The rose-covered cottage of Charles
Langholm’s dreams, which could not have come
true in a more charming particular, stood on a wooded
hill at the back of a village some three miles from
Normanthorpe. It was one of two cottages under
the same tiled roof, and in the other there lived an
admirable couple who supplied all material wants of
the simple life which the novelist led when at work.
In his idle intervals the place knew him not; a nomadic
tendency was given free play, and the man was a wanderer
on the face of Europe. But he wandered less than
he had done from London, finding, in his remote but
fragrant corner of the earth, that peace which twenty
years of a strenuous manhood had taught him to value
more than downright happiness.
Its roses were not the only merit
of this ideal retreat, though in the summer months
they made it difficult for one with eyes and nostrils
to appreciate the others. There was a delightful
room running right through the cottage; and it was
here that Langholm worked, ate, smoked, read, and
had his daily being; his bath was in the room adjoining,
and his bed in another adjoining that. Of the
upper floor he made no use; it was filled with the
neglected furniture of a more substantial establishment,
and Langholm seldom so much as set foot upon the stairs.
The lower rooms were very simply furnished. There
was a really old oak bureau, and some solid, comfortable
chairs. The pictures were chiefly photographs
of other writers. There were better pictures
deep in dust upstairs.
An artist in temperament, if not in
attainment, Langholm had of late years found the ups
and downs of his own work supply all the excitement
that was necessary to his life; it was only when the
work was done that his solitude had oppressed him;
but neither the one nor the other had been the case
of late weeks. His new book had been written under
the spur of an external stimulus; it had not written
itself, like all the more reputable members of the
large but short-lived family to which it belonged.
Langholm had not felt lonely in the breathing spaces
between the later chapters. On the contrary,
he would walk up and down among his roses with the
animated face of one on the happy heights of intercourse
with a kindred spirit, when in reality he was quite
alone. But the man wrote novels, and withal believed
in them at the time of writing. It was true that
on one occasion, when the Steels came to tea, the novelist
walked his garden with the self-same radiant face with
which he had lately taken to walking it alone; but
that also was natural enough.
The change came on the very day he
finished his book, when Langholm made himself presentable
and rode off to the garden-party at Hornby Manor in
spirits worthy of the occasion. About seven of
the same evening he dismounted heavily in the by-lane
outside the cottage, and pushed his machine through
the wicket, a different man. A detail declared
his depression to the woman next door, who was preparing
him a more substantial meal than Langholm ever thought
of ordering for himself: he went straight through
to his roses without changing his party coat for the
out-at-elbow Norfolk jacket in which he had spent that
summer and the last.
The garden behind the two cottages
was all Langholm’s. The whole thing, levelled,
would not have made a single lawn-tennis court, nor
yet a practice pitch of proper length. Yet this
little garden contained almost everything that a garden
need have. There were tall pines among the timber
to one side, and through these set the sun, so that
on the hottest days the garden was in sufficient shadow
by the time the morning’s work was done.
There was a little grass-plot, large enough for a
basket-chair and a rug. There was a hedge of Penzance
sweet-brier opposite the backdoor and the window at
which Langholm wrote, and yet this hedge broke down
in the very nick and place to give the lucky writer
a long glimpse across a green valley, with dim woods
upon the opposite hill. And then there were the
roses, planted by the last cottager-a retired
gardener-a greater artist than his successor-a
man who knew what roses were!
Over the house clambered a William
Allen Richardson and two Gloires de Dijon,
these last a-blowing, the first still resting from
a profuse yield in June; in the southeast corner,
a Crimson Rambler was at its ripe red height; and
Caroline Testout, Margaret Dickson, La France, Madame
Lambard, and Madame Cochet, blushed from pale pink
to richest red, or remained coldly but beautifully
white, at the foot of the Penzance briers. Langholm
had not known one rose from another when he came to
live among this galaxy; now they were his separate,
familiar, individual friends, each with its own character
in his eyes, its own charm for him; and the man’s
soul was the sweeter for each summer spent in their
midst. But to-night they called to closed nostrils
and blind eyes. And the evening sun, reddening
the upper stems of the pines, and warming the mellow
tiles of his dear cottage, had no more to say to Langholm’s
spirit than his beloved roses.
The man had emerged from the dreamy,
artistic, aesthetic existence into which he had drifted
through living alone amid so much simple beauty; he
was in real, human, haunting trouble, and the manlier
man for it already.
Could he be mistaken after all?
No; the more he pondered, the more convinced he felt.
Everything pointed to the same conclusion, beginning
with that first dinner-party at Upthorpe, and that
first conversation of which he remembered every word.
Mrs. Steel was Mrs. Minchin-the notorious
Mrs. Minchin-the Mrs. Minchin who had been
tried for her husband’s murder, and acquitted
to the horror of a righteous world.
And he had been going to write a book
about her, and it was she herself who had given him
the idea!
But was it? There had been much
light talk about Mrs. Steel’s novel, and the
plot that Mrs. Steel had given Langholm, but that view
of the matter had been more of a standing joke than
an intellectual bond between them. It was strange
to think of it in the former light to-night.
Langholm recalled more than one conversation
upon the same subject. It had had a fascination
for Rachel, which somehow he was sorry to remember
now. Then he recollected the one end to all these
conversations, and his momentary regret was swept
away by a rush of sympathy which it did him good to
feel. They had ended invariably in her obtaining
from him, on one cunning pretext or another, a fresh
assurance of his belief in Mrs. Minchin’s innocence.
Langholm radiated among his roses as his memory convinced
him of this. Rachel had not talked about her case
and his plot for the morbid excitement of discussing
herself with another, but for the solid and wholesome
satisfaction of hearing yet again that the other disbelieved
in her guilt.
And did he not? Langholm stood
still in the scented dusk as he asked his heart of
hearts the point-blank question. And it was a
crisper step that he resumed, with a face more radiant
than before.
Yes, analytical as he was, there at
least he was satisfied with himself. Thank God,
he had always been of one opinion on that one point;
that he had made up his mind about her long before
he knew the whilom Mrs. Minchin in the flesh, and
had let her know which way almost as long before the
secret of her identity could possibly have dawned upon
him. Now, if the worst came to the worst, his
sincerity at least could not be questioned. Others
might pretend, others again be unconsciously prejudiced
in favor of their friend; he at least was above either
suspicion. Had he not argued her case with Mrs.
Venables at the time, and had he not told her so on
the very evening that they met?
Certainly Langholm felt in a strong
position, if ever the worst came to the worst; it
illustrated a little weakness, however, that he himself
foresaw no such immediate eventuality. There had
been a very brief encounter between two persons at
a garden-party, and a yet more brief confusion upon
either side. Of all this there existed but half-a-dozen
witnesses, at the outside, and Langholm did not credit
the other five with his own trained insight and powers
of observation; he furthermore reflected that those
others, even if as close observers as himself, could
not possibly have put two and two together as he had
done. And this was sound; but Langholm had a
fatal knack of overlooking the lady whom he had taken
in to dinner at Upthorpe Hall, and scarcely noticed
at Hornby Manor. Cocksure as he himself was of
the significance of that which he had seen with his
own eyes, the observer flattered himself that he was
the only real one present; remembered the special knowledge
which he had to assist his vision; and relied properly
enough upon the silence of Sir Baldwin Gibson.
The greater the secret, however, the
more piquant the situation for one who was in it;
and there were moments of a sleepless night in which
Langholm found nothing new to regret. But he was
in a quandary none the less. He could scarcely
meet Mrs. Steel again without a word about the prospective
story, which they had so often discussed together,
and upon which he was at last free to embark; nor
could he touch upon that theme without disclosing
the new knowledge which would burn him until he did.
Charles Langholm and Rachel Steel had two or three
qualities in common: an utter inability to pretend
was one, if you do not happen to think it a defect.
As a rule when he had finished a rapid
bit of writing, Langholm sat down to correct, and
a depressing task his spent brain always found it;
but for once he let it beat him altogether. After
a morning’s tussle with one unfortunate chapter,
the desperate author sent off the rest in their sins,
and rode his bicycle to abolish thought. But that
mild pastime fell lamentably short of its usual efficacy.
It was not one of his heroines who was worrying the
novelist, but a real woman whom he liked and her husband
whom he did not. The husband it was who had finished
matters by entering the field of speculation during
the morning’s work. It may he confessed
that Langholm had not by any means disliked him the
year before.
What was the secret of this second
marriage on the part of one who had been so recently
and so miserably married? Was it love? Langholm
would not admit it for a moment. Steel did not
love his wife, and there was certainly nothing to
love in Steel. Langholm had begun almost to hate
him; he told himself it was because Steel did not even
pretend to love his wife, but let strangers see the
abnormal terms on which they lived.
What, then, was the explanation-the
history-the excuse? They were supposed
to have married on the Continent; that was one of the
few statements vouchsafed by Steel, and he happened
to have made it in the first instance to Langholm
himself. Was there any truth in it? And did
Steel know the truth concerning his wife?
Your imaginative man is ever quick
to form a theory based upon facts of his own involuntary
invention. Langholm formed numerous theories and
invented innumerable facts during the four-and-twenty
hours of his present separation from the heroine and
the villain of these romances. The likeliest
of the lot was the idea that the pair had really met
abroad, at some out-of-the-way place, where Rachel
had been in hiding from the world, and that in her
despair of receiving common justice from her kind,
she had accepted the rich man without telling him who
she was. His subsequent enlightenment was Langholm’s
explanation of Steel’s coldness towards his
wife.
He wondered if it was the kind of
coldness that would ever be removed; if Steel believed
her guilty, it never would. Langholm would not
have admitted it, was not even aware of it in his
own introspective mind, but he almost hoped that Steel
was not thoroughly convinced of his wife’s innocence.
The night of the dinner-party was
so fine and the roads so clean that Langholm went
off on his bicycle once more, making an incongruous
figure in his dress-suit, but pedalling sedately to
keep cool. Fortune, however, was against him,
for they had begun clipping those northern hedgerows,
and an ominous bumping upon a perfectly flat road led
to the discovery of a puncture a long mile from Normanthorpe.
Thence onward the unhappy cyclist had to choose between
running beside his machine and riding on the rims,
and between the two expedients arrived at last both
very hot and rather late. But he thought he must
be very late; for he neither met, followed, nor was
followed by any vehicle whatsoever in the drive; and
the door did not open before Langholm rang, as it does
when they are still waiting for one. Then the
house seemed strangely silent when the door did open,
and the footman wore a curious expression as he ushered
the late comer into an empty drawing-room. Langholm
was now almost convinced that he had made some absurd
mistake, and the impression was not removed by the
entry of Steel with his napkin in one hand.
“I’ve mistaken the night!”
exclaimed the perspiring author.
“Not a bit of it,” replied
Steel; “only we thought you weren’t coming
at all.”
“Am I really so late as all that?”
And Langholm began to wish he had mistaken the night.
“No,” said Steel, “only
a very few minutes, and the sin is ours entirely.
But we thought you were staying away, like everybody
else.”
“Like-everybody-else?”
“My dear fellow,” said
Steel, smiling on the other’s bewilderment, “I
humbly apologize for having classed you for an instant
with the rank and file of our delightful neighbors;
for the fact is that all but two have made their excuses
at the last moment. The telegrams will delight
you, one of these days!”
“There was none from me,”
declared Langholm, as he began to perceive what had
happened.
“There was not; and my wife
was quite confident that you would come; so the fault
is altogether mine. Langholm, you were almost
at her heels when she was introduced to the old judge
yesterday?”
“I was.”
“Have you guessed who she was-before
she married me-or has anybody told you?”
“I have guessed.”
Steel stood silent for an instant,
his eyes resting in calm scrutiny upon the other,
his mouth as firm and fixed, his face fresh as a young
man’s, his hair like spun silver in the electric
light. Langholm looked upon the man who was looking
upon him, and he could not hate him as he would.
“And do you still desire to
dine with us?” inquired his host at last.
“I don’t want to be in
the way,” faltered Langholm, “on a painful-”
“Oh, never mind that!”
cried Steel. “Are you quite sure you don’t
want to cut our acquaintance?”
“You know I don’t,” said Langholm,
bluntly.
“Then come in, pray, and take us as we are.”
“One moment, Steel! All
this is inconceivable; do you mean to say that your
guests have thrown you over on account of-of-”
“My wife having been a certain
Mrs. Minchin before she changed her name to Steel!
Yes, every one of them, except our vicar and his wife,
who are real good friends.”
“I am another,” said Langholm through
his big mustache.
“The very servants are giving notice, one by
one!”
“I am her servant, too!”
muttered Langholm, as Steel stood aside to let him
pass out first; but this time it was through his teeth,
though from his heart, and the words were only audible
to himself.