<h2><SPAN name="XXII"></SPAN>XXII</h2>
<br/>
<p>In the first week of May, Julie Le Breton married Jacob
Delafield in the English Church at Florence. The Duchess was there.
So was the Duke--a sulky and ill-resigned spectator of something
which he believed to be the peculiar and mischievous achievement of
his wife.</p>
<p>At the church door Julie and Delafield left for Camaldoli.</p>
<p>"Well, if you imagine that I intend to congratulate you or
anybody else upon that performance you are very much mistaken,"
said the Duke, as he and his wife drove back to the "Grand
Bretagne" together.</p>
<p>"I don't deny it's--risky," said the Duchess, her hands on her
lap, her eyes dreamily following the streets.</p>
<p>"Risky!" repeated the Duke, shrugging his shoulders. "Well, I
don't want to speak harshly of your friends, Evelyn, but Miss Le
Breton--"</p>
<p>"Mrs. Delafield," said the Duchess.</p>
<p>"Mrs. Delafield, then"--the name was evidently a difficult
mouthful--"seems to me a most undisciplined and unmanageable woman.
Why does she look like a tragedy queen at her marriage? Jacob is
twice too good for her, and she'll lead him a life. And how you can
reconcile it to your conscience to have misled me so completely as
you have in this matter, I really can't imagine."</p>
<p>"Misled you?" said Evelyn.</p>
<p>Her innocence was really a little hard to bear, and not even the
beauty of her blue eyes, now happily restored to him, could appease
the mentor at her side.</p>
<p>"You led me plainly to believe," he repeated, with emphasis,
"that if I helped her through the crisis of leaving Lady Henry she
would relinquish her designs on Delafield."</p>
<p>"Did I?" said the Duchess. And putting her hands over her face
she laughed rather hysterically. "But that wasn't why you lent her
the house, Freddie."</p>
<p>"You coaxed me into it, of course," said the Duke.</p>
<p>"No, it was Julie herself got the better of you," said Evelyn,
triumphantly. "You felt her spell, just as we all do, and wanted to
do something for her."</p>
<p>"Nothing of the sort," said the Duke, determined to admit no
recollection to his disadvantage. "It was your doing entirely."</p>
<p>The Duchess thought it discreet to let him at least have the
triumph of her silence, smiling, and a little sarcastic though it
were.</p>
<p>"And of all the undeserved good fortune!" he resumed, feeling in
his irritable disapproval that the moral order of the universe had
been somehow trifled with. "In the first place, she is the daughter
of people who flagrantly misconducted themselves--<i>that</i>
apparently does her no harm. Then she enters the service of Lady
Henry in a confidential position, and uses it to work havoc in Lady
Henry's social relations. That, I am glad to say, <i>has</i> done
her a little harm, although not nearly as much as she deserves. And
finally she has a most discreditable flirtation with a man already
engaged--to her own cousin, please observe!--and pulls wires for
him all over the place in the most objectionable and unwomanly
manner."</p>
<p>"As if everybody didn't do that!" cried the Duchess. "You know,
Freddie, that your own mother always used to boast that she had
made six bishops and saved the Establishment."</p>
<p>The Duke took no notice.</p>
<p>"And yet there she is! Lord Lackington has left her a fortune--a
competence, anyway. She marries Jacob Delafield--rather a fool, I
consider, but all the same one of the best fellows in the world.
And at any time, to judge from what one hears of the health both of
Chudleigh and his boy, she may find herself Duchess of
Chudleigh."</p>
<p>The Duke threw himself back in the carriage with the air of one
who waits for Providence to reply.</p>
<p>"Oh, well, you see, you can't make the world into a moral tale
to please you," said the Duchess, absently.</p>
<p>Then, after a pause, she asked, "Are you still going to let them
have the house, Freddie?"</p>
<p>"I imagine that if Jacob Delafield applies to me to let it to
<i>him</i>, that I shall not refuse him," said the Duke,
stiffly.</p>
<p>The Duchess smiled behind her fan. Yet her tender heart was not
in reality very happy about her Julie. She knew well enough that it
was a strange marriage of which they had just been witnesses--a
marriage containing the seeds of many untoward things only too
likely to develop unless fate were kinder than rash mortals have
any right to expect.</p>
<p>"I wish to goodness Delafield weren't so religious," murmured
the Duchess, fervently, pursuing her own thoughts.</p>
<p>"Evelyn!"</p>
<p>"Well, you see, Julie isn't, at all," she added, hastily.</p>
<p>"You need not have troubled yourself to tell me that," was the
Duke's indignant reply.</p>
<hr style="width: 25%;">
<p>After a fortnight at Camaldoli and Vallombrosa the Delafields
turned towards Switzerland. Julie, who was a lover of Rousseau and
Obermann, had been also busy with the letters of Byron. She wished
to see with her own eyes St. Gingolphe and Chillon, Bevay and
Glion.</p>
<p>So one day at the end of May they found themselves at Montreux.
But Montreux was already hot and crowded, and Julie's eyes turned
in longing to the heights. They found an old inn at Charnex,
whereof the garden commanded the whole head of the lake, and there
they settled themselves for a fortnight, till business, in fact,
should recall Delafield to England. The Duke of Chudleigh had shown
all possible kindness and cordiality with regard to the marriage,
and the letter in which he welcomed his cousin's new wife had both
touched Julie's feelings and satisfied her pride. "You are marrying
one of the best of men," wrote this melancholy father of a dying
son. "My boy and I owe him more than can be written. I can only
tell you that for those he loves he grudges nothing--no labor, no
sacrifice of himself. There are no half-measures in his affections.
He has spent himself too long on sick and sorry creatures like
ourselves. It is time he had a little happiness on his own account.
You will give it him, and Mervyn and I will be most grateful to
you. If joy and health can never be ours, I am not yet so vile as
to grudge them to others. God bless you! Jacob will tell you that
my house is not a gay one; but if you and he will sometimes visit
it, you will do something to lighten its gloom."</p>
<p>Julie wondered, as she wrote her very graceful reply, how much
the Duke might know about herself. Jacob had told his cousin, as
she knew, the story of her parentage and of Lord Lackington's
recognition of his granddaughter. But as soon as the marriage was
announced it was not likely that Lady Henry had been able to hold
her tongue.</p>
<p>A good many interesting tales of his cousin's bride had, indeed,
reached the melancholy Duke. Lady Henry had done all that she
conceived it her duty to do, filling many pages of note-paper with
what the Duke regarded as most unnecessary information.</p>
<p>At any rate, he had brushed it all aside with the impatience of
one for whom nothing on earth had now any savor or value beyond one
or two indispensable affections. "What's good enough for Jacob is
good for me," he wrote to Lady Henry, "and if I may offer you some
advice, it is that you should not quarrel with Jacob about a matter
so vital as his marriage. Into the rights and wrongs of the story
you tell me, I really cannot enter; but rather than break with
Jacob I would welcome <i>anybody</i> he chose to present to me. And
in this case I understand the lady is very clever, distinguished,
and of good blood on both sides. Have you had no trouble in your
life, my dear Flora, that you can make quarrels with a light heart?
If so, I envy you; but I have neither the energy nor the good
spirits wherewith to imitate you."</p>
<p>Julie, of course, knew nothing of this correspondence, though
from the Duke's letters to Jacob she divined that something of the
kind had taken place. But it was made quite plain to her that she
was to be spared all the friction and all the difficulty which may
often attend the entrance of a person like herself within the
circle of a rich and important family like the Delafields. With
Lady Henry, indeed, the fight had still to be fought. But Jacob's
mother, influenced on one side by her son and on the other by the
head of the family, accepted her daughter-in-law with the facile
kindliness and good temper that were natural to her; while his
sister, the fair-haired and admirable Susan, owed her brother too
much and loved him too well to be other than friendly to his
wife.</p>
<p>No; on the worldly side all was smooth. The marriage had been
carried through with ease and quietness The Duke, in spite of
Jacob's remonstrances, had largely increased his cousin's salary,
and Julie was already enjoying the income left her by Lord
Lackington. She had only to reappear in London as Jacob's wife to
resume far more than her old social ascendency. The winning cards
had all passed into her hands, and if now there was to be a
struggle with Lady Henry, Lady Henry would be worsted.</p>
<p>All this was or should have been agreeable to the sensitive
nerves of a woman who knew the worth of social advantages. It had
no effect, however, on the mortal depression which was constantly
Julie's portion during the early weeks of her marriage.</p>
<p>As for Delafield, he had entered upon this determining
experiment of his life--a marriage, which was merely a legalized
comradeship, with the woman he adored--in the mind of one resolved
to pay the price of what he had done. This graceful and stately
woman, with her high intelligence and her social gifts, was now his
own property. She was to be the companion of his days and the
mistress of his house. But although he knew well that he had a
certain strong hold upon her, she did not love him, and none of the
fusion of true marriage had taken place or could take place. So be
it. He set himself to build up a relation between them which should
justify the violence offered to natural and spiritual law. His own
delicacy of feeling and perception combined with the strength of
his passion to make every action of their common day a symbol and
sacrament. That her heart regretted Warkworth, that bitterness and
longing, an unspent and baffled love, must be constantly
overshadowing her--these things he not only knew, he was forever
reminding himself of them, driving them, as it were, into
consciousness, as the ascetic drives the spikes into his flesh. His
task was to comfort her, to make her forget, to bring her back to
common peace and cheerfulness of mind.</p>
<p>To this end he began with appealing as much as possible to her
intelligence. He warmly encouraged her work for Meredith. From the
first days of their marriage he became her listener, scholar, and
critic. Himself interested mainly in social, economical, or
religious discussion, he humbly put himself to school in matters of
<i>belles-lettres</i>. His object was to enrich Julie's daily life
with new ambitions and new pleasures, which might replace the
broodings of her illness and convalescence, and then, to make her
feel that she had at hand, in the companion of that life, one who
felt a natural interest in all her efforts, a natural pride in all
her successes.</p>
<p>Alack! the calculation was too simple--and too visible. It took
too little account of the complexities of Julie's nature, of the
ravages and the shock of passion. Julie herself might be ready
enough to return to the things of the mind, but they were no sooner
offered to her, as it were, in exchange for the perilous delights
of love, than she grew dumbly restive. She felt herself, also, too
much observed, too much thought over, made too often, if the truth
were known, the subject of religious or mystical emotion.</p>
<p>More and more, also, was she conscious of strangeness and
eccentricity in the man she had married. It often seemed to that
keen and practical sense which in her mingled so oddly with the
capacity for passion that, as they grew older, and her mind
recovered tone and balance, she would probably love the world
disastrously more and he disastrously less. And if so, the gulf
between them, instead of closing, could but widen.</p>
<p>One day--a showery day in early June--she was left alone for an
hour, while Delafield went down to Montreux to change some circular
notes. Julie took a book from the table and strolled out along the
lovely road that slopes gently downward from Charnex to the old
field-embowered village of Brent.</p>
<p>The rain was just over. It had been a cold rain, and the snow
had crept downward on the heights, and had even powdered the pines
of the Cubly. The clouds were sweeping low in the west. Towards
Geneva the lake was mere wide and featureless space--a cold and
misty water, melting into the fringes of the rain-clouds. But to
the east, above the Rhône valley, the sky was lifting; and as
Julie sat down upon a midway seat and turned herself eastward, she
was met by the full and unveiled glory of the higher Alps--the
Rochers de Naye, the Velan, the Dent du Midi. On the jagged peaks
of the latter a bright shaft of sun was playing, and the great
white or rock-ribbed mass raised itself above the mists of the
lower world, once more unstained and triumphant.</p>
<p>But the cold <i>bise</i> was still blowing, and Julie,
shivering, drew her wrap closer round her. Her heart pined for Como
and the south; perhaps for the little Duchess, who spoiled and
petted her in the common, womanish ways.</p>
<p>The spring--a second spring--was all about her; but in this
chilly northern form it spoke to her with none of the ravishment of
Italy. In the steep fields above her the narcissuses were bent and
bowed with rain; the red-browns of the walnuts glistened in the wet
gleams of sun; the fading apple-blossom beside her wore a
melancholy beauty; only in the rich, pushing grass, with its wealth
of flowers and its branching cow-parsley, was there the stubborn
life and prophecy of summer.</p>
<p>Suddenly Julie caught up the book that lay beside her and opened
it with a hasty hand. It was one of that set of Saint-Simon which
had belonged to her mother, and had already played a part in her
own destiny.</p>
<p>She turned to the famous "character" of the Dauphin, of that
model prince, in whose death Saint-Simon, and Fénelon, and
France herself, saw the eclipse of all great hopes.</p>
<p>"A prince, affable, gentle, humane, patient, modest, full of
compunctions, and, as much as his position allowed--sometimes
beyond it--humble, and severe towards himself."</p>
<p>Was it not to the life? "<i>Affable, doux, humain--patient,
modeste--humble et austère pour soi</i>"--beyond what was
expected, beyond, almost, what was becoming?</p>
<p>She read on to the mention of the Dauphine, terrified, in her
human weakness, of so perfect a husband, and trying to beguile or
tempt him from the heights; to the picture of Louis Quatorze, the
grandfather, shamed in his worldly old age by the presence beside
him of this saintly and high-minded youth; of the Court, looking
forward with dismay to the time when it should find itself under
the rule of a man who despised and condemned both its follies and
its passions, until she reached that final rapture, where, in a
mingled anguish and adoration, Saint-Simon bids eternal farewell to
a character and a heart of which France was not worthy.</p>
<p>The lines passed before her, and she was conscious, guiltily
conscious, of reading them with a double mind.</p>
<p>Then she closed the book, held by the thought of her husband--in
a somewhat melancholy reverie.</p>
<p>There is a Catholic word with which in her convent youth she had
been very familiar--the word <i>recueilli</i>--"recollected." At no
time had it sounded kindly in her ears; for it implied fetters and
self--suppressions--of the voluntary and spiritual sort--wholly
unwelcome to and unvalued by her own temperament. But who that knew
him well could avoid applying it to Delafield? A man of
"recollection" living in the eye of the Eternal; keeping a guard
over himself in the smallest matters of thought and action;
mystically possessed by the passion of a spiritual ideal; in love
with charity, purity, simplicity of life.</p>
<p>She bowed her head upon her hands in dreariness of spirit.
