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<h2> XL </h2>
<p>Leslie Ward had found the autumn extremely tedious. His old passion for
Nina now and then flamed up in him, but her occasional coquetries no
longer deceived him. They had their source only in her vanity. She exacted
his embraces only as tribute to her own charm, her youth, her fresh young
body.</p>
<p>And Nina out of her setting of gaiety, of a thumping piano, of chattering,
giggling crowds, of dancing and bridge and theater boxes, was a queen
dethroned. She did not read or think. She spent the leisure of her
mourning period in long hours before her mirror fussing with her hair, in
trimming and retrimming hats, or in the fastidious care of her hands and
body.</p>
<p>He was ashamed sometimes of his pitilessly clear analysis of her. She was
not discontented, save at the enforced somberness of their lives. She had
found in marriage what she wanted; a good house, daintily served; a man to
respond to her attractions as a woman, and to provide for her needs as a
wife; dignity and an established place in the world; liberty and
privilege.</p>
<p>But she was restless. She chafed at the quiet evenings they spent at home,
and resented the reading in which he took refuge from her uneasy
fidgeting.</p>
<p>"For Heaven's sake, Nina, sit down and read or sew, or do something.
You've been at that window a dozen times."</p>
<p>"I'm not bothering you. Go on and read."</p>
<p>When nobody dropped in she would go upstairs and spend the hour or so
before bedtime in the rites of cold cream, massage, and in placing the
little combs of what Leslie had learned was called a water-wave.</p>
<p>But her judgment was as clear as his, and even more pitiless; the
difference between them lay in the fact that while he rebelled, she
accepted the situation. She was cleverer than he was; her mind worked more
quickly, and she had the adaptability he lacked. If there were times when
she wearied him, there were others when he sickened her. Across from her
at the table he ate slowly and enormously. He splashed her dainty bathroom
with his loud, gasping cold baths. He flung his soiled clothing anywhere.
He drank whisky at night and crawled into the lavender-scented sheets
redolent of it, to drop into a heavy sleep and snore until she wanted to
scream. But she played the game to the limit of her ability.</p>
<p>Then, seeing that they might go on the rocks, he made a valiant effort,
and since she recognized it as an effort, she tried to meet him half way.
They played two-handed card games. He read aloud to her, poetry which she
loathed, and she to him, short stories he hated. He suggested country
walks and she agreed, to limp back after a half mile or so in her
high-heeled pumps.</p>
<p>He concealed his boredom from her, but there were nights when he lay awake
long after she was asleep and looked ahead into a future of unnumbered
blank evenings. He had formerly taken an occasional evening at his club,
but on his suggesting it now Nina's eyes would fill with suspicion, and he
knew that although she never mentioned Beverly Carlysle, she would neither
forget nor entirely trust him again. And in his inner secret soul he knew
that she was right.</p>
<p>He had thought that he had buried that brief madness, but there were times
when he knew he lied to himself. One fiction, however, he persisted in; he
had not been infatuated with Beverly. It was only that she gave him during
those few days something he had not found at home, companionship and quiet
intelligent talk. She had been restful. Nina was never restful.</p>
<p>He bought a New York paper daily, and read it in the train. "The Valley"
had opened to success in New York, and had settled for a long run. The
reviews of her work had been extraordinary, and when now and then she gave
an interview he studied the photographs accompanying it. But he never
carried the paper home.</p>
<p>He began, however, to play with the thought of going to New York. He would
not go to see her at her house, but he would like to see her before a
metropolitan audience, to add his mite to her triumph. There were times
when he fully determined to go, when he sat at his desk with his hand on
the telephone, prepared to lay the foundations of the excursion by some
manipulation of business interests. For months, however, he never went
further than the preliminary movement.</p>
<p>But by October he began to delude himself with a real excuse for going,
and this was the knowledge that by a strange chain of circumstance this
woman who so dominated his secret thoughts was connected with Elizabeth's
