion.
+
+"I think, my dear Alexandra, that we shall do best in considering that
+you belong to us. You'll need time to grow accustomed to your new
+situation. A step backward now might be perilous."
+
+My fight was ended. What could I do? I listened and submitted, while he
+went on to tell me that Mrs. Brokenshire would wish to see me during the
+day, that Hugh would be sent for and would probably arrive the next
+afternoon, and that by the end of the week we should all be settled in
+Newport. There, whenever I felt I needed instruction, I was not to be
+ashamed to ask for it. Mrs. Rossiter would explain anything of a social
+nature that I didn't understand, and he knew I could count on Mrs.
+Brokenshire's protection.
+
+With a comic inward grimace I swallowed all my pride and thanked him.
+
+As for Mrs. Brokenshire's protection, that was settled when, later in
+the afternoon, we sat on her balcony and laughed and cried together, and
+held each other's hands, as young women do when their emotions outrun
+their power of expression. She called me Alix and begged me to invent a
+name for her that would combine the dignity of Hugh's stepmother with
+our standing as friends. I chose Miladi, out of _Les Trois
+Mousquetaires_, with which she was delighted.
+
+I begged off from dining with them that evening, nominally because I was
+too upset by all I had lived through in the afternoon, but really for
+the reason that I couldn't bear the thought of Mr. Brokenshire calling
+me his dear Alexandra twice in the same day. Once had made my blood run
+cold. His method of shriveling up a name by merely pronouncing it is
+something that transcends my power to describe. He had ruined that of
+Adare with me forever, and now he was completing my confusion at being
+called after so lovely a creature as our queen. I have always admitted
+that, with its stately, regal suggestions, Alexandra is no symbol for a
+plain little body like me; but when Mr. Brokenshire took it on his lips
+and called me his dear I could have cried out for mercy. So I had my
+dinner by myself, munching slowly and meditating on what Mr. Brokenshire
+described as "my new situation."
+
+I was meditating on it still when, in the course of the following
+afternoon, I was sitting in a retired grove of the hillside wood
+waiting for Hugh to come and find me. He was to arrive about three and
+Miladi was to tell him where I was. In our crowded little inn, with its
+crowded grounds, nooks of privacy were rare.
+
+I had taken the Boston paper with me in order to get further details of
+the tragedy of Sarajevo. These I found absorbing. They wove themselves
+in with my thoughts of Hugh and my dreams of our life together. An
+article on Serbia, which I had found in an old magazine that morning,
+had given me, too, an understanding of the situation I hadn't had
+before. Up to that day Serbia had been but a name to me; now I began to
+see its significance. The story of this brave, patient little people,
+with its one idea--an _idee fixe_ of liberty--began to move me.
+
+Of all the races of Europe the Serbian impressed me as the one that had
+been most constantly thwarted in its natural ambitions--struck down
+whenever it attempted to rise. Its patriotic hopes had always been
+inconvenient to some other nation's patriotic hopes, and so had to be
+blasted systematically. England, France, Austria, Turkey, Italy, and
+Russia had taken part at various times in this circumvention, denying
+the fruits of victory after they had been won. Serbia had been the poor
+little bastard brother of Europe, kept out of the inheritance of justice
+and freedom and commerce when others were admitted to a share. For some
+of them there might have been no great share; but for little Serbia
+there was none.
+
+It was terrible to me that such wrong could go on, generation after
+generation, and that there should be no Nemesis. In a measure it
+contradicted my theory of right. I didn't want any one to suffer, but I
+asked why there had been no suffering. Of the nations that had knocked
+Serbia about, hedged her in by restrictions, dismembered her and kept
+her dismembered, most were prosperous. From Serbia's point of view I
+couldn't help sympathizing with the hand that had struck down at least
+one member of the House of Hapsburg; and yet in that tragic act there
+could be no adequate revenge for centuries of repression. What I wanted
+I didn't know; I suppose I didn't want anything. I was only
+wondering--wondering why, if individuals couldn't sin without paying for
+the sin they had committed, nations should sin and be immune.
+
+Strangely enough, these reflections did not shut out the thought of the
+lover who was coming up the hill; they blended with it; they made it
+larger and more vital. I could thank God I was marrying a man whose hand
+would always be lifted on behalf of right. I didn't know how it could be
+lifted in the cause of Serbia against the influences represented by
+Franz Ferdinand; but when one is dreaming one doesn't pause to direct
+the logical course of one's dreams. Perhaps I was only clutching at
+whatever I could say for Hugh; and at least I could say that. He was not
+a strong man in the sense of being fertile in ideas; but he was brave
+and generous, and where there was injustice his spirit would be among
+the first to be stirred by it. That conviction made me welcome him when,
+at last, I saw his stocky figure moving lower down among the pine
+trunks.
+
+I caught sight of him long before he discovered me, and could make my
+notes upon him. I could even make my notes upon myself, not wholly with
+my own approval. I was too business-like, too cool. There was nothing I
+possessed in the world that I would not have given for a single
+quickened heart-throb. I would have given it the more when I saw Hugh's
+pinched face and the furbished-up spring suit he had worn the year
+before.
+
+It was not the fact that he had worn it the year before that gave me a
+pang; it was that he must have worn it pretty steadily. I am not
+observant of men's clothes. Except that I like to see them neat, they
+are too much alike to be worth noticing. But anything not plainly
+opulent in Hugh smote me with a sense of guilt. It could so easily be
+attributed to my fault. I could so easily take it so myself. I did take
+it so myself. I said as he approached: "This man has suffered. He has
+suffered on my account. All my life must be given to making it up to
+him."
+
+I make no attempt to tell how we met. It was much as we had met after
+other separations, except that when he slipped to the low boulder and
+took me in his arms it was with a certainty of possession which had
+never hitherto belonged to him. There was nothing for me but to let
+myself go, and lie back in his embrace.
+
+I came to myself, as it were, on hearing him whisper, with his face
+close to mine:
+
+"You witch! You witch! How did you ever manage it?"
+
+I made the necessity for giving him an explanation the excuse for
+working myself free.
+
+"I didn't manage it. It was Mrs. Brokenshire."
+
+He cried out, incredulously:
+
+"Oh no! Not the madam!"
+
+"Yes, Hugh. It was she. She asked him. She must have begged him. That's
+all I can tell you about it."
+
+He was even more incredulous.
+
+"Then it must have been on your account rather than on mine; you can bet
+your sweet life on that!"
+
+"Hugh, darling, she's fond of you. She's fond of you all. If you could
+only have--"
+
+"We couldn't." For the first time he showed signs of admitting me into
+the family sense of disgrace. "Did you ever hear how dad came to marry
+her?"
+
+I said that something had reached me, but one couldn't put the blame for
+that on her.
+
+"And she's had more pull with him than we've had," he declared,
+resentfully. "You can see that by the way he's given in to her on
+this--"
+
+I soothed him on this point, however, and we talked of a general
+reconciliation. From that we went on to the subject of our married life,
+of which his father, in the hasty interview of half an hour before, had
+briefly sketched the conditions. A place was to be found for Hugh in the
+house of Meek & Brokenshire; his allowance was to be raised to twelve or
+fifteen thousand a year; we were to have a modest house, or apartment in
+New York. No date had been fixed for the wedding, so far as Hugh could
+learn; but it might be in October. We should be granted perhaps a three
+months' trip abroad, with a return to New York before Christmas.
+
+He gave me these details with an excitement bespeaking intense
+satisfaction. It was easy to see that, after his ten months' rebellion,
+he was eager to put his head under the Brokenshire yoke again. His
+instinct in this was similar to Ethel's and Jack's--only that they had
+never declared themselves free. I could best compare him to a horse who
+for one glorious half-hour kicks up his heels and runs away, and yet
+returns to the stable and the harness as the safest sphere of
+blessedness. Under the Brokenshire yoke he could live, move, have his
+being, and enjoy his twelve or fifteen thousand a year, without that
+onerous responsibility which comes with the exercise of choice. Under
+the Brokenshire yoke I, too, should be provided for. I should be raised
+from my lowly estate, be given a position in the world, and, though for
+a while the fact of the _mesalliance_ might tell against me, it would be
+overcome in my case as in that of Libby Jaynes. His talk was a paean on
+our luck.
+
+"All we'll have to do for the rest of our lives, little Alix, will be to
+get away with our thousand dollars a month. I guess we can do
+that--what? We sha'n't even have to save, because in the natural course
+of events--" He left this reference to his father's demise to go on with
+his hymn of self-congratulation. "But we've pulled it off, haven't we?
+We've done the trick. Lord! what a relief it is! What do you think I've
+been living on for the last six weeks? Chocolate and crackers for the
+most part. Lost thirty pounds in two months. But it's all right now,
+little Alix. I've got you and I mean to keep you." He asked, suddenly:
+"How did you come to know the madam so well? I'd never had a hint of it.
+You do keep some things awful close!"
+
+I made my answer as truthful as I could.
+
+"This was nothing I could tell you, Hugh. Mrs. Brokenshire was sorry for
+me ever since last year in Newport. She never dared to say anything
+about it, because she was afraid of your father and the rest of you; but
+she did pity me--"
+
+"Well, I'll be blowed! I didn't suppose she had it in her. She's always
+seemed to me like a woman walking in her sleep--"
+
+"She's waking up now. She's beginning to understand that perhaps she
+hasn't taken the right attitude toward your father; and I think she'd
+like to begin. It was to work that problem out that she decided to come
+away with me and live simply for a while. . . . She wanted to escape
+from every one, and I was the nearest to no one she could find to take
+with her; and so-- If your sisters or your brother ask you any questions
+I wish you would tell them that."
+
+We discussed this theme in its various aspects while the afternoon light
+turned the pine trunks round us into columns of red-gold, and a soft
+wind soothed us with balsamic smells. Birds flitted and fluted overhead,
+and now and then a squirrel darted up to challenge us with the peak of
+its inquisitive sharp little nose. I chose what I thought a favorable
+moment to bring before Hugh the matter that had been so summarily
+shelved by his father. I wanted so much to be married among my own
+people and from what I could call my own home.
+
+His child-like, wide-apart, small blue eyes regarded me with growing
+astonishment as I made my point clear.
+
+"For Heaven's sake, my sweet little Alix, what do you want that for?
+Why, we can be married in Newport!"
+
+His emphasis on the word Newport was as if he had said Heaven.
+
+"Yes; but you see, Hugh, darling, Newport means nothing to me--"
+
+"It will jolly well have to if--"
+
+"And my home means such a lot. If you were marrying Lady Cissie Boscobel
+you'd certainly go to Goldborough for the occasion."
+
+"Ah, but that would be different!"
+
+"Different in what way?"
+
+He colored, and grew confused.
+
+"Well, don't you see?"
+
+"No; I'm afraid I don't."
+
+"Oh yes, you do, little Alix," he smiled, cajolingly. "Don't try to pull
+my leg. We can't have one of these bang-up weddings, as it is. Of course
+we can't--and we don't want it. But they'll do the decent thing by us,
+now that dad has come round at all, and let people see that they stand
+behind us. If we were to go down there to where you came from--Halifax,
+or wherever it is--it would put us back ten years with the people we
+want to keep up with."
+
+I submitted again, because I didn't know what else to do. I submitted,
+and yet with a rage which was the hotter for being impotent. These
+people took it so easily for granted that I had no pride, and was
+entitled to none. They allowed me no more in the way of antecedents than
+if I had been a new creation on the day when I first met Mrs. Rossiter.
+They believed in the principle of inequality of birth as firmly as if
+they had been minor German royalties. My marriage to Hugh might be valid
+in the eyes of the law, but to them it would always be more or less
+morganatic. I could only be Duchess of Hohenberg to this young prince;
+and perhaps not even that. She was noble--_adel_, as they call it--at
+the least; while I was merely a nursemaid.
+
+But I made another grimace--and swallowed it. I could have broken out
+with some vicious remark, which would have bewildered poor Hugh beyond
+expression and made no change in his point of view. Even if it relieved
+my pent-up bitterness, it would have left me nothing but a nursemaid;
+and, since I was to marry him, why disturb the peace? And I owed him too
+much not to marry him; of that I was convinced. He had been kind to me
+from the first day he knew me; he had been true to me in ways in which
+few men would have been true. To go back on him now would not be simply
+a change of mind; it would be an act of cruel treachery. No, I argued; I
+could do nothing but go on with it. My debt could not be paid in any
+other way. Besides, I declared to myself, with a catch in the throat,
+I--I loved him. I had said it so many times that it must be true.
+
+When the minute came to go down the hill and prepare for the little
+dinner at which I was to be included in the family, my thoughts reverted
+to the event that had startled the world.
+
+"Isn't this terrible?" I said to Hugh, indicating the paper I carried in
+my hand.
+
+He looked at me with the mild wondering which always made his expression
+vacuous.
+
+"Isn't what terrible?"
+
+"Why, the assassinations in Bosnia."
+
+"Oh! I saw there had been something."
+
+"Something!" I cried. "It's one of the most momentous things that have
+ever happened in history."
+
+"What makes you say that?" he inquired, turning on me the innocent stare
+of his baby-blue eyes as we sauntered between the pine trunks.
+
+I had to admit that I didn't know, I only felt it in my bones.
+
+"Aren't they always doing something of the sort down there--killing
+kings and queens, or something?"
+
+"Oh, not like this!" I paused. "You know, Hugh, Serbia is a wonderful
+little country when you've heard a bit of its story."
+
+"Is it?" He took out a cigarette and lit it.
+
+In the ardor of my sympathy I poured out on him some of the information
+I had just acquired.
+
+"And we're all responsible," I was finishing; "English, French,
+Russians, Austrians--"
+
+"We're not responsible--we Americans," he broke in, quietly.
+
+"Oh, I'm not so sure about that. If you inherit the civilization of the
+races from which you spring you inherit some of their crimes; and you've
+got to pay for them."
+
+"Not on your life!" he laughed, easily; but in the laugh there was
+something that cut me more deeply than he knew.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXI
+
+
+But once we were settled in Newport, I almost forgot the tragedy of
+Sarajevo. The world, it seemed to me, had forgotten it, too; it had
+passed into history. Franz Ferdinand and Sophie Chotek being dead and
+buried, we had gone on to something else.
+
+Personally I had gone on to the readjustment of my life. I was with
+Ethel Rossiter as a guest. Guest or retainer, however, made little
+difference. She treated me just as before--with the same detached,
+live-and-let-live kindliness that dropped into the old habit of making
+use of me. I liked that. It kept us on a simple, natural footing. I
+could see myself writing her notes and answering her telephone calls as
+long as I lived. Except that now and then, when she thought of it, she
+called me Alix, instead of Miss Adare, she might still have been paying
+me so much a month.
+
+"Well, I can't get over father," was the burden of her congratulations
+to me. "I knew that woman could turn him around her finger; but I didn't
+suppose she could do it like that. You played your cards well in getting
+hold of her."
+
+"I didn't play my cards," was my usual defense, "because I had none to
+play.'"
+
+"Then what on earth brought her over to your side?"
+
+"Life."
+
+"Life--fiddlesticks! It was life with a good deal of help from Alix
+Adare." She added, on one occasion: "Why didn't you take that young
+Strangways--frankly, now?"
+
+"Because," I smiled, "I don't believe in polyandry."
+
+"But you're fond of him. That's what beats me! You're fond of one man
+and you're marrying another; and yet--"
+
+I don't know what color I turned outwardly, but within I was fire. It
+was the fire of confusion and not of indignation. I felt it safest to
+let her go on, hazarding no remarks of my own.
+
+"And yet--what?"
+
+"And yet you don't seem like a girl who'd marry for money--you really
+don't. That's one thing about you."
+
+I screwed up a wan smile.
+
+"Thanks."
+
+"So that I'm all in the dark. What you can see in Hugh--"
+
+"What I can see in Hugh is the kindest of men. That's a good deal to say
+of any one."
+
+"Well, I'll be hanged if I'd marry even the kindest of men if it was for
+nothing but his kindness."
+
+The Jack Brokenshires were jovially non-committal, letting it go at
+that. In offering the necessary good wishes Jack contented himself with
+calling me a sly one; while Pauline, who was mannish and horsey, wrung
+my hand till she almost pulled it off, remarking that in a family like
+the Brokenshires the natural principle was, The more, the merrier.
+Acting, doubtless, on a hint from higher up, they included Hugh and me
+in a luncheon to some twenty of their cronies, whose shibboleths I
+didn't understand and among whom I was lost.
+
+As far as I went into general society it was so unobtrusively that I
+might be said not to have gone at all. I made no sensation as the
+affianced bride of Hugh Brokenshire. To the great fact of my engagement
+few people paid any attention, and those who referred to it did so with
+the air of forgetting it the minute afterward. It came to me with some
+pain that in his own circle Hugh was regarded more or less as a
+nonentity. I was a "queer Canadian." Newport presented to me a hard,
+polished exterior, like a porcelain wall. It was too high to climb over
+and it afforded no nooks or crevices in which I might find a niche. No
+one ever offered me the slightest hint of incivility--or of interest.
+
+"It's because they've too much to do and to think of," Mrs. Brokenshire
+explained to me. "They know too many people already. Their lives are too
+full. Money means nothing to them, because they've all got so much of
+it. Quiet good breeding isn't striking enough. Cleverness they don't
+care anything about--and not even for scandals outside their own close
+corporation. All the same"--I waited while she formulated her
+opinion--"all the same, a great deal could be done in Newport--in New
+York--in Washington--in America at large--if we had the right sort of
+women."
+
+"And haven't you?"
+
+"No. Our women are--how shall I say?--too small--too parochial--too
+provincial. They've no national outlook; they've no authority. Few of
+them know how to use money or to hold high positions. Our men hardly
+ever turn to them for advice on important things, because they've rarely
+any to give."
+
+Her remarks showed so much more of the reflecting spirit than I had ever
+seen in her before, that I was emboldened to ask:
+
+"Then, couldn't you show them how?"
+
+She shook her head.
+
+"No; I'm an American, like the rest. It isn't in me. It's both personal
+and national. Cissie Boscobel could do it--not because she's clever or
+has had experience, but because the tradition is there. We've no
+tradition."
+
+The tradition in Cissie Boscobel became evident on a day in July when
+she came to sit beside me in the grounds of the Casino. I had gone with
+Mrs. Rossiter, with whom I had been watching the tennis. When she
+drifted away with a group of her friends I was left alone. It was then
+that Lady Cecilia, in tennis things, with her racket in her hand, came
+across the grass to me. She moved with the splendid careless freedom of
+women who pass their lives outdoors and yet are trained to
+drawing-rooms.
+
+She didn't go to her point at once; she was, in fact, a mistress of the
+introductory. The visits she had made and the people she had met since
+our last meeting were the theme of her remarks; and now she was staying
+with the Burkes. She would remain with them for a month, after which she
+had two or three places to go to on Long Island and in the Catskills.
+She would have to be at Strath-na-Cloid in September, for the wedding of
+her sister Janet and the young man in the Inverness Rangers, who would
+then have got home from India. She would be sorry to leave. She adored
+America. Americans were such fun. Their houses were so fresh and new.
+She doted on the multiplicity of bathrooms. It would be so horrid to
+live at Strath-na-Cloid or Dillingham Hall after the cheeriness of Mrs.
+Burke's or Mrs. Rossiter's.
+
+Screwing up her greenish cat-like eyes till they were no more than tiny
+slits with a laugh in them, she said, with her deliciously incisive
+utterance:
+
+"So you've done it, haven't you?"
+
+"You mean that Mr. Brokenshire has come round."
+
+"You know, that seems to me the most wonderful thing I ever heard of!
+It's like a miracle isn't it? You've hardly lifted a finger--and yet
+here it is." She leaned forward, her firm hands grasping the racket that
+lay across her knees. "I want to tell you how much I admire you. You're
+splendid! You're not a bit like a Colonial, are you?"
+
+Since she meant well, I mastered my indignation.
+
+"Oh yes, I am. I'm exactly like a Colonial, and very proud of the fact."
+
+"Fancy! And are all Colonials like you?"
+
+"All that aren't a great deal cleverer and better."
+
+"Fancy!" she breathed again. "I must tell them when I go home. They
+don't know it, you know." She added, in a slight change of key: "I'm so
+glad Hugh is going to have a wife like you."
+
+It was on my tongue to say, "He'd be much better off with a wife like
+you"; but I made it:
+
+"What do you think it will do for him?"
+
+"It will bring him out. Hugh is splendid in his way--just as you
+are--only he needs bringing out, don't you think?"
+
+"He hasn't needed bringing out in the last ten months," I declared, with
+some emphasis. "See what he's done--"
+
+"And yet he didn't pull it off, did he? You managed that. You'll manage
+a lot of other things for him, too. I must go back to the others," she
+continued, getting up. "They're waiting for me to make up the set. But I
+wanted to tell you I'm--I'm glad--without--without any--any reserves."
+
+I think there were tears in her narrow eyes, as I know there were in my
+own; but she beat such a hasty retreat that I could not be very sure of
+it.
+
+Mildred Brokenshire was a surprise to me. I had hardly ever seen her
+till she sent for me in order to talk about Hugh. I found her lying on a
+couch in a dim corner of her big, massively furnished room, her face no
+more than a white pain-pinched spot in the obscurity. After having
+kissed me she made me sit at a distance, nominally to get the breeze
+through an open window, but really that I might not have to look at her.
+
+In an unnaturally hollow, tragic voice she said it was a pleasure to her
+that Hugh should have got at last the woman he loved, especially after
+having made such a fight for her. Though she didn't know me, she was
+sure I had fine qualities; otherwise Hugh would not have cared for me as
+he did. He was a dear boy, and a good wife could make much of him. He
+lacked initiative in the way that was unfortunately common among rich
+men's sons, especially in America; but the past winter had shown that he
+was not deficient in doggedness. She wondered if I loved him as much as
+he loved me.
+
+There was that in this suffering woman, so far withdrawn from our
+struggles in the world outside, which prompted me to be as truthful as
+the circumstances rendered possible.
+
+"I love him enough, dear Miss Brokenshire," I said, with some emotion,
+"to be eager to give my life to the object of making him happy."
+
+She accepted this in silence. At least it was silence for a time, after
+which she said, in measured, organ-like tones:
+
+"We can't make other people happy, you know. We can only do our
+duty--and let their happiness take care of itself. They must make
+themselves happy! It's a mistake for any of us to feel responsible for
+more than doing right. "When we do right other people must make the best
+they can of it."
+
+"I believe that, too," I responded, earnestly--"only that it's sometimes
+so hard to tell what is right."
+
+There was again an interval of silence. The voice, when it came out of
+the dimness, might have been that of the Pythian virgin oracle. The
+utterances I give were not delivered consecutively, but in answer to
+questions and observations of my own.
+
+"Right, on the whole, is what we've been impelled to do when we've been
+conscientiously seeking the best way. . . . Forces catch us, often
+contradictory and bewildering forces, and carry us to a certain act, or
+to a certain line of action. Very well, then; be satisfied. Don't go
+back. Don't torture yourself with questionings. Don't dig up what has
+already been done. That's done! Nothing can undo it. Accept it as it is.
+If there's a wrong or a mistake in it life will take care of it. . . .
+Life is not a blind impulse, working blindly. It's a beneficent,
+rectifying power. It's dynamic. It's a perpetual unfolding. It's a fire
+that utilizes as fuel everything that's cast into it. . . ."
+
+And yet when I kissed her to say good-by I got the impression that she
+didn't like me or that she didn't trust me. I was not always liked, but
+I was generally trusted. The idea that this Brokenshire seeress, this
+suffering priestess whose whole life was to lie on a couch and think,
+and think, and think, had reserves in her consciousness on my account
+was painful. I said so to Hugh that evening.
+
+"Oh, you mustn't take Mildred's gassing too seriously," he advised.
+"Gets a lot of ideas in her head: but--poor thing--what else can she do?
+Since she doesn't know anything about real life, she just spins
+theories on the subject. Whatever you want to know, little Alix, I'll
+tell you."
+
+"Thanks," I said, dryly, explaining the shiver which ran through me by
+the fact that we were sitting in the loggia, in the open air.
+
+"Then we'll go in."
+
+"No, no!" I protested. "I like it much better out here."
+
+But he was on his feet.
+
+"We'll go in. I can't have my sweet little Alix taking cold. I'm here to
+protect her. She must do what I tell her. We'll go in."
+
+And we went in. It was one of the things I was learning, that my kind
+Hugh would kill me with kindness. It was part of his way of taking
+possession. If he could help it he wouldn't leave me for an hour
+unwatched; nor would he let me lift a hand.
+
+"There are servants to do that," he would say. "It's one of the things
+little Alix will have to get accustomed to."
+
+"I can't get accustomed to doing nothing, Hugh."
+
+"You'll have plenty to do in having a good time."
+
+"Oh, but I must have more than that in life."
+
+"In your old life, perhaps; but everything is to be different now. Don't
+be afraid, little Alix; you'll learn."
+
+"Learn what? It seems to me you're taking the possibility of ever
+learning anything away."
+
+This was a joke. Over it he laughed heartily.
+
+"You won't know yourself, little Alix, when I've had you for a year."
+
+Mr. Brokenshire's compliments to me were in a similar vein. He seemed
+always to be in search of the superior position he had lost on the day
+we sat looking up into the hillside wood. His dear Alexandra must never
+forget her social inexperience. In being raised to a higher level I was
+to watch the manners of those about me. I was to copy them, as people
+learning French or Italian try to catch an accent which is not that of
+their mother tongue. They probably do it badly; but that is better than
+not doing it at all. I could never be an Ethel Rossiter or a Daisy
+Burke, but I could become an imitation. Imitations being to the house of
+Brokenshire like paste diamonds or fish-glue pearls, my gratitude for
+the effort they made in accepting me had to be the more humble.
+
+And yet on occasions I tried to get justice for myself.
+
+"I'm not altogether without knowledge of the world, Mr. Brokenshire," I
+said, after one of his kindly, condescending lectures. "Not only in
+Canada, but in England, and to some slight extent abroad, I've had
+opportunities--"
+
+"Yes, yes; but this is different. You've had opportunities, as you say.
+But there you were looking on from the outside, while here you'll be
+living from within."
+
+"Oh, but I wasn't looking on from the outside--"
+
+His hand went up; his pitiful crooked smile was meant to express
+tolerance. "You'll pardon me, my dear; but we gain nothing by discussing
+that point. You'll see it yourself when you've been one of us a little
+longer. Meantime, if you watch the women about you and study them--"
+
+We left it there. I always left it there. But I did begin to see that
+there was a difference between me and the women whom Hugh and his father
+wished me to take as my models. I had hitherto not observed this
+variation in type--I might possibly call it this distinction between
+national ideals--during my two years under the Stars and Stripes; and I
+find a difficulty in expressing it, for the reason that to anything I
+say so many exceptions can be made. The immense class of wage-earning
+women would be exceptions; mothers and housekeepers would again be
+exceptions; exceptions would be all women engaged in political or social
+or philanthropic service to the country; but when this allowance has
+been made there still remain a multitude of American women economically
+independent, satisfied to be an incubus on the land. They dress, they
+entertain, they go to entertainments, they live gracefully. When they
+can't help it they bear children; but they bear as few as possible.
+Otherwise they are not much more than pleasing forms of vegetation, idle
+of body and mind; and the American man, as a rule, loves to have it so.
+
+"The American man," Mrs. Rossiter had said to me once, "likes
+figurines." Hugh was a rebel to that doctrine, she had added then; but
+his rebellion had been short-lived. He had come back to the standard of
+his countrymen. He had chosen me, he used to say, because I was a woman
+of whom a Socialist might make his star; and now I was to be put in a
+vitrine.
+
+Canadian women, as a class, are not made for the vitrine. Their instinct
+is to be workers in the world and mates for men. They have no very high
+opinion of their privileges; they are not self-analytical. They rarely
+think of themselves as the birds and flowers of the human race, or as
+other than creatures to put their shoulders to the wheel in the ways of
+which God made them mistresses. Not ashamed to know how to bake and brew
+and mend and sew, they rule the house with a practically French
+economy. I was brought up in that way; not ignorant of books or of
+social amenities, but with the assumption that I was in this world to
+contribute something to it by my usefulness. I hadn't contributed much,
+Heaven only knows; but the impulse to work was instinctive.
+
+And as Hugh's wife I began to see that I should be lifted high and dry
+into a sphere where there was nothing to be done. I should dress and I
+should amuse myself; I should amuse myself and I should dress. It was
+all Mrs. Rossiter did; it was all Mrs. Brokenshire did--except that to
+her, poor soul, amusement had become but gall and bitterness. Still,
+with the large exceptions which I cheerfully concede, it was the
+American ideal, so far as I could get hold of it; and I began to feel
+that, in the long run, it would stifle me.
+
+It was a kind of feminine Nirvana. It offered me nothing to strive for,
+nothing to wait for in hope, nothing to win gloriously. The wife of
+Larry Strangways, whoever she turned out to be, would have a goal before
+her, high up and far ahead, with the incentive of lifelong striving.
+Hugh Brokenshire's wife would have everything done for her, as it was
+done for Mildred. Like Mildred she would have nothing to do but think
+and think and think--or train herself to not thinking at all. Little by
+little I saw myself being steered toward this fate; and, like St. Peter,
+when I thought thereon I wept.
+
+I had taken to weeping all alone in my pretty room, which looked out on
+shrubberies and gardens. I should probably have shrubberies and gardens
+like them some day; so that weeping was the more foolish. Every one
+considered me fortunate. All my Canadian and English friends spoke of me
+as a lucky girl, and, in their downright, practical way, said I was
+"doing very well for myself."
+
+Of course I was--which made it criminal on my part not to take the
+Brokenshire view of things with equanimity. I tried to. I bent my will
+to it. I bent my spirit to it. In the end I might have succeeded if the
+heavenly trumpet had not sounded again, with another blast from
+Sarajevo.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXII
+
+
+As I have already said, I had almost forgotten Sarajevo. The illustrated
+papers had shown us a large coffin raised high and a small one set low,
+telling us of unequal rank, even at the Great White Throne. I had a
+thought for that from time to time; but otherwise Franz Ferdinand and
+Sophie Chotek were less to me than Caesar or Napoleon.
+
+But toward the end of July there was a sudden rumbling. It was like that
+first disquieting low note of the "Rheingold," rising from elemental
+depths, presaging love and adventure and war and death and defeat and
+triumph, and the end of the old gods and the burning of their Valhalla.
+I cannot say that any of us knew its significance; but it was arresting.
+
+"What does it mean?"
+
+I think Cissie Boscobel was the first to ask me that question, to which
+I could only reply by asking it in my own turn. What did it mean--this
+ultimatum from Vienna to Belgrade? Did it mean anything? Could it
+possibly mean what dinner-table diplomats hinted at between a laugh and
+a look of terror?
+
+Hugh and I were descending the Rossiter lawn on a bright afternoon near
+the end of July. Cissie, who was passing with some of the Burkes, ran
+over the grass toward us. Had we seen the papers? Had we read the
+Austrian note? Could we make anything out of it?
+
+I recall her as an extraordinarily vivid picture against the background
+of blue sea, in white, with a green-silk tunic embroidered in peacock's
+feathers, with long jade ear-rings and big jade beads, and a
+jade-colored plume in a black-lace hat cocked on her flaming hair as she
+alone knew how to cock it. I merely want to point out here that to
+Cissie Boscobel and me the questions she asked already possessed a
+measure of life-and-death importance; while to Hugh they had none at
+all.
+
+I remember him as he stood aloof from us, strong and stocky and
+summer-like in his white flannels, a type of that safe and separated
+America which could afford to look on at Old World tragedies and feel
+them of no personal concern. To him Cissie Boscobel and I, with anxiety
+in our eyes and something worse already clutching at our hearts, were
+but two girls talking of things they didn't understand and of no great
+interest, anyway.
+
+"Come along, little Alix!" he interrupted, gaily. "Cissie will excuse
+us. The madam is waiting to motor us over to South Portsmouth, and I
+don't want to keep her waiting. You know," he explained, proudly, "she
+thinks this little girl is a peach!"
+
+Cissie ran back to join the Burkes and we continued our way along the
+Cliff Walk to Mr. Brokenshire's. Hugh had come for me in order that we
+might have the stroll together.
+
+I gave him my view of the situation as we went along, though in it there
+was nothing original.
+
+"You see, if Austria attacks Serbia, then Russia must attack Austria; in
+which case Germany will attack Russia, and France will attack Germany.
+Then England will certainly have to pitch in."
+
+"But we won't. We shall be out of it."
+
+The complacency of his tone nettled me.
+
+"But I sha'n't be out of it, Hugh."
+
+He laughed.
+
+"You? What could you do, little lightweight?"
+
+"I don't know; but whatever it was I should want to be doing it."
+
+This joke might have been characterized as a screamer. He threw back his
+head with a loud guffaw.
+
+"Well, of all the little spitfires!" Catching me by the arm, he hugged
+me to him, as we were hidden in a rocky nook of the path. "Why, you're a
+regular Amazon! A soldier in your way would be no more than a ninepin in
+a bowling-alley."
+
+I didn't enter into the spirit of this pleasantry. On the contrary, I
+concealed my anger in endeavoring to speak with dignity.
+
+"And, what's more, Hugh, than not being out of it myself, I don't see
+how I could marry a man who was. Of course, no such war will come to
+pass. It couldn't! The world has gone beyond that sort of madness. We
+know too well the advantages of peace. But if it should break out--"
+
+"I'll buy you a popgun with the very first shot that's fired."
+
+But in August, when the impossible had happened, when Germany had
+invaded Belgium, and France had moved to her eastern frontier, and
+Russia was pouring into Prussia, and English troops were on foreign
+continental soil for the first time in fifty years, Hugh's indifference
+grew painful. He was perhaps not more indifferent than any one else with
+whom I was thrown, but to me he seemed so because he was so near me. He
+read the papers; he took a sporting interest in the daily events; but it
+resembled--to my mind at least--the interest of an eighteenth-century
+farmer's lad excited at a cockfight. It was somewhat in the spirit of
+"Go it, old boy!" to each side indifferently.
+
+If he took sides at all it was rather on that to which Cissie Boscobel
+and I were nationally opposed; but this, we agreed, was to tease us. So
+far as opinions of his own were concerned, he was neutral. He meant by
+that that he didn't care a jot who lost or who won, so long as America
+was out of the fray and could eat its bread in safety.
+
+"There are more important things than safety," I said to him,
+scornfully, one day.
+
+"Such as--"
+
+But when I gave him what seemed to me the truisms of life he was
+contented to laugh in my face.
+
+Cissie Boscobel was more patient with him than I was. I have always
+admired in the English that splendid tolerance which allows to others
+the same liberty of thinking they claim for themselves; but in this
+instance I had none of it. Hugh was too much a part of myself. When he
+said, as he was fond of saying, "If Germany gets at poor degenerate old
+England she'll crumple her up," Lady Cissie could fling him a pitying,
+confident smile, with no venom in it whatever, while I became bitter or
+furious.
+
+Fortunately, Mr. Brokenshire was called to New York on business
+connected with the war, so that his dear Alexandra was delivered for a
+while from his daily condescensions. Though Hugh didn't say so in actual
+words, I inferred that the struggle would further enrich the house of
+Meek & Brokenshire. Of the vast sums it would handle a commission would
+stick to its fingers, and if the business grew too heavy for the usual
+staff to deal with Hugh's own energies were to be called into play. His
+father, he told me, had said so. It would be an eye-opener to Cousin
+Andrew Brew, he crowed, to see him helping to finance the European War
+within a year after that slow-witted nut had had the hardihood to refuse
+him!
+
+In the Brokenshire villa the animation was comparable to a suppressed
+fever. Mr. Brokenshire came back as often as he could. Thereupon there
+followed whispered conferences between him and Jack, between him and Jim
+Rossiter, between him and kindred magnates, between three and four and
+six and eight of them together, with a ceaseless stream of telegrams, of
+the purport of which we women knew nothing. We gave dinners and lunches,
+and bathed at Bailey's, and played tennis at the Casino, and lived in
+our own little lady-like Paradise, shut out from the interests
+convulsing the world. Knitting had not yet begun. The Red Cross had
+barely issued its appeals. America, with the speed of the
+Franco-Prussian War in mind, was still under the impression that it
+could hardly give its philanthropic aid before the need for it would be
+over.
+
+Of all our little coterie Lady Cissie and I alone perhaps took the sense
+of things to heart. Even with us, it was the heart that acted rather
+than the intelligence. So far as intelligence went, we were convinced
+that, once Great Britain lifted her hand, all hostile nations would
+tremble. That was a matter of course. It amazed us that people round us
+should talk of our enemy's efficiency. The word was just coming into
+use, always with the implication that the English were inefficient and
+unprepared.
+
+That would have made us laugh if those who said such things hadn't said
+them like Hugh, with detached, undisturbed deliberation, as a matter
+that was nothing to them. Many of them hoped, and hoped ardently, that
+the side represented by England, Russia, and France would be victorious;
+but if it wasn't, America would still be able to sit down to eat and
+drink, and rise up to play, as we were doing at the moment, while
+nothing could shake her from her ease.
+
+Owing to our kinship in sentiment, Lady Cissie and I drew closer
+together. We gave each other bits of information in which no one else
+would have had an interest. She was getting letters from England; I from
+England and Canada. Her brother Leatherhead had been ordered to France
+with his regiment--was probably there. Her brother Rowan, who had been
+at Sandhurst, had got his commission. The young man her sister Janet was
+engaged to had sailed with the Rangers for Marseilles and would go at
+once to the front instead of coming home. If he could get leave the
+young couple would be married hastily, after which he would return to
+his duty. My sister Louise wrote that her husband's ship was in the
+North Sea and that her news of him was meager. The husband of my sister
+Victoria, who had had a staff appointment at Gibraltar, had been ordered
+to rejoin his regiment; and he, too, would soon be in Belgium.
+
+From Canada I heard of that impulse toward recruiting which was
+thrilling the land from the Island of Vancouver, in the Pacific, to that
+of Cape Breton, in the Atlantic, and in which the multitudes were of one
+heart and one soul. Men came from farms, factories, and fisheries; they
+came from banks and shops and mines. They tramped hundreds of miles,
+from the Yukon, from Ungava, and from Hudson Bay. They arrived in troops
+or singly, impelled by nothing but that love which passes the love of
+women--the love of race, the love of country, the love of honor, the
+love of something vast and intangible and inexplicable, that comes as
+near as possible to that love of man which is almost the love of God.
+
+I can proudly say that among my countrymen it was this, and it was
+nothing short of this. They were as far from the fray as their neighbors
+to the south, and as safe. Belgium and Serbia meant less to most of them
+than to the people of San Francisco, Chicago, and New York; but a great
+cause, almost indefinable to thought, meant everything. To that cause
+they gave themselves--not sparingly or grudgingly, but like Araunah the
+Jebusite to David the son of Jesse, "as a king gives unto a king."
+
+Men are wonderful to me--all men of all races. They face hardship so
+cheerfully and dangers so gaily, and death so serenely. This is true of
+men not only in war, but in peace--of men not only as saints, but as
+sinners. And among men it seems to me that our Colonial men are in the
+first rank of the manliest. Frenchman, German, Austrian, Italian,
+Russian, Englishman, and Turk had each some visible end to gain. They
+couldn't help going. They couldn't help fighting. Our men had nothing to
+gain that mortal eyes could see. They have endured, "as seeing Him who
+is invisible."
+
+They have come from the far ends of the earth, and are still
+coming--turning their backs on families and business and pleasure and
+profit and hope. They have counted the world well lost for love--for a
+true love--a man's love--a redemptive love if ever there was one; for
+"greater love hath no man than this, that a man lay down his life for
+his friends."
+
+But when, with my heart flaming, I spoke of this to Lady Cecilia, she
+was cold. "Fancy!" was the only comment she ever made on the subject.
+Toward my own intensity of feeling she was courteous; but she plainly
+felt that in a war in which the honors would be to the professional
+soldier, and to the English professional soldier first of all, Colonials
+were out of place. It was somewhat presumptuous of them to volunteer.
+
+She was a splendid character--with British limitations. Among those
+limitations her attitude toward Colonials was, as I saw things, the
+first. She rarely spoke of Canadians or Australians; it was always of
+Colonials, with a delicately disdainful accent on the word impossible to
+transcribe. Geography, either physical or ethnic, was no more her strong
+point than it is that of other women; and I think she took Colonials to
+be a kind of race of aborigines, like the Maoris or the Hottentots--only
+that by some freak of nature they were white. So, whenever my heart was
+so hot that I could contain myself no longer, and I poured out my
+foolish tales of the big things we hoped to do for the empire and the
+world, the dear thing would merely utter her dazed, "Fancy!" and strike
+me dumb.
+
+And it all threw me back on the thought of Larry Strangways. Reader, if
+you suppose that I had forgotten him you are making a mistake.
+Everything made my heart cry out for him--Hugh's inanity; his father's
+lumbering dignity; Mildred's sepulchral apothegms, which were deeper
+than I could fathom and higher than I could scale; Cissie Boscobel's
+stolid scorn of my country; and Newport's whole attitude of taking no
+notice of me or mine. Whenever I had minutes of rebellion or stress it
+was on Larry Strangways I called, with an agonized appeal to him to come
+to me. It was a purely rhetorical appeal, let me say in passing. As it
+would never reach him, he could not respond to it; but it relieved my
+repressed emotions to send it out on the wings of the spirit. It was
+the only vehicle I could trust; and even that betrayed me--for he came.
+
+He came one hot afternoon about the 20th of August. His card was brought
+to me by the rosebud Thomas as I was taking a siesta up-stairs.
+
+"Tell Mr. Strangways I shall come down at once," I said to my footman
+knight; but after he had gone I sat still.
+
+I sat still to estimate my strength. If Larry Strangways made such an
+appeal to me as I had made to him, should I have the will-power to
+resist him? I could only reply that I must have it! There was no other
+way. When Hugh had been so true to me it was impossible to be other than
+true to him. It was no longer a question of love, but of right: and I
+couldn't forsake my maxim.
+
+Nevertheless, when I threw off my dressing-gown instinct compelled me to
+dress at my prettiest. To be sure, my prettiest was only a flowered
+muslin and a Leghorn hat, in which I resembled the vicar's daughter in a
+Royal Academy picture; but if I was never to see Larry Strangways again
+I wanted the vision in his heart to be the most decent possible. As I
+dressed I owned to myself that I loved him. I had never done so before,
+because I had never known it--or rather, I had known it from that
+evening on the train when I had seen nothing but his traveling-cap; only
+I had strangled the knowledge in my heart. I meant to strangle it again.
+I should strangle it the minute I went down-stairs. But for this little
+interval, just while I was fastening my gown and pinning on my hat, it
+seemed to me of no great harm to let the unfortunate passion come out
+for a breath in the sunlight.
+
+And yet, after having rehearsed all the romantic speeches I should make
+in giving him up forever, he never mentioned love to me at all. On the
+contrary, he had on that gleaming smile which, from the beginning of our
+acquaintance, was like the flash of a sword held up between him and me.
+When he came forward from a corner of the long, dim drawing-room all the
+embarrassment was on my side.
+
+"I suppose you wonder what brings me," were the words he uttered when
+shaking hands.
+
+I tried to murmur politely that, whatever it was, I was glad to see
+him--only the words refused to form themselves.
+
+"Can't we go out?" he asked, as I cast about me for chairs. "It's so
+stuffy in here."
+
+I led the way through the hall, picking up a rose-colored parasol of
+Mrs. Rossiter's as we passed the umbrella-stand.
+
+"How much money have you got?" he asked, abruptly, as soon as we were on
+the terrace.
+
+I made an effort to gather my wits from the far fields into which they
+had wandered.
+
+"Do you mean in ready cash? Or how much do I own in all?"
+
+"How much in all?"
+
+I told him--just a few thousand dollars, the wreckage of what my father
+had left. My total income, apart from what I earned, was about four
+hundred dollars a year.
+
+"I want it," he said, as we descended the steps to the lower terrace.
+"How soon could you let me have it?"
+
+I made the reckoning as we went down the lawn toward the sea. I should
+have to write to my uncle, who would sell my few bonds and forward me
+the proceeds. Mr. Strangways himself said that would take a week.
+
+"I'm going to make a small fortune for you," he laughed, in explanation.
+"All the nations of the earth are beginning to send to us for munitions,
+and Stacy Grainger is right on the spot with the goods. There'll be a
+demand for munitions for years to come--"
+
+"Oh, not for years to come!" I exclaimed. "Only till the end of the
+war."
+
+"'But the end is not by and by,'" he quoted from the Bible. "It's a long
+way off from by and by--believe me! We're up against the struggle
+mankind has been getting ready for ever since it's had a history. I
+don't want just to make money out of it; but, since money's to be
+made--since we can't help making it--I want you to be in on it."
+
+I didn't thank him, because I had something else on my mind.
+
+"Perhaps you don't know that I'm engaged to Hugh Brokenshire. We're to
+be married before we move back to New York."
+
+"Yes, I do know it. That's the reason I'm suggesting this. You'll want
+some money of your own, in order to feel independent. If you don't have
+it the Brokenshire money will break you down."
+
+I don't know what I said, or whether I was able to say anything. There
+was something in this practical care-taking interest that moved me more
+than any love declaration he could have made. He was renouncing me in
+everything but his protection. That was going with me. That was watching
+over me. There was no one to watch over me in the whole world with just
+this sort of devotion.
+
+I suppose we talked. We must have said something as we descended the
+slope; I must have stammered some sort of appreciation. All I can
+clearly remember is that, as we reached the steps going down to the
+Cliff Walk, Hugh was coming up.
+
+I had forgotten that this sort of encounter was possible. I had
+forgotten Hugh. When I saw his innocent, blank face staring up at us I
+felt I was confronting my doom.
+
+"Well!" he ejaculated, as though he had caught us in some criminal
+conspiracy.
+
+As it was for me to explain, I said, limply:
+
+"Mr. Strangways has been good enough to offer to make some money for me,
+Hugh. Isn't that kind of him?"
+
+Hugh grew slowly crimson. His voice shook with passion. He came up one
+step.
+
+"Mr. Strangways will be kinder still in minding his own business."
+
+"Oh, Hugh!"
+
+"Don't be offended, Mr. Brokenshire," Larry Strangways said, peaceably.
+"I merely had the opportunity to advise Miss Adare as to her
+investments--"
+
+"I shall advise Miss Adare as to her investments. It happens that she's
+engaged to me!"
+
+"But she's not married to you. An engagement is not a marriage; it's
+only a preliminary period in which two persons agree to consider whether
+or not a marriage between them would be possible. Since that's the
+situation at present, I thought it no harm to tell Miss Adare that if
+she puts her money into some of the new projects for ammunition that I
+know about--"
+
+"And I'm sure she's not interested."
+
+Mr. Strangways bowed.
+
+"That will be for her to decide. I understood her to say--"
+
+"Whatever you understood her to say, sir, Miss Adare is not interested!
+Good afternoon." He nodded to me to come down the steps. "I was just
+coming over for you. Shall we walk along together?"
+
+I backed away from him toward the stone balustrade.
+
+"But, Hugh, I can't leave Mr. Strangways like this. He's come all the
+way from New York on purpose to--"
+
+"Then I shall defray his expense and pay him for his time; but if we're
+going at all, dear--"
+
+At a sign of the eyes from Larry Strangways I mastered my wrath at this
+insolence, and spoke meekly:
+
+"I didn't know we were going anywhere in particular."
+
+"And you'll excuse me, Mr. Brokenshire," our visitor interrupted, "if I
+say that I can't be dismissed in this way by any one but Miss Adare
+herself. You must remember she isn't your wife--that she's still a free
+agent. Perhaps, if I explain the matter a little further--"
+
+Hugh put up his hand in stately imitation of his father.
+
+"Please! There's no need of that."
+
+"Oh, but there is, Hugh!"
+
+"You see," Mr. Strangways reasoned, "it's more than a question of making
+money. We shall make money, of course; but that's only incidental. What
+I'm really asking Miss Adare to do is to help one of the most glorious
+causes to which mankind has ever given itself--"
+
+I started toward him impulsively.
+
+"Oh! Do you feel like that?"
+
+"Not like that; that's all I feel. I live it! I've no other thought."
+
+It was curious to see how the force of this all-absorbing topic swept
+Hugh away from the merely personal standpoint.
+
+"And you call yourself an American?" he demanded, hotly.
+
+"I call myself a man. I don't emphasize the American. This thing
+transcends what we call nationality."
+
+Hugh shouted, somewhat in the tone of a man kicking against the pricks:
+
+"Not what I call nationality! It's got nothing to do with us."
+
+"Ah, but it will have something to do with us! It isn't merely a
+European struggle; it's a universal one. Sooner or later you'll see
+mankind divided into just two camps."
+
+Hugh warmed to the discussion.
+
+"Even if we do, it still doesn't follow that we'll all be in your camp."
+
+"That depends on whether we're among those driving forward or those
+kicking back. The American people has been in the first of these classes
+hitherto; it remains to be seen whether or not it's there still. But if
+it isn't as a nation I can tell you that some of us will be there as
+individuals."
+
+Hugh's tone was one of horror.
+
+"You mean that you'd go and fight?"
+
+"That's about the size of it."
+
+"Then you'd be a traitor to your country for getting her into trouble."
+
+"If I had to choose between being a traitor to my country and a traitor
+to my manhood I'd take the first. Fortunately, no such alternative will
+be thrust upon us. Miss Adare pointed out to me once that there couldn't
+be two right courses, each opposed to the other. Right and rights must
+be harmonious. If I'm true to myself I'm true to my country; and I can't
+be true to my country unless I do my 'bit,' as the phrase begins to go,
+for the good of the human race."
+
+"And you're really going?" I asked, breathlessly.
+
+"As soon as I can arrange things with Mr."--but he remembered he was
+speaking to a Brokenshire--"as soon as I can arrange things with--with
+my boss. He's willing to let me go, and to keep my job for me if I come
+back. He'll take charge of my small funds and of any Miss Adare
+intrusts to me. He asked me to give her that message. When it's settled
+I shall start for Canada."
+
+"That'll do you no good," Hugh stated, triumphantly. "They won't enlist
+Americans there."
+
+Larry Strangways smiled.
+
+"Oh, there are ways! If there's nothing else for it I'll swear in as a
+Canadian."
+
+"You'd do that!" In different tones the exclamation came from Hugh and
+me, simultaneously.
+
+I can still see Larry Strangways with his proud, fair head held high.
+
+"I'd do anything rather than not fight. My American birthright is as
+dear to me as it is to any one; but we've reached a time when such
+considerations must go by the board. For the matter of that, the more
+closely we can now identify the Briton and the American, the better it
+will be for the world."
+
+He explained this at some length. The theme was so engrossing that even
+Hugh was willing to listen to the argument. People were talking already
+of a world federation which would follow the war and unite all the
+nations in approximate brotherhood. Larry Strangways didn't believe in
+that as a possibility; at least he didn't believe in it as an immediate
+possibility. There were just two nations fitted to understand each other
+and act together, and if they couldn't fraternize and sympathize it was
+of no use to expect that miracle from races who had nothing in common.
+Get the United States and the British Empire to stand shoulder to
+shoulder, and sooner or later the other peoples would line up beside
+them.
+
+But you must begin at the beginning. Unless you started as an acorn you
+couldn't be an oak; if you were not willing to be a baby you could
+never become a man. There must be no more Hague conferences, with their
+vast programs and ineffective means. The failure of that dream was
+evident. We must be practical; we mustn't soar beyond the possible. The
+possible and the practical lay in British and American institutions and
+commonly understood principles. The world had an asset in them that had
+never been worked. To work it was the task not primarily of governments,
+but, first and before everything, of individuals. It was up to the
+British and American man and woman in their personal lives and opinions.
+
+I interrupted to say that it was up to the American man and woman first
+of all; that British willingness to co-operate with America was far more
+ready than any similar sentiment on the American side.
+
+Hugh threw the stress on efficiency. America was so thorough in her
+methods that she couldn't co-operate with British muddling.
+
+"What is efficiency?" Larry Strangways asked. "It's the best means of
+doing what you want to do, isn't it? Well, then, efficiency is a matter
+of your ambitions. There's the efficiency of the watch-dog who loves his
+master and guards the house, and there's the efficiency of the tiger in
+the jungle. One has one's choice."
+
+It was not a question, he continued to reason, as to who began this
+war--whether it was a king or a czar or a kaiser. It was not a question
+of English and German competition, or of French or Russian aggression,
+or fear of it. The inquiry went back of all that. It went back beyond
+modern Europe, beyond the Middle Ages, beyond Rome and Assyria and
+Egypt. It was a battle of principles rather than of nations--the last
+great struggle between reason and force--the fight between the instinct
+of some men to rule other men and the contrary instinct, implanted more
+or less in all men, that they shall hold up their heads and rule
+themselves.
+
+It was part of the impulse of the human race to forge ahead and upward.
+The powers that worked against liberty had been arming themselves, not
+merely for a generation or a century, but since the beginning of time,
+for just this trial of strength. The effort would be colossal and it
+would be culminating; no human being would be spared taking part in it.
+If America didn't come in of her own accord she would be compelled to
+come in; and meantime he, Larry Strangways, was going of free will.
+
+He didn't express it in just this way. He put it humbly, colloquially,
+with touches of slang.
+
+"I've got to be on the job, Miss Adare, and there are no two ways about
+it," were the words in which he ended. "I've just run down from New York
+to speak about--about the money; and--and to bid you good-by." He
+glanced toward Hugh. "Possibly, in view of the fact that I'm so soon to
+be off--and may not come back, you know," he added, with a laugh--"Mr.
+Brokenshire won't mind if--if we shake hands."
+
+I can say to Hugh's credit that he gave us a little while together.
+Going down the steps he had mounted, he called back, over his shoulder:
+
+"I'm going off for a walk, dear. I shall return in exactly fifteen
+minutes; and I expect you to be ready for me then."
+
+But when we were alone we had little or nothing to say. I recall that
+quarter of an hour as a period of emotional paralysis. I knew and he
+knew that each second ticked off an instant that all the rest of our
+lives we should long for in vain; and yet we didn't know how to make use
+of it.
+
+We began to wander slowly up the slope. We did it aimlessly, stopping
+when we were only a few yards away from the steps. We talked about the
+money. We talked about his going to Canada. We talked about the breaking
+off, so far as we knew, of all intercourse between Mr. Grainger and Mrs.
+Brokenshire. But we said nothing about ourselves. We said nothing about
+anything but what was superficial and trite and lame.
+
+Once or twice Larry Strangways took out his watch and glanced at it, as
+if to underscore the fact that the sands were slipping away. I kept my
+face hidden as much as possible beneath the rose-colored parasol. So far
+as I could judge, he looked over my head. We still had said
+nothing--there was still nothing we could say--when, beneath the bank of
+the lawn, and moving back in our direction, we saw the crown of Hugh's
+Panama.
+
+"Good-by!" Larry Strangways said, then.
+
+"Good-by!"
+
+My hand rested in his without pressure; without pressure his had taken
+mine. I think his eyes made one last wild, desperate appeal to me but if
+so I was unable to respond to it.
+
+I don't know how it happened that he turned his back and walked firmly
+up the lawn. I don't know how it happened that I also turned and took
+the necessary steps toward Hugh. All I can say is--and I can say it only
+in this way--all I can say is, I felt that I had died.
+
+That is, I felt that I had died except for one queer, bracing echo which
+suddenly come back to me. It was in the words Mildred Brokenshire had
+used, and which, at the time, I had thought too deep for me to
+understand:
+
+"Life is not a blind impulse working blindly. It is a beneficent
+rectifying power."
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXIII
+
+
+As Hugh Brokenshire and I were walking along the Ocean Drive a few days
+after Larry Strangways had come and gone, the dear lad got some
+satisfaction from charging me with inconsistency.
+
+"You're certainly talking about England and Canada to-day very
+differently from what you used to."
+
+"Am I? Well, if it seems so it's because you don't understand the
+attitude of Canadians toward their mother country. As a country, as a
+government, England has been magnificently true to us always. It's only
+between Englishmen and Canadians as individuals that irritation arises,
+and for that most Canadians don't care. The Englishman snubs and the
+Canadian grows bumptious. I don't think the Canadian would grow
+bumptious if the Englishman didn't snub. Both snubbing and bumptiousness
+are offensive to me; but that, I suppose, is because I'm over-sensitive.
+And yet one forgets sensitiveness when it comes to anything really
+national. In that we're one, with as perfect a solidarity as that which
+binds Oregon to Florida. You'll never find one of us who isn't proud to
+serve when England gives the orders."
+
+"To be snubbed by her for serving."
+
+"Certainly; to be snubbed by her for serving! It's all we look for; it's
+all we shall ever get. No one need make any mistake about that. In
+Canada we're talking of sending fifty thousand troops to the front. We
+may send five hundred thousand and we shall still be snubbed. But we're
+not such children as to go into a cause in the hope that some one will
+give us sweets. We do it for the Cause. We know, too, that it isn't
+exactly injustice on the English side; it's only ungraciousness."
+
+"Oh, they're long on ungraciousness, all right."
+
+"Yes; they're very long on ungraciousness--"
+
+"Even dad feels that. You should hear him cuss after he's been kotowing
+to some British celebrity--and given him the best of all he's got--and
+put him up at the good clubs. They bring him letters in shoals, you
+know--"
+
+"I'm afraid it has to be admitted that the best-mannered among them are
+often rude from our transatlantic point of view; and yet the very
+rudeness is one of the defects of their good qualities. You can no more
+take the ungraciousness out of the English character than you can take
+the hardness out of granite; but if granite wasn't hard it wouldn't
+serve its purposes. We Canadians know that, don't you see? We allow for
+it in advance, just as you allow for the clumsiness of the elephant for
+the sake of his strength and sagacity. We're not angels
+ourselves--neither you Americans nor we Canadians; and yet we like to
+get the credit for such small merits as we possess."
+
+Hugh whipped off the blossom of a roadside flower as he swung his stick.
+
+"All they give us credit for is money."
+
+"Well, they certainly give you a great deal of credit for that!" I
+laughed. "They make a golden calf of you. They fall down and worship
+you, like the children of Israel in the wilderness. When we're as rich
+as we shall be some day they'll do the same by us."
+
+Within a week my intercourse with Hugh had come to be wholly along
+international lines. We were no longer merely a man and a woman; we were
+types; we were points of view. The world-struggle--the time-struggle, as
+Larry Strangways would have called it--had broken out in us. The
+interlocking of human destinies had become apparent. As positively as
+Franz Ferdinand and Sophie Chotek, we had our part in the vast drama.
+Even Hugh, against all his inclinations to hang back, was obliged to
+take his share. So lost were we in the theme that, as we tramped along,
+we had not a thought for the bracing wind, the ruffled seas, the dashing
+of surf over ledges, or the exquisite, gentle savagery of the rocky
+flowering uplands, with villas marking the sky-line as they do on the
+Cote d'Azur.
+
+I was the more willing to discuss the subject since I felt it a kind of
+mission from Mr. Strangways to carry out the object he had so much at
+heart. I was to be--so far as so humble a body as I could be it--an
+interpreter of the one country to the other. I reckoned that if I
+explained and explained and explained, and didn't let myself grow tired
+of explaining, some little shade of the distrust which each of the great
+English-speaking nations has for its fellow might be scrubbed away. I
+couldn't do much, but the value of all effort is in proportion to the
+opportunity. So I began with Hugh.
+
+"You see, Hugh, peoples are like people. Each of us has his weak points
+as well as his strong ones; but we don't necessarily hate each other on
+that account. You've lived in England, and you know the English rub you
+up the wrong way. I've lived there, too, and had exactly the same
+experience. But we go through just that thing with lots of individuals
+with whom we manage to be very good friends. You and your brother Jack,
+for instance, don't hit it off so very well; and yet you contrive to be
+Brokenshires together and uphold the honor of the family."
+
+"I'm a Socialist and Jack's a snob--"
+
+"That's it. Mentally you're the world apart. But, as you've objects in
+common to work for, you get along fairly well. Now why shouldn't the
+Englishman and the American do the same? Why should they always see how
+much they differ instead of how much they are alike? Why should they
+always underscore each other's faults when by seeing each other's good
+points they could benefit not only themselves, but the world? If there
+was an entente, let us say, between the British Empire and the United
+States--not exactly an alliance, perhaps, if people are afraid of the
+word--"
+
+He stopped and wheeled round suddenly, suspicion in his small,
+myosotis-colored eyes.
+
+"Look here, little Alix; isn't this the dope that fresh guy Strangways
+was handing out the other day?"
+
+I flushed, but I didn't stammer.
+
+"I don't care whether it is or not. Besides, it isn't dope; it's food;
+it's medicine; it's a remedy for the ills of this poor old civilization.
+We've got it in our power, we English-speaking peoples--"
+
+"You haven't," he declared, coolly. "Your country would still be the
+goat."
+
+"Yes," I agreed, "Canada would still be the goat; but we don't mind
+that. We're used to it. You'll always have a fling at us on one side and
+England on the other; but we're like the strong, good-natured boy who
+doesn't resent kicks and cuffs because he knows he can grow and thrive
+in spite of them."
+
+He put his hand on my arm and spoke in the kindly tone that reminded me
+of his father.
+
+"My dear little girl, you can drop it. It won't go down. Suppose we keep
+to the sort of thing you can tackle. You see, when you've married me
+you'll be an American. Then you'll be out of it."
+
+I was hurt. I was furious. The expression, too, was getting on my
+nerves. I began to wish I was out of it. Since I couldn't be in it,
+marriage might prove a Lethe bath, in which I should forget I had
+anything to do with it. Sheer desperation made me cry out:
+
+"Very well, then, Hugh! If we're to be married, can't we be married
+quickly? Then I shall have it off my mind."
+
+There was not only a woeful decline of spirit in his response, but a
+full acceptance of the Brokenshire yoke.
+
+"We can't be married any quicker than dad says. But I'll talk to him."
+
+He made no objection, however, when, a little later, I received from my
+uncle a draft for my entire fortune and announced my intention of
+handing the sum over to Mr. Strangways for investment. Hugh probably
+looked on the amount as too insignificant to talk about; in addition to
+which some Brokenshire instinct for the profitable may have led him to
+appreciate a thing so good as to make it folly to say nay to it. The
+result was that I heard from Larry Strangways, in letters which added
+nothing to my comfort.
+
+I don't know what I expected him to say; but, whatever it was, he didn't
+say it. He wasn't curt; his letters were not short. On the contrary, he
+wrote at length, and brought up subjects that had nothing to do with
+certificates of stock. But they were all political or international, or
+related in one way or another to the ideal of his heart--England and
+America! The British Empire and the United States! The brotherhood of
+democracies! Why in thunder had the bally world waited so long for the
+coalition of dominating influences which alone could keep it straight?
+Why dream of the impossible when the practical had not as yet been
+tried? Why talk peace, peace, when there was no peace at The Hague, if a
+full and controlling sympathy could be effected nearer home--let us say
+at Ottawa? He was going to Canada to enlist; he would start in a few
+days' time; but he was doing it not merely to fight for the Cause; he
+was going to be one man, at least, just a straggling democratic
+scout--one of a forlorn hope, if you chose to call it so--to offer his
+life to a union of which the human race had the same sort of need as
+human beings of wedlock.
+
+And in all this there was no reference to me. He might not have loved
+me; I might not have loved him. I answered the letters in the vein in
+which they were written, and once or twice showed my replies to Hugh.
+
+"Forget it!" was his ordinary comment. "The American eagle is too wise
+an old bird to be caught with salt on its tail."
+
+Perhaps it was because Larry Strangways made no appeal to me that I gave
+myself to forwarding his work with a more enthusiastic zeal. I had to do
+it quietly, for fear of offending Hugh; but I got my opportunities--that
+is, I got my opportunities to talk, though I saw I made no impression.
+
+I was only a girl--the queer Canadian who had been Ethel Rossiter's
+nursery governess and whom the Brokenshire family, for unexplained
+reasons, had accepted as Hugh's future wife. What could I know about
+matters at which statesmen had always shied? It was preposterous that I
+should speak of them; it was presumptuous. Nobody told me that; I saw it
+in people's eyes.
+
+And I should have seen it in their eyes more plainly if they had been
+interested. No one was. An entente between the United States and the
+British Empire might have been an alliance between Bolivia and
+Beluchistan. It wasn't merely fashionable folk who wouldn't think of it;
+no one would. I knew plenty of people by this time. I knew townspeople
+of Newport, and summer residents, and that intermediate group of retired
+admirals and professors who come in between the two. I knew shop people
+and I knew servants, all with their stake in the country, their stake in
+the world. Not a soul among them cared a hang.
+
+And then, threatening to put me entirely out of business, we got the
+American war refugees and the English visitors. I group them together
+because they belonged together. They belonged together for the reason
+that there was nothing each one of them didn't know--by hearsay from
+some one who knew it by hearsay. The American war refugees had all been
+in contact with people in England whom they characterized as well
+informed. The English visitors were well informed because they were
+English visitors. Some of them told prodigious secrets which they had
+indirectly from Downing Street. Others gave the reasons why General
+Isleworth had been superseded in his command, and the part Mrs.
+Lamingford, that beautiful American, had played in the scandal. From
+others we learned that Lady Hull, with her baleful charm, was the
+influence really responsible for the shortage of shells.
+
+War was shown to us by our English visitors not as a mighty, pitiless
+contest, but as a series of social, sexual, and political intrigues, in
+which women pulled the strings. I know it was talk; but talk it was. For
+weeks, for months, we had it with the greater number of our meals.
+Wherever there were English guests--women of title they often were, or
+eccentric public men--we had an orgy of tales in which the very entrails
+of English reputations were torn out. No one was spared---not even the
+Highest in the Land. All the American could do was to listen
+open-mouthed; and open-mouthed he listened.
+
+I will say for the English that they have no disloyalty but that of
+chatter; but the plain American could not be expected to know that. To
+him the chatter was gospel truth. He has none of that facility for
+discounting gossip on the great which the Englishman learns with his
+mother tongue. The American heard it greedily; he was avid for more. He
+retailed it at dinners and teas, and in that Reading-room which is
+really a club. Naturally enough! From what our English visitors told us
+about themselves, their statesmen, their generals, their admirals were
+footlers at the best, and could, moreover, be described by a vigorous
+compound Anglo-Saxon word in the Book of Revelations.
+
+And the English papers were no better. All the important ones, weeklies
+as well as dailies, were sent to Mr. Brokenshire, and copies lay about
+at Mr. Rossiter's. They sickened me. I stopped reading them. There was
+good in them, doubtless; but what I chiefly found was a wild tempest of
+abuse of this party or that party, of this leading man or that leading
+man, with the effect on the imagination of a ship going down amid the
+curses and confusion of officers and passengers alike. It may have
+sounded well in England; very likely it did; but in America it was
+horrible. I mention it here only because, in this babel of voices, my
+own faint pipe on behalf of a league of democracies could no more be
+heard than the tinkle of a sacring bell amid the shrieking and bursting
+of shells.
+
+I was often tempted to say no more about it and let the world go to pot.
+Then I thought of Larry Strangways, offering his life for an ideal as to
+which I was unwilling to speak a word. So I would begin my litany of
+Bolivia and Beluchistan over again, crooning it into the ears of people,
+both gentle and simple, who, in the matter of response, might never have
+heard the names of the two countries I mentioned together.
+
+A few lines from one of Larry Strangways's letters, written from
+Valcartier, prompted me to persevere in this course:
+
+ People are no more interested here than they are on our side of
+ the border; but it's got to come, for all that. What we need is
+ a public opinion; and a public opinion can only be created by
+ writing and talk. Thank the Lord, you and I can talk if we are
+ not very strong on writing! and talk we must! Bigger streams
+ have risen from smaller springs. The mustard seed is the least
+ of all seeds; but it grows to be the greatest of herbs.
+
+It might have been easier to call forth a responsive spark had we
+realized that there was a war. But we hadn't--not in the way that the
+fact came to us afterward. In spite of the taking of Namur, Liege,
+Maubeuge, the advance on Paris, and the rolling back on the Marne, we
+had seen no more than chariots and horses of fire in the clouds. It was
+not only distant, it was phantom-like. We read the papers; we heard of
+horrors; American war refugees and English visitors alike piled up the
+agonies, to which we listened eagerly; we saw the moneyed magnates come
+and go in counsel with Mr. Brokenshire; we knitted and sewed and
+subscribed to funds; but, so far as vital participation went, Hugh was
+right in saying we were out of it.
+
+And then a shot fell into our midst, smiting us with awe.
+
+Cissie Boscobel, Hugh, another young man, and I had been playing tennis
+one September morning on Mrs. Rossiter's courts. The other young man
+having left for Bailey's Beach, the remaining three of us were
+sauntering back toward the house when a lad, whom Cissie recognized as
+belonging to the Burkes' establishment, came running up with a telegram.
+As it was for Cissie she stood still to read it, while Hugh and I
+strolled on. Once or twice I glanced back toward her; but she still held
+the brief lines up before her as if she couldn't make out their meaning.
+
+When she rejoined us, as she presently did, I noticed that her color had
+died out, though there was otherwise no change in her unless it was in
+stillness. The question was as to whether we should go to Bailey's or
+not. I didn't want to go and Hugh declared he wouldn't go without me.
+
+"We'll put it up to Cissie," he said, as we reached the house. "If she
+goes we'll all go."
+
+"I think I won't go," she answered, quietly; adding, without much change
+of tone, "Leatherhead's been killed in action."
+
+So there really was a war! Hugh's deep "Oh!" was in Itself like the
+distant rumble of guns.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXIV
+
+
+There was nothing to be done for Lady Cecilia because she took her
+bereavement with so little fuss. She asked for no sympathy; so far as I
+ever saw, she shed no tears. If on that particular spot in the
+neighborhood of Ypres a man had had to fall for his country, she was
+proud that it had been a Boscobel. She put on a black frock and ordered
+her maid to take the jade-green plume out of a black hat; but, except
+that she declined invitations, she went about as usual. As the first
+person we knew to be touched by the strange new calamity of war, we made
+a kind of heroine of her, treating her with an almost romantic
+reverence; but she herself never seemed aware of it. It was my first
+glimpse of that unflinching British heroism of which I have since seen
+much, and it impressed me.
+
+We began to dream together of being useful; our difficulty was that we
+didn't see the way. War had not yet made its definite claims on women
+and girls, and knitting till our muscles ached was not a sufficient
+outlet for our energies. Had I been in Cissie's place, I should have
+gone home at once; but I suspected that, in spite of all her brave words
+to me, she couldn't quite kill the hope that kept her lingering on.
+
+My own ambitions being distasteful to Hugh, I was obliged to repress
+them, doing so with the greater regret because some of the courses I
+suggested would have done him good. They would have utilized the
+physical strength with which he was blessed, and delivered him from that
+material well-being to which he returned with the more child-like
+rejoicing because of having been without it.
+
+"Hugh, dear," I said to him once, "couldn't we be married soon and go
+over to France or England? Then we should see whether there wasn't
+something we could do."
+
+"Not on your life, little Alix!" was his laughing response. "Since as
+Americans we're out of it, out of it we shall stay."
+
+Over replies like this, of which there were many, I was gnashing my
+teeth helplessly when, all at once, I was called on to see myself as
+others saw me, so getting a surprise.
+
+The first note of warning came to me in a few words from Ethel Rossiter.
+I was scribbling her notes one morning as she lay in bed, when it
+occurred to me to say:
+
+"If I'm going to be married, I suppose I ought to be doing something
+about clothes."
+
+She murmured, listlessly:
+
+"Oh, I wouldn't be in a hurry about that, if I were you."
+
+I went on writing.
+
+"I haven't been in a hurry, have I? But I shall certainly want some
+things I haven't got now."
+
+"Then you can get them after you're married. When are you to be married,
+anyhow?"
+
+As the question was much on my mind, I looked up from my task and said:
+
+"Well--when?"
+
+"Don't you know?"
+
+"No. Do you?"
+
+She shook her head.
+
+"I didn't know but what father had said something about it."
+
+"He hasn't--not a word." I resumed my scribbling. "It's a queer thing
+for him to have to settle, don't you think? One might have supposed it
+would have been left to me."
+
+"Oh, you don't know father!" It was as if throwing off something of no
+importance that she added, "Of course, he can see that you're not in
+love with Hugh."
+
+Amazed at this reading of my heart, I bent my head to hide my confusion.
+
+"I don't know why you should say that," I stammered at last, "when you
+can't help seeing I'm quite true to him."
+
+She shrugged her beautiful shoulders, of which one was bare.
+
+"Oh, true! What's the good of that?" She went on, casually: "By the by,
+do call up Daisy Burke and tell her I sha'n't go to that luncheon of
+theirs. They're going to have old lady Billing, who's coming to stay at
+father's; and you don't catch me with that lot except when I can't help
+it." She reverted to the topic of a minute before. "I don't blame you,
+of course. I suppose, if I were in your place, it's what I should do
+myself. It's what I thought you'd try for--you remember, don't you?--as
+long ago as when we were in Halifax. But naturally enough other people
+don't--" I failed to learn, however, what other people didn't, because
+of a second reversion in theme: "Do make up something civil to say to
+Daisy, and tell her I won't come."
+
+We dropped the subject, chiefly because I was afraid to go on with it;
+but when I met old Mrs. Billing I received a similar shock. Having gone
+to Mr. Brokenshire's to pay her my respects, I was told she was on the
+terrace. As a matter of fact, she was making her way toward the hall,
+and awkwardly carried a book, a sunshade, and the stump of a cigarette.
+Dutifully I went forward in the hope of offering my services.
+
+"Get out of my sight!" was her response to my greetings. "I can't bear
+to look at you."
+
+Brushing past me without further words, she entered the house.
+
+"What did she mean?" I asked of Cissie Boscobel, to whom I heard that
+Mrs. Billing had given her own account of the incident.
+
+Lady Cecilia was embarrassed.
+
+"Oh, nothing! She's just so very odd."
+
+But I insisted:
+
+"She must have meant something. Had it anything to do with Hugh?"
+
+Reluctantly Lady Cissie let it out. Mrs. Billing had got the idea that I
+was marrying Hugh for his money; and, though in the past she had not
+disapproved of this line of action, she had come to think it no road to
+happiness. Having taken the trouble to give me more than one hint that I
+should many the man I was in love with she was now disappointed in my
+character.
+
+"You know how much truth there is in all that, don't you?" I said,
+evasively.
+
+Lady Cissie did her best to support me, though between her words and her
+inflection there was a curious lack of correspondence.
+
+"Oh yes--certainly!"
+
+I got the reaction of her thought, however, some minutes later, when she
+said, apropos of nothing in our conversation:
+
+"Since Janet can't be married this month, I needn't go home for a long
+time."
+
+But knowing that this suggestion was in the air, I was the better able
+to interpret Mildred's oracular utterance the next time I sat at the
+foot of the couch, in the darkened room.
+
+"One can't be true to another," she said, in reply to some feeler of my
+own, "unless one is true to oneself, and one can't be true to oneself
+unless one follows the highest of one's instincts."
+
+I said, inwardly: "Ah! Now I know the reason for her distrust of me."
+Aloud I made it:
+
+"But that throws us back on the question as to what one's highest
+instincts are."
+
+There was the pause that preceded all her expressions of opinion.
+
+"On the principle that it is more blessed to give than to receive, I
+suppose our highest promptings are those which urge us to give most of
+ourselves."
+
+"And when one gives all of oneself that one can dispose of?"
+
+"One has then to consider the importance or the unimportance of what one
+has to withhold."
+
+Of all the things that had been said to me this was the most disturbing.
+It had seemed to me hitherto that the essence of my duty lay in marrying
+Hugh. If I married him, I argued, I should have done my best to make up
+to him for all he had undergone for my sake. I saw myself as owing him a
+debt. The refusal to pay it would have implied a kind of moral
+bankruptcy. Considering myself solvent, and also considering myself
+honest, I felt I had no choice. Since I could pay, I must pay. The
+reasoning was the more forcible because I liked Hugh and was grateful
+to him. I could be tolerably happy with him, and would make him a good
+wife.
+
+To make him a good wife I had choked back everything I had ever felt for
+Larry Strangways; I had submitted to all the Brokenshire repressions; I
+had made myself humble and small before Hugh and his father, and
+accepted the status of a Libby Jaynes. My heart cried out like any other
+woman's heart--it cried out for my country in the hour of its stress; it
+cried out for my home in what I tried to make the hour of my happiness;
+when it caught me unawares it cried out for the man I loved. But all
+this I mastered as our Canadian men were mastering their longings and
+regrets on saying their good-bys. What was to be done was to be done,
+and done willingly. Willingly I meant to marry Hugh, not because he was
+the man I would have chosen before all others, but because, when no one
+else in the world was giving me a thought, he had had the astonishing
+goodness to choose me. And now--
+
+With Mrs. Brokenshire the situation was different. She believed I was in
+love with Hugh and that the others were doing me a wrong. Moreover, she
+informed me one day that I was making my way in Newport. People who
+noticed me once noticed me again. The men beside whom I sat at the
+occasional lunches and dinners I attended often spoke of me to the
+hostess on going away, and there could be no better sign than that. They
+said that, though I "wasn't long on looks," I had ideas and knew how to
+express them. She ventured to hope that this kindly opinion might, in
+the end, soften Mr. Brokenshire.
+
+"Do you mean that he isn't softened as it is?"
+
+She answered, indirectly:
+
+"He's not accustomed to be forced--and he feels I've forced him."
+
+It was her first reference to what she had done for Hugh and me. In its
+way it gave me permission to say:
+
+"But isn't it a question of the _quid pro quo_? If you granted him
+something for something he granted you in return--"
+
+But the expression on her face forbade my going on. I have never seen
+such a parting to human lips, or so haunting, so lost a look in human
+eyes. It told me everything. It was a confession of all the things she
+never could have said. "Better is it," says the Book of Ecclesiastes,
+"that thou shouldest not vow, than that thou shouldest vow and not pay."
+She had vowed and not paid. She had got her price and hadn't fulfilled
+her bargain. She couldn't; she never would. It was beyond her. The big
+moneyed man who at that minute was helping to finance a good part of
+Europe, who was a power not only in a city or a country, but the world,
+had been tricked by a woman; and I in my poor little person was the
+symbol of his discomfiture.
+
+No wonder he found it hard to forgive me! No wonder that whenever I came
+where he was he treated me to some kindly hint or correction which was
+no sufficient veil for his scorn! As I had never to my knowledge been
+hated by any one, it was terrible to feel myself an object of abhorrence
+to a man of such high standing in the world. Our eyes couldn't meet
+without my seeing that his passions were seething to the boiling-point.
+If he could have struck me dead with a look I think he would have done
+it. And I didn't hate him; I was too sorry for him. I could have liked
+him if he had let me.
+
+I had, consequently, much to think about. I thought and I prayed. It was
+not a minute at which to do anything hurriedly. To a spirit so hot as
+mine it would have been a relief to lash out at them all; but, as I had
+checked myself hitherto, I checked myself again. I reasoned that if I
+kept close to right, right would take care of me. Not being a
+theologian, I felt free to make some closeness of identity between right
+and God. I might have defined right as God in action, or God as right in
+conjunction with omnipotence, intelligence, and love; but I had no need
+for exactness of terms. In keeping near to right I knew I must be near
+to God: and near to God I could let myself go so far that no power on
+earth would seem strong enough to save me--and yet I should be saved.
+
+I went on then with a kind of fearlessness. If I was to marry Hugh I was
+convinced that I should be supported; if not, I was equally convinced
+that something would hold me back.
+
+"If anything should happen," I said to Cissie Boscobel one day, "I want
+you to look after Hugh."
+
+The dawn seemed to break over her, though she only said, tremulously:
+
+"Happen--how?"
+
+"I don't know. Perhaps nothing will. But if it does--"
+
+She slipped away, doubtless so as not to hear more.
+
+And then one evening, when I was not thinking especially about it, the
+Cloud came down on the Mountain; the voice spoke out of it, and my
+course was made plain.
+
+But before that night I also had received a cablegram. It was from my
+sister Louise, to say that the _King Arthur_, her husband's ship, had
+been blown up in the North Sea, and that he was among the lost.
+
+So the call was coming to me more sharply than I had yet heard it. With
+Lady Cecilia's example in mind, I said little to those about me beyond
+mentioning the fact. I suppose they showed me as much sympathy as the
+sweeping away of a mere brother-in-law demanded. They certainly said
+they were sorry, and hinted that that was what nations let themselves in
+for when they were so rash as to go to war.
+
+"Think we'd ever expose our fellows like that?" was Hugh's comment. "Not
+on your life!"
+
+But they didn't make a heroine of me as they did with Lady Cissie; not
+that I cared about that. I only hoped that the fact that my
+brother-in-law's name was in all the American accounts of the incident
+would show them that I belonged to some one, and that some one belonged
+to me. If it did I never perceived it. Perhaps the loss of a mere
+captain in the navy was a less gallant occurrence than the death in
+action of a Lord Leatherhead; perhaps we were already getting used to
+the toll of war; but, whatever the reason, Lady Cissie was still, to all
+appearances, the only sufferer. Within a day or two a black dress was my
+sole reminder that the _King Arthur_ had gone down; and, even to Hugh, I
+made no further reference to the catastrophe.
+
+And then came the evening when, as Larry Strangways said on my telling
+him about it, "the fat was all in the fire."
+
+It was the occasion of what had become the annual dinner at Mr.
+Brokenshire's in honor of Mrs. Billing--a splendid function. Nothing
+short of a splendid function would have satisfied the old lady, who had
+the gift of making even the great afraid of her. The event was the more
+magnificent for the reason that, in addition to the mother of the
+favorite, a number of brother princes of finance, in Newport for
+conference with our host, were included among the guests. Of these one
+was staying in the house, one with the Jack Brokenshires, and two at a
+hotel. I was seated between the two who were at the hotel because they
+were socially unimportant. Even Mr. Brokenshire had sometimes to extend
+his domestic hospitality to business friends for the sake of business,
+when perhaps he should have preferred to show his attentions in clubs.
+
+The chief scene, if I may so call it, was played to the family alone in
+Mildred's sitting-room, after the guests had gone; but there was a
+curtain-raiser at the dinner-table before the assembled company. I give
+bits of the conversation, not because they were important, but because
+of what they led up to.
+
+We were twenty-four, seated on great Italian chairs, which gave each of
+us the feeling of being a sovereign on a throne. It took all the men of
+the establishment, as well as those gathered in from the Jack
+Brokenshires' and Mrs. Rossiter's, to wait on us, a detail by which in
+the end I profited. The gold service had been sent down from the vaults
+in New York, so that the serving-plates were gold, as well as the plates
+for some of the other courses. Gold vases and bowls held the roses that
+adorned the table, and gold spoons and forks were under our hands. It
+was the first time I had ever been able to notice with my own eyes how
+nearly the rich American can rival the state of kings and emperors.
+
+It goes without saying that all the women had put on their best, and
+that the jewels were as precious metals in the days of Solomon; they
+were "nothing accounted of." Diamonds flashed, rubies broke out in fire,
+and emeralds said unspeakable things all up and down the table; the rows
+and ropes and circlets of pearls made one think of the gates of
+Paradise. I was the only one not so bedecked, getting that contrast of
+simplicity which is the compensation of the poor. The ring Hugh had
+given me, a sapphire set in diamonds, was my only ornament; and yet the
+neat austerity of my black evening frock rendered me conspicuous.
+
+It also goes without saying that I had no right to be conspicuous, being
+the person of least consequence at the board. Mr. Brokenshire not only
+felt that himself, but he liked me to feel it; and he not only liked me
+to feel it, but he liked others to see that his great, broad spirit
+admitted me among his family and friends from noble promptings of
+tolerance. I was expected to play up to this generosity and to present
+the foil of humility to the glory of the other guests and the beauty of
+the table decorations.
+
+In general I did this, and had every intention of doing it again.
+Nothing but what perhaps were the solecisms of my immediate neighbors
+caused my efforts to miscarry. I had been informed by Mrs. Brokenshire
+beforehand that they were socially dull, that one of them was "awful,"
+and that my powers would be taxed to keep them in conversation. My
+mettle being up, I therefore did my best.
+
+The one who was awful proved to be a Mr. Samuel Russky, whose claim to
+be present sprang from the fact that he was a member of a house that had
+the power to lend a great deal of money. He was a big man, of a mingled
+Slavic and Oriental cast of countenance, and had nothing more awful
+about him than a tendency to overemphasis. On my right I had Mr. John G.
+Thorne, whose face at a glance was as guileless as his name till
+contemplation revealed to you depth beyond depth of that peculiar
+astuteness of which only the American is master. I am sure that when we
+sat down to table neither of these gentlemen had any intention of taking
+a hand in my concerns, and are probably ignorant to this day of ever
+having done so; but the fact remains.
+
+It begins with my desire to oblige Mrs. Brokenshire by trying to make
+the dinner a success. Having to lift the heaviest corner, so to speak, I
+gave myself to the task first with one of my neighbors and then with the
+other. They responded so well that as early as when the terrapin was
+reached I was doing it with both. As there was much animation about the
+table, there was nothing at that time to call attention to our talk.
+
+Naturally, it was about the war. From the war we passed to the attitude
+of the United States toward the struggle; and from that what could I do
+but glide to the topics as to which I felt myself a mouthpiece for Larry
+Strangways? It was a chance. Here were two men obviously of some
+influence in the country, and neither of them of very strong
+convictions, so far as I could judge, on any subject but that of
+floating foreign bonds. As the dust from a butterfly's wing might turn
+the scale with one or both of them, I endeavored to throw at least that
+much weight on the side of a British and American entente.
+
+At something I said, Mr. Russky, with the slightest hint of a Yiddish
+pronunciation, complained that I spoke as if all Americans were
+"Anglo-Zaxons"; whereas it was well known that the "Anglo-Zaxon" element
+among them was but a percentage, which was destined to grow less.
+
+"I'm not putting it on that ground," I argued, with some zeal, taking up
+a point as to which one of Larry Strangways's letters had enlightened
+me. "I see well enough that the American ideal isn't one of nationality,
+but of principle. When the federation of the States was completed it was
+on the basis not of a common Anglo-Saxon origin, but on that of the
+essential unity of mankind. Mere nationality was left out of the
+question. All nations were welcomed, with the idea of welding them into
+one."
+
+"And England," Mr. Russky declared, somewhat more loudly than was
+necessary for my hearing him, "is still bound up in her Anglo-Zaxondon."
+
+"Not a bit of it!" I returned. "Her spirit is exactly the same as that
+of this country. Except this country, where is there any other of which
+the gates and ports and homes and factories have been open to all
+nations as hers have been? They've landed on her shores in thousands and
+thousands, without passports and without restraint, welcomed and
+protected even when they've been taking the bread out of the born
+Englishman's mouth. Look at the number of foreigners they've been
+obliged to round up since the war began--for the simple reason that
+they'd become so many as to be a peril. It's the same not only in the
+British Islands, but in every part of the British Empire. Always the
+same reception for all, with liberty for all. My own country, in
+proportion to its population, is as full of citizens of foreign birth as
+this is. They've been fathered and mothered from the minute they landed
+at Halifax. Poles and Ruthenians and Slovaks and Icelanders have been
+given the same advantages as ourselves. I'm not boasting of this, Mr.
+Russky. I'm only saying that, though we've never defined the principle
+in a constitution, our instinct toward mankind is the same as yours."
+
+It was here Mr. Thorne broke in, saying that sympathy in the United
+States was all for France.
+
+"I can understand that," I said. "You often find in a family that the
+sympathy of each of the members is for some one outside. But that
+doesn't keep them from being a family, or from acting in important
+moments with a family's solidarity."
+
+"And, personally," Mr. Thorne went on, "I don't care for England."
+
+I laughed politely in his face.
+
+"And do you, a business man, say that? I thought business was carried on
+independently of personal regard. You might conceivably not like Mr.
+Warren or Mr. Casemente"--I named the two other banker guests--"or even
+Mr. Brokenshire; but you do business with them as if you loved them, and
+quite successfully, too. In the same way the Briton and the American
+might put personal fancies out of the question and co-operate for great
+ends."
+
+"Ah, but, young lady," Mr. Russky exclaimed, so noisily as to draw
+attention, "you forget that we're far from the scene of European
+disputes, and that our wisest course is to keep out of them!"
+
+I fell back again on what I had learned from Larry Strangways.
+
+"But you're not far from the past of mankind. You inherit that as much
+as any European; and it isn't an inheritance that can be limited
+geographically." I still quoted one of Larry Strangways's letters,
+knowing it by heart. "Every Russian and German and Jew and Italian and
+Scotchman who lands in New York brings a portion of it with him and
+binds the responsibility of the New World more closely to the sins of
+the Old. Oceans and continents will not separate us from sins. As we can
+never run away from our past, Americans must help to expiate what they
+and their ancestors have done in the countries from which they came.
+This isn't going to be a local war or a twentieth-century war. It's the
+struggle of all those who have had to bear the burdens of the world
+against those who have made them bear them."
+
+"If that was the case," Mr. Russky said, doubtfully, "Americans would be
+all on one side."
+
+"They will be all on one side--when they see it. The question is, Will
+they see it soon enough?"
+
+Being so interested I didn't notice that our immediate neighbors were
+listening, nor did I observe, what Cissie Boscobel told me afterward,
+that Hugh was dividing disquieting looks between me and his father. I
+did try to divert Mr. Thorne to giving his attention to Mrs. Burke, who
+was his neighbor on the right, but I couldn't make him take the hint. It
+was, in fact, he who said:
+
+"We've too many old grudges against England to keep step with her now."
+
+I smiled engagingly.
+
+"But you've no old grudges against the British Empire, have you?"
+
+"What do you mean?"
+
+"You've no old grudges against Canada, or Australia, or the West Indies,
+or New Zealand, or the Cape?"
+
+"N-no."
+
+"Nor even against Scotland or Wales or Ireland?"
+
+"N-no."
+
+"You recognize in all those countries a spirit more or less akin to your
+own, and one with which you can sympathize?"
+
+"Y-yes."
+
+"Then isn't that my point? You speak of England, and you see the
+southern end of an island between the North Sea and the Atlantic; but
+that's all you see. You forget Scotland and Ireland and Canada and
+Australia and South Africa. You think I'm talking of a country three
+thousand miles away, whereas it comes right up to your doors. It's on
+the borders of Maine and Michigan and Minnesota, and all along your
+line. That isn't Canada alone; it's the British Empire. It's the country
+with which you Americans have more to do than with any other in the
+world. It's the one you have to think of first. You may like some other
+better, but you can't get away from having it as your most pressing
+consideration the minute you pass your own frontiers. That," I declared,
+with a little laugh, "is what makes my entente important."
+
+"Important for England or for America?" Mr. Russky, as a citizen of the
+country he thought had most to give, was on his guard.
+
+"Important for the world!" I said, emphatically. "England and
+America--the British Empire and the United States--are both secondary in
+what I'm trying to say. I speak of them only as the two that can most
+easily line up together. When they've done that the rest will follow
+their lead. It's not to be an offensive and defensive alliance, or
+directed against any other power. It would be a starting-point, the
+beginning of world peace. It would also be an instance of what could be
+accomplished in the long run among all the nations of the world by
+mutual tolerance and common sense."
+
+As I made a little mock oratorical flourish there was a laugh from our
+part of the table. Some one sitting opposite called out, "Good!" I
+distinctly heard Mrs. Billing's cackle of a "Brava!" I ought to say,
+too, that, afraid of even the appearance of "holding forth," I had kept
+my tone lowered, addressing myself to my left-hand companion. If others
+stopped talking and listened it was because of the compulsion of the
+theme. It was a burning theme. It was burning in hearts and minds that
+had never given it a conscious thought; and, now that for a minute it
+was out in the open, it claimed them. True, it was an occasion meant to
+be kept free from the serious; but even in Newport we were beginning to
+understand that occasions kept free from the serious were over--perhaps
+for the rest of our time.
+
+After that the conversation in our neighborhood became general. With the
+exception of Hugh, who was not far away, every one joined in, aptly or
+inaptly, as the case might be, with pros and cons and speculations and
+anecdotes and flashes of wit, and a far deeper interest than I should
+have predicted. As Mrs. Brokenshire whispered after we regained the
+drawing-room, it had made the dinner go; and a number of women whom I
+hadn't known before came up and talked to me.
+
+But all that was only the curtain-raiser. It was not till the family
+were assembled in Mildred's room up-stairs that the real play began.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXV
+
+
+Mildred's big, heavily furnished room was as softly lighted as usual. As
+usual, she herself, in white, with a rug across her feet, lay on her
+couch, withdrawn from the rest. She never liked to have any one near
+her, unless it was Hugh; she never entered into general talk. When
+others were present she remained silent, as she did on this evening.
+Whatever passed through her mind she gave out to individuals when she
+was alone with them.
+
+The rest of the party were scattered about, standing or sitting. There
+were Jack and Pauline, Jim and Ethel Rossiter, Mrs. Billing, Mrs.
+Brokenshire, Cissie Boscobel, who was now staying with the Brokenshires,
+and Hugh. The two banker guests had gone back to the smoking-room. As I
+entered, Mr. Brokenshire was standing in his customary position of
+command, a little like a pasha in his seraglio, his back to the empty
+fireplace. With his handsome head and stately form, he would have been a
+truly imposing figure had it not been for his increased stoutness and
+the occasional working of his face.
+
+I had come up-stairs with some elation. The evening might have been
+called mine. Most of the men, on rejoining us in the drawing-room, had
+sought a word with me, and those who didn't know me inquired who I was.
+I could hardly help the hope that Mr. Brokenshire might see I was worth
+my salt, and that on becoming a member of his family I should bring my
+contribution.
+
+But on the way up-stairs Hugh gave me a hint that in that I might be
+mistaken.
+
+"Well, little Alix, you certainly gave poor old dad a shock this time."
+
+"A shock?" I asked, in not unnatural astonishment.
+
+"Your fireworks."
+
+"Fireworks! What on earth do you mean?"
+
+"It's always a shock when fireworks go off too close to you; and
+especially when it's in church."
+
+As we had reached the door of Mildred's room, I searched my conduct
+during dinner to see in what I had offended.
+
+It is possible my entry might have passed unnoticed if Mrs. Brokenshire,
+with the kindest intentions, had not come forward to the threshold and
+taken me by the hand. As if making a presentation, she led me toward the
+august figure before the fireplace.
+
+"Our little girl," she said, in the hope of doing me a good turn,
+"distinguished herself to-night, didn't she?"
+
+He must have been stung to sudden madness by the sight of the two of us
+together. In general he controlled himself in public. He was often
+cruel, but with a quiet subtle cruelty to which even the victims often
+didn't know how to take exception. But to-night the long-gathering fury
+of passion was incapable of further restraint. Behind it there was all
+the explosive force of a lifetime of pride, complacence, and self-love.
+The exquisite creature--a vision of soft rose, with six strings of
+pearls--who was parading her bargain, as you might say, without having
+paid for it, excited him to the point of frenzy. I saw later, what I
+didn't understand at the time, that he was striking at her through me.
+He was willing enough to strike at me, since I was the nobody who had
+forced herself into his family; but she was his first aim.
+
+Having looked at me disdainfully, he disdainfully looked away.
+
+"She certainly gave us an exhibition!" he said, with his incisive,
+whip-lash quietude.
+
+Mrs. Brokenshire dropped my hand.
+
+"Oh, Howard!"
+
+I think she backed away toward the nearest chair. I was vaguely
+conscious of curious eyes in the dimness about me as I stood alone
+before my critic.
+
+"I'm sorry if I've done anything wrong, Mr. Brokenshire," I said,
+meekly. "I didn't mean to."
+
+He looked over my head, speaking casually, as one who takes no interest
+in the subject.
+
+"All the great stupidities have been committed by people who didn't mean
+to--but there they are!"
+
+I continued to be meek.
+
+"I didn't know I had been stupid."
+
+"The stupid never do."
+
+"And I don't think I have been," I added, with rising spirit.
+
+Though there was consternation in the room behind me, Mr. Brokenshire
+merely said:
+
+"Unfortunately, you must let others judge of that."
+
+"But how?" I insisted. "If I have been, wouldn't it be a kindness on
+your part to tell me in what way?"
+
+He pretended not merely indifference, but reluctance.
+
+"Isn't that obvious?"
+
+"Not to me--and I don't think to any one else."
+
+"What do you call it when one--you compel me to speak frankly--what do
+you call it when one exposes one's ignorance of--of fundamental things
+before a roomful of people who've never set eyes on one before?"
+
+Since no one, not even Hugh, was brave enough to stand up for me, I had
+to do it for myself.
+
+"But I didn't know I had."
+
+"Probably not. It's what I warned you of, if you'll take the trouble to
+remember. I said--or it amounted to that--that until you'd learned the
+ways of the people who are generally recognized as _comme il faut_,
+you'd be wise in keeping yourself--unobtrusive."
+
+"And may I ask whether one becomes obtrusive merely in talking of public
+affairs?"
+
+"You'll pardon me for giving you a lesson before others; but, since you
+invite it--"
+
+"Quite so, Mr. Brokenshire, I do invite it."
+
+"Then I can only say that in what we call good society we become
+obtrusive in talking of things we know nothing about."
+
+"But surely one can set an idea going, even if one hasn't sounded all
+its depths. And as for the relations between this country and the
+British Empire--"
+
+"Well-bred women leave such subjects to statesmen."
+
+"Yes; we've done so. We've left them to statesmen and"--I couldn't
+resist the temptation to say it--"and we've left them to financiers; but
+we can't look at Europe and be proud of the result. We women, well bred
+or otherwise, couldn't make things worse even if we were to take a hand;
+and we might make them better."
+
+He was not moved from his air of slightly bored indifference.
+
+"Then you must wait for women with some knowledge of the subject."
+
+"But, Mr. Brokenshire, I have some knowledge of the subject! Though I'm
+neither English nor American, I'm both. I've only to shift from one side
+of my mind to the other to be either. Surely, when it comes to the
+question of a link between the two countries I love I'm qualified to put
+in a plea for it."
+
+I think his nerves were set further on edge because I dared to argue the
+point, though he would probably have been furious if I had not. His tone
+was still that of a man deigning no more than to fling out an occasional
+stinging remark.
+
+"As a future member of my family, you're not qualified to make yourself
+ridiculous before my friends. To take you humorously was the kindest
+thing they could do."
+
+I saw an opportunity.
+
+"Then wouldn't it be equally kind, sir, if you were to follow their
+example?"
+
+Mrs. Billing's hen-like crow came out of the obscurity:
+
+"She's got you there!"
+
+The sound incited him. He became not more irritable, but cruder.
+
+"Unhappily, that's beyond my power. I have to blush for my son Hugh."
+
+Hugh spoke out of the darkness, his voice trembling with the fear of his
+own hardihood in once more braving Jove.
+
+"Oh no, dad! You must take that back."
+
+The father wheeled round in the new direction. He was losing command of
+the ironic courtesy he secured by his air of indifference, and growing
+coarser.
+
+"My poor boy! I can't take it back. You're like myself--in that you can
+only be fooled when you put your trust in a woman."
+
+It was Mrs. Brokenshire's turn:
+
+"Howard--please!"
+
+In the cry there was the confession of the woman who has vowed and not
+paid, and yet begs to be spared the blame.
+
+Jack Brokenshire sprang to his feet and hurried forward, laying his hand
+on his father's arm.
+
+"Say, dad--"
+
+But Mr. Brokenshire shook off the hand, refusing to be placated. He
+looked at his wife, who had risen, confusedly, from her chair and was
+backing away from him to the other side of the room.
+
+"I said poor Hugh was being fooled by a woman; and he is. He's marrying
+some one who doesn't care a hang about him and who's in love with
+another man. He may not be the first in the family to do that, but I
+merely make the statement that he's doing it."
+
+Hugh leaped forward.
+
+"She's not in love with another man!"
+
+"Ask her."
+
+He clutched me by the wrist.
+
+"You're not, are you?" he pleaded. "Tell father you're not."
