It is with some reluctance that I
begin these chapters dealing with the most terrible
event in Jerry’s life, and for that matter the
most terrible experience in my own, for as the reader
of this history must now be aware, Jerry’s life
was mine. I had made him, molded him for good
or ill according to my own definite plan, by the results
of which I had professed myself willing to stand whatever
came. Had I known what these results were to
be, it would have been better if I had cast myself
into the sea than have come to Horsham Manor as Jerry’s
preceptor, the sponsor for old Benham’s theory.
But human wisdom is fallible, true virtue a dream.
Dust we are and to dust return, groveling meanwhile
as best we may, amid the wreck of our illusions.
It costs me something to admit the failure of the Great
Experiment, its horrible and tragic failure!
To lose a hand, an eye, a limb, to be withered by
disease, one can replace, repair, renew; but an ideal,
a system of philosophy, ingrained into one’s
very life! It is this that scars and withers
the soul.
I must go on, for, after all, it is
not my soul that matters, but Jerry’s.
It was quite an hour after Jerry disappeared before
I began to suspect that he had gone to Briar Hills.
The last I had seen of him was when he was on his
way up the stair to his own room. But when I
sought him there a short while afterward, I could not
find him, nor was he anywhere in the house. I
questioned the servants, telephoned the garage.
All the machines, including Jerry’s own roadster,
were in the building. I went out to question
the gardeners and found a man who had seen Jerry awhile
before, entering the path into the woods behind the
house. Mr. Benham was hatless, the fellow said,
and walked rapidly, his head bent. Even then
I did not suspect where he was going. I thought
that he had merely gone to “walk it off,”
a phrase we had for our own cure for the doldrums.
But as the moments passed and he did not return, I
took Jack into confidence, and expressed the fear
that he had gone to Briar Hills for a reckoning with
Marcia and Lloyd.
A worried look came into Jack’s
face, but he shrugged his shoulders.
“Let him. It’s time. We can’t
do anything.”
“We might try.”
“What?”
“Go there before damage is done, bring him home.”
“And make ourselves ridiculous.”
“Oh, that ! I don’t care.”
“Well, I do. You’ve
got to let this problem work itself out, Pope.
It’s gone too far. He’s on the brink
of disillusionment. Let it come, no matter how
or what.”
“But violence !”
“Let it come. Better a
violence which may cure than this quiet madness that
is eating his soul away.”
“But Lloyd! Jerry’s strength!
He might kill the brute.”
“Don’t fear. If the
man would fight Jerry might do him damage. But
he’ll run, Pope. You can’t kill a
bounder. The breed is resilient.”
“I’m afraid.”
“You needn’t be. This is the turning
point of his affair.”
“Perhaps. But in which way will it turn?”
“Wait.”
I was helpless. Against my own
judgment I did as he bade. We waited. We
sat upon the terrace for awhile with the ladies, Jack
reading aloud. Una made no comment upon Jerry’s
absence and gave no sign of her prescience of anything
unusual, except the frequent turning of her head toward
the house or toward the paths within the range of her
vision, as though she hoped every moment that Jerry
might appear. The shadows lengthened. Jack
challenged the girl to a game of tennis and even offered
to play in the double court against us both, but neither
of us was willing. I think she knew where Jerry
had gone and, like me, was frightened. It was
a miserable afternoon. As the dinner hour approached
the ladies retired to dress and I gave a sigh of relief.
In my anxious state of mind the burden of entertaining
them had weighed heavily upon me. It had occurred
to me that Una’s mother might have thought it
strange that Jerry should have left them so suddenly
without excuses, for he owed them an explanation at
least. I think some inkling of an unusual situation
had entered Mrs. Habberton’s mind, for when
dinner was nearly over and her host had not appeared,
she made a vague remark about a letter that had come
in the morning which might oblige her to curtail her
visit, a tactful anticipation of any situation which
might make their stay impossible. The evening
dragged hopelessly and the ladies retired early, while
at the foot of the stair I made some fatuous remark
about Jerry’s possibly having been summoned
to town. The “good-nights” were said
with an excess of cheerfulness on Una’s part
and my own which did nothing to conceal from either
of us the real nature of our anxiety.
Jack and I smoked in the library,
discussing every phase of the situation. The
coming of night without a word or a sign from the boy
had made us both a prey to the liveliest fears.
Something had happened to Jerry What?
He had been wild, determined. I could not forget
his look. It was the same expression I had seen
at Madison Square Garden when he had made his insensate
effort to knock Clancy out a narrow glitter
of the eyes, brute-keen and directed by a mind made
crafty by desperation. Weary of surmises, at
last we relapsed into silence, trying to read.
Jack at last dozed over his book and, unable longer
to remain seated, I got up, went outside and walked
around the house again and again. The garage
tempted me. Jerry’s machine was inside.
Unknown to Jack I would go myself to Briar Hills and
see Miss Gore. She would know.
There was a light in the window.
I turned the knob and entered. As I did so someone
stooping rose and faced me. It was Jerry, a terrible
figure, his clothes torn and covered with dirt, his
hair matted and hanging over his eyes, which gleamed
somberly out of dark circles. He had a wrench
in his hand. For a moment in my timidity and uncertainty
I thought him mad and about to strike me with it.
But he made no move toward me and only hung his head
like a whipped dog.
“You, Roger?”
“What has happened. Jerry?”
“Nothing. Don’t ask.”
“But Jack and I have been sitting up for you.
We’ve been worried.”
“I know. But it couldn’t
be helped. Just don’t ask me anything,
Roger.”
I was glad enough to have him safe
and apparently quite sane. I don’t know
why I should have considered his sanity at that moment
of peculiar importance unless because my own mind
had been all the afternoon and evening so colored
with the impression of his last appearance. I
had become so used to the sense of strain, of tension
in his condition of mind, that the quiet, rather submissive
tone of his voice affected me strangely. It seemed
almost as if the disease was passing, that his fever
was abated.
“I won’t ask you anything,
if you don’t like, but I think you’d better
come to the house and get a hot bath and to bed.”
He remained silent for a long moment.
“I’m not going to the house, Roger.
I’m going ”
He paused again.
“Going! Where?” I asked.
“I don’t know just yet. Away from
here, from New York at once.”
“But I can’t let you go without ”
He held up his hand and I paused.
“Don’t talk, Roger,”
he said quickly. “Don’t question and
don’t talk. It won’t do any good.
I had hoped I shouldn’t see you. I was
waiting waiting until the lights went out.”
“But I couldn’t.”
“Please!” he said quietly, and then went
on.
“I was going to get some things
and go during the night. Now you’ll have
to help me. Tell Christopher to pack a bag just
a clean suit and linen and bring it here And and
that’s all.” He held out his hand
with a sober smile. “Good-by, Roger,”
he finished.
“But I can’t let you go like this.”
“You’ve got to. Don’t
worry. I’m all right. I’m not
going to make a fool of myself or or
drink or anything. I’ve got to be alone to
do some thinking. I’ll write you.
Good-by.”
“But Una! What shall I say?”
“Una!” He turned away
and bent his head. “My God!” he said
and then repeated the words below his breath, almost
like a prayer, and then, turning, with a wild gesture,
“Tell her anything, Roger. Say I’m
all right but I can’t see her. Say I had
a telegram called West on a Railroad matter anything.
Now go.”
He caught me by the hand with a crushing
grip while he pushed me toward the door.
“You will not ?”
“I’m all right, quite.
Don’t fear for me. I’ll come back soon.
Now go, old chap. I’ll wait for Christopher
here. Hurry, please.”
He spoke kindly but sharply.
I could see that argument was of no avail. His
mind was made up and with Jerry that was final.
Whatever had happened and from his appearance
I suspected a soul-wrenching struggle he
was at least for the present physically safe and entirely
sane. But it was with serious misgivings that
I slipped past the somnolent Jack and upstairs to
Jerry’s room, where I found Christopher and
together we packed a bag, descending by the back stairs,
where I took the bag from Christopher’s hand
and sent him to bed.
In a moment I was in the garage with Jerry.
“Oh, you !” he frowned.
“Let me go with you at least as far as town,”
I pleaded.
“No,” gruffly. “No
one.” He threw the bag into the car and
clambered quickly in.
“Here, your cap,” I said,
handing it to him. Our fingers met. He grasped
mine until they pained me.
“Forgive me, Roger. I don’t
mean to be unkind. You’re too good to me.”
“Jerry, you fool!” I cried, my eyes wet.
He had started the machine and when
I opened the door he moved slowly out.
“Good-by, old Dry-as-dust,”
he called with a wave of the hand and a rather sinister
smile.
“For God’s sake no drink, Jerry!”
I whispered tensely.
“I promise,” he said solemnly. “Good-by!”
And while I watched, he swept noiselessly
around the drive and was soon lost in the blur of
the trees below.
I walked slowly toward the terrace
in the shadow of the trees, deep in bewilderment.
What should I say to Una? Half unconsciously I
glanced up at her window, the corner one over the
terrace. Something white stirred and I thought
I heard a sound, a faint sound, and then a strangling
hush.