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<h2> IN ERROR. </h2>
<p>They burnt a corpse upon the sand—<br/>
The light shone out afar;<br/>
It guided home the plunging boats<br/>
That beat from Zanzibar.<br/>
Spirit of Fire, where'er Thy altars rise.<br/>
Thou art Light of Guidance to our eyes!<br/>
<br/>
Salsette Boat-Song.<br/></p>
<p>There is hope for a man who gets publicly and riotously drunk more often
that he ought to do; but there is no hope for the man who drinks secretly
and alone in his own house—the man who is never seen to drink.</p>
<p>This is a rule; so there must be an exception to prove it. Moriarty's case
was that exception.</p>
<p>He was a Civil Engineer, and the Government, very kindly, put him quite by
himself in an out-district, with nobody but natives to talk to and a great
deal of work to do. He did his work well in the four years he was utterly
alone; but he picked up the vice of secret and solitary drinking, and came
up out of the wilderness more old and worn and haggard than the dead-alive
life had any right to make him. You know the saying that a man who has
been alone in the jungle for more than a year is never quite sane all his
life after. People credited Moriarty's queerness of manner and moody ways
to the solitude, and said it showed how Government spoilt the futures of
its best men. Moriarty had built himself the plinth of a very god
reputation in the bridge-dam-girder line. But he knew, every night of the
week, that he was taking steps to undermine that reputation with L. L. L.
and "Christopher" and little nips of liqueurs, and filth of that kind. He
had a sound constitution and a great brain, or else he would have broken
down and died like a sick camel in the district, as better men have done
before him.</p>
<p>Government ordered him to Simla after he had come out of the desert; and
he went up meaning to try for a post then vacant. That season, Mrs. Reiver—perhaps
you will remember her—was in the height of her power, and many men
lay under her yoke. Everything bad that could be said has already been
said about Mrs. Reiver, in another tale. Moriarty was heavily-built and
handsome, very quiet and nervously anxious to please his neighbors when he
wasn't sunk in a brown study. He started a good deal at sudden noises or
if spoken to without warning; and, when you watched him drinking his glass
of water at dinner, you could see the hand shake a little. But all this
was put down to nervousness, and the quiet, steady, "sip-sip-sip, fill and
sip-sip-sip, again," that went on in his own room when he was by himself,
was never known. Which was miraculous, seeing how everything in a man's
private life is public property out here.</p>
<p>Moriarty was drawn, not into Mrs. Reiver's set, because they were not his
sort, but into the power of Mrs. Reiver, and he fell down in front of her
and made a goddess of her. This was due to his coming fresh out of the
jungle to a big town. He could not scale things properly or see who was
what.</p>
<p>Because Mrs. Reiver was cold and hard, he said she was stately and
dignified. Because she had no brains, and could not talk cleverly, he said
she was reserved and shy. Mrs. Reiver shy! Because she was unworthy of
honor or reverence from any one, he reverenced her from a distance and
dowered her with all the virtues in the Bible and most of those in
Shakespeare.</p>
<p>This big, dark, abstracted man who was so nervous when a pony cantered
behind him, used to moon in the train of Mrs. Reiver, blushing with
pleasure when she threw a word or two his way. His admiration was strictly
platonic: even other women saw and admitted this. He did not move out in
Simla, so he heard nothing against his idol: which was satisfactory. Mrs.
Reiver took no special notice of him, beyond seeing that he was added to
her list of admirers, and going for a walk with him now and then, just to
show that he was her property, claimable as such. Moriarty must have done
most of the talking, for Mrs. Reiver couldn't talk much to a man of his
stamp; and the little she said could not have been profitable. What
Moriarty believed in, as he had good reason to, was Mrs. Reiver's
influence over him, and, in that belief, set himself seriously to try to
do away with the vice that only he himself knew of.</p>
<p>His experiences while he was fighting with it must have been peculiar, but
he never described them. Sometimes he would hold off from everything
except water for a week. Then, on a rainy night, when no one had asked him
out to dinner, and there was a big fire in his room, and everything
comfortable, he would sit down and make a big night of it by adding little
nip to little nip, planning big schemes of reformation meanwhile, until he
threw himself on his bed hopelessly drunk. He suffered next morning.</p>
<p>One night, the big crash came. He was troubled in his own mind over his
attempts to make himself "worthy of the friendship" of Mrs. Reiver. The
past ten days had been very bad ones, and the end of it all was that he
received the arrears of two and three-quarter years of sipping in one
attack of delirium tremens of the subdued kind; beginning with suicidal
depression, going on to fits and starts and hysteria, and ending with
downright raving. As he sat in a chair in front of the fire, or walked up
and down the room picking a handkerchief to pieces, you heard what poor
Moriarty really thought of Mrs. Reiver, for he raved about her and his own
fall for the most part; though he ravelled some P. W. D. accounts into the
same skein of thought. He talked, and talked, and talked in a low dry
whisper to himself, and there was no stopping him. He seemed to know that
there was something wrong, and twice tried to pull himself together and
confer rationally with the Doctor; but his mind ran out of control at
once, and he fell back to a whisper and the story of his troubles. It is
terrible to hear a big man babbling like a child of all that a man usually
locks up, and puts away in the deep of his heart. Moriarty read out his
very soul for the benefit of any one who was in the room between
ten-thirty that night and two-forty-five next morning.</p>
<p>From what he said, one gathered how immense an influence Mrs. Reiver held
over him, and how thoroughly he felt for his own lapse. His whisperings
cannot, of course, be put down here; but they were very instructive as
showing the errors of his estimates.</p>
<p>. . . . . . . . .<br/></p>
<p>When the trouble was over, and his few acquaintances were pitying him for
the bad attack of jungle-fever that had so pulled him down, Moriarty swore
a big oath to himself and went abroad again with Mrs. Reiver till the end
of the season, adoring her in a quiet and deferential way as an angel from
heaven. Later on he took to riding—not hacking, but honest riding—which
was good proof that he was improving, and you could slam doors behind him
without his jumping to his feet with a gasp. That, again, was hopeful.</p>
<p>How he kept his oath, and what it cost him in the beginning, nobody knows.
He certainly managed to compass the hardest thing that a man who has drank
heavily can do. He took his peg and wine at dinner, but he never drank
alone, and never let what he drank have the least hold on him.</p>
<p>Once he told a bosom-friend the story of his great trouble, and how the
"influence of a pure honest woman, and an angel as well" had saved him.
When the man—startled at anything good being laid to Mrs. Reiver's
door—laughed, it cost him Moriarty's friendship. Moriarty, who is
married now to a woman ten thousand times better than Mrs. Reiver—a
woman who believes that there is no man on earth as good and clever as her
husband—will go down to his grave vowing and protesting that Mrs.
Reiver saved him from ruin in both worlds.</p>
<p>That she knew anything of Moriarty's weakness nobody believed for a
moment. That she would have cut him dead, thrown him over, and acquainted
all her friends with her discovery, if she had known of it, nobody who
knew her doubted for an instant.</p>
<p>Moriarty thought her something she never was, and in that belief saved
himself. Which was just as good as though she had been everything that he
had imagined.</p>
<p>But the question is, what claim will Mrs. Reiver have to the credit of
Moriarty's salvation, when her day of reckoning comes?</p>
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