<h2><SPAN name="XXXIX" id="XXXIX"></SPAN>XXXIX</h2>
<p><span class="smcap">When</span> Amherst, returning late that afternoon
from Westmore, learned of his wife's departure,
and read the note she had left, he found it, for a time,
impossible to bring order out of the confusion of feeling
produced in him.</p>
<p>His mind had been disturbed enough before. All
day, through the routine of work at the mills, he had
laboured inwardly with the difficulties confronting him;
and his unrest had been increased by the fact that his
situation bore an ironic likeness to that in which, from
a far different cause, he had found himself at the other
crisis of his life. Once more he was threatened with
the possibility of having to give up Westmore, at a moment
when concentration of purpose and persistency
of will were at last beginning to declare themselves in
tangible results. Before, he had only given up
dreams; now it was their fruition that he was asked
to surrender. And he was fixed in his resolve to
withdraw absolutely from Westmore if the statement
he had to make to Mr. Langhope was received with the
least hint of an offensive mental reservation. All forms<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_559" id="Page_559"></SPAN></span>
of moral compromise had always been difficult to Amherst,
and like many men absorbed in large and complicated
questions he craved above all clearness and
peace in his household relation. The first months of
his second marriage had brought him, as a part of
richer and deeper joys, this enveloping sense of a clear
moral medium, in which no subterfuge or equivocation
could draw breath. He had felt that henceforth he
could pour into his work all the combative energy, the
powers of endurance, resistance, renovation, which had
once been unprofitably dissipated in the vain attempt
to bring some sort of harmony into life with Bessy.
Between himself and Justine, apart from their love for
each other, there was the wider passion for their kind,
which gave back to them an enlarged and deepened reflection
of their personal feeling. In such an air it had
seemed that no petty egotism could hamper their growth,
no misintelligence obscure their love; yet all the while
this pure happiness had been unfolding against a sordid
background of falsehood and intrigue from which
his soul turned with loathing.</p>
<p>Justine was right in assuming that Amherst had never
thought much about women. He had vaguely regarded
them as meant to people that hazy domain of feeling designed
to offer the busy man an escape from thought.
His second marriage, leading him to the blissful discovery
that woman can think as well as feel, that there<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_560" id="Page_560"></SPAN></span>
are beings of the ornamental sex in whom brain and
heart have so enlarged each other that their emotions
are as clear as thought, their thoughts as warm as emotions—this
discovery had had the effect of making him
discard his former summary conception of woman as
a bundle of inconsequent impulses, and admit her at a
stroke to full mental equality with her lord. The result
of this act of manumission was, that in judging
Justine he could no longer allow for what was purely
feminine in her conduct. It was incomprehensible to
him that she, to whom truth had seemed the essential
element of life, should have been able to draw breath,
and find happiness, in an atmosphere of falsehood and
dissimulation. His mind could assent—at least in the
abstract—to the reasonableness of her act; but he was
still unable to understand her having concealed it from
him. He could enter far enough into her feelings to
allow for her having kept silence on his first return to
Lynbrook, when she was still under the strain of a prolonged
and terrible trial; but that she should have continued
to do so when he and she had discovered and
confessed their love for each other, threw an intolerable
doubt on her whole course.</p>
<p>He stayed late at the mills, finding one pretext after
another for delaying his return to Hanaford, and trying,
while he gave one part of his mind to the methodical
performance of his task, to adjust the other to some<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_561" id="Page_561"></SPAN></span>
definite view of the future. But all was darkened and
confused by the sense that, between himself and Justine,
complete communion of thought was no longer possible.
