<h2><SPAN name="XXIII" id="XXIII"></SPAN>XXIII</h2>
<p><span class="smcap">Justine</span> was coming back to Lynbrook.
She had been, after all, unable to stay out the ten
days of her visit: the undefinable sense of being needed,
so often the determining motive of her actions, drew her
back to Long Island at the end of the week. She had
received no word from Amherst or Bessy; only Cicely
had told her, in a big round hand, that mother had been
away three days, and that it had been very lonely, and
that the housekeeper's cat had kittens, and she was to
have one; and were kittens christened, or how did
they get their names?—because she wanted to call hers
Justine; and she had found in her book a bird like the
one father had shown them in the swamp; and they
were not alone now, because the Telfers were there,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_344" id="Page_344"></SPAN></span>
and they had all been out sleighing; but it would be
much nicer when Justine came back....</p>
<p>It was as difficult to extract any sequence of facts
from Cicely's letter as from an early chronicle. She
made no reference to Amherst's return, which was odd,
since she was fond of her step-father, yet not significant,
since the fact of his arrival might have been
crowded out by the birth of the kittens, or some incident
equally prominent in her perspectiveless grouping
of events; nor did she name the date of her mother's
departure, so that Justine could not guess whether it
had been contingent on Amherst's return, or wholly
unconnected with it. What puzzled her most was
Bessy's own silence—yet that too, in a sense, was
reassuring, for Bessy thought of others chiefly when it
was painful to think of herself, and her not writing
implied that she had felt no present need of her
friend's sympathy.</p>
<p>Justine did not expect to find Amherst at Lynbrook.
She had felt convinced, when they parted, that he
would persist in his plan of going south; and the fact
that the Telfer girls were again in possession made it
seem probable that he had already left. Under the circumstances,
Justine thought the separation advisable;
but she was eager to be assured that it had been effected
amicably, and without open affront to Bessy's pride.</p>
<p>She arrived on a Saturday afternoon, and when she<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_345" id="Page_345"></SPAN></span>
entered the house the sound of voices from the drawing-room,
and the prevailing sense of bustle and movement
amid which her own coming was evidently an
unconsidered detail, showed that the normal life of
Lynbrook had resumed its course. The Telfers, as
usual, had brought a lively throng in their train; and
amid the bursts of merriment about the drawing-room
tea-table she caught Westy Gaines's impressive accents,
and the screaming laughter of Blanche Carbury....</p>
<p>So Blanche Carbury was back at Lynbrook! The
discovery gave Justine fresh cause for conjecture.
Whatever reciprocal concessions might have resulted
from Amherst's return to his wife, it seemed hardly
probable that they included a renewal of relations with
Mrs. Carbury. Had his mission failed then—had he
and Bessy parted in anger, and was Mrs. Carbury's
presence at Lynbrook Bessy's retort to his assertion of
independence?</p>
<p>In the school-room, where Justine was received with
the eager outpouring of Cicely's minutest experiences,
she dared not put the question that would have solved
these doubts; and she left to dress for dinner without
knowing whether Amherst had returned to Lynbrook.
Yet in her heart she never questioned that he had done
so; all her fears revolved about what had since taken
place.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_346" id="Page_346"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>She saw Bessy first in the drawing-room, surrounded
by her guests; and their brief embrace told her nothing,
except that she had never beheld her friend more
brilliant, more triumphantly in possession of recovered
spirits and health.</p>
<p>That Amherst was absent was now made evident by
Bessy's requesting Westy Gaines to lead the way to
the dining-room with Mrs. Ansell, who was one of the
reassembled visitors; and the only one, as Justine
presently observed, not in key with the prevailing
gaiety. Mrs. Ansell, usually so tinged with the colours
of her environment, preserved on this occasion a grey
neutrality of tone which was the only break in the
general brightness. It was not in her graceful person
to express anything as gross as disapproval, yet that
sentiment was manifest, to the nice observer, in a delicate
aloofness which made the waves of laughter fall
back from her, and spread a circle of cloudy calm
about her end of the table. Justine had never been
greatly drawn to Mrs. Ansell. Her own adaptability
was not in the least akin to the older woman's studied
self-effacement; and the independence of judgment
which Justine preserved in spite of her perception of
divergent standpoints made her a little contemptuous
of an excess of charity that seemed to have been acquired
at the cost of all individual convictions. To-night
for the first time she felt in Mrs. Ansell a secret<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_347" id="Page_347"></SPAN></span>
sympathy with her own fears; and a sense of this tacit
understanding made her examine with sudden interest
the face of her unexpected ally.... After all, what
did she know of Mrs. Ansell's history—of the hidden
processes which had gradually subdued her own passions
and desires, making of her, as it were, a mere
decorative background, a connecting link between
other personalities? Perhaps, for a woman alone in
the world, without the power and opportunity that
money gives, there was no alternative between letting
one's individuality harden into a small dry nucleus of
egoism, or diffuse itself thus in the interstices of other
lives—and there fell upon Justine the chill thought that
just such a future might await her if she missed the
liberating gift of personal happiness....</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>Neither that night nor the next day had she a private
word with Bessy—and it became evident, as the hours
passed, that Mrs. Amherst was deliberately postponing
the moment when they should find themselves alone.
But the Lynbrook party was to disperse on the Monday;
and Bessy, who hated early rising, and all the details
of housekeeping, tapped at Justine's door late on Sunday
night to ask her to speed the departing visitors.</p>
<p>She pleaded this necessity as an excuse for her intrusion,
and the playful haste of her manner showed a
nervous shrinking from any renewal of confidence; but<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_348" id="Page_348"></SPAN></span>
as she leaned in the doorway, fingering the diamond
chain about her neck, while one satin-tipped foot
emerged restlessly from the edge of her lace gown, her
face lost the bloom of animation which talk and
laughter always produced in it, and she looked so pale
and weary that Justine needed no better pretext for
drawing her into the room.</p>
<p>It was not in Bessy to resist a soothing touch in her
moments of nervous reaction. She sank into the chair
by the fire and let her head rest wearily against the
cushion which Justine slipped behind it.</p>
<p>Justine dropped into the low seat beside her, and
laid a hand on hers. "You don't look as well as when
I went away, Bessy. Are you sure you've done wisely
in beginning your house-parties so soon?"</p>
<p>It always alarmed Bessy to be told that she was not
looking her best, and she sat upright, a wave of pink
rising under her sensitive skin.</p>
<p>"I am quite well, on the contrary; but I was dying
of inanition in this big empty house, and I suppose I
haven't got the boredom out of my system yet!"</p>
<p>Justine recognized the echo of Mrs. Carbury's manner.</p>
<p>"Even if you <i>were</i> bored," she rejoined, "the inanition
was probably good for you. What does Dr.
Wyant say to your breaking away from his régime?"
She named Wyant purposely, knowing that Bessy had<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_349" id="Page_349"></SPAN></span>
that respect for the medical verdict which is the last
trace of reverence for authority in the mind of the
modern woman. But Mrs. Amherst laughed with
gentle malice.</p>
<p>"Oh, I haven't seen Dr. Wyant lately. His interest
in me died out the day you left."</p>
<p>Justine forced a laugh to hide her annoyance. She
had not yet recovered from the shrinking disgust of her
last scene with Wyant.</p>
<p>"Don't be a goose, Bessy. If he hasn't come, it must
be because you've told him not to—because you're
afraid of letting him see that you're disobeying him."</p>
<p>Bessy laughed again. "My dear, I'm afraid of nothing—nothing!
Not even of your big eyes when they
glare at me like coals. I suppose you must have looked
at poor Wyant like that to frighten him away! And
yet the last time we talked of him you seemed to like
him—you even hinted that it was because of him that
Westy had no chance."</p>
<p>Justine uttered an impatient exclamation. "If
neither of them existed it wouldn't affect the other's
chances in the least. Their only merit is that they
both enhance the charms of celibacy!"</p>
<p>Bessy's smile dropped, and she turned a grave glance
on her friend. "Ah, most men do that—you're so
clever to have found it out!"</p>
<p>It was Justine's turn to smile. "Oh, but I haven't<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_350" id="Page_350"></SPAN></span>—as
a generalization. I mean to marry as soon as I get
the chance!"</p>
<p>"The chance——?"</p>
<p>"To meet the right man. I'm gambler enough to
believe in my luck yet!"</p>
<p>Mrs. Amherst sighed compassionately. "There <i>is</i>
no right man! As Blanche says, matrimony's as uncomfortable
as a ready-made shoe. How can one and
the same institution fit every individual case? And
why should we all have to go lame because marriage
was once invented to suit an imaginary case?"</p>
<p>Justine gave a slight shrug. "You talk of walking
lame—how else do we all walk? It seems to me that
life's the tight boot, and marriage the crutch that may
help one to hobble along!" She drew Bessy's hand
into hers with a caressing pressure. "When you philosophize
I always know you're tired. No one who
feels well stops to generalize about symptoms. If you
won't let your doctor prescribe for you, your nurse is
going to carry out his orders. What you want is quiet.
Be reasonable and send away everybody before Mr.
Amherst comes back!"</p>
<p>She dropped the last phrase carelessly, glancing away
as she spoke; but the stiffening of the fingers in her
clasp sent a little tremor through her hand.</p>
<p>"Thanks for your advice. It would be excellent but
for one thing—my husband is not coming back!"<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_351" id="Page_351"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>The mockery in Bessy's voice seemed to pass into
her features, hardening and contracting them as frost
shrivels a flower. Justine's face, on the contrary, was
suddenly illuminated by compassion, as though a light
had struck up into it from the cold glitter of her friend's
unhappiness.</p>
<p>"Bessy! What do you mean by not coming back?"</p>
<p>"I mean he's had the tact to see that we shall be
more comfortable apart—without putting me to the
unpleasant necessity of telling him so."</p>
<p>Again the piteous echo of Blanche Carbury's phrases!
The laboured mimicry of her ideas!</p>
<p>Justine looked anxiously at her friend. It seemed
horribly false not to mention her own talk with Amherst,
yet she felt it wiser to feign ignorance, since
Bessy could never be trusted to interpret rightly any
departure from the conventional.</p>
<p>"Please tell me what has happened," she said at length.</p>
<p>Bessy, with a smile, released her hand. "John has
gone back to the life he prefers—which I take to be
a hint to me to do the same."</p>
<p>Justine hesitated again; then the pressure of truth
overcame every barrier of expediency. "Bessy—I
ought to tell you that I saw Mr. Amherst in town the
day I went to Philadelphia. He spoke of going away
for a time...he seemed unhappy...but he told me
he was coming back to see you first—" She broke<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_352" id="Page_352"></SPAN></span>
off, her clear eyes on her friend's; and she saw at
once that Bessy was too self-engrossed to feel any surprise
at her avowal. "Surely he came back?" she
went on.</p>
<p>"Oh, yes—he came back!" Bessy sank into the
cushions, watching the firelight play on her diamond
chain as she repeated the restless gesture of lifting it
up and letting it slip through her fingers.</p>
<p>"Well—and then?"</p>
<p>"Then—nothing! I was not here when he came."</p>
<p>"You were not here? What had happened?"</p>
<p>"I had gone over to Blanche Carbury's for a day
or two. I was just leaving when I heard he was coming
back, and I couldn't throw her over at the last moment."</p>
<p>Justine tried to catch the glance that fluttered evasively
under Bessy's lashes. "You knew he was coming—and
you chose that time to go to Mrs. Carbury's?"</p>
<p>"I didn't choose, my dear—it just happened! And
it really happened for the best. I suppose he was
annoyed at my going—you know he has a ridiculous
prejudice against Blanche—and so the next morning
he rushed off to his cotton mill."</p>
<p>There was a pause, while the diamonds continued to
flow in threads of fire through Mrs. Amherst's fingers.</p>
<p>At length Justine said: "Did Mr. Amherst know
that you knew he was coming back before you left for
Mrs. Carbury's?"<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_353" id="Page_353"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>Bessy feigned to meditate the question. "Did he
know that I knew that he knew?" she mocked. "Yes—I
suppose so—he must have known." She stifled
a slight yawn as she drew herself languidly to her feet.</p>
<p>"Then he took that as your answer?"</p>
<p>"My answer——?"</p>
<p>"To his coming back——"</p>
<p>"So it appears. I told you he had shown unusual
tact." Bessy stretched her softly tapering arms above
her head and then dropped them along her sides with
another yawn. "But it's almost morning—it's wicked
of me to have kept you so late, when you must be up
to look after all those people!"</p>
<p>She flung her arms with a light gesture about Justine's
shoulders, and laid a dry kiss on her cheek.</p>
<p>"Don't look at me with those big eyes—they've
eaten up the whole of your face! And you needn't
think I'm sorry for what I've done," she declared.
"I'm <i>not</i>—the—least—little—atom—of a bit!"</p>
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