“Oh, depend upon it,”
said Mrs. Tenterden, in her heavy, consequential way,
“there’s more behind than we shall
ever know! ‘Unsound mind,’ indeed
She was no more of unsound mind than I am!”
It was after church, and Mrs. Mumbray,
alone this morning, had offered the heavy lady a place
in her brougham. The whole congregation had but
one topic as they streamed into the unconsecrated daylight.
Never was such eagerness for the strains of the voluntary
which allowed them to start up from attitudes of profound
meditation, and look round for their acquaintances.
Yesterday’s paper the Polterham
Examiner unfortunately reported the
inquest, and people had to make the most of those
meagre paragraphs until the Mercury
came out, when fuller and less considerate details
might be hoped for. The whispering, the nodding,
the screwing up of lips, the portentous frowning and
the shaking of heads no such excitement
was on record!
“To me,” remarked Mrs.
Mumbray, with an air of great responsibility, “the
mystery is too plain. I don’t hint at the
worst it would be uncharitable but
the poor creature had undoubtedly made some discovery
in that woman’s house which drove her to despair.”
Mrs. Tenterden gave a start.
“You really think so? That
has occurred to me. Mrs. Wade’s fainting
when she gave her evidence oh dear, oh dear!
I’m afraid there can be only one explanation.”
“That is our honourable
member, my dear!” threw out Mrs. Mumbray.
“These are Radical principles in man
and woman. Why, I am told that scarcely a day
passed without Mrs. Wade calling at the house.”
“And they tell me that he was frequently
at hers!”
“That poor young wife!
Oh, it is shameful! The matter oughtn’t
to end here. Something ought to be done.
If that man is allowed to keep his seat”
Many were the conjectures put forward
and discussed throughout the day, but this of Mrs.
Mumbray’s started of course in several
quarters found readiest acceptance in Conservative
circles. Mrs. Wade was obviously the cause of
what had happened no wonder she fainted
at the inquest; no wonder she hid herself in her cottage!
When she ventured to come out, virtuous Polterham
would let her know its mind. Quarrier shared
in the condemnation, but not even political animosity
dealt so severely with him as social opinion did with
Mrs. Wade.
Mr. Chown who would on
no account have been seen in a place of worship went
about all day among his congenial gossips, and scornfully
contested the rumour that Quarrier’s relations
with Mrs. Wade would not bear looking into. At
the house of Mr. Murgatroyd, the Radical dentist,
he found two or three friends who were very anxious
not to think evil of their victorious leader, but
felt wholly at a loss for satisfactory explanations.
Mr. Vawdrey, the coal-merchant, talked with gruff
discontent.
“I don’t believe there’s
been anything wrong; I couldn’t think it neither
of him nor her. But I do say it’s a lesson
to you men who go in for Female Suffrage. Now,
this is just the kind of thing that ’ud always
be happening. If there isn’t wrong-doing,
there’ll be wrong-speaking. Women have
no business in politics, that’s the plain moral
of it. Let them keep at home and do their duty.”
“Humbug!” cried Mr. Chown,
who cared little for the graces of dialogue.
“A political principle is not to be at the mercy
of party scandal. I, for my part, have never
maintained that women were ripe for public duties
but Radicalism involves the certainty that they some
day will be. The fact of the matter is that Mrs.
Quarrier was a woman of unusually feeble physique.
We all know those of us, at all events,
who keep up with the science of the day that
the mind is entirely dependent upon the body entirely!”
He looked round, daring his friends to contradict
this. “Mrs. Quarrier had overtaxed her strength,
and it’s just possible I say its
just possible that her husband was not very
prudent in sending her for necessary repose to the
house of a woman so active-minded and so excitable
as Mrs. Wade We must remember the peculiar state of
her health. As far as I am concerned, Dr.
Jenkins’s evidence is final, and entirely satisfactory.
As for the dirty calumnies of dirty-minded reactionists,
I am not the man to give ear to them!”
One man there was who might have been
expected to credit such charges, yet surprised his
acquaintances by what seemed an unwonted exercise of
charity. Mr. Scatchard Vialls, hitherto active
in defamation of Quarrier, with amiable inconsistency
refused to believe him guilty of conduct which had
driven his wife to suicide. It was some days before
the rumour reached his ears. Since the passage
of arms with Serena, he had held aloof from Mrs. Mumbray’s
drawing-room, and his personality did not invite the
confidence of ordinary scandal-mongers. When at
length his curate hinted to him what was being said,
he had so clearly formulated his own theory of Mrs.
Quarrier’s death that only the strongest evidence
would have led him to reconsider it. Obstinacy
and intellectual conceit forbade him to indulge his
disposition to paint an enemy’s character in
the darkest colours.
“No, Mr. Blenkinsop,”
he replied to the submissive curate, standing on his
hearth-rug at full height and regarding the cornice
as his habit was when he began to monologize “no,
I find it impossible to entertain such an accusation.
I have little reason to think well of Mr. Quarrier;
he is intemperate, in many senses of the word, and
intemperance, it is true, connects closely with the
most odious crimes. But in this case censure
has been too quick to interpret suspicious circumstances suspicious,
I admit. Far be it from me to speak in defence
of such a person as Mrs. Wade; I think she is a source
of incalculable harm to all who are on friendly terms
with her especially young and impressionable
women; but you must trust my judgment in this instance:
I am convinced she is not guilty. Her agitation
in the coroner’s court has no special significance.
No; the solution of the mystery is not so simple;
it involves wider issues calls for a more
profound interpretation of character and motives.
Mrs. Quarrier pray attend to this, Mr.
Blenkinsop represents a type of woman becoming,
I have reason to think, only too common in our time,
women who cultivate the intellect at the expense of
the moral nature, who abandon religion and think they
have found a substitute for it in the so-called humanitarianism
of the day. Strong-minded women, you will hear
them called; in truth, they are the weakest of their
sex. Let their energies be submitted to any unusual
strain, let their nerves (they are always morbid)
be overwrought, and they snap!” He illustrated
the catastrophe with his hands. “Unaided
by religion, the female nature is irresponsible, unaccountable.”
Mr. Vialls had been severe of late in his judgment
of women. “Mrs. Quarrier, poor creature,
was the victim of immoderate zeal for worldly ends.
She was abetted by her husband and by Mrs. Wade; they
excited her to the point of frenzy, and in the last
moment she snapped! Mrs. Wade’s
hysterical display is but another illustration of
the same thing. These women have no support outside
themselves they have deliberately cast away
everything of the kind.”
“Let me exhibit my meaning from
another point of view. Consider, Mr. Blenkinsop”
Quarrier, in the meantime, was very
far from suspecting the accusation which hostile ingenuity
had brought against him. Decency would in any
case have necessitated his withdrawal for the present
from public affairs, and, in truth, he was stricken
down by his calamity. The Liversedges had brought
him to their house; he transacted no business, and
saw no one beyond the family circle. At the funeral
people had thought him strangely unmoved; pride forbade
him to make an exhibition of grief, but in secret
he suffered as only a strong man can. His love
for Lilian was the deepest his life would know.
Till now, he had not understood how unspeakably precious
she was to him; for the most part he had treated her
with playful good-humour, seldom, if ever, striking
the note of passion in his speech. With this defect
he reproached himself. Lilian had not learnt
to trust him sufficiently; she feared the result upon
him of such a blow as Northway had it in his power
to inflict. It was thus he interpreted her suicide,
for Mrs. Wade had told him that Lilian believed disaster
to be imminent. Surely he was to blame for it
that, at such a pass, she had fled away from
him instead of hastening to his side. How perfectly
had their characters harmonized! He could recall
no moment of mutual dissatisfaction, and that in spite
of conditions which, with most women, would have made
life very difficult. He revered her purity; her
intellect he esteemed far subtler and nobler than
his own. With such a woman for companion, he
might have done great things; robbed for ever of her
beloved presence, he felt lame, purposeless, indifferent
to all but the irrecoverable past.
In a day or two he was to leave Polterham.
Whether Northway would be satisfied with the result
of his machinations remained to be seen; as yet nothing
more had been heard of him. The fellow was perhaps
capable of demanding more hush-money, of threatening
the memory of the woman he had killed. Quarrier
hoped more earnestly than ever that the secret would
not be betrayed; he scorned vulgar opinion, so far
as it affected himself, but could not bear the thought
of Lilian’s grave being defiled by curiosity
and reprobation. The public proceedings had brought
to light nothing whatever that seemed in conflict
with medical evidence and the finding of the coroner’s
jury. One dangerous witness had necessarily come
forward Mrs. Wade’s servant; but the
girl made no kind of allusion to Northway’s
visit didn’t, in her own mind, connect
it with Mrs. Quarrier’s behaviour. She was
merely asked to describe in what way the unfortunate
lady had left the house. In Glazzard and Mrs.
Wade, Denzil of course reposed perfect confidence.
Northway, if need were, could and should be bought
off.
Toby Liversedge got wind of the scandal
in circulation, and his rage knew no bounds.
Lest his wife should somehow make the discovery, he
felt obliged to speak to her representing
the change in its mildest form.
“There’s a vile story
going about that Lilian was jealous of Mrs. Wade’s
influence with Denzil; that the two quarrelled that
day at the cottage, and the poor girl drowned herself
in despair.”
Mary looked shocked, but was silent.
“I suppose,” added her
husband, “we must be prepared for all sorts of
rumours. The thing is unintelligible to people
in general. Any one who knew her, and saw her
those last days, can understand it only too well.”
“Yes,” murmured Mrs. Liversedge,
with sad thought fulness.
She would not speak further on the
subject, and Toby concluded that the mere suggestion
gave her offence.
On the day after Denzil departed,
leaving by a night train for London.
He was in town for a week, then took
a voyage to Madeira, where he remained until there
was only time enough to get back for the opening of
Parliament. The natural plea of shaken health
excused him to his constituents, many of whom favoured
him with their unsolicited correspondence. (He had
three or four long letters from Mr. Chown, who thought
it necessary to keep the borough member posted in the
course of English politics.) From Glazzard he heard
twice, with cheerful news. “How it happened,”
he had written to his newly-married friend, in telling
of Lilian’s death, “I will explain some
day; I cannot speak of it yet.” Glazzard’s
response was full of manly sympathy. “I
don’t pretend,” wrote the connoisseur,
“that I am ideally mated, but my wife is a good
girl, and I understand enough of happiness in marriage
to appreciate to the full how terrible is your loss.
Let confidences be for the future; if they do not
come naturally, be assured I shall never pain you
by a question.”
Denzil’s book had now been for
several weeks before the public; it would evidently
excite little attention. “A capital present
for a schoolboy,” was one of the best things
the critics had yet found to say of it. He suffered
disappointment, but did not seriously resent the world’s
indifference. Honestly speaking, was the book
worth much? The writing had at first amused him;
in the end it had grown a task. Literature was
not his field.
Back, then, to politics! There
he knew his force. He was looking to the first
taste of Parliament with decided eagerness.
In Madeira he chanced to make acquaintance
with an oldish man who had been in Parliament for
a good many years; a Radical, an idealist, sore beset
with physical ailments. This gentleman found pleasure
in Denzil’s society, talked politics to him
with contagious fervour, and greatly aided the natural
process whereby Quarrier was recovering his interest
in the career before him.
“My misfortune is,” Denzil
one day confided to this friend, “that I detest
the town and the people that have elected me.”
“Indeed?” returned the
other, with a laugh. “Then lay yourself
out to become my successor at when
a general election comes round again. I hope
to live out this Parliament, but sha’n’t
try for another.”
About the same time he had a letter
from Mrs. Wade, now in London, wherein, oddly enough,
was a passage running thus:
“You say that the thought of
representing Polterham spoils your pleasure in looking
forward to a political life. Statesmen (and you
will become one) have to be trained to bear many disagreeable
things. But you are not bound to Polterham for
ever the gods forbid! Serve them in
this Parliament, and in the meantime try to find another
borough.”
It was his second letter from Mrs.
Wade; the first had been a mere note, asking if he
could bear to hear from her, and if he would let her
know of his health. He replied rather formally,
considering the terms on which they stood; and, indeed,
it did not gratify him much to be assured of the widow’s
constant friendship.