<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0010" id="link2H_4_0010"></SPAN></p>
<h2> X </h2>
<p>In the days that followed Fraide's marked adoption of him Loder behaved
with a discretion that spoke well for his qualities. Many a man placed in
the same responsible, and yet strangely irresponsible, position might have
been excused if, for the time at least, he gave himself a loose rein. But
Loder kept free of the temptation.</p>
<p>Like all other experiments, his showed unlooked-for features when put to a
working test. Its expected difficulties smoothed themselves away, while
others, scarcely anticipated, came into prominence. Most notable of all,
the physical likeness between himself and Chilcote, the bedrock of the
whole scheme, which had been counted upon to offer most danger, worked
without a hitch. He stood literally amazed before the sweeping credulity
that met him on every hand. Men who had known Chilcote from his youth,
servants who had been in his employment for years, joined issue in the
unquestioning acceptance. At times the ease of the deception bewildered
him; there were moments when he realized that, should circumstances force
him to a declaration of the truth, he would not be believed. Human nature
prefers its own eyesight to the testimony of any man.</p>
<p>But in face of this astonishing success he steered a steady course. In the
first exhilaration of Fraide's favor, in the first egotistical wish to
break down Eve's scepticism, he might possibly have plunged into the
vortex of action, let it be in what direction it might; but fortunately
for himself, for Chilcote, and for their scheme, he was liable to
strenuous second thoughts—those wise and necessary curbs that go
further to the steadying of the universe than the universe guesses.
Sitting in the quiet of the House, on the same day that he had spoken with
Eve on the Terrace, he had weighed possibilities slowly and cautiously.
Impressed to the full by the atmosphere of the place that in his eyes
could never lack character, however dull its momentary business, however
prosy the voice that filled it, he had sifted impulse from expedience, as
only a man who has lived within himself can sift and distinguish. And at
the close of that first day his programme bad been formed. There must be
no rush, no headlong plunge, he had decided; things must work round. It
was his first expedition into the new country, and it lay with fate to say
whether it would be his last.</p>
<p>He had been leaning back in his seat, his eyes on the ministers opposite,
his arms folded in imitation of Chilcote's most natural attitude, when
this final speculation had come to him; and as it came his lips had
tightened for a moment and his face become hard and cold. It is an
unpleasant thing when a man first unconsciously reckons on the weakness of
another, and the look that expresses the idea is not good to see. He had
stirred uneasily; then his lips had closed again. He was tenacious by
nature, and by nature intolerant of weakness. At the first suggestion of
reckoning upon Chilcote's lapses, his mind had drawn back in disgust; but
as the thought came again the disgust had lessened.</p>
<p>In a week—two weeks, perhaps—Chilcote would reclaim his place.
Then would begin the routine of the affair. Chilcote, fresh from
indulgence and freedom, would find his obligations a thousand times more
irksome than before; he would struggle for a time; then—</p>
<p>A shadowy smile had touched Loder's lips as the idea formed itself.</p>
<p>Then would come the inevitable recall; then in earnest he might venture to
put his hand to the plough. He never indulged in day-dreams, but something
in the nature of a vision had flashed over his mind in that instant. He
had seen himself standing in that same building, seen the rows of faces
first bored, then hesitatingly transformed under his personal domination,
under the one great power he knew himself to possess—the power of
eloquence. The strength of the suggestion had been almost painful. Men who
have attained self-repression are occasionally open to a perilous onrush
of feeling. Believing that they know themselves, they walk boldly forward
towards the high-road and the pitfall alike.</p>
<p>These had been Loder's disconnected ideas and speculations on the first
day of his new life. At four o'clock on the ninth day he was pacing with
quiet confidence up and down Chilcote's study, his mind pleasantly busy
and his cigar comfortably alight, when he paused in, his walk and frowned,
interrupted by the entrance of a servant.</p>
<p>The man came softly into the room, drew a small table towards the fire,
and proceeded to lay an extremely fine and unserviceable-looking cloth.</p>
<p>Loder watched him in silence. He had grown to find silence a very useful
commodity. To wait and let things develop was the attitude he oftenest
assumed. But on this occasion he was perplexed. He had not rung for tea,
and in any case a cup on a salver satisfied his wants. He looked
critically at the fragile cloth.</p>
<p>Presently the servant departed, and solemnly reentered carrying a silver
tray, with cups, a teapot, and cakes. Having adjusted them to his
satisfaction, he turned to Loder.</p>
<p>"Mrs. Chilcote will be with you in five minutes, sir," he said.</p>
<p>He waited for some response, but Loder gave none. Again he had found the
advantages of silence, but this time it was silence of a compulsory kind.
He had nothing to say.</p>
<p>The man, finding him irresponsive, retired; and, left to himself, Loder
stared at the array of feminine trifles; then, turning abruptly, he moved
to the centre of the room.</p>
<p>Since the day they had talked on the Terrace, he had only seen Eve thrice,
and always in the presence e others. Since the night of his first coming,
she has not invaded his domain, and he wondered what this new departure
might mean.</p>
<p>His thought of her had been less vivid in the last few days; for, though
still using steady discretion, he had been drawn gradually nearer the
fascinating whirlpool of new interests and new work. Shut his eyes as he
might, there was no denying that this moment, so personally vital to him,
was politically vital to the whole country; and that by a curious
coincidence Chilcote's position well-nigh forced him to take an active
interest in the situation. Again and again the suggestion had arisen that—should
the smouldering fire in Persia break into a flame, Chilcote's commercial
interests would facilitate, would practically compel, his standing in in
the campaign against the government.</p>
<p>The little incident of the tea-table, recalling the social side of his
obligations, had aroused the realization of greater things. As he stood
meditatively in the middle of the room he saw suddenly how absorbed he had
become in these greater things. How, in the swing of congenial interests,
he had been borne insensibly forward—his capacities expanding, his
intelligence asserting itself. He had so undeniably found his sphere that
the idea of usurpation had receded gently as by natural laws, until his
own personality had begun to color the day's work.</p>
<p>As this knowledge came, he wondered quickly if it held a solution of the
present little comedy; if Eve had seen what others, he knew, had observed—that
Chilcote was showing a grasp of things that he had not exhibited for
years. Then, as a sound of skirts came softly down the corridor, he
squared his shoulders with his habitual abrupt gesture and threw his cigar
into the fire.</p>
<p>Eve entered the room much as she had done on her former visit, but with
one difference. In passing Loder she quietly held out her hand.</p>
<p>He took it as quietly. "Why am I so honored?" he said.</p>
<p>She laughed a little and looked across at the fire. "How like a man! You
always want to begin with reasons. Let's have tea first and explanations
after." She moved forward towards the table, and he followed. As he did
so, it struck him that her dress seemed in peculiar harmony with the day
and the room, though beyond that he could not follow its details. As she
paused beside the table he drew forward a chair with a faint touch of
awkwardness.</p>
<p>She thanked him and sat down.</p>
<p>He watched her in silence as she poured out the tea, and the thought
crossed his mind that it was incredibly long since he had seen a woman
preside over a meal. The deftness of her fingers filled him with an
unfamiliar, half-inquisitive wonder. So interesting was the sensation
that, when she held his cup towards him, he didn't immediately see it.</p>
<p>"Don't you want any?" She smiled a little.</p>
<p>He started, embarrassed by his own tardiness. "I'm afraid I'm dull," he
said. "I've been so—"</p>
<p>"So keen a worker in the last week?"</p>
<p>For a moment he felt relieved. Then, as a fresh silence fell, his sense of
awkwardness returned. He sipped his tea and ate a biscuit. He found
himself wishing, for almost the first time, for some of the small society
talk that came so pleasantly to other men. He felt that the position was
ridiculous. He glanced at Eve's averted head, and laid his empty cup upon
the table.</p>
<p>Almost at once she turned, and their eyes met.</p>
<p>"John," she said, "do you guess at all why I wanted to have tea with you?"</p>
<p>He looked down at her. "No," he said, honestly and without embellishment.</p>
<p>The curtness of the answer might have displeased another woman. Eve seemed
to take no offence.</p>
<p>"I had a talk with the Fraides to-day," she said "A long talk. Mr. Fraide
said great things of you—things I wouldn't have believed from
anybody but Mr. Fraide." She altered her position and looked from Loder's
face back into the fire.</p>
<p>He took a step forward. "What things?" he said. He was almost ashamed of
the sudden, inordinate satisfaction that welled up at her words.</p>
<p>"Oh, I mustn't tell you!" She laughed a little. "But you have surprised
him." She paused, sipped her tea, then looked up again with a change of
expression.</p>
<p>"John," she said, more seriously, "there is one point that sticks a
little. Will this great change last?" Her voice was direct and even—wonderfully
direct for a woman, Loder thought. It came to him with a certain force
that beneath her remarkable charm might possibly lie a remarkable
character. It was not a possibility that had occurred to him before, and
it caused him to look at her a second time. In the new light he saw her
beauty differently, and it interested him differently. Heretofore he had
been inclined to class women under three heads—idols, amusements, or
