<h2><SPAN name="XXIV"></SPAN>XXIV</h2>
<br/>
<p>"You have had a disquieting letter?"</p>
<p>The voice was Julie's. Delafield was standing, apparently in
thought, at the farther corner of the little, raised terrace of the
hotel. She approached him with an affectionate anxiety, of which he
was instantly conscious.</p>
<p>"I am afraid I may have to leave you to-night," he said, turning
towards her, and holding out the letter in his hand.</p>
<p>It contained a few agitated lines from the Duke of
Chudleigh.</p>
<p>"They tell me my lad can't get over this. He's made a gallant
fight, but this beats us. A week or two--no more. Ask Mrs.
Delafield to let you come. She will, I know. She wrote to me very
kindly. Mervyn keeps talking of you. You'd come, if you heard him.
It's ghastly--the cruelty of it all. Whether I can live without
him, that's the point."</p>
<p>"You'll go, of course?" said Julie, returning it.</p>
<p>"To-night, if you allow it."</p>
<p>"Of course. You ought."</p>
<p>"I hate leaving you alone, with this trouble on your hands,"
said Jacob, in some agitation. "What are your plans?"</p>
<p>"I could follow you next week. Aileen comes down to-day. And I
should like to wait here for the mail."</p>
<p>"In five days, about, it should be here," said Delafield.</p>
<p>There was a silence. She dropped into a chair beside the
balustrade of the terrace, which was wreathed in wistaria, and
looked out upon the vast landscape of the lake. His thought was,
"How can the mail matter to her? She cannot suppose that he had
written--"</p>
<p>Aloud he said, in some embarrassment, "You expect letters
yourself?"</p>
<p>"I expect nothing," she said, after a pause. "But Aileen is
living on the chance of letters."</p>
<p>"There may be nothing for her--except, indeed, her letters to
him--poor child!"</p>
<p>"She knows that. But the hope keeps her alive."</p>
<p>"And you?" thought Delafield, with an inward groan, as he looked
down upon her pale profile. He had a moment's hateful vision of
himself as the elder brother in the parable. Was Julie's mind to be
the home of an eternal antithesis between the living husband and
the dead lover--in which the latter had forever the <i>beau
rôle</i>?</p>
<p>Then, impatiently, Jacob wrenched himself from mean thoughts. It
was as though he bared his head remorse-fully before the dead
man.</p>
<p>"I will go to the Foreign Office," he said, in her ear, "as I
pass through town. They will have letters. All the information I
can get you shall have at once."</p>
<p>"Thank you, <i>mon ami</i>", she said, almost inaudibly.</p>
<p>Then she looked up, and he was startled by her eyes. Where he
had expected grief, he saw a shrinking animation.</p>
<p>"Write to me often," she said, imperiously.</p>
<p>"Of course. But don't trouble to answer much. Your hands are so
full here."</p>
<p>She frowned.</p>
<p>"Trouble! Why do you spoil me so? Demand--insist--that I should
write!"</p>
<p>"Very well," he said, smiling, "I demand--I insist!"</p>
<p>She drew a long breath, and went slowly away from him into the
house. Certainly the antagonism of her secret thoughts, though it
persisted, was no longer merely cold or critical. For it concerned
one who was not only the master of his own life, but threatened
unexpectedly to become the master of hers.</p>
<p>She had begun, indeed, to please her imagination with the idea
of a relation between them, which, while it ignored the ordinary
relations of marriage, should yet include many of the intimacies
and refinements of love. More and more did the surprises of his
character arrest and occupy her mind. She found, indeed, no
"plaster saint." Her cool intelligence soon detected the traces of
a peevish or stubborn temper, and of a natural inertia, perpetually
combated, however, by the spiritual energy of a new and other self
exfoliating from the old; a self whose acts and ways she watched,
sometimes with the held breath of fascination, sometimes with a
return of shrinking or fear. That a man should not only appear but
be so good was still in her eyes a little absurd. Perhaps her
feeling was at bottom the common feeling of the sceptical nature.
"We should listen to the higher voices; but in such a way that if
another hypothesis were true, we should not have been too
completely duped."</p>
<p>She was ready, also, to convict him of certain prejudices and
superstitions which roused in her an intellectual impatience. But
when all was said, Delafield, unconsciously, was drawing her
towards him, as the fowler draws a fluttering bird. It was the
exquisite refinement of those spiritual insights and powers he
possessed which constantly appealed, not only to her heart, but--a
very important matter in Julie's case--to her taste, to her own
carefully tempered instinct for the rare and beautiful.</p>
<p>He was the master, then, she admitted, of a certain vein of
spiritual genius. Well, here should he lead--and even, if he
pleased, command her. She would sit at his feet, and he should open
to her ranges of feeling, delights, and subtleties of moral
sensation hitherto unknown to her.</p>
<p>Thus the feeling of ennui and reaction which had marked the
first weeks of her married life had now wholly disappeared.
Delafield was no longer dull or pedantic in her eyes. She passed
alternately from moments of intolerable smart and pity for the dead
to moments of agitation and expectancy connected with her husband.
She thought over their meeting of the night before; she looked
forward to similar hours to come.</p>
<p>Meanwhile his relation towards her in many matters was still
naïvely ignorant and humble--determined by the simplicity of a
man of some real greatness, who never dreamed of claiming tastes or
knowledge he did not possess, whether in small things or large.
