THAT this hope was to be frustrated
Bernald learned from Howland Wade’s own lips,
the day before the two young men were to meet at Portchester.
“I can’t really, my dear
fellow,” the Interpreter lisped, passing a polished
hand over the faded smoothness of his face. “Oh,
an authentic engagement, I assure you: otherwise,
to oblige old Bob I’d submit cheerfully to looking
over his foundling’s literature. But I’m
pledged this week to the Pellerin Society of Kenosha:
I had a hand in founding it, and for two years now
they’ve been patiently waiting for a word from
me—the Fiat Lux, so to speak.
You see it’s a ministry, Bernald—I
assure you, I look upon my calling quite religiously.”
As Bernald listened, his disappointment
gradually changed to relief. Howland, on trial,
always turned out to be too insufferable, and the
pleasure of watching his antics was invariably lost
in the impulse to put a sanguinary end to them.
“If he’d only keep his
beastly pink hands off Pellerin,” Bernald groaned,
thinking of the thick manuscript condemned to perpetual
incarceration in his own desk by the publication of
Howland’s “definitive” work on the
great man. One couldn’t, after Howland
Wade, expose one’s self to the derision of writing
about Pellerin: the eagerness with which Wade’s
book had been devoured proved, not that the public
had enough appetite for another, but simply that,
for a stomach so undiscriminating, anything better
than Wade had given it would be too good. And
Bernald, in the confidence that his own work was open
to this objection, had stoically locked it up.
Yet if he had resigned his exasperated intelligence
to the fact that Wade’s book existed, and was
already passing into the immortality of perpetual
republication, he could not, after repeated trials,
adjust himself to the author’s talk about Pellerin.
When Wade wrote of the great dead he was egregious,
but in conversation he was familiar and fond.
It might have been supposed that one of the beauties
of Pellerin’s hidden life and mysterious taking
off would have been to guard him from the fingering
of anecdote; but biographers like Howland Wade were
born to rise above such obstacles. He might be
vague or inaccurate in dealing with the few recorded
events of his subject’s life; but when he left
fact for conjecture no one had a firmer footing.
Whole chapters in his volume were constructed in the
conditional mood and packed with hypothetical detail;
and in talk, by the very law of the process, hypothesis
became affirmation, and he was ready to tell you confidentially
the exact circumstances of Pellerin’s death,
and of the “distressing incident” leading
up to it. Bernald himself not only questioned
the form under which this incident was shaping itself
before posterity, but the mere radical fact of its
occurrence: he had never been able to discover
any break in the dense cloud enveloping Pellerin’s
later life and its mysterious termination. He
had gone away—that was all that any of
them knew: he who had so little, at any time,
been with them or of them; and his going had so slightly
stirred the public consciousness that even the subsequent
news of his death, laconically imparted from afar,
had dropped unheeded into the universal scrap-basket,
to be long afterward fished out, with all its details
missing, when some enquiring spirit first became aware,
by chance encounter with a two-penny volume in a London
book-stall, not only that such a man as John Pellerin
had died, but that he had ever lived, or written.
It need hardly be noted that Howland
Wade had not been the pioneer in question: his
had been the wiser part of swelling the chorus when
it rose, and gradually drowning the other voices by
his own insistent note. He had pitched the note
so screamingly, and held it so long, that he was now
the accepted authority on Pellerin, not only in the
land which had given birth to his genius but in the
Europe which had first acclaimed it; and it was the
central point of pain in Bernald’s sense of
the situation that a man who had so yearned for silence
as Pellerin should have his grave piped over by such
a voice as Wade’s.
Bernald’s talk with the Interpreter
had revived this ache to the momentary exclusion of
other sensations; and he was still sore with it when,
the next afternoon, he arrived at Portchester for his
second Sunday with the Wades.
At the station he had the surprise
of seeing Winterman’s face on the platform,
and of hearing from him that Doctor Bob had been called
away to assist at an operation in a distant town.
“Mrs. Wade wanted to put you
off, but I believe the message came too late; so she
sent me down to break the news to you,” said
Winterman, holding out his hand.
Perhaps because they were the first
conventional words that Bernald had heard him speak,
the young man was struck by the relief his intonation
gave them.
“She wanted to send a carriage,”
Winterman added, “but I told her we’d
walk back through the woods.” He looked
at Bernald with a sudden kindness that flushed the
young man with pleasure.
“Are you strong enough? It’s not
too far?”
“Oh, no. I’m pulling
myself together. Getting back to work is the
slowest part of the business: not on account of
my eyes—I can use them now, though not
for reading; but some of the links between things
are missing. It’s a kind of broken spectrum
... here, that boy will look after your bag.”
The walk through the woods remained
in Bernald’s memory as an enchanted hour.
He used the word literally, as descriptive of the
way in which Winterman’s contact changed the
face of things, or perhaps restored them to their
primitive meanings. And the scene they traversed—one
of those little untended woods that still, in America,
fringe the tawdry skirts of civilization—acquired,
as a background to Winterman, the hush of a spot aware
of transcendent visitings. Did he talk, or did
he make Bernald talk? The young man never knew.
He recalled only a sense of lightness and liberation,
as if the hard walls of individuality had melted,
and he were merged in the poet’s deeper interfusion,
yet without losing the least sharp edge of self.
This general impression resolved itself afterward into
the sense of Winterman’s wide elemental range.
His thought encircled things like the horizon at sea.
He didn’t, as it happened, touch on lofty themes—Bernald
was gleefully aware that, to Howland Wade, their talk
would hardly have been Talk at all—but Winterman’s
mind, applied to lowly topics, was like a powerful
lens that brought out microscopic delicacies and differences.
The lack of Sunday trains kept Doctor
Bob for two days on the scene of his surgical duties,
and during those two days Bernald seized every moment
of communion with his friend’s guest. Winterman,
as Wade had said, was reticent as to his personal
affairs, or rather as to the practical and material
conditions to which the term is generally applied.
But it was evident that, in Winterman’s case,
the usual classification must be reversed, and that
the discussion of ideas carried one much farther into
his intimacy than any specific acquaintance with the
incidents of his life.
“That’s exactly what Howland
Wade and his tribe have never understood about Pellerin:
that it’s much less important to know how, or
even why, he disapp—”
Bernald pulled himself up with a jerk,
and turned to look full at his companion. It
was late on the Monday evening, and the two men, after
an hour’s chat on the verandah to the tune of
Mrs. Wade’s knitting-needles, had bidden their
hostess good-night and strolled back to the bungalow
together.
“Come and have a pipe before
you turn in,” Winterman had said; and they had
sat on together till midnight, with the door of the
bungalow open on a heaving moonlit bay, and summer
insects bumping against the chimney of the lamp.
Winterman had just bent down to re-fill his pipe from
the jar on the table, and Bernald, jerking about to
catch him in the yellow circle of lamplight, sat speechless,
staring at a fact that seemed suddenly to have substituted
itself for Winterman’s face, or rather to have
taken on its features.
“No, they never saw that Pellerin’s
ideas were Pellerin. ...” He continued
to stare at Winterman. “Just as this man’s
ideas are—why, are Pellerin!”
The thought uttered itself in a kind
of inner shout, and Bernald started upright with the
violent impact of his conclusion. Again and again
in the last forty-eight hours he had exclaimed to himself:
“This is as good as Pellerin.” Why
hadn’t he said till now: “This is
Pellerin”? ... Surprising as the answer
was, he had no choice but to take it. He hadn’t
said so simply because Winterman was better than
Pellerin—that there was so much more
of him, so to speak. Yes; but—it came
to Bernald in a flash—wouldn’t there
by this time have been any amount more of Pellerin?
... The young man felt actually dizzy with the
thought. That was it—there was the
solution of the haunting problem! This man was
Pellerin, and more than Pellerin! It was so fantastic
and yet so unanswerable that he burst into a sudden
startled laugh.
Winterman, at the same moment, brought
his palm down with a sudden crash on the pile of manuscript
covering the desk.
“What’s the matter?” Bernald gasped.
“My match wasn’t out.
In another minute the destruction of the library of
Alexandria would have been a trifle compared to what
you’d have seen.” Winterman, with
his large deep laugh, shook out the smouldering sheets.
“And I should have been a pensioner on Doctor
Bob the Lord knows how much longer!”
Bernald pulled himself together.
“You’ve really got going again? The
thing’s actually getting into shape?”
“This particular thing is
in shape. I drove at it hard all last week, thinking
our friend’s brother would be down on Sunday,
and might look it over.”
Bernald had to repress the tendency
to another wild laugh.
“Howland—you meant
to show Howland what you’ve done?”
Winterman, looming against the moonlight,
slowly turned a dusky shaggy head toward him.
“Isn’t it a good thing to do?”
Bernald wavered, torn between loyalty
to his friends and the grotesqueness of answering
in the affirmative. After all, it was none of
his business to furnish Winterman with an estimate
of Howland Wade.
“Well, you see, you’ve
never told me what your line is,” he
answered, temporizing.
“No, because nobody’s
ever told me. It’s exactly what I
want to find out,” said the other genially.
“And you expect Wade—?”
“Why, I gathered from our good
Doctor that it’s his trade. Doesn’t
he explain—interpret?”
“In his own domain—which is Pellerinism.”
Winterman gazed out musingly upon
the moon-touched dusk of waters. “And what
is Pellerinism?” he asked.
Bernald sprang to his feet with a
cry. “Ah, I don’t know—but
you’re Pellerin!”
They stood for a minute facing each
other, among the uncertain swaying shadows of the
room, with the sea breathing through it as something
immense and inarticulate breathed through young Bernald’s
thoughts; then Winterman threw up his arms with a humorous
gesture.
“Don’t shoot!” he said.