<h2><SPAN name="XX" id="XX"></SPAN>XX</h2>
<p><span class="smcap">Amherst's</span> morning excursions with his step-daughter
and Miss Brent renewed themselves
more than once. He welcomed any pretext for escaping
from the unprofitable round of his thoughts, and
these woodland explorations, with their gay rivalry of
search for some rare plant or elusive bird, and the
contact with the child's happy wonder, and with the
morning brightness of Justine's mood, gave him his
only moments of self-forgetfulness.</p>
<p>But the first time that Cicely's chatter carried home
an echo of their adventures, Amherst saw a cloud on
his wife's face. Her resentment of Justine's influence<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_306" id="Page_306"></SPAN></span>
over the child had long since subsided, and in the
temporary absence of the governess she was glad to
have Cicely amused; but she was never quite satisfied
that those about her should have pursuits and diversions
in which she did not share. Her jealousy did
not concentrate itself on her husband and Miss Brent:
Amherst had never shown any inclination for the
society of other women, and if the possibility had
been suggested to her, she would probably have said
that Justine was not "in his style"—so unconscious is
a pretty woman apt to be of the versatility of masculine
tastes. But Amherst saw that she felt herself excluded
from amusements in which she had no desire to join,
and of which she consequently failed to see the
purpose; and he gave up accompanying his stepdaughter.</p>
<p>Bessy, as if in acknowledgment of his renunciation,
rose earlier in order to prolong their rides together.
Dr. Wyant had counselled her against the fatigue of
following the hounds, and she instinctively turned their
horses away from the course the hunt was likely to
take; but now and then the cry of the pack, or the
flash of red on a distant slope, sent the blood to her
face and made her press her mare to a gallop. When
they escaped such encounters she showed no great zest
in the exercise, and their rides resolved themselves into
a spiritless middle-aged jog along the autumn lanes.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_307" id="Page_307"></SPAN></span>
In the early days of their marriage the joy of a canter
side by side had merged them in a community of sensation
beyond need of speech; but now that the physical
spell had passed they felt the burden of a silence that
neither knew how to break.</p>
<p>Once only, a moment's friction galvanized these lifeless
rides. It was one morning when Bessy's wild mare
Impulse, under-exercised and over-fed, suddenly broke
from her control, and would have unseated her but for
Amherst's grasp on the bridle.</p>
<p>"The horse is not fit for you to ride," he exclaimed,
as the hot creature, with shudders of defiance rippling
her flanks, lapsed into sullen subjection.</p>
<p>"It's only because I don't ride her enough," Bessy
panted. "That new groom is ruining her mouth."</p>
<p>"You must not ride her alone, then."</p>
<p>"I shall not let that man ride her."</p>
<p>"I say you must not ride her alone."</p>
<p>"It's ridiculous to have a groom at one's heels!"</p>
<p>"Nevertheless you must, if you ride Impulse."</p>
<p>Their eyes met, and she quivered and yielded like the
horse. "Oh, if you say so—" She always hugged his
brief flashes of authority.</p>
<p>"I do say so. You promise me?"</p>
<p>"If you like——"</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>Amherst had made an attempt to occupy himself with<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_308" id="Page_308"></SPAN></span>
the condition of Lynbrook, one of those slovenly villages,
without individual character or the tradition of
self-respect, which spring up in America on the skirts
of the rich summer colonies. But Bessy had never
given Lynbrook a thought, and he realized the futility
of hoping to interest her in its mongrel population of
day-labourers and publicans so soon after his glaring
failure at Westmore. The sight of the village irritated
him whenever he passed through the Lynbrook gates,
but having perforce accepted the situation of prince
consort, without voice in the government, he tried to
put himself out of relation with all the questions which
had hitherto engrossed him, and to see life simply as a
spectator. He could even conceive that, under certain
conditions, there might be compensations in the passive
attitude; but unfortunately these conditions were not
such as the life at Lynbrook presented.</p>
<p>The temporary cessation of Bessy's week-end parties
had naturally not closed her doors to occasional visitors,
and glimpses of the autumnal animation of Long Island
passed now and then across the Amhersts' horizon.
Blanche Carbury had installed herself at Mapleside, a
fashionable colony half-way between Lynbrook and
Clifton, and even Amherst, unused as he was to noting
the seemingly inconsecutive movements of idle people,
could not but remark that her visits to his wife almost
invariably coincided with Ned Bowfort's cantering over<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_309" id="Page_309"></SPAN></span>
unannounced from the Hunt Club, where he had taken
up his autumn quarters.</p>
<p>There was something very likeable about Bowfort, to
whom Amherst was attracted by the fact that he was
one of the few men of Bessy's circle who knew what
was going on in the outer world. Throughout an existence
which one divined to have been both dependent
and desultory, he had preserved a sense of wider relations
and acquired a smattering of information to which
he applied his only independent faculty, that of clear
thought. He could talk intelligently and not too inaccurately
of the larger questions which Lynbrook
ignored, and a gay indifference to the importance of
money seemed the crowning grace of his nature, till
Amherst suddenly learned that this attitude of detachment
was generally ascribed to the liberality of Mrs.
Fenton Carbury. "Everybody knows she married Fenton
to provide for Ned," some one let fall in the course
of one of the smoking-room dissertations on which the
host of Lynbrook had such difficulty in fixing his attention;
and the speaker's matter-of-course tone, and the
careless acquiescence of his hearers, were more offensive
to Amherst than the fact itself. In the first flush
of his disgust he classed the story as one of the lies bred
in the malarious air of after-dinner gossip; but gradually
he saw that, whether true or not, it had sufficient
circulation to cast a shade of ambiguity on the persons<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_310" id="Page_310"></SPAN></span>
concerned. Bessy alone seemed deaf to the rumours
about her friend. There was something captivating
to her in Mrs. Carbury's slang and noise, in her defiance
of decorum and contempt of criticism. "I like
Blanche because she doesn't pretend," was Bessy's
vague justification of the lady; but in reality she was
under the mysterious spell which such natures cast
over the less venturesome imaginations of their own
sex.</p>
<p>Amherst at first tried to deaden himself to the situation,
as part of the larger coil of miseries in which he
found himself; but all his traditions were against such
tolerance, and they were roused to revolt by the receipt
of a newspaper clipping, sent by an anonymous hand,
enlarging on the fact that the clandestine meetings of a
fashionable couple were being facilitated by the connivance
of a Long Island <i>châtelaine</i>. Amherst, hot
from the perusal of this paragraph, sprang into the
first train, and laid the clipping before his father-in-law,
who chanced to be passing through town on his
way from the Hudson to the Hot Springs.</p>
<p>Mr. Langhope, ensconced in the cushioned privacy
of the reading-room at the Amsterdam Club, where he
had invited his son-in-law to meet him, perused the
article with the cool eye of the collector to whom a new
curiosity is offered.</p>
<p>"I suppose," he mused, "that in the time of the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_311" id="Page_311"></SPAN></span>
Pharaohs the Morning Papyrus used to serve up this
kind of thing"—and then, as the nervous tension of his
hearer expressed itself in an abrupt movement, he added,
handing back the clipping with a smile: "What do you propose
to do? Kill the editor, and forbid Blanche
and Bowfort the house?"</p>
<p>"I mean to do something," Amherst began, suddenly
chilled by the realization that his wrath had not yet
shaped itself into a definite plan of action.</p>
<p>"Well, it must be that or nothing," said Mr. Langhope,
drawing his stick meditatively across his knee.
"And, of course, if it's <i>that</i>, you'll land Bessy in a devil
of a mess."</p>
<p>Without giving his son-in-law time to protest, he
touched rapidly but vividly on the inutility and embarrassment
of libel suits, and on the devices whereby the
legal means of vindication from such attacks may be
turned against those who have recourse to them; and
Amherst listened with a sickened sense of the incompatibility
between abstract standards of honour and
their practical application.</p>
<p>"What should you do, then?" he murmured, as Mr.
Langhope ended with his light shrug and a "See Tredegar,
if you don't believe me"—; and his father-in-law
replied with an evasive gesture: "Why, leave the responsibility
where it belongs!"</p>
<p>"Where it belongs?"<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_312" id="Page_312"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"To Fenton Carbury, of course. Luckily it's nobody's
business but his, and if he doesn't mind what is
said about his wife I don't see how you can take up
the cudgels for her without casting another shade on
her somewhat chequered reputation."</p>
<p>Amherst stared. "His wife? What do I care what's
said of her? I'm thinking of mine!"</p>
<p>"Well, if Carbury has no objection to his wife's meeting
Bowfort, I don't see how you can object to her
meeting him at your house. In such matters, as you
know, it has mercifully been decided that the husband's
attitude shall determine other people's; otherwise we
should be deprived of the legitimate pleasure of slandering
our neighbours." Mr. Langhope was always careful
to temper his explanations with an "as you know":
he would have thought it ill-bred to omit this parenthesis
in elucidating the social code to his son-in-law.</p>
<p>"Then you mean that I can do nothing?" Amherst
exclaimed.</p>
<p>Mr. Langhope smiled. "What applies to Carbury
applies to you—by doing nothing you establish the fact
that there's nothing to do; just as you create the difficulty
by recognizing it." And he added, as Amherst
sat silent: "Take Bessy away, and they'll have to see
each other elsewhere."</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>Amherst returned to Lynbrook with the echoes of this<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_313" id="Page_313"></SPAN></span>
casuistry in his brain. It seemed to him but a part of
the ingenious system of evasion whereby a society bent
on the undisturbed pursuit of amusement had contrived
to protect itself from the intrusion of the disagreeable:
a policy summed up in Mr. Langhope's concluding
advice that Amherst should take his wife away.
Yes—that was wealth's contemptuous answer to every
challenge of responsibility: duty, sorrow and disgrace
were equally to be evaded by a change of residence, and
nothing in life need be faced and fought out while one
could pay for a passage to Europe!</p>
<p>In a calmer mood Amherst's sense of humour would
have preserved him from such a view of his father-in-law's
advice; but just then it fell like a spark on his
smouldering prejudices. He was clear-sighted enough
to recognize the obstacles to legal retaliation; but this
only made him the more resolved to assert his will in
his own house. He no longer paused to consider the
possible effect of such a course on his already strained
relations with his wife: the man's will rose in him and
spoke.</p>
<p>The scene between Bessy and himself was short and
sharp; and it ended in a way that left him more than
ever perplexed at the ways of her sex. Impatient of
preamble, he had opened the attack with his ultimatum:
the suspected couple were to be denied the house.
Bessy flamed into immediate defence of her friend;<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_314" id="Page_314"></SPAN></span>
but to Amherst's surprise she no longer sounded the
note of her own rights. Husband and wife were animated
by emotions deeper-seated and more instinctive
than had ever before confronted them; yet while Amherst's
resistance was gathering strength from the conflict,
Bessy unexpectedly collapsed in tears and submission.
She would do as he wished, of course—give up
seeing Blanche, dismiss Bowfort, wash her hands, in
short, of the imprudent pair—in such matters a woman
needed a man's guidance, a wife must of necessity see
with her husband's eyes; and she looked up into his
through a mist of penitence and admiration....</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />