<SPAN name="chap09"></SPAN>
<h3> IX </h3>
<p>The next day Durham left with his family for England, with the
intention of not returning till after the divorce should have been
pronounced in September.</p>
<p>To say that he left with a quiet heart would be to overstate the
case: the fact that he could not communicate to Madame de Malrive
the substance of his talk with her sister-in-law still hung upon him
uneasily. But of definite apprehensions the lapse of time gradually
freed him, and Madame de Malrive's letters, addressed more
frequently to his mother and sisters than to himself, reflected, in
their reassuring serenity, the undisturbed course of events.</p>
<p>There was to Durham something peculiarly touching—as of an
involuntary confession of almost unbearable loneliness—in the way
she had regained, with her re-entry into the clear air of American
associations, her own fresh trustfulness of view. Once she had
accustomed herself to the surprise of finding her divorce unopposed,
she had been, as it now seemed to Durham, in almost too great haste
to renounce the habit of weighing motives and calculating chances.
It was as though her coming liberation had already freed her from
the garb of a mental slavery, as though she could not too soon or
too conspicuously cast off the ugly badge of suspicion. The fact
that Durham's cleverness had achieved so easy a victory over forces
apparently impregnable, merely raised her estimate of that
cleverness to the point of letting her feel that she could rest in
it without farther demur. He had even noticed in her, during his few
hours in Paris, a tendency to reproach herself for her lack of
charity, and a desire, almost as fervent as his own, to expiate it
by exaggerated recognition of the disinterestedness of her
opponents—if opponents they could still be called. This sudden
change in her attitude was peculiarly moving to Durham. He knew she
would hazard herself lightly enough wherever her heart called her;
but that, with the precious freight of her child's future weighing
her down, she should commit herself so blindly to his hand stirred
in him the depths of tenderness. Indeed, had the actual course of
events been less auspiciously regular, Madame de Malrive's
confidence would have gone far toward unsettling his own; but with
the process of law going on unimpeded, and the other side making no
sign of open or covert resistance, the fresh air of good faith
gradually swept through the inmost recesses of his distrust.</p>
<p>It was expected that the decision in the suit would be reached by
mid-September; and it was arranged that Durham and his family should
remain in England till a decent interval after the conclusion of the
proceedings. Early in the month, however, it became necessary for
Durham to go to France to confer with a business associate who was
in Paris for a few days, and on the point of sailing for Cherbourg.
The most zealous observance of appearances could hardly forbid
Durham's return for such a purpose; but it had been agreed between
himself and Madame de Malrive—who had once more been left alone by
Madame de Treymes' return to her family—that, so close to the
fruition of their wishes, they would propitiate fate by a scrupulous
adherence to usage, and communicate only, during his hasty visit, by
a daily interchange of notes.</p>
<p>The ingenuity of Madame de Malrive's tenderness found, however, the
day after his arrival, a means of tempering their privation.
"Christiane," she wrote, "is passing through Paris on her way from
Trouville, and has promised to see you for me if you will call on
her today. She thinks there is no reason why you should not go to
the Hôtel de Malrive, as you will find her there alone, the family
having gone to Auvergne. She is really our friend and understands
us."</p>
<p>In obedience to this request—though perhaps inwardly regretting
that it should have been made—Durham that afternoon presented
himself at the proud old house beyond the Seine. More than ever, in
the semi-abandonment of the <i>morte saison</i>, with reduced service,
and shutters closed to the silence of the high-walled court, did it
strike the American as the incorruptible custodian of old prejudices
and strange social survivals. The thought of what he must represent
to the almost human consciousness which such old houses seem to
possess, made him feel like a barbarian desecrating the silence of a
temple of the earlier faith. Not that there was anything venerable
in the attestations of the Hôtel de Malrive, except in so far as, to
a sensitive imagination, every concrete embodiment of a past order
of things testifies to real convictions once suffered for. Durham,
at any rate, always alive in practical issues to the view of the
other side, had enough sympathy left over to spend it sometimes,
whimsically, on such perceptions of difference. Today, especially,
the assurance of success—the sense of entering like a victorious
beleaguerer receiving the keys of the stronghold—disposed him to a
sentimental perception of what the other side might have to say for
itself, in the language of old portraits, old relics, old usages
dumbly outraged by his mere presence.</p>
<p>On the appearance of Madame de Treymes, however, such considerations
gave way to the immediate act of wondering how she meant to carry
off her share of the adventure. Durham had not forgotten the note on
which their last conversation had closed: the lapse of time serving
only to give more precision and perspective to the impression he had
then received.</p>
<p>Madame de Treymes' first words implied a recognition of what was in
his thoughts.</p>
<p>"It is extraordinary, my receiving you here; but <i>que voulez vous?</i>
There was no other place, and I would do more than this for our dear
Fanny."</p>
<p>Durham bowed. "It seems to me that you are also doing a great deal
for me."</p>
<p>"Perhaps you will see later that I have my reasons," she returned
smiling. "But before speaking for myself I must speak for Fanny."</p>
<p>She signed to him to take a chair near the sofa-corner in which she
had installed herself, and he listened in silence while she
delivered Madame de Malrive's message, and her own report of the
progress of affairs.</p>
<p>"You have put me still more deeply in your debt," he said, as she
concluded; "I wish you would make the expression of this feeling a
large part of the message I send back to Madame de Malrive."</p>
<p>She brushed this aside with one of her light gestures of
deprecation. "Oh, I told you I had my reasons. And since you are
here—and the mere sight of you assures me that you are as well as
Fanny charged me to find you—with all these preliminaries disposed
of, I am going to relieve you, in a small measure, of the weight of
your obligation."</p>
<p>Durham raised his head quickly. "By letting me do something in
return?"</p>
<p>She made an assenting motion. "By asking you to answer a question."</p>
<p>"That seems very little to do."</p>
<p>"Don't be so sure! It is never very little to your race." She leaned
back, studying him through half-dropped lids.</p>
<p>"Well, try me," he protested.</p>
<p>She did not immediately respond; and when she spoke, her first words
were explanatory rather than interrogative.</p>
<p>"I want to begin by saying that I believe I once did you an
injustice, to the extent of misunderstanding your motive for a
certain action."</p>
<p>Durham's uneasy flush confessed his recognition of her meaning. "Ah,
if we must go back to <i>that</i>—"</p>
<p>"You withdraw your assent to my request?"</p>
<p>"By no means; but nothing consolatory you can find to say on that
point can really make any difference."</p>
<p>"Will not the difference in my view of you perhaps make a difference
in your own?"</p>
<p>She looked at him earnestly, without a trace of irony in her eyes or
on her lips. "It is really I who have an <i>amende</i> to make, as I now
understand the situation. I once turned to you for help in a painful
extremity, and I have only now learned to understand your reasons
for refusing to help me."</p>
<p>"Oh, my reasons—" groaned Durham.</p>
<p>"I have learned to understand them," she persisted, "by being so
much, lately, with Fanny."</p>
<p>"But I never told her!" he broke in.</p>
<p>"Exactly. That was what told <i>me</i>. I understood you through her, and
through your dealings with her. There she was—the woman you adored
and longed to save; and you would not lift a finger to make her
yours by means which would have seemed—I see it now—a desecration
of your feeling for each other." She paused, as if to find the exact
words for meanings she had never before had occasion to formulate.
"It came to me first—a light on your attitude—when I found you had
never breathed to her a word of our talk together. She had
confidently commissioned you to find a way for her, as the mediaeval
lady sent a prayer to her knight to deliver her from captivity, and
you came back, confessing you had failed, but never justifying
yourself by so much as a hint of the reason why. And when I had
lived a little in Fanny's intimacy—at a moment when circumstances
helped to bring us extraordinarily close—I understood why you had
done this; why you had let her take what view she pleased of your
failure, your passive acceptance of defeat, rather than let her
suspect the alternative offered you. You couldn't, even with my
permission, betray to any one a hint of my miserable secret, and you
couldn't, for your life's happiness, pay the particular price that I
asked." She leaned toward him in the intense, almost childlike,
effort at full expression. "Oh, we are of different races, with a
different point of honour; but I understand, I see, that you are
good people—just simply, courageously <i>good!</i>"</p>
<p>She paused, and then said slowly: "Have I understood you? Have I put
my hand on your motive?"</p>
<p>Durham sat speechless, subdued by the rush of emotion which her
words set free.</p>
<p>"That, you understand, is my question," she concluded with a faint
smile; and he answered hesitatingly: "What can it matter, when the
upshot is something I infinitely regret?"</p>
<p>"Having refused me? Don't!" She spoke with deep seriousness, bending
her eyes full on his: "Ah, I have suffered—suffered! But I have
learned also—my life has been enlarged. You see how I have
understood you both. And that is something I should have been
incapable of a few months ago."</p>
<p>Durham returned her look. "I can't think that you can ever have been
incapable of any generous interpretation."</p>
<p>She uttered a slight exclamation, which resolved itself into a laugh
of self-directed irony.</p>
<p>"If you knew into what language I have always translated life! But
that," she broke off, "is not what you are here to learn."</p>
<p>"I think," he returned gravely, "that I am here to learn the measure
of Christian charity."</p>
<p>She threw him a new, odd look. "Ah, no—but to show it!" she
exclaimed.</p>
<p>"To show it? And to whom?"</p>
<p>She paused for a moment, and then rejoined, instead of answering:
"Do you remember that day I talked with you at Fanny's? The day
after you came back from Italy?"</p>
<p>He made a motion of assent, and she went on: "You asked me then what
return I expected for my service to you, as you called it; and I
answered, the contemplation of your happiness. Well, do you know
what that meant in my old language—the language I was still
speaking then? It meant that I knew there was horrible misery in
store for you, and that I was waiting to feast my eyes on it: that's
all!"</p>
<p>She had flung out the words with one of her quick bursts of
self-abandonment, like a fevered sufferer stripping the bandage from
a wound. Durham received them with a face blanching to the pallour
of her own.</p>
<p>"What misery do you mean?" he exclaimed.</p>
<p>She leaned forward, laying her hand on his with just such a gesture
as she had used to enforce her appeal in Mrs. Boykin's boudoir. The
remembrance made him shrink slightly from her touch, and she drew
back with a smile.</p>
<p>"Have you never asked yourself," she enquired, "why our family
consented so readily to a divorce?"</p>
<p>"Yes, often," he replied, all his unformed fears gathering in a dark
throng about him. "But Fanny was so reassured, so convinced that we
owed it to your good offices—"</p>
<p>She broke into a laugh. "My good offices! Will you never, you
Americans, learn that we do not act individually in such cases? That
we are all obedient to a common principle of authority?"</p>
<p>"Then it was not you—?"</p>
<p>She made an impatient shrugging motion. "Oh, you are too
confiding—it is the other side of your beautiful good faith!"</p>
<p>"The side you have taken advantage of, it appears?"</p>
<p>"I—we—all of us. I especially!" she confessed.</p>
<br/><br/><br/>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />