<SPAN name="vol_3_chap_04"></SPAN>
<h3>Volume Three--Chapter Four.</h3>
<h4>The Victim of Sympathy.</h4>
<p>On the same evening, Edwin, Albert Benbow, and Darius were smoking Albert’s
cigarettes in the dining-room. Edwin sat at the end of a disordered supper-table, Albert
was standing, hat in hand, near the sideboard, and Darius leaned against the mantelpiece.
Nobody could have supposed from his appearance that a doctor had responsibly prophesied
this man’s death within two years. Except for a shade of sadness upon his face, he
looked the same as he had looked for a decade. Though regarded by his children as an old
man, he was not old, being in fact still under sixty. His grey hair was sparse; his
spectacles were set upon his nose with the negligence characteristic of age; but the
down-pointing moustache, which, abetted by his irregular teeth, gave him that curious
facial resemblance to a seal, showed great force, and the whole of his stiff and sturdy
frame showed force. His voice, if not his mouth, had largely recovered from the weakness
of the morning. Moreover, the fashion in which he smoked a cigarette had somehow the
effect of rejuvenating him. It was Albert who had induced him to smoke cigarettes
occasionally. He was not an habitual smoker, consuming perhaps half an ounce a week of
pipe-tobacco: and assuredly he would never of his own accord have tried a cigarette. For
Darius cigarettes were aristocratic and finicking; they were an affectation. He smoked a
cigarette with the self-consciousness which usually marks the consumption of champagne in
certain strata of society. His gestures, as he examined from time to time the end of the
cigarette, or audibly blew forth spreading clouds, seemed to signify that in his opinion
he was going the pace, cutting a dash, and seeing life. This <i>naïveté</i>
had its charm.</p>
<p>The three men, left alone by their women, were discussing politics, which then meant
nothing but the subject of Home Rule. Darius agreed almost eagerly with everything that
Albert Benbow said. Albert was a calm and utterly sound Conservative. He was one of those
politicians whose conviction of rightness is so strong that they cannot help condescending
towards an opponent. Albert would say persuasively to Liberal acquaintances: “Now
just <i>think</i> a moment!” apparently sure that the only explanation of their
misguided views was that they never had thought for a moment. Or he would say:
“Surely all patriotic Liberals—” But one day when Edwin had said to him
with a peculiar accent: “Surely all patriotic Conservatives—” he had
been politely offended for the rest of the evening, and Edwin and he had not mentioned
politics to each other for a long time. Albert had had much influence over his
father-in-law. And now Albert said, after Darius had concurred and concurred—</p>
<p>“You’re one of the right sort, after all, old gentleman.”</p>
<p>Throughout the evening he had spoken to Darius in an unusually loud voice, as though it
was necessary to shout to a man who had only two years to live.</p>
<p>“All I say is,” said Darius, “country before party!”</p>
<p>“Why, of course!” Albert smiled, confident and superior.
“Haven’t I been telling you for years you’re one of us?”</p>
<p>Edwin, too, smiled, as superiorly as he could, but unhappily not with sufficient
superiority to wither Albert’s smile. He said nothing, partly from timid discretion,
but partly because he was preoccupied with the thought of the malignant and subtle power
working secretly in his father’s brain. How could the doctor tell? What was the
process of softening? Did his father know, in that sick brain of his, that he was
condemned; or did he hope to recover? Now, as he leaned against the mantelpiece,
protruding his body in an easy posture, he might have been any ordinary man, and not a
victim; he might have been a man of business relaxing after a long day of hard and
successful cerebral activity.</p>
<p>It seemed strange to Edwin that Albert could talk as he did to one whom destiny had set
apart, to one whose being was the theatre of a drama so mysterious and tragic. Yet it was
the proper thing for Albert to do, and Albert did it perfectly, better than anybody,
except possibly Maggie.</p>
<p>“Those women take a deuce of a time putting their bonnets on!” Albert
exclaimed.</p>
<hr>
<h4>Two.</h4>
<p>The women came downstairs at last. At last, to Edwin’s intense relief, every one
was going. Albert went into the hall to meet the women. Edwin rose and followed him. And
Darius came as far as the door of the dining-room. Less than twenty-four hours had passed
since Edwin had begun even to suspect any sort of disaster to his father. But the previous
night seemed an age away. The day had been interminable, and the evening exasperating in
the highest degree. What an evening! Why had Albert and Clara and Auntie Hamps all of them
come up just at supper-time? At first they would not be persuaded! No! They had just
called—sheer accident!—nothing abnormal! And yet the whole of the demeanour of
Auntie Hamps and Clara was abnormal. Maggie herself, catching the infection, had
transformed the meal into a kind of abnormal horrible feast by serving cold beef and
pickles—flesh-meat being unknown to the suppers of the Clayhangers save occasionally
on Sundays.</p>
<p>Edwin could not comprehend why the visitors had come. That is to say, he understood the
reason quite well, but hated to admit it. They had come from a mere gluttony of curiosity.
They knew all that could be known—but still they must come and gaze and indulge
their lamentable hearts, and repeat the same things again and again, ten million times!
