<h2><SPAN name="XL" id="XL"></SPAN>XL</h2>
<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Langhope</span>, tossing down a note on Mrs.
Ansell's drawing-room table, commanded imperiously:
"Read that!"</p>
<p>She set aside her tea-cup, and looked up, not at the
note, but into his face, which was crossed by one of
the waves of heat and tremulousness that she was
beginning to fear for him. Mr. Langhope had changed
greatly in the last three months; and as he stood there
in the clear light of the June afternoon it came to her
that he had at last suffered the sudden collapse which
is the penalty of youth preserved beyond its time.</p>
<p>"What is it?" she asked, still watching him as she
put out her hand for the letter.</p>
<p>"Amherst writes to remind me of my promise to
take Cicely to Hanaford next week, for her birthday."</p>
<p>"Well—it was a promise, wasn't it?" she rejoined,
running her eyes over the page.</p>
<p>"A promise—yes; but made before.... Read the
note—you'll see there's no reference to his wife. For
all I know, she'll be there to receive us."<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_579" id="Page_579"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"But that was a promise too."</p>
<p>"That neither Cicely nor I should ever set eyes on
her? Yes. But why should she keep it? I was a
fool that day—she fooled me as she's fooled us all!
But you saw through it from the beginning—you said
at once that she'd never leave him."</p>
<p>Mrs. Ansell reflected. "I said that before I knew all
the circumstances. Now I think differently."</p>
<p>"You think she still means to go?"</p>
<p>She handed the letter back to him. "I think this is
to tell you so."</p>
<p>"This?" He groped for his glasses, dubiously scanning
the letter again.</p>
<p>"Yes. And what's more, if you refuse to go she'll
have every right to break her side of the agreement."</p>
<p>Mr. Langhope sank into a chair, steadying himself
painfully with his stick. "Upon my soul, I sometimes
think you're on her side!" he ejaculated.</p>
<p>"No—but I like fair play," she returned, measuring
his tea carefully into his favourite little porcelain tea-pot.</p>
<p>"Fair play?"</p>
<p>"She's offering to do her part. It's for you to do
yours now—to take Cicely to Hanaford."</p>
<p>"If I find her there, I never cross Amherst's threshold
again!"</p>
<p>Mrs. Ansell, without answering, rose and put his tea-<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_580" id="Page_580"></SPAN></span>cup
on the slender-legged table at his elbow; then,
before returning to her seat, she found the enamelled
match-box and laid it by the cup. It was becoming
difficult for Mr. Langhope to guide his movements
about her small encumbered room; and he had always
liked being waited on.</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>Mrs. Ansell's prognostication proved correct. When
Mr. Langhope and Cicely arrived at Hanaford they
found Amherst alone to receive them. He explained
briefly that his wife had been unwell, and had gone to
seek rest and change at the house of an old friend in
the west. Mr. Langhope expressed a decent amount
of regret, and the subject was dropped as if by common
consent. Cicely, however, was not so easily silenced.
Poor Bessy's uncertain fits of tenderness had produced
more bewilderment than pleasure in her sober-minded
child; but the little girl's feelings and perceptions had
developed rapidly in the equable atmosphere of her
step-mother's affection. Cicely had reached the age
when children put their questions with as much ingenuity
as persistence, and both Mr. Langhope and
Amherst longed for Mrs. Ansell's aid in parrying her
incessant interrogations as to the cause and length of
Justine's absence, what she had said before going,
and what promise she had made about coming back.
But Mrs. Ansell had not come to Hanaford. Though<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_581" id="Page_581"></SPAN></span>
it had become a matter of habit to include her in the
family pilgrimages to the mills she had firmly maintained
the plea of more urgent engagements; and the
two men, with only Cicely between them, had spent
the long days and longer evenings in unaccustomed and
unmitigated propinquity.</p>
<p>Mr. Langhope, before leaving, thought it proper to
touch tentatively on his promise of giving Cicely to
Amherst for the summer; but to his surprise the latter,
after a moment of hesitation, replied that he should
probably go to Europe for two or three months.</p>
<p>"To Europe? Alone?" escaped from Mr. Langhope
before he had time to weigh his words.</p>
<p>Amherst frowned slightly. "I have been made a
delegate to the Berne conference on the housing of
factory operatives," he said at length, without making
a direct reply to the question; "and if there is
nothing to keep me at Westmore, I shall probably
go out in July." He waited a moment, and then
added: "My wife has decided to spend the summer
in Michigan."</p>
<p>Mr. Langhope's answer was a vague murmur of
assent, and Amherst turned the talk to other matters.</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>Mr. Langhope returned to town with distinct views on
the situation at Hanaford.</p>
<p>"Poor devil—I'm sorry for him: he can hardly speak<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_582" id="Page_582"></SPAN></span>
of her," he broke out at once to Mrs. Ansell, in the
course of their first confidential hour together.</p>
<p>"Because he cares too much—he's too unhappy?"</p>
<p>"Because he loathes her!" Mr. Langhope brought
out with emphasis.</p>
<p>Mrs. Ansell drew a deep sigh which made him add
accusingly: "I believe you're actually sorry!"</p>
<p>"Sorry?" She raised her eye-brows with a slight
smile. "Should one not always be sorry to know
there's a little less love and a little more hate in the
world?"</p>
<p>"You'll be asking <i>me</i> not to hate her next!"</p>
<p>She still continued to smile on him. "It's the haters,
not the hated, I'm sorry for," she said at length; and
he flung back impatiently: "Oh, don't let's talk of her.
I sometimes feel she takes up more place in our lives
than when she was with us!"</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>Amherst went to the Berne conference in July, and
spent six weeks afterward in rapid visits to various
industrial centres and model factory villages. During
his previous European pilgrimages his interest had by
no means been restricted to sociological questions:
the appeal of an old civilization, reaching him through
its innumerable forms of tradition and beauty, had
roused that side of his imagination which his work at
home left untouched. But upon his present state of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_583" id="Page_583"></SPAN></span>
deep moral commotion the spells of art and history were
powerless to work. The foundations of his life had
been shaken, and the fair exterior of the world was as
vacant as a maniac's face. He could only take refuge
in his special task, barricading himself against every
expression of beauty and poetry as so many poignant
reminders of a phase of life that he was vainly trying to
cast off and forget.</p>
<p>Even his work had been embittered to him, thrust
out of its place in the ordered scheme of things. It
had cost him a hard struggle to hold fast to his main
purpose, to convince himself that his real duty lay, not
in renouncing the Westmore money and its obligations,
but in carrying out his projected task as if nothing
had occurred to affect his personal relation to it. The
mere fact that such a renunciation would have been
a deliberate moral suicide, a severing once for all of
every artery of action, made it take on, at first, the
semblance of an obligation, a sort of higher duty to
the abstract conception of what he owed himself. But
Justine had not erred in her forecast. Once she had
passed out of his life, it was easier for him to return
to a dispassionate view of his situation, to see, and
boldly confess to himself that he saw, the still higher
duty of sticking to his task, instead of sacrificing it to
any ideal of personal disinterestedness. It was this
gradual process of adjustment that saved him from the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_584" id="Page_584"></SPAN></span>
desolating scepticism which falls on the active man
when the sources of his activity are tainted. Having
accepted his fate, having consented to see in himself
merely the necessary agent of a good to be done, he
could escape from self-questioning only by shutting
himself up in the practical exigencies of his work,
closing his eyes and his thoughts to everything which
had formerly related it to a wider world, had given
meaning and beauty to life as a whole.</p>
<p>The return from Europe, and the taking up of the
daily routine at Hanaford, were the most difficult
phases in this process of moral adaptation.</p>
<p>Justine's departure had at first brought relief. He
had been too sincere with himself to oppose her wish to
leave Hanaford for a time, since he believed that, for
her as well as for himself, a temporary separation
would be less painful than a continuance of their
actual relation. But as the weeks passed into months
he found he was no nearer to a clear view of his own
case: the future was still dark and enigmatic. Justine's
desire to leave him had revived his unformulated
distrust of her. What could it mean but that there
were thoughts within her which could not be at rest
in his presence? He had given her every proof of his
wish to forget the past, and Mr. Langhope had behaved
with unequalled magnanimity. Yet Justine's
unhappiness was evident: she could not conceal her<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_585" id="Page_585"></SPAN></span>
longing to escape from the conditions her act had
created. Was it because, in reality, she was conscious
of other motives than the one she acknowledged? She
had insisted, almost unfeelingly as it might have
seemed, on the abstract rightness of what she had
done, on the fact that, ideally speaking, her act could
not be made less right, less justifiable, by the special
accidental consequences that had flowed from it. Because
these consequences had caught her in a web
of tragic fatality she would not be guilty of the weakness
of tracing back the disaster to any intrinsic error
in her original motive. Why, then, if this was her
real, her proud attitude toward the past—and since
those about her believed in her sincerity, and accepted
her justification as valid from her point of view if not
from theirs—why had she not been able to maintain
her posture, to carry on life on the terms she had
exacted from others?</p>
<p>A special circumstance contributed to this feeling of
distrust; the fact, namely, that Justine, a week after
her departure from Hanaford, had written to say that
she could not, from that moment till her return, consent
to accept any money from Amherst. As her
manner was, she put her reasons clearly and soberly,
without evasion or ambiguity.</p>
<p>"Since you and I," she wrote, "have always agreed
in regarding the Westmore money as a kind of wage<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_586" id="Page_586"></SPAN></span>
for our services at the mills, I cannot be satisfied to
go on drawing that wage while I am unable to do any
work in return. I am sure you must feel as I do about
this; and you need have no anxiety as to the practical
side of the question, since I have enough to live on in
some savings from my hospital days, which were invested
for me two years ago by Harry Dressel, and
are beginning to bring in a small return. This being
the case, I feel I can afford to interpret in any way I
choose the terms of the bargain between myself and
Westmore."</p>
<p>On reading this, Amherst's mind had gone through
the strange dual process which now marked all his
judgments of his wife. At first he had fancied he
understood her, and had felt that he should have done
as she did; then the usual reaction of distrust set in,
and he asked himself why she, who had so little of the
conventional attitude toward money, should now develop
this unexpected susceptibility. And so the old
question presented itself in another shape: if she had
nothing to reproach herself for, why was it intolerable
to her to live on Bessy's money? The fact that she
was doing no actual service at Westmore did not account
for her scruples—she would have been the last
person to think that a sick servant should be docked
of his pay. Her reluctance could come only from that
hidden cause of compunction which had prompted her<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_587" id="Page_587"></SPAN></span>
departure, and which now forced her to sever even
the merely material links between herself and her past.</p>
<p>Amherst, on his return to Hanaford, had tried to
find in these considerations a reason for his deep unrest.
It was his wife's course which still cast a torturing
doubt on what he had braced his will to accept
and put behind him. And he now told himself that
the perpetual galling sense of her absence was due to
this uneasy consciousness of what it meant, of the dark
secrets it enveloped and held back from him. In
actual truth, every particle of his being missed her, he
lacked her at every turn. She had been at once the
partner of his task, and the <i>pays bleu</i> into which he
escaped from it; the vivifying thought which gave
meaning to the life he had chosen, yet never let him
forget that there was a larger richer life outside, to
which he was rooted by deeper and more intrinsic
things than any abstract ideal of altruism. His love
had preserved his identity, saved him from shrinking
into the mere nameless unit which the social enthusiast
is in danger of becoming unless the humanitarian passion
is balanced, and a little overweighed, by a merely
human one. And now this equilibrium was lost forever,
and his deepest pain lay in realizing that he
could not regain it, even by casting off Westmore and
choosing the narrower but richer individual existence
that her love might once have offered. His life was in<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_588" id="Page_588"></SPAN></span>
truth one indivisible organism, not two halves artificially
united. Self and other-self were ingrown from
the roots—whichever portion fate restricted him to
would be but a mutilated half-live fragment of the
whole.</p>
<p>Happily for him, chance made this crisis of his life
coincide with a strike at Westmore. Soon after his
return to Hanaford he found himself compelled to
grapple with the hardest problem of his industrial
career, and he was carried through the ensuing three
months on that tide of swift obligatory action that
sweeps the ship-wrecked spirit over so many sunken
reefs of fear and despair. The knowledge that he was
better able to deal with the question than any one
who might conceivably have taken his place—this conviction,
which was presently confirmed by the peaceable
adjustment of the strike, helped to make the sense of
his immediate usefulness outbalance that other, disintegrating
doubt as to the final value of such efforts.
And so he tried to settle down into a kind of mechanical
altruism, in which the reflexes of habit should take the
place of that daily renewal of faith and enthusiasm
which had been fed from the springs of his own joy.</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>The autumn came and passed into winter; and after
Mr. Langhope's re-establishment in town Amherst
began to resume his usual visits to his step-daughter.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_589" id="Page_589"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>His natural affection for the little girl had been
deepened by the unforeseen manner in which her fate
had been entrusted to him. The thought of Bessy,
softened to compunction by the discovery that her love
had persisted under their apparently hopeless estrangement—this
feeling, intensified to the verge of morbidness
by the circumstances attending her death, now
sought expression in a passionate devotion to her child.
Accident had, in short, created between Bessy and himself
a retrospective sympathy which the resumption of
life together would have dispelled in a week—one of the
exhalations from the past that depress the vitality of
those who linger too near the grave of dead experiences.</p>
<p>Since Justine's departure Amherst had felt himself
still more drawn to Cicely; but his relation to the
child was complicated by the fact that she would not
be satisfied as to the cause of her step-mother's absence.
Whenever Amherst came to town, her first question was
for Justine; and her memory had the precocious persistence
sometimes developed in children too early deprived
of their natural atmosphere of affection. Cicely
had always been petted and adored, at odd times and
by divers people; but some instinct seemed to tell her
that, of all the tenderness bestowed on her, Justine's
most resembled the all-pervading motherly element in
which the child's heart expands without ever being
conscious of its needs.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_590" id="Page_590"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>If it had been embarrassing to evade Cicely's questions
in June it became doubly so as the months passed,
and the pretext of Justine's ill-health grew more and
more difficult to sustain. And in the following March
Amherst was suddenly called from Hanaford by the
news that the little girl herself was ill. Serious complications
had developed from a protracted case of
scarlet fever, and for two weeks the child's fate was
uncertain. Then she began to recover, and in the joy
of seeing life come back to her, Mr. Langhope and
Amherst felt as though they must not only gratify every
wish she expressed, but try to guess at those they saw
floating below the surface of her clear vague eyes.</p>
<p>It was noticeable to Mrs. Ansell, if not to the others,
that one of these unexpressed wishes was the desire to
see her stepmother. Cicely no longer asked for Justine;
but something in her silence, or in the gesture
with which she gently put from her other offers of
diversion and companionship, suddenly struck Mrs.
Ansell as more poignant than speech.</p>
<p>"What is it the child wants?" she asked the governess,
in the course of one of their whispered consultations;
and the governess, after a moment's hesitation,
replied: "She said something about a letter she wrote
to Mrs. Amherst just before she was taken ill—about
having had no answer, I think."</p>
<p>"Ah—she writes to Mrs. Amherst, does she?"<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_591" id="Page_591"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>The governess, evidently aware that she trod on
delicate ground, tried at once to defend herself and her
pupil.</p>
<p>"It was my fault, perhaps. I suggested once that
her little compositions should take the form of letters—it
usually interests a child more—and she asked if
they might be written to Mrs. Amherst."</p>
<p>"Your fault? Why should not the child write to
her step-mother?" Mrs. Ansell rejoined with studied
surprise; and on the other's murmuring: "Of course—of
course——" she added haughtily: "I trust the
letters were sent?"</p>
<p>The governess floundered. "I couldn't say—but
perhaps the nurse...."</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>That evening Cicely was less well. There was a slight
return of fever, and the doctor, hastily summoned,
hinted at the possibility of too much excitement in the
sick-room.</p>
<p>"Excitement? There has been no excitement," Mr.
Langhope protested, quivering with the sudden renewal
of fear.</p>
<p>"No? The child seemed nervous, uneasy. It's
hard to say why, because she is unusually reserved for
her age."</p>
<p>The medical man took his departure, and Mr. Langhope
and Mrs. Ansell faced each other in the disarray<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_592" id="Page_592"></SPAN></span>
produced by a call to arms when all has seemed at
peace.</p>
<p>"I shall lose her—I shall lose her!" the grandfather
broke out, sinking into his chair with a groan.</p>
<p>Mrs. Ansell, gathering up her furs for departure,
turned on him abruptly from the threshold.</p>
<p>"It's stupid, what you're doing—stupid!" she exclaimed
with unwonted vehemence.</p>
<p>He raised his head with a startled look. "What do
you mean—what I'm doing?"</p>
<p>"The child misses Justine. You ought to send for
her."</p>
<p>Mr. Langhope's hands dropped to the arms of his
chair, and he straightened himself up with a pale flash
of indignation. "You've had moments lately——!"</p>
<p>"I've had moments, yes; and so have you—when
the child came back to us, and we stood there and wondered
how we could keep her, tie her fast...and in
those moments I saw...saw what she wanted...and
so did you!"</p>
<p>Mr. Langhope turned away his head. "You're a
sentimentalist!" he flung scornfully back.</p>
<p>"Oh, call me any bad names you please!"</p>
<p>"I won't send for that woman!"</p>
<p>"No." She fastened her furs slowly, with the gentle
deliberate movements that no emotion ever hastened
or disturbed.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_593" id="Page_593"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Why do you say no?" he challenged her.</p>
<p>"To make you contradict me, perhaps," she ventured,
after looking at him again.</p>
<p>"Ah——" He shifted his position, one elbow supporting
his bowed head, his eyes fixed on the ground.
Presently he brought out: "Could one ask her to
come—and see the child—and go away again—for
good?"</p>
<p>"To break the compact at your pleasure, and enter
into it again for the same reason?"</p>
<p>"No—no—I see." He paused, and then looked up
at her suddenly. "But what if Amherst won't have
her back himself?"</p>
<p>"Shall I ask him?"</p>
<p>"I tell you he can't bear to hear her name!"</p>
<p>"But he doesn't know why she has left him."</p>
<p>Mr. Langhope gathered his brows in a frown. "Why—what
on earth—what possible difference would that
make?"</p>
<p>Mrs. Ansell, from the doorway, shed a pitying glance
on him. "Ah—if you don't see!" she murmured.</p>
<p>He sank back into his seat with a groan. "Good
heavens, Maria, how you torture me! I see enough
as it is—I see too much of the cursed business!"</p>
<p>She paused again, and then slowly moved a step or
two nearer, laying her hand on his shoulder.</p>
<p>"There's one thing you've never seen yet, Henry:<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_594" id="Page_594"></SPAN></span>
what Bessy herself would do now—for the child—if she
could."</p>
<p>He sat motionless under her light touch, his eyes on
hers, till their inmost thoughts felt for and found each
other, as they still sometimes could, through the fog of
years and selfishness and worldly habit; then he
dropped his face into his hands, hiding it from her with
the instinctive shrinking of an aged grief.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />