<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0025" id="link2H_4_0025"></SPAN></p>
<h2> XXV </h2>
<p>Having taken a definite step in any direction, it was not in Loder's
nature to wish it retraced. His face was set, but set with determination,
when he closed the outer door of his own rooms and passed quietly down the
stairs and out into the silent court. The thought of Chilcote, his
pitiable condition, his sordid environments, were things that required a
firm will to drive into the background of the imagination; but a whole
inferno of such visions would not have daunted Loder on that morning as,
unobserved by any eyes, he left the little court-yard with its grass, its
trees, its pavement—all so distastefully familiar—and passed
down the Strand towards life and action.</p>
<p>As he walked, his steps increased in speed and vigor. Now, for the first
time, he fully appreciated the great mental strain that he had undergone
in the past ten days—the unnatural tension; the suppressed, but
perpetual, sense of impending recall; the consequently high pressure at
which work, and even existence, had been carried on. And as he hurried
forward the natural reaction to this state of things came upon him in a
flood of security and confidence—a strong realization of the
temporary respite and freedom for which no price would have seemed too
high. The moment for which he had unconsciously lived ever since
Chilcote's first memorable proposition was within reach at last—safeguarded
by his own action.</p>
<p>The walk from Clifford's Inn to Grosvenor Square was long enough to dispel
any excitement that his interview had aroused; and long before the
well-known house came into view he felt sufficiently braced mentally and
physically to seek Eve in the morning-room—where he instinctively
felt she would still be waiting for him.</p>
<p>Thus he encountered and overpassed the obstacle that had so nearly
threatened ruin; and, with the singleness of purpose that always
distinguished him, he was able, once having passed it, to dismiss it
altogether from his mind. From the moment of his return to Chilcote's
house no misgiving as to his own action, no shadow of doubt, rose to
trouble his mind. His feelings on the matter were quite simple. He had
inordinately desired a certain opportunity; one factor had arisen to debar
that opportunity, and he, claiming the right of strength, had set the
barrier aside. In the simplicity of the reasoning lay its power to
convince; and were a tonic needed to brace him for his task, he was
provided with one in the masterful sense of a difficulty set at nought.
For the man who has fought and conquered one obstacle feels strong to
vanquish a score.</p>
<p>It was on this day, at the reassembling of Parliament, that Fraide's great
blow was to be struck. In the ten days since the affair of the caravans
had been reported from Persia public feeling had run high, and it was upon
the pivot of this incident that Loder's attack was to turn; for, as Lakely
was fond of remarking, "In the scales of public opinion, one dead
Englishman has more weight than the whole Eastern Question!" It had been
arranged that, following the customary procedure, Loder was to rise after
questions at the morning sitting and ask leave to move the adjournment of
the House on a definite matter of urgent public importance; upon which—leave
having been granted by the rising of forty members in his support—the
way was to lie open for his definite attack at the evening sitting. And it
was with a mind attuned to this plan of action that he retired to the
study immediately he had breakfasted, and settled to a final revision of
his speech before an early party conference should compel him to leave the
house. But here again circumstances were destined to change his programme.
Scarcely had he sorted his notes and drawn his chair to Chilcote's desk
than Renwick entered the room with the same air of important haste that he
had shown on a previous occasion.</p>
<p>"A letter from Mr. Fraide, sir. But there's no answer," he said, with
unusual brevity.</p>
<p>Loder waited till he had left the room, then he tore the letter open. He
read:</p>
<p>"MY DEAR CHILCOTE,—Lakely is the recipient of special and very vital
news from Meshed—unofficial, but none the less alarming. Acts of
Russian aggression towards British traders are reported to be rapidly
increasing, and it is stated that the authority of the Consulate is
treated with contempt. Pending a possible confirmation of this, I would
suggest that you keep an open mind on the subject of to-night's speech. By
adopting an anticipatory—even an unprepared—attitude you may
find your hand materially strengthened. I shall put my opinions before you
more explicitly when we meet.</p>
<p>"Yours faithfully,<br/>
HERBERT FRAIDE."<br/></p>
<p>The letter, worded with Fraide's usual restraint, made a strong impression
on its recipient. The thought that his speech might not only express
opinions already tacitly held, but voice a situation of intense and
national importance, struck him with full force. For many minutes after he
had grasped the meaning of Fraide's message he sat neglectful of his
notes, his elbows resting on the desk, his face between his hands, stirred
by the suggestion that here might lie a greater opportunity than any he
had anticipated.</p>
<p>Still moved by this new suggestion, he attended the party conclave that
Fraide had convened, and afterwards lunched with and accompanied his
leader to the House. They spoke very little as they drove to Westminster,
for each was engrossed by his own thoughts. Only once did Fraide allude to
the incident that was paramount in both their minds. Then, turning to
Loder with a smile of encouragement, he had laid his fingers for an
instant on his arm.</p>
<p>"Chilcote," he had said, "when the time comes, remember you have all my
confidence."</p>
<p>Looking back upon that day, Loder often wondered at the calmness with
which he bore the uncertainty. To sit apparently unmoved, and wait without
emotion for news that might change the whole tenor of one's action, would
have tried the stoicism of the most experienced; to the novice it was
wellnigh unendurable. And it was under these conditions, and fighting
against these odds, that he sat through the long afternoon in Chilcote's
place, obeying the dictates of his chief. But if the day was fraught with
difficulties for him, it was fraught with dulness and disappointment for
others; for the undercurrent of interest that had stirred at the Easter
adjournment, and risen with added force on this first day of the new
session, was gradually but surely threatened with extinction, as hour
after hour passed, bringing no suggestion of the battle that had on every
side been tacitly expected. Slowly and unmistakably speculation and
dissatisfaction crept into the atmosphere of the House, as moment
succeeded moment, and the Opposition made no sign. Was Fraide shirking the
attack? Or was he playing a waiting game? Again and again the question
arose, filling the air with a passing flicker of interest; but each time
it sprang up only to die down again, as the ordinary business of the day
dragged itself out.</p>
<p>Gradually, as the afternoon wore on, daylight began to fade. Loder,
sitting rigidly in Chilcote's place, watched with suppressed inquiry the
faces of the men who entered through the constantly swinging doors; but
not one face, so eagerly scanned, carried the message for which he waited.
Monotonously and mechanically the time passed. The Government, adopting a
neutral attitude, carefully skirted all dangerous subjects; while the
Opposition, acting under Fraide's suggestion, assisted rather than
hindered the programme of postponement. For the moment the eagerly
anticipated reassembling threatened dismal failure; and it was with a
universal movement of weariness and relief that at last the House rose to
dine.</p>
<p>But there are no possibilities so elastic as those of politics. At
half-past seven the House rose in a spirit of boredom and disappointment;
and at eight o'clock the lobbies, the dining-room, the entire space of the
vast building, was stirred into activity by the arrival of a single
telegraphic message.</p>
<p>The new development for which Fraide had waited came indeed, but it came
with a force he had little anticipated. With a thrill of awe and
consternation men heard and repeated the astounding news that—while
personally exercising his authority on behalf of British traders—Sir
William Brice-Field, Consul-General at Meshed, had been fired at by a
Russian officer and instantly killed.</p>
<p>The interval immediately following the receipt of this news was too
confused for detailed remembrance. Two ideas made themselves slowly felt—a
deep horror that such an event could obtrude itself upon our high
civilization, and a strong personal dismay that so honored, distinguished,
and esteemed a representative as Sir William Brice-Field could have been
allowed to meet death in so terrible a manner.</p>
<p>It was in the consciousness of this feeling—the consciousness that,
in his own person, he might voice, not only the feelings of his party, but
those of the whole country—that Loder rose an hour later to make his
long-delayed attack.</p>
<p>He stood silent for a moment, as he had done on an earlier occasion; but
this time his motive was different. Roused beyond any feeling of
self-consciousness, he waited as by right for the full attention of the
House; then quietly, but with self-possessed firmness, he moved the motion
for adjournment.</p>
<p>Like a match to a train of powder, the words set flame to the excitement
that had smouldered for weeks; and in an atmosphere of stirring activity,
a scene of such tense and vital concentration as the House has rarely
witnessed, he found inspiration for his great achievement.</p>
<p>To give Loder's speech in mere words would be little short of futile. The
gift of oratory is too illusive, too much a matter of eye and voice and
individuality, to allow of cold reproduction. To those who heard him speak
on that night of April 18th the speech will require no recalling; and to
those who did not hear him there would be no substitute in bare
reproduction.</p>
<p>In the moment of action it mattered nothing to him that his previous
preparations were to a great extent rendered useless by this news that had
come with such paralyzing effect. In the sweeping consciousness of his own
ability, he found added joy in the freedom it opened up. He ceased to
consider that by fate he was a Conservative, bound by traditional
conventionalities: in that great moment he knew himself sufficiently a man
to exercise whatever individuality instinct prompted. He forgot the
didactic methods by which he had proposed to show knowledge of his subject—both
as a past and a future factor in European politics. With his own strong
appreciation of present things, he saw and grasped the vast present
interest lying beneath his hand.</p>
<p>For fifty minutes he held the interest of the House, speaking insistently,
fearlessly, commandingly on the immediate need of action. He
unhesitatingly pointed out that the news which had just reached England
was not so much an appalling fact as a sinister warning to those in whose
keeping lay the safety of the country's interests. Lastly, with a fine
touch of eloquence, he paid tribute to the steadfast fidelity of such men
as Sir William Brice-Field, who, whatever political complications arise at
home, pursue their duty unswervingly on the outposts of the empire.</p>
<p>At his last words there was silence—the silence that marks a genuine
effect—then all at once, with vehement, impressive force, the storm
of enthusiasm broke its bounds.</p>
<p>It was one of those stupendous bursts of feeling that no etiquette, no
decorum is powerful enough to quell. As he resumed his seat, very pale,
but exalted as men are exalted only once or twice in a lifetime, it rose
about him—clamorous, spontaneous, undeniable. Near at hand were the
faces of his party, excited and triumphant; across the house were the
faces of Sefborough and his Ministry, uncomfortable and disturbed.</p>
<p>The tumult swelled, then fell away; and in the partial lull that followed
Fraide leaned over the back of his seat. His quiet, dignified expression
was unaltered, but his eyes were intensely bright.</p>
<p>"Chilcote," he whispered, "I don't congratulate you—or myself. I
congratulate the country on possessing a great man!"</p>
<p>The remaining features of the debate followed quickly one upon the other;
the electric atmosphere of the House possessed a strong incentive power.
Immediately Loder's ovation had subsided, the Under-Secretary for Foreign
Affairs rose and in a careful and non-incriminating reply defended the
attitude of the Government.</p>
<p>Next came Fraide, who, in one of his rare and polished speeches, touched
with much feeling upon his personal grief at the news reported from
Persia, and made emphatic indorsement of Loder's words.</p>
<p>Following Fraide came one or two dissentient Liberals, and then Sefborough
himself closed the debate. His speech was masterly and fluent; but though
any disquietude he may have felt was well disguised under a tone of
reassuring ease, the attempt to rehabilitate his position—already
weakened in more than one direction—was a task beyond his strength.</p>
<p>Amid extraordinary excitement the division followed—and with it a
Government defeat.</p>
<p>It was not until half an hour after the votes had, been taken that Loder,
freed at last from persistent congratulations, found opportunity to look
for Eve. In accordance with a promise made that morning, he was to find
her waiting outside the Ladies' Gallery at the close of the debate.</p>
<p>Disengaging himself from the group of men who had surrounded and followed
him down the lobby, he discarded the lift and ran up the narrow staircase.
Reaching the landing, he went forward hurriedly; then with a certain
abrupt movement he paused. In the doorway leading to the gallery Eve was
waiting for him. The place was not brightly lighted, and she was standing
in the shadow; but it needed only a glance to assure his recognition. He
could almost have seen in the dark that night, so vivid were his
perceptions. He took a step towards her, then again he stopped. In a
second glance he realized that her eyes were bright with tears; and it was
with the strangest sensation he had ever experienced that the knowledge
flashed upon him. Here, also, he had struck the same note—the
long-coveted note of supremacy. It had rung out full and clear as he stood
in Chilcote's place dominating the House; it had besieged him clamorously
as he passed along the lobbies amid a sea of friendly hands and voices;
now in the quiet of the deserted gallery it came home to him with deeper
meaning from the eyes of Chilcote's wife.</p>
<p>Without a thought he put out his hands and caught hers.</p>
<p>"I couldn't get away," he said. "I'm afraid I'm very late."</p>
<p>With a smile that scattered her tears Eve looked up. "Are you?" she said,
laughing a little. "I don't know what the time is. I scarcely know whether
it's night or day."</p>
<p>Still holding one of her hands, he drew her down the stairs; but as they
reached the last step she released her fingers.</p>
<p>"In the carriage!" she said, with another little laugh of nervous
happiness.</p>
<p>At the foot of the stairs they were surrounded. Men whose faces Loder
barely knew crowded about him. The intoxication of excitement was still in
the air—the instinct that a new force had made itself felt, a new
epoch been entered upon, stirred prophetically in every mind.</p>
<p>Passing through the enthusiastic concourse of men, they came unexpectedly
upon Fraide and Lady Sarah surrounded by a group of friends. The old
statesman came forward instantly, and, taking Loder's arm, walked with him
to Chilcote's waiting brougham. He said little as they slowly made their
way to the carriage, but the pressure of his fingers was tense and an
unwonted color showed in his face. When Eve and Loder had taken their
seats he stepped to the edge of the curb. They were alone for the moment,
and, leaning close to the carriage, he put his hand through the open
window. In silence he took Eve's fingers and held them in a long,
affectionate pressure; then he released them and took Loder's hand.</p>
<p>"Good-night, Chilcote," he said. "You have proved yourself worthy of her.
Good-night." He turned quickly and rejoined his waiting friends. In
another second the horses had wheeled round, and Eve and Loder were
carried swiftly forward into the darkness.</p>
<p>In the great moments of man's life woman comes before—and after.
Some shadow of this truth was in, Eve's mind as she lay back in her seat
with closed eyes, and parted lips. It seemed that life came to her now for
the first time—came in the glad, proud, satisfying tide of things
accomplished. This was her hour: and the recognition of it brought the
blood to her face in a sudden, happy rush. There had been no need to
precipitate its coming; it had been ordained from the first. Whether she
desired it or no, whether she strove to draw it nearer or strove to ward
it off, its coming had been inevitable. She opened her eyes suddenly and
looked out into the darkness—the darkness throbbing with multitudes
of lives, all awaiting, all desiring fulfilment. She was no longer lonely,
no longer aloof; she was kin with all this pitiful, admirable, sinning,
loving humanity. Again tears of pride and happiness filled her eyes. Then
suddenly the thing she had waited for came to pass.</p>
<p>Loder leaned close to her. She was conscious of his nearer presence, of
his strong, masterful personality. With a thrill that caught her breath,
she felt his arm. about her shoulder and heard the sound of his voice.</p>
<p>"Eve," he said,—"I love you. Do you understand I love you." And
drawing her close to him he bent and kissed her.</p>
<p>With Loder, to do was to do fully. When he gave, he gave generously; when
he swept aside a barrier he left no stone standing. He had been slow to
recognize his capacities—slower still to recognize his feelings. But
now that the knowledge came he received it openly. In this matter of newly
comprehended love he gave no thought to either past or future. That they
loved and were alone was all he knew or questioned. She was as much Eve—the
one woman—as though they were together in the primeval garden; and
in that spirit he claimed her.</p>
<p>He neither spoke nor behaved extravagantly in that great moment of
comprehension. He acted quietly, with the completeness of purpose that he
gave to everything. He had found a new capacity within himself, and he was
strong enough to dread no weakness in displaying it.</p>
<p>Holding her close to him, he repeated his declaration again and again, as
though repetition ratified it. He found no need to question her feeling
for him—he had divined it in a flash of inspiration as she stood
waiting in the doorway of the gallery; but his own surrender was a
different matter.</p>
<p>As the carriage passed round the corner of Whitehall and dipped into the
traffic of Piccadilly he bent down again until her soft hair brushed his
face; and the warm personal contact, the slight, fresh smell of violets so
suggestive of her presence, stirred' him afresh.</p>
<p>"Eve," he said, vehemently, "do you understand? Do you know that I have
loved you always—from the very first?" As he said it he bent still
nearer, kissing her lips, her forehead, her hair.</p>
<p>At the same moment the horses slackened speed and then stopped, arrested
by one of the temporary blocks that so often occur in the traffic of
Piccadilly Circus.</p>
<p>Loder, preoccupied with his own feelings, scarcely noticed the halt, but
Eve drew away from him laughing.</p>
<p>"You mustn't!" she said, softly. "Look!"</p>
<p>The carriage had stopped beside one of the small islands that intersect
the place; a group of pedestrians were crowded upon it, under the light of
the electric lamp—wayfarers who, like themselves, were awaiting a
passage. Loder took a cursory glance at them, then turned back to Eve.</p>
<p>"What are they, after all, but men and women?" he said. "They'd understand—every
one of them." He laughed in his turn; nevertheless he withdrew his arm.
Her feminine thought for conventionalities appealed to him. It was an
acknowledgment of dependency.</p>
<p>For a while they sat silent, the light of the street lamp flickering
through the glass of the window, the hum of voices and traffic coming to
them in a continuous rise and fall of sound. At first the position was
interesting; but, as the seconds followed each other, it gradually became
irksome. Loder, watching the varying expressions of Eve's face, grew
impatient of the delay, grew suddenly eager to be alone again in the
fragrant darkness.</p>
<p>Impelled by the desire, he leaned forward and opened the window.</p>
<p>"Let's find the meaning of this," he said. "Is there nobody to regulate
the traffic?" As he spoke he half rose and leaned out of the window. There
was a touch of imperious annoyance in his manner. Fresh from the
realization of power, there was something irksome in this commonplace
check to his desires.</p>
<p>"Isn't it possible to get out of this?" Eve heard him call to the
coachman. Then she heard no more.</p>
<p>He had leaned out of the carriage with the intention of looking onward
towards the cause of the delay; instead, by that magnetic attraction that
undoubtedly exists, he looked directly in front of him at the group of
people waiting on the little island—at one man who leaned against
the lamp-post in an attitude of apathy—a man with a pallid, unshaven
face and lustreless eyes, who wore a cap drawn low over his forehead.</p>
<p>He looked at this man, and the man saw and returned his glance. For a
space that seemed interminable they held each other's eyes; then very
slowly Loder drew back into the carriage.</p>
<p>As he dropped into his seat, Eve glanced at him anxiously.</p>
<p>"John," she said, "has anything happened? You look ill."</p>
<p>He turned to her and tried to smile.</p>
<p>"It's nothing," he said. "Nothing to worry about." He spoke quickly, but
his voice had suddenly become flat. All the command, all the domination
had dropped away from it.</p>
<p>Eve bent close to him, her face lighting up with anxious tenderness. "It
was the excitement," she said, "the strain of tonight."</p>
<p>He looked at her; but he made no attempt to press the fingers that clasped
his own.</p>
<p>"Yes," he said, slowly. "Yes. It was the excitement of to-night—and
the reaction."</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0026" id="link2H_4_0026"></SPAN></p>
<h2> XXVI </h2>
<p>The next morning at eight o'clock, and again without breakfast, Loder
covered the distance between Grosvenor Square and Clifford's Inn. He left
Chilcote's house hastily—with a haste that only an urgent motive
could have driven him to adopt. His steps were quick and uneven as he
traversed the intervening streets; his shoulders lacked their decisive
pose, and his pale face was marked with shadows beneath the eyes—shadows
that bore witness to the sleepless night spent in pacing Chilcote's vast
and lonely room. By the curious effect of circumstances the likeness
between the two men had never been more significantly marked than on that
morning of April 19th, when Loder walked along the pavements crowded with
early workers and brisk with insistent news-venders already alive to the
value of last night's political crisis.</p>
<p>The irony of this last element in the day's concerns came to him fully
when one newsboy, more energetic than his fellows, thrust a paper in front
of him.</p>
<p>"Sensation in the 'Ouse, sir! Speech by Mr. Chilcote! Government defeat!"</p>
<p>For a moment Loder stopped and his face reddened. The tide of emotions
still ran strong. His hand went instinctively to his pocket; then his lips
set. He shook his head and walked on.</p>
<p>With the same hard expression about his mouth, he turned into Clifford's
Inn, passed through his own doorway, and mounted the stairs.</p>
<p>This time there was no milk-can on the threshold of his rooms and the door
yielded to his pressure without the need of a key. With a strange
sensation of reluctance he walked into the narrow passage and paused,
uncertain which room to enter first. As he stood hesitating a voice from
the sitting-room settled the question.</p>
<p>"Who's there?" it called, irritably. "What do you want?"</p>
<p>Without further ceremony the intruder pushed the door open and entered the
room. As he did so he drew a quick breath—whether of disappointment
or relief it was impossible to say. Whether he had hoped for or dreaded
it, Chilcote was conscious.</p>
<p>As Loder entered he was sitting by the cheerless grate, the ashes of
yesterday's fire showing charred and dreary where the sun touched them.
His back was to the light, and about his shoulders was an old plaid rug.
Behind him on the table stood a cup, a teapot, and the can of milk;
farther off a kettle was set to boil upon a tiny spirit-stove.</p>
<p>In all strong situations we are more or less commonplace. Loder's first
remark as he glanced round the disordered room seemed strangely
inefficient.</p>
<p>"Where's Robins?" he asked, in a brusque voice. His mind teemed with big
considerations, yet this was his first involuntary question.</p>
<p>Chilcote had started at the entrance of his visitor; now he sat staring at
him, his hands holding the arms of his chair.</p>
<p>"Where's Robins?" Loder asked again.</p>
<p>"I don't know. She—I—We didn't hit it off. She's gone—went
yesterday." He shivered and drew the rug about him.</p>
<p>"Chilcote—" Loder began, sternly; then he paused. There was
something in the other's look and attitude that arrested him. A change of
expression passed over his own face; he turned about with an abrupt
gesture, pulled off his coat and threw it on a chair; then crossing
deliberately to the fireplace, he began to rake the ashes from the grate.</p>
<p>Within a few minutes he had a fire crackling where the bed of dead cinders
had been, and, having finished the task, he rose slowly from his knees,
wiped his hands, and crossed to the table. On the small spirit-stove the
kettle had boiled and the cover was lifting and falling with a tinkling
sound. Blowing out the flame, Loder picked up the teapot, and with hands
that were evidently accustomed to the task set about making the tea.</p>
<p>During the whole operation he never spoke, though all the while he was
fully conscious of Chilcote's puzzled gaze. The tea ready, he poured it
into the cup and carried it across the room.</p>
<p>"Drink this!" he said, laconically. "The fire will be up presently."</p>
<p>Chilcote extended a cold and shaky hand. "You see—" he began.</p>
<p>But Loder checked him almost savagely. "I do—as well as though I had
followed you from Piccadilly last night! You've been hanging about, God
knows where, till the small hours of the morning; then you've come back—slunk
back, starving for your damned poison and shivering with cold. You've
settled the first part of the business, but the cold has still to be
reckoned with. Drink the tea. I've something to say to you." He mastered
his vehemence, and, walking to the window, stood looking down into the
court. His eyes were blank, his face hard; his ears heard nothing but the
faint sound of Chilcote's swallowing, the click of the cup against his
teeth.</p>
<p>For a time that seemed interminable he stood motionless; then, when he
judged the tea finished, he turned slowly. Chilcote had drawn closer to
the fire. He was obviously braced by the warmth; and the apathy that hung
about him was to some extent dispelled. Still moving slowly, Loder went
towards him, and, relieving him of the empty cup, stood looking down at
him.</p>
<p>"Chilcote," he said, very quietly, "I've come to fell you that the thing
must end."</p>
<p>After he spoke there was a prolonged pause; then, as if shaken with sudden
consciousness, Chilcote rose. The rug dropped from one shoulder and hung
down ludicrously; his hand caught the back of the chair for support; his
unshaven face looked absurd and repulsive in its sudden expression of
scared inquiry. Loder involuntarily turned away.</p>
<p>"I mean it," he said, slowly. "It's over; we've come to the end."</p>
<p>"But why?" Chilcote articulated, blankly. "Why? Why?" In his confusion he
could think of no better word.</p>
<p>"Because I throw it up. My side of the bargain's off!"</p>
<p>Again Chilcote's lips parted stammeringly. The apathy caused by physical
exhaustion and his recently administered drug was passing from him; the
hopelessly shattered condition of mind and body was showing through it
like a skeleton through a thin covering of flesh.</p>
<p>"But why?" he said again. "Why?"</p>
<p>Still Loder avoided the frightened surprise of his, eyes. "Because I
withdraw," he answered, doggedly.</p>
<p>Then suddenly Chilcote's tongue was loosened. "Loder," he cried,
excitedly, "you can't do it! God! man, you can't do it!" To reassure
himself he laughed—a painfully thin echo of his old, sarcastic
laugh. "If it's a matter of greater opportunity—" he began, "of more
money—"</p>
<p>But Loder turned upon him.</p>
<p>"Be quiet!" he said, so menacingly that the other stopped. Then by an
effort he conquered himself, "It's not a matter of money, Chilcote," he
said, quietly; "it's a matter of necessity." He brought the word out with
difficulty.</p>
<p>Chilcote glanced up. "Necessity?" he repeated. "How? Why?"</p>
<p>The reiteration roused Loder. "Because there was a great scene in the
House last night," he began, hurriedly; "because when you go back you'll
find that Sefborough has smashed up over the assassination of Sir William
Brice-Field at Meshed, and that you have made your mark in a big speech;
and because—" Abruptly he stopped. The thing he had come to say—the
thing he had meant to say—would not be said. Either his tongue or
his resolution failed him, and for the instant he stood as silent and
almost as ill at ease as his companion. Then all at once inspiration came
to him, in the suggestion of a wellnigh forgotten argument by which he
might influence Chilcote and save his own self-respect. "It's all over,
Chilcote," he said, more quietly; "it has run itself out." And in a dozen
sentences he sketched the story of Lillian Astrupp—her past
relations with himself, her present suspicions. It was not what he had
meant to say; it was not what he had come to say; but it served the
purpose—it saved him humiliation.</p>
<p>Chilcote listened to the last word; then, as the other finished, he
dropped nervously back into his chair. "Good heavens! man," he said, "why
didn't you tell me—why didn't you warn me, instead of filling my
mind with your political position? Your political position!" He laughed
unsteadily. The long spells of indulgence that had weakened his already
maimed faculties showed in the laugh, in the sudden breaking of his voice.
"You must do something, Loder!" he added, nervously, checking his
amusement; "you must do something!"</p>
<p>Loder looked down at him. "No," he said, decisively. "It's your turn now.
It's you who've got to do something."</p>
<p>Chilcote's face turned a shade grayer. "I can't," he said, below his
breath.</p>
<p>"Can't? Oh yes, you can. We can all do—anything. It's not too late;
there's just sufficient time. Chilcote," he added, suddenly, "don't you
see that the thing has been madness all along—has been like playing
with the most infernal explosives? You may thank whatever you have faith
in that nobody has been smashed up! You are going back. Do you understand
me? You are going back—now, to-day, before it's too late." There was
a great change in Loder; his strong, imperturbable face was stirred; he
was moved in both voice and manner. Time after time he repeated his
injunction—reasoning, expostulating, insisting. It almost seemed
that he fought some strenuous invisible force rather than the shattered
man before him.</p>
<p>Chilcote moved nervously in his seat. It was the first real clash of
personalities. He felt it—recognized it by instinct. The sense of
domination had fallen on him; he knew himself impotent in the other's
hands. Whatever he might attempt in moments of solitude, he possessed no
voice in presence of this invincible second self. For a while he struggled—he
did not fight, he struggled to resist—then, lifting his eyes, he met
Loder's. "And what will you do?" he said, weakly.</p>
<p>Loder returned his questioning gaze; but almost immediately he turned
aside. "I?" he said. "Oh, I shall leave London."</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0027" id="link2H_4_0027"></SPAN></p>
<h2> XXVII </h2>
<p>But Loder did not leave London. And the hour of two on the day following
his dismissal of Chilcote found him again in his sitting-room.</p>
<p>He sat at the centre-table surrounded by a cloud of smoke; a pipe was
between his lips and the morning's newspapers lay in a heap beside his
elbow. To the student of humanity his attitude was intensely interesting.
It was the attitude of a man trammelled by the knowledge of his strength.
Before him, as he sat smoking, stretched a future of absolute nothingness;
and towards this blank future one portion of his consciousness—a
struggling and as yet scarcely sentient portion—pushed him
inevitably; while another—a vigorous, persistent, human portion—cried
to him to pause. So actual, so clamorous was this silent mental combat
that had raged unceasingly since the moment of his renunciation that at
last in physical response to it he pushed back his chair.</p>
<p>"It's too late!" he said, aloud. "I'm a fool. It's too late!"</p>
<p>Then abruptly, astonishingly, as though in direct response to his spoken
thought, the door opened and Chilcote walked into the room.</p>
<p>Slowly Loder rose and stared at him. The feeling he acknowledged to
himself was anger; but below the anger a very different sensation ran
riotously strong.</p>
<p>And it was in time to this second feeling, this sudden, lawless joy, that
his pulses beat as he turned a cold face on the intruder.</p>
<p>"Well?" he said, sternly.</p>
<p>But Chilcote was impervious to sternness. He was mentally shaken and
distressed, though outwardly irreproachable, even to the violets in the
lapel of his coat—the violets that for a week past had been brought
each morning to the door of Loder's rooms by Eve's maid. For one second,
as Loder's eyes' rested on the flowers, a sting of ungovernable jealousy
shot through him; then as suddenly it died away, superseded by another
feeling—a feeling of new, spontaneous joy. Worn by Chilcote or by
himself, the flowers were a symbol!</p>
<p>"Well?" he said again, in a gentler voice.</p>
<p>Chilcote had walked to the table and laid down his hat. His face was white
and the muscles of his lips twitched nervously as he drew off his gloves.</p>
<p>"Thank Heaven, you're here!" he said, shortly. "Give me something to
drink."</p>
<p>In silence Loder brought out the whiskey and set it on the table; then
instinctively he turned aside. As plainly as though he saw the action, he
mentally figured Chilcote's furtive glance, the furtive movement of his
fingers to his waistcoat-pocket, the hasty dropping of the tabloids into
the glass. For an instant the sense of his tacit connivance came to him
sharply; the next, he flung it from him. The human, inner voice was
whispering its old watchword. The strong man has no time to waste over his
weaker brother!</p>
<p>When he heard Chilcote lay down his tumbler he looked back again. "Well,
what is it?" he said. "What have you come for?" He strove resolutely to
keep his voice severe, but, try as he might, he could not quite subdue the
eager force that lay behind his words. Once again, as on the night of
their second interchange, life had become a phoenix, rising to fresh
existence even while he sifted its ashes. "Well?" he said, once again.</p>
<p>Chilcote had set down his glass. He was nervously passing his handkerchief
across his lips. There was something in the gesture that attracted Loder.
Looking at him more attentively, he saw what his own feelings and the
other's conventional dress had blinded him to—the almost piteous
panic and excitement in his visitor's eyes.</p>
<p>"Something's gone wrong!" he said, with abrupt intuition.</p>
<p>Chilcote started. "Yes—no—that is, yes," he stammered.</p>
<p>Loder moved round the table. "Something's gone wrong," he repeated. "And
you've come to tell me."</p>
<p>The tone unnerved Chilcote; he suddenly dropped into a chair. "It—it
wasn't my fault," he began. "I—I have had a horrible time!"</p>
<p>Loder's lips tightened. "Yes," he said, "yes—I understand."</p>
<p>The other glanced up with a gleam of his old suspicion "'Twas all my
nerves, Loder—"</p>
<p>"Of course. Yes, of course." Loder's interruption was curt.</p>
<p>Chilcote eyed him doubtfully. Then recollection took the place of doubt,
and a change passed over his expression. "It wasn't my fault," he began,
hastily. "On my soul, it wasn't! It was Crapham's beastly fault for
showing her into the morning-room—"</p>
<p>Loder kept silent. His curiosity had flared into sudden life at the
other's words, but he feared to break the shattered train of thought even
by a word.</p>
<p>In the silence Chilcote moved uneasily. "You see," he went on, at last,
"when I was here with you I—I felt strong. I—I—" He
stopped.</p>
<p>"Yes, yes. When you were here with me you felt strong."</p>
<p>"Yes, that's it. While I was here, I felt I could do the thing. But when I
went home—when I went up to my rooms—" Again he paused,
passing his handkerchief across his forehead.</p>
<p>"When you went up to your rooms?" Loder strove hard to keep his control.</p>
<p>"To my room—? Oh, I—I forget about that. I forget about the
night" He hesitated confusedly. "All I remember is the coming down to
breakfast next morning—this morning—at twelve o'clock—"</p>
<p>Loder turned to the table and poured himself out some whiskey. "Yes," he
acquiesced, in a very quiet voice.</p>
<p>At the word Chilcote rose from his seat. His disquietude was very evident.
"Oh, there was breakfast on the table when I came down-stairs—breakfast
with flowers and a horrible, dazzling glare of sun. It was then, Loder, as
I stood and looked into the room, that the impossibility of it all came to
me—that I knew I couldn't stand it—couldn't go on."</p>
<p>Loder swallowed his whiskey slowly. His sense of overpowering curiosity
held him very still; but he made no effort to prompt his companion.</p>
<p>Again Chilcote shifted his position agitatedly. "It, had to be done," he
said, disjointedly. "I had to do it—then and there. The things were
on the bureau—the pens and ink and telegraph forms. They tempted
me."</p>
<p>Loder laid down his glass suddenly. An exclamation rose to his lips, but
he checked it.</p>
<p>At the slight sound of the tumbler touching the table Chilcote turned; but
there was no expression on the other's face to affright him.</p>
<p>"They tempted me," he repeated, hastily. "They seemed like magnets—they
seemed to draw me towards them. I sat at the bureau staring at them for a
long time; then a terrible compulsion seized me—something you could
never understand—and I caught up the nearest pen and wrote just what
was in my mind. It wasn't a telegram, properly speaking—it was more
a letter. I wanted you back and I had to make myself plain. The writing of
the message seemed to steady me; the mere forming of the words quieted my
mind. I was almost cool when I got up from the bureau and pressed the bell—"</p>
<p>"The bell?"</p>
<p>"Yes. I rang for a servant. I had to send the wire myself, so I had to get
a cab." His voice rose to irritability. "I pressed the bell several times;
but the thing had gone wrong—'twouldn't work. At last I gave it up
and went into the corridor to call some one."</p>
<p>"Well?" In the intense suspense of the moment the word escaped Loder.</p>
<p>"Oh, I went out of the room; but there at the door, before I could call
anybody, I knocked up against that idiot Greening. He was looking for me—for
you, rather—about some beastly Wark affair. I tried to explain that
I wasn't in a state for business; I tried to shake him off, but he was
worse than Blessington. At last, to be rid of the fellow, I went with him
to the study—"</p>
<p>"But the telegram?" Loder began; then again he checked himself. "Yes—yes—I
understand," he added, quietly.</p>
<p>"I'm getting to the telegram! I wish you wouldn't jar me with sudden
questions. I wasn't in the study more than a minute—more than five
or six minutes—" His voice became confused; the strain of the
connected recital was telling upon him. With nervous haste he made a rush
for the end of his story. "I wasn't more than seven or eight minutes in
the study; then, as I came down-stairs, Crapham met me in the hall. He
told me that Lillian Astrupp had called and wished to see me. And that he
had shown her into the morning-room—"</p>
<p>"The morning-room?" Loder suddenly stepped back from the table. "The
morning-room? With your telegram lying on the bureau?"</p>
<p>His sudden speech and movement startled Chilcote. The blood rushed to his
face, then died out, leaving it ashen. "Don't do that, Loder!" he cried.
"I—I can't bear it!"</p>
<p>With an immense effort Loder controlled himself. "Sorry!" he said. "Go
on!"</p>
<p>"I'm going on! I tell you I'm going on. I got a horrid shock when Chapham
told me. Your story came clattering through my mind. I knew Lillian had
come to see you—I knew there was going to be a scene—"</p>
<p>"But the telegram? The telegram?"</p>
<p>Chilcote paid no heed to the interruption. He was following his own train
of ideas. "I knew she had come to see you—I knew there was going to
be a scene. When I got to the morning-room my hand was shaking so that I
could scarcely turn the handle; then, as the door opened, I could have
cried out with relief. Eve was there as well!"</p>
<p>"Eve?"</p>
<p>"Yes. I don't think I was ever so glad to see her in my life." He laughed
almost hysterically. "I was quite civil to her, and she was—quite
sweet to me—" Again he laughed.</p>
<p>Loder's lips tightened.</p>
<p>"You see, it saved the situation. Even if Lillian wanted to be nasty, she
couldn't, while Eve was there. We talked for about ten minutes. We were
quite an amiable trio. Then Lillian told me why she'd called. She wanted
me to make a fourth in a theatre party at the 'Arcadian' to-night, and I—I
was so pleased and so relieved that I said yes!" He paused and laughed
again unsteadily.</p>
<p>In his tense anxiety, Loder ground his heel into the floor. "Go on!" he
said, fiercely. "Go on!"</p>
<p>"Don't!" Chilcote exclaimed. "I'm going on—I'm going on." He passed
his handkerchief across his lips. "We talked for ten minutes or so, and
then Lillian left. I went with her to the hall door, but Chapham was there
too—so I was still safe. She laughed and chatted and seemed in high
spirits as we crossed the hall, and she was still smiling as she waved to
me from her motor. But then, Loder—then, as I stood in the hall, it
all came to me suddenly. I remembered that Lillian must have been alone in
the morning-room before Eve found her! I remembered the telegram! I ran
back to the room, meaning to question Eve as to how long Lillian had been
alone, but she had left the room. I ran to the bureau—but the
telegram wasn't there!"</p>
<p>"Gone?"</p>
<p>"Yes, gone. That's why I've come straight here."</p>
<p>For a moment they confronted each other. Then, moved by a sudden impulse,
Loder pushed Chilcote aside and crossed the room. An instant later the
opening and shutting of doors, the hasty pulling out of drawers and moving
of boxes, came from the bedroom.</p>
<p>Chilcote, shaken and nervous, stood for a minute where his companion had
left him; at last, impelled by curiosity, he too crossed the narrow
passage and entered the second room.</p>
<p>The full light streamed in through the open window; the keen spring air
blew freshly across the house-tops; and on the window-sill a band of
grimy, joyous sparrows twittered and preened themselves. In the middle of
the room stood Loder. His coat was off, and round him on chairs and floor
lay an array of waistcoats, gloves, and ties.</p>
<p>For a space Chilcote stood in the doorway staring at him; then his lips
parted and he took a step forward. "Loder—" he said, anxiously.
"Loder, what are you going to do?"</p>
<p>Loder turned. His shoulders were stiff, his face alight with energy. "I'm
going back," he said, "to unravel the tangle you have made."</p>
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