I have, I am aware, told this
story in a very rambling way so that it may be difficult
for anyone to find their path through what may be
a sort of maze. I cannot help it. I have
stuck to my idea of being in a country cottage with
a silent listener, hearing between the gusts of the
wind and amidst the noises of the distant sea, the
story as it comes. And, when one discusses an
affair—a long, sad affair—one
goes back, one goes forward. One remembers points
that one has forgotten and one explains them all the
more minutely since one recognizes that one has forgotten
to mention them in their proper places and that one
may have given, by omitting them, a false impression.
I console myself with thinking that this is a real
story and that, after all, real stories are probably
told best in the way a person telling a story would
tell them. They will then seem most real.
At any rate, I think I have brought
my story up to the date of Maisie Maidan’s
death. I mean that I have explained everything
that went before it from the several points of view
that were necessary—from Leonora’s,
from Edward’s and, to some extent, from my
own. You have the facts for the trouble of finding
them; you have the points of view as far as I could
ascertain or put them. Let me imagine myself
back, then, at the day of Maisie’s death—or
rather at the moment of Florence’s dissertation
on the Protest, up in the old Castle of the town
of M——. Let us consider Leonora’s
point of view with regard to Florence; Edward’s,
of course, I cannot give you, for Edward naturally
never spoke of his affair with my wife. (I may, in
what follows, be a little hard on Florence; but you
must remember that I have been writing away at this
story now for six months and reflecting longer and
longer upon these affairs.) And the longer I think
about them the more certain I become that Florence
was a contaminating influence—she depressed
and deteriorated poor Edward; she deteriorated, hopelessly,
the miserable Leonora. There is no doubt that
she caused Leonora’s character to deteriorate.
If there was a fine point about Leonora it was that
she was proud and that she was silent. But that
pride and that silence broke when she made that extraordinary
outburst, in the shadowy room that contained the
Protest, and in the little terrace looking over the
river. I don’t mean to say that she was
doing a wrong thing. She was certainly doing
right in trying to warn me that Florence was making
eyes at her husband. But, if she did the right
thing, she was doing it in the wrong way. Perhaps
she should have reflected longer; she should have
spoken, if she wanted to speak, only after reflection.
Or it would have been better if she had acted—if,
for instance, she had so chaperoned Florence that
private communication between her and Edward became
impossible. She should have gone eavesdropping;
she should have watched outside bedroom doors.
It is odious; but that is the way the job is done.
She should have taken Edward away the moment Maisie
was dead. No, she acted wrongly. . . .
And yet, poor thing, is it for me to condemn her—and
what did it matter in the end? If it had not
been Florence, it would have been some other . .
. Still, it might have been a better woman than
my wife. For Florence was vulgar; Florence was
a common flirt who would not, at the last, lacher
prise; and Florence was an unstoppable talker.
You could not stop her; nothing would stop her.
Edward and Leonora were at least proud and reserved
people. Pride and reserve are not the only things
in life; perhaps they are not even the best things.
But if they happen to be your particular virtues
you will go all to pieces if you let them go.
And Leonora let them. go. She let them go before
poor Edward did even. Consider her position when
she burst out over the Luther-Protest. . . .
Consider her agonies. . . .
You are to remember that the main
passion of her life was to get Edward back; she had
never, till that moment, despaired of getting him
back. That may seem ignoble; but you have also
to remember that her getting him back represented
to her not only a victory for herself. It would,
as it appeared to her, have been a victory for all
wives and a victory for her Church. That was
how it presented itself to her. These things
are a little inscrutable. I don’t know
why the getting back of Edward should have represented
to her a victory for all wives, for Society and for
her Church. Or, maybe, I have a glimmering of
it. She saw life as a perpetual sex-baffle between
husbands who desire to be unfaithful to their wives,
and wives who desire to recapture their husbands
in the end. That was her sad and modest view
of matrimony. Man, for her, was a sort of brute
who must have his divagations, his moments of excess,
his nights out, his, let us say, rutting seasons.
She had read few novels, so that the idea of a pure
and constant love succeeding the sound of wedding
bells had never been very much presented to her.
She went, numbed and terrified, to the Mother Superior
of her childhood’s convent with the tale of
Edward’s infidelities with the Spanish dancer,
and all that the old nun, who appeared to her to
be infinitely wise, mystic and reverend, had done had
been to shake her head sadly and to say:
“Men are like that. By
the blessing of God it will all come right in the
end.”
That was what was put before her by
her spiritual advisers as her programme in life.
Or, at any rate, that was how their teachings came
through to her—that was the lesson she
told me she had learned of them. I don’t
know exactly what they taught her. The lot of
women was patience and patience and again patience—ad
majorem Dei gloriam—until upon the appointed
day, if God saw fit, she should have her reward.
If then, in the end, she should have succeeded in
getting Edward back she would have kept her man within
the limits that are all that wifehood has to expect.
She was even taught that such excesses in men are
natural, excusable—as if they had been
children.
And the great thing was that there
should be no scandal before the congregation.
So she had clung to the idea of getting Edward back
with a fierce passion that was like an agony.
She had looked the other way; she had occupied herself
solely with one idea. That was the idea of having
Edward appear, when she did get him back, wealthy,
glorious as it were, on account of his lands, and
upright. She would show, in fact, that in an unfaithful
world one Catholic woman had succeeded in retaining
the fidelity of her husband. And she thought
she had come near her desires.
Her plan with regard to Maisie had
appeared to be working admirably. Edward had
seemed to be cooling off towards the girl. He
did not hunger to pass every minute of the time at
Nauheirn beside the child’s recumbent form;
he went out to polo matches; he played auction bridge
in the evenings; he was cheerful and bright.
She was certain that he was not trying to seduce that
poor child; she was beginning to think that he had
never tried to do so. He seemed in fact to be
dropping back into what he had been for Maisie in
the beginning—a kind, attentive, superior
officer in the regiment, paying gallant attentions
to a bride. They were as open in their little
flirtations as the dayspring from on high. And
Maisie had not appeared to fret when he went off
on excursions with us; she had to lie down for so
many hours on her bed every afternoon, and she had
not appeared to crave for the attentions of Edward
at those times. And Edward was beginning to make
little advances to Leonora. Once or twice, in
private—for he often did it before people—he
had said: “How nice you look!” or
“What a pretty dress!” She had gone with
Florence to Frankfurt, where they dress as well as
in Paris, and had got herself a gown or two.
She could afford it, and Florence was an excellent
adviser as to dress. She seemed to have got
hold of the clue to the riddle.
Yes, Leonora seemed to have got hold
of the clue to the riddle. She imagined herself
to have been in the wrong to some extent in the past.
She should not have kept Edward on such a tight rein
with regard to money. She thought she was on
the right tack in letting him—as she had
done only with fear and irresolution—have
again the control of bis income. He came even
a step towards her and acknowledged, spontaneously,
that she had been right in husbanding, for all those
years, their resources. He said to her one day:
“You’ve done right, old
girl. There’s nothing I like so much as
to have a little to chuck away. And I can do
it, thanks to you.”
That was really, she said, the happiest
moment of her life. And he, seeming to realize
it, had ventured to pat her on the shoulder. He
had, ostensibly, come in to borrow a safety-pin of
her. And the occasion of her boxing Maisie’s
ears, had, after it was over, riveted in her mind
the idea that there was no intrigue between Edward
and Mrs Maidan. She imagined that, from henceforward,
all that she had to do was to keep him well supplied
with money and his mind amused with pretty girls.
She was convinced that he was coming back to her.
For that month she no longer repelled his timid advances
that never went very far. For he certainly made
timid advances. He patted her on the shoulder;
he whispered into her ear little jokes about the odd
figures that they saw up at the Casino. It was
not much to make a little joke—but the
whispering of it was a precious intimacy. . . .
And then—smash—it
all went. It went to pieces at the moment when
Florence laid her hand upon Edward’s wrist,
as it lay on the glass sheltering the manuscript
of the Protest, up in the high tower with the shutters
where the sunlight here and there streamed in.
Or, rather, it went when she noticed the look in Edward’s
eyes as he gazed back into Florence’s.
She knew that look.
She had known—since the
first moment of their meeting, since the moment of
our all sitting down to dinner together—that
Florence was making eyes at Edward. But she
had seen so many women make eyes at Edward—hundreds
and hundreds of women, in railway trains, in hotels,
aboard liners, at street corners. And she had
arrived at thinking that Edward took little stock in
women that made eyes at him. She had formed
what was, at that time, a fairly correct estimate
of the methods of, the reasons for, Edward’s
loves. She was certain that hitherto they had
consisted of the short passion for the Dolciquita,
the real sort of love for Mrs Basil, and what she
deemed the pretty courtship of Maisie Maidan.
Besides she despised Florence so haughtily that she
could not imagine Edward’s being attracted by
her. And she and Maisie were a sort of bulwark
round him. She wanted, besides, to keep her eyes
on Florence—for Florence knew that she
had boxed Maisie’s ears. And Leonora desperately
desired that her union with Edward should appear
to be flawless. But all that went. . . .
With the answering gaze of Edward
into Florence’s blue and uplifted eyes, she
knew that it had all gone. She knew that that
gaze meant that those two had had long conversations
of an intimate kind—about their likes and
dislikes, about their natures, about their views
of marriage. She knew what it meant that she,
when we all four walked out together, had always been
with me ten yards ahead of Florence and Edward.
She did not imagine that it had gone further than
talks about their likes and dislikes, about their
natures or about marriage as an institution.
But, having watched Edward all her life, she knew
that that laying on of hands, that answering of gaze
with gaze, meant that the thing was unavoidable.
Edward was such a serious person.
She knew that any attempt on her part
to separate those two would be to rivet on Edward
an irrevocable passion; that, as I have before told
you, it was a trick of Edward’s nature to believe
that the seducing of a woman gave her an irrevocable
hold over him for life. And that touching of
hands, she knew, would give that woman an irrevocable
claim—to be seduced. And she so despised
Florence that she would have preferred it to be a parlour-maid.
There are very decent parlour-maids.
And, suddenly, there came into her
mind the conviction that Maisie Maidan had a real
passion for Edward; that this would break her heart—and
that she, Leonora, would be responsible for that.
She went, for the moment, mad. She clutched me
by the wrist; she dragged me down those stairs and
across that whispering Rittersaal with the high painted
pillars, the high painted chimney-piece. I guess
she did not go mad enough.
She ought to have said:
“Your wife is a harlot who is
going to be my husband’s mistress . . .”
That might have done the trick. But, even in
her madness, she was afraid to go as far as that.
She was afraid that, if she did, Edward and Florence
would make a bolt of it, and that, if they did that,
she would lose forever all chance of getting him back
in the end. She acted very badly to me.
Well, she was a tortured soul who
put her Church before the interests of a Philadelphia
Quaker. That is all right—I daresay
the Church of Rome is the more important of the two.
A week after Maisie Maidan’s
death she was aware that Florence had become Edward’s
mistress. She waited outside Florence’s
door and met Edward as he came away. She said
nothing and he only grunted. But I guess he had
a bad time.
Yes, the mental deterioration that
Florence worked in Leonora was extraordinary; it
smashed up her whole life and all her chances.
It made her, in the first place, hopeless—for
she could not see how, after that, Edward could return
to her—after a vulgar intrigue with a vulgar
woman. His affair with Mrs Basil, which was now
all that she had to bring, in her heart, against
him, she could not find it in her to call an intrigue.
It was a love affair—a pure enough thing
in its way. But this seemed to her to be a horror—a
wantonness, all the more detestable to her, because
she so detested Florence. And Florence talked.
. . .
That was what was terrible, because
Florence forced Leonora herself to abandon her high
reserve—Florence and the situation.
It appears that Florence was in two minds whether
to confess to me or to Leonora. Confess she
had to. And she pitched at last on Leonora, because
if it had been me she would have had to confess a
great deal more. Or, at least, I might have guessed
a great deal more, about her “heart”,
and about Jimmy. So she went to Leonora one
day and began hinting and hinting. And she enraged
Leonora to such an extent that at last Leonora said:
“You want to tell me that you
are Edward’s mistress. You can be.
I have no use for him.” That was really
a calamity for Leonora, because, once started, there
was no stopping the talking. She tried to stop—but
it was not to be done. She found it necessary
to send Edward messages through Florence; for she
would not speak to him. She had to give him,
for instance, to understand that if I ever came to
know of his intrigue she would ruin him beyond repair.
And it complicated matters a good deal that Edward,
at about this time, was really a little in love with
her. He thought that he had treated her so badly;
that she was so fine. She was so mournful that
he longed to comfort her, and he thought himself such
a blackguard that there was nothing he would not have
done to make amends. And Florence communicated
these items of information to Leonora.
I don’t in the least blame Leonora
for her coarseness to Florence; it must have done
Florence a world of good. But I do blame her for
giving way to what was in the end a desire for communicativeness.