Auntie Hamps, indeed, probably knew more than Edwin did, for she had thought fit to summon
Dr Heve that very afternoon for an ailment of her own, and Clara, with an infant or so,
had by a remarkable coincidence called at Mrs Hamps’s house just after the doctor
left. “Odious,” thought Edwin.</p>
<p>These two had openly treated Darius as a martyr, speaking to him in soft and pitiful
voices, urging him to eat, urging him to drink, caressing him, soothing him, humouring
him; pretending to be brave and cheerful and optimistic, but with a pretence so poor, so
wilfully poor, that it became an insult. When they said fulsomely, “You’ll be
perfectly all right soon if only you’ll take care and do as the doctor says,”
Edwin could have risen and killed them both with hearty pleasure. They might just as well
have said, “You’re practically in your grave.” And assuredly they were
not without influence on Maggie’s deportment. The curious thing was that it was
impossible to decide whether Darius loathed, or whether he liked, to be so treated. His
face was an enigma. However, he was less gloomy.</p>
<p>Then also the evening had necessarily been full of secret conferences. What would you?
Each had to relate privately the things that he or she knew or had heard or had imagined.
And there were questions of urgency to be discussed. For example the question of the
specialist. They were all positively agreed, Edwin found, that a specialist was
unnecessary. Darius was condemned beyond hope or argument. There he sat, eating and
talking, in the large, fine house that he had created out of naught, looking not at all
like a corpse; but he was condemned. The doctor had convinced them. Besides, did not
everybody know what softening of the brain was? “Of course, if he thinks he would
prefer to have a specialist, if he has the slightest wish—” This from Auntie
Hamps. There was the question, further, of domestic service. Mrs Nixon’s niece had
committed the folly of marriage, and for many months Maggie and the old servant had been
‘managing;’ but with a crotchety invalid always in the house, more help would
be indispensable. And still further—should Darius be taken away for a period to the
sea, or Buxton, or somewhere? Maggie said that nothing would make him go, and Clara agreed
with her. All these matters, and others, had to be kept away from the central figure; they
were all full of passionate interest, and they had to be debated, in tones hushed but
excited, in the hall, in the kitchen, upstairs, or anywhere except in the dining-room. The
excuses invented by the conspiring women for quitting and entering the dining-room, their
fatuous air of innocent simplicity, disgusted Edwin. And he became curter and curter, as
he noticed the new deference which even Clara practised towards him.</p>
<hr>
<h4>Three.</h4>
<p>The adieux were distressing. Clara, with her pale sharp face and troubled eyes, clasped
Darius round the neck, and almost hung on it. And Edwin thought: “Why doesn’t
she tell him straight out he’s done for?” Then she retired and sought her
husband’s arm with the conscious pride of a wife fruitful up to the limits set by
nature. And then Auntie Hamps shook hands with the victim. These two of course did not
kiss. Auntie Hamps bore herself bravely. “Now <i>do</i> do as the doctor
advises!” she said, patting Darius on the shoulder. “And <i>do</i> be guided
by these dear children!”</p>
<p>Edwin caught Maggie’s eye, and held it grimly.</p>
<p>“And you, my pet,” said Auntie Hamps, turning to Clara, who with Albert was
now at the door. “You must be getting back to your babies! It’s a wonder how
you manage to get away! But you’re a wonderful arranger! ... Only don’t overdo
it. Don’t overdo it!”</p>
<p>Clara gave a fatigued smile, as of one whom circumstances often forced to overdo
it.</p>
<p>They departed, Albert whistling to the night. Edwin observed again, in their final
glances, the queer, new, ingratiating deference for himself. He bolted the door
savagely.</p>
<p>Darius was still standing at the entrance to the dining-room. And as he looked at him
Edwin thought of Big James’s vow never to lift his voice in song again. Strange! It
was the idea of the secret strangeness of life that was uppermost in his mind: not grief,
not expectancy. In the afternoon he had been talking again to Big James, who, it appeared,
had known intimately a case of softening of the brain. He did not identify the
case—it was characteristic of him to name no names—but clearly he was familiar
with the course of the disease.</p>
<p>He had begun revelations which disconcerted Edwin, and had then stopped. And now as
Edwin furtively examined his father, he asked himself: “Will <i>that</i> happen to
him, and <i>that</i>, and those still worse things that Big James did not reveal?”
Incredible! There he was, smoking a cigarette, and the clock striking ten in its daily,
matter-of-fact way.</p>
<p>Darius let fall the cigarette, which Edwin picked up from the mat, and offered to
him.</p>
<p>“Throw it away,” said Darius, with a deep sigh.</p>
<p>“Going to bed?” Edwin asked.</p>
<p>Darius shook his head, and Edwin debated what he should do. A moment later, Maggie came
from the kitchen and asked—</p>
<p>“Going to bed, father?”</p>
<p>Again Darius shook his head. He then went slowly into the drawing-room and lit the gas
there.</p>
<p>“What shall you do? Leave him?” Maggie whispered to Edwin in the
dining-room, as she helped Mrs Nixon to clear the table.</p>
<p>“I don’t know,” said Edwin. “I shall see.”</p>
<p>In ten minutes both Maggie and Mrs Nixon had gone to bed. Edwin hesitated in the
dining-room. Then he extinguished the gas there, and went into the drawing-room. Darius,
not having lowered the blinds, was gazing out of the black window.</p>
<p>“You needn’t wait down here for me,” said he, a little sharply. And
his tone was so sane, controlled, firm, and ordinary that Edwin could do nothing but
submit to it.</p>
<p>“I’m not going to,” he answered quietly.</p>
<p>Impossible to treat a man of such demeanour like a child.</p>
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