encumbrances; now it crossed his mind that a woman might possibly fill
another place—the place of a companion.</p>
<p>"You are very sceptical," he said, still looking down at her.</p>
<p>She did not return his glance. "I think I have been made sceptical," she
said.</p>
<p>As she spoke the image of Chilcote shot through his mind. Chilcote,
irritable, vicious, unstable, and a quick compassion for this woman so
inevitably shackled to him followed it.</p>
<p>Eve, unconscious of what was passing in his mind, went on with her
subject.</p>
<p>"When we were married," she said, gently, "I had such a great interest in
things, such a great belief in life. I had lived in politics, and I was
marrying one of the coming men—everybody said you were one of the
coming men—I scarcely felt there was anything left to ask for. You
didn't make very ardent love," she smiled, "but I think I had forgotten
about love. I wanted nothing so much as to be like Lady Sarah—married
to a great man." She paused, then went on more hurriedly: "For a while
things went right; then slowly things, went wrong. You got your—your
nerves."</p>
<p>Loder changed his position with something of abruptness.</p>
<p>She misconstrued the action.</p>
<p>"Please don't think I want to be disagreeable," she said, hastily. "I
don't. I'm only trying to make you understand why—why I lost heart."</p>
<p>"I think I know," Loder's voice broke in involuntarily. "Things got worse—then
still worse. You found interference useless. At last you ceased to have a
husband."</p>
<p>"Until a week ago." She glanced up quickly. Absorbed in her own feelings,
she had seen nothing extraordinary in his words.</p>
<p>But at hers, Loder changed color.</p>
<p>"It's the most incredible thing in the world," she said. "It's quite
incredible, and yet I can't deny it. Against all my reason, all my
experience, all my inclination I seem to feel in the last week something
of what I felt at first." She stopped with an embarrassed laugh. "It seems
that, as if by magic, life has been picked up where I dropped it six years
ago." Again she stopped and laughed.</p>
<p>Loder was keenly uncomfortable, but he could think of nothing to say.</p>
<p>"It seemed to begin that night I dined with the Fraides," she went on.
"Mr. Fraide talked so wisely and so kindly about many things. He recalled
all we had hoped for in you; and—and he blamed me a little." She
paused and laid her cup aside. "He said that when people have made what
they call their last effort, they should always make just one effort more.
He promised that if I could once persuade you to take an interest in your
work, he would do the rest. He said all that, and a thousand other kinder
things—and I sat and listened. But all the time I thought of nothing
but their uselessness. Before I left I promised to do my best—but my
thought was still the same. It was stronger than ever when I forced myself
to come up here—" She paused again, and glanced at Loder's averted
head. "But I came, and then—as if by conquering myself I had
compelled a reward, you seemed—you somehow seemed different. It
sounds ridiculous, I know." Her voice was half amused, half deprecating.
"It wasn't a difference in your face, though I knew directly that you were
free from—nerves." Again she hesitated over the word. "It was a
difference in yourself, in the things you said, more than in the way you
said them." Once more she paused and laughed a little.</p>
<p>Loder's discomfort grew.</p>
<p>"But it didn't affect me then." She spoke more slowly. "I wouldn't admit
it then. And the next day when we talked on the Terrace I still refused to
admit it—though I felt it more strongly than before. But I have
watched you since that day, and I know there is a change. Mr. Fraide feels
the same, and he is never mistaken. I know it's only nine or ten days, but
I've hardly seen you in the same mood for nine or ten hours in the last
three years." She stopped, and the silence was expressive. It seemed to
plead for confirmation of her instinct.</p>
<p>Still Loder could find no response.</p>
<p>After waiting for a moment, she leaned forward in her chair and looked up
at him.</p>
<p>"John," she said, "is it going to last? That's what I came to ask. I don't
want to believe till I'm sure; I don't want to risk a new disappointment."
Loder felt the earnestness of her gaze, though he avoided meeting it.</p>
<p>"I couldn't have said this to you a week ago, but to-day I can. I don't
pretend to explain why—the feeling is too inexplicable. I only know
that I can say it now, and that I couldn't a week ago. Will you understand—and
answer?"</p>
<p>Still Loder remained mute. His position was horribly incongruous. What
could he say? What dared he say?</p>
<p>Confused by his silence, Eve rose.</p>
<p>"If it's only a phase, don't try to hide it," she said. "But if it's going
to last—if by any possibility it's going to last—" She
hesitated and looked up.</p>
<p>She was quite close to him. He would have been less than man had he been
unconscious of the subtle contact of her glance, the nearness of her
presence—and no one had ever hinted that manhood was lacking in him.
It was a moment of temptation. His own energy, his own intentions, seemed
so near; Chilcote and Chilcote's claims so distant and unreal. After all,
his life, his ambitions, his determinations, were his own. He lifted his
eyes and looked at her.</p>
<p>"You want me to tell you that I will go on?" he said.</p>
<p>Her eyes brightened; she took a step forward. "Yes," she said, "I want it
more than anything in the world."</p>
<p>There was a wait. The declaration that would satisfy her came to Loder's
lips, but he delayed it. The delay, was fateful. While he stood silent the
door opened and the servant who had brought in the tea reappeared.</p>
<p>He crossed the room and handed Loder a telegram. "Any answer, sir?" he
said.</p>
<p>Eve moved back to her chair. There was a flush on her cheeks and her eyes
were still alertly bright.</p>
<p>Loder tore the telegram open, read it, then threw it Into the fire.</p>
<p>"No answer!" he said, laconically.</p>
<p>At the brusqueness of his voice, Eve looked up. "Disagreeable news?" she
said, as the servant departed.</p>
<p>He didn't look at her. He was watching the telegram withering in the
centre of the fire.</p>
<p>"No," he said at last, in a strained voice. "No. Only news that I—that
I had forgotten to expect."</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0011" id="link2H_4_0011"></SPAN></p>
<h2> XI </h2>
<p>There was a silence—an uneasy break—after Loder spoke. The
episode of the telegram was, to all appearances, ordinary enough, calling
forth Eve's question and his own reply as a natural sequence; yet in the
pause that followed it each was conscious of a jar, each was aware that in
some subtle way the thread of sympathy had been dropped, though to one the
cause was inexplicable and to the other only too plain.</p>
<p>Loder watched the ghost of his message grow whiter and thinner, then
dissolve into airy fragments and flutter up the chimney. As the last
morsel wavered out of sight, he turned and looked at his companion.</p>
<p>"You almost made me commit myself," he said. In the desire to hide his
feelings his tone was short.</p>
<p>Eve returned his glance with a quiet regard, but he scarcely saw it. He
had a stupefied sense of disaster; a feeling of bitter self-commiseration
that for the moment outweighed all other considerations. Almost at the
moment of justification the good of life had crumbled in his fingers, the
soil given beneath his feet, and with an absence of logic, a lack of
justice unusual in him, he let resentment against Chilcote sweep suddenly
over his mind.</p>
<p>Eve, still watching him, saw the darkening of his expression, and with a
quiet movement rose from her chair.</p>
<p>"Lady Sarah has a theatre-party to-night, and I am dining with her," she
said. "It is an early dinner, so I must think about dressing. I'm sorry
you think I tried to draw you into anything. I must have explained myself
badly." She laughed a little, to cover the slight discomfiture that her
tone betrayed, and as she laughed she moved across the room towards the
door.</p>
<p>Loder, engrossed in the check to his own schemes, incensed at the
suddenness of Chilcote's recall, and still more incensed at his own folly
in not having anticipated it, was oblivious for the moment of both her
movement and her words. Then, quite abruptly, they obtruded themselves
upon him, breaking through his egotism with something of the sharpness of
pain following a blow. Turning quickly from the fireplace, he faced the
shadowy room across which she had passed, but simultaneously with his
turning she gained the door.</p>
<p>The knowledge that she was gone struck him with a sense of double loss.
"Wait!" he called, suddenly moving forward. But almost at once he paused,
chilled by the solitude of the room.</p>
<p>"Eve!" he said, using her name unconsciously for the first time.</p>
<p>But the corridor, as well as the room, was empty; he was too late. He
stood irresolute; then he laughed shortly, turned, and passed back towards
the fireplace.</p>
<p>The blow had fallen, the inevitable come to pass, and nothing remained but
to take the fact with as good a grace as possible. Chilcote's telegram had
summoned him to Clifford's Inn at seven o'clock, and it was now well on
towards six. He pulled out his watch—Chilcote's watch he realized,
with a touch of grim humor as he stooped to examine the dial by the light
of the fire; then, as if the humor had verged to another feeling, he stood
straight again and felt for the electric button in the wall. His fingers
touched it, and simultaneously the room was lighted.</p>
<p>The abrupt alteration from shadow to light came almost as a shock. The
feminine arrangement of the tea-table seemed incongruous beside the sober
books and the desk laden with papers—incongruous as his own presence
in the place. The thought was unpleasant, and he turned aside as if to
avoid it; but at the movement his eyes fell on Chilcote's cigarette-box
with its gleaming monogram, and the whimsical suggestion of his first
morning rose again. The idea that the inanimate objects in the room knew
him for what he was—recognized the interloper where human eyes saw
the rightful possessor—returned to his mind. Through all his disgust
and chagrin a smile forced itself to his lips, and, crossing the room for
the second time, he passed into Chilcote's bedroom.</p>
<p>There the massive furniture and sombre atmosphere fitted better with his
mood than the energy and action which the study always suggested. Walking
directly to the great bed, he sat on its side and for several minutes
stared straight in front of him, apparently seeing nothing; then at last
the apathy passed from him, as his previous anger against Chilcote had
passed. He stood up slowly, drawing his long limbs together, and recrossed
the room, passing along the corridor and through the door communicating
with the rest of the house. Five minutes later he was in the open air and
walking steadily eastward, his hat drawn forward and his overcoat buttoned
up.</p>
<p>As he traversed the streets he allowed himself no thought, Once, as he
waited in Trafalgar Square to find a passage between the vehicles, the
remembrance of Chilcote's voice coming out of the fog on their first night
made itself prominent, but he rejected it quickly, guarding himself from
even an involuntary glance at the place of their meeting. The Strand, with
its unceasing life, came to him as something almost unfamiliar. Since his
identification with the new life no business had drawn him east of Charing
Cross, and his first sight of the narrower stream of traffic struck him as
garish and unpleasant. As the impression came he accelerated his steps,
moved by the wish to make regret and retrospection alike impossible by a
contact with actual forces.</p>
<p>Still walking hastily, he entered Clifford's Inn, but there almost
unconsciously his feet halted. There was something in the quiet
immutability of the place that sobered energy, both mental and physical. A
sense of changelessness—the changelessness of inanimate things, that
rises in such solemn contrast to the variableness of mere human nature,
which a new environment, a new outlook, sometimes even a new presence, has
power to upheave and remould. He paused; then with slower and steadier
steps crossed the little court and mounted the familiar stairs of his own
house.</p>
<p>As he turned the handle of his own door some one stirred inside the
sitting-room. Still under the influence of the stones and trees that he
had just left, he moved directly towards the sound, and, without waiting
for permission, entered the room. After the darkness of the passage it
seemed well alight, for, besides the lamp with its green shade, a large
fire burned in the grate and helped to dispel the shadows.</p>
<p>As he entered the room Chilcote rose and came forward, his figure thrown
into strong relief by the double light. He was dressed in a shabby tweed
suit; his face looked pale and set with a slightly nervous tension, but
besides the look and a certain added restlessness of glance there was no
visible change. Reaching Loder, he held out his hand.</p>
<p>"Well?" he said, quickly.</p>
<p>The other looked at him questioningly.</p>
<p>"Well? Well? How has it gone?"</p>
<p>"The scheme? Oh, excellently!" Loder's manner was abrupt. Turning from the
restless curiosity in Chilcote's eyes, he moved a little way across the
room and began to draw off his coat. Then, as if struck by the incivility
of the action, he looked back again. "The scheme has gone
extraordinarily," he said. "I could almost say absurdly. There are some
things, Chilcote, that fairly bowl a man over."</p>
<p>A great relief tinged Chilcote's face. "Good!" he exclaimed. "Tell me all
about it."</p>
<p>But Loder was reticent. The moment was not propitious. It was as if a
hungry man had dreamed a great banquet and had awakened to his starvation.
He was chary of imparting his visions.</p>
<p>"There's nothing to tell," he said, shortly. "All that you'll want to know
is here in black and white. I don't think you'll find I have slipped
anything; it's a clear business record." From an inner pocket he drew out
a bulky note-book, and, recrossing the room, laid it open on the table. It
was a correct, even a minute, record of every action that had been
accomplished in Chilcote's name. "I don't think you'll find any loose
ends," he said, as he turned back the pages. "I had you and your position
in my mind all through." He paused and glanced up from the book. "You have
a position that absolutely insists upon attention," he added, in a
different voice.</p>
<p>At the new tone Chilcote looked up as well. "No moral lectures!" he said,
with a nervous laugh. "I was anxious to know if you had pulled it off—and
you have reassured me. That's enough. I was in a funk this afternoon to
know how things were going-one of those sudden, unreasonable funks. But
now that I see you"—he cut himself short and laughed once more "now
that I see you, I'm hanged if I don't want to—to prolong your
engagement."</p>
<p>Loder glanced at him, then glanced away. He felt a quick shame at the
eagerness that rose at the words—a surprised contempt at his own
readiness to anticipate the man's weakness. But almost as speedily as he
had turned away he looked back again.</p>
<p>"Tush, man!" he said, with his old, intolerant manner. "You're dreaming.
You've had your holiday and school's begun again. You must remember you
are dining with the Charringtons to-night. Young Charrington's coming of
age—quite a big business. Come along! I want my clothes." He
laughed, and, moving closer to Chilcote, slapped him on the shoulder.</p>
<p>Chilcote started; then, suddenly becoming imbued with the other's manner,
he echoed the laugh.</p>
<p>"By Jove!" he said, "you're right! You're quite right! A man must keep his
feet in their own groove." Raising his hand, he began to fumble with his
tie.</p>
<p>But Loder kept the same position. "You'll find the check-book in its usual
drawer," he said. "I've made one entry of a hundred pounds—pay for
the first week. The rest can stand over until—" He paused abruptly.</p>
<p>Chilcote shifted his position. "Don't talk about that. It upsets me to
anticipate. I can make out a check to-morrow payable to John Loder."</p>
<p>"No. That can wait. The name of Loder is better out of the book. We can't
be too careful." Loder spoke with unusual impetuosity. Already a slight,
unreasonable jealousy was coloring his thoughts. Already he grudged the
idea of Chilcote with his unstable glance and restless fingers opening the
drawers and sorting the papers that for one stupendous fortnight had been
his without question. Turning aside, he changed the subject brusquely.</p>
<p>"Come into the bedroom," he said. "It's half-past seven if it's a minute,
and the Charringtons' show is at nine." Without waiting for a reply, he
walked across the room and held the door open.</p>
<p>There was no silence while they exchanged clothes. Loder talked
continuously, sometimes in short, curt sentences, sometimes with ironic
touches of humor; he talked until Chilcote, strangely affected by contact
with another personality after his weeks of solitude, fell under his
influence—his excitement rising, his imagination stirring at the
novelty of change. At last, garbed once more in the clothes of his own
world, he passed from the bedroom back into the sitting-room, and there
halted, waiting for his companion.</p>
<p>Almost directly Loder followed. He came into the room quietly, and, moving
at once to the table, picked up the note-book.</p>
<p>"I'm not going to preach," he began, "so you needn't shut me up. But I'll
say just one thing—a thing that will get said. Try and keep your
hold! Remember your responsibilities—and keep your hold!" He spoke
energetically, looking earnestly into Chilcote's eyes. He did not realize
it, but he was pleading for his own career.</p>
<p>Chilcote paled a little, as he always did in face of a reality. Then he
extended his hand.</p>
<p>"My dear fellow," he said, with a touch of hauteur, "a man can generally
be trusted to look after his own life."</p>
<p>Extricating his hand almost immediately, he turned towards the door and
without a word of farewell passed into the little hall, leaving Loder
alone in the sitting-room.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0012" id="link2H_4_0012"></SPAN></p>
<h2> XII </h2>
<p>On the night of Chilcote's return to his own, Loder tasted the lees of
life poignantly for the first time. Before their curious compact had been
entered upon he had been, if not content, at least apathetic; but with
action the apathy had been dispersed, never again to regain its old
position.</p>
<p>He realized with bitter certainty that his was no real home-coming. On
entering Chilcote's house he had experienced none of the unfamiliarity,
none of the unsettled awkwardness, that assailed him now. There he had
almost seemed the exile returning after many hardships; here, in the
atmosphere made common by years, he felt an alien. It was illustrative of
the man's character that sentimentalities found no place in his nature.
Sentiments were not lacking, though they lay out of sight, but
sentimentalities he altogether denied.</p>
<p>Left alone in the sitting-room after Chilcote's departure, his first
sensation was one of physical discomfort and unfamiliarity. His own
clothes, with their worn looseness, brought no sense of friendliness such
as some men find in an old garment. Lounging, and the clothes that
suggested lounging, had no appeal for him. In his eyes the garb that
implies responsibility was symbolic and even inspiring.</p>
<p>And, as with clothes, so with his actual surroundings. Each detail of his
room was familiar, but not one had ever become intimately close. He had
used the place for years, but he had used it as he might use a hotel; and
whatever of his household gods had come with him remained, like himself,
on sufferance. His entrance into Chilcote's surroundings had been
altogether different. Unknown to himself, he had been in the position of a
young artist who, having roughly modelled in clay, is brought into the
studio of a sculptor. To his outward vision everything is new, but his
inner sight leaps to instant understanding. Amid all the strangeness he
recognizes the one essential—the workshop, the atmosphere, the home.</p>
<p>On this first night of return Loder comprehended something of his
position; and, comprehending, he faced the problem and fought with it.</p>
<p>He had made his bargain and must pay his share. Weighing this, he had
looked about his room with a quiet gaze. Then at last, as if finding the
object really sought for, his eyes had come round to the mantel-piece and
rested on the pipe-rack. The pipes stood precisely as he had left them. He
had looked at them for a long time, then an ironic expression that was
almost a smile had touched his lips, and, crossing the room, he had taken
the oldest and blackest from its place and slowly filled it with tobacco.</p>
<p>With the first indrawn breath of smoke his attitude had unbent. Without
conscious determination, he had chosen the one factor capable of easing
his mood. A cigarette is for the trivial moments of life; a cigar for its
fulfilments, its pleasant, comfortable retrospections; but in real
distress—in the solving of question, the fighting of difficulty—a
pipe is man's eternal solace,</p>
<p>So he had passed the first night of his return to the actualities of life.
Next day his mind was somewhat settled and outward aid was not so
essential; but though facts faced him more solidly, they were nevertheless
very drab in shade. The necessity for work, that blessed antidote to
ennui, no longer forced him to endeavor. He was no longer penniless; but
the money, he possessed brought with it no desires. When a man has lived
from hand to mouth for years, and suddenly finds himself with a hundred
pounds in his pocket, the result is sometimes curious. He finds with a
vague sense of surprise that he has forgotten how to spend. That
extravagance, like other artificial passions, requires cultivation.</p>
<p>This he realized even more fully on the days that followed the night of
his first return; and with it was born a new bitterness. The man who has
friends and no money may find life difficult; but the man who has money
and no friend to rejoice in his fortune or benefit by his generosity is
aloof indeed. With the leaven of incredulity that works in all strong
natures, Loder distrusted the professional beggar—therefore the
charity that bestows easily and promiscuously was denied him; and of other
channels of generosity he was too self-contained to have learned the
secret.</p>
<p>When depression falls upon a man of usually even temperament it descends
with a double weight. The mercurial nature has a hundred counterbalancing
devices to rid itself of gloom—a sudden lifting of spirit, a memory
of other moods lived through, other blacknesses dispersed by time; but the
man of level nature has none of these. Depression, when it comes, is
indeed depression; no phase of mind to be superseded by another phase, but
a slackening of all the chords of life.</p>
<p>It was through such a depression as this that he labored during three
weeks, while no summons and no hint of remembrance came from Chilcote. His
position was peculiarly difficult. He found no action in the present, and
towards the future he dared not trust himself to look. He had slipped the
old moorings that familiarity had rendered endurable; but having slipped
them, he had found no substitute. Such was his case on the last night of
the three weeks, and such his frame of mind as he crossed Fleet Street
from Clifford's Inn to Middle Temple Lane.</p>
<p>It was scarcely seven o'clock, but already the dusk was falling; the
greater press of vehicles had ceased, and the light of the street lamps
gleamed back from the spaces of dry and polished roadway, worn smooth as a
mirror by wheels and hoofs. Something of the solitude of night that sits
so ill on the strenuous city street was making itself felt, though the
throngs of people on the pathway still streamed eastward and westward and
the taverns made a busy trade.</p>
<p>Having crossed the roadway, Loder paused for a moment to survey the scene.
But humanity in the abstract made small appeal to him, and his glance
wandered from the passers-by to the buildings massed like clouds against
the dark sky. As his gaze moved slowly from one to the other a clock near
at hand struck seven, and an instant later the chorus was taken up by a
dozen clamorous tongues. Usually he scarcely heard, and never heeded,
these innumerable chimes; but this evening their effect was strange.
Coming out of the darkness, they seemed to possess a personal note, a
human declaration. The impression was fantastic, but it was strong; with a
species of revolt against life and his own personality, he turned slowly
and moved forward in the direction of Ludgate Hill.</p>
<p>For a space he continued his course, then, reaching Bouverie Street, he
turned sharply to the right and made his way down the slight incline that
leads to the Embankment. There he paused and drew a long breath. The sense
of space and darkness soothed him. Pulling his cap over his eyes, he
crossed to the river and walked on in the direction of Westminster Bridge.</p>
<p>As he walked the great mass, of water by his side looked dense and smooth
as oil with its sweeping width and network of reflected light. On its
farther bank rose the tall buildings, the chimneys, the flaring lights
that suggest another and an alien London; close at hand stretched the
solid stone parapet, giving assurance of protection.</p>
<p>All these things he saw with his mental eyes, but with his mental eyes
only, for his physical gaze was fixed ahead where the Houses of Parliament
loomed out of the dusk. From the great building his eyes never wavered
until the Embankment was traversed and Westminster Bridge reached. Then he
paused, resting his arms on the coping of the bridge.</p>
<p>In the tense quietude of the darkness the place looked vast and inspiring.
The shadowy Terrace, the silent river, the rows of lighted windows, each
was significant. Slowly and comprehensively his glance passed from one to
the other. He was no sentimentalist and no dreamer; his act was simply the
act of a man whose interests, robbed of their natural outlet, turn
instinctively towards the forms and symbols of the work that is denied
them. His scrutiny was steady—even cold. He was raised to no
exaltation by the vastness of the building, nor was he chilled by any
dwarfing of himself. He looked at it long and thoughtfully; then, again
moving slowly, he turned and retraced his steps.</p>
<p>His mind was full as he walked back, still oblivious of the stone parapet
of the Embankment, the bare trees, and the flaring lights of the
advertisements across the water. Turning to the left, he regained Fleet
Street and made for his own habitation with the quiet accuracy that some
men exhibit in moments of absorption.</p>
<p>He crossed Clifford's Inn with the same slow, almost listless step; then,
as his own doorway came into view, he stopped. Some one was standing in
its recess.</p>
<p>For a moment he wondered if his fancy were playing him a trick; then his
reason sprang to certainty with so fierce a leap that for an instant his
mind recoiled. For we more often stand aghast at the strength of our own
feelings than before the enormity of our neighbor's actions.</p>
<p>"Is that you, Chilcote?" he said, below his breath.</p>
<p>At the sound of his voice the other wheeled round. "Hallo!" he said. "I
thought you were the ghost of some old inhabitant. I suppose I am very
unexpected?"</p>
<p>Loder took the hand that he extended and pressed the fingers
unconsciously. The sight of this man was like the finding of an oasis at
the point where the desert is sandiest, deadliest, most unbearable.</p>
<p>"Yes, you are—unexpected," he answered.</p>
<p>Chilcote looked at him, then looked out into the court. "I'm done up," he
said. "I'm right at the end of the tether." He laughed as he said it, but
in the dim light of the hall Loder thought his face looked ill and
harassed despite the flush that the excitement of the meeting had brought
to it. Taking his arm, he drew him towards the stairs.</p>
<p>"So the rope has run out, eh?" he said, in imitation of the other's tone.
But under the quiet of his manner his own nerves were throbbing with the
peculiar alertness of anticipation; a sudden sense of mastery over life,
that lifted him above surroundings and above persons—a sense of
stature, mental and physical, from which he surveyed the world. He felt as
if fate, in the moment of utter darkness, had given him a sign.</p>
<p>As they crossed the hall, Chilcote had drawn away and was already mounting
the stairs. And as Loder followed, it came sharply to his mind that here,
in the slipshod freedom of a door that was always open and stairs that
were innocent of covering, lay his companion's real niche—unrecognized
in outward avowal, but acknowledged by the inward, keener sense that
manifests the individual.</p>
<p>In silence they mounted the stairs, but on the first landing Chilcote
paused and looked back, surveying Loder from the superior height of two
steps.</p>
<p>"I did very well at first," he said. "I did very well—I almost
followed your example, for a week or so. I found myself on a sort of
pinnacle—and I clung on. But in the last ten days I've—I've
rather lapsed."</p>
<p>"Why?" Loder avoided looking at his face; he kept his eyes fixed
determinately on the spot where his own hand gripped the banister.</p>
<p>"Why?" Chilcote repeated. "Oh, the prehistoric tale—weakness
stronger than strength. I'm-I'm sorry to come down on you like this, but
it's the social side that bowls me over. It's the social side I can't
stick."</p>
<p>"The social side? But I thought—"</p>
<p>"Don't think. I never think; it entails such a constant upsetting of
principles and theories. We did arrange for business only, but one can't
set up barriers. Society pushes itself everywhere nowadays—into
business most of all. I don't want you for theatre-parties or dinners. But
a big reception with a political flavor is different. A man has to be seen
at these things; he needn't say anything or do anything, but it's bad form
if he fails to show up."</p>
<p>Loder raised his head. "You must explain," he said, abruptly.</p>
<p>Chilcote started slightly at the sudden demand.</p>
<p>"I—I suppose I'm rather irrelevant," he said, quickly. "Fact is,
there's a reception at the Bramfells' to-night. You know Blanche Bramfell—Viscountess
Bramfell, sister to Lillian Astrupp." His words conveyed nothing to Loder,
but he did not consider that. All explanations were irksome to him and he
invariably chafed to be done with them.</p>
<p>"And you've got to put in an appearance—for party reasons?" Loder
broke in.</p>
<p>Chilcote showed relief. "Yes. Old Fraide makes rather a point of it—so
does Eve." He said the last words carelessly; then, as if their sound
recalled something, his expression changed. A touch of satirical amusement
touched his lips and he laughed.</p>
<p>"By-the-way, Loder," he said, "my wife was actually tolerant of me for
nine or ten days after my return. I thought your representation was to be
quite impersonal? I'm not jealous," he laughed. "I'm not jealous, I assure
you; but the burned child shouldn't grow absentminded."</p>
<p>At his tone and his laugh Loder's blood stirred; with a sudden, unexpected
impulse his hand tightened on the banister, and, looking up, he caught
sight of the face above him—his own face, it seemed, alight with
malicious interest. At the sight a strange sensation seized him; his grip
on the banister loosened, and, pushing past Chilcote, he hurriedly mounted
the stairs.</p>
<p>Outside his own door the other overtook him.</p>
<p>"Loder!" he said. "Loder! I meant no harm. A man must have a laugh
sometimes."</p>
<p>But Loder was facing the door and did not turn round.</p>
<p>A sudden fear shook Chilcote. "Loder!" he exclaimed again, "you wouldn't
desert me? I can't go back to-night. I can't go back."</p>
<p>Still Loder remained immovable.</p>
<p>Alarmed by his silence, Chilcote stepped closer to him.</p>
<p>"Loder! Loder, you won't desert me?" He caught hastily at his arm.</p>
<p>With a quick repulsion Loder shook him off; then almost as quickly he
turned round.</p>
<p>"What fools we all are!" he said, abruptly. "We, only differ in degree.
Come in, and let us change our clothes."</p>
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