<h2><SPAN name="BOOK_III" id="BOOK_III"></SPAN>BOOK III</h2><h2><SPAN name="XIX" id="XIX"></SPAN>XIX</h2>
<p><span class="smcap">It</span> was late in October when Amherst returned to
Lynbrook.</p>
<p>He had begun to learn, in the interval, the lesson
most difficult to his direct and trenchant nature: that
compromise is the law of married life. On the afternoon
of his talk with his wife he had sought her out,
determined to make a final effort to clear up the situation
between them; but he learned that, immediately
after luncheon, she had gone off in the motor with Mrs.
Carbury and two men of the party, leaving word that
they would probably not be back till evening. It cost
Amherst a struggle, when he had humbled himself to
receive this information from the butler, not to pack
his portmanteau and take the first train for Hanaford;
but he was still under the influence of Justine Brent's
words, and also of his own feeling that, at this juncture,
a break between himself and Bessy would be final.</p>
<p>He stayed on accordingly, enduring as best he might
the mute observation of the household, and the gentle
irony of Mr. Langhope's attentions; and before he left
Lynbrook, two days later, a provisional understanding
had been reached.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_293" id="Page_293"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>His wife proved more firm than he had foreseen in
her resolve to regain control of her income, and the
talk between them ended in reciprocal concessions,
Bessy consenting to let the town house for the winter
and remain at Lynbrook, while Amherst agreed to restrict
his improvements at Westmore to such alterations
as had already been begun, and to reduce the
expenditure on these as much as possible. It was virtually
the defeat of his policy, and he had to suffer the
decent triumph of the Gaineses, as well as the bitterer
pang of his foiled aspirations. In spite of the opposition
of the directors, he had taken advantage of Truscomb's
resignation to put Duplain at the head of the
mills; but the new manager's outspoken disgust at the
company's change of plan made it clear that he would
not remain long at Westmore, and it was one of the
miseries of Amherst's situation that he could not give
the reasons for his defection, but must bear to figure in
Duplain's terse vocabulary as a "quitter." The difficulty
of finding a new manager expert enough to satisfy
the directors, yet in sympathy with his own social
theories, made Amherst fear that Duplain's withdrawal
would open the way for Truscomb's reinstatement, an
outcome on which he suspected Halford Gaines had
always counted; and this possibility loomed before him
as the final defeat of his hopes.</p>
<p>Meanwhile the issues ahead had at least the merit of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_294" id="Page_294"></SPAN></span>
keeping him busy. The task of modifying and retrenching
his plans contrasted drearily with the hopeful
activity of the past months, but he had an iron capacity
for hard work under adverse conditions, and the fact of
being too busy for thought helped him to wear through
the days. This pressure of work relieved him, at first,
from too close consideration of his relation to Bessy.
He had yielded up his dearest hopes at her wish, and
for the moment his renunciation had set a chasm between
them; but gradually he saw that, as he was
patching together the ruins of his Westmore plans, so
he must presently apply himself to the reconstruction
of his married life.</p>
<p>Before leaving Lynbrook he had had a last word with
Miss Brent; not a word of confidence—for the same
sense of reserve kept both from any explicit renewal of
their moment's intimacy—but one of those exchanges
of commonplace phrase that circumstances may be
left to charge with special meaning. Justine had
merely asked if he were really leaving and, on his assenting,
had exclaimed quickly: "But you will come
back soon?"</p>
<p>"I shall certainly come back," he answered; and
after a pause he added: "I shall find you here? You
will remain at Lynbrook?"</p>
<p>On her part also there was a shade of hesitation;
then she said with a smile: "Yes, I shall stay."<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_295" id="Page_295"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>His look brightened. "And you'll write me if anything—if
Bessy should not be well?"</p>
<p>"I will write you," she promised; and a few weeks
after his return to Hanaford he had, in fact, received
a short note from her. Its ostensible purpose was to
reassure him as to Bessy's health, which had certainly
grown stronger since Dr. Wyant had persuaded her,
at the close of the last house-party, to accord herself a
period of quiet; but (the writer added) now that Mr.
Langhope and Mrs. Ansell had also left, the quiet was
perhaps too complete, and Bessy's nerves were beginning
to suffer from the reaction.</p>
<p>Amherst had no difficulty in interpreting this brief
communication. "I have succeeded in dispersing the
people who are always keeping you and your wife
apart; now is your chance: come and take it." That
was what Miss Brent's letter meant; and his answer
was a telegram to Bessy, announcing his return to Long
Island.</p>
<p>The step was not an easy one; but decisive action,
however hard, was always easier to Amherst than the
ensuing interval of readjustment. To come to Lynbrook
had required a strong effort of will; but the
effort of remaining there called into play less disciplined
faculties.</p>
<p>Amherst had always been used to doing things; now
he had to resign himself to enduring a state of things.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_296" id="Page_296"></SPAN></span>
The material facilities of the life about him, the way in
which the machinery of the great empty house ran on
like some complex apparatus working in the void, increased
the exasperation of his nerves. Dr. Wyant's
suggestion—which Amherst suspected Justine of having
prompted—that Mrs. Amherst should cancel her autumn
engagements, and give herself up to a quiet outdoor
life with her husband, seemed to present the very
opportunity these two distracted spirits needed to find
and repossess each other. But, though Amherst was
grateful to Bessy for having dismissed her visitors—partly
to please him, as he guessed—yet he found the
routine of the establishment more oppressive than when
the house was full. If he could have been alone with
her in a quiet corner—the despised cottage at Westmore,
even!—he fancied they might still have been
brought together by restricted space and the familiar
exigencies of life. All the primitive necessities which
bind together, through their recurring daily wants, natures
fated to find no higher point of union, had been
carefully eliminated from the life at Lynbrook, where
material needs were not only provided for but anticipated
by a hidden mechanism that filled the house with
the perpetual sense of invisible attendance. Though
Amherst knew that he and Bessy could never meet in
the region of great issues, he thought he might have
regained the way to her heart, and found relief from<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_297" id="Page_297"></SPAN></span>
his own inaction, in the small ministrations of daily
life; but the next moment he smiled to picture Bessy
in surroundings where the clocks were not wound of
themselves and the doors did not fly open at her approach.
Those thick-crowding cares and drudgeries
which serve as merciful screens between so many discordant
natures would have been as intolerable to her
as was to Amherst the great glare of leisure in which
he and she were now confronted.</p>
<p>He saw that Bessy was in the state of propitiatory
eagerness which always followed on her gaining a point
in their long duel; and he could guess that she was
tremulously anxious not only to make up to him, by
all the arts she knew, for the sacrifice she had exacted,
but also to conceal from every one the fact that, as Mr.
Langhope bluntly put it, he had been "brought to
terms." Amherst was touched by her efforts, and
half-ashamed of his own inability to respond to them.
But his mind, released from its normal preoccupations,
had become a dangerous instrument of analysis and
disintegration, and conditions which, a few months
before, he might have accepted with the wholesome
tolerance of the busy man, now pressed on him unendurably.
He saw that he and his wife were really
face to face for the first time since their marriage.
Hitherto something had always intervened between
them—first the spell of her grace and beauty, and the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_298" id="Page_298"></SPAN></span>
brief joy of her participation in his work; then the
sorrow of their child's death, and after that the temporary
exhilaration of carrying out his ideas at Westmore—but
now that the last of these veils had been
torn away they faced each other as strangers.</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>The habit of keeping factory hours always drove Amherst
forth long before his wife's day began, and in the
course of one of his early tramps he met Miss Brent and
Cicely setting out for a distant swamp where rumour
had it that a rare native orchid might be found. Justine's
sylvan tastes had developed in the little girl a
passion for such pillaging expeditions, and Cicely, who
had discovered that her step-father knew almost as
much about birds and squirrels as Miss Brent did
about flowers, was not to be appeased till Amherst
had scrambled into the pony-cart, wedging his long
legs between a fern-box and a lunch-basket, and balancing
a Scotch terrier's telescopic body across his
knees.</p>
<p>The season was so mild that only one or two light
windless frosts had singed the foliage of oaks and
beeches, and gilded the roadsides with a smooth carpeting
of maple leaves. The morning haze rose like
smoke from burnt-out pyres of sumach and sugar-maple;
a silver bloom lay on the furrows of the ploughed
fields; and now and then, as they drove on, the wooded<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_299" id="Page_299"></SPAN></span>
road showed at its end a tarnished disk of light, where
sea and sky were merged.</p>
<p>At length they left the road for a winding track
through scrub-oaks and glossy thickets of mountain-laurel;
the track died out at the foot of a wooded knoll,
and clambering along its base they came upon the
swamp. There it lay in charmed solitude, shut in by
a tawny growth of larch and swamp-maple, its edges
burnt out to smouldering shades of russet, ember-red
and ashen-grey, while the quaking centre still preserved
a jewel-like green, where hidden lanes of moisture
wound between islets tufted with swamp-cranberry
and with the charred browns of fern and wild rose
and bay. Sodden earth and decaying branches gave
forth a strange sweet odour, as of the aromatic essences
embalming a dead summer; and the air charged
with this scent was so still that the snapping of witch-hazel
pods, the drop of a nut, the leap of a startled
frog, pricked the silence with separate points of
sound.</p>
<p>The pony made fast, the terrier released, and fern-box
and lunch-basket slung over Amherst's shoulder,
the three explorers set forth on their journey. Amherst,
as became his sex, went first; but after a few
absent-minded plunges into the sedgy depths between
the islets, he was ordered to relinquish his command
and fall to the rear, where he might perform the hum<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_300" id="Page_300"></SPAN></span>bler
service of occasionally lifting Cicely over unspannable
gulfs of moisture.</p>
<p>Justine, leading the way, guided them across the
treacherous surface as fearlessly as a king-fisher, lighting
instinctively on every grass-tussock and submerged
tree-stump of the uncertain path. Now and then she
paused, her feet drawn close on their narrow perch,
and her slender body swaying over as she reached down
for some rare growth detected among the withered reeds
and grasses; then she would right herself again by a
backward movement as natural as the upward spring
of a branch—so free and flexible in all her motions that
she seemed akin to the swaying reeds and curving
brambles which caught at her as she passed.</p>
<p>At length the explorers reached the mossy corner
where the orchids grew, and Cicely, securely balanced
on a fallen tree-trunk, was allowed to dig the coveted
roots. When they had been packed away, it was felt
that this culminating moment must be celebrated with
immediate libations of jam and milk; and having
climbed to a dry slope among the pepper-bushes, the
party fell on the contents of the lunch-basket. It was
just the hour when Bessy's maid was carrying her
breakfast-tray, with its delicate service of old silver
and porcelain, into the darkened bed-room at Lynbrook;
but early rising and hard scrambling had
whetted the appetites of the naturalists, and the nurs<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_301" id="Page_301"></SPAN></span>ery
fare which Cicely spread before them seemed a
sumptuous reward for their toil.</p>
<p>"I do like this kind of picnic much better than the
ones where mother takes all the footmen, and the
mayonnaise has to be scraped off things before I can
eat them," Cicely declared, lifting her foaming mouth
from a beaker of milk.</p>
<p>Amherst, lighting his pipe, stretched himself contentedly
among the pepper-bushes, steeped in that unreflecting
peace which is shed into some hearts by
communion with trees and sky. He too was glad to get
away from the footmen and the mayonnaise, and he
imagined that his stepdaughter's exclamation summed
up all the reasons for his happiness. The boyish
wood-craft which he had cultivated in order to encourage
the same taste in his factory lads came to life in
this sudden return to nature, and he redeemed his
clumsiness in crossing the swamp by spying a marsh-wren's
