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<h2> XI </h2>
<p>Never in her life had Frida enjoyed anything so much as those first four
happy days at Heymoor. She had come away with Bertram exactly as Bertram
himself desired her to do, without one thought of anything on earth except
to fulfil the higher law of her own nature; and she was happy in her
intercourse with the one man who could understand it, the one man who had
waked it to its fullest pitch, and could make it resound sympathetically
to his touch in every chord and every fibre. They had chosen a lovely spot
on a heather-clad moorland, where she could stroll alone with Bertram
among the gorse and ling, utterly oblivious of Robert Monteith and the
unnatural world she had left for ever behind her. Her soul drank in deep
draughts of the knowledge of good and evil from Bertram's lips; she felt
it was indeed a privilege to be with him and listen to him; she wondered
how she could ever have endured that old bad life with the lower man who
was never her equal, now she had once tasted and known what life can be
when two well-matched souls walk it together, abreast, in holy fellowship.</p>
<p>The children, too, were as happy as the day was long. The heath was heaven
to them. They loved Bertram well, and were too young to be aware of
anything unusual in the fact of his accompanying them. At the little inn
on the hill-top where they stopped to lodge, nobody asked any compromising
questions: and Bertram felt so sure he could soon complete his
arrangements for taking Frida and the children "home," as he still always
phrased it, that Frida had no doubts for their future happiness. As for
Robert Monteith, that bleak, cold man, she hardly even remembered him:
Bertram's first kiss seemed almost to have driven the very memory of her
husband clean out of her consciousness. She only regretted, now she had
left him, the false and mistaken sense of duty which had kept her so long
tied to an inferior soul she could never love, and did wrong to marry.</p>
<p>And all the time, what strange new lessons, what beautiful truths, she
learned from Bertram! As they strolled together, those sweet August
mornings, hand locked in hand, over the breezy upland, what new insight he
gave her into men and things! what fresh impulse he supplied to her keen
moral nature! The misery and wrong of the world she lived in came home to
her now in deeper and blacker hues than ever she had conceived it in: and
with that consciousness came also the burning desire of every wakened soul
to right and redress it. With Bertram by her side, she felt she could not
even harbour an unholy wish or admit a wrong feeling; that vague sense of
his superiority, as of a higher being, which she had felt from the very
first moment she met him at Brackenhurst, had deepened and grown more
definite now by closer intercourse; and she recognised that what she had
fallen in love with from the earliest beginning was the beauty of holiness
shining clear in his countenance. She had chosen at last the better part,
and she felt in her soul that, come what might, it could not be taken away
from her.</p>
<p>In this earthly paradise of pure love, undefiled, she spent three full
days and part of another. On the morning of the fourth, she sent the
country girl they had engaged to take care of the children, out on the
moor with the little ones, while she herself and Bertram went off alone,
past the barrow that overlooks the Devil's Saucepan, and out on the open
ridge that stretches with dark growth of heath and bracken far away into
the misty blue distance of Hampshire. Bertram had just been speaking to
her, as they sat on the dry sand, of the buried chieftain whose bones
still lay hid under that grass-grown barrow, and of the slaughtered wives
whose bodies slept beside him, massacred in cold blood to accompany their
dead lord to the world of shadows. He had been contrasting these hideous
slaveries of taboo-ridden England, past or present, with the rational
freedom of his own dear country, whither he hoped so soon with good luck
to take her, when suddenly Frida raised her eager eyes from the ground,
and saw somebody or something coming across the moor from eastward in
their direction.</p>
<p>All at once, a vague foreboding of evil possessed her. Hardly quite
knowing why, she felt this approaching object augured no good to their
happiness. "Look, Bertram," she cried, seizing his arm in her fright,
"there's somebody coming."</p>
<p>Bertram raised his eyes and looked. Then he shaded them with his hands.
"How strange!" he said simply, in his candid way: "it looks for all the
world just like the man who was once your husband!"</p>
<p>Frida rose in alarm. "Oh, what can we do?" she cried, wringing her hands.
"What ever can we do? It's he! It's Robert!"</p>
<p>"Surely he can't have come on purpose!" Bertram exclaimed, taken aback.
"When he sees us, he'll turn aside. He must know of all people on earth
he's the one least likely at such a time to be welcome. He can't want to
disturb the peace of another man's honeymoon!"</p>
<p>But Frida, better used to the savage ways of the world she had always
lived in, made answer, shrinking and crouching, "He's hunted us down, and
he's come to fight you."</p>
<p>"To fight me!" Bertram exclaimed. "Oh, surely not that! I was told by
those who ought best to know, you English had got far beyond the stage of
private war and murderous vendetta."</p>
<p>"For everything else," Frida answered, cowering down in her terror of her
husband's vengeance, not for herself indeed so much as for Bertram. "For
everything else, we have; but NOT for a woman."</p>
<p>There was no time just then, however, for further explanation of this
strange anomaly. Monteith had singled them out from a great distance with
his keen, clear sight, inherited from generations of Highland ancestors,
and now strode angrily across the moor, with great wrathful steps, in his
rival's direction. Frida nestled close to Bertram, to protect her from the
man to whom her country's laws and the customs of her tribe would have
handed her over blindfold. Bertram soothed her with his hand, and awaited
in silence, with some dim sense of awe, the angry barbarian's arrival.</p>
<p>He came up very quickly, and stood full in front of them, glaring with
fierce eyes at the discovered lovers. For a minute or two his rage would
not allow him to speak, nor even to act; he could but stand and scowl from
under his brows at Bertram. But after a long pause his wrath found words.
"You infernal scoundrel!" he burst forth, "so at last I've caught you! How
dare you sit there and look me straight in the face? You infernal thief,
how dare you? how dare you?"</p>
<p>Bertram rose and confronted him. His own face, too, flushed slightly with
righteous indignation; but he answered for all that in the same calm and
measured tones as ever: "I am NOT a scoundrel, and I will not submit to be
called so even by an angry savage. I ask you in return, how dare you
follow us? You must have known your presence would be very unwelcome. I
should have thought this was just the one moment in your life and the one
place on earth where even YOU would have seen that to stop away was your
imperative duty. Mere self-respect would dictate such conduct. This lady
has given you clear proof indeed that your society and converse are highly
distasteful to her."</p>
<p>Robert Monteith glared across at him with the face of a tiger. "You
infamous creature," he cried, almost speechless with rage, "do you dare to
defend my wife's adultery?"</p>
<p>Bertram gazed at him with a strange look of mingled horror and
astonishment. "You poor wretch!" he answered, as calmly as before, but
with evident contempt; "how can you dare, such a thing as you, to apply
these vile words to your moral superiors? Adultery it was indeed, and
untruth to her own higher and purer nature, for this lady to spend one
night of her life under your roof with you; what she has taken now in
exchange is holy marriage, the only real and sacred marriage, the marriage
of true souls, to which even the wiser of yourselves, the poets of your
nation, would not admit impediment. If you dare to apply such base
language as this to my lady's actions, you must answer for it to me, her
natural protector, for I will not permit it."</p>
<p>At the words, quick as lightning, Monteith pulled from his pocket a loaded
revolver and pointed it full at his rival. With a cry of terror, Frida
flung herself between them, and tried to protect her lover with the shield
of her own body. But Bertram gently unwound her arms and held her off from
him tenderly. "No, no, darling," he said slowly, sitting down with
wonderful calm upon a big grey sarsen-stone that abutted upon the pathway;
"I had forgotten again; I keep always forgetting what kind of savages I
have to deal with. If I chose, I could snatch that murderous weapon from
his hand, and shoot him dead with it in self-defence—for I'm
stronger than he is. But if I did, what use? I could never take you home
with me. And after all, what could we either of us do in the end in this
bad, wild world of your fellow-countrymen? They would take me and hang me;
and all would be up with you. For your sake, Frida, to shield you from the
effects of their cruel taboos, there's but one course open: I must submit
to this madman. He may shoot me if he will.... Stand free, and let him!"</p>
<p>But with a passionate oath, Robert Monteith seized her arm and flung her
madly from him. She fell, reeling, on one side. His eyes were bloodshot
with the savage thirst for vengeance. He raised the deadly weapon. Bertram
Ingledew, still seated on the big round boulder, opened his breast in
silence to receive the bullet. There was a moment's pause. For that
moment, even Monteith himself, in his maniac mood, felt dimly aware of
that mysterious restraining power all the rest who knew him had so often
felt in their dealings with the Alien. But it was only for a moment. His
coarser nature was ill adapted to recognise that ineffable air as of a
superior being that others observed in him. He pulled the trigger and
fired. Frida gave one loud shriek of despairing horror. Bertram's body
fell back on the bare heath behind it.</p>
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