<h3><SPAN name="II" id="II"></SPAN>II</h3>
<p class="nind"><span class="letter">T</span>HE day was as fine and the scene as fair at Newmarch as the party was
numerous and various; and my memory associates with the rest of the long
afternoon many renewals of acquaintance and much sitting and strolling,
for snatches of talk, in the long shade of great trees and through the
straight walks of old gardens. A couple of hours thus passed, and fresh
accessions enriched the picture. There were persons I was curious of—of
Lady John, for instance, of whom I promised myself an early view; but we
were apt to be carried away in currents that reflected new images and
sufficiently beguiled impatience. I recover, all the same, a full
sequence of impressions, each of which, I afterwards saw, had been
appointed to help all the others. If my anecdote, as I have mentioned,
had begun, at Paddington, at a particular moment, it gathered substance
step by step and without missing a link. The links, in fact, should I
count them all, would make too long a chain. They formed, nevertheless,
the happiest little chapter of accidents, though a series of which I can
scarce give more than the general effect.<SPAN name="page_014" id="page_014"></SPAN></p>
<p>One of the first accidents was that, before dinner, I met Ford Obert
wandering a little apart with Mrs. Server, and that, as they were known
to me as agreeable acquaintances, I should have faced them with
confidence had I not immediately drawn from their sequestered air the
fear of interrupting them. Mrs. Server was always lovely and Obert
always expert; the latter straightway pulled up, however, making me as
welcome as if their converse had dropped. She was extraordinarily
pretty, markedly responsive, conspicuously charming, but he gave me a
look that really seemed to say: "Don't—there's a good fellow—leave me
any longer alone with her!" I had met her at Newmarch before—it was
indeed only so that I had met her—and I knew how she was valued there.
I also knew that an aversion to pretty women—numbers of whom he had
preserved for a grateful posterity—was his sign neither as man nor as
artist; the effect of all of which was to make me ask myself what she
could have been doing to him. Making love, possibly—yet from that he
would scarce have appealed. She wouldn't, on the other hand, have given
him her company only to be inhuman. I joined them, at all events,
learning from Mrs. Server that she had come by a train previous to my
own; and we made a slow trio till, at a turn of the prospect, we came
upon another group. It consisted of Mrs. Froome and Lord Lutley and of
Gilbert Long and<SPAN name="page_015" id="page_015"></SPAN> Lady John—mingled and confounded, as might be said,
not assorted according to tradition. Long and Mrs. Froome came first, I
recollect, together, and his lordship turned away from Lady John on
seeing me rather directly approach her. She had become for me, on the
spot, as interesting as, while we travelled, I had found my two friends
in the train. As the source of the flow of "intellect" that had
transmuted our young man, she had every claim to an earnest attention;
and I should soon have been ready to pronounce that she rewarded it as
richly as usual. She was indeed, as Mrs. Briss had said, as pointed as a
hat-pin, and I bore in mind that lady's injunction to look in her for
the answer to our riddle.</p>
<p>The riddle, I may mention, sounded afresh to my ear in Gilbert Long's
gay voice; it hovered there—before me, beside, behind me, as we all
paused—in his light, restless step, a nervous animation that seemed to
multiply his presence. He became really, for the moment, under this
impression, the thing I was most conscious of; I heard him, I felt him
even while I exchanged greetings with the sorceress by whose wand he had
been touched. To be touched myself was doubtless not quite what I
wanted; yet I wanted, distinctly, a glimpse; so that, with the smart
welcome Lady John gave me, I might certainly have felt that I was on the
way to get it. The note of Long's predominance deepened<SPAN name="page_016" id="page_016"></SPAN> during these
minutes in a manner I can't describe, and I continued to feel that
though we pretended to talk it was to him only we listened. He had us
all in hand; he controlled for the moment all our attention and our
relations. He was in short, as a consequence of our attitude, in
possession of the scene to a tune he couldn't have dreamed of a year or
two before—inasmuch as at that period he could have figured at no such
eminence without making a fool of himself. And the great thing was that
if his eminence was now so perfectly graced he yet knew less than any of
us what was the matter with him. He was unconscious of how he had "come
out"—which was exactly what sharpened my wonder. Lady John, on her
side, was thoroughly conscious, and I had a fancy that she looked at me
to measure how far <i>I</i> was. I cared, naturally, not in the least what
she guessed; her interest for me was all in the operation of her
influence. I am afraid I watched to catch it in the act—watched her
with a curiosity of which she might well have become aware.</p>
<p>What an intimacy, what an intensity of relation, I said to myself, so
successful a process implied! It was of course familiar enough that when
people were so deeply in love they rubbed off on each other—that a
great pressure of soul to soul usually left on either side a sufficient
show of tell-tale traces. But for Long to have been so stamped as<SPAN name="page_017" id="page_017"></SPAN> I
found him, how the pliant wax must have been prepared and the seal of
passion applied! What an affection the woman working such a change in
him must have managed to create as a preface to her influence! With what
a sense of her charm she must have paved the way for it! Strangely
enough, however—it was even rather irritating—there was nothing more
than usual in Lady John to assist my view of the height at which the
pair so evoked must move. These things—the way other people could feel
about each other, the power not one's self, in the given instance, that
made for passion—were of course at best the mystery of mysteries;
still, there were cases in which fancy, sounding the depths or the
shallows, could at least drop the lead. Lady John, perceptibly, was no
such case; imagination, in her presence, was but the weak wing of the
insect that bumps against the glass. She was pretty, prompt, hard, and,
in a way that was special to her, a mistress at once of "culture" and of
slang. She was like a hat—with one of Mrs. Briss's hat-pins—askew on
the bust of Virgil. Her ornamental information—as strong as a coat of
furniture-polish—almost knocked you down. What I felt in her now more
than ever was that, having a reputation for "point" to keep up, she was
always under arms, with absences and anxieties like those of a celebrity
at a public dinner. She thought too much of her "speech"—of how soon it
would have to come.<SPAN name="page_018" id="page_018"></SPAN> It was none the less wonderful, however, that, as
Grace Brissenden had said, she should still find herself with intellect
to spare—have lavished herself by precept and example on Long and yet
have remained for each other interlocutor as fresh as the clown bounding
into the ring. She cracked, for my benefit, as many jokes and turned as
many somersaults as might have been expected; after which I thought it
fair to let her off. We all faced again to the house, for dressing and
dinner were in sight.</p>
<p>I found myself once more, as we moved, with Mrs. Server, and I remember
rejoicing that, sympathetic as she showed herself, she didn't think it
necessary to be, like Lady John, always "ready." She was delightfully
handsome—handsomer than ever; slim, fair, fine, with charming pale eyes
and splendid auburn hair. I said to myself that I hadn't done her
justice; she hadn't organised her forces, was a little helpless and
vague, but there was ease for the weary in her happy nature and her
peculiar grace. These last were articles on which, five minutes later,
before the house, where we still had a margin, I was moved to challenge
Ford Obert.</p>
<p>"What was the matter just now—when, though you were so fortunately
occupied, you yet seemed to call me to the rescue?"</p>
<p>"Oh," he laughed, "I was only occupied in being frightened!"<SPAN name="page_019" id="page_019"></SPAN></p>
<p>"But at what?"</p>
<p>"Well, at a sort of sense that she wanted to make love to me."</p>
<p>I reflected. "Mrs. Server? Does Mrs. Server make love?"</p>
<p>"It seemed to me," my friend replied, "that she began on it to <i>you</i> as
soon as she got hold of you. Weren't you aware?"</p>
<p>I debated afresh; I didn't know that I had been. "Not to the point of
terror. She's so gentle and so appealing. Even if she took one in hand
with violence, moreover," I added, "I don't see why terror—given so
charming a person—should be the result. It's flattering."</p>
<p>"Ah, you're brave," said Obert.</p>
<p>"I didn't know you were ever timid. How can you be, in your profession?
Doesn't it come back to me, for that matter, that—only the other
year—you painted her?"</p>
<p>"Yes, I faced her to that extent. But she's different now."</p>
<p>I scarcely made it out. "In what way different? She's as charming as
ever."</p>
<p>As if even for his own satisfaction my friend seemed to think a little.
"Well, her affections were not then, I imagine, at her disposal. I judge
that that's what it must have been. They were fixed—with intensity; and
it made the difference with <i>me</i>. Her imagination had, for the time,
rested<SPAN name="page_020" id="page_020"></SPAN> its wing. At present it's ready for flight—it seeks a fresh
perch. It's trying. Take care."</p>
<p>"Oh, I don't flatter myself," I laughed, "that I've only to hold out my
hand! At any rate," I went on, "<i>I</i> sha'n't call for help."</p>
<p>He seemed to think again. "I don't know. You'll see."</p>
<p>"If I do I shall see a great deal more than I now suspect." He wanted to
get off to dress, but I still held him. "Isn't she wonderfully lovely?"</p>
<p>"Oh!" he simply exclaimed.</p>
<p>"Isn't she as lovely as she seems?"</p>
<p>But he had already broken away. "What has that to do with it?"</p>
<p>"What has anything, then?"</p>
<p>"She's too beastly unhappy."</p>
<p>"But isn't that just one's advantage?"</p>
<p>"No. It's uncanny." And he escaped.</p>
<p>The question had at all events brought us indoors and so far up our
staircase as to where it branched towards Obert's room. I followed it to
my corridor, with which other occasions had made me acquainted, and I
reached the door on which I expected to find my card of designation.
This door, however, was open, so as to show me, in momentary possession
of the room, a gentleman, unknown to me, who, in unguided quest of his
quarters, appeared to have arrived from the other end of the passage. He
had just seen, as the property of another,<SPAN name="page_021" id="page_021"></SPAN> my unpacked things, with
which he immediately connected me. He moreover, to my surprise, on my
entering, sounded my name, in response to which I could only at first
remain blank. It was in fact not till I had begun to help him place
himself that, correcting my blankness, I knew him for Guy Brissenden. He
had been put by himself, for some reason, in the bachelor wing and,
exploring at hazard, had mistaken the signs. By the time we found his
servant and his lodging I had reflected on the oddity of my having been
as stupid about the husband as I had been about the wife. He had escaped
my notice since our arrival, but I had, as a much older man, met
him—the hero of his odd union—at some earlier time. Like his wife,
none the less, he had now struck me as a stranger, and it was not till,
in his room, I stood a little face to face with him that I made out the
wonderful reason.</p>
<p>The wonderful reason was that I was <i>not</i> a much older man; Guy
Brissenden, at any rate, was not a much younger. It was he who was
old—it was he who was older—it was he who was oldest. That was so
disconcertingly what he had become. It was in short what he would have
been had he been as old as he looked. He looked almost anything—he
looked quite sixty. I made it out again at dinner, where, from a
distance, but opposite, I had him in sight. Nothing could have been
stranger than<SPAN name="page_022" id="page_022"></SPAN> the way that, fatigued, fixed, settled, he seemed to have
piled up the years. They were there without having had time to arrive.
It was as if he had discovered some miraculous short cut to the common
doom. He had grown old, in fine, as people you see after an interval
sometimes strike you as having grown rich—too quickly for the honest,
or at least for the straight, way. He had cheated or inherited or
speculated. It took me but a minute then to add him to my little
gallery—the small collection, I mean, represented by his wife and by
Gilbert Long, as well as in some degree doubtless also by Lady John: the
museum of those who put to me with such intensity the question of what
had happened to them. His wife, on the same side, was not out of my
range, and now, largely exposed, lighted, jewelled, and enjoying
moreover visibly the sense of these things—his wife, upon my honour, as
I soon remarked to the lady next me, his wife (it was too prodigious!)
looked about twenty.</p>
<p>"Yes—isn't it funny?" said the lady next me.</p>
<p>It was so funny that it set me thinking afresh and that, with the
interest of it, which became a positive excitement, I had to keep myself
in hand in order not too publicly to explain, not to break out right and
left with my reflections. I don't know why—it was a sense instinctive
and unreasoned, but I felt from the first that if I was on the scent of
something ultimate I had better waste neither my wonder nor<SPAN name="page_023" id="page_023"></SPAN> my wisdom.
I <i>was</i> on the scent—that I was sure of; and yet even after I was sure
I should still have been at a loss to put my enigma itself into words. I
was just conscious, vaguely, of being on the track of a law, a law that
would fit, that would strike me as governing the delicate
phenomena—delicate though so marked—that my imagination found itself
playing with. A part of the amusement they yielded came, I daresay, from
my exaggerating them—grouping them into a larger mystery (and thereby a
larger "law") than the facts, as observed, yet warranted; but that is
the common fault of minds for which the vision of life is an obsession.
The obsession pays, if one will; but to pay it has to borrow. After
dinner, but while the men were still in the room, I had some talk again
with Long, of whom I inquired if he had been so placed as to see "poor
Briss."</p>
<p>He appeared to wonder, and poor Briss, with our shifting of seats, was
now at a distance. "I think so—but I didn't particularly notice. What's
the matter with poor Briss?"</p>
<p>"That's exactly what I thought you might be able to tell me. But if
nothing, in him, strikes you——!"</p>
<p>He met my eyes a moment—then glanced about. "Where is he?"</p>
<p>"Behind you; only don't turn round to look, for he knows——" But I
dropped, having caught<SPAN name="page_024" id="page_024"></SPAN> something directed toward me in Brissenden's
face. My interlocutor remained blank, simply asking me, after an
instant, what it was he knew. On this I said what I meant. "He knows
we've noticed."</p>
<p>Long wondered again. "Ah, but I <i>haven't</i>!" He spoke with some
sharpness.</p>
<p>"He knows," I continued, noting the sharpness too, "what's the matter
with him."</p>
<p>"Then what the devil is it?"</p>
<p>I waited a little, having for the moment an idea on my hands. "Do you
see him often?"</p>
<p>Long disengaged the ash from his cigarette. "No. Why should I?"</p>
<p>Distinctly, he was uneasy—though as yet perhaps but vaguely—at what I
might be coming to. That was precisely my idea, and if I pitied him a
little for my pressure my idea was yet what most possessed me. "Do you
mean there's nothing in him that strikes you?"</p>
<p>On this, unmistakably, he looked at me hard. "'Strikes' me—in that boy?
Nothing in him, that I know of, ever struck me in my life. He's not an
object of the smallest interest to me!"</p>
<p>I felt that if I insisted I should really stir up the old Long, the
stolid coxcomb, capable of rudeness, with whose redemption,
reabsorption, supersession—one scarcely knew what to call it—I had
been so happily impressed. "Oh, of course, if you haven't noticed, you
haven't, and the matter I was going to<SPAN name="page_025" id="page_025"></SPAN> speak of will have no point. You
won't know what I mean." With which I paused long enough to let his
curiosity operate if his denial had been sincere. But it hadn't. His
curiosity never operated. He only exclaimed, more indulgently, that he
didn't know what I was talking about; and I recognised after a little
that if I had made him, without intention, uncomfortable, this was
exactly a proof of his being what Mrs. Briss, at the station, had called
cleverer, and what I had so much remarked while, in the garden before
dinner, he held our small company. Nobody, nothing could, in the time of
his inanity, have made him turn a hair. It was the mark of his
aggrandisement. But I spared him—so far as was consistent with my wish
for absolute certainty; changed the subject, spoke of other things, took
pains to sound disconnectedly, and only after reference to several of
the other ladies, the name over which we had just felt friction. "Mrs.
Brissenden's quite fabulous."</p>
<p>He appeared to have strayed, in our interval, far. "'Fabulous'?"</p>
<p>"Why, for the figure that, by candle-light and in cloth-of-silver and
diamonds, she is still able to make."</p>
<p>"Oh dear, yes!" He showed as relieved to be able to see what I meant.
"She has grown so very much less plain."</p>
<p>But that wasn't at all what I meant. "Ah," I<SPAN name="page_026" id="page_026"></SPAN> said, "you put it the
other way at Paddington—which was much more the right one."</p>
<p>He had quite forgotten. "How then did I put it?"</p>
<p>As he had done before, I got rid of my ash. "She hasn't grown very much
less plain. She has only grown very much less old."</p>
<p>"Ah, well," he laughed, but as if his interest had quickly dropped,
"youth is—comparatively speaking—beauty."</p>
<p>"Oh, not always. Look at poor Briss himself."</p>
<p>"Well, if you like better, beauty is youth."</p>
<p>"Not always, either," I returned. "Certainly only when it <i>is</i> beauty.
To see how little it may be either, look," I repeated, "at poor Briss."</p>
<p>"I thought you told me just now not to!" He rose at last in his
impatience.</p>
<p>"Well, at present you can."</p>
<p>I also got up, the other men at the same moment moved, and the subject
of our reference stood in view. This indeed was but briefly, for, as if
to examine a picture behind him, the personage in question suddenly
turned his back. Long, however, had had time to take him in and then to
decide. "I've looked. What then?"</p>
<p>"You don't see anything?"</p>
<p>"Nothing."</p>
<p>"Not what everyone else must?"</p>
<p>"No, confound you!"<SPAN name="page_027" id="page_027"></SPAN></p>
<p>I already felt that, to be so tortuous, he must have had a reason, and
the search for his reason was what, from this moment, drew me on. I had
in fact half guessed it as we stood there. But this only made me the
more explanatory. "It isn't really, however, that Brissenden has grown
less lovely—it's only that he has grown less young."</p>
<p>To which my friend, as we quitted the room, replied simply: "Oh!"</p>
<p>The effect I have mentioned was, none the less, too absurd. The poor
youth's back, before us, still as if consciously presented, confessed to
the burden of time. "How old," I continued, "did we make out this
afternoon that he would be?"</p>
<p>"That who would?"</p>
<p>"Why, poor Briss."</p>
<p>He fairly pulled up in our march. "Have you got him on the brain?"</p>
<p>"Don't I seem to remember, my dear man, that it was you yourself who
knew? He's thirty at the most. He can't possibly be more. And there he
is: as fine, as swaddled, as royal a mummy, to the eye, as one would
wish to see. Don't pretend! But it's all right." I laughed as I took
myself up. "I must talk to Lady John."</p>
<p>I did talk to her, but I must come to it. What is most to the point just
here is an observation or two that, in the smoking-room, before going
to<SPAN name="page_028" id="page_028"></SPAN> bed, I exchanged with Ford Obert. I forbore, as I have hinted, to
show all I saw, but it was lawfully open to me to judge of what other
people did; and I had had before dinner my little proof that, on
occasion, Obert could see as much as most. Yet I said nothing more to
him for the present about Mrs. Server. The Brissendens were new to him,
and his experience of every sort of facial accident, of human sign, made
him just the touchstone I wanted. Nothing, naturally, was easier than to
turn him on the question of the fair and the foul, type and character,
weal and woe, among our fellow-visitors; so that my mention of the air
of disparity in the couple I have just named came in its order and
produced its effect. This effect was that of my seeing—which was all I
required—that if the disparity was marked for him this expert observer
could yet read it quite the wrong way. Why had so fine a young creature
married a man three times her age? He was of course astounded when I
told him the young creature was much nearer three times Brissenden's,
and this led to some interesting talk between us as to the consequences,
in general, of such association on such terms. The particular case
before us, I easily granted, sinned by over-emphasis, but it was a fair,
though a gross, illustration of what almost always occurred when twenty
and forty, when thirty and sixty, mated or mingled, lived together in
intimacy. Intimacy of course had to be postulated.<SPAN name="page_029" id="page_029"></SPAN> Then either the high
number or the low always got the upper hand, and it was usually the high
that succeeded. It seemed, in other words, more possible to go back than
to keep still, to grow young than to remain so. If Brissenden had been
of his wife's age and his wife of Brissenden's, it would thus be he who
must have redescended the hill, it would be she who would have been
pushed over the brow. There was really a touching truth in it, the stuff
of—what did people call such things?—an apologue or a parable. "One of
the pair," I said, "has to pay for the other. What ensues is a miracle,
and miracles are expensive. What's a greater one than to have your youth
twice over? It's a second wind, another 'go'—which isn't the sort of
thing life mostly treats us to. Mrs. Briss had to get her new blood, her
extra allowance of time and bloom, somewhere; and from whom could she so
conveniently extract them as from Guy himself? She <i>has</i>, by an
extraordinary feat of legerdemain, extracted them; and he, on his side,
to supply her, has had to tap the sacred fount. But the sacred fount is
like the greedy man's description of the turkey as an 'awkward' dinner
dish. It may be sometimes too much for a single share, but it's not
enough to go round."</p>
<p>Obert was at all events sufficiently struck with my view to throw out a
question on it. "So that,<SPAN name="page_030" id="page_030"></SPAN> paying to his last drop, Mr. Briss, as you
call him, can only die of the business?"</p>
<p>"Oh, not yet, I hope. But before <i>her</i>—yes: long."</p>
<p>He was much amused. "How you polish them off!"</p>
<p>"I only talk," I returned, "as you paint; not a bit worse! But one must
indeed wonder," I conceded, "how the poor wretches feel."</p>
<p>"You mean whether Brissenden likes it?"</p>
<p>I made up my mind on the spot. "If he loves her he must. That is if he
loves her passionately, sublimely." I saw it all. "It's in fact just
because he does so love her that the miracle, for her, is wrought."</p>
<p>"Well," my friend reflected, "for taking a miracle coolly——!"</p>
<p>"She hasn't her equal? Yes, she does take it. She just quietly, but just
selfishly, profits by it."</p>
<p>"And doesn't see then how her victim loses?"</p>
<p>"No. She can't. The perception, if she had it, would be painful and
terrible—might even be fatal to the process. So she hasn't it. She
passes round it. It takes all her flood of life to meet her own chance.
She has only a wonderful sense of success and well-being. The <i>other</i>
consciousness——"</p>
<p>"Is all for the other party?"</p>
<p>"The author of the sacrifice."<SPAN name="page_031" id="page_031"></SPAN></p>
<p>"Then how beautifully 'poor Briss,'" my companion said, "must have it!"</p>
<p>I had already assured myself. He had gone to bed, and my fancy followed
him. "Oh, he has it so that, though he goes, in his passion, about with
her, he dares scarcely show his face." And I made a final induction.
"The agents of the sacrifice are uncomfortable, I gather, when they
suspect or fear that you see."</p>
<p>My friend was charmed with my ingenuity. "How you've worked it out!"</p>
<p>"Well, I feel as if I were on the way to something."</p>
<p>He looked surprised. "Something still more?"</p>
<p>"Something still more." I had an impulse to tell him I scarce knew what.
But I kept it under. "I seem to snuff up——"</p>
<p>"<i>Quoi donc?</i>"</p>
<p>"The sense of a discovery to be made."</p>
<p>"And of what?"</p>
<p>"I'll tell you to-morrow. Good-night."<SPAN name="page_032" id="page_032"></SPAN></p>
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