THE BLAZE OF THE TINDER—FLESH WARS WITH THE FLESH
The misfortune of the Hurstwood household
was due to the fact that jealousy, having been born
of love, did not perish with it. Mrs. Hurstwood
retained this in such form that subsequent influences
could transform it into hate. Hurstwood was still
worthy, in a physical sense, of the affection his wife
had once bestowed upon him, but in a social sense
he fell short. With his regard died his power
to be attentive to her, and this, to a woman, is much
greater than outright crime toward another. Our
self-love dictates our appreciation of the good or
evil in another. In Mrs. Hurstwood it discoloured
the very hue of her husband’s indifferent nature.
She saw design in deeds and phrases which sprung
only from a faded appreciation of her presence.
As a consequence, she was resentful
and suspicious. The jealousy that prompted her
to observe every falling away from the little amenities
of the married relation on his part served to give
her notice of the airy grace with which he still took
the world. She could see from the scrupulous
care which he exercised in the matter of his personal
appearance that his interest in life had abated not
a jot. Every motion, every glance had something
in it of the pleasure he felt in Carrie, of the zest
this new pursuit of pleasure lent to his days.
Mrs. Hurstwood felt something, sniffing change, as
animals do danger, afar off.
This feeling was strengthened by actions
of a direct and more potent nature on the part of
Hurstwood. We have seen with what irritation
he shirked those little duties which no longer contained
any amusement of satisfaction for him, and the open
snarls with which, more recently, he resented her irritating
goads. These little rows were really precipitated
by an atmosphere which was surcharged with dissension.
That it would shower, with a sky so full of blackening
thunderclouds, would scarcely be thought worthy of
comment. Thus, after leaving the breakfast table
this morning, raging inwardly at his blank declaration
of indifference at her plans, Mrs. Hurstwood encountered
Jessica in her dressing-room, very leisurely arranging
her hair. Hurstwood had already left the house.
“I wish you wouldn’t be
so late coming down to breakfast,” she said,
addressing Jessica, while making for her crochet basket.
“Now here the things are quite cold, and you
haven’t eaten.”
Her natural composure was sadly ruffled,
and Jessica was doomed to feel the fag end of the
storm.
“I’m not hungry,” she answered.
“Then why don’t you say
so, and let the girl put away the things, instead
of keeping her waiting all morning?”
“She doesn’t mind,” answered Jessica,
coolly.
“Well, I do, if she doesn’t,”
returned the mother, “and, anyhow, I don’t
like you to talk that way to me. You’re
too young to put on such an air with your mother.”
“Oh, mamma, don’t row,”;
answered Jessica. “What’s the matter
this morning, anyway?”
“Nothing’s the matter,
and I’m not rowing. You mustn’t think
because I indulge you in some things that you can keep
everybody waiting. I won’t have it.”
“I’m not keeping anybody
waiting,” returned Jessica, sharply, stirred
out of a cynical indifference to a sharp defence.
“I said I wasn’t hungry. I don’t
want any breakfast.”
“Mind how you address me, missy.
I’ll not have it. Hear me now; I’ll
not have it!”
Jessica heard this last while walking
out of the room, with a toss of her head and a flick
of her pretty skirts indicative of the independence
and indifference she felt. She did not propose
to be quarrelled with.
Such little arguments were all too
frequent, the result of a growth of natures which
were largely independent and selfish. George,
Jr., manifested even greater touchiness and exaggeration
in the matter of his individual rights, and attempted
to make all feel that he was a man with a man’s
privileges—an assumption which, of all
things, is most groundless and pointless in a youth
of nineteen.
Hurstwood was a man of authority and
some fine feeling, and it irritated him excessively
to find himself surrounded more and more by a world
upon which he had no hold, and of which he had a lessening
understanding.
Now, when such little things, such
as the proposed earlier start to Waukesha, came up,
they made clear to him his position. He was
being made to follow, was not leading. When,
in addition, a sharp temper was manifested, and to
the process of shouldering him out of his authority
was added a rousing intellectual kick, such as a sneer
or a cynical laugh, he was unable to keep his temper.
He flew into hardly repressed passion, and wished
himself clear of the whole household. It seemed
a most irritating drag upon all his desires and opportunities.
For all this, he still retained the
semblance of leadership and control, even though his
wife was straining to revolt. Her display of
temper and open assertion of opposition were based
upon nothing more than the feeling that she could do
it. She had no special evidence wherewith to
justify herself—the knowledge of something
which would give her both authority and excuse.
The latter was all that was lacking, however, to
give a solid foundation to what, in a way, seemed
groundless discontent. The clear proof of one
overt deed was the cold breath needed to convert the
lowering clouds of suspicion into a rain of wrath.
An inkling of untoward deeds on the
part of Hurstwood had come. Doctor Beale, the
handsome resident physician of the neighbourhood,
met Mrs. Hurstwood at her own doorstep some days after
Hurstwood and Carrie had taken the drive west on Washington
Boulevard. Dr. Beale, coming east on the same
drive, had recognised Hurstwood, but not before he
was quite past him. He was not so sure of Carrie—did
not know whether it was Hurstwood’s wife or
daughter.
“You don’t speak to your
friends when you meet them out driving, do you?”
he said, jocosely, to Mrs. Hurstwood.
“If I see them, I do. Where was I?”
“On Washington Boulevard.”
he answered, expecting her eye to light with immediate
remembrance.
She shook her head.
“Yes, out near Hoyne Avenue. You were
with your husband.”
“I guess you’re mistaken,”
she answered. Then, remembering her husband’s
part in the affair, she immediately fell a prey to
a host of young suspicions, of which, however, she
gave no sign.
“I know I saw your husband,”
he went on. “I wasn’t so sure about
you. Perhaps it was your daughter.”
“Perhaps it was,” said
Mrs. Hurstwood, knowing full well that such was not
the case, as Jessica had been her companion for weeks.
She had recovered herself sufficiently to wish to
know more of the details.
“Was it in the afternoon?”
she asked, artfully, assuming an air of acquaintanceship
with the matter.
“Yes, about two or three.”
“It must have been Jessica,”
said Mrs. Hurstwood, not wishing to seem to attach
any importance to the incident.
The physician had a thought or two
of his own, but dismissed the matter as worthy of
no further discussion on his part at least.
Mrs. Hurstwood gave this bit of information
considerable thought during the next few hours, and
even days. She took it for granted that the
doctor had really seen her husband, and that he had
been riding, most likely, with some other woman, after
announcing himself as busy to her. As a
consequence, she recalled, with rising feeling, how
often he had refused to go to places with her, to
share in little visits, or, indeed, take part in any
of the social amenities which furnished the diversion
of her existence. He had been seen at the theatre
with people whom he called Moy’s friends; now
he was seen driving, and, most likely, would have
an excuse for that. Perhaps there were others
of whom she did not hear, or why should he be so busy,
so indifferent, of late? In the last six weeks
he had become strangely irritable—strangely
satisfied to pick up and go out, whether things were
right or wrong in the house. Why?
She recalled, with more subtle emotions,
that he did not look at her now with any of the old
light of satisfaction or approval in his eye.
Evidently, along with other things, he was taking
her to be getting old and uninteresting. He
saw her wrinkles, perhaps. She was fading, while
he was still preening himself in his elegance and
youth. He was still an interested factor in the
merry-makings of the world, while she—but
she did not pursue the thought. She only found
the whole situation bitter, and hated him for it thoroughly.
Nothing came of this incident at the
time, for the truth is it did not seem conclusive
enough to warrant any discussion. Only the atmosphere
of distrust and ill-feeling was strengthened, precipitating
every now and then little sprinklings of irritable
conversation, enlivened by flashes of wrath.
The matter of the Waukesha outing was merely a continuation
of other things of the same nature.
The day after Carrie’s appearance
on the Avery stage, Mrs. Hurstwood visited the races
with Jessica and a youth of her acquaintance, Mr.
Bart Taylor, the son of the owner of a local house-furnishing
establishment. They had driven out early, and,
as it chanced, encountered several friends of Hurstwood,
all Elks, and two of whom had attended the performance
the evening before. A thousand chances the subject
of the performance had never been brought up had Jessica
not been so engaged by the attentions of her young
companion, who usurped as much time as possible.
This left Mrs. Hurstwood in the mood to extend the
perfunctory greetings of some who knew her into short
conversations, and the short conversations of friends
into long ones. It was from one who meant but
to greet her perfunctorily that this interesting intelligence
came.
“I see,” said this individual,
who wore sporting clothes of the most attractive pattern,
and had a field-glass strung over his shoulder, “that
you did not get over to our little entertainment last
evening.”
“No?” said Mrs. Hurstwood,
inquiringly, and wondering why he should be using
the tone he did in noting the fact that she had not
been to something she knew nothing about. It
was on her lips to say, “What was it?”
when he added, “I saw your husband.”
Her wonder was at once replaced by
the more subtle quality of suspicion.
“Yes,” she said, cautiously,
“was it pleasant? He did not tell me much
about it.”
“Very. Really one of the
best private theatricals I ever attended. There
was one actress who surprised us all.”
“Indeed,” said Mrs. Hurstwood.
“It’s too bad you couldn’t
have been there, really. I was sorry to hear
you weren’t feeling well.”
Feeling well! Mrs. Hurstwood
could have echoed the words after him open-mouthed.
As it was, she extricated herself from her mingled
impulse to deny and question, and said, almost raspingly:
“Yes, it is too bad.”
“Looks like there will be quite
a crowd here to-day, doesn’t it?” the
acquaintance observed, drifting off upon another topic.
The manager’s wife would have
questioned farther, but she saw no opportunity.
She was for the moment wholly at sea, anxious to
think for herself, and wondering what new deception
was this which caused him to give out that she was
ill when she was not. Another case of her company
not wanted, and excuses being made. She resolved
to find out more.
“Were you at the performance
last evening?” she asked of the next of Hurstwood’s
friends who greeted her as she sat in her box.
“Yes. You didn’t get around.”
“No,” she answered, “I was not feeling
very well.”
“So your husband told me,”
he answered. “Well, it was really very
enjoyable. Turned out much better than I expected.”
“Were there many there?”
“The house was full. It
was quite an Elk night. I saw quite a number
of your friends—Mrs. Harrison, Mrs. Barnes,
Mrs. Collins.”
“Quite a social gathering.”
“Indeed it was. My wife enjoyed it very
much.”
Mrs. Hurstwood bit her lip.
“So,” she thought, “that’s
the way he does. Tells my friends I am sick
and cannot come.”
She wondered what could induce him
to go alone. There was something back of this.
She rummaged her brain for a reason.
By evening, when Hurstwood reached
home, she had brooded herself into a state of sullen
desire for explanation and revenge. She wanted
to know what this peculiar action of his imported.
She was certain there was more behind it all than
what she had heard, and evil curiosity mingled well
with distrust and the remnants of her wrath of the
morning. She, impending disaster itself, walked
about with gathered shadow at the eyes and the rudimentary
muscles of savagery fixing the hard lines of her mouth.
On the other hand, as we may well
believe, the manager came home in the sunniest mood.
His conversation and agreement with Carrie had raised
his spirits until he was in the frame of mind of one
who sings joyously. He was proud of himself,
proud of his success, proud of Carrie. He could
have been genial to all the world, and he bore no
grudge against his wife. He meant to be pleasant,
to forget her presence, to live in the atmosphere of
youth and pleasure which had been restored to him.
So now, the house, to his mind, had
a most pleasing and comfortable appearance.
In the hall he found an evening paper, laid there
by the maid and forgotten by Mrs. Hurstwood.
In the dining-room the table was clean laid with linen
and napery and shiny with glasses and decorated china.
Through an open door he saw into the kitchen, where
the fire was crackling in the stove and the evening
meal already well under way. Out in the small
back yard was George, Jr., frolicking with a young
dog he had recently purchased, and in the parlour
Jessica was playing at the piano, the sounds of a
merry waltz filling every nook and corner of the comfortable
home. Every one, like himself, seemed to have
regained his good spirits, to be in sympathy with youth
and beauty, to be inclined to joy and merry-making.
He felt as if he could say a good word all around
himself, and took a most genial glance at the spread
table and polished sideboard before going upstairs
to read his paper in the comfortable armchair of the
sitting-room which looked through the open windows
into the street. When he entered there, however,
he found his wife brushing her hair and musing to
herself the while.
He came lightly in, thinking to smooth
over any feeling that might still exist by a kindly
word and a ready promise, but Mrs. Hurstwood said
nothing. He seated himself in the large chair,
stirred lightly in making himself comfortable, opened
his paper, and began to read. In a few moments
he was smiling merrily over a very comical account
of a baseball game which had taken place between the
Chicago and Detroit teams.
The while he was doing this Mrs. Hurstwood
was observing him casually through the medium of the
mirror which was before her. She noticed his
pleasant and contented manner, his airy grace and
smiling humour, and it merely aggravated her the more.
She wondered how he could think to carry himself
so in her presence after the cynicism, indifference,
and neglect he had heretofore manifested and would
continue to manifest so long as she would endure it.
She thought how she should like to tell him—what
stress and emphasis she would lend her assertions,
how she should drive over this whole affair until
satisfaction should be rendered her. Indeed,
the shining sword of her wrath was but weakly suspended
by a thread of thought.
In the meanwhile Hurstwood encountered
a humorous item concerning a stranger who had arrived
in the city and became entangled with a bunco-steerer.
It amused him immensely, and at last he stirred and
chuckled to himself. He wished that he might
enlist his wife’s attention and read it to her.
“Ha, ha,” he exclaimed
softly, as if to himself, “that’s funny.”
Mrs. Hurstwood kept on arranging her
hair, not so much as deigning a glance.
He stirred again and went on to another
subject. At last he felt as if his good-humour
must find some outlet. Julia was probably still
out of humour over that affair of this morning, but
that could easily be straightened. As a matter
of fact, she was in the wrong, but he didn’t
care. She could go to Waukesha right away if
she wanted to. The sooner the better. He
would tell her that as soon as he got a chance, and
the whole thing would blow over.
“Did you notice,” he said,
at last, breaking forth concerning another item which
he had found, “that they have entered suit to
compel the Illinois Central to get off the lake front,
Julia?” he asked.
She could scarcely force herself to
answer, but managed to say “No,” sharply.
Hurstwood pricked up his ears.
There was a note in her voice which vibrated keenly.
“It would be a good thing if
they did,” he went on, half to himself, half
to her, though he felt that something was amiss in
that quarter. He withdrew his attention to his
paper very circumspectly, listening mentally for the
little sounds which should show him what was on foot.
As a matter of fact, no man as clever
as Hurstwood—as observant and sensitive
to atmospheres of many sorts, particularly upon his
own plane of thought—would have made the
mistake which he did in regard to his wife, wrought
up as she was, had he not been occupied mentally with
a very different train of thought. Had not the
influence of Carrie’s regard for him, the elation
which her promise aroused in him, lasted over, he
would not have seen the house in so pleasant a mood.
It was not extraordinarily bright and merry this
evening. He was merely very much mistaken, and
would have been much more fitted to cope with it had
he come home in his normal state.
After he had studied his paper a few
moments longer, he felt that he ought to modify matters
in some way or other. Evidently his wife was
not going to patch up peace at a word. So he
said:
“Where did George get the dog
he has there in the yard?”
“I don’t know,” she snapped.
He put his paper down on his knees
and gazed idly out of the window. He did not
propose to lose his temper, but merely to be persistent
and agreeable, and by a few questions bring around
a mild understanding of some sort.
“Why do you feel so bad about
that affair of this morning? he said, at last.
“We needn’t quarrel about that. You
know you can go to Waukesha if you want to.”
“So you can stay here and trifle
around with some one else?” she exclaimed, turning
to him a determined countenance upon which was drawn
a sharp and wrathful sneer.
He stopped as if slapped in the face.
In an instant his persuasive, conciliatory manner
fled. He was on the defensive at a wink and
puzzled for a word to reply.
“What do you mean?” he
said at last, straightening himself and gazing at
the cold, determined figure before him, who paid no
attention, but went on arranging herself before the
mirror.
“You know what I mean,”
she said, finally, as if there were a world of information
which she held in reserve—which she did
not need to tell.
“Well, I don’t,”
he said, stubbornly, yet nervous and alert for what
should come next. The finality of the woman’s
manner took away his feeling of superiority in battle.
She made no answer.
“Hmph!” he murmured, with
a movement of his head to one side. It was the
weakest thing he had ever done. It was totally
unassured.
Mrs. Hurstwood noticed the lack of
colour in it. She turned upon him, animal-like,
able to strike an effectual second blow.
“I want the Waukesha money to-morrow
morning,” she said.
He looked at her in amazement.
Never before had he seen such a cold, steely determination
in her eye—such a cruel look of indifference.
She seemed a thorough master of her mood—
thoroughly confident and determined to wrest all control
from him. He felt that all his resources could
not defend him. He must attack.
“What do you mean?” he
said, jumping up. “You want! I’d
like to know what’s got into you to-night.”
“Nothing’s got into
me,” she said, flaming. “I want that
money. You can do your swaggering afterwards.”
“Swaggering, eh! What!
You’ll get nothing from me. What do you
mean by your insinuations, anyhow?”
“Where were you last night?”
she answered. The words were hot as they came.
“Who were you driving with on Washington Boulevard?
Who were you with at the theatre when George saw you?
Do you think I’m a fool to be duped by you?
Do you think I’ll sit at home here and take
your ‘too busys’ and ‘can’t
come,’ while you parade around and make out
that I’m unable to come? I want you to
know that lordly airs have come to an end so far as
I am concerned. You can’t dictate to me
nor my children. I’m through with you
entirely.”
“It’s a lie,” he
said, driven to a corner and knowing no other excuse.
“Lie, eh!” she said, fiercely,
but with returning reserve; “you may call it
a lie if you want to, but I know.”
“It’s a lie, I tell you,”
he said, in a low, sharp voice. “You’ve
been searching around for some cheap accusation for
months and now you think you have it. You think
you’ll spring something and get the upper hand.
Well, I tell you, you can’t. As long as
I’m in this house I’m master of it, and
you or any one else won’t dictate to me—do
you hear?”
He crept toward her with a light in
his eye that was ominous. Something in the woman’s
cool, cynical, upper-handish manner, as if she were
already master, caused him to feel for the moment as
if he could strangle her.
She gazed at him—a pythoness in humour.
“I’m not dictating to
you,” she returned; “I’m telling
you what I want.”
The answer was so cool, so rich in
bravado, that somehow it took the wind out of his
sails. He could not attack her, he could not
ask her for proofs. Somehow he felt evidence,
law, the remembrance of all his property which she
held in her name, to be shining in her glance.
He was like a vessel, powerful and dangerous, but
rolling and floundering without sail.
“And I’m telling you,”
he said in the end, slightly recovering himself, “what
you’ll not get.”
“We’ll see about it,”
she said. “I’ll find out what my
rights are. Perhaps you’ll talk to a lawyer,
if you won’t to me.”
It was a magnificent play, and had
its effect. Hurstwood fell back beaten.
He knew now that he had more than mere bluff to contend
with. He felt that he was face to face with a
dull proposition. What to say he hardly knew.
All the merriment had gone out of the day.
He was disturbed, wretched, resentful. What should
he do? “Do as you please,” he said,
at last. “I’ll have nothing more
to do with you,” and out he strode.