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<h2> CHAPTER XVII </h2>
<p>Yes, he was conscious—he was very conscious; so Bernard reflected
during the two or three first days of his visit to his friend. Gordon knew
it must seem strange to so irreverent a critic that a man who had once
aspired to the hand of so intelligent a girl—putting other things
aside—as Angela Vivian should, as the Ghost in “Hamlet” says, have
“declined upon” a young lady who, in force of understanding, was so very
much Miss Vivian’s inferior; and this knowledge kept him ill at his ease
and gave him a certain pitiable awkwardness. Bernard’s sense of the
anomaly grew rapidly less acute; he made various observations which helped
it to seem natural. Blanche was wonderfully pretty; she was very graceful,
innocent, amusing. Since Gordon had determined to marry a little goose, he
had chosen the animal with extreme discernment. It had quite the plumage
of a swan, and it sailed along the stream of life with an extraordinary
lightness of motion. He asked himself indeed at times whether Blanche were
really so silly as she seemed; he doubted whether any woman could be so
silly as Blanche seemed. He had a suspicion at times that, for ends of her
own, she was playing a part—the suspicion arising from the fact
that, as usually happens in such cases, she over-played it. Her empty
chatter, her futility, her childish coquetry and frivolity—such
light wares could hardly be the whole substance of any woman’s being;
there was something beneath them which Blanche was keeping out of sight.
She had a scrap of a mind somewhere, and even a little particle of a
heart. If one looked long enough one might catch a glimpse of these
possessions. But why should she keep them out of sight, and what were the
ends that she proposed to serve by this uncomfortable perversity? Bernard
wondered whether she were fond of her husband, and he heard it intimated
by several good people in New York who had had some observation of the
courtship, that she had married him for his money. He was very sorry to
find that this was taken for granted, and he determined, on the whole, not
to believe it. He was disgusted with the idea of such a want of gratitude;
for, if Gordon Wright had loved Miss Evers for herself, the young lady
might certainly have discovered the intrinsic value of so disinterested a
suitor. Her mother had the credit of having made the match. Gordon was
known to be looking for a wife; Mrs. Evers had put her little feather-head
of a daughter very much forward, and Gordon was as easily captivated as a
child by the sound of a rattle. Blanche had an affection for him now,
however; Bernard saw no reason to doubt that, and certainly she would have
been a very flimsy creature indeed if she had not been touched by his
inexhaustible kindness. She had every conceivable indulgence, and if she
married him for his money, at least she had got what she wanted. She led
the most agreeable life conceivable, and she ought to be in high
good-humor. It was impossible to have a prettier house, a prettier
carriage, more jewels and laces for the adornment of a plump little
person. It was impossible to go to more parties, to give better dinners,
to have fewer privations or annoyances. Bernard was so much struck with
all this that, advancing rapidly in the intimacy of his gracious hostess,
he ventured to call her attention to her blessings. She answered that she
was perfectly aware of them, and there was no pretty speech she was not
prepared to make about Gordon.</p>
<p>“I know what you want to say,” she went on; “you want to say that he
spoils me, and I don’t see why you should hesitate. You generally say
everything you want, and you need n’t be afraid of me. He does n’t spoil
me, simply because I am so bad I can’t be spoiled; but that ‘s of no
consequence. I was spoiled ages ago; every one spoiled me—every one
except Mrs. Vivian. I was always fond of having everything I want, and I
generally managed to get it. I always had lovely clothes; mamma thought
that was a kind of a duty. If it was a duty, I don’t suppose it counts as
a part of the spoiling. But I was very much indulged, and I know I have
everything now. Gordon is a perfect husband; I believe if I were to ask
him for a present of his nose, he would cut it off and give it to me. I
think I will ask him for a small piece of it some day; it will rather
improve him to have an inch or two less. I don’t say he ‘s handsome; but
he ‘s just as good as he can be. Some people say that if you are very fond
of a person you always think them handsome; but I don’t agree with that at
all. I am very fond of Gordon, and yet I am not blinded by affection, as
regards his personal appearance. He ‘s too light for my taste, and too
red. And because you think people handsome, it does n’t follow that you
are fond of them. I used to have a friend who was awfully handsome—the
handsomest man I ever saw—and I was perfectly conscious of his
defects. But I ‘m not conscious of Gordon’s, and I don’t believe he has
got any. He ‘s so intensely kind; it ‘s quite pathetic. One would think he
had done me an injury in marrying me, and that he wanted to make up for
it. If he has done me an injury I have n’t discovered it yet, and I don’t
believe I ever shall. I certainly shall not as long as he lets me order
all the clothes I want. I have ordered five dresses this week, and I mean
to order two more. When I told Gordon, what do you think he did? He simply
kissed me. Well, if that ‘s not expressive, I don’t know what he could
have done. He kisses me about seventeen times a day. I suppose it ‘s very
improper for a woman to tell any one how often her husband kisses her;
but, as you happen to have seen him do it, I don’t suppose you will be
scandalized. I know you are not easily scandalized; I am not afraid of
you. You are scandalized at my getting so many dresses? Well, I told you I
was spoiled—I freely acknowledge it. That ‘s why I was afraid to
tell Gordon—because when I was married I had such a lot of things; I
was supposed to have dresses enough to last for a year. But Gordon had n’t
to pay for them, so there was no harm in my letting him feel that he has a
wife. If he thinks I am extravagant, he can easily stop kissing me. You
don’t think it would be easy to stop? It ‘s very well, then, for those
that have never begun!”</p>
<p>Bernard had a good deal of conversation with Blanche, of which, so far as
she was concerned, the foregoing remarks may serve as a specimen. Gordon
was away from home during much of the day; he had a chemical laboratory in
which he was greatly interested, and which he took Bernard to see; it was
fitted up with the latest contrivances for the pursuit of experimental
science, and was the resort of needy young students, who enjoyed, at
Gordon’s expense, the opportunity for pushing their researches. The place
did great honor to Gordon’s liberality and to his ingenuity; but Blanche,
who had also paid it a visit, could never speak of it without a pretty
little shudder.</p>
<p>“Nothing would induce me to go there again,” she declared, “and I consider
myself very fortunate to have escaped from it with my life. It ‘s filled
with all sorts of horrible things, that fizzle up and go off, or that make
you turn some dreadful color if you look at them. I expect to hear a great
clap some day, and half an hour afterward to see Gordon brought home in
several hundred small pieces, put up in a dozen little bottles. I got a
horrid little stain in the middle of my dress that one of the young men—the
young savants—was so good as to drop there. Did you see the young
savants who work under Gordon’s orders? I thought they were too forlorn;
there is n’t one of them you would look at. If you can believe it, there
was n’t one of them that looked at me; they took no more notice of me than
if I had been the charwoman. They might have shown me some attention, at
least, as the wife of the proprietor. What is it that Gordon ‘s called—is
n’t there some other name? If you say ‘proprietor,’ it sounds as if he
kept an hotel. I certainly don’t want to pass for the wife of an
hotel-keeper. What does he call himself? He must have some name. I hate
telling people he ‘s a chemist; it sounds just as if he kept a shop. That
‘s what they call the druggists in England, and I formed the habit while I
was there. It makes me feel as if he were some dreadful little man, with
big green bottles in the window and ‘night-bell’ painted outside. He does
n’t call himself anything? Well, that ‘s exactly like Gordon! I wonder he
consents to have a name at all. When I was telling some one about the
young men who work under his orders—the young savants—he said
I must not say that—I must not speak of their working ‘under his
orders.’ I don’t know what he would like me to say! Under his
inspiration!”</p>
<p>During the hours of Gordon’s absence, Bernard had frequent colloquies with
his friend’s wife, whose irresponsible prattle amused him, and in whom he
tried to discover some faculty, some quality, which might be a positive
guarantee of Gordon’s future felicity. But often, of course, Gordon was an
auditor as well; I say an auditor, because it seemed to Bernard that he
had grown to be less of a talker than of yore. Doubtless, when a man finds
himself united to a garrulous wife, he naturally learns to hold his
tongue; but sometimes, at the close of one of Blanche’s discursive
monologues, on glancing at her husband just to see how he took it, and
seeing him sit perfectly silent, with a fixed, inexpressive smile, Bernard
said to himself that Gordon found the lesson of listening attended with
some embarrassments. Gordon, as the years went by, was growing a little
inscrutable; but this, too, in certain circumstances, was a usual
tendency. The operations of the mind, with deepening experience, became
more complex, and people were less apt to emit immature reflections at
forty than they had been in their earlier days. Bernard felt a great
kindness in these days for his old friend; he never yet had seemed to him
such a good fellow, nor appealed so strongly to the benevolence of his
disposition. Sometimes, of old, Gordon used to irritate him; but this
danger appeared completely to have passed away. Bernard prolonged his
visit; it gave him pleasure to be able to testify in this manner to his
good will. Gordon was the kindest of hosts, and if in conversation, when
his wife was present, he gave precedence to her superior powers, he had at
other times a good deal of pleasant bachelor-talk with his guest. He
seemed very happy; he had plenty of occupation and plenty of practical
intentions. The season went on, and Bernard enjoyed his life. He enjoyed
the keen and brilliant American winter, and he found it very pleasant to
be treated as a distinguished stranger in his own land—a situation
to which his long and repeated absences had relegated him. The hospitality
of New York was profuse; the charm of its daughters extreme; the radiance
of its skies superb. Bernard was the restless and professionless mortal
that we know, wandering in life from one vague experiment to another,
constantly gratified and never satisfied, to whom no imperious finality
had as yet presented itself; and, nevertheless, for a time he contrived to
limit his horizon to the passing hour, and to make a good many hours pass
in the drawing-room of a demonstrative flirt.</p>
<p>For Mrs. Gordon was a flirt; that had become tolerably obvious. Bernard
had known of old that Blanche Evers was one, and two or three months’
observation of his friend’s wife assured him that she did not judge a
certain ethereal coquetry to be inconsistent with the conjugal character.
Blanche flirted, in fact, more or less with all men, but her opportunity
for playing her harmless batteries upon Bernard were of course
exceptionally large. The poor fellow was perpetually under fire, and it
was inevitable that he should reply with some precision of aim. It seemed
to him all child’s play, and it is certain that when his back was turned
to his pretty hostess he never found himself thinking of her. He had not
the least reason to suppose that she thought of him—excessive
concentration of mind was the last vice of which he accused her. But
before the winter was over, he discovered that Mrs. Gordon Wright was
being talked about, and that his own name was, as the newspapers say,
mentioned in connection with that of his friend’s wife. The discovery
greatly disgusted him; Bernard Longueville’s chronicler must do him the
justice to say that it failed to yield him an even transient thrill of
pleasure. He thought it very improbable that this vulgar rumor had reached
Gordon’s ears; but he nevertheless—very naturally—instantly
made up his mind to leave the house. He lost no time in saying to Gordon
that he had suddenly determined to go to California, and that he was sure
he must be glad to get rid of him. Gordon expressed no surprise and no
regret. He simply laid his hand on his shoulder and said, very quietly,
looking at him in the eyes—</p>
<p>“Very well; the pleasantest things must come to an end.”</p>
<p>It was not till an hour afterwards that Bernard said to himself that his
friend’s manner of receiving the announcement of his departure had been
rather odd. He had neither said a word about his staying longer nor urged
him to come back again, and there had been (it now seemed to Bernard) an
audible undertone of relief in the single sentence with which he assented
to his visitor’s withdrawal. Could it be possible that poor Gordon was
jealous of him, that he had heard this loathsome gossip, or that his own
observation had given him an alarm? He had certainly never betrayed the
smallest sense of injury; but it was to be remembered that even if he were
uneasy, Gordon was quite capable, with his characteristic habit of
weighing everything, his own honor included, in scrupulously adjusted
scales, of denying himself the luxury of active suspicion. He would never
have let a half suspicion make a difference in his conduct, and he would
not have dissimulated; he would simply have resisted belief. His
hospitality had been without a flaw, and if he had really been wishing
Bernard out of his house, he had behaved with admirable self-control.
Bernard, however, followed this train of thought a very short distance. It
was odious to him to believe that he could have appeared to Gordon,
however guiltlessly, to have invaded even in imagination the mystic line
of the marital monopoly; not to say that, moreover, if one came to that,
he really cared about as much for poor little Blanche as for the
weather-cock on the nearest steeple. He simply hurried his preparations
for departure, and he told Blanche that he should have to bid her farewell
on the following day. He had found her in the drawing-room, waiting for
dinner. She was expecting company to dine, and Gordon had not yet come
down.</p>
<p>She was sitting in the vague glow of the fire-light, in a wonderful blue
dress, with two little blue feet crossed on the rug and pointed at the
hearth. She received Bernard’s announcement with small satisfaction, and
expended a great deal of familiar ridicule on his project of a journey to
California. Then, suddenly getting up and looking at him a moment—</p>
<p>“I know why you are going,” she said.</p>
<p>“I am glad to hear my explanations have not been lost.”</p>
<p>“Your explanations are all nonsense. You are going for another reason.”</p>
<p>“Well,” said Bernard, “if you insist upon it, it ‘s because you are too
sharp with me.”</p>
<p>“It ‘s because of me. So much as that is true.” Bernard wondered what she
was going to say—if she were going to be silly enough to allude to
the most impudent of fictions; then, as she stood opening and closing her
blue fan and smiling at him in the fire-light, he felt that she was silly
enough for anything. “It ‘s because of all the talk—it ‘s because of
Gordon. You need n’t be afraid of Gordon.”</p>
<p>“Afraid of him? I don’t know what you mean,” said Bernard, gravely.</p>
<p>Blanche gave a little laugh.</p>
<p>“You have discovered that people are talking about us—about you and
me. I must say I wonder you care. I don’t care, and if it ‘s because of
Gordon, you might as well know that he does n’t care. If he does n’t care,
I don’t see why I should; and if I don’t, I don’t see why you should!”</p>
<p>“You pay too much attention to such insipid drivel in even mentioning it.”</p>
<p>“Well, if I have the credit of saying what I should n’t—to you or to
any one else—I don’t see why I should n’t have the advantage too.
Gordon does n’t care—he does n’t care what I do or say. He does n’t
care a pin for me!”</p>
<p>She spoke in her usual rattling, rambling voice, and brought out this
declaration with a curious absence of resentment.</p>
<p>“You talk about advantage,” said Bernard. “I don’t see what advantage it
is to you to say that.”</p>
<p>“I want to—I must—I will! That ‘s the advantage!” This came
out with a sudden sharpness of tone; she spoke more excitedly. “He does
n’t care a button for me, and he never did! I don’t know what he married
me for. He cares for something else—he thinks of something else. I
don’t know what it is—I suppose it ‘s chemistry!”</p>
<p>These words gave Bernard a certain shock, but he had his intelligence
sufficiently in hand to contradict them with energy.</p>
<p>“You labor under a monstrous delusion,” he exclaimed. “Your husband thinks
you fascinating.”</p>
<p>This epithet, pronounced with a fine distinctness, was ringing in the air
when the door opened and Gordon came in. He looked for a moment from
Bernard to his wife, and then, approaching the latter, he said, softly—</p>
<p>“Do you know that he leaves us to-morrow?”</p>
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