It had, in fact, never existed; there had always been a
locked chamber in her mind, and he knew not yet what
other secrets might inhabit it.</p>
<p>The shock of finding her gone when he reached home
gave a new turn to his feelings. She had made no
mystery of her destination, leaving word with the servants
that she had gone to town to see Mr. Langhope;
and Amherst found a note from her on his study
table.</p>
<p>"I feel," she wrote, "that I ought to see Mr. Langhope
myself, and be the first to tell him what must be
told. It was like you, dearest, to wish to spare me
this, but it would have made me more unhappy; and
Mr. Langhope might wish to hear the facts in my own
words. I shall come back tomorrow, and after that it
will be for you to decide what must be done."</p>
<p>The brevity and simplicity of the note were characteristic;
in moments of high tension Justine was always
calm and direct. And it was like her, too, not to
make any covert appeal to his sympathy, not to seek to
entrap his judgment by caressing words and plaintive
allusions. The quiet tone in which she stated her purpose
matched the firmness and courage of the act, and
for a moment Amherst was shaken by a revulsion<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_562" id="Page_562"></SPAN></span>
of feeling. Her heart was level with his, after all—if
she had done wrong she would bear the brunt of it
alone. It was so exactly what he himself would have
felt and done in such a situation that faith in her flowed
back through all the dried channels of his heart. But
an instant later the current set the other way. The
wretched years of his first marriage had left in him a
residue of distrust, a tendency to dissociate every act
from its ostensible motive. He had been too profoundly
the dupe of his own enthusiasm not to retain
this streak of scepticism, and it now moved him
to ask if Justine's sudden departure had not been
prompted by some other cause than the one she avowed.
Had that alone actuated her, why not have told it to
him, and asked his consent to her plan? Why let him
leave the house without a hint of her purpose, and slip
off by the first train as soon as he was safe at Westmore?
Might it not be that she had special reasons for wishing
Mr. Langhope to <i>hear her own version first</i>—that there
were questions she wished to parry herself, explanations
she could trust no one to make for her? The
thought plunged Amherst into deeper misery. He
knew not how to defend himself against these disintegrating
suspicions—he felt only that, once the accord
between two minds is broken, it is less easy to restore
than the passion between two hearts. He dragged
heavily through his solitary evening, and awaited with<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_563" id="Page_563"></SPAN></span>
dread and yet impatience a message announcing his
wife's return.</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>It would have been easier—far easier—when she left
Mr. Langhope's door, to go straight out into the darkness
and let it close in on her for good.</p>
<p>Justine felt herself yielding to the spell of that
suggestion as she walked along the lamplit pavement,
hardly conscious of the turn her steps were taking.
The door of the house which a few weeks before had
been virtually hers had closed on her without a question.
She had been suffered to go out into the darkness
without being asked whither she was going, or
under what roof her night would be spent. The contrast
between her past and present sounded through
the tumult of her thoughts like the evil laughter of
temptation. The house at Hanaford, to which she
was returning, would look at her with the same alien
face—nowhere on earth, at that moment, was a door
which would open to her like the door of home.</p>
<p>In her painful self-absorption she followed the side
street toward Madison Avenue, and struck southward
down that tranquil thoroughfare. There was a physical
relief in rapid motion, and she walked on, still hardly
aware of her direction, toward the clustered lights of
Madison Square. Should she return to Hanaford, she
had still several hours to dispose of before the de<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_564" id="Page_564"></SPAN></span>parture
of the midnight train; and if she did not return,
hours and dates no longer existed for her.</p>
<p>It would be easier—infinitely easier—not to go back.
To take up her life with Amherst would, under any
circumstances, be painful enough; to take it up under
the tacit restriction of her pledge to Mr. Langhope
seemed more than human courage could face. As she
approached the square she had almost reached the
conclusion that such a temporary renewal was beyond
her strength—beyond what any standard of duty exacted.
The question of an alternative hardly troubled
her. She would simply go on living, and find an escape
in work and material hardship. It would not be hard
for so inconspicuous a person to slip back into the obscure
mass of humanity.</p>
<p>She paused a moment on the edge of the square,
vaguely seeking a direction for her feet that might permit
the working of her thoughts to go on uninterrupted;
and as she stood there, her eyes fell on the bench near
the corner of Twenty-sixth Street, where she had sat
with Amherst on the day of his flight from Lynbrook.
He too had dreamed of escaping from insoluble problems
into the clear air of hard work and simple duties;
and she remembered the words with which she had turned
him back. The cases, of course, were not identical,
since he had been flying in anger and wounded pride
from a situation for which he was in no wise to blame;<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_565" id="Page_565"></SPAN></span>
yet, if even at such a moment she had insisted on charity
and forbearance, how could she now show less self-denial
than she had exacted of him?</p>
<p>"If you go away for a time, surely it ought to be in
such a way that your going does not seem to cast any
reflection on Bessy...." That was how she had put it
to him, and how, with the mere change of a name, she
must now, for reasons as cogent, put it to herself.
It was just as much a part of the course she had
planned to return to her husband now, and take up
their daily life together, as it would, later on, be her
duty to drop out of that life, when her doing so could
no longer involve him in the penalty to be paid.</p>
<p>She stood a little while looking at the bench on which
they had sat, and giving thanks in her heart for the past
strength which was now helping to build up her failing
courage: such a patchwork business are our best
endeavours, yet so faithfully does each weak upward
impulse reach back a hand to the next.</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>Justine's explanation of her visit to Mr. Langhope
was not wholly satisfying to her husband. She did not
conceal from him that the scene had been painful, but
she gave him to understand, as briefly as possible, that
Mr. Langhope, after his first movement of uncontrollable
distress, had seemed able to make allowances for
the pressure under which she had acted, and that he<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_566" id="Page_566"></SPAN></span>
had, at any rate, given no sign of intending to let her
confession make any change in the relation between the
households. If she did not—as Amherst afterward recalled—put
all this specifically into words, she contrived
to convey it in her manner, in her allusions, above
all in her recovered composure. She had the demeanour
of one who has gone through a severe test of strength,
but come out of it in complete control of the situation.
There was something slightly unnatural in this prompt
solution of so complicated a difficulty, and it had the
effect of making Amherst ask himself what, to produce
such a result, must have been the gist of her communication
to Mr. Langhope. If the latter had shown
any disposition to be cruel, or even unjust, Amherst's
sympathies would have rushed instantly to his wife's
defence; but the fact that there was apparently to be
no call on them left his reason free to compare and
discriminate, with the final result that the more he
pondered on his father-in-law's attitude the less intelligible
it became.</p>
<p>A few days after Justine's return he was called to
New York on business; and before leaving he told her
that he should of course take the opportunity of having
a talk with Mr. Langhope.</p>
<p>She received the statement with the gentle composure
from which she had not departed since her return from
town; and he added tentatively, as if to provoke her to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_567" id="Page_567"></SPAN></span>
a clearer expression of feeling: "I shall not be satisfied,
of course, till I see for myself just how he feels—just
how much, at bottom, this has affected him—since my
own future relation to him will, as I have already told
you, depend entirely on his treatment of you."</p>
<p>She met this without any sign of disturbance. "His
treatment of me was very kind," she said. "But would
it not, on your part," she continued hesitatingly, "be
kinder not to touch on the subject so soon again?"</p>
<p>The line deepened between his brows. "Touch on
it? I sha'n't rest till I've gone to the bottom of it! Till
then, you must understand," he summed up with decision,
"I feel myself only on sufferance here at Westmore."</p>
<p>"Yes—I understand," she assented; and as he bent
over to kiss her for goodbye a tenuous impenetrable
barrier seemed to lie between their lips.</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>It was Justine's turn to await with a passionate anxiety
her husband's home-coming; and when, on the
third day, he reappeared, her dearly acquired self-control
gave way to a tremulous eagerness. This was,
after all, the turning-point in their lives: everything depended
on how Mr. Langhope had "played up" to his
cue; had kept to his side of their bond.</p>
<p>Amherst's face showed signs of emotional havoc:
when feeling once broke out in him it had full play,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_568" id="Page_568"></SPAN></span>
and she could see that his hour with Mr. Langhope had
struck to the roots of life. But the resultant expression
was one of invigoration, not defeat; and she gathered
at a glance that her partner had not betrayed her. She
drew a tragic solace from the success of her achievement;
yet it flung her into her husband's arms with a
passion of longing to which, as she instantly felt, he
did not as completely respond.</p>
<p>There was still, then, something "between" them:
somewhere the mechanism of her scheme had failed, or
its action had not produced the result she had counted
on.</p>
<p>As soon as they were alone in the study she said, as
quietly as she could: "You saw your father-in-law?