You see that business cut her off from her Church.
She did not want to confess what she was doing because
she was afraid that her spiritual advisers would blame
her for deceiving me. I rather imagine that
she would have preferred damnation to breaking my
heart. That is what it works out at. She
need not have troubled.
But, having no priests to talk to,
she had to talk to someone, and as Florence insisted
on talking to her, she talked back, in short, explosive
sentences, like one of the damned. Precisely
like one of the damned. Well, if a pretty period
in hell on this earth can spare her any period of
pain in Eternity—where there are not any
periods—I guess Leonora will escape hell
fire.
Her conversations with Florence would
be like this. Florence would happen in on her,
whilst she was doing her wonderful hair, with a proposition
from Edward, who seems about that time to have conceived
the naïve idea that he might become a polygamist.
I daresay it was Florence who put it into his head.
Anyhow, I am not responsible for the oddities of the
human psychology. But it certainly appears that
at about that date Edward cared more for Leonora
than he had ever done before—or, at any
rate, for a long time. And, if Leonora had been
a person to play cards and if she had played her cards
well, and if she had had no sense of shame and so
on, she might then have shared Edward with Florence
until the time came for jerking that poor cuckoo out
of the nest. Well, Florence would come to Leonora
with some such proposition. I do not mean to
say that she put it baldly, like that. She stood
out that she was not Edward’s mistress until
Leonora said that she had seen Edward coming out of
her room at an advanced hour of the night. That
checked Florence a bit; but she fell back upon her
“heart” and stuck out that she had merely
been conversing with Edward in order to bring him
to a better frame of mind. Florence had, of
course, to stick to that story; for even Florence
would not have had the face to implore Leonora to
grant her favours to Edward if she had admitted that
she was Edward’s mistress. That could not
be done. At the same time Florence had such
a pressing desire to talk about something. There
would have been nothing else to talk about but a
rapprochement between that estranged pair. So
Florence would go on babbling and Leonora would go
on brushing her hair. And then Leonora would
say suddenly something like:
“I should think myself defiled
if Edward touched me now that he has touched you.”
That would discourage Florence a bit;
but after a week or so, on another morning she would
have another try.
And even in other things Leonora deteriorated.
She had promised Edward to leave the spending of
his own income in his own hands. And she had
fully meant to do that. I daresay she would
have done it too; though, no doubt, she would have
spied upon his banking account in secret. She
was not a Roman Catholic for nothing. But she
took so serious a view of Edward’s unfaithfulness
to the memory of poor little Maisie that she could
not trust him any more at all .
So when she got back to Branshaw she
started, after less than a month, to worry him about
the minutest items of his expenditure. She allowed
him to draw his own cheques, but there was hardly
a cheque that she did not scrutinize—except
for a private account of about five hundred a year
which, tacitly, she allowed him to keep for expenditure
on his mistress or mistresses. He had to have
his jaunts to Paris; he had to send expensive cables
in cipher to Florence about twice a week. But
she worried him about his expenditure on wines, on
fruit trees, on harness, on gates, on the account
at his blacksmith’s for work done to a new patent
Army stirrup that he was trying to invent. She
could not see why he should bother to invent a new
Army stirrup, and she was really enraged when, after
the invention was mature, he made a present to the
War Office of the designs and the patent rights.
It was a remarkably good stirrup.
I have told you, I think, that Edward
spent a great deal of time, and about two hundred
pounds for law fees on getting a poor girl, the daughter
of one of his gardeners, acquitted of a charge of
murdering her baby. That was positively the last
act of Edward’s life. It came at a time
when Nancy Rufford was on her way to India; when
the most horrible gloom was over the household; when
Edward himself was in an agony and behaving as prettily
as he knew how. Yet even then Leonora made him
a terrible scene about this expenditure of time and
trouble. She sort of had the vague idea that
what had passed with the girl and the rest of it
ought to have taught Edward a lesson—the
lesson of economy. She threatened to take his
banking account away from him again. I guess
that made him cut his throat. He might have stuck
it out otherwise—but the thought that he
had lost Nancy and that, in addition, there was nothing
left for him but a dreary, dreary succession of days
in which he could be of no public service . . .
Well, it finished him.
It was during those years that Leonora
tried to get up a love affair of her own with a fellow
called Bayham—a decent sort of fellow.
A really nice man. But the affair was no sort
of success. I have told you about it already.
. . .