Ultimately, what could such a man want with her? What had she to
give him? In what way could she ever be <i>necessary</i> to him?
And a woman, even in friendship, must feel herself that to be
happy.</p>
<p>Already this daily state in which she found herself--of owing
everything and giving nothing--produced in her a secret irritation
and repulsion; how would it be in the years to come?</p>
<p>"He never saw me as I am," she thought to herself, looking
fretfully back to their past acquaintance. "I am neither as weak as
he thinks me--nor as clever. And how strange it is--this
<i>tension</i> in which he lives!"</p>
<p>And as she sat there idly plucking at the wet grass, her mind
was overrun with a motley host of memories--some absurd, some
sweet, some of an austerity that chilled her to the core. She
thought of the difficulty she had in persuading Delafield to allow
himself even necessary comforts and conveniences; a laugh,
involuntary, and not without tenderness, crossed her face as she
recalled a tale he had told her at Camaldoli, of the contempt
excited in a young footman of a smart house by the mediocrity and
exiguity of his garments and personal appointments generally. "I
felt I possessed nothing that he would have taken as a gift," said
Delafield, with a grin. "It was chastening."</p>
<p>Yet though he laughed, he held to it; and Julie was already so
much of the wife as to be planning how to coax him presently out of
a portmanteau and a top-hat that were in truth a disgrace to their
species.</p>
<p>And all the time <i>she</i> must have the best of everything--a
maid, luxurious travelling, dainty food. They had had one or two
wrestles on the subject already. "Why are you to have all the high
thinking and plain living to yourself?" she had asked him, angrily,
only to be met by the plea, "Dear, get strong first--then you shall
do what you like."</p>
<p>But it was at La Verna, the mountain height overshadowed by the
memories of St. Francis, that she seemed to have come nearest to
the ascetic and mystical tendency in Delafield. He went about the
mountain-paths a transformed being, like one long spiritually
athirst who has found the springs and sources of life. Julie felt a
secret terror. Her impression was much the same as Meredith's--as
of "something wearing through" to the light of day. Looking back
she saw that this temperament, now so plain to view, had been
always there; but in the young and capable agent of the Chudleigh
property, in the Duchess's cousin, or Lady Henry's nephew, it had
passed for the most part unsuspected. How remarkably it had
developed!--whither would it carry them both in the future? When
thinking about it, she was apt to find herself seized with a sudden
craving for Mayfair, "little dinners," and good talk.</p>
<p>"What a pity you weren't born a Catholic!--you might have been a
religious," she said to him one night at La Verna, when he had been
reading her some of the <i>Fioretti</i> with occasional comments of
his own.</p>
<p>But he had shaken his head with a smile.</p>
<p>"You see, I have no creed--or next to none."</p>
<p>The answer startled her. And in the depths of his blue eyes
there seemed to her to be hovering a swarm of thoughts that would
not let themselves loose in her presence, but were none the less
the true companions of his mind. She saw herself a moment as Elsa,
and her husband as a modern Lohengrin, coming spiritually she knew
not whence, bound on some quest mysterious and unthinkable.</p>
<p>"What will you do," she said, suddenly, "when the dukedom comes
to you?"</p>
<p>Delafield's aspect darkened in an instant. If he could have
shown anger to her, anger there would have been.</p>
<p>"That is a subject I never think of or discuss, if I can help
it," he said, abruptly; and, rising to his feet, he pointed out
that the sun was declining fast towards the plain of the Casentino,
and they were far from their hotel.</p>
<p>"Inhuman!--unreasonable!" was the cry of the critical sense in
her as she followed him in silence.</p>
<hr style="width: 25%;">
<p>Innumerable memories of this kind beat on Julie's mind as she
sat dreamily on her bench among the Swiss meadows. How natural that
in the end they should sweep her by reaction into imaginations
wholly indifferent--of a drum-and-trumpet history, in the actual
fighting world.</p>
<p>... Far, far in the African desert she followed the march of
Warkworth's little troop.</p>
<p>Ah, the blinding light--the African scrub and sand--the long,
single line--the native porters with their loads--the handful of
English officers with that slender figure at their head--the
endless, waterless path with its palms and mangoes and mimosas--the
scene rushed upon the inward eye and held it. She felt the heat,
the thirst, the weariness of bone and brain--all the spell and
mystery of the unmapped, unconquered land.</p>
<p>Did he think of her sometimes, at night, under the stars, or in
the blaze and mirage of noon? Yes, yes; he thought of her. Each to
the other their thoughts must travel while they lived.</p>
<p>In Delafield's eyes, she knew, his love for her had been mere
outrage and offence.</p>
<p>Ah, well, <i>he</i>, at least, had needed her. He had desired
only very simple, earthy things--money, position, success--things
it was possible for a woman to give him, or get for him; and at the
last, though it were only as a traitor to his word and his
<i>fiancée</i>, he had asked for love--asked commonly,
hungrily, recklessly, because he could not help it--and then for
pardon! And those are things the memory of which lies deep, deep in
the pulsing, throbbing heart.</p>
<p>At this point she hurriedly checked and scourged herself, as she
did a hundred times a day.</p>
<p>No, no, <i>no</i>! It was all over, and she and Jacob would
still make a fine thing of their life together. Why not?</p>
<p>And all the time there were burning hot tears in her eyes; and
as the leaves of Saint-Simon passed idly through her fingers, the
tears blotted out the meadows and the flowers, and blurred the
figure of a young girl who was slowly mounting the long slope of
road that led from the village of Brent towards the seat on which
Julie was sitting.</p>
<hr style="width: 25%;">
<p>Gradually the figure approached. The mist cleared from Julie's
eyes. Suddenly she found herself giving a close and passionate
attention to the girl upon the road.</p>
<p>Her form was slight and small; under her shady hat there was a
gleam of fair hair arranged in smooth, shining masses about her
neck and temples. As she approached Julie she raised her eyes
absently, and Julie saw a face of singular and delicate beauty,
marred, however, by the suggestion of physical fragility, even
sickliness, which is carried with it. One might have thought it a
face blanched by a tropical climate, and for the moment touched
into faint color by the keen Alpine air. The eyes, indeed, were
full of life; they were no sooner seen but they defined and
enforced a personality. Eager, intent, a little fretful, they
expressed a nervous energy out of all proportion to their owner's
slender physique. In this, other bodily signs concurred. As she
perceived Julie on the bench, for instance, the girl's slight,
habitual frown sharply deepened; she looked at the stranger with
keen observation, both glance and gesture betraying a quick and
restless sensibility.</p>
<p>As for Julie, she half rose as the girl neared her. Her cheeks
were flushed, her lips parted; she had the air of one about to
speak. The girl looked at her in a little surprise and passed
on.</p>
<p>She carried a book under her arm, into which were thrust a few
just-opened letters. She had scarcely passed the bench when an
envelope fell out of the book and lay unnoticed on the road.</p>
<p>Julie drew a long breath. She picked up the envelope. It lay in
her hand, and the name she had expected to see was written upon
it.</p>
<p>For a moment she hesitated. Then she ran after the owner of the
letter.</p>
<p>"You dropped this on the road."</p>
<p>The girl turned hastily.</p>
<p>"Thank you very much. I am sorry to have given you the
trouble--"</p>
<p>Then she paused, arrested evidently by the manner in which Julie
stood regarding her.</p>
<p>"Did--did you wish to speak to me?" she said, uncertainly.</p>
<p>"You are Miss Moffatt?"</p>
<p>"Yes. That is my name. But, excuse me. I am afraid I don't
remember you." The words were spoken with a charming sweetness and
timidity.</p>
<p>"I am Mrs. Delafield."</p>
<p>The girl started violently.</p>
<p>"Are you? I--I beg your pardon!"</p>
<p>She stood in a flushed bewilderment, staring at the lady who had
addressed her, a troubled consciousness possessing itself of her
face and manner more and more plainly with every moment.</p>
<p>Julie asked herself, hurriedly: "How much does she know? What
has she heard?" But aloud she gently said: "I thought you must have
heard of me. Lord Uredale told me he had written--his father wished
it--to Lady Blanche. Your mother and mine were sisters."</p>
<p>The girl shyly withdrew her eyes.</p>
<p>"Yes, mother told me."</p>
<p>There was a moment's silence. The mingled fear and recklessness
which had accompanied Julie's action disappeared from her mind. In
the girl's manner there was neither jealousy nor hatred, only a
young shrinking and reserve.</p>
<p>"May I walk with you a little?"</p>
<p>"Please do. Are you staying at Montreux?"</p>
<p>"No; we are at Charnex--and you?"</p>
<p>"We came up two days ago to a little <i>pension</i> at Brent. I
wanted to be among the fields, now the narcissuses are out. If it
were warm weather we should stay, but mother is afraid of the cold
for me. I have been ill."</p>
<p>"I heard that," said Julie, in a voice gravely kind and winning.
"That was why your mother could not come home."</p>
<p>The girl's eyes suddenly filled with tears.</p>
<p>"No; poor mother! I wanted her to go--we had a good nurse--but
she would not leave me, though she was devoted to my grandfather.
She--"</p>
<p>"She is always anxious about you?"</p>
<p>"Yes. My health has been a trouble lately, and since father
died--"</p>
<p>"She has only you."</p>
<p>They walked on a few paces in silence. Then the girl looked up
eagerly.</p>
<p>"You saw grandfather at the last? Do tell me about it, please.
My uncles write so little."</p>
<p>Julie obeyed with difficulty. She had not realized how hard it
would be for her to talk of Lord Lackington. But she described the
old man's gallant dying as best she could; while Aileen Moffatt
listened with that manner at once timid and rich in feeling which
seemed to be her characteristic.</p>
<p>As they neared the top of the hill where the road begins to
incline towards Charnex, Julie noticed signs of fatigue in her
companion.</p>
<p>"You have been an invalid," she said. "You ought not to go
farther. May I take you home? Would your mother dislike to see
me?"</p>
<p>The girl paused perceptibly. "Ah, there she is!"</p>
<p>They had turned towards Brent, and Julie saw coming towards
them, with somewhat rapid steps, a small, elderly lady,
gray-haired, her features partly hidden by her country hat.</p>
<p>A thrill passed through Julie. This was the sister whose name
her mother had mentioned in her last hour. It was as though
something of her mother, something that must throw light upon that
mother's life and being, were approaching her along this Swiss
road.</p>
<p>But the lady in question, as she neared them, looked with
surprise, not unmingled with hauteur, upon her daughter and the
stranger beside her.</p>
<p>"Aileen, why did you go so far? You promised me only to be a
quarter of an hour."</p>
<p>"I am not tired, mother. Mother, this is Mrs. Delafield. You
remember, Uncle Uredale wrote--"</p>
<p>Lady Blanche Moffatt stood still. Once more a fear swept through
Julie's mind, and this time it stayed. After an evident hesitation,
a hand was coldly extended.</p>
<p>"How do you do? I heard from my brothers of your marriage, but
they said you were in Italy."</p>
<p>"We have just come from there."</p>
<p>"And your husband?"</p>
<p>"He has gone down to Montreux, but he should be home very soon
now. We are only a few steps from our little inn. Would you not
rest there? Miss Moffatt looks very tired."</p>
<p>There was a pause. Lady Blanche was considering her daughter.
Julie saw the trembling of her wide, irregular mouth, of which the
lips were slightly turned outward. Finally she drew her daughter's
hand into her arm, and bent anxiously towards her, scrutinizing her
face.</p>
<p>"Thank you. We will rest a quarter of an hour. Can we get a
carriage at Charnex?"</p>
<p>"Yes, I think so, if you will wait a little on our balcony."</p>
<p>They walked on towards Charnex. Lady Blanche began to talk
resolutely of the weather, which was, indeed, atrocious. She spoke
as she would have done to the merest acquaintance. There was not a
word of her father; not a word, either, of her brother's letter, or
of Julie's relationship to herself. Julie accepted the situation
with perfect composure, and the three kept up some sort of a
conversation till they reached the paved street of Charnex and the
old inn at its lower end.</p>
<p>Julie guided her companions through its dark passages, till they
reached an outer terrace where there were a few scattered seats,
and among them a deck-chair with cushions.</p>
<p>"Please," said Julie, as she kindly drew the girl towards it.
Aileen smiled and yielded. Julie placed her among the cushions,
then brought out a shawl, and covered her warmly from the sharp,
damp air. Aileen thanked her, and lightly touched her hand. A
secret sympathy seemed to have suddenly sprung up between them.</p>
<p>Lady Blanche sat stiffly beside her daughter, watching her face.
The warm touch of friendliness in Aileen's manner towards Mrs.
Delafield seemed only to increase the distance and embarrassment of
her own. Julie appeared to be quite unconscious. She ordered tea,
and made no further allusion of any kind to the kindred they had in
common. She and Lady Blanche talked as strangers.</p>
<p>Julie said to herself that she understood. She remembered the
evening at Crowborough House, the spinster lady who had been the
Moffatts' friend, her own talk with Evelyn. In that way, or in some
other, the current gossip about herself and Warkworth, gossip they
had been too mad and miserable to take much account of, had reached
Lady Blanche. Lady Blanche probably abhorred her; though, because
of her marriage, there was to be an outer civility. Meanwhile no
sign whatever of any angry or resentful knowledge betrayed itself
in the girl's manner. Clearly the mother had shielded her.</p>
<p>Julie felt the flutter of an exquisite relief. She stole many a
look at Aileen, comparing the reality with that old, ugly notion
her jealousy had found so welcome--of the silly or insolent little
creature, possessing all that her betters desired, by the mere
brute force of money or birth. And all the time the reality was
<i>this</i>--so soft, suppliant, ethereal! Here, indeed, was the
child of Warkworth's picture--the innocent, unknowing child, whom
their passion had sacrificed and betrayed. She could see the face
now, as it lay piteous, in Warkworth's hand. Then she raised her
eyes to the original. And as it looked at her with timidity and
nascent love her own heart beat wildly, now in remorse, now in a
reviving jealousy.</p>
<p>Secretly, behind this mask of convention, were they both
thinking of him? A girl's thoughts are never far from her lover;
and Julie was conscious, this afternoon, of a strange and
mysterious preoccupation, whereof Warkworth was the centre.</p>
<hr style="width: 25%;">
<p>Gradually the great mountains at the head of the lake freed
themselves from the last wandering cloud-wreaths. On the rock faces
of the Rochers de Naye the hanging pine-woods, brushed with snow,
came into sight. The white walls of Glion shone faintly out, and a
pearly gold, which was but a pallid reflection of the Italian
glory, diffused itself over mountain and lake. The sun was
grudging; there was no caress in the air. Aileen shivered a little
in her shawls, and when Julie spoke of Italy the girl's enthusiasm
and longing sprang, as it were, to meet her, and both were
conscious of another slight link between them.</p>
<p>Suddenly a sound of steps came to them from below.</p>
<p>"My husband," said Julie, rising, and, going to the balustrade,
she waved to Delafield, who had come up from Montreux by one of the
steep vineyard paths. "I will tell him you are here," she added,
with what might have been taken for the shyness of the young
wife.</p>
<p>She ran down the steps leading from the terrace to the lower
garden. Aileen looked at her mother.</p>
<p>"Isn't she wonderful?" she said, in an ardent whisper. "I could
watch her forever. She is the most graceful person I ever saw.
Mother, is she like Aunt Rose?"</p>
<p>Lady Blanche shook her head.</p>
<p>"Not in the least," she said, shortly. "She has too much manner
for me."</p>
<p>"Oh, mother!" And the girl caught her mother's hand in caressing
remonstrance, as though to say: "Dear little mother, you must like
her, because I do; and you mustn't think of Aunt Rose, and all
those terrible things, except for pity."</p>
<p>"Hush!" said Lady Blanche, smiling at her a little excitedly.
"Hush; they're coming!"</p>
<p>Delafield and Julie emerged from the iron staircase. Lady
Blanche turned and looked at the tall, distinguished pair, her ugly
lower lip hardening ungraciously. But she and Delafield had a
slight previous acquaintance, and she noticed instantly the
charming and solicitous kindness with which he greeted her
daughter.</p>
<p>"Julie tells me Miss Moffatt is still far from strong," he said,
returning to the mother.</p>
<p>Lady Blanche only sighed for answer. He drew a chair beside her,
and they fell into the natural talk of people who belong to the
same social world, and are travelling in the same scenes.</p>
<p>Meanwhile Julie was sitting beside the heiress. Not much was
said, but each was conscious of a lively interest in the other, and
every now and then Julie would put out a careful hand and draw the
shawls closer about the girl's frail form. The strain of guilty
compunction that entered into Julie's feeling did but make it the
more sensitive. She said to herself in a vague haste that now she
would make amends. If only Lady Blanche were willing--</p>
<p>But she should be willing! Julie felt the stirrings of the old
self-confidence, the old trust in a social ingenuity which had, in
truth, rarely failed her. Her intriguing, managing instinct made
itself felt--the mood of Lady Henry's companion.</p>
<hr style="width: 25%;">
<p>Presently, as they were talking, Aileen caught sight of an
English newspaper which Delafield had brought up from Montreux. It
lay still unopened on one of the tables of the terrace.</p>
<p>"Please give it me," said the girl, stretching out an eager
hand. "It will have Tiny's marriage, mamma! A cousin of mine," she
explained to Julie, who rose to hand it to her. "A very favorite
cousin. Oh, thank you."</p>
<p>She opened the paper. Julie turned away, that she might relieve
Lady Blanche of her teacup.</p>
<p>Suddenly a cry rang out--a cry of mortal anguish. Two ladies who
had just stepped out upon the terrace from the hotel drawing-room
turned in terror; the gardener who was watering the flower-boxes at
the farther end stood arrested.</p>
<p>"Aileen!" shrieked Lady Blanche, running to her. "What--what is
it?"</p>
<p>The paper had dropped to the floor, but the child still pointed
to it, gasping.</p>
<p>"Mother--mother!"</p>
<p>Some intuition woke in Julie. She stood dead-white and dumb,
while Lady Blanche threw herself on her daughter.</p>
<p>"Aileen, darling, what is it?"</p>
<p>The girl, in her agony, threw her arms frantically round her
mother, and dragged herself to her feet. She stood tottering, her
hand over her eyes.</p>
<p>"He's dead, mother! He's--dead!"</p>
<p>The last word sank into a sound more horrible even than the
first cry. Then she swayed out of her mother's arms. It was Julie
who caught her, who laid her once more on the deck-chair--a broken,
shrunken form, in whom all the threads and connections of life had
suddenly, as it were, fallen to ruin. Lady Blanche hung over her,
pushing Julie away, gathering the unconscious girl madly in her
arms. Delafield rushed for water-and-brandy. Julie snatched the
paper and looked at the telegrams.</p>
<p>High up in the first column was the one she sought.</p>
<p>/# "CAIRO, <i>June</i> 12.--Great regret is felt here at the
sudden and tragic news of Major Warkworth's death from fever, which
seems to have occurred at a spot some three weeks' distance from
the coast, on or about May 25. Letters from the officer who has
succeeded him in the command of the Mokembe expedition have now
reached Denga. A fortnight after leaving the coast Major Warkworth
was attacked with fever; he made a brave struggle against it, but
it was of a deadly type, and in less than a week he succumbed. The
messenger brought also his private papers and diaries, which have
been forwarded to his representatives in England. Major Warkworth
was a most promising and able officer, and his loss will be keenly
felt." #/</p>
<p>Julie fell on her knees beside her swooning cousin. Lady
Blanche, meanwhile, was loosening her daughter's dress, chafing her
icy hands, or moaning over her in a delirium of terror.</p>
<p>"My darling--my darling! Oh, my God! Why did I allow it? Why did
I ever let him come near her? It was my fault--my fault! And it's
killed her!"</p>
<p>And clinging to her child's irresponsive hands, she looked down
upon her in a convulsion of grief, which included not a shadow of
regret, not a gleam of pity for anything or any one else in the
world but this bone of her bone and flesh of her flesh, which lay
stricken there.</p>
<p>But Julie's mind had ceased to be conscious of the tragedy
beside her. It had passed for the second time into the grasp of an
illusion which possessed itself of the whole being and all its
perceptive powers. Before her wide, terror-stricken gaze there rose
once more the same piteous vision which had tortured her in the
crisis of her love for Warkworth. Against the eternal snows which
close in the lake the phantom hovered in a ghastly
relief--emaciated, with matted hair, and purpled cheeks, and
eyes--not to be borne!--expressing the dumb anger of a man, still
young, who parts unwillingly from life in a last lonely spasm of
uncomforted pain.</p>
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