life through Judson Clark. The discovery, communicated to him by Walter
Wheeler, that Dick was Clark had roused in him a totally different feeling
from Nina's. He saw no glamour of great wealth. On the contrary, he saw in
Clark the author of a great unhappiness to a woman who had not deserved
it. And Nina, judging him with deadly accuracy, surmised even that.</p>
<p>That he was jealous of Judson Clark, and of his part in the past, he
denied to himself absolutely. But his resentment took the form of violent
protest to the family, against even allowing Elizabeth to have anything to
do with Dick if he turned up.</p>
<p>"He'll buy his freedom, if he isn't dead," he said to Nina, "and he'll
come snivelling back here, with that lost memory bunk, and they're just
fool enough to fall for it."</p>
<p>"I've fallen for it, and I'm at least as intelligent as you are."</p>
<p>Before her appraising eyes his own fell.</p>
<p>"Suppose I did something I shouldn't and turned up here with such a story,
would you believe it?"</p>
<p>"No. When you want to do something you shouldn't you don't appear to need
any excuse."</p>
<p>But, on the whole, they managed to live together comfortably enough. They
each had their reservations, but especially after Jim's death they tacitly
agreed to stop bickering and to make their mutual concessions. What Nina
never suspected was that he corresponded with Beverly Carlysle. Not that
the correspondence amounted to much. He had sent her flowers the night of
the New York opening, with the name of his club on his card, and she wrote
there in acknowledgment. Then, later, twice he sent her books, one a
biography, which was a compromise with his conscience, and later a volume
of exotic love verse, which was not. As he replied to her notes of thanks
a desultory correspondence had sprung up, letters which the world might
have read, and yet which had to him the savor and interest of the
clandestine.</p>
<p>He did not know that that, and not infatuation, was behind his desire to
see Beverly again; never reasoned that he was demonstrating to himself
that his adventurous love life was not necessarily ended; never
acknowledged that the instinct of the hunter was as alive in him as in the
days before his marriage. Partly, then, a desire for adventure, partly a
hope that romance was not over but might still be waiting around the next
corner, was behind his desire to see her again.</p>
<p>Probably Nina knew that, as she knew so many things; why he had taken to
reading poetry, for instance. Certain it is that when he began, early in
October, to throw out small tentative remarks about the necessity of a
business trip before long to New York, she narrowed her eyes. She was
determined to go with him, if he went at all, and he was equally
determined that she should not.</p>
<p>It became, in a way, a sort of watchful waiting on both sides. Then there
came a time when some slight excuse offered, and Leslie took up the
shuttle for forty-eight hours, and wove his bit in the pattern. It
happened to be on the same evening as Dick's return to the old house.</p>
<p>He was a little too confident, a trifle too easy to Nina.</p>
<p>"Has the handle of my suitcase been repaired yet?" he asked. He was
lighting a cigarette at the time.</p>
<p>"Yes. Why?"</p>
<p>"I'll have to run over to New York to-morrow. I wanted Joe to go alone,
but he thinks he needs me." Joe was his partner. "Oh. So Joe's going?"</p>
<p>"That's what I said."</p>
<p>She was silent. Joe's going was clever of him. It gave authenticity to his
business, and it kept her at home.</p>
<p>"How long shall you be gone?"</p>
<p>"Only a day or two." He could not entirely keep the relief out of his
voice. It had been easy, incredibly easy. He might have done it a month
ago. And he had told the truth; Joe was going.</p>
<p>"I'll pack to-night, and take my suitcase in with me in the morning."</p>
<p>"If you'll get your things out I'll pack them." She was still thinking,
but her tone was indifferent. "You won't want your dress clothes, of
course."</p>
<p>"I'd better have a dinner suit."</p>
<p>She looked at him then, with a half contemptuous smile. "Yes," she said
slowly. "I suppose you will. You'll be going to the theater."</p>
<p>He glanced away.</p>
<p>"Possibly. But we'll be rushing to get through. There's a lot to do.
Amazing how business piles up when you find you're going anywhere. There
won't be much time to play."</p>
<p>She sat before the mirror in her small dressing-room that night,
ostensibly preparing for bed but actually taking stock of her situation.
She had done all she could, had been faithful and loyal, had made his home
attractive, had catered to his tastes and tried to like his friends, had
met his needs and responded to them. And now, this. She was bewildered and
frightened. How did women hold their husbands?</p>
<p>She found him in bed and unmistakably asleep when she went into the
bedroom. Man-like, having got his way, he was not troubled by doubts or
introspection. It was done.</p>
<p>He was lying on his back, with his mouth open. She felt a sudden and
violent repugnance to getting into the bed beside him. Sometime in the
night he would turn over and throwing his arm about her, hold her close in
his sleep; and it would be purely automatic, the mechanical result of
habit.</p>
<p>She lay on the edge of the bed and thought things over.</p>
<p>He had his good qualities. He was kind and affectionate to her family. He
had been wonderful when Jim died, and he loved Elizabeth dearly. He was
generous and open-handed. He was handsome, too, in a big, heavy way.</p>
<p>She began to find excuses for him. Men were always a child-like prey to
some women. They were vain, and especially they were sex-vain; good
looking men were a target for every sort of advance. She transferred her
loathing of him to the woman she suspected of luring him away from her,
and lay for hours hating her.</p>
<p>She saw Leslie off in the morning with a perfunctory good-bye while cold
anger and suspicion seethed in her. And later she put on her hat and went
home to lay the situation before her mother. Mrs. Wheeler was out,
however, and she found only Elizabeth sewing by her window.</p>
<p>Nina threw her hat on the bed and sat down dispiritedly.</p>
<p>"I suppose there's no news?" she asked.</p>
<p>Nina watched her. She was out of patience with Elizabeth, exasperated with
the world.</p>
<p>"Are you going to go on like this all your life?" she demanded. "Sitting
by a window, waiting? For a man who ran away from you?"</p>
<p>"That's not true, and you know it."</p>
<p>"They're all alike," Nina declared recklessly. "They go along well enough,
and they are all for virtue and for the home and fireside stuff, until
some woman comes their way. I ought to know."</p>
<p>Elizabeth looked up quickly.</p>
<p>"Why, Nina!" she said. "You don't mean—"</p>
<p>"He went to New York this morning. He pretended to be going on business,
but he's actually gone to see that actress. He's been mad about her for
months."</p>
<p>"I don't believe it."</p>
<p>"Oh, wake up," Nina said impatiently. "The world isn't made up of good,
kind, virtuous people. It's rotten. And men are all alike. Dick
Livingstone and Les and all the rest—tarred with the same stick. As
long as there are women like this Carlysle creature they'll fall for them.
And you and I can sit at home and chew our nails and plan to keep them by
us. And we can't do it."</p>
<p>In spite of herself a little question of doubt crept that day into
Elizabeth's mind. She had always known that they had not told her all the
truth; that the benevolent conspiracy to protect Dick extended even to
her. But she had never thought that it might include a woman. Once there,
the very humility of her love for Dick was an element in favor of the
idea. She had never been good enough, or wise or clever enough, for him.
She was too small and unimportant to be really vital.</p>
<p>Dismissing the thought did no good. It came back. But because she was a
healthy-minded and practical person she took the one course she could
think of, and put the question that night to her father, when he came back
from seeing David.</p>
<p>David had sent for him early in the evening. All day he had thought over
the situation between Dick and Elizabeth, with growing pain and
uneasiness. He had not spoken of it to Lucy, or to Harrison Miller; he
knew that they would not understand, and that Lucy would suffer. She was
bewildered enough by Dick's departure.</p>
<p>At noon he had insisted on getting up and being helped into his trousers.
So clad he felt more of a man and better able to cope with things,
although his satisfaction in them was somewhat modified by the knowledge
of two safety-pins at the sides, to take up their superfluous girth at the
waistband.</p>
<p>But even the sense of being clothed as a man again did not make it easier
to say to Walter Wheeler what must be said.</p>
<p>Walter took the news of Dick's return with a visible brightening. It was
as though, out of the wreckage of his middle years, he saw that there was
now some salvage, but he was grave and inarticulate over it, wrung David's
hand and only said:</p>
<p>"Thank God for it, David." And after a pause: "Was he all right? He
remembered everything?"</p>
<p>But something strange in the situation began to obtrude itself into his
mind. Dick had come back twenty-four hours ago. Last night. And all this
time—</p>
<p>"Where is he now?"</p>
<p>"He's not here, Walter."</p>
<p>"He has gone away again, without seeing Elizabeth?"</p>
<p>David cleared his throat.</p>
<p>"He is still a fugitive. He doesn't himself know he isn't guilty. I think
he feels that he ought not to see her until—"</p>
<p>"Come, come," Walter Wheeler said impatiently. "Don't try to find excuses
for him. Let's have the truth, David. I guess I can stand it."</p>
<p>Poor David, divided between his love for Dick and his native honesty,
threw out his hands.</p>
<p>"I don't understand it, Wheeler," he said. "You and I wouldn't, I suppose.
We are not the sort to lose the world for a woman. The plain truth is that
there is not a trace of Judson Clark in him to-day, save one. That's the
woman."</p>
<p>When Wheeler said nothing, but sat twisting his hat in his hands, David
went on. It might be only a phase. As its impression on Dick's youth had
been deeper than others, so its effect was more lasting. It might
gradually disappear. He was confident, indeed, that it would. He had been
reading on the subject all day.</p>
<p>Walter Wheeler hardly heard him. He was facing the incredible fact, and
struggling with his own problem. After a time he got up, shook hands with
David and went home, the dog at his heels.</p>
<p>During the evening that followed he made his resolution, not to tell her,
never to let her suspect the truth. But he began to wonder if she had
heard something, for he found her eyes on him more than once, and when
Margaret had gone up to bed she came over and sat on the arm of his chair.
She said an odd thing then, and one that made it impossible to lie to her
later.</p>
<p>"I come to you, a good bit as I would go to God, if he were a person," she
said. "I have got to know something, and you can tell me."</p>
<p>He put his arm around her and held her close.</p>
<p>"Go ahead, honey."</p>
<p>"Daddy, do you realize that I am a woman now?"</p>
<p>"I try to. But it seems about six months since I was feeding you hot water
for colic."</p>
<p>She sat still for a moment, stroking his hair and being very careful not
to spoil his neat parting.</p>
<p>"You have never told me all about Dick, daddy. You have always kept
something back. That's true, isn't it?"</p>
<p>"There were details," he said uncomfortably. "It wasn't necessary—"</p>
<p>"Here's what I want to know. If he has gone back to the time—you
know, wouldn't he go back to caring for the people he loved then?" Then,
suddenly, her childish appeal ceased, and she slid from the chair and
stood before him. "I must know, father. I can bear it. The thing you have
been keeping from me was another woman, wasn't it?"</p>
<p>"It was so long ago," he temporized. "Think of it, Elizabeth. A boy of
twenty-one or so."</p>
<p>"Then there was?"</p>
<p>"I believe so, at one time. But I know positively that he hadn't seen or
heard from her in ten years."</p>
<p>"What sort of woman?"</p>
<p>"I wouldn't think about it, honey. It's all so long ago."</p>
<p>"Did she live in Wyoming?"</p>
<p>"She was an actress," he said, hard driven by her persistence.</p>
<p>"Do you know her name?"</p>
<p>"Only her stage name, honey."</p>
<p>"But you know she was an actress!"</p>
<p>He sighed.</p>
<p>"All right, dear," he said. "I'll tell you all I know. She was an actress,
and she married another man. That's all there is to it. She's not young
now. She must be thirty now—if she's living," he added, as an
afterthought.</p>
<p>It was some time before she spoke again.</p>
<p>"I suppose she was beautiful," she said slowly.</p>
<p>"I don't know. Most of them aren't, off the stage. Anyhow, what does it
matter now?"</p>
<p>"Only that I know he has gone back to her. And you know it too."</p>
<p>He heard her going quietly out of the room.</p>
<p>Long after, he closed the house and went cautiously upstairs. She was
waiting for him in the doorway of her room, in her nightgown.</p>
<p>"I know it all now," she said steadily. "It was because of her he shot the
other man, wasn't it?"</p>
<p>She saw her answer in his startled face, and closed her door quickly. He
stood outside, and then he tapped lightly.</p>
<p>"Let me in, honey," he said. "I want to finish it. You've got a wrong idea
about it."</p>
<p>When she did not answer he tried the door, but it was locked. He turned
and went downstairs again...</p>
<p>When he came home the next afternoon Margaret met him in the hall.</p>
<p>"She knows it, Walter."</p>
<p>"Knows what?"</p>
<p>"Knows he was back here and didn't see her. Annie blurted it out; she'd
got it from the Oglethorpe's laundress. Mr. Oglethorpe saw him on the
street."</p>
<p>It took him some time to drag a coherent story from her. Annie had told
Elizabeth in her room, and then had told Margaret. She had gone to
Elizabeth at once, to see what she could do, but Elizabeth had been in her
closet, digging among her clothes. She had got out her best frock and put
it on, while her mother sat on the bed not even daring to broach the
matter in her mind, and had gone out. There was a sort of cold
determination in her that frightened Margaret. She had laughed a good bit,
for one thing.</p>
<p>"She's terribly proud," she finished. "She'll do something reckless, I'm
sure. It wouldn't surprise me to see her come back engaged to Wallie
Sayre. I think that's where she went."</p>
<p>But apparently she had not, or if she had she said nothing about it. From
that time on they saw a change in her; she was as loving as ever, but she
affected a sort of painful brightness that was a little hard. As though
she had clad herself in armor against further suffering.</p>
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