<h2><SPAN name="XIV" id="XIV"></SPAN>XIV</h2>
<p><span class="smcap">Justine Brent</span>, her household duties discharged,
had gone upstairs to her room, a little turret
chamber projecting above the wide terrace below, from
which the sounds of lively intercourse now rose increasingly
to her window.</p>
<p>Bessy, she knew, would have preferred to have her remain
with the party from whom these evidences of gaiety
proceeded. Mrs. Amherst had grown to depend on her
friend's nearness. She liked to feel that Justine's quick
hand and eye were always in waiting on her impulses,
prompt to interpret and execute them without any
exertion of her own. Bessy combined great zeal in
the pursuit of sport—a tireless passion for the saddle,
the golf-course, the tennis-court—with an almost oriental
inertia within doors, an indolence of body and
brain that made her shrink from the active obligations
of hospitality, though she had grown to depend more
and more on the distractions of a crowded house.</p>
<p>But Justine, though grateful, and anxious to show
her gratitude, was unwilling to add to her other duties<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_220" id="Page_220"></SPAN></span>
that of joining in the amusements of the house-party.
She made no pretense of effacing herself when she
thought her presence might be useful—but, even if she
had cared for the diversions in favour at Lynbrook, a
certain unavowed pride would have kept her from participating
in them on the same footing with Bessy's
guests. She was not in the least ashamed of her
position in the household, but she chose that every one
else should be aware of it, that she should not for an
instant be taken for one of the nomadic damsels who
form the camp-followers of the great army of pleasure.
Yet even on this point her sensitiveness was not exaggerated.
Adversity has a deft hand at gathering loose
strands of impulse into character, and Justine's early
contact with different phases of experience had given
her a fairly clear view of life in the round, what might
be called a sound working topography of its relative
heights and depths. She was not seriously afraid of
being taken for anything but what she really was,
and still less did she fear to become, by force of propinquity
and suggestion, the kind of being for whom
she might be temporarily taken.</p>
<p>When, at Bessy's summons, she had joined the
latter at her camp in the Adirondacks, the transition
from a fatiguing "case" at Hanaford to a life in which
sylvan freedom was artfully blent with the most studied
personal luxury, had come as a delicious refreshment to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_221" id="Page_221"></SPAN></span>
body and brain. She was weary, for the moment, of
ugliness, pain and hard work, and life seemed to recover
its meaning under the aspect of a graceful leisure.
Lynbrook also, whither she had been persuaded to go
with Bessy at the end of their woodland cure, had at
first amused and interested her. The big house on its
spreading terraces, with windows looking over bright
gardens to the hazy distances of the plains, seemed a
haven of harmless ease and gaiety. Justine was sensitive
to the finer graces of luxurious living, to the warm
lights on old pictures and bronzes, the soft mingling of
tints in faded rugs and panellings of time-warmed oak.
And the existence to which this background formed a
setting seemed at first to have the same decorative
qualities. It was pleasant, for once, to be among people
whose chief business was to look well and take life
lightly, and Justine's own buoyancy of nature won her
immediate access among the amiable persons who
peopled Bessy's week-end parties. If they had only
abounded a little more in their own line she might have
succumbed to their spell. But it seemed to her that
they missed the poetry of their situation, transacting
their pleasures with the dreary method and shortness
of view of a race tethered to the ledger. Even the
verbal flexibility which had made her feel that she was
in a world of freer ideas, soon revealed itself as a form
of flight from them, in which the race was distinctly to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_222" id="Page_222"></SPAN></span>
the swift; and Justine's phase of passive enjoyment
passed with the return of her physical and mental activity.
She was a creature tingling with energy, a little
fleeting particle of the power that moves the sun and
the other stars, and the deadening influences of the life
at Lynbrook roused these tendencies to greater intensity,
as a suffocated person will suddenly develop abnormal
strength in the struggle for air.</p>
<p>She did not, indeed, regret having come. She was
glad to be with Bessy, partly because of the childish
friendship which had left such deep traces in her lonely
heart, and partly because what she had seen of her
friend's situation stirred in her all the impulses of sympathy
and service; but the idea of continuing in such a
life, of sinking into any of the positions of semi-dependence
that an adroit and handsome girl may create for
herself in a fashionable woman's train—this possibility
never presented itself to Justine till Mrs. Ansell, that
afternoon, had put it into words. And to hear it was
to revolt from it with all the strength of her inmost nature.
The thought of the future troubled her, not so
much materially—for she had a light bird-like trust in
the morrow's fare—but because her own tendencies
seemed to have grown less clear, because she could not
rest in them for guidance as she had once done. The
renewal of bodily activity had not brought back her
faith in her calling: her work had lost the light of con<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_223" id="Page_223"></SPAN></span>secration.
She no longer felt herself predestined to
nurse the sick for the rest of her life, and in her inexperience
she reproached herself with this instability.
Youth and womanhood were in fact crying out in her
for their individual satisfaction; but instincts as deep-seated
protected her from even a momentary illusion
as to the nature of this demand. She wanted happiness,
and a life of her own, as passionately as young
flesh-and-blood had ever wanted them; but they must
come bathed in the light of imagination and penetrated
by the sense of larger affinities. She could not conceive
of shutting herself into a little citadel of personal well-being
while the great tides of existence rolled on unheeded
outside. Whether they swept treasure to her
feet, or strewed her life with wreckage, she felt, even
now; that her place was there, on the banks, in sound
and sight of the great current; and just in proportion
as the scheme of life at Lynbrook succeeded in shutting
out all sense of that vaster human consciousness, so did
its voice speak more thrillingly within her.</p>
<p>Somewhere, she felt—but, alas! still out of reach—was
the life she longed for, a life in which high chances
of doing should be mated with the finer forms of enjoying.
But what title had she to a share in such an existence?
Why, none but her sense of what it was
worth—and what did that count for, in a world which
used all its resources to barricade itself against all its<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_224" id="Page_224"></SPAN></span>
opportunities? She knew there were girls who sought,
by what is called a "good" marriage, an escape into
the outer world, of doing and thinking—utilizing an
empty brain and full pocket as the key to these envied
fields. Some such chance the life at Lynbrook seemed
likely enough to offer—one is not, at Justine's age and
with her penetration, any more blind to the poise of
one's head than to the turn of one's ideas; but here the
subtler obstacles of taste and pride intervened. Not
even Bessy's transparent manœuvrings, her tender
solicitude for her friend's happiness, could for a moment
weaken Justine's resistance. If she must marry
without love—and this was growing conceivable to
her—she must at least merge her craving for personal
happiness in some view of life in harmony with
hers.</p>
<p>A tap on her door interrupted these musings, to one
aspect of which Bessy Amherst's entrance seemed suddenly
to give visible expression.</p>
<p>"Why did you run off, Justine? You promised to be
down-stairs when I came back from tennis."</p>
<p>"<i>Till</i> you came back—wasn't it, dear?" Justine corrected
with a smile, pushing her arm-chair forward as
Bessy continued to linger irresolutely in the doorway.
"I saw that there was a fresh supply of tea in the
drawing-room, and I knew you would be there before
the omnibus came from the station."<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_225" id="Page_225"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Oh, I was there—but everybody was asking for
you——"</p>
<p>"Everybody?" Justine gave a mocking lift to her
dark eyebrows.</p>
<p>"Well—Westy Gaines, at any rate; the moment he
set foot in the house!" Bessy declared with a laugh as
she dropped into the arm-chair.</p>
<p>Justine echoed the laugh, but offered no comment
on the statement which accompanied it, and for a
moment both women were silent, Bessy tilting her
pretty discontented head against the back of the
chair, so that her eyes were on a level with those of
her friend, who leaned near her in the embrasure of
the window.</p>
<p>"I can't understand you, Justine. You know well
enough what he's come back for."</p>
<p>"In order to dazzle Hanaford with the fact that he
has been staying at Lynbrook!"</p>
<p>"Nonsense—the novelty of that has worn off. He's
been here three times since we came back."</p>
<p>"You are admirably hospitable to your family——"</p>
<p>Bessy let her pretty ringed hands fall with a discouraged
gesture. "Why do you find him so much
worse than—than other people?"</p>
<p>Justine's eye-brows rose again. "In the same capacity?
You speak as if I had boundless opportunities
of comparison."<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_226" id="Page_226"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Well, you've Dr. Wyant!" Mrs. Amherst suddenly
flung back at her.</p>
<p>Justine coloured under the unexpected thrust, but
met her friend's eyes steadily. "As an alternative to
Westy? Well, if I were on a desert island—but I'm
not!" she concluded with a careless laugh.</p>
<p>Bessy frowned and sighed. "You can't mean that,
of the two—?" She paused and then went on doubtfully:
"It's because he's cleverer?"</p>
<p>"Dr. Wyant?" Justine smiled. "It's not making an
enormous claim for him!"</p>
<p>"Oh, I know Westy's not brilliant; but stupid men
are not always the hardest to live with." She sighed
again, and turned on Justine a glance charged with conjugal
experience.</p>
<p>Justine had sunk into the window-seat, her thin hands
clasping her knee, in the attitude habitual to her meditative
moments. "Perhaps not," she assented; "but
I don't know that I should care for a man who made
life easy; I should want some one who made it interesting."</p>
<p>Bessy met this with a pitying exclamation. "Don't
imagine you invented that! Every girl thinks it. Afterwards
she finds out that it's much pleasanter to be
thought interesting herself."</p>
<p>She spoke with a bitterness that issued strangely from
her lips. It was this bitterness which gave her soft<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_227" id="Page_227"></SPAN></span>
personality the sharp edge that Justine had felt in it
on the day of their meeting at Hanaford.</p>
<p>The girl, at first, had tried to defend herself from
these scarcely-veiled confidences, distasteful enough in
themselves, and placing her, if she listened, in an attitude
of implied disloyalty to the man under whose roof
they were spoken. But a precocious experience of life
had taught her that emotions too strong for the nature
containing them turn, by some law of spiritual chemistry,
into a rankling poison; and she had therefore resigned
herself to serving as a kind of outlet for Bessy's
pent-up discontent. It was not that her friend's grievance
appealed to her personal sympathies; she had
learned enough of the situation to give her moral assent
unreservedly to the other side. But it was characteristic
of Justine that where she sympathized least she
sometimes pitied most. Like all quick spirits she was
often intolerant of dulness; yet when the intolerance
passed it left a residue of compassion for the very incapacity
at which she chafed. It seemed to her that
the tragic crises in wedded life usually turned on the
stupidity of one of the two concerned; and of the two
victims of such a catastrophe she felt most for the one
whose limitations had probably brought it about. After
all, there could be no imprisonment as cruel as that of
being bounded by a hard small nature. Not to be
penetrable at all points to the shifting lights, the wan<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_228" id="Page_228"></SPAN></span>dering
music of the world—she could imagine no physical
disability as cramping as that. How the little
parched soul, in solitary confinement for life, must pine
and dwindle in its blind cranny of self-love!</p>
<p>To be one's self wide open to the currents of life
does not always contribute to an understanding of
narrower natures; but in Justine the personal emotions
were enriched and deepened by a sense of participation
in all that the world about her was doing, suffering
and enjoying; and this sense found expression in the
instinct of ministry and solace. She was by nature a
redresser, a restorer; and in her work, as she had once
told Amherst, the longing to help and direct, to hasten
on by personal intervention time's slow and clumsy
processes, had often been in conflict with the restrictions
imposed by her profession. But she had no idle
desire to probe the depths of other lives; and where
there seemed no hope of serving she shrank from fruitless
confidences. She was beginning to feel this to be
the case with Bessy Amherst. To touch the rock was
not enough, if there were but a few drops within it; yet
in this barrenness lay the pathos of the situation—and
after all, may not the scanty spring be fed from a fuller
current?</p>
<p>"I'm not sure about that," she said, answering her
friend's last words after a deep pause of deliberation.
"I mean about its being so pleasant to be found inter<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_229" id="Page_229"></SPAN></span>esting.
I'm sure the passive part is always the dull
one: life has been a great deal more thrilling since we
found out that we revolved about the sun, instead of
sitting still and fancying that all the planets were dancing
attendance on us. After all, they were <i>not</i>; and
it's rather humiliating to think how the morning stars
must have laughed together about it!"</p>
<p>There was no self-complacency in Justine's eagerness
to help. It was far easier for her to express it in
action than in counsel, to grope for the path with her
friend than to point the way to it; and when she had to
speak she took refuge in figures to escape the pedantry
of appearing to advise. But it was not only to Mrs.
Dressel that her parables were dark, and the blank
look in Bessy's eyes soon snatched her down from the
height of metaphor.</p>
<p>"I mean," she continued with a smile, "that, as
human nature is constituted, it has got to find its real
self—the self to be interested in—outside of what we
conventionally call 'self': the particular Justine or Bessy
who is clamouring for her particular morsel of life.
You see, self isn't a thing one can keep in a box—bits
of it keep escaping, and flying off to lodge in all sorts
of unexpected crannies; we come across scraps of ourselves
in the most unlikely places—as I believe you
would in Westmore, if you'd only go back there and
look for them!"<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_230" id="Page_230"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>Bessy's lip trembled and the colour sprang to her
face; but she answered with a flash of irritation: "Why
doesn't <i>he</i> look for me there, then—if he still wants to
find me?"</p>
<p>"Ah—it's for him to look here—to find himself <i>here</i>,"
Justine murmured.</p>
<p>"Well, he never comes here! That's his answer."</p>
<p>"He will—he will! Only, when he does, let him
find you."</p>
<p>"Find me? I don't understand. How can he,
when he never sees me? I'm no more to him than the
carpet on the floor!"</p>
<p>Justine smiled again. "Well—be that then! The
thing is to <i>be</i>."</p>
<p>"Under his feet? Thank you! Is that what you
mean to marry for? It's not what husbands admire
in one, you know!"</p>
<p>"No." Justine stood up with a sense of stealing
discouragement. "But I don't think I want to be
admired——"</p>
<p>"Ah, that's because you know you are!" broke from
the depths of the other's bitterness.</p>
<p>The tone smote Justine, and she dropped into the
seat at her friend's side, silently laying a hand on Bessy's
feverishly-clasped fingers.</p>
<p>"Oh, don't let us talk about me," complained the
latter, from whose lips the subject was never long<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_231" id="Page_231"></SPAN></span>
absent. "And you mustn't think I <i>want</i> you to
marry, Justine; not for myself, I mean—I'd so much
rather keep you here. I feel much less lonely when
you're with me. But you say you won't stay—and it's
too dreadful to think of your going back to that dreary
hospital."</p>
<p>"But you know the hospital's not dreary to me,"
Justine interposed; "it's the most interesting place I've
ever known."</p>
<p>Mrs. Amherst smiled indulgently on this extravagance.
"A great many people go through the craze
for philanthropy—" she began in the tone of mature
experience; but Justine interrupted her with a laugh.</p>
<p>"Philanthropy? I'm not philanthropic. I don't
think I ever felt inclined to do good in the abstract—any
more than to do ill! I can't remember that I ever
planned out a course of conduct in my life. It's only,"
she went on, with a puzzled frown, as if honestly trying
to analyze her motives, "it's only that I'm so fatally
interested in people that before I know it I've slipped
into their skins; and then, of course, if anything goes
wrong with them, it's just as if it had gone wrong with
me; and I can't help trying to rescue myself from <i>their</i>
troubles! I suppose it's what you'd call meddling—and
so should I, if I could only remember that the other
people were not myself!"</p>
<p>Bessy received this with the mild tolerance of su<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_232" id="Page_232"></SPAN></span>perior
wisdom. Once safe on the tried ground of traditional
authority, she always felt herself Justine's
superior. "That's all very well now—you see the
romantic side of it," she said, as if humouring her
friend's vagaries. "But in time you'll want something
else; you'll want a husband and children—a life of
your own. And then you'll have to be more practical.
It's ridiculous to pretend that comfort and money don't
make a difference. And if you married a rich man,
just think what a lot of good you could do! Westy will
be very well off—and I'm sure he'd let you endow
hospitals and things. Think how interesting it would
be to build a ward in the very hospital where you'd
been a nurse! I read something like that in a novel
the other day—it was beautifully described. All the
nurses and doctors that the heroine had worked with
were there to receive her...and her little boy went
about and gave toys to the crippled children...."</p>
<p>If the speaker's concluding instance hardly produced
the effect she had intended, it was perhaps only because
Justine's attention had been arrested by the earlier part
of the argument. It was strange to have marriage
urged on her by a woman who had twice failed to find
happiness in it—strange, and yet how vivid a sign that,
even to a nature absorbed in its personal demands, not
happiness but completeness is the inmost craving! "A
life of your own"—that was what even Bessy, in her<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_233" id="Page_233"></SPAN></span>
obscure way, felt to be best worth suffering for. And
how was a spirit like Justine's, thrilling with youth and
sympathy, to conceive of an isolated existence as the
final answer to that craving? A life circumscribed by
one's own poor personal consciousness would not be
life at all—far better the "adventure of the diver" than
the shivering alone on the bank! Bessy, reading encouragement
in her silence, returned her hand-clasp
with an affectionate pressure.</p>
<p>"You <i>would</i> like that, Justine?" she said, secretly
proud of having hit on the convincing argument.</p>
<p>"To endow hospitals with your cousin's money? No;
I should want something much more exciting!"</p>
<p>Bessy's face kindled. "You mean travelling abroad—and
I suppose New York in winter?"</p>
<p>Justine broke into a laugh. "I was thinking of your
cousin himself when I spoke." And to Bessy's disappointed
cry—"Then it <i>is</i> Dr. Wyant, after all?" she
answered lightly, and without resenting the challenge:
"I don't know. Suppose we leave it to the oracle."</p>
<p>"The oracle?"</p>
<p>"Time. His question-and-answer department is generally
the most reliable in the long run." She started
up, gently drawing Bessy to her feet. "And just at
present he reminds me that it's nearly six, and that you
promised Cicely to go and see her before you dress for
dinner."<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_234" id="Page_234"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>Bessy rose obediently. "Does he remind you of
<i>your</i> promises too? You said you'd come down to
dinner tonight."</p>
<p>"Did I?" Justine hesitated. "Well, I'm coming,"
she said, smiling and kissing her friend.</p>
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