HIS CHANCE
Betty walked much alone upon the marshes
with Roland at her side. At intervals she heard
from Mr. Penzance, but his notes were necessarily
brief, and at other times she could only rely upon
report for news of what was occurring at Mount Dunstan.
Lord Mount Dunstan’s almost military supervision
of and command over his villagers had certainly saved
them from the horrors of an uncontrollable epidemic;
his decision and energy had filled the alarmed Guardians
with respect and this respect had begun to be shared
by many other persons. A man as prompt in action,
and as faithful to such responsibilities as many men
might have found plausible reasons enough for shirking,
inevitably assumed a certain dignity of aspect, when
all was said and done. Lord Dunholm was most
clear in his expressions of opinion concerning him.
Lady Alanby of Dole made a practice of speaking of
him in public frequently, always with admiring approval,
and in that final manner of hers, to whose authority
her neighbours had so long submitted. It began
to be accepted as a fact that he was a new development
of his race—as her ladyship had put it,
“A new order of Mount Dunstan.”
The story of his power over the stricken
people, and of their passionate affection and admiration
for him, was one likely to spread far, and be immensely
popular. The drama of certain incidents appealed
greatly to the rustic mind, and by cottage firesides
he was represented with rapturous awe, as raising
men, women, and children from the dead, by the mere
miracle of touch. Mrs. Welden and old Doby revelled
in thrilling, almost Biblical, versions of current
anecdotes, when Betty paid her visits to them.
“It’s like the Scripture,
wot he done for that young man as the last breath
had gone out of him, an’ him lyin’ stiffening
fast. ’Young man, arise,’ he says.
‘The Lord Almighty calls. You’ve got
a young wife an’ three children to take care
of. Take up your bed an’ walk.’
Not as he wanted him to carry his bed anywheres, but
it was a manner of speaking. An’ up the
young man got. An’ a sensible way,”
said old Mrs. Welden frankly, “for the Lord
to look at it—for I must say, miss, if I
was struck down for it, though I s’pose it’s
only my sinful ignorance—that there’s
times when the Lord seems to think no more of sweepin’
away a steady eighteen-shillin’ a week, and
p’raps seven in family, an’ one at the
breast, an’ another on the way—than
if it was nothin’. But likely enough, eighteen
shillin’ a week an’ confinements does seem
paltry to the Maker of ‘eaven an’ earth.”
But, to the girl walking over the
marshland, the humanness of the things she heard gave
to her the sense of nearness—of being almost
within sight and sound—which Mount Dunstan
himself had felt, when each day was filled with the
result of her thought of the needs of the poor souls
thrown by fate into his hands. In these days,
after listening to old Mrs. Welden’s anecdotes,
through which she gathered the simpler truth of things,
Betty was able to construct for herself a less Scriptural
version of what she had heard. She was glad—glad
in his sitting by a bedside and holding a hand which
lay in his hot or cold, but always trusting to something
which his strong body and strong soul gave without
stint. There would be no restraint there.
Yes, he was kind—kind—kind —with
the kindness a woman loves, and which she, of all women,
loved most. Sometimes she would sit upon some
mound, and, while her eyes seemed to rest on the yellowing
marsh and its birds and pools, they saw other things,
and their colour grew deep and dark as the marsh water
between the rushes.
The time was pressing when a change
in her life must come. She frequently asked herself
if what she saw in Nigel Anstruthers’ face was
the normal thinking of a sane man, which he himself
could control. There had been moments when she
had seriously doubted it. He was haggard, aging
and restless. Sometimes he—always as
if by chance—followed her as she went from
one room to another, and would seat himself and fix
his miserable eyes upon her for so long a time that
it seemed he must be unconscious of what he was doing.
Then he would appear suddenly to recollect himself
and would start up with a muttered exclamation, and
stalk out of the room. He spent long hours riding
or driving alone about the country or wandering wretchedly
through the Park and gardens. Once he went up
to town, and, after a few days’ absence, came
back looking more haggard than before, and wearing
a hunted look in his eyes. He had gone to see
a physician, and, after having seen him, he had tried
to lose himself in a plunge into deep and turbid enough
waters; but he found that he had even lost the taste
of high flavours, for which he had once had an epicurean
palate. The effort had ended in his being overpowered
again by his horrors—the horrors in which
he found himself staring at that end of things when
no pleasure had spice, no debauchery the sting of
life, and men, such as he, stood upon the shore of
time shuddering and naked souls, watching the great
tide, bearing its treasures, recede forever, and leave
them to the cold and hideous dark. During one
day of his stay in town he had seen Teresita, who had
at first stared half frightened by the change she
saw in him, and then had told him truths he could
have wrung her neck for putting into words.
“You look an old man,”
she said, with the foreign accent he had once found
deliciously amusing, but which now seemed to add a
sting. “And somesing is eating you op.
You are mad in lofe with some beautiful one who will
not look at you. I haf seen it in mans before.
It is she who eats you op—your evil thinkings
of her. It serve you right. Your eyes look
mad.”
He himself, at times, suspected that
they did, and cursed himself because he could not
keep cool. It was part of his horrors that he
knew his internal furies were worse than folly, and
yet he could not restrain them. The creeping
suspicion that this was only the result of the simple
fact that he had never tried to restrain any tendency
of his own was maddening. His nervous system
was a wreck. He drank a great deal of whisky
to keep himself “straight” during the day,
and he rose many times during his black waking hours
in the night to drink more because he obstinately
refused to give up the hope that, if he drank enough,
it would make him sleep. As through the thoughts
of Mount Dunstan, who was a clean and healthy human
being, there ran one thread which would not disentangle
itself, so there ran through his unwholesome thinking
a thread which burned like fire. His secret ravings
would not have been good to hear. His passion
was more than half hatred, and a desire for vengeance,
for the chance to re-assert his own power, to prove
himself master, to get the better in one way or another
of this arrogant young outsider and her high-handed
pride. The condition of his mind was so far from
normal that he failed to see that the things he said
to himself, the plans he laid, were grotesque in their
folly. The old cruel dominance of the man over
the woman thing, which had seemed the mere natural
working of the law among men of his race in centuries
past, was awake in him, amid the limitations of modern
days.
“My God,” he said to himself
more than once, “I would like to have had her
in my hands a few hundred years ago. Women were
kept in their places, then.”
He was even frenzied enough to think
over what he would have done, if such a thing had
been—of her utter helplessness against that
which raged in him—of the grey thickness
of the walls where he might have held and wrought
his will upon her—insult, torment, death.
His alcohol-excited brain ran riot—but,
when it did its foolish worst, he was baffled by one
thing.
“Damn her!” he found himself
crying out. “If I had hung her up and cut
her into strips she would have died staring at me with
her big eyes—without uttering a sound.”
There was a long reach between his
imaginings and the time he lived in. America
had not been discovered in those decent days, and now
a man could not beat even his own wife, or spend her
money, without being meddled with by fools. He
was thinking of a New York young woman of the nineteenth
century who could actually do as she hanged pleased,
and who pleased to be damned high and mighty.
For that reason in itself it was incumbent upon a
man to get even with her in one way or another.
High and mightiness was not the hardest thing to reach.
It offered a good aim.
His temper when he returned to Stornham
was of the order which in past years had set Rosalie
and her child shuddering and had sent the servants
about the house with pale or sullen faces. Betty’s
presence had the odd effect of restraining him, and
he even told her so with sneering resentment.
“There would be the devil to
pay if you were not here,” he said. “You
keep me in order, by Jove! I can’t work
up steam properly when you watch me.”
He himself knew that it was likely
that some change would take place. She would
not stay at Stornham and she would not leave his wife
and child alone with him again. It would be like
her to hold her tongue until she was ready with her
infernal plans and could spring them on him.
Her letters to her father had probably prepared him
for such action as such a man would be likely to take.
He could guess what it would be. They were free
and easy enough in America in their dealings with the
marriage tie. Their idea would doubtless be a
divorce with custody of the child. He wondered
a little that they had remained quiet so long.
There had been American shrewdness in her coming boldly
to Stornham to look over the ground herself and actually
set the place in order. It did not present itself
to his mind that what she had done had been no part
of a scheme, but the mere result of her temperament
and training. He told himself that it had been
planned beforehand and carried out in hard-headed
commercial American fashion as a matter of business.
The thing which most enraged him was the implied cool,
practical realisation of the fact that he, as inheritor
of an entailed estate, was but owner in charge, and
not young enough to be regarded as an insurmountable
obstacle to their plans. He could not undo the
greater part of what had been done, and they were
calculating, he argued, that his would not be likely
to be a long life, and if—if anything happened—Stornham
would be Ughtred’s and the whole vulgar lot
of them would come over and take possession and swagger
about the place as if they had been born on it.
As to divorce or separation—if they took
that line, he would at least give them a good run
for their money. They would wish they had let
sleeping dogs lie before the thing was over. The
right kind of lawyer could bully Rosalie into saying
anything he chose on the witness-stand. There
was not much limit to the evidence a man could bring
if he was experienced enough to be circumstantial,
and knew whom he was dealing with. The very fact
that the little fool could be made to appear to have
been so sly and sanctimonious would stir the gall of
any jury of men. His own condoning the matter
for the sake of his sensitive boy, deformed by his
mother’s unrestrained and violent hysteria before
his birth, would go a long way. Let them get
their divorce, they would have paid for it, the whole
lot of them, the beautiful Miss Vanderpoel and all.
Such a story as the newspapers would revel in would
not be a recommendation to Englishmen of unsmirched
reputation. Then his exultation would suddenly
drop as his mental excitement produced its effect
of inevitable physical fatigue. Even if he made
them pay for getting their own way, what would happen
to himself afterwards? No morbid vanity of self-bolstering
could make the outlook anything but unpromising.
If he had not had such diabolical luck in his few
investments he could have lived his own life.
As it was, old Vanderpoel would possibly condescend
to make him some insufficient allowance because Rosalie
would wish that it might be done, and he would be
expected to drag out to the end the kind of life a
man pensioned by his wife’s relatives inevitably
does. If he attempted to live in the country
he should blow out his brains. When his depression
was at its worst, he saw himself aging and shabby,
rambling about from one cheap Continental town to
another, blackballed by good clubs, cold-shouldered
even by the Teresitas, cut off from society by his
limited means and the stories his wife’s friends
would spread. He ground his teeth when he thought
of Betty. Her splendid vitality had done something
to life for him—had given it savour.
When he had come upon her in the avenue his blood had
stirred, even though it had been maliciously, and there
had been spice in his very resentment of her presence.
And she would go away. He would not be likely
to see her again if his wife broke with him; she would
be swept out of his days. It was hideous to think
of, and his rage would overpower him and his nerves
go to pieces again.
“What are you going to do?”
he broke forth suddenly one evening, when he found
himself temporarily alone with her. “You
are going to do something. I see it in your eyes.”
He had been for some time watching
her from behind his newspaper, while she, with an
unread book upon her lap, had, in fact, been thinking
deeply and putting to herself serious questions.
Her answer made him stir rather uncomfortably.
“I am going to write to my father to ask him
to come to England.”
So this was what she had been preparing
to spring upon him. He laughed insolently.
“To ask him to come here?”
“With your permission.”
“With mine? Does an American father-in-law
wait for permission?”
“Is there any practical reason
why you should prefer that he should not come?”
He left his seat and walked over to her.
“Yes. Your sending for him is a declaration
of war.”
“It need not be so. Why should it?”
“In this case I happen to be
aware that it is. The choice is your own, I suppose,”
with ready bravado, “that you and he are prepared
to face the consequences. But is Rosalie, and
is your mother?”
“My father is a business man
and will know what can be done. He will know
what is worth doing,” she answered, without noticing
his question. “But,” she added the
words slowly, “I have been making up my mind—before
I write to him—to say something to you—to
ask you a question.”
He made a mock sentimental gesture.
“To ask me to spare my wife,
to ’remember that she is the mother of my child’?”
She passed over that also.
“To ask you if there is no possible
way in which all this unhappiness can be ended decently.”
“The only decent way of ending
it would be that there should be no further interference.
Let Rosalie supply the decency by showing me the consideration
due from a wife to her husband. The place has
been put in order. It was not for my benefit,
and I have no money to keep it up. Let Rosalie
be provided with means to do it.”
As he spoke the words he realised
that he had opened a way for embarrassing comment.
He expected her to remind him that Rosalie had not
come to him without money. But she said nothing
about the matter. She never said the things he
expected to hear.
“You do not want Rosalie for
your wife,” she went on “but you could
treat her courteously without loving her. You
could allow her the privileges other men’s wives
are allowed. You need not separate her from her
family. You could allow her father and mother
to come to her and leave her free to go to them sometimes.
Will you not agree to that? Will you not let
her live peaceably in her own simple way? She
is very gentle and humble and would ask nothing more.”
“She is a fool!” he exclaimed
furiously. “A fool! She will stay where
she is and do as I tell her.”
“You knew what she was when
you married her. She was simple and girlish and
pretended to be nothing she was not. You chose
to marry her and take her from the people who loved
her. You broke her spirit and her heart.
You would have killed her if I had not come in time
to prevent it.”
“I will kill her yet if you
leave her,” his folly made him say.
“You are talking like a feudal
lord holding the power of life and death in his hands,”
she said. “Power like that is ancient history.
You can hurt no one who has friends—without
being punished.”
It was the old story. She filled
him with the desire to shake or disturb her at any
cost, and he did his utmost. If she was proposing
to make terms with him, he would show her whether
he would accept them or not. He let her hear
all he had said to himself in his worst moments—all
that he had argued concerning what she and her people
would do, and what his own actions would be—all
his intention to make them pay the uttermost farthing
in humiliation if he could not frustrate them.
His methods would be definite enough. He had not
watched his wife and Ffolliott for weeks to no end.
He had known what he was dealing with. He had
put other people upon the track and they would testify
for him. He poured forth unspeakable statements
and intimations, going, as usual, further than he
had known he should go when he began. Under the
spur of excitement his imagination served him well.
At last he paused.
“Well,” he put it to her, “what
have you to say?”
“I?” with the remote intent
curiosity growing in her eyes. “I have
nothing to say. I am leaving you to say things.”
“You will, of course, try to deny——”
he insisted.
“No, I shall not. Why should I?”
“You may assume your air of
magnificence, but I am dealing with uncomfortable
factors.” He stopped in spite of himself,
and then burst forth in a new order of rage.
“You are trying some confounded experiment on
me. What is it?”
She rose from her chair to go out
of the room, and stood a moment holding her book half
open in her hand.
“Yes. I suppose it might
be called an experiment,” was her answer.
“Perhaps it was a mistake. I wanted to make
quite sure of something.”
“Of what?”
“I did not want to leave anything
undone. I did not want to believe that any man
could exist who had not one touch of decent feeling
to redeem him. It did not seem human.”
White dints showed themselves about his nostrils.
“Well, you have found one,”
he cried. “You have a lashing tongue, by
God, when you choose to let it go. But I could
teach you a good many things, my girl. And before
I have done you will have learned most of them.”
But though he threw himself into a
chair and laughed aloud as she left him, he knew that
his arrogance and bullying were proving poor weapons,
though they had done him good service all his life.
And he knew, too, that it was mere simple truth that,
as a result of the intellectual, ethical vagaries
he scathingly derided—she had actually been
giving him a sort of chance to retrieve himself, and
that if he had been another sort of man he might have
taken it.