nest that had escaped Justine, and detecting in
a swiftly-flitting olive-brown bird a belated tanager in
autumn incognito.</p>
<p>Cicely sat rapt while he pictured the bird's winter
pilgrimage, with glimpses of the seas and islands that
fled beneath him till his long southern flight ended in
the dim glades of the equatorial forests.</p>
<p>"Oh, what a good life—how I should like to be a
wander-bird, and look down people's chimneys twice<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_302" id="Page_302"></SPAN></span>
a year!" Justine laughed, tilting her head back to
catch a last glimpse of the tanager.</p>
<p>The sun beamed full on their ledge from a sky of
misty blue, and she had thrown aside her hat, uncovering
her thick waves of hair, blue-black in the hollows,
with warm rusty edges where they took the light. Cicely
dragged down a plumy spray of traveller's joy and
wound it above her friend's forehead; and thus
wreathed, with her bright pallour relieved against the
dusky autumn tints, Justine looked like a wood-spirit
who had absorbed into herself the last golden juices
of the year.</p>
<p>She leaned back laughing against a tree-trunk, pelting
Cicely with witch-hazel pods, making the terrier
waltz for scraps of ginger-bread, and breaking off now
and then to imitate, with her clear full notes, the call
of some hidden marsh-bird, or the scolding chatter of
a squirrel in the scrub-oaks.</p>
<p>"Is that what you'd like most about the journey—looking
down the chimneys?" Amherst asked with a
smile.</p>
<p>"Oh, I don't know—I should love it all! Think of
the joy of skimming over half the earth—seeing it born
again out of darkness every morning! Sometimes,
when I've been up all night with a patient, and have
seen the world <i>come back to me</i> like that, I've been
almost mad with its beauty; and then the thought that<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_303" id="Page_303"></SPAN></span>
I've never seen more than a little corner of it makes me
feel as if I were chained. But I think if I had wings I
should choose to be a house-swallow; and then, after
I'd had my fill of wonders, I should come back to my
familiar corner, and my house full of busy humdrum
people, and fly low to warn them of rain, and wheel up
high to show them it was good haying weather, and
know what was going on in every room in the house,
and every house in the village; and all the while I
should be hugging my wonderful big secret—the secret
of snow-plains and burning deserts, and coral islands
and buried cities—and should put it all into my chatter
under the eaves, that the people in the house were
always too busy to stop and listen to—and when winter
came I'm sure I should hate to leave them, even to go
back to my great Brazilian forests full of orchids and
monkeys!"</p>
<p>"But, Justine, in winter you could take care of the
monkeys," the practical Cicely suggested.</p>
<p>"Yes—and that would remind me of home!" Justine
cried, swinging about to pinch the little girl's chin.</p>
<p>She was in one of the buoyant moods when the spirit
of life caught her in its grip, and shook and tossed her
on its mighty waves as a sea-bird is tossed through the
spray of flying rollers. At such moments all the light
and music of the world seemed distilled into her veins,
and forced up in bubbles of laughter to her lips and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_304" id="Page_304"></SPAN></span>
eyes. Amherst had never seen her thus, and he watched
her with the sense of relaxation which the contact of
limpid gaiety brings to a mind obscured by failure and
self-distrust. The world was not so dark a place after
all, if such springs of merriment could well up in a
heart as sensitive as hers to the burden and toil of
existence.</p>
<p>"Isn't it strange," she went on with a sudden drop
to gravity, "that the bird whose wings carry him
farthest and show him the most wonderful things, is
the one who always comes back to the eaves, and is
happiest in the thick of everyday life?"</p>
<p>Her eyes met Amherst's. "It seems to me," he
said, "that you're like that yourself—loving long
flights, yet happiest in the thick of life."</p>
<p>She raised her dark brows laughingly. "So I imagine—but
then you see I've never had the long
flight!"</p>
<p>Amherst smiled. "Ah, there it is—one never knows—one
never says, <i>This is the moment</i>! because, however
good it is, it always seems the door to a better one
beyond. Faust never said it till the end, when he'd
nothing left of all he began by thinking worth while;
and then, with what a difference it was said!"</p>
<p>She pondered. "Yes—but it <i>was</i> the best, after all—the
moment in which he had nothing left...."</p>
<p>"Oh," Cicely broke in suddenly, "do look at the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_305" id="Page_305"></SPAN></span>
squirrel up there! See, father—he's off! Let's follow
him!"</p>
<p>As she crouched there, with head thrown back, and
sparkling lips and eyes, her fair hair—of her mother's
very hue—making a shining haze about her face, Amherst
recalled the winter evening at Hopewood, when
he and Bessy had tracked the grey squirrel under the
snowy beeches. Scarcely three years ago—and how
bitter memory had turned! A chilly cloud spread
over his spirit, reducing everything once more to the
leaden hue of reality....</p>
<p>"It's too late for any more adventures—we must be
going," he said.</p>
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