+
+I was so sorry for Hugh that I hardly thought of myself. I was benumbed.
+The suddenness of the attack had been like a blow from behind that stuns
+you without taking away your consciousness. In any case Mr. Brokenshire
+gave me no time, for he laughed gratingly.
+
+"She can't do that, my boy, because she is. Everybody knows it. I know
+it--and Ethel and Mildred and Cissie. They're all here and they can
+contradict me if I'm saying what isn't so."
+
+"But she may not know it herself," Mrs. Billing croaked. "A girl is
+often the last to make that discovery."
+
+"Ask her."
+
+Hugh obeyed, still clutching my wrist.
+
+"I'm asking you, little Alix. You're not, are you?"
+
+I could say nothing. Apart from the fact that I didn't knew what to say,
+I was dumbfounded by the way in which it had all come upon me. The only
+words that occurred to me were:
+
+"I think Mr. Brokenshire is ill."
+
+Oddly enough. I was convinced of that. It was the one assuaging fact. He
+might hate me, but he wouldn't have made me the object of this mad-bull
+rush if he had been in his right mind. He was not in his right mind; he
+was merely a blood-blinded animal as he went on:
+
+"Ask her again, Hugh. You're the only one she's been able to keep in the
+dark; but then"--his eyes followed his wife, who was still slowly
+retreating--"but then that's nothing new. She'll let you believe
+anything--till she gets you. That's always the game with women of the
+sort. But once you're fast in her clutches--then, my boy, look out!"
+
+I heard Pauline whisper, "Jack, for Heaven's sake, do something!"
+
+Once more Jack's hand was laid on his parent's arm, with his foolish
+"Say, dad--"
+
+Once more the restraining hand was shaken off. The cutting tones were
+addressed to Hugh:
+
+"You see what a hurry she's been in to be married, don't you? How many
+times has she asked you to do it up quick? She's been afraid that you'd
+slip through her fingers." He turned toward me. "Don't be alarmed, my
+dear. We shall keep our word. You've worked hard to capture the
+position, and I shall not deny that you've been clever in your attacks.
+You deserve what you've won, and you shall have it. But all in good
+time. Don't rush. The armies in Europe are showing us that you must
+intrench yourself where you are if you want, in the end, to push
+forward. You push a little too hard."
+
+Poor Hugh had gone white. He was twisting my wrist as if he would wring
+it off, though I felt no pain till afterward.
+
+"Tell me!" he whispered. "Tell me! You're--you're not marrying me
+for--for my money, are you?"
+
+I could have laughed hysterically.
+
+"Hugh, don't be an idiot!" came, scornfully, from Ethel Rossiter.
+
+I could see her get up, cross the room, and sit down on the edge of
+Mildred's couch, where the two engaged in a whispered conversation. Jim
+Rossiter, too, got up and tiptoed his sleek, slim person out of the
+room. Cissie Boscobel followed him. They talked in low tones at the head
+of the stairs outside. I found voice at last:
+
+"No, Hugh; I never thought of marrying you for that reason. I was doing
+it only because it seemed to me right."
+
+Mr. Brokenshire emitted a sound, meant to be a laugh:
+
+"Right! Oh, my God!"
+
+Mrs. Brokenshire was now no more than a pale-rose shadow on the farther
+side of the room, but she came to my aid:
+
+"She was, Howard. Please believe her. She was, really!"
+
+"Thanks, darling, for the corroboration! It comes well from you. Where
+there's a question of right you're an authority."
+
+Mrs. Billing's hoarse, prolonged "Ha-a!" implied every shade of
+comprehension. I saw the pale-rose shadow sink down on a sofa, all in a
+little heap, like something shot with smokeless powder.
+
+Hugh was twisting my wrist again and whispering:
+
+"Alix, tell me. Speak! What are you marrying me for? What about the
+other fellow? Is it Strangways? Speak!"
+
+"I've given you the only answer I can, Hugh. If you can't believe in my
+doing right--"
+
+"What were you in such a hurry for? Was that the reason--what dad
+says--that you were afraid you wouldn't--hook me?"
+
+I looked him hard in the eye. Though we were speaking in the lowest
+possible tones, there was a sudden stillness in the room, as though
+every one was hanging on my answer.
+
+"Have I ever given you cause to suspect me of that?" I asked, after
+thinking of what I ought to say.
+
+Three words oozed themselves out like three drops of his own blood. They
+were the distillation of two years' uncertainty:
+
+"Well--sometimes--yes."
+
+Either he dropped my wrist or I released myself. I only remember that I
+was twisting the sapphire-and-diamond ring on my finger.
+
+"What made you think so?" I asked, dully.
+
+"A hundred things--everything!" He gave a great gasp. "Oh, little Alix!"
+
+Turning away suddenly, he leaned his head against the mantelpiece, while
+his shoulders heaved.
+
+It came to me that this was the moment to make an end of it all; but I
+saw Mrs. Rossiter get up from her conference with Mildred and come
+forward. She did it leisurely, pulling up one shoulder of her decollete
+gown as she advanced.
+
+"Hugh, don't be a baby!" she said, in passing. "Father, you ought to be
+ashamed of yourself!"
+
+If the heavens had fallen my amazement might have been less. She went on
+in a purely colloquial tone, extricating the lace of her corsage from a
+spray of diamond flowers as she spoke:
+
+"I'll tell you why she was marrying Hugh. It was for two or three
+reasons, every one of them to her credit. Any one who knows her and
+doesn't see that must be an idiot. She was marrying him, first, because
+he was kind to her. None of the rest of us was, unless it was Mrs.
+Brokenshire; and she was afraid to show it for fear you'd jump on her,
+father. The rest of us have treated Alix Adare like brutes. I know I
+have."
+
+"Oh no!" I protested, though I could scarcely make myself audible.
+
+"But Hugh was nice to her. He was nice to her from the start. And she
+couldn't forget it. No nice girl would. When he asked her to marry him
+she felt she had to. And then, when he put up his great big bluff of
+earning a living--"
+
+"It wasn't a bluff," Hugh contradicted, his face still buried in his
+hands.
+
+"Well, perhaps it wasn't," she admitted, imperturbably. "If you, father,
+hadn't driven him to it with your heroics--"
+
+"If you call it heroics that I should express my will--"
+
+"Oh your will! You seem to think that no one's got a will but you. Here
+we are, all grown up, two of us married, and you still try to keep us as
+if we were five years old. We're sick of it, and it's time some of us
+spoke. Jack's afraid to, and Mildred's too good; so it's up to me to say
+what I think."
+
+Mr. Brokenshire's first shock having passed, he got back something of
+his lordly manner, into which he threw an infusion of the misunderstood.
+
+"And you've said it sufficiently. When my children turn against me--"
+
+"Nonsense, father! Your children don't do anything of the sort. We're
+perfect sheep. You drive us wherever you like. But, however much we can
+stand ourselves, we can't help kicking when you attack some one who
+doesn't quite belong to us and who's a great deal better than we are."
+
+Mrs. Billing crowed again:
+
+"Brava, Ethel! Never supposed you had the pluck."
+
+Ethel turned her attention to the other side of her corsage.
+
+"Oh, it isn't a question of pluck; it's one of exasperation. Injustice
+after a while gets on one's nerves. I've had a better chance of knowing
+Alix Adare than any one; and you can take it from me that, when it comes
+to a question of breeding, she's the genuine pearl and we're only
+imitations--all except Mildred."
+
+Both of Mr. Brokenshire's handsome hands went up together. He took a
+step forward as if to save Mrs. Rossiter from a danger.
+
+"My daughter!"
+
+The pale-rose heap on the other side of the room raised its dainty head.
+
+"It's true, Howard; it's true! Please believe it!"
+
+Ethel went on in her easy way:
+
+"If Alix Adare has made any mistake it's been in ignoring her own
+wishes--I may say her own heart--in order to be true to us. The Lord
+knows she can't have respected us much, or failed to see that, judged by
+her standards, we're as common as grass when you compare it to orchids.
+But because she is an orchid she couldn't do anything but want to give
+us back better than she ever got from us; and so--"
+
+"Oh no; it wasn't that!" I tried to interpose.
+
+"It's no dishonor to her not to be in love with Hugh," she pursued,
+evenly. "She may have thought she was once; but what girl hasn't thought
+she was in love a dozen times? A fine day in April will make any one
+think it's summer already; but when June comes they know the difference.
+It was April when Hugh asked her; and now it's June. I'll confess for
+her. She is in love with--"
+
+"Please!" I broke in.
+
+She gave me another surprise.
+
+"Do run and get me my fan. It's over by Mildred. There's a love!"
+
+I had to do her bidding. The picture of the room stamped itself on my
+brain, though I didn't think of it at the time. It seemed rather empty.
+Jack had retired to one window, where he was smoking a cigarette;
+Pauline was at another, looking out at the moonlight on the water. Mrs.
+Billing sat enthroned in the middle, taking a subordinate place for
+once. Mrs. Brokenshire was on the sofa by the wall. The murmur of
+Ethel's voice, but no words, reached me as I stooped beside Mildred's
+couch to pick up the fan.
+
+The invalid took my hand. Her voice had the deep, low murmur of the sea.
+
+"You must forgive my father."
+
+"I do," I was able to say. "I--I like him in spite of everything--"
+
+"And as for my brother, you'll remember what we agreed upon once--that
+where we can't give all, our first consideration must be the value of
+what we withhold."
+
+I thanked her and went back with the fan. As I passed Mrs. Billing she
+snapped at me, with the enigmatic words:
+
+"You're a puss!"
+
+When I drew near to the group by the fireplace, Mrs. Rossiter was saying
+to Hugh:
+
+"And as for her marrying you for your money--well, you're crazy! I
+suppose she likes money as well as anybody else; but she would have
+married you to be loyal. She would have married you two months ago if
+father had been willing; and if you'd been willing you could now have
+been in England or France together, trying to do some good. If a woman
+marries one man when she's in love with another the right or the wrong
+depends on her motives. Who knows but what I may have done it myself? I
+don't say I haven't. And so--"
+
+But I had taken off the ring on my way across the room. Having returned
+the fan to Ethel, I went up to Hugh, who looked round at me over his
+shoulder.
+
+"Hugh, darling," I said, very softly, "I feel that I ought to give you
+back this."
+
+He put out his hand mechanically, not thinking of what I was about to
+offer. On seeing it he drew back his hand quickly, and the ring dropped
+on the floor. I can hear it still, rolling with a little rattle among
+the fire-irons.
+
+In making my curtsy to Mr. Brokenshire I raised my eyes to his face. It
+seemed to me curiously stricken. After all her years of submission Mrs.
+Rossiter's rebellion must have made him feel like an autocrat dethroned.
+I repeated my curtsy to Mrs. Billing, who merely stared at me through
+her lorgnette--to Jack and Pauline, who took no notice, who perhaps
+didn't see me--to Mrs. Brokenshire, who was again a little rose-colored
+heap--and to Mildred, who raised her long, white hand.
+
+In the hall outside Cissie Boscobel rose and came toward me.
+
+"You must look after Hugh," I said to her, breathlessly, as I sped on my
+way.
+
+She did. As I hurried down the stairs I heard her saying:
+
+"No, Hugh, no! She wants to go alone."
+
+
+
+
+ POSTSCRIPT
+
+
+I am writing in the dawn of a May morning in 1917.
+
+Before me lies a sickle of white beach some four or five miles in curve.
+Beyond that is the Atlantic, a mirror of leaden gray. Woods and fields
+bank themselves inland; here a dewy pasture, there a stretch of plowed
+earth recently sown and harrowed; elsewhere a grove of fir or maple or a
+hazel copse. From a little wooden house on the other side of the
+crescent of white sand a pillar of pale smoke is going straight up into
+the windless air. In the woods round me the birds, which have only just
+arrived from Florida, from the West Indies, from Brazil, are chirruping
+sleepily. They will doze again presently, to awake with the sunrise into
+the chorus of full song. Halifax lies some ten or twelve miles to the
+westward. This house is my uncle's summer residence, which he has lent
+to my husband and me for the latter's after-cure.
+
+I am used to being up at this hour, or at any hour, owing to my
+experience in nursing. As a matter of fact, I am restless with the
+beginning of day, fearing lest my husband may need me. He is in the next
+room. If he stirs I can hear him. In this room my baby is sleeping in
+his little bassinet. It is not the bassinet of my dreams, nor is this
+the white-enameled nursery, nor am I wearing a delicate lace peignoir.
+It is all much more beautiful than that, because it is as it is. My
+baby's name is John Howard Brokenshire Strangways, though we shorten it
+to Broke, which, in the English fashion, we pronounce Brook.
+
+You will see why I wanted to call him by this name; but for that I must
+hark back to the night when I returned the ring to dear Hugh Brokenshire
+and fled. It is like a dream to me now, that night; but a dream still
+vivid enough to recall.
+
+On escaping Hugh and making my way down-stairs I was lucky enough to
+find Thomas, my rosebud footman knight. Poor lad! The judgment trumpet
+was sounding for him, as for Franz Ferdinand and Sophie Chotek and the
+rest of us. He went back to England shortly after that and was killed
+the next year at the Dardanelles. But there he was for the moment,
+standing with the wraps of the Rossiter party.
+
+"Thomas, call the motor," I said, hurriedly. "Be quick! I'm going home,
+alone, and you must come with me. I've things for you to do. Mr. Jack
+Brokenshire will bring Mrs. Rossiter."
+
+On the way I explained my program to him through the window. I had been
+called suddenly to New York. There was a train from Boston to that city
+which would stop at Providence at two. I thought there was one from
+Newport to Providence about twelve-thirty, and it was now a quarter past
+eleven. If there was such a train I must take it; if there wasn't, the
+motor must run me up to Providence, for which there was still time. I
+should delay only long enough to pack a suit-case. For the use I was
+making of him and the chauffeur, as well as of the vehicle, I should be
+responsible to my hosts.
+
+Both the men being my tacitly sworn friends, there was no questioning of
+my authority. I fell back, therefore, into the depths of the limousine
+with the first sense of relief I had had since the day I accepted my
+position with Mrs. Rossiter. Something seemed to roll off me. I realized
+all at once that I had never, during the whole of the two years, been
+free from that necessity of picking my steps which one must have in
+walking on a tight-rope. Now it was delicious. I could have wished that
+the drive along Ochre Point Avenue had been thirty times as long.
+
+For Hugh I had no feeling of compunction. It was so blissful to be free.
+Cissie Boscobel, I knew, would make up to him for all I had failed to
+give, and would give more. Let me say at once that when, a few weeks
+later, the man Lady Janet Boscobel was engaged to had also been killed
+at the front, and her parents had begged Cissie to go home, Hugh was her
+escort on the journey. It was the beginning of an end which I think is
+in sight, of a healing which no one wishes so eagerly as I.
+
+For the last two years Cissie has been mothering Belgian children
+somewhere in the neighborhood of Poperinghe, and Hugh has been in the
+American Ambulance Corps before Verdun. That was Cissie's work, made
+easier, perhaps, by some recollection he retained of me. When he has a
+few days' leave--so Ethel Rossiter writes me--he spends it at
+Goldborough Castle or Strath-na-Cloid. I ran across Cissie when for a
+time I was helping in first-aid work not far behind the lines at Neuve
+Chapelle.
+
+I had been taking care of her brother Rowan--Lord Ovingdean, he calls
+himself now, hesitating to follow his brother as Lord Leatherhead, and
+using one of his father's other secondary titles--and she had come to
+see him. I hadn't supposed till then that we were such friends. We
+talked and talked and talked, and still would have gone on talking. I
+can understand what she sees in Hugh, though I could never feel it for
+him with her intensity. I hope her devotion will be rewarded soon, and
+I think it will.
+
+I had a premonition of this as I drove along Ochre Point Avenue that
+night. It helped me to the joy of liberty, to rightness of heart. As I
+threw the things into my suit-case I could have sung. Seraphine, who was
+up, waiting for her mistress, being also my friend, promised to finish
+my packing after I had gone, so that Mrs. Rossiter would have nothing to
+do but send my boxes after me. It couldn't have been half an hour after
+my arrival at the house before I was ready to drive away again.
+
+I was in the down-stairs hall, going out to the motor, when a great
+black form appeared in the doorway. My knees shook under me; my
+happiness came down like a shot bird. Mr. Brokenshire advanced and stood
+under the many-colored Oriental hall lantern. I clung for support to the
+pilaster that finished the balustrade of the stairway.
+
+There was gentleness in his voice, in spite of its whip-lash abruptness.
+
+"Where are you going?"
+
+I could hardly reply, my heart pounded with such fright.
+
+"To--to New York, sir."
+
+"What for?"
+
+"Be-because," I faltered. "I want to--to get away."
+
+"Why do you want to get away?"
+
+"For--for every reason."
+
+"But suppose I don't want you to go?"
+
+"I should still have to be gone."
+
+He said in a hoarse whisper:
+
+"I want you to stay--and--and marry Hugh."
+
+I clasped my hands.
+
+"Oh, but how can I?"
+
+"He's willing to forget what you've said--what my daughter Ethel has
+said; and I'm willing to forget it, too."
+
+"Do you mean as to my being in love with some one else? But I am."
+
+"Not more than you were at the beginning of the evening. You were
+willing to marry him then."
+
+"But he didn't know then what he's had to learn since. I hoped to have
+kept it from him always. I may have been wrong--I suppose I was; but I
+had nothing but good motives."
+
+There was a strange drop in his voice as he said, "I know you hadn't."
+
+I couldn't help taking a step nearer him.
+
+"Oh, do you? Then I'm so glad. I thought--"
+
+He turned slightly away from me, toward a huge ugly fish in a glass
+case, which Mr. Rossiter believed to be a proof of his sportsmanship and
+an ornament to the hall.
+
+"I've had great trials," he said, after a pause--"great trials!"
+
+[Illustration: "I'VE HAD GREAT TRIALS . . . I'VE ALWAYS BEEN MISJUDGED.
+. . . THEY'VE PUT ME DOWN AS HARD AND PROUD"]
+
+"I know," I agreed, softly.
+
+He walked toward the fish and seemed to be studying it.
+
+"They've--they've--broken me down."
+
+"Oh, don't say that, sir!"
+
+"It's true." His finger outlined the fish's skeleton from head to tail.
+"The things I said to-night--" He seemed hung up there. He traced the
+fish's skeleton back from tail to head. "Have we been unkind to you?" he
+demanded, suddenly, wheeling round in my direction.
+
+I thought it best to speak quite truthfully.
+
+"Not unkind, sir--exactly."
+
+"But what did Ethel mean? She said we'd been brutes to you. Is that
+true?"
+
+"No, sir; not in my sense. I haven't felt it."
+
+He tapped his foot with the old imperiousness. "Then--what?"
+
+We were so near the fundamentals that again I felt I ought to give him
+nothing but the facts.
+
+"I suppose Mrs. Rossiter meant that sometimes I should have been glad of
+a little more sympathy, and always of more--courtesy." I added: "From
+you, sir, I shouldn't have asked for more than courtesy."
+
+Though only his profile was toward me and the hall was dim, I could see
+that his face was twitching. "And--and didn't you get it?"
+
+"Do you think I did?"
+
+"I never thought anything about it."
+
+"Exactly; but any one in my position does. Even if we could do without
+courtesy between equals--and I don't think we can--from the higher to
+the lower--from you to me, for instance--it's indispensable. I don't
+remember that I ever complained of it, however. Mrs. Rossiter must have
+seen it for herself."
+
+"I didn't want you to marry Hugh," he began, again, after a long pause;
+"but I'd given in about it. I shouldn't have minded it so much if--if my
+wife--"
+
+He broke off with a distressful, choking sound in the throat, and a
+twisting of the head, as if he couldn't get his breath. That passed and
+he began once more.
+
+"I've had great trials. . . . My wife! . . . And then the burden of this
+war. . . . They think--they think I don't care anything about it
+but--but just to make money. . . . I've always been misjudged. . . .
+They've put me down as hard and proud, when--"
+
+"I could have liked you, sir," I interrupted, boldly. "I told you so
+once, and it offended you. But I've never been able to help it. I've
+always felt that there was something big and fine in you--if you'd only
+set it free."
+
+His reply to this was to turn away from his contemplation of the fish
+and say:
+
+"Why don't you come back?"
+
+I was sure it was best to be firm.
+
+"Because I can't, sir. The episode is--is over. I'm sorry, and yet I'm
+glad. What I'm doing is right. I suppose everything has been right--even
+what happened between me and Hugh. I don't think it will do him any
+harm--Cissie Boscobel is there--and it's done me good. It's been a
+wonderful experience; but it's over. It would be a mistake for me to go
+back now--a mistake for all of us. Please let me go, sir; and just
+remember of me that I'm--I'm--grateful."
+
+He regarded me quietly and--if I may say so--curiously. There was
+something in his look, something broken, something defeated, something,
+at long last, kind, that made me want to cry.
+
+I was crying inwardly when he turned about, without another word, and
+walked toward the door.
+
+It must have been the impulse to say a silent good-by to him that sent
+me slowly down the hall, though I was scarcely aware of moving. He had
+gone out into the dark and I was under the Oriental lamp, when he
+suddenly reappeared, coming in my direction rapidly. I would have leaped
+back if I hadn't refused to show fear. As it was, I stood still. I was
+only conscious of an overwhelming pity, terror, and amazement as he
+seized me and kissed me hotly on the brow. Then he was gone.
+
+But it was that kiss which made all the difference in my afterthought of
+him. It was a confession on his part, too, and a bit of self-revelation.
+Behind it lay a nature of vast, splendid qualities--strong, noble,
+dominating, meant to be used for good--all ruined by self-love. Of the
+Brokenshire family, of whom I am so fond and to whom I owe so much, he
+was the one toward whom, by some blind, spontaneous, subconscious
+sympathy of my own, I have been most urgently attracted. If his soul was
+twisted by passions as his face became twisted by them, too--well, who
+is there among us of whom something of the sort may not be said; and yet
+God has patience with us all.
+
+Howard Brokenshire and I were foes, and we fought; but we fought as so
+many thousands, so many millions, have fought in the short time since
+that day; we fought as those who, when the veils are suddenly stripped
+away, when they are helpless on the battle-field after the battle, or on
+hospital cots lined side by side, recognize one another as men and
+brethren. And so, when my baby was born I called him after him. I wanted
+the name as a symbol--not only to myself, but to the Brokenshire
+family--that there was no bitterness in my heart.
+
+At present let me say that, though pained, I was scarcely surprised to
+read in the New York papers on the following afternoon that Mr. J.
+Howard Brokenshire, the eminent financier, had, on the previous evening,
+been taken with a paralytic seizure while in his motor on the way from
+his daughter's house to his own. He was conscious when carried indoors,
+but he had lost the power of speech. The doctors indicated overwork in
+connection with foreign affairs as the predisposing cause.
+
+From Mrs. Rossiter I heard as each successive shock overtook him. Very
+pitifully the giant was laid low. Very tenderly--so Ethel has written
+me--Mrs. Brokenshire has watched over him--and yet, I suppose, with a
+terrible tragic expectation in her heart, which no one but myself, and
+perhaps Stacy Grainger, can have shared with her. Howard Brokenshire
+died on that early morning when his country went to war.
+
+I stayed in New York just long enough to receive my boxes from Newport.
+On getting out of the train at Halifax Larry Strangways received me in
+his arms.
+
+And this time I saw no little dining-room, with myself seating the
+guests; I saw no bassinet and no baby. I saw nothing but him. I knew
+nothing but him. He was all to me. It was the difference.
+
+And not the least of my surprises, when I came to find out, was the fact
+that it was Jim Rossiter who had sent him there--Jim Rossiter, whom I
+had rather despised as a selfish, cat-like person, with not much thought
+beyond "ridin' and racin'," and pills and medicinal waters. That was
+true of him; and yet he took the trouble to get into touch with Stacy
+Grainger--as a Brokenshire only by affinity, he could do it--to use his
+influence at Washington and Ottawa to get Larry Strangways a week's
+leave from Princess Patricia's regiment--to watch over my movements in
+New York and know the train I should take--and wire to Larry Strangways
+the hour of my arrival. When I think of it I grow maudlin at the thought
+of the good there is in every one.
+
+We were married within the week at the old church which was once a
+center for Loyalist refugees from New England, beneath which some of
+them lie buried, and where I was baptized. When my husband returned to
+Valcartier I went--to be near him--to Quebec. After he sailed for
+England I, too, sailed, and met him there. I kept near him in England,
+taking such nursing training as I could while he trained in other ways.
+I was not many miles away from him when, in the spring of the next
+year, he was badly cut up at Bois Grenier, near Neuve Chapelle.
+
+He was one of the two or three Canadians to hold a listening post
+half-way between the hostile lines, where they could hear the slightest
+movement of the enemy and signal back. A Maxim swept the dugout at
+intervals, and now and then a shell burst near them. My husband was
+wounded in a leg and his right arm was shattered.
+
+When I was permitted to see him at Amiens the arm had been taken off and
+the doctors were doing what they could to save the leg. Fortunately,
+they have succeeded; and now he walks with no more than a noticeable
+limp. He is a captain in Princess Patricia's regiment and a D. S. O.
+
+Later he was taken to the American Women's Hospital, at Paignton, in
+Devonshire, and there again I had the joy of being near him. I couldn't
+take care of him--I had not the skill, and perhaps my nerve would have
+failed me--but I worked in the kitchen and was sometimes allowed to take
+him his food and feed him. I think the hope, the expectation, of my
+doing this was what brought him out of the profound silence into which
+he was plunged when he arrived.
+
+That was the only sign of mental suffering I ever saw in him. For the
+physical suffering he never seemed to care. But something deep and far
+off, and beyond the beyond of self-consciousness, seemed to have been
+reached by what he had seen and heard and done. It was said of Lazarus,
+after his recall to life by Christ, that he never spoke of what he had
+experienced in those four days; and I can say as much of my husband.
+
+When his mind reverts to the months in France and Flanders he grows
+dumb. He grows dumb and his spirit moves away from me. It moves away
+from me and from everything that is of this world. It is among scenes
+past speech, past understanding, past imagining. He is Lazarus back in
+the world, but with secrets in his keeping which no one may learn but
+those who have learned them where he did.
+
+When he came to Paignton he was far removed from us; but little by
+little he reapproached. I helped to restore him; and then, when the baby
+was born, the return to earth was quickened.
+
+To have my baby I went over to Torquay, where I had six quiet contented
+weeks in a room overlooking the peacock-blue waters of Tor Bay, with the
+kindly roof that sheltered my husband in the distance. When I had
+recovered I went to a cottage at Paignton, where, when he left the
+hospital, he joined me. As the healing of the leg has been so slow, we
+have been in the lovely Devon country ever since, till, a few weeks ago,
+the British Government allowed us to cross on the ship that brought the
+British Commissioners to Washington.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I have just been in to look at him. He is sound asleep, lying on his
+left side, the coverlet sagging slightly at the shoulder where the right
+arm is gone. He is getting accustomed to using his left hand, but not
+rapidly. Meantime he is my other baby; and, in a way, I love to have it
+so. I can be more to him. In proportion as he needs me the bond is
+closer.
+
+He is a grave man now. The smile that used to flash like a sword between
+us is never there any more. When he smiles it is with a long, slow smile
+that comes from far away--perhaps from life as it was before the war. It
+is a sweet smile, a brave one, one infinitely touching; and it pierces
+me to the heart.
+
+He didn't have to forfeit his American citizenship in becoming one of
+the glorious Princess Pats. They were glad to have him on any terms. He
+is an American and I am one. I thought I became one without feeling any
+difference. It seemed to me I had been born one, just as I had been born
+a subject of the dear old queen. But on the night of our landing in
+Halifax, a military band came and played the "Star-spangled Banner"
+before my uncle's door, and I burst into the first tears I had shed
+since my marriage.
+
+Through everything else I had been upheld; but at the strains of that
+anthem, and all it implied, I broke down helplessly. When we went to the
+door and my husband stood to listen to the cheering of my friends, in
+his khaki with the empty sleeve, and the fine, stirring, noble air was
+played again, his eyes, as well as mine, were wet.
+
+It recalled to me what he said once when I was allowed to relieve the
+night nurse and sit beside him at Paignton. He woke in the small hours
+and smiled at me--his distant, dreamy smile. His only words--words he
+seemed to bring with him out of the lands of sleep, in which perhaps he
+lived again what now was past for him--his only words were:
+
+"You know the Stars and Stripes were at Bois Grenier."
+
+"How?" I asked, to humor him, thinking him delirious.
+
+He laughed--the first thing that could be called a laugh since they had
+brought him there.
+
+"Sewn or my undershirt--over my heart! It will be there again," he
+added, "floating openly!"
+
+And almost immediately he fell asleep once more.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+And, after all, it is to be there again--floating openly. The
+time-struggle has taken it and will carry it aloft. It has taken other
+flags, too--flags of Asia; flags of South America; flags of the islands
+of the seas. As my husband predicted long ago, mankind is divided into
+just two camps. So be it! God knows I don't want war. I have been too
+near it, and too closely touched by it, ever to wish again to hear a
+cannon-shot or see a sword. But I suppose it is all a part of the great
+War in Heaven.
+
+Michael and his angels are fighting, and the dragon is fighting and his
+angels. By that I do not mean that all the good is on one side and all
+the evil on the other. God forbid! There is good and evil on both sides.
+On both sides doubtless evil is being purged away and the new, true man
+is coming to his own.
+
+If I think most of the spiritualization of France, and the consecration
+of the British Empire, and the coming of a new manhood to the United
+States, it is because these are the countries I know best. I should be
+sorry, I should be hopeless, were I not to believe that, above
+bloodshed, and cruelty, and hatred, and lust, and suffering, and all
+that is abominable, the Holy Ghost is breathing on every nation of
+mankind.
+
+When it is all over, and we have begun to live again, there will be a
+great Renaissance. It will be what the word implies--a veritable New
+Birth. The sword shall be beaten to a plowshare and the spear to a
+pruning-hook. "Nation shall not lift up sword against nation, neither
+shall they learn war any more."
+
+So, in this gray light, growing so silvery that as day advances it
+becomes positively golden, I turn to my Bible. It is extraordinary how
+comforting the Bible has become in these days when hearts have been
+lifted up into long-unexplored regions of terror and courage. Men and
+women who had given up reading it, men and women who have never read it
+at all, turn its pages with trembling hands and find the wisdom of the
+ages. And so I read what for the moment have become to me its most
+strengthening words:
+
+ In your patience possess ye your souls. . . . There shall be
+ signs in the sun, and in the moon, and in the stars; and upon
+ the earth distress of nations, with perplexity; the sea and the
+ waves roaring; men's hearts failing them for fear, and for
+ looking after those things which are coming on the earth; for
+ the powers of heaven shall be shaken. . . . And when these
+ things begin to come to pass, then look up, and lift up your
+ heads; for your redemption draweth nigh.
+
+That is what I believe--that through this travail of the New Birth for
+all mankind redemption is on the way.
+
+It is coming like the sunrise I now see over the ocean. In it are the
+glories that never were on land or sea. It paints the things which have
+never entered into the heart of man, but which God has prepared for them
+that love him. It is the future; it is Heaven. Not a future that no man
+will live to see; not a Heaven beyond death and the blue sky. It is a
+future so nigh as to be at the doors; it is the Kingdom of Heaven within
+us.
+
+Meantime there is saffron pulsating into emerald, and emerald into rose,
+and rose into lilac, and lilac into pearl, and pearl into the great gray
+canopy that has hardly as yet been touched with light.
+
+And the great gray ocean is responding a fleck of color here, a hint of
+glory there; and now, stealing westward, from wavelet to wavelet,
+stealing and ever stealing, nearer and still more near, a wide, golden
+pathway, as if some Mighty One were coming straight to me. "Even so,
+come, Lord Jesus."
+
+Even so I look up, and lift up my head. Even so I possess my soul in
+patience.
+
+Even so, too, I think of Mildred Brokenshire's words:
+
+"Life is not a blind impulse, working blindly. It is a beneficent,
+rectifying power."
+
+
+ THE END
+
+
+ =Transcriber's Notes:=
+ original hyphenation, spelling and grammar have been preserved as in
+ the original
+ Page 8, "won't he Miss" changed to "won't be Miss"
+ Page 32, "was to indignant" changed to "was too indignant"
+ Page 43, "what is is" changed to "what it is"
+ Page 72, "shoulder. "No" changed to "shoulder, "No"
+ Page 84, "Glady's" changed to "Gladys's"
+ Page 85, "Glady's" changed to "Gladys's"
+ Page 93, "presisted" changed to "persisted"
+ Page 129, "waistcoat. a slate-colored" changed to "waistcoat, a
+ slate-colored"
+ Page 150, "come an and" changed to "come and"
+ Page 178, "stammer the words" changed to "stammer the words--"
+ Page 211, "well received His" changed to "well received. His"
+ Page 230, "your hand but" changed to "your hand, but"
+ Page 235, "put in it my" changed to "put it in my"
+ Page 235, "'I could be" changed to '"I could be'
+ Page 268, "at last "but" changed to "at last, "but"
+ Page 293, "'So much that" changed to '"So much that'
+ Page 297, "The darlings!'" changed to 'The darlings!"'
+ Page 312, "ligthning" changed to "lightning"
+ Page 333, "must be true" changed to "must be true."
+ Page 334, "broke in, quietly" changed to "broke in, quietly."
+ Page 398, "dumfounded" changed to "dumbfounded"
+ Page 409, "want you so stay" changed to "want you to stay"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The High Heart, by Basil King
+
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