This phase, however, only gave the more value to one which
frequently succeeded it. For suddenly the conversation would enter
regions where he felt himself peculiarly at home, and, with the
same unconsciousness on his part, she would be made to feel the
dignity and authority which surrounded his ethical and spiritual
life. And these contrasts--this weakness and this
strength--combined with the man-and-woman element which is always
present in any situation of the kind, gave rise to a very varied
and gradually intensifying play of feeling between them. Feeling
only possible, no doubt, for the <i>raffinés</i> of this
world; but for them full of strange charm, and even of
excitement.</p>
<hr style="width: 25%;">
<p>Delafield left the little inn for Montreux, Lausanne, and London
that afternoon. He bent to kiss his wife at the moment of his
departure, in the bare sitting-room that had been improvised for
them on the ground floor of the hotel, and as she let her face
linger ever so little against his she felt strong arms flung round
her, and was crushed against his breast in a hungry embrace. When
he released her with a flush and a murmured word of apology she
shook her head, smiling sadly but saying nothing. The door closed
on him, and at the sound she made a hasty step forward.</p>
<p>"Jacob! Take me with you!"</p>
<p>But her voice died in the rattle and bustle of the diligence
outside, and she was left trembling from head to foot, under a
conflict of emotions that seemed now to exalt, now to degrade
her.</p>
<p>Half an hour after Delafield's departure there appeared on the
terrace of the hotel a tottering, emaciated form--Aileen Moffatt,
in a black dress and hat, clinging to her mother's arm. But she
refused the deck--chair, which they had spread with cushions and
shawls.</p>
<p>"No; let me sit up." And she took an ordinary chair, looking
round upon the lake and the little flowery terrace with a slow,
absorbed look, like one trying to remember. Suddenly she bowed her
head on her hands.</p>
<p>"Aileen!" cried Lady Blanche, in an agony.</p>
<p>But the girl motioned her away. "Don't, mummy. I'm all
right."</p>
<p>And restraining any further emotion, she laid her arms on the
balustrade and gazed long and calmly into the purple depths and
gleaming snows of the Rhône valley. Her hat oppressed her and
she took it off, revealing the abundance of her delicately golden
hair, which, in its lack of lustre and spring, seemed to share in
the physical distress and loss of the whole personality.</p>
<p>The face was that of a doomed creature, incapable now of making
any successful struggle for the right to live. What had been
sensibility had become melancholy; the slight, chronic frown was
deeper, the pale lips more pinched. Yet intermittently there was
still great sweetness, the last effort of a "beautiful soul" meant
for happiness, and withered before its time.</p>
<p>As Julie stood beside her, while Lady Blanche had gone to fetch
a book from the salon, the poor child put out her hand and grasped
that of Julie.</p>
<p>"It is quite possible I may get the letter to-night," she said,
in a hurried whisper. "My maid went down to Montreux--there is a
clever man at the post-office who tried to make it out for us. He
thinks it'll be to-night."</p>
<p>"Don't be too disappointed if nothing comes," said Julie,
caressing the hand. Its thinness, its icy and lifeless touch,
dismayed her. Ah, how easily might this physical wreck have been
her doing!</p>
<hr style="width: 25%;">
<p>The bells of Montreux struck half-past six. A restless and
agonized expectation began to show itself in all the movements of
the invalid. She left her chair and began to pace the little
terrace on Julie's arm. Her dragging step, the mournful black of
her dress, the struggle between youth and death in her sharpened
face, made her a tragic presence. Julie could hardly bear it, while
all the time she, too, was secretly and breathlessly waiting for
Warkworth's last words.</p>
<p>Lady Blanche returned, and Julie hurried away.</p>
<p>She passed through the hotel and walked down the Montreux road.
The post had already reached the first houses of the village, and
the postman, who knew her, willingly gave her the letters.</p>
<p>Yes, a packet for Aileen, addressed in an unknown hand to a
London address, and forwarded thence. It bore the Denga
postmark.</p>
<p>And another for herself, readdressed from London by Madame
Bornier. She tore off the outer envelope; beneath was a letter of
which the address was feebly written in Warkworth's hand:
"Mademoiselle Le Breton, 3 Heribert Street, London."</p>
<p>She had the strength to carry her own letter to her room, to
call Aileen's maid and send her with the other packet to Lady
Blanche. Then she locked herself in....</p>
<p>Oh, the poor, crumpled page, and the labored hand-writing!</p>
<p>"Julie, I am dying. They are such good fellows, but they can't
save me. It's horrible.</p>
<p>"I saw the news of your engagement in a paper the day before I
left Denga. You're right. He'll make you happy. Tell him I said so.
Oh, my God, I shall never trouble you again! I bless you for the
letter you wrote me. Here it is.... No, I can't--can't read it.
Drowsy. No pain--"</p>
<p>And here the pen had dropped from his hand. Searching for
something more, she drew from the envelope the wild and passionate
letter she had written him at Heribert Street, in the early morning
after her return from Paris, while she was waiting for Delafield to
bring her the news of Lord Lackington's state.</p>
<hr style="width: 25%;">
<p>The small <i>table d'hôte</i> of the Hotel Michel was
still further diminished that night. Lady Blanche was with her
daughter, and Mrs. Delafield did not appear.</p>
<p>But the moon was hanging in glory over the lake when Julie,
unable to bear her room and her thoughts any longer, threw a lace
scarf about her head and neck, and went blindly climbing through
the upward paths leading to Les Avants. The roads were silver in
the moonlight; so was the lake, save where the great mountain
shadows lay across the eastern end. And suddenly, white, through
pine-trees, "Jaman, delicately tall!"</p>
<p>The air cooled her brow, and from the deep, enveloping night her
torn heart drew balm, and a first soothing of the pulse of pain.
Every now and then, as she sat down to rest, a waking dream
overshadowed her. She seemed to be supporting Warkworth in her
arms; his dying head lay upon her breast, and she murmured courage
and love into his ear. But not as Julie Le Breton. Through all the
anguish of what was almost an illusion of the senses, she still
felt herself Delafield's wife. And in that flood of silent speech
she poured out on Warkworth, it was as though she offered him also
Jacob's compassion, Jacob's homage, mingled with her own.</p>
<p>Once she found herself sitting at the edge of a meadow,
environed by the heavy scents of flowers. Some apple-trees with
whitened trunks rose between her and the lake a thousand feet
below. The walls of Chillon, the houses of Montreux, caught the
light; opposite, the deep forests of Bouveret and St. Gingolphe lay
black upon the lake; above them rode the moon. And to the east the
high Alps, their pure lines a little effaced and withdrawn, as when
a light veil hangs over a sanctuary.</p>
<p>Julie looked out upon a vast freedom of space, and by a natural
connection she seemed to be also surveying her own world of life
and feeling, her past and her future. She thought of her childhood
and her parents, of her harsh, combative youth, of the years with
Lady Henry, of Warkworth, of her husband, and the life into which
his strong hand had so suddenly and rashly drawn her. Her thoughts
took none of the religious paths so familiar to his. And yet her
reverie was so far religious that her mind seemed to herself to be
quivering under the onset of affections, emotions, awes, till now
unknown, and that, looking back, she was conscious of a groping
sense of significance, of purpose, in all that had befallen her.
Yet to this sense she could put no words. Only, in the end, through
the constant action of her visualizing imagination, it connected
itself with Delafield's face, and with the memory of many of his
recent acts and sayings.</p>
<p>It was one of those hours which determine the history of a man
or woman. And the august Alpine beauty entered in, so that Julie,
in this sad and thrilling act of self-probing, felt herself in the
presence of powers and dominations divine.</p>
<p>Her face, stained with tears, took gradually some of the calm,
the loftiness of the night. Yet the close-shut, brooding mouth
would slip sometimes into a smile exquisitely soft and gentle, as
though the heart remembered something which seemed to the
intelligence at once folly and sweetness.</p>
<p>What was going on within her was, to her own consciousness, a
strange thing. It appeared to her as a kind of simplification, a
return to childhood; or, rather, was it the emergence in the grown
mind, tired with the clamor of its own egotistical or passionate
life, of some instincts, natural to the child, which she,
nevertheless, as a child had never known; instincts of trust, of
self-abandonment, steeped, perhaps, in those tears which are
themselves only another happiness?...</p>
<p>But hush! What are our poor words in the presence of these
nobler secrets of the wrestling and mounting spirit!</p>
<hr style="width: 25%;">
<p>On the way down she saw another figure emerge from the dark.</p>
<p>"Lady Blanche!"</p>
<p>Lady Blanche stood still.</p>
<p>"The hotel was stifling," she said, in a voice that vainly tried
for steadiness.</p>
<p>Julie perceived that she had been weeping.</p>
<p>"Aileen is asleep?"</p>
<p>"Perhaps. They have given her something to make her sleep."</p>
<p>They walked on towards the hotel.</p>
<p>Julie hesitated.</p>
<p>"She was not disappointed?" she said, at last, in a low
voice.</p>
<p>"No!" said the mother, sharply. "But one knew, of course, there
must be letters for her. Thank God, she can feel that his very last
thought was for her! The letters which have reached her are dated
the day before the fatal attack began--giving a complete account of
his march--most interesting--showing how he trusted her
already--though she is such a child. It will tranquillize her to
feel how completely she possessed his heart--poor fellow!"</p>
<p>Julie said nothing, and Lady Blanche, with bitter satisfaction,
felt rather than saw what seemed to her the just humiliation
expressed in the drooping and black-veiled figure beside her.</p>
<p>Next day there was once more a tinge of color on Aileen's
cheeks. Her beautiful hair fell round her once more in a soft life
and confusion, and the roses which her mother had placed beside her
on the bed were not in too pitiful contrast with her frail
loveliness.</p>
<p>"Read it, please," she said, as soon as she found herself alone
with Julie, pushing her letter tenderly towards her. "He tells me
everything--everything! All he was doing and hoping--consults me in
everything. Isn't it an honor--when I'm so ignorant and childish?
I'll try to be brave--try to be worthy--"</p>
<p>And while her whole frame was shaken with deep, silent sobs, she
greedily watched Julie read the letter.</p>
<p>"Oughtn't I to try and live," she said, dashing away her tears,
as Julie returned it, "when he loved me so?"</p>
<p>Julie kissed her with a passionate and guilty pity. The letter
might have been written to any friend, to any charming child for
whom a much older man had a kindness. It gave a business-like
account of their march, dilated on one or two points of policy,
drew some humorous sketches of his companions, and concluded with a
few affectionate and playful sentences.</p>
<p>But when the wrestle with death began, Warkworth wrote but one
last letter, uttered but one cry of the heart, and it lay now in
Julie's bosom.</p>
<hr style="width: 25%;">
<p>A few days passed. Delafield's letters were short and full of
sadness. Elmira still lived; but any day or hour might see the end.
As for the father--But the subject was too tragic to be written of,
even to her. Not to feel, not to realize; there lay the only chance
of keeping one's own courage, and so of being any help whatever to
two of the most miserable of human beings.</p>
<p>At last, rather more than a week after Delafield's departure,
came two telegrams. One was from Delafield--"Mervyn died this
morning. Duke's condition causes great anxiety." The other from
Evelyn Crowborough--"Elmira died this morning. Going down to
Shropshire to help Jacob."</p>
<p>Julie threw down the telegrams. A rush of proud tears came to
her eyes. She swept to the door of her room, opened it, and called
her maid.</p>
<p>The maid came, and when she saw the sparkling looks and strained
bearing of her mistress, wondered what crime she was to be rebuked
for. Julie merely bade her pack at once, as it was her intention to
catch the eight o'clock through train at Lausanne that night for
England.</p>
<hr style="width: 25%;">
<p>Twenty hours later the train carrying Julie to London entered
Victoria Station. On the platform stood the little Duchess,
impatiently expectant. Julie was clasped in her arms, and had no
time to wonder at the pallor and distraction of her friend before
she was hurried into the brougham waiting beyond the train.</p>
<p>"Oh, Julie!" cried the Duchess, catching the traveller's hands,
as they drove away. "Julie, darling!"</p>
<p>Julie turned to her in amazement. The blue eyes fixed upon her
had no tears, but in them, and in the Duchess's whole aspect, was
expressed a vivid horror and agitation which struck at Julie's
heart.</p>
<p>"What is it?" she said, catching her breath. "What is it?"</p>
<p>"Julie, I was going to Faircourt this morning. First your
telegram stopped me. I thought I'd wait and go with you. Then came
another, from Delafield. The Duke! The poor Duke!"</p>
<p>Julie's attitude changed unconsciously--instantly.</p>
<p>"Yes; tell me!"</p>
<p>"It's in all the papers to-night--on the placards--don't look
out!" And the Duchess lifted her hand and drew down the blinds of
the brougham. "He was in a most anxious state yesterday, but they
thought him calmer at night, and he insisted on being left alone.
The doctors still kept a watch, but he managed in some mysterious
way to evade them all, and this morning he was missed. After two
hours they found him--in the river that runs below the house!"</p>
<p>There was a silence.</p>
<p>"And Jacob?" said Julie, hoarsely.</p>
<p>"That's what I'm so anxious about," exclaimed the Duchess. "Oh,
I am thankful you've come! You know how Jacob's always felt about
the Duke and Mervyn--how he's hated the notion of succeeding. And
Susan, who went down yesterday, telegraphed to me last
night--before this horror--that he was 'terribly strained and
overwrought.'"</p>
<p>"Succeeding?" said Julie, vaguely. Mechanically she had drawn up
the blind again, and her eyes followed the dingy lines of the
Vauxhall Bridge Road, till suddenly they turned away from the
placards outside a small stationer's shop which announced: "Tragic
death of the Duke of Chudleigh and his son."</p>
<p>The Duchess looked at her curiously without replying. Julie
seemed to be grappling with some idea which escaped her, or,
rather, was presently expelled by one more urgent.</p>
<p>"Is Jacob ill?" she said, abruptly, looking her companion full
in the face.</p>
<p>"I only know what I've told you. Susan says 'strained and
overwrought.' Oh, it'll be all right when he gets you!"</p>
<p>Julie made no reply. She sat motionless, and the Duchess,
stealing another glance at her, must needs, even in this tragic
turmoil, allow herself the reflection that she was a more delicate
study in black-and-white, a more refined and accented personality
than ever.</p>
<p>"You won't mind," said Evelyn, timidly, after a pause; "but Lady
Henry is staying with me, and also Sir Wilfrid Bury, who had such a
bad cold in his lodgings that I went down there a week ago, got the
doctor's leave, and carried him off there and then. And Mr.
Montresor's coming in. He particularly wanted, he said, just to
press your hand. But they sha'n't bother you if you're tired. Our
train goes at 10.10, and Freddie has got the express stopped for us
at Westonport--about three in the morning."</p>
<p>The carriage rolled into Grosvenor Square, and presently stopped
before Crowborough House. Julie alighted, looked round her at the
July green of the square, at the brightness of the window-boxes,
and then at the groom of the chambers who was taking her wraps from
her--the same man who, in the old days, used to feed Lady Henry's
dogs with sweet biscuit. It struck her that he was showing her a
very particular and eager attention.</p>
<hr style="width: 25%;">
<p>Meanwhile in the Duchess's drawing--room a little knot of people
was gathered--Lady Henry, Sir Wilfrid Bury, and Dr. Meredith. Their
demeanor illustrated both the subduing and the exciting influence
of great events. Lady Henry was more talkative than usual. Sir
Wilfrid more silent.</p>
<p>Lady Henry seemed to have profited by her stay at Torquay. As
she sat upright in a stiff chair, her hands resting on her stick,
she presented her characteristic aspect of English solidity,
crossed by a certain free and foreign animation. She had been
already wrangling with Sir Wilfrid, and giving her opinion freely
on the "socialistic" views on rank and property attributed to Jacob
Delafield. "If <i>he</i> can't digest the cake, that doesn't mean
it isn't good," had been her last impatient remark, when Sir
Wilfrid interrupted her.</p>
<p>"Only a few minutes more," he said, looking at his watch. "Now,
then, what line do we take? How much is our friend likely to
know?"</p>
<p>"Unless she has lost her eyesight--which Evelyn has not
reported--she will know most of what matters before she has gone a
hundred yards from the station," said Lady Henry, dryly.</p>
<p>"Oh, the streets! Yes; but persons are often curiously dazed by
such a gallop of events."</p>
<p>"Not Julie Le Breton!"</p>
<p>"I should like to be informed as to the part you are about to
play," said Sir Wilfrid, in a lower voice, "that I may play up to
it. Where are you?"</p>
<p>Both looked at Meredith, who had walked to a distant window and
was standing there looking out upon the square. Lady Henry was well
aware that <i>he</i> had not forgiven her, and, to tell the truth,
was rather anxious that he should. So she, too, dropped her
voice.</p>
<p>"I bow to the institutions of my country," she said, a little
sparkle in the strong, gray eye.</p>
<p>"In other words, you forgive a duchess?"</p>
<p>"I acknowledge the head of the family, and the greater carries
the less."</p>
<p>"Suppose Jacob should be unforgiving?"</p>
<p>"He hasn't the spirit."</p>
<p>"And she?"</p>
<p>"Her conscience will be on my side."</p>
<p>"I thought it was your theory that she had none?"</p>
<p>"Jacob, let us hope, will have developed some. He has a good
deal to spare."</p>
<p>Sir Wilfrid laughed. "So it is you who will do the
pardoning?"</p>
<p>"I shall offer an armed and honorable peace. The Duchess of
Chudleigh may intrigue and tell lies, if she pleases. I am not
giving her a hundred a year."</p>
<p>There was a pause.</p>
<p>"Why, if I may ask," said Sir Wilfrid, at the end of it, "did
you quarrel with Jacob? I understand there was a separate
cause:"</p>
<p>Lady Henry hesitated.</p>
<p>"He paid me a debt," she said, at last, and a sudden flush rose
in her old, blanched cheek.</p>
<p>"And that annoyed you? You have the oddest code!"</p>
<p>Lady Henry bit her lip.</p>
<p>"One does not like one's money thrown in one's face."</p>
<p>"Most unreasonable of women!"</p>
<p>"Never mind, Wilfrid. We all have our feelings."</p>
<p>"Precisely. Well, no doubt Jacob will make peace. As for--Ah,
here comes Montresor!"</p>
<p>A visible tremor passed through Lady Henry. The door was thrown
open, and the footman announced the Minister for War.</p>
<p>"Her grace, sir, is not yet returned."</p>
<p>Montresor stumbled into the room, and even with his eye-glasses
carefully adjusted, did not at once perceive who was in it.</p>
<p>Sir Wilfrid went towards him.</p>
<p>"Ah, Bury! Convalescent, I hope?"</p>
<p>"Quite. The Duchess has gone to meet Mrs. Delafield."</p>
<p>"Mrs.--?" Montresor's mouth opened. "But, of course, you
know?"</p>
<p>"Oh yes, I know. But one's tongue has to get oiled. You see Lady
Henry?"</p>
<p>Montresor started.</p>
<p>"I am glad to see Lady Henry," he replied, stiffly.</p>
<p>Lady Henry slowly rose and advanced two steps. She quietly held
out her hand to him, and, smiling, looked him in the face.</p>
<p>"Take it. There is no longer any cause of quarrel between us. I
raise the embargo."</p>
<p>The Minister took the hand, and shook his head.</p>
<p>"Ah, but you had no right to impose it," he said, with
energy.</p>
<p>"Oh, for goodness sake, meet me half-way," cried Lady Henry, "or
I shall never hold out!"</p>
<p>Sir Wilfrid, whose half-embarrassed gaze was bent on the ground,
looked up and was certain that he saw a gleam of moisture in those
wrinkled eyes.</p>
<p>"Why have you held out so long? What does it matter to me
whether Miss Julie be a duchess or no? That doesn't make up to me
for all the months you've shut your door on me. And I was always
given to understand, by-the-way, that it wouldn't matter to
you."</p>
<p>"I've had three months at Torquay," said Lady Henry, raising her
shoulders.</p>
<p>"I hope it was dull to distraction."</p>
<p>"It was. And my doctor tells me the more I fret the more gout I
may expect."</p>
<p>"So all this is not generosity, but health?"</p>
<p>"Kiss my hand, sir, and have done with it! You are all avenged.
At Torquay I had four companions in seven weeks."</p>
<p>"More power to them!" said Montresor. "Meredith, come here.
Shall we accept the pleas?"</p>
<p>Meredith came slowly from the window, his hands behind his
back.</p>
<p>"Lady Henry commands and we obey," he said, slowly. "But to-day
begins a new world--founded in ruin, like the rest of them."</p>
<p>He raised his fine eyes, in which there was no laughter, rather
a dreamy intensity. Lady Henry shrank.</p>
<p>"If you're thinking of Chudleigh," she said, uncertainly, "be
glad for him. It was release. As for Henry Warkworth--"</p>
<p>"Ah, poor fellow!" said Montresor, perfunctorily. "Poor
fellow!"</p>
<p>He had dropped Lady Henry's hand, but he now recaptured it,
enclosing the thin, jewelled fingers in his own.</p>
<p>"Well, well, then it's peace, with all my heart." He stooped and
lightly kissed the fingers. "And now, when do you expect our
friend?"</p>
<p>"At any moment," said Lady Henry.</p>
<p>She seated herself, and Montresor beside her.</p>
<p>"I am told," said Montresor, "that this horror will not only
affect Delafield personally, but that he will regard the dukedom as
a calamity."</p>
<p>"Hm!--and you believe it?" said Lady Henry.</p>
<p>"I try to," was the Minister's laughing reply. "Ah, surely, here
they are!"</p>
<p>Meredith turned from the window, to which he had gone back.</p>
<p>"The carriage has just arrived," he announced, and he stood
fidgeting, standing first on one foot, then on the other, and
running his hand through his mane of gray hair. His large features
were pale, and any close observer would have detected the quiver of
emotion.</p>
<p>A sound of voices from the anteroom, the Duchess's light tones
floating to the top. At the same time a door on the other side of
the drawing-room opened and the Duke of Crowborough appeared.</p>
<p>"I think I hear my wife," he said, as he greeted Montresor and
hurriedly crossed the room.</p>
<p>There was a rustle of quick steps, and the little Duchess
entered.</p>
<p>"Freddie, here is Julie!"</p>
<p>Behind appeared a tall figure in black. Everybody in the room
advanced, including Lady Henry, who, however, after a few steps
stood still behind the others, leaning on her stick.</p>
<p>Julie looked round the little circle, then at the Duke of
Crowborough, who had gravely given her his hand. The suppressed
excitement already in the room clearly communicated itself to her.
She did not lose her self-command for an instant, but her face
pleaded.</p>
<p>"Is it really true? Perhaps there is some mistake?"</p>
<p>"I fear there can be none," said the Duke, sadly. "Poor
Chudleigh had been long dead when they found him."</p>
<p>"Freddie," said the Duchess, interrupting, "I have told Greswell
we shall want the carriage at half-past nine for Euston. Will that
do?"</p>
<p>"Perfectly."</p>
<p>Greswell, the handsome groom of the chambers, approached
Julie.</p>
<p>"Your grace's maid wishes to know whether it is your grace's
wish that she should go round to Heribert Street before taking the
luggage to Euston?"</p>
<p>Julie looked at the man, bewildered. Then a stormy color rushed
into her cheeks.</p>
<p>"Does he mean my maid?" she said to the Duke, piteously.</p>
<p>"Certainly. Will you give your orders?"</p>
<p>She gave them, and then, turning again to the Duke, she covered
her eyes with her hands a moment.</p>
<p>"What does it all mean?" she said, faltering. "It seems as
though we were all mad."</p>
<p>"You understand, of course, that Jacob succeeds?" said the Duke,
not without coldness; and he stood still an instant, gazing at this
woman, who must now, he supposed, feel herself at the very summit
of her ambitions.</p>
<p>Julie drew a long breath. Then she perceived Lady Henry.
Instantly, impetuously, she crossed the room. But as she reached
that composed and formidable figure, the old timidity, the old
fear, seized her. She paused abruptly, but she held out her
hand.</p>
<p>Lady Henry took it. The two women stood regarding each other,
while the other persons in the room instinctively turned away from
their meeting. Lady Henry's first look was one of curiosity. Then,
before the indefinable, ennobling change in Julie's face, now full
of the pale agitation of memory, the eyes of the older woman
wavered and dropped. But she soon recovered herself.</p>
<p>"We meet again under very strange circumstances," she said,
quietly; "though I have long foreseen them. As for our former
experience, we were in a false relation, and it made fools of us
both. You and Jacob are now the heads of the family. And if you
like to make friends with me on this new footing, I am ready. As to
my behavior, I think it was natural; but if it rankles in your
mind, I apologize."</p>
<p>The personal pride of the owner, curbed in its turn by the pride
of tradition and family, spoke strangely from these words. Julie
stood trembling, her chest heaving.</p>
<p>"I, too, regret--and apologize," she said, in a low voice.</p>
<p>"Then we begin again. But now you must let Evelyn take you to
rest for an hour or two. I am sorry you have this hurried journey
to-night."</p>
<p>Julie pressed her hands to her breast with one of those dramatic
movements that were natural to her.</p>
<p>"Oh, I must see Jacob!" she said, under her breath--"I must see
Jacob!"</p>
<p>And she turned away, looking vaguely round her. Meredith
approached.</p>
<p>"Comfort yourself," he said, very gently, pressing her hand in
both of his. "It has been a great shock, but when you get there
he'll be all right."</p>
<p>"Jacob?"</p>
<p>Her expression, the piteous note in her voice, awoke in him an
answering sense of pain. He wondered how it might be between the
husband and wife. Yet it was borne in upon him, as upon Lady Henry,
that her marriage, however interpreted, had brought with it
profound and intimate transformation. A different woman stood
before him. And when, after a few more words, the Duchess swept
down upon them, insisting that Julie must rest awhile, Meredith
stood looking after the retreating figures, filled with the old,
bitter sense of human separateness, and the fragmentariness of all
human affections. Then he made his farewells to the Duke and Lady
Henry, and slipped away. He had turned a page in the book of life;
and as he walked through Grosvenor Square he applied his mind
resolutely to one of the political "causes" with which, as a
powerful and fighting journalist, he was at that moment
occupied.</p>
<p>Lady Henry, too, watched Julie's exit from the room.</p>
<p>"So now she supposes herself in love with Jacob?" she thought,
with amusement, as she resumed her seat.</p>
<p>"What if Delafield refuses to be made a duke?" said Sir Wilfrid,
in her ear.</p>
<p>"It would be a situation new to the Constitution," said Lady
Henry, composedly. "I advise you, however, to wait till it
occurs."</p>
<hr style="width: 25%;">
<p>The northern express rushed onward through the night. Rugby,
Stafford, Crewe had been left behind. The Yorkshire valleys and
moors began to show themselves in pale ridges and folds under the
moon. Julie, wakeful in her corner opposite the little, sleeping
Duchess, was conscious of an interminable rush of images through a
brain that longed for a few unconscious and forgetful moments. She
thought of the deferential station-master at Euston; of the fuss
attending their arrival on the platform; of the arrangements made
for stopping the express at the Yorkshire Station, where they were
to alight.</p>
<p>Faircourt? Was it the great Early-Georgian house of which she
had heard Jacob speak--the vast pile, half barrack, half palace, in
which, according to him, no human being could be either happy or at
home?</p>
<p>And this was now his--and hers? Again the whirl of thoughts
swept and danced round her.</p>
<p>A wild, hill country. In the valleys, the blackness of thick
trees, the gleam of rivers, the huge, lifeless factories; and
beyond, the high, silver edges, the sharp shadows of the moors....
The train slackened, and the little Duchess woke at once.</p>
<p>"Ten minutes to three. Oh, Julie, here we are!"</p>
<p>The dawn was just coldly showing as they alighted. Carriages and
servants were waiting, and various persons whose identity and
function it was not easy to grasp. One of them, however, at once
approached Julie with a privileged air, and she perceived that he
was a doctor.</p>
<p>"I am very glad that your grace has come," he said, as he raised
his hat. "The trouble with the Duke is shock, and want of
sleep."</p>
<p>Julie looked at him, still bewildered.</p>
<p>"How long has my husband been ill?"</p>
<p>He walked on beside her, describing in as few words as possible
the harrowing days preceding the death of the boy, Delafield's
attempts to soothe and control the father, the stratagem by which
the poor Duke had outwitted them all, and the weary hours of search
through the night, under a drizzling rain, which had resulted,
about dawn, in the discovery of the Duke's body in one of the
deeper holes of the river.</p>
<p>"When the procession returned to the house, your husband"--the
speaker framed the words uncertainly--"had a long fainting-fit. It
was probably caused by the exhaustion of the search--many hours
without food--and many sleepless nights. We kept him in his room
all day. But towards evening he insisted on getting up. The
restlessness he shows is itself a sign of shock. I trust, now you
are here, you may be able to persuade him to spare himself.
Otherwise the consequences might be grave."</p>
<p>The drive to the house lay mainly through a vast park, dotted
with stiff and melancholy woods. The morning was cloudy; even the
wild roses in the hedges and the daisies in the grass had neither
gayety nor color. Soon the house appeared--an immense pile of
stone, with a pillared centre, and wings to east and west, built in
a hollow, gray and sunless. The mournful blinds drawn closely down
made of it rather a mausoleum for the dead than a home for the
living.</p>
<p>At the approach of the carriage, however, doors were thrown
open, servants appeared, and on the steps, trembling and
heavy-eyed, stood Susan Delafield.</p>
<p>She looked timidly at Julie, and then, as they passed into the
great central hall, the two kissed each other with tears.</p>
<p>"He is in his room, waiting for you. The doctors persuaded him
not to come down. But he is dressed, and reading and writing. We
don't believe he has slept at all for a week."</p>
<hr style="width: 25%;">
<p>"Through there," said Susan Delafield, stepping back. "That is
the door."</p>
<br/>
<SPAN name="illus-480.jpg"></SPAN>
<p class="ctr"><SPAN href="images/illus-480.jpg"><ANTIMG src=
"images/illus-480.jpg" width="60%" alt=""></SPAN><br/>
<b>"SHE FOUND HERSELF KNEELING BESIDE HIM"</b></p>
<br/>
<p>Julie softly opened it, and closed it behind her. Delafield had
heard her approach, and was standing by the table, supporting
himself upon it. His aspect filled Julie with horror. She ran to
him and threw her arms round him. He sank back into his chair, and
she found herself kneeling beside him, murmuring to him, while his
head rested upon her shoulder.</p>
<p>"Jacob, I am here! Oh, I ought to have been here all through!
It's terrible--terrible! But, Jacob, you won't suffer so--now I'm
here--now we're together--now I love you, Jacob?"</p>
<p>Her voice broke in tears. She put back the hair from his brow,
kissing him with a tenderness in which there was a yearning and
lovely humility. Then she drew a little away, waiting for him to
speak, in an agony.</p>
<p>But for a time he seemed unable to speak. He feebly released
himself, as though he could not bear the emotion she offered him,
and his eyes closed.</p>
<p>"Jacob, come and lie down!" she said, in terror. "Let me call
the doctors."</p>
<p>He shook his head, and a faint pressure from his hand bade her
sit beside him.</p>
<p>"I shall be better soon. Give me time. I'll tell you--"</p>
<p>Then silence again. She sat holding his hand, her eyes fixed
upon him. Time passed, she knew not how. Susan came into the
room--a small sitting-room in the east wing--to tell her that the
neighboring bedroom had been prepared for herself. Julie only
looked up for an instant with a dumb sign of refusal. A doctor came
in, and Delafield made a painful effort to take the few spoonfuls
of food and stimulant pressed upon him. Then he buried his face in
the side of the arm-chair.</p>
<p>"Please let us be alone," he said, with a touch of his old
peremptoriness, and both Susan and the doctor obeyed.</p>
<p>But it was long before he could collect energy enough to talk.
When he did, he made an effort to tell her the story of the boy's
death, and the father's self-destruction. He told it leaning
forward in his chair, his eyes on the ground, his hands loosely
joined, his voice broken and labored. Julie listened, gathering
from his report an impression of horror, tragic and irremediable,
similar to that which had shaken the balance of his own mind. And
when he suddenly looked up with the words, "And now <i>I</i> am
expected to take their place--to profit by their deaths! What
rightful law of God or man binds me to accept a life and a
responsibility that I loathe?" Julie drew back as though he had
struck her. His face, his tone were not his own--there was a
violence, a threat in them, addressed, as it were, specially to
<i>her</i>. "If it were not for you," his eyes seemed to say, "I
could refuse this thing, which will destroy me, soul and body."</p>
<p>She was silent, her pulses fluttering, and he resumed, speaking
like one groping his way:</p>
<p>"I could have done the work, of course--I have done it for five
years. I could have looked after the estate and the people. But the
money, the paraphernalia, the hordes of servants, the mummery of
the life! Why, Julie, should we be forced into it? What
happiness--I ask you--what happiness can it bring to either of
us?"</p>
<p>And again he looked up, and again it seemed to Julie that his
expression was one of animated hostility and antagonism--antagonism
to her, as embodying for the moment all the arguments--of
advantage, custom, law--he was, in his own mind, fighting and
denying. With a failing heart she felt herself very far from him.
Was there not also something in his attitude, unconsciously, of
that old primal antagonism of the man to the woman, of the stronger
to the weaker, the more spiritual to the more earthy?</p>
<p>"You think, no doubt," he said, after a pause, "that it is my
duty to take this thing, even if I <i>could</i> lay it down?"</p>
<p>"I don't know what I think," she said, hurriedly. "It is very
strange, of course, what you say. We ought to discuss it
thoroughly. Let me have a little time."</p>
<p>He gave an impatient sigh, then suddenly rose.</p>
<p>"Will you come and look at them?"</p>
<p>She, too, rose and put her hand in his.</p>
<p>"Take me where you will."</p>
<p>"It is not horrible," he said, shading his eyes a moment. "They
are at peace."</p>
<p>With a feeble step, leaning on her arm, he guided her through
the great, darkened house. Julie was dimly aware of wide
staircases, of galleries and high halls, of the pictures of past
Delafields looking down upon them. The morning was now far
advanced. Many persons were at work in the house, but Julie was
conscious of them only as distant figures that vanished at their
approach. They walked alone, guarded from all intrusion by the awe
and sympathy of the unseen human beings around them.</p>
<p>Delafield opened the closed door.</p>
<p>The father and son lay together, side by side, the boy's face in
a very winning repose, which at first sight concealed the traces of
his long suffering; the father's also--closed eyes and sternly shut
mouth--suggesting, not the despair which had driven him to his
death, but, rather, as in sombre triumph, the all-forgetting,
all-effacing sleep which he had won from death.</p>
<p>They stood a moment, till Delafield fell on his knees. Julie
knelt beside him. She prayed for a while; then she wearied, being,
indeed, worn out with her journey. But Delafield was motionless,
and it seemed to Julie that he hardly breathed.</p>
<p>She rose to her feet, and found her eyes for the first time
flooded with tears. Never for many weeks had she felt so lonely, or
so utterly unhappy. She would have given anything to forget herself
in comforting Jacob. But he seemed to have no need of her, no
thought of her.</p>
<p>As she vaguely looked round her, she saw that beside the dead
man was a table holding some violets--the only flowers in the
room--some photographs, and a few well--worn books. Softly she took
up one. It was a copy of the <i>Meditations of Marcus Aurelius</i>,
much noted and underlined. It would have seemed to her sacrilege to
look too close; but she presently perceived a letter between its
pages, and in the morning light, which now came strongly into the
room through a window looking on the garden, she saw plainly that
it was written on thin, foreign paper, that it was closed, and
addressed to her husband.</p>
<p>"Jacob!"</p>
<p>She touched him softly on the shoulder, alarmed by his long
immobility.</p>
<p>He looked up, and it appeared to Julie as though he were shaking
off with difficulty some abnormal and trancelike state. But he
rose, looking at her strangely.</p>
<p>"Jacob, this is yours."</p>
<p>He took the book abruptly, almost as if she had no right to be
holding it. Then, as he saw the letter, the color rushed into his
face. He took it, and after a moment's hesitation walked to the
window and opened it.</p>
<p>She saw him waver, and ran to his support. But he put out a hand
which checked her.</p>
<p>"It was the last thing he wrote," he said; and then,
uncertainly, and without reading any but the first words of the
letter, he put it into his pocket.</p>
<p>Julie drew back, humiliated. His gesture said that to a secret
so intimate and sacred he did not propose to admit his wife.</p>
<p>They went back silently to the room from which they had come.
Sentence after sentence came to Julie's lips, but it seemed useless
to say them, and once more, but in a totally new way, she was
"afraid" of the man beside her.</p>
<hr style="width: 25%;">
<p>She left him shortly after, by his own wish.</p>
<p>"I will lie down, and you must rest," he said, with
decision.</p>
<p>So she bathed and dressed, and presently she allowed the kind,
fair-haired Susan to give her food, and pour out her own history of
the death-week which she and Jacob had passed through. But in all
that was said, Julie noticed that Susan spoke of her brother very
little, and of his inheritance and present position not at all. And
once or twice she noticed a wondering or meditative expression in
the girl's charming eyes as they rested on herself, and realized
that the sense of mystery, of hushed expectancy, was not confined
to her own mind.</p>
<p>When Susan left her at nine o'clock, it was to give a number of
necessary orders in the house. The inquest was to be held in the
morning, and the whole day would be filled with arrangements for
the double funeral. The house would be thronged with officials of
all sorts. "Poor Jacob!" said the sister, sighing, as she went
away.</p>
<p>But the tragic tumult had not yet begun. The house was still
quiet, and Julie was for the first time alone.</p>
<p>She drew up the blinds, and stood gazing out upon the park, now
flooded with light; at the famous Italian garden beneath the
windows, with its fountains and statues; at the wide lake which
filled the middle distance; and the hills beyond it, with the
plantations and avenues which showed the extension of the park as
far as the eye could see.</p>
<p>Julie knew very well what it all implied. Her years with Lady
Henry, in connection with her own hidden sense of birth and family,
had shown her with sufficient plainness the conditions under which
the English noble lives. She <i>was</i> actually, at that moment,
Duchess of Chudleigh; her strong intelligence faced and appreciated
the fact; the social scope and power implied in those three words
were all the more vivid to her imagination because of her history
and up-bringing. She had not grown to maturity <i>inside</i>, like
Delafield, but as an exile from a life which was yet naturally
hers--an exile, full, sometimes, of envy, and the passions of
envy.</p>
<p>It had no terrors for her--quite the contrary--this high social
state. Rather, there were moments when her whole nature reached out
to it, in a proud and confident ambition. Nor had she any mystical
demurrer to make. The originality which in some ways she richly
possessed was not concerned in the least with the upsetting of
class distinctions, and as a Catholic she had been taught loyally
to accept them.</p>
<p>The minutes passed away. Julie sank deeper and deeper into
reverie, her head leaning against the side of the window, her hands
clasped before her on her black dress. Once or twice she found the
tears dropping from her eyes, and once or twice she smiled.</p>
<p>She was not thinking of the tragic circumstances amid which she
stood. From that short trance of feeling even the piteous figures
of the dead father and son faded away. Warkworth entered into it,
but already invested with the passionless and sexless beauty of a
world where--whether it be to us poetry or reality--"they neither
marry nor are given in marriage." Her warm and living thoughts
spent themselves on one theme only--the redressing of a spiritual
balance. She was no longer a beggar to her husband; she had the
wherewithal to give. She had been the mere recipient, burdened with
debts beyond her paying; now--</p>
<p>And then it was that her smiles came--tremluous, fugitive,
exultant.</p>
<hr style="width: 25%;">
<p>A bell rang in the long corridor, and the slight sound recalled
her to life and action. She walked towards the door which separated
her from the sitting-room where she had left her husband, and
opened it without knocking.</p>
<p>Delafield was sitting at a writing-table in the window. He had
apparently been writing; but she found him in a moment of pause,
playing absently with the pen he still held.</p>
<p>As she entered he looked up, and it seemed to her that his
aspect and his mood had changed. Her sudden and indefinable sense
of this made it easier for her to hasten to him, and to hold out
her hands to him.</p>
<p>"Jacob, you asked me a question just now, and I begged you to
give me time. But I am here to answer it. If it would be to your
happiness to refuse the dukedom, refuse it. I will not stand in
your way, and I will never reproach you. I suppose"--she made
herself smile upon him--"there are ways of doing such a strange
thing. You will be much criticised, perhaps much blamed. But if it
seems to you right, do it. I'll just stand by you and help you.
Whatever makes you happy shall make me happy, if only--"</p>
<p>Delafield had risen impetuously and held her by both hands. His
breast heaved, and the hurrying of her own breath would now hardly
let her speak.</p>
<p>"If only what?" he said, hoarsely.</p>
<p>She raised her eyes.</p>
<p>"If only, <i>mon ami</i>"--she disengaged one hand and laid it
gently on his shoulder--"you will give me your trust, and"--her
voice dropped--"your love!"</p>
<p>They gazed at each other. Between them, around them hovered
thoughts of the past--of Warkworth, of the gray Channel waves, of
the spiritual relation which had grown up between them in
Switzerland, mingled with the consciousness of this new,
incalculable present, and of the growth and change in
themselves.</p>
<p>"You'd give it all up?" said Delafield, gently, still holding
her at arm's-length.</p>
<p>"Yes," she nodded to him, with a smile.</p>
<p>"For me? For my sake?"</p>
<p>She smiled again. He drew a long breath, and turning to the
table behind him, took up a letter which was lying there.</p>
<p>"I want you to read that," he said, holding it out to her.</p>
<p>She drew back, with a little, involuntary frown.</p>
<p>He understood.</p>
<p>"Dearest," he cried, pressing her hand passionately, "I have
been in the grip of all the powers of death! Read it--be good to
me!"</p>
<p>Standing beside him, with his arm round her, she read the
melancholy Duke's last words:</p>
<p>/# "My Dear Jacob,--I leave you a heavy task, which I know well
is, in your eyes, a mere burden. But, for my sake, accept it. The
man who runs away has small right to counsel courage. But you know
what my struggle has been. You'll judge me mercifully, if no one
else does. There is in you, too, the little, bitter drop that
spoils us all; but you won't be alone. You have your wife, and you
love her. Take my place here, care for our people, speak of us
sometimes to your children, and pray for us. I bless you, dear
fellow. The only moments of comfort I have ever known this last
year have come from you. I would live on if I could, but I
must--<i>must</i> have sleep." #/</p>
<p>Julie dropped the paper. She turned to look at her husband.</p>
<p>"Since I read that," he said, in a low voice, "I have been
sitting here alone--or, rather, it is my belief that I have not
been alone. But"--he hesitated--"it is very difficult for me to
speak of that--even to you. At any rate, I have felt the touch of
discipline, of command. My poor cousin deserted. I, it seems"--he
drew a long and painful breath--"must keep to the ranks."</p>
<p>"Let us discuss it," said Julie; and sitting down, hand in hand,
they talked quietly and gravely.</p>
<p>Suddenly, Delafield turned to her with renewed emotion.</p>
<p>"I feel already the energy, the honorable ambition you will
bring to it. But still, you'd have given it up, Julie? You'd have
given it up?"</p>
<p>Julie chose her words.</p>
<p>"Yes. But now that we are to keep it, will you hate me if, some
day--when we are less sad--I get pleasure from it? I sha'n't be
able to help it. When we were at La Verna, I felt that you ought to
have been born in the thirteenth century, that you were really
meant to wed poverty and follow St. Francis. But now you have got
to be horribly, hopelessly rich. And I, all the time, am a
worldling, and a modern. What you'll suffer from, I shall
perhaps--enjoy."</p>
<p>The word fell harshly on the darkened room. Delafield shivered,
as though he felt the overshadowing dead. Julie impetuously took
his hand.</p>
<p>"It will be my part to be a worldling--for your sake," she said,
her breath wavering. Their eyes met. From her face shone a
revelation, a beauty that enwrapped them both. Delafield fell on
his knees beside her, and laid his head upon her breast. The
exquisite gesture with which she folded her arms about him told her
inmost thought. At last he needed her, and the dear knowledge
filled and tamed her heart.</p>
<br/>
<p>THE END</p>
<br/>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />