Crowned with One Crest
(Published in Vanity Fair, London, in 1895)
People were beginning to wonder if
an American, having captured a title and worn it for
five years, would renounce it for mere good looks and
brains; in other words, if Lady Carnath, formerly Miss
Edith Ingoldsby, of Washington, and still earlier—before
her father had found leisure to crown a triumphant
financial career with the patriotic labors of a United
States Senator—of Boone, Iowa, would marry
Butler Hedworth, M.P., a gentleman of some fortune
and irreproachable lineage who had already made himself
known on the floor of the House, but was not so much
as heir-presumptive to a title. So many American
maidens had placidly stood by while their mammas “arranged”
a marriage between their gold-banked selves and the
impecunious scion of an historical house, that the
English, when forced to admit them well-bred, found
solace in the belief that these disgustingly rich
and handsome girls were without heart.
Nevertheless, Lady Carnath, who had
worn her weeds but a year, permitted Butler Hedworth
to pay her attentions so pronounced that her world
was mildly betting on his possible acceptance as husband
or lover. It was argued that during the life
of Lord Carnath his wife’s demeanor had been
above comment, but a cynic remarked that women had
all sorts of odd ideals; and was widely quoted.
Edith Ingoldsby had bought her Earl
and paid a high price for him; nevertheless she had
liked him better than any man but one that she had
ever known, and they had been the best of friends.
When she met him she was in the agonies of her only
passion, and had clutched the first opportunity to
bury alive the love that was destroying her beauty
and her interest in life.
The passion had lingered for a time,
then gone the way of all passions unfed by a monotonous
environment and too much leisure. She found it
very interesting to be an English countess. For
a while she had the impression of playing a part in
a modern historical drama; but before long she realized,
with true American adaptability, that her new life
was but the living chapters of a book whose earlier
parts had been serial instalments of retiring memory.
Her great wealth, her beauty, her piquant dashing
thoroughbred manner, her husband’s popularity
and title, created for her a position that would have
closed any wound not irritated by domestic unhappiness;
and this canker was not in her rose. When Carnath
died she mourned him sincerely, but not too profoundly
to anticipate pleasurably the end of the weeded year.
When she met Hedworth she was as free of fancy and
of heart as if she had but stepped from a convent.
“Yes, I was in love once—”
she admitted to him one evening as they sat alone.
She blushed as she tripped at the word “before.”
Hedworth had made no declaration as yet; they were
still playing with electricity, and content with sparks.
“At least, I thought I was. All girls have
their love freaks. I had had several—when
I was in my teens. This seemed more serious,
the grande passion—because there
was an obstacle: he was married. If he had
been free, if there had been no barrier between myself
and what I wanted, I think it would have been quite
different. You see, I had had my own way so long
that the situation, combined, of course, with the
man himself—who was very magnetic—fascinated
me; and I let myself go, to see what it would be like
to long for something I could not have. I suppose
it was my imagination that was at work principally;
but I ended by believing myself frantically in love
with him.”
Hedworth stood up as she paused, and
leaned against the mantel, looking down at her.
They were in her boudoir, a yellow satin room that
looked like a large jewel-casket. Lady Carnath’s
long slender round figure betrayed its perfections
in a gown of black chiffon; on her white neck and
arms and in her black hair were many diamonds; she
had dressed for the opera, then given the evening
to Hedworth. Her dark face was delicately modelled;
the mouth and chin were very firm, but the lips were
full and red. The eyes in repose were a trifle
languid, in animation mutable and brilliant.
The brows were finely pencilled, and the soft dark
hair, brushed back from a low forehead, added to the
general distinction of her appearance. Hedworth
studied her face as he had studied it many times.
“Well?” he asked.
He had an abrupt voice, suggestive of temper, and the
haughty bearing which is the chief attraction of Englishmen
for American women. His face was as well chiselled
as the average of his kind, but lacked the national
repose. The eyes were very clever, the features
mobile; the tenacity and strength of his nature were
indicated in the lower part of his face and in the
powerful yet supple build of the man.
“Well, what?”
“What sort of a man was this Johnny?”
“Oh, I am not very good at describing
people—quite different from you—much
lighter—”
“I don’t care what he
looked like. A man only looks to a woman who is
in love with him as she imagines he looks. Was
he in love with you?”
“Yes, of course he was.”
“Did he tell you so?”
The delicate red in Lady Carnath’s dark cheek
deepened. “Yes. He did.”
“Did you tell him that you loved him?”
“Yes.”
“What did he do?”
“I don’t know that you have any right
to be so curious.”
“Of course you need not answer if you don’t
wish. Did he kiss you?”
“Yes, he did, if you want to
know. We had a tremendous scene. I went
into high tragics, and, I suppose, bored the poor man
dreadfully.”
“He was much more matter-of-fact, I suppose?”
“Yes—he was.”
“Where did this scene take place?”
“In the drawing-room one afternoon
when he had walked home with me from a tea.”
“What happened the next time you met him?”
“I never saw him again—that is, alone.”
Hedworth’s face and tone changed suddenly.
Both softened. “Why not?”
She raised her head from the back
of the sofa and lifted her chin defiantly. “I
did not dare—if you will know. Carnath
came along shortly after, and I took him as soon as
he offered himself. Why do you look so pleased?
The one was as bad as the other, only in the course
I took there was no scandal.”
“Which is the point. Scandal
and snubs and vulgar insinuation in print and out
of it would have demoralized you. How do you feel
towards this man now? If he were free and came
for you would you marry him?”
She shook her head, and looked up
at him, smiling and blushing again. “He
is no more to me than one of the book-heroes I used
to fancy myself in love with.”
“Why didn’t he get a divorce
and marry you? I thought any one could get a
divorce in the States.”
“You English people know so
much about the United States! You are willing
to believe anything and to know nothing. I really
think you feel that your dignity would be compromised
if you knew as much about America as we know about
Europe. Your attitude is like that of old people
to a new invention which is too remarkable for their
powers of appreciation, so they take refuge in disdain.”
He smiled, as he always did when her
patriotism flamed. “You haven’t answered
my question.”
“What?—oh, divorce.
If a man has a good wife, no matter how uncongenial,
he can’t get rid of her unless he is a brute;
and I didn’t happen to like that sort of man.”
“Like? I thought you said just now that
you loved him.”
“I don’t think now that I did. I
explained that a while ago.”
“Why have you changed your mind?”
“I never knew a man to ask so many questions.”
But before he left her he knew.
* * * *
Edith anticipated pleasurably the
sensation her engagement would make, but did not announce
it at once. She had a certain feminine secretiveness
which made her doubly enjoy a happiness undiluted by
publicity; moreover, some further deference was due
to Carnath. She was very happy, the more so as
she had believed until a short while ago that her
strong temperamental possibilities were vaulted in
her nature’s little church-yard. “Our
hearts after first love are like our dead,” she
thought; “they sleep until the hour of resurrection.”
Hedworth dominated her, had taken her love rather
than asked for it, and, although he was jealous and
exacting, she was haunted by the traditions of man’s
mutability, and studied her resources as it had never
occurred to her to study them before. She found
that the outer envelopes of her personality could
be made to shift with kaleidoscopic brilliancy, and
except when Hedworth needed repose—she
had much tact—she treated him to these many
moods in turn. It is possible that she added to
her fascination, but, having won him without effort,
she might have rested on her laurels. He was
deeply in love with her, and worried himself with presentiments
of what might happen before she would consent to name
the wedding-day. Both being children of worldly
wisdom, however, they harlequined their misgivings
and were happy when together.
Fortunately for both, she was heavy-laden
with femininity, and was content to give all, and
receive the little that man in the nature of his life
and inherited particles has to offer. She was
satisfied to be adored, desired, mentally appreciated.
If his ego was always paramount, his spiritual demands
so imperious that he appropriated the full measure
of sympathy and comprehension that Nature has let loose
for man and woman, not caring to know anything of
her beyond the fact that she was the one woman in
the world in whom he saw no fault, she was satisfied
to have it so. She was a clever woman, but not
too clever; and their chances of happiness were good.
And then a strange thing happened to her.
Hedworth was called to Switzerland
by his mother, who fell ill. His parting with
Edith occupied several hours, and during the three
or four days following, his affianced protested that
she was inconsolable. But his letters were frequent
and characteristic, and she began to enjoy the new
phase of their intercourse: the excitement of
waiting for the post, the delight which the first
glimpse of the envelope on her breakfast-tray gave
her, the novelty of receiving a fragment of him daily,
which her imagination could expand into his hourly
life and thoughts. The season was over, and she
had little else to do. She expected him back
at any moment, and preferred to await his arrival in
town.
One evening she was sitting in her
bedroom thinking of him. The night was hot and
the windows were open. It was very late.
She had been staring down upon the dark mass of tree-tops
in the Park, recapitulating, phase by phase, the growth
of her feeling for Hedworth. Suddenly it occurred
to her that it bore a strong racial resemblance to
her first passion, and, being too intelligent to have
escaped the habit of analysis, she dug up the old
love and dissected it. It had been better preserved
than she would have thought, for it did not offend
her sense; and she gave an hour to the office.
She went back to her first moment of conscious interest
in the hero of her tragedy, galvanized the thrill
she had felt when he entered her presence, her restlessness
and doubt and jealousy when he was away, or appeared
to neglect her; the recognition that she was in the
hard grasp of a passion in which she had had little
faith; the sweetness and terror of it, the keen delight
in the sense of danger. There had been weeks
of companionship before he had defined their position;
it occurred to her now that he had managed her with
the skill and coolness of a man who understood women
and could keep his head, even while quickened with
all that he inspired. She also recalled, her
lips curling into a cynical grin, that she had felt
the same promptings for spiritual abandonment, of
high desire to help this man where he was weak, to
restore some of his lost ideals, or to replace them
with better; to root out the weeds which she recognized
in his nature, and to coax the choked bulbs of those
fairer flowers which may have been there before he
and the world knew each other too well. Then
she relived the days and nights of torment when she
had walked the floor wringing her hands, barely eating
and sleeping. She recalled that she had even
beaten the walls and flung herself against them.
The procession was startlingly familiar
and fresh of lineament; even the moments of rapture,
whose memory is soonest to fade, and the fitful solace
she had found, in those last days, imagining what might
have been.
She got up and walked about the room,
half amused, half appalled. “What does
it mean?” she thought. “Is it that
there is an impalpable entity in this world for me,
and that part of it is in one man and part in another?
Is the man who has the larger share the one I really
love? Is that the explanation of loving a second
time? It certainly is very like—ridiculously
like.”
She turned her thoughts to Hedworth,
but they swung aside and pointed straight to the other
man. She half expected to see his ghost framed
in the dark window, he seemed so close. She found
herself living the past again and again, instinct
with its sensations. He had had much in his life
to cark and harrow, and the old sympathy and tenderness
vibrated aloud, and little out of tune. She wondered
what had become of him, what he was doing at the moment.
She did not believe that he had loved any woman since;
he had nearly exhausted his capacity for loving when
he met her.
And at the same time she was distinctly
conscious that if the two men stood before her she
should spring to Hedworth. Nevertheless, when
she conjured his image, the shadowy figure of the
other man stood behind, looking over Hedworth’s
shoulder, with the half-cynical smile which had only
left his mouth when he had told her, with white face
whose muscles were free of his will for the moment,
that he loved her.
“Is it the old love that is
demanding its rights, not the man?” she thought.
“Is it true, then, that all we women want is
love, and that it is as welcome in one attractive
frame as another? That it is not Hedworth I love,
but what he gives me? Now that I even suspect
this, can I be happy? Will that ghost always
look over his shoulder?”
She was a woman of sound practical
sense, and had no intention of risking her happiness
by falling a victim to her imagination. She pressed
the electric-button and wrote a letter to her former
lover—a friendly letter, without sentimental
allusion, asking for news of him. The sight of
the handwriting that once had thrilled her, as well
as the nature of his reply, would at least bring her
to some sort of mental climax. Moreover, he might
be dead. It might be spiritual influence that
had handled her imagination. She was not a superstitious
woman; she was merely wise enough to know that she
knew nothing, and that it was folly to disbelieve
anything.
Hedworth did not return for three
weeks. During that time it seemed to her that
her brain was an amphitheatre in which the two men
were constantly wrestling. She never saw one
without the other. When Hedworth mastered for
the moment she was reminded that he was merely playing
a familiar tune on her soul-keys. She felt for
the man who had first touched those keys a persistent
tenderness, and during the last days watched restlessly
for his letter. But she felt no desire whatever
to see him again. For Hedworth she longed increasingly.
Hedworth returned. The other man vanished.
* * *
*
She announced the engagement.
They had been invited to the same houses for the autumn.
Necessarily they saw little of each other, and planned
to meet in the less-frequented rooms and in the woods.
At first they enjoyed this new experience; but when
they found themselves in a large party that seemed
to pervade every corner of the house and grounds at
once, and two days had passed without an interview
of five minutes’ duration, Hedworth walked up
to her—she was alone for the moment—and
said:
“Four weeks from to-day we marry.”
She gave a little gasp, but made no protest.
“I have had enough of dawdling
and sentimentalizing. We will marry at your place
in Sussex on the second of October.”
“Very well,” she said.
Shortly after she went to Paris to
confer with the talent that should enhance her loveliness,
then paid Mrs. Hedworth a visit in Switzerland.
Hedworth met her there, and his mother saw little of
her guests. Edith returned to England alone.
Hedworth was to follow at the end of the week, and
spend the few remaining days of his bachelorhood at
the house of a friend whose estate adjoined the one
Lady Carnath had bought not long after her husband’s
death.
Several days after her return she
was sitting at her dressing-table when a letter was
handed her bearing the Washington post-mark. Her
maid was devising a new coiffure, and she was grumbling
at the result. She glanced at the handwriting,
pushed the letter aside, and commanded the maid to
arrange her hair in the simple fashion that suited
her best. After the woman had fixed the last
pin, Edith critically examined her profile in the
triple mirror; then thrust out a thin little foot to
be divested of its mule and shod in a slipper that
had arrived that morning from Paris: she expected
people to tea. While the maid was on her knees
Edith bethought herself of the letter and read it:—
Dear Lady Carnath—I have
been in Canada all summer. No letters were
forwarded. I find yours here at the Metropolitan.
Thanks, I am well. Life is the same with
me. I eat and drink and wither. But
you are a memory to be thankful for, and I have never
tried to forget you. I was glad to learn through
Tower, whom I met in Montreal, that you were
well and happy. I wish I may never hear
otherwise.
Then followed several pages of news of her old friends.
“Poor fellow!” thought
Edith with a sigh. “But I doubt if any woman
or any circumstances would ever make a man like that
happy. There are those wretched people, and I
am not half dressed!”
Nevertheless, he again took his stand
in her brain and elbowed Hedworth—whose
concrete part was still detained in Switzerland.
She did not answer the letter at once; it was not
an easy letter to answer. But it haunted her;
and finally she sat down at her desk and bit the end
of her penholder.
She sat staring before her, the man
in complete possession. And gradually the color
left her face. If this old love, which her mind
and senses had corporealized, refused to abdicate,
had she any right to marry Hedworth? Now that
she had unlocked this ghost, might not she find it
at her side whenever her husband was absent, reminding
her that she was a sort of mental bigamist? Carnath
had no part in her dilemma; she barely recalled his
episode.
She was as positive as she had been
when the past unrolled itself that she had no wish
to see the first man again; that did he stand before
her his power would vanish. He was a back number—a
fatal position to occupy in the imagination of a vital
and world-living woman.
“Is it all that he awakened,
made known to me, represented, that arises in resentment?
Or is it that the soul only gives itself once, acknowledges
only one mate? The mind and body, perhaps, obey
the demand for companionship again. The soul
in its loneliness endeavors to accompany these comrades,
but finds itself linked to the mate of the past.
Probably when a woman marries a man she does not love,
the soul, having no demand made upon it, abstracts
itself, sleeps. It is when a mate to whom it
might wholly have given itself appears, that, in its
isolation and desolation, it clamors for its wedded
part.”
Her teeth indented the nib of her
penholder. “Was ever a woman in such a
predicament before? So illusionary and yet so
ridiculously actual! Shall I send Hedworth away
and sit down with this phantom through life? I
understand that some women get their happiness out
of just that sort of thing. Then when I forget
Hedworth would I forget him? Is passion
needed to set the soul free? Until Hedworth made
me feel awakened womanhood personified, I had not
thought of this man for years, not even during the
year of my mourning, when I was rather bored.
What am I to do? I can’t fling my life
away. I am not a morbid idiot. But I can’t
marry one man if what I feel for him is simply the
galvanizing of a corpse. Hedworth ought to be
taken ill and his life despaired of. That is
the way things would work out in a novel.”
Her face grew whiter still. She
had experienced another mental shock. For the
first time she realized that no woman could suffer
twice as she had suffered five years ago. That
at least was all the other man’s. Her capacity
for pain had been blunted, two-thirds exhausted.
If Hedworth left her, died, she might regret him,
long to have him back; but the ghost of that abandon
of grief, that racking of every sense, that groping
in an abyss while a voiceless something within her
raved and shrieked, resolved itself into a finger
of fire, which wrote Hedworth’s inferior position.
“What shall I do? What
shall I do?” She dipped the pen into the ink
and put it to the paper. At least, for the moment,
she could write a friendly note to this man, convey
tactful sympathy, little good as it would do him.
The letter must be answered.
She heard a step on the gravel beneath
her open window. She sprang to her feet, the
blood rushing to her hair. She ran to the window
and leaned out, smiling and trembling. Hedworth’s
eyes flashed upward to hers. She was, it must
be admitted, a product of that undulating and alluring
plain we call “the world,” not of those
heights where the few who have scaled them live alone.