You talked with him?"</p>
<p>"Yes—I spent the afternoon with him. Cicely sent
you her love."</p>
<p>She coloured at the mention of the child's name and
murmured: "And Mr. Langhope?"</p>
<p>"He is perfectly calm now—perfectly impartial.—This
business has made me feel," Amherst added
abruptly, "that I have never been quite fair to him. I
never thought him a magnanimous man."</p>
<p>"He has proved himself so," Justine murmured, her
head bent low over a bit of needlework; and Amherst
affirmed energetically: "He has been more than that—generous!"<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_569" id="Page_569"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>She looked up at him with a smile. "I am so glad,
dear; so glad there is not to be the least shadow between
you...."</p>
<p>"No," Amherst said, his voice flagging slightly.
There was a pause, and then he went on with renewed
emphasis: "Of course I made my point clear to him."</p>
<p>"Your point?"</p>
<p>"That I stand or fall by his judgment of you."</p>
<p>Oh, if he had but said it more tenderly! But he delivered
it with the quiet resolution of a man who contends
for an abstract principle of justice, and not for a
passion grown into the fibres of his heart!</p>
<p>"You are generous too," she faltered, her voice
trembling a little.</p>
<p>Amherst frowned; and she perceived that any hint,
on her part, of recognizing the slightest change in their
relations was still like pressure on a painful bruise.</p>
<p>"There is no need for such words between us," he
said impatiently; "and Mr. Langhope's attitude," he
added, with an effort at a lighter tone, "has made it unnecessary,
thank heaven, that we should ever revert to
the subject again."</p>
<p>He turned to his desk as he spoke, and plunged into
perusal of the letters that had accumulated in his absence.</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>There was a temporary excess of work at Westmore,
and during the days that followed he threw himself into<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_570" id="Page_570"></SPAN></span>
it with a zeal that showed Justine how eagerly he sought
any pretext for avoiding confidential moments. The
perception was painful enough, yet not as painful as
another discovery that awaited her. She too had her
tasks at Westmore: the supervision of the hospital, the
day nursery, the mothers' club, and the various other
organizations whereby she and Amherst were trying
to put some sort of social unity into the lives of the mill-hands;
and when, on the day after his return from New
York, she presented herself, as usual, at the Westmore
office, where she was in the habit of holding a brief consultation
with him before starting on her rounds, she
was at once aware of a new tinge of constraint in his
manner. It hurt him, then, to see her at Westmore—hurt
him more than to live with her, at Hanaford, under
Bessy's roof! For it was there, at the mills, that his real
life was led, the life with which Justine had been most
identified, the life that had been made possible for both
by the magnanimity of that other woman whose presence
was now forever between them.</p>
<p>Justine made no sign. She resumed her work as
though unconscious of any change; but whereas in the
past they had always found pretexts for seeking each
other out, to discuss the order of the day's work, or
merely to warm their hearts by a rapid word or two,
now each went a separate way, sometimes not meeting
till they regained the house at night-fall.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_571" id="Page_571"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>And as the weeks passed she began to understand
that, by a strange inversion of probability, the relation
between Amherst and herself was to be the means of
holding her to her compact with Mr. Langhope—if
indeed it were not nearer the truth to say that it had
made such a compact unnecessary. Amherst had
done his best to take up their life together as though
there had been no break in it; but slowly the fact was
being forced on her that by remaining with him she
was subjecting him to intolerable suffering—was coming
to be the personification of the very thoughts and
associations from which he struggled to escape. Happily
her promptness of action had preserved Westmore
to him, and in Westmore she believed that he would in
time find a refuge from even the memory of what he
was now enduring. But meanwhile her presence kept
the thought alive; and, had every other incentive lost
its power, this would have been enough to sustain her.
Fate had, ironically enough, furnished her with an unanswerable
reason for leaving Amherst; the impossibility
of their keeping up such a relation as now existed
between them would soon become too patent to be denied.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, as summer approached, she knew that
external conditions would also call upon her to act.
The visible signal for her withdrawal would be Cicely's
next visit to Westmore. The child's birthday fell in<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_572" id="Page_572"></SPAN></span>
early June; and Amherst, some months previously, had
asked that she should be permitted to spend it at Hanaford,
and that it should be chosen as the date for the
opening of the first model cottages at Hopewood.</p>
<p>It was Justine who had originated the idea of associating
Cicely's anniversaries with some significant moment
in the annals of the mill colony; and struck by the
happy suggestion, he had at once applied himself to
hastening on the work at Hopewood. The eagerness
of both Amherst and Justine that Cicely should be
identified with the developing life of Westmore had
been one of the chief influences in reconciling Mr.
Langhope to his son-in-law's second marriage. Husband
and wife had always made it clear that they regarded
themselves as the mere trustees of the Westmore
revenues, and that Cicely's name should, as early
as possible, be associated with every measure taken for
the welfare of the people. But now, as Justine knew,
the situation was changed; and Cicely would not be allowed
to come to Hanaford until she herself had left it.
The manifold threads of divination that she was perpetually
throwing out in Amherst's presence told her,
without word or sign on his part, that he also awaited
Cicely's birthday as a determining date in their lives.
He spoke confidently, and as a matter of course, of
Mr. Langhope's bringing his grand-daughter at the
promised time; but Justine could hear a note of chal<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_573" id="Page_573"></SPAN></span>lenge
in his voice, as though he felt that Mr. Langhope's
sincerity had not yet been put to the test.</p>
<p>As the time drew nearer it became more difficult for
her to decide just how she should take the step she had
determined on. She had no material anxiety for the
future, for although she did not mean to accept a penny
from her husband after she had left him, she knew it
would be easy for her to take up her nursing again;
and she knew also that her hospital connections would
enable her to find work in a part of the country far
enough distant to remove her entirely from his life.
But she had not yet been able to invent a reason for
leaving that should be convincing enough to satisfy him,
without directing his suspicions to the truth. As she
revolved the question she suddenly recalled an exclamation
of Amherst's—a word spoken as they entered Mr.
Langhope's door, on the fatal afternoon when she had
found Wyant's letter awaiting her.</p>
<p>"There's nothing you can't make people believe,
you little Jesuit!"</p>
<p>She had laughed in pure joy at his praise of her; for
every bantering phrase had then been a caress. But
now the words returned with a sinister meaning. She
knew they were true as far as Amherst was concerned:
in the arts of casuistry and equivocation a child could
have outmatched him, and she had only to exert her
will to dupe him as deeply as she pleased. Well!<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_574" id="Page_574"></SPAN></span>
the task was odious, but it was needful: it was the bitterest
part of her expiation that she must deceive him once
more to save him from the results of her former deception.
This decision once reached, every nerve in her
became alert for an opportunity to do the thing and have
it over; so that, whenever they were alone together, she
was in an attitude of perpetual tension, her whole mind
drawn up for its final spring.</p>
<p>The decisive word came, one evening toward the end
of May, in the form of an allusion on Amherst's part
to Cicely's approaching visit. Husband and wife were
seated in the drawing-room after dinner, he with a book
in hand, she bending, as usual, over the needlework
which served at once as a pretext for lowered eyes, and
as a means of disguising her fixed preoccupation.</p>
<p>"Have you worked out a plan?" he asked, laying
down his book. "It occurred to me that it would
be rather a good idea if we began with a sort of festivity
for the kids at the day nursery. You could take Cicely
there early, and I could bring out Mr. Langhope after
luncheon. The whole performance would probably
tire him too much."</p>
<p>Justine listened with suspended thread. "Yes—that
seems a good plan."</p>
<p>"Will you see about the details, then? You know
it's only a week off."</p>
<p>"Yes, I know." She hesitated, and then took the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_575" id="Page_575"></SPAN></span>
spring. "I ought to tell you John—that I—I think I
may not be here...."</p>
<p>He raised his head abruptly, and she saw the blood
mount under his fair skin. "Not be here?" he exclaimed.</p>
<p>She met his look as steadily as she could. "I think
of going away for awhile."</p>
<p>"Going away? Where? What is the matter—are
you not well?"</p>
<p>There was her pretext—he had found it for her!
Why should she not simply plead ill-health? Afterward
she would find a way of elaborating the details
and making them plausible. But suddenly, as she was
about to speak, there came to her the feeling which, up
to one fatal moment in their lives, had always ruled
their intercourse—the feeling that there must be truth,
and absolute truth, between them. Absolute, indeed, it
could never be again, since he must never know of the
condition exacted by Mr. Langhope; but that, at the
moment, seemed almost a secondary motive compared
to the deeper influences that were inexorably forcing
them apart. At any rate, she would trump up no
trivial excuse for the step she had resolved on; there
should be truth, if not the whole truth, in this last decisive
hour between them.</p>
<p>"Yes; I am quite well—at least my body is," she said
quietly. "But I am tired, perhaps; my mind has been<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_576" id="Page_576"></SPAN></span>
going round too long in the same circle." She paused
for a brief space, and then, raising her head, and
looking him straight in the eyes: "Has it not been so
with you?" she asked.</p>
<p>The question seemed to startle Amherst. He rose
from his chair and took a few steps toward the hearth,
where a small fire was crumbling into embers. He
turned his back to it, resting an arm on the mantel-shelf;
then he said, in a somewhat unsteady tone: "I
thought we had agreed not to speak of all that again."</p>
<p>Justine shook her head with a fugitive half-smile.
"I made no such agreement. And besides, what is the
use, when we can always hear each other's thoughts
speak, and they speak of nothing else?"</p>
<p>Amherst's brows darkened. "It is not so with mine,"
he began; but she raised her hand with a silencing
gesture.</p>
<p>"I know you have tried your best that it should not
be so; and perhaps you have succeeded better than I.
But I am tired, horribly tired—I want to get away from
everything!"</p>
<p>She saw a look of pain in his eyes. He continued
to lean against the mantel-shelf, his head slightly lowered,
his unseeing gaze fixed on a remote scroll in the
pattern of the carpet; then he said in a low tone: "I
can only repeat again what I have said before—that I
understand why you did what you did."<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_577" id="Page_577"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Thank you," she answered, in the same tone.</p>
<p>There was another pause, for she could not trust herself
to go on speaking; and presently he asked, with a
tinge of bitterness in his voice: "That does not satisfy
you?"</p>
<p>She hesitated. "It satisfies me as much as it does
you—and no more," she replied at length.</p>
<p>He looked up hastily. "What do you mean?"</p>
<p>"Just what I say. We can neither of us go on living
on that understanding just at present." She rose as
she spoke, and crossed over to the hearth. "I want to
go back to my nursing—to go out to Michigan, to a
town where I spent a few months the year before I first
came to Hanaford. I have friends there, and can get
work easily. And you can tell people that I was ill
and needed a change."</p>
<p>It had been easier to say than she had imagined, and
her voice held its clear note till the end; but when she
had ceased, the whole room began to reverberate with
her words, and through the clashing they made in her
brain she felt a sudden uncontrollable longing that they
should provoke in him a cry of protest, of resistance.
Oh, if he refused to let her go—if he caught her to him,
and defied the world to part them—what then of her
pledge to Mr. Langhope, what then of her resolve to
pay the penalty alone?</p>
<p>But in the space of a heart-beat she knew that peril<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_578" id="Page_578"></SPAN></span>—that
longed-for peril!—was past. Her husband had
remained silent—he neither moved toward her nor
looked at her; and she felt in every slackening nerve that
in the end he would let her go.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />