That was absolutely all that happened
at the Uniackes’ garden-party. There was
no scene, no scandal, no incident whatsoever beyond
an apparently mutual recognition between Mrs. Steel
and Mr. Justice Gibson. Of this there were not
half-a-dozen witnesses, all of whom were given immediate
reason to suppose that either they or the pair in question
had made a mistake; for nothing could have surpassed
the presence of mind and the kindness of heart with
which Sir Baldwin Gibson chatted to the woman whom
he had tried for her life within the year. And
his charity continued behind her back.
“Odd thing,” said Sir
Baldwin to his hostess, at the earliest opportunity,
“but for the moment I could have sworn that woman
was some one else. May I ask who she is exactly?”
“Sure, Sir Baldwin,” replied
Mrs. Uniacke, “and that’s what I thought
we were to hear at last. It’s who she is
we none of us know. And what does it matter?
She’s pretty and nice, and I’m just in
love with her; but then nobody knows any more about
her husband, and so we talk.”
A few more questions satisfied the
judge that he could not possibly have been mistaken,
and he hesitated a moment, for he was a pious man;
but Rachel’s face, combined with her nerve,
had deepended an impression which was now nearly a
year old, and the superfluous proximity of an angular
and aquiline lady, to whom Sir Baldwin had not been
introduced, but who was openly hanging upon his words,
drove the good man’s last scruple to the winds.
“Very deceptive, these likenesses,”
said he, raising his voice for the interloper’s
benefit; “in future I shall beware of them.
I needn’t tell you, Mrs. Uniacke, that I never
before set eyes upon the lady whom I fear I embarrassed
by behaving as though I had.”
Rachel was not less fortunate in her
companion of the moment which had so nearly witnessed
her undoing. Ox-eyed Hugh Woodgate saw nothing
inexplicable in Mrs. Steel’s behavior upon her
introduction to Sir Baldwin Gibson, and anything he
did see he attributed to an inconvenient sense of
that dignitary’s greatness. He did not think
the matter worth mentioning to his wife, when the
Steels had dropped them at the Vicarage gate, after
a pleasant but somewhat silent drive. Neither
did Rachel see fit to speak of it to her husband.
There was a certain unworthy satisfaction in her keeping
something from him. But again she underrated
his uncanny powers of observation, and yet again he
turned the tables upon her by a sudden display of
the very knowledge which she was painfully keeping
to herself.
“Of course you recognized the
judge?” said Steel, following his wife for once
into her own apartments, where he immediately shut
a door behind him and another in front of Rachel,
who stood at bay before the glitter in his eyes.
“Of course,” she admitted, with irritating
nonchalance.
“And he you?”
“I thought he did at first; afterwards I was
not so sure.”
“But I am!” exclaimed Steel through his
teeth.
Rachel’s face was a mixture of surprise and
incredulity.
“How can you know?” she
asked coldly. “You were at least a hundred
yards away at the time, for I saw you with Morna Woodgate.”
“And do you think my sight is
not good for a hundred yards,” retorted Steel,
“when you are at the end of them? I saw
the whole thing-his confusion and yours-but
then I did not know who he was. He must have
been in the house when we arrived; otherwise I should
have taken good care that you never met. I saw
enough, however, to bring me up in time to see and
hear more. I heard the way he was talking to you
then; that was his damned good-nature, and he has
us at his mercy all the same.”
Rachel had never seen her husband
in such a passion; indeed, she had never before known
him in a state of mind to justify the use of such a
word. He was paler than his wont, his eyes brighter,
his lips more bloodless. Rachel experienced a
strange sense of advantage, at once unprecedented
and unforeseen, and with it an irresistible temptation
to the sort of revenge which she knew to be petty
at the time. But he had made her suffer; for
once it was her turn. He could be cold as ice
when she was not, could deny her his confidence when
she all but fell upon her knees before him; he should
learn what it was to be treated as he had treated
her.
“I’m well aware of it,”
said Rachel, with a harsh, dry laugh, “though
in point of fact I don’t for a moment believe
that he’ll give me away. But really I don’t
think it matters if he does.”
Steel stared; it was wonderful to her to see his face.
“It doesn’t matter?” he repeated
in angry astonishment.
“Not to me,” rejoined
Rachel, bitterly. “You tell me nothing.
What can matter to me? When you can tell me why
you felt compelled to marry me-when you
have the courage to tell me that-other things
may begin to matter again!”
Steel stared harder than before; he
did not flinch, but his eyes seemed to hedge together
as he stared, and the glittering light in them to
concentrate in one baleful gleam. Yet it was not
a cruel look; it was the look of a man who has sealed
his lips upon one point for ever, and who views any
questioning on that point as an attempt upon his treasury.
There was more of self-defence than of actual hostility
in the compressed lips, the bloodless face, the glaring
eyes. Then, with a shrug, the look, the resentment,
and the passion were shaken off, and Steel stepped
briskly to the inner door, which he had shut in Rachel’s
path. Opening it, he bowed her through with a
ceremony conspicuous even in their ceremonious relations.
But Rachel nursed her contrariety,
even to the extent of a perverse satisfaction at her
encounter with the judge, and a fierce enjoyment of
its still possible consequences. The mood was
neither logical nor generous, and yet it was human
enough in the actual circumstances of the case.
At last she had made him feel! It had taken her
the better part of a year, but here at last was something
that he really felt. And it had to do with her;
it was impending disaster to herself which had brought
about this change in her husband; she knew him too
well not to acquit him of purely selfish solicitude
for his own good name and comfortable status in a
society for which he had no real regard. There
was never a man less dependent upon the good opinion
of other men. In absolute independence of character,
as in sheer strength of personality, Steel stood by
himself in the estimation of his wife. But he
had deceived her unnecessarily for weeks and months.
He had lied to her. He had refused her his whole
confidence when she begged him for it, and when he
knew how he could trust her. There was some deep
mystery underlying their marriage, he could not deny
it, yet he would not tell her what it was.
He had made her suffer needless pain;
it was his turn. And yet, with all her resentment
against him, and all her grim savoring of the scandal
which he seemed to fear so much, there ran a golden
thread of unacknowledged contentment in the conviction
that those fears were all for her.
Outwardly she was callous to the last
degree, reckless as on the day she made this marriage,
and as light-hearted as it was possible to appear;
but the excitement of the coming dinner-party was no
small help to Rachel in the maintenance of this attitude.
It was to be a very large dinner-party, and Rachel’s
first in her own house; in any case she must have
been upon her mettle. Two dozen had accepted.
The Upthorpe party was coming in force; if anybody
knew anything, it would be Mrs. Venables. What
would she do or say? Mrs. Venables was capable
of doing or of saying anything. And what might
not happen before the day was out?
It was a stimulating situation for
one so curiously compact of courage and of nerves
as the present mistress of Normanthorpe House; and
for once she really was mistress, inspecting the silver
with her own eyes, arranging the flowers with her
own hands, and, what was more difficult, the order
in which the people were to sit. She was thus
engaged, in her own sanctum, when Mrs. Venables did
the one thing which Rachel had not dreamt of her doing.
She called at three in the afternoon,
and sent her name upstairs.
Rachel’s heart made itself felt;
but she was not afraid. Something was coming
earlier than she had thought; she was chiefly curious
to know what. Her first impulse was to have Mrs.
Venables brought upstairs, and to invoke her aid in
the arrangement of the table before that lady could
open fire. Rachel disliked the great cold drawing-room,
and felt that she must be at a disadvantage in any
interview there. On the other hand, if this was
a hostile visit, the visitor could not be treated with
too much consideration. And so the servant was
dismissed with word that her mistress would not be
a moment; nor was Rachel very many. She glanced
in a glass, but that was all; she might have been
tidier, but not easily more animated, confident, and
alert. She had reached the landing when she returned
and collected all the cards which she had been trying
to arrange; they made quite a pack; and Rachel laughed
as she took them downstairs with her.
Mrs. Venables sat in solitary stiffness
on the highest chair she had been able to find; neither
Sybil nor Vera was in attendance; a tableful of light
literature was at her elbow, but Mrs. Venables sat
with folded hands.
“This is too good of you!”
cried Rachel, greeting her in a manner redeemed from
hypocrisy by a touch of irresistible irony. “You
know my inexperience, and you have come to tell me
things, have you not? You could not have come
at a better time. How do you fit in twenty-six
people at one table? I wanted to have two at each
end, and it can’t be done!”
Mrs. Venables suppressed a smile suggestive
of some unconscious humor in these remarks, but sat
more upright than ever in her chair, with a hard light
in the bright brown eyes that stared serenely into
Rachel’s own.
“I cannot say I came to offer
you my assistance, Mrs. Steel. I only take liberties
with very intimate friends.”
“Then I wonder what can have brought you!”
And Rachel returned both the smile
and the stare with irritating self-control.
“I will tell you,” said
Mrs. Venables, weightily. “There is a certain
thing being said of you, Mrs. Steel; and I wish to
know from your own lips whether there is any truth
in it or none.”
Rachel held up her hands as quick as thought.
“My dear Mrs. Venables, you
can’t mean that you are bringing me a piece
of unpleasant gossip on the very afternoon of my first
dinner-party?”
“It remains with you,”
said Mrs. Venables, changing color at this hit, “to
say whether it is mere gossip or not. You must
know, Mrs. Steel, though we were all quite charmed
with your husband from the moment he came among us,
we none of us had the least idea where he came from
nor have we yet.”
“You are speaking for the neighborhood?”
inquired Rachel, sweetly.
“I am,” said Mrs. Venables.
“Town and county,”
murmured Rachel. “And you mean that nobody
in the district knew anything at all about my husband?”
“Not a thing,” said Mrs. Venables.
“And yet you called on him;
and yet you took pity on him, poor lonely bachelor
that he was!”
This shaft also left its momentary
mark upon the visitor’s complexion. “The
same applies to you,” she went on the more severely.
“We had no idea who you were, either!”
“And now?” said Rachel,
still mistress of the situation, for she knew so well
what was coming.
“And now we hear, and I wish
to know whether it is true or not. Were you,
or were you not, the Mrs. Minchin who was tried last
winter for her husband’s murder?”
Rachel looked steadily into the hard
brown eyes, until a certain hardness came into her
own.
“I don’t quite know what
right you think you have to ask me such a question,
Mrs. Venables. Is it the usual thing to question
people who have made a second marriage-supposing
I am one-about their first? I fancied
myself that it was considered bad form; but then I
am still very ignorant of the manners and customs
in this part of the world. Since you ask it,
however, you shall have your answer.” And
Rachel’s voice rang out through the room, as
she rose majestically from the chair which she had
drawn opposite that of the visitor. “Yes,
Mrs. Venables, I am that unhappy woman. And what
then?”
“No wonder you were silent about
yourself,” said Mrs. Venables, in a vindictive
murmur. “No wonder we never even heard-”
“And what then?” repeated
Rachel, with a quiet and compelling scorn. “Does
it put one outside the local pale to keep to oneself
any painful incident in one’s own career?
Is an accusation down here the same thing as a conviction?
Is there nothing to choose between ‘guilty’
and ’not guilty’?”
“You must be aware,” proceeded
Mrs. Venables, without taking any notice of these
questions-“indeed, you cannot fail
to be perfectly well aware-that a large
proportion of the public was dissatisfied with the
verdict in your case.”
“Your husband, for one!”
Rachel agreed, with a scornful laugh. “He
would have come to see me hanged; he told me so at
his own table.”
“You never would have been at
his table,” retorted Mrs. Venables, with some
effect, “if he or I had dreamt who you were;
but now that we know, you may be quite sure that none
of us will sit at yours.”
And Mrs. Venables rose up in all her
might and spite, her brown eyes flashing, her handsome
head thrown back.
“Are you still speaking for
the district?” inquired Rachel, conquering a
recreant lip to put the question, and putting it with
her finest scorn.
“I am speaking for Mr. Venables,
my daughters, and myself,” rejoined the lady
with great dignity; “others will speak for themselves;
and you will soon learn in what light you are regarded
by ordinary people. It is a merciful chance that
we have found you out-a merciful chance!
That you should dare-you, about whom there
are not two opinions among sensible people-that
you should dare to come among us as you have done and
to speak to me as you have spoken! But one thing
is certain-it is for the last time.”
With that Mrs. Venables sailed to
the door by which she was to make her triumphant exit,
but she stopped before reaching it. Steel stood
before her on the threshold, and as he stood he closed
the door behind him, and as he closed it he turned
and took out the key. There was the other door
that led through the conservatory into the garden.
Without a word he crossed the room, shut that door
also, locked it, and put the two keys in his pocket.
Then at last he turned to the imprisoned lady.
“You are quite right, Mrs. Venables.
It is the last conversation we are likely to have
together. The greater the pity to cut it short!”
“Will you have the goodness
to let me go?” the visitor demanded, white and
trembling, but not yet unimpressive in her tremendous
indignation.
“With the greatest alacrity,”
replied Steel, “when you have apologized to
my wife.”
Rachel stood by without a word.
“For what?” cried Mrs.
Venables. “For telling her what the whole
world thinks of her? Never; and you will unlock
that door this instant, unless you wish my husband
to-to-horsewhip you within an
inch of your life!”
Steel merely smiled; he could well
afford to do so, lithe and supple as he still was,
with flabby Mr. Venables in his mind’s eye.
“I might have known what to
expect in this house,” continued Mrs. Venables,
in a voice hoarse with suppressed passion, “what
unmanly and ungentlemanly behavior, what cowardly
insults! I might have known!”
And she glanced from the windows to the bells.
“It is no use ringing,”
said Steel, with a shake of his snowy head, “or
doing anything else of the sort. I am the only
person on the premises who can let you out; your footman
could not get in if he tried; but if you like I shall
shout to him to try. As for insults, you have
insulted my wife most cruelly and gratuitously, for
I happen to have heard more than you evidently imagine.
In fact, ‘insult’ is hardly the word for
what even I have heard you say; let me warn you, madam,
that you have sailed pretty close to the wind already
in the way of indictable slander. You seem to
forget that my wife was tried and acquitted by twelve
of her fellow-countrymen. You will at least apologize
for that forgetfulness before you leave this room.”
“Never!”
Steel looked at his watch and sat
down. “I begin to fear you are no judge
of character, Mrs. Venables; otherwise you would have
seen ere this which of us will have to give in sooner
or later. I can only tell you which of us never
will!”
And Rachel still stood by without a word.