WITHOUT a note of warning, the public
were startled by the news that Mrs. Dexter had left
her husband. Wisely, sober second thought laid
upon the lips of Mr. Dexter the seal of silence.
He gave no reason for the step his wife had taken,
and declined answering all inquiries, even from his
nearest friends. From a man of impulse, he seemed
changed at once into a man of deliberate purpose.
His elegant home was not given up, though he lived
in it a kind of half hermit life. Abroad, he
was reserved; while everything about him gave signs
of a painful inward conflict.
Of course, the social air was full
of rumors, probable and improbable, but none of them
exactly true. Mrs. Dexter was wholly silent,
except to her wisest and truest friend, Mrs. De Lisle—and
her discretion ever kept her guarded. Mrs. Loring
simply alleged “incompatibility of temper”—that
vague allegation which covers with its broad mantle
so wide a range of domestic antagonisms. And so
the public had its appetite piqued, and the nine days’
wonder became the wonder of a season. Hints towards
the truth were embellished by gossips’ ready
imaginations, and stories of wrong, domestic (sic)
tyrrany, infidelity, and the like, were passed around,
and related with a degree of circumstantiality that
gave them wide credence. Yet in no instance was
the name of Hendrickson connected with that of Mrs.
Dexter. So transient had been their intercourse,
that no eye but that of jealousy had noted their meeting
as anything beyond the meeting of indifferent acquaintances.
It was just one week from the day
Paul Hendrickson caught an unexpected glimpse of Mrs.
Dexter’s face at the window, and passed on with
her image freshened in his heart, that he called in
at the Ardens’, after an unusually long absence,
to spend an evening. Miss Arden’s countenance
lighted with a sudden glow on his appearance, the
rich blood dyeing her cheeks, and giving her face a
heightened charm; and in the visitor’s eyes
there was something gentler and softer in her beauty
than he had before observed. He probably guessed
the cause; and the thought touched his feelings, and
drew his heart something nearer to her.
“That is a painful story about
Mrs. Dexter,” said Mrs. Arden, almost as soon
as the young man came in. The recently heard facts
were uppermost in her thoughts.
“What story? I have not
heard anything.” Hendrickson was on his
guard in a moment; though he betrayed unusual interest.
“It is dreadful to think of!”
said Miss Arden. “What a wretched creature
she must be! I always thought her one of the best
of women. Though I must own that at Saratoga
last summer, she showed rather more fondness for the
society of other men than she did for that of her
husband.”
“I am still in the dark,”
said Mr. Hendrickson, with suppressed excitement.
“Then you haven’t heard
of it? Why, it’s the town talk.”
“No.”
“There’s been a separation
between Mrs. Dexter and her husband,” remarked
Mrs. Arden. “She left him several days ago,
and is now with her aunt, Mrs. Loring.”
“A separation! On what
ground?” Hendrickson’s breathing oppressed
him.
“Something wrong with Mrs. Dexter,
I am told. She had too many admirers—so
the story goes; and, worse still—for admiration
she couldn’t help—one lover.”
It was Mrs. Arden who said this.
“Who was the lover?” asked
Mr. Hendrickson. His voice was so quiet, and
his tones so indifferent, that none suspected the intense
interest with which he was listening.
“I have not heard his name,” replied Mrs.
Arden.
“Does he live in this city?”
“I believe not. Some new
acquaintance, made at Newport, I think. You remember
that she was very ill there last summer?”
“Yes.”
“Well, the cause of that illness
is now said to have been a discovery by Mr. Dexter
of some indiscretion on her part, followed by angry
remonstrance on his.”
“That is the story?”
“Yes.”
“And what caused the separation which has just
taken place?”
“A renewal of this intimacy,” said Mrs.
Arden.
“A very serious charge; and,
I believe without foundation in truth,” replied
Hendrickson. He spoke slowly, yet not with strong
emphasis. His auditors did not know that he was
simply controlling his voice to hide his agitation.
“Oh, there is no doubt as to
its truth,” said Mrs. Arden. “The
facts have been substantiated; so Mrs. Anthony told
me to-day; and she has been one of Mrs. Dexter’s
most intimate friends.”
“What facts?” inquired Hendrickson.
“Facts, that if they do not
prove crime against Mrs. Dexter, show her to have
been imprudent to the verge of crime.”
“Can you particularize?” said the young
man.
“Well, no I can’t just
do that. Mrs. Anthony ran on at such a rate that
I couldn’t get the affair adjusted in my mind.
But she asserts positively that Mrs. Dexter has gone
considerably beyond the boundary of prudence; and
she is no friend of Dexter’s, I can assure you.
As far as I can learn, there have been frequent meetings
between this lover and Mrs. Dexter during the husband’s
absence. An earlier return home, a few days ago,
led to a surprise and an exposure. The result
you know.”
“I must make bold to pronounce
this whole story a fabrication,” said Mr. Hendrickson,
with rising warmth; “It is too improbable.”
“Worse things than that have
happened, and are happening every day,” remarked
Mrs. Arden.
“Still I shall disbelieve the
story,” said Mr. Hendrickson, firmly.
“What else would justify him
in sending her home to her aunt?” asked Mrs.
Arden.
“He sent her home, then?
That is the report?” remarked Hendrickson.
“Some say one thing and some another.”
“And a story loses nothing in the repetition.”
“You are very skeptical,” said Miss Arden.
“I wish all men and women were
more skeptical than they are, in touching the wrong
doings of others,” replied the young man.
“The world is not so bad as it seems. Now
I am sure that if the truth of this affair could really
be known, we should find scarcely a single fact in
agreement with the report. I have heard that Mr.
Dexter is blindly jealous of his wife.”
“Oh, as to that, Mrs. Anthony
says that he made himself ridiculous by his jealousy
at Saratoga last summer. And I now remember that
he used to act strangely sometimes,” said Mrs.
Arden.
“A jealous man,” returned
Hendrickson, “is a very bad judge of his wife’s
conduct; and more likely to see guilt than innocence
in any circumstance that will bear a double explanation.
Let us then lean to the side of charity, and suppose
good until the proof of evil stares us in the very
face; as I shall do in this instance. I have
always believed Mrs. Dexter to be the purest of women;
and I believe so still.”
Both Mrs. Arden and her daughter seemed
annoyed at this defence of a woman against whom they
had so readily accepted the common rumor. But
they said nothing farther. After that an unusual
embarrassment marked their intercourse. As early
as he could, with politeness, retire, Hendrickson
went away. He did not err in his own elucidation
of the mystery; for he remembered well the vision of
Mrs. Dexter’s face at the window—her
instant sign of feeling—his own quick but
not meditated response—and the sudden appearance
of her husband, whose clouded countenance was full
of angry suspicion.
“To this!—and so
soon!” said Hendrickson to himself, as he left
the house of Mrs. Arden. “Oh, that I could
stretch out my hand to save her!—That I
could shield her from the tempests!—That
I could shelter her from the burning heats! But
I cannot. There is a great gulf between us, and
I may not pass to her, nor she to me. Oh, my
soul! is this separation to be for all time?”
There was rebellion in the heart of
Paul Hendrickson when he reached his home; and a wild
desire to overleap all barriers of separation.
“There will be a divorce in
all probability,” so he began talking with himself.
“Jessie will never return to him after this violent
separation; and he, after a time, will ask to have
the marriage annulled. He will not be able to
bring proof of evil against her—will, I
am sure, not even attempt it; for no evidence exists.
But her steady refusal to live with him as his wife,
will enable him, it may be, to get a divorce.
And then!”
There was a tone of exultation in
his voice at the closing words.
“And whosoever marrieth her
which is put away, committeth adultery.”
Hendrickson started to his feet, his
face as pale as ashes, and glanced almost fearfully
about the room. The voice seemed spoken in the
air—but it was not so. The warning
had reached his sense of hearing by an inner way.
Then he sat down, and pondered this
new question, so suddenly presented for solution,
turning it towards every light—viewing it
now from the side of human feeling and human reason—and
now with the light of Divine Revelation shining upon
it. But he was not satisfied. The letter
of the record was against him; but nature cried out
for some different reading. At length he made
an effort to thrust the subject aside.
“What folly is this?”
he said, still talking with himself. “Wait!
wait! wait!—the time is not yet. Separation
only exists. There is no divorce. The great,
impassable gulf is yet between us. I cannot go
to her. She cannot come to me. I must wait,
hopefully, if not patiently, the issue of events.”
The thoughts of Hendrickson had once
more been turning themselves towards Miss Arden, and
he had felt the glow of warmer feelings. He had
even begun to think again of marriage.
“Let that illusion go!”
he said. “It must no longer tempt me to
the commission of an act that reason and conscience
both pronounce wrong. I do not love Mary Arden;
therefore, I will not marry her. I settle that
matter now, and forever.”
And the decision was final. He
did not visit her again for many months, and then
only after her engagement to another.