<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0002" id="link2H_4_0002"></SPAN></p>
<h2> II </h2>
<p>He dined alone and walked home to his rooms in the rain. As he turned into
Fifth Avenue he caught the wet gleam of carriages on their way to the
opera, and he took the first side street, in a moment of irritation
against the petty restrictions that thwarted every impulse. It was
ridiculous to give up the opera, not because one might possibly be bored
there, but because one must pay for the experiment.</p>
<p>In his sitting-room, the tacit connivance of the inanimate had centred the
lamp-light on a photograph of Alexa Trent, placed, in the obligatory
silver frame, just where, as memory officiously reminded him, Margaret
Aubyn's picture had long throned in its stead. Miss Trent's features
cruelly justified the usurpation. She had the kind of beauty that comes of
a happy accord of face and spirit. It is not given to many to have the
lips and eyes of their rarest mood, and some women go through life behind
a mask expressing only their anxiety about the butcher's bill or their
inability to see a joke. With Miss Trent, face and mind had the same high
serious contour. She looked like a throned Justice by some grave
Florentine painter; and it seemed to Glennard that her most salient
attribute, or that at least to which her conduct gave most consistent
expression, was a kind of passionate justice—the intuitive feminine
justness that is so much rarer than a reasoned impartiality. Circumstances
had tragically combined to develop this instinct into a conscious habit.
She had seen more than most girls of the shabby side of life, of the
perpetual tendency of want to cramp the noblest attitude. Poverty and
misfortune had overhung her childhood and she had none of the pretty
delusions about life that are supposed to be the crowning grace of
girlhood. This very competence, which gave her a touching reasonableness,
made Glennard's situation more difficult than if he had aspired to a
princess bred in the purple. Between them they asked so little—they
knew so well how to make that little do—but they understood also,
and she especially did not for a moment let him forget, that without that
little the future they dreamed of was impossible.</p>
<p>The sight of her photograph quickened Glennard's exasperation. He was sick
and ashamed of the part he was playing. He had loved her now for two
years, with the tranquil tenderness that gathers depth and volume as it
nears fulfilment; he knew that she would wait for him—but the
certitude was an added pang. There are times when the constancy of the
woman one cannot marry is almost as trying as that of the woman one does
not want to.</p>
<p>Glennard turned up his reading-lamp and stirred the fire. He had a long
evening before him and he wanted to crowd out thought with action. He had
brought some papers from his office and he spread them out on his table
and squared himself to the task....</p>
<p>It must have been an hour later that he found himself automatically
fitting a key into a locked drawer. He had no more notion than a
somnambulist of the mental process that had led up to this action. He was
just dimly aware of having pushed aside the papers and the heavy calf
volumes that a moment before had bounded his horizon, and of laying in
their place, without a trace of conscious volition, the parcel he had
taken from the drawer.</p>
<p>The letters were tied in packets of thirty or forty. There were a great
many packets. On some of the envelopes the ink was fading; on others,
which bore the English post-mark, it was still fresh. She had been dead
hardly three years, and she had written, at lengthening intervals, to the
last....</p>
<p>He undid one of the earlier packets—little notes written during
their first acquaintance at Hillbridge. Glennard, on leaving college, had
begun life in his uncle's law office in the old university town. It was
there that, at the house of her father, Professor Forth, he had first met
the young lady then chiefly distinguished for having, after two years of a
conspicuously unhappy marriage, returned to the protection of the paternal
roof.</p>
<p>Mrs. Aubyn was at that time an eager and somewhat tragic young woman, of
complex mind and undeveloped manners, whom her crude experience of
matrimony had fitted out with a stock of generalizations that exploded
like bombs in the academic air of Hillbridge. In her choice of a husband
she had been fortunate enough, if the paradox be permitted, to light on
one so signally gifted with the faculty of putting himself in the wrong
that her leaving him had the dignity of a manifesto—made her, as it
were, the spokeswoman of outraged wifehood. In this light she was
cherished by that dominant portion of Hillbridge society which was least
indulgent to conjugal differences, and which found a proportionate
pleasure in being for once able to feast openly on a dish liberally
seasoned with the outrageous. So much did this endear Mrs. Aubyn to the
university ladies that they were disposed from the first to allow her more
latitude of speech and action than the ill-used wife was generally
accorded in Hillbridge, where misfortune was still regarded as a
visitation designed to put people in their proper place and make them feel
the superiority of their neighbors. The young woman so privileged combined
with a kind of personal shyness an intellectual audacity that was like a
deflected impulse of coquetry: one felt that if she had been prettier she
would have had emotions instead of ideas. She was in fact even then what
she had always remained: a genius capable of the acutest generalizations,
but curiously undiscerning where her personal susceptibilities were
concerned. Her psychology failed her just where it serves most women and
one felt that her brains would never be a guide to her heart. Of all this,
however, Glennard thought little in the first year of their acquaintance.
He was at an age when all the gifts and graces are but so much
undiscriminated food to the ravening egoism of youth. In seeking Mrs.
Aubyn's company he was prompted by an intuitive taste for the best as a
pledge of his own superiority. The sympathy of the cleverest woman in
Hillbridge was balm to his craving for distinction: it was public
confirmation of his secret sense that he was cut out for a bigger place.
It must not be understood that Glennard was vain. Vanity contents itself
with the coarsest diet; there is no palate so fastidious as that of
self-distrust. To a youth of Glennard's aspirations the encouragement of a
clever woman stood for the symbol of all success. Later, when he had begun
to feel his way, to gain a foothold, he would not need such support; but
it served to carry him lightly and easily over what is often a period of
insecurity and discouragement.</p>
<p>It would be unjust, however, to represent his interest in Mrs. Aubyn as a
matter of calculation. It was as instinctive as love, and it missed being
love by just such a hair-breadth deflection from the line of beauty as had
determined the curve of Mrs. Aubyn's lips. When they met she had just
published her first novel, and Glennard, who afterward had an ambitious
man's impatience of distinguished women, was young enough to be dazzled by
the semi-publicity it gave her. It was the kind of book that makes elderly
ladies lower their voices and call each other "my dear" when they
furtively discuss it; and Glennard exulted in the superior knowledge of
the world that enabled him to take as a matter of course sentiments over
which the university shook its head. Still more delightful was it to hear
Mrs. Aubyn waken the echoes of academic drawing-rooms with audacities
surpassing those of her printed page. Her intellectual independence gave a
touch of comradeship to their intimacy, prolonging the illusion of college
friendships based on a joyous interchange of heresies. Mrs. Aubyn and
Glennard represented to each other the augur's wink behind the Hillbridge
idol: they walked together in that light of young omniscience from which
fate so curiously excludes one's elders.</p>
<p>Husbands who are notoriously inopportune, may even die inopportunely, and
this was the revenge that Mr. Aubyn, some two years after her return to
Hillbridge, took upon his injured wife. He died precisely at the moment
when Glennard was beginning to criticise her. It was not that she bored
him; she did what was infinitely worse—she made him feel his
inferiority. The sense of mental equality had been gratifying to his raw
ambition; but as his self-knowledge defined itself, his understanding of
her also increased; and if man is at times indirectly flattered by the
moral superiority of woman, her mental ascendency is extenuated by no such
oblique tribute to his powers. The attitude of looking up is a strain on
the muscles; and it was becoming more and more Glennard's opinion that
brains, in a woman, should be merely the obverse of beauty. To beauty Mrs.
Aubyn could lay no claim; and while she had enough prettiness to
exasperate him by her incapacity to make use of it, she seemed invincibly
ignorant of any of the little artifices whereby women contrive to palliate
their defects and even to turn them into graces. Her dress never seemed a
part of her; all her clothes had an impersonal air, as though they had
belonged to someone else and been borrowed in an emergency that had
somehow become chronic. She was conscious enough of her deficiencies to
try to amend them by rash imitations of the most approved models; but no
woman who does not dress well intuitively will ever do so by the light of
reason, and Mrs. Aubyn's plagiarisms, to borrow a metaphor of her trade,
somehow never seemed to be incorporated with the text.</p>
<p>Genius is of small use to a woman who does not know how to do her hair.
The fame that came to Mrs. Aubyn with her second book left Glennard's
imagination untouched, or had at most the negative effect of removing her
still farther from the circle of his contracting sympathies. We are all
the sport of time; and fate had so perversely ordered the chronology of
Margaret Aubyn's romance that when her husband died Glennard felt as
though he had lost a friend.</p>
<p>It was not in his nature to be needlessly unkind; and though he was in the
impregnable position of the man who has given a woman no more definable
claim on him than that of letting her fancy that he loves her, he would
not for the world have accentuated his advantage by any betrayal of
indifference. During the first year of her widowhood their friendship
dragged on with halting renewals of sentiment, becoming more and more a
banquet of empty dishes from which the covers were never removed; then
Glennard went to New York to live and exchanged the faded pleasures of
intercourse for the comparative novelty of correspondence. Her letters,
oddly enough, seemed at first to bring her nearer than her presence. She
had adopted, and she successfully maintained, a note as affectionately
impersonal as his own; she wrote ardently of her work, she questioned him
about his, she even bantered him on the inevitable pretty girl who was
certain before long to divert the current of his confidences. To Glennard,
who was almost a stranger in New York, the sight of Mrs. Aubyn's writing
was like a voice of reassurance in surroundings as yet insufficiently
aware of him. His vanity found a retrospective enjoyment in the sentiment
his heart had rejected, and this factitious emotion drove him once or
twice to Hillbridge, whence, after scenes of evasive tenderness, he
returned dissatisfied with himself and her. As he made room for himself in
New York and peopled the space he had cleared with the sympathies at the
disposal of agreeable and self-confident young men, it seemed to him
natural to infer that Mrs. Aubyn had refurnished in the same manner the
void he was not unwilling his departure should have left. But in the
dissolution of sentimental partnerships it is seldom that both associates
are able to withdraw their funds at the same time; and Glennard gradually
learned that he stood for the venture on which Mrs. Aubyn had
irretrievably staked her all. It was not the kind of figure he cared to
cut. He had no fancy for leaving havoc in his wake and would have
preferred to sow a quick growth of oblivion in the spaces wasted by his
unconsidered inroads; but if he supplied the seed it was clearly Mrs.
Aubyn's business to see to the raising of the crop. Her attitude seemed
indeed to throw his own reasonableness into distincter relief: so that
they might have stood for thrift and improvidence in an allegory of the
affections.</p>
<p>It was not that Mrs. Aubyn permitted herself to be a pensioner on his
bounty. He knew she had no wish to keep herself alive on the small change
of sentiment; she simply fed on her own funded passion, and the luxuries
it allowed her made him, even then, dimly aware that she had the secret of
an inexhaustible alchemy.</p>
<p>Their relations remained thus negatively tender till she suddenly wrote
him of her decision to go abroad to live. Her father had died, she had no
near ties in Hillbridge, and London offered more scope than New York to
her expanding personality. She was already famous and her laurels were yet
unharvested.</p>
<p>For a moment the news roused Glennard to a jealous sense of lost
opportunities. He wanted, at any rate, to reassert his power before she
made the final effort of escape. They had not met for over a year, but of
course he could not let her sail without seeing her. She came to New York
the day before her departure, and they spent its last hours together.
Glennard had planned no course of action—he simply meant to let
himself drift. They both drifted, for a long time, down the languid
current of reminiscence; she seemed to sit passive, letting him push his
way back through the overgrown channels of the past. At length she
reminded him that they must bring their explorations to an end. He rose to
leave, and stood looking at her with the same uncertainty in his heart. He
was tired of her already—he was always tired of her—yet he was
not sure that he wanted her to go.</p>
<p>"I may never see you again," he said, as though confidently appealing to
her compassion.</p>
<p>Her look enveloped him. "And I shall see you always—always!"</p>
<p>"Why go then—?" escaped him.</p>
<p>"To be nearer you," she answered; and the words dismissed him like a
closing door.</p>
<p>The door was never to reopen; but through its narrow crack Glennard, as
the years went on, became more and more conscious of an inextinguishable
light directing its small ray toward the past which consumed so little of
his own commemorative oil. The reproach was taken from this thought by
Mrs. Aubyn's gradual translation into terms of universality. In becoming a
personage she so naturally ceased to be a person that Glennard could
almost look back to his explorations of her spirit as on a visit to some
famous shrine, immortalized, but in a sense desecrated, by popular
veneration.</p>
<p>Her letters, from London, continued to come with the same tender
punctuality; but the altered conditions of her life, the vistas of new
relationships disclosed by every phrase, made her communications as
impersonal as a piece of journalism. It was as though the state, the
world, indeed, had taken her off his hands, assuming the maintenance of a
temperament that had long exhausted his slender store of reciprocity.</p>
<p>In the retrospective light shed by the letters he was blinded to their
specific meaning. He was not a man who concerned himself with literature,
and they had been to him, at first, simply the extension of her brilliant
talk, later the dreaded vehicle of a tragic importunity. He knew, of
course, that they were wonderful; that, unlike the authors who give their
essence to the public and keep only a dry rind for their friends, Mrs.
Aubyn had stored of her rarest vintage for this hidden sacrament of
tenderness. Sometimes, indeed, he had been oppressed, humiliated almost,
by the multiplicity of her allusions, the wide scope of her interests, her
persistence in forcing her superabundance of thought and emotion into the
shallow receptacle of his sympathy; but he had never thought of the
letters objectively, as the production of a distinguished woman; had never
measured the literary significance of her oppressive prodigality. He was
almost frightened now at the wealth in his hands; the obligation of her
love had never weighed on him like this gift of her imagination: it was as
though he had accepted from her something to which even a reciprocal
tenderness could not have justified his claim.</p>
<p>He sat a long time staring at the scattered pages on his desk; and in the
sudden realization of what they meant he could almost fancy some
alchemistic process changing them to gold as he stared. He had the sense
of not being alone in the room, of the presence of another self observing
from without the stirring of subconscious impulses that sent flushes of
humiliation to his forehead. At length he stood up, and with the gesture
of a man who wishes to give outward expression to his purpose—to
establish, as it were, a moral alibi—swept the letters into a heap
and carried them toward the grate. But it would have taken too long to
burn all the packets. He turned back to the table and one by one fitted
the pages into their envelopes; then he tied up the letters and put them
back into the locked drawer.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />