<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XIV" id="CHAPTER_XIV"></SPAN>CHAPTER XIV</h2>
<p>When the bridesmaids entered it was a pale but firm face that greeted
them. "It was panic," said Conscience slowly. "If I hadn't decided
freely and fully and finally, I wouldn't have come this far. No one has
forced me.... He, Eben, is worth a dozen of me.... Please believe me,
never speak of this to anyone. It was sheer nerves and panic."</p>
<p>Of the wedding itself, Conscience had always a memory as confused and
unreal as that of a dream in which logical events go mad. Through many
faces, which at the moment seemed to be floating against black and
leering at her, she had the sense of moving without the action of her
muscles.... She saw the lion-like mane of her father's head and the
ecstasy of his eyes and a voice in her but not of her whispered: "Well,
I hope you're satisfied."... She was conscious of the heavy scent of
flowers which reminded her of a funeral.... One face stood out distinct
and seemed to be boring into her, reading secrets which, she felt
through a great dizziness, she ought not to let him fathom. It was the
face of Dr. Ebbett.... Then she heard a voice which sounded to her
unduly loud saying: "I do," and realized that it was her own. Later she
was reliably informed that she had appeared splendidly collected and
regally happy. This blurred focus of realization left her only when she
found herself in her own room and heard Mary Barrascale's voice
speaking.</p>
<p>"I've never seen a bride who was lovelier, or a groom who was happier,"
announced Mary exuberantly as she began lifting the white veil from the
dark hair. Then she added in afterthought:</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_130" id="Page_130"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Oh, by the way, I guess this is a message of congratulation or
something. One of the servants handed it to me a few minutes ago." She
drew from the bosom of her gown an envelope bearing the imprint of a
cable office.</p>
<p>As Conscience took the missive a sudden intuition hinted the contents
and the waxy white of her cheeks became a dead pallor. Very slowly she
tore the envelope and read Stuart's message frantically penned in Cairo
on the way to the Alexandria train.</p>
<blockquote><p>"Received no note from you. Wrote to you that night begging a
chance. Horrible mistake has occurred. Matter of life and death and
thousand times more than that, that you take no step till I see
you. Am sailing by first boat. Wait. Stuart."</p>
</blockquote>
<p>The bride's heart stopped dead, then pounded madly. Stuart had received
no note from her! Then he had not abandoned her. He still loved her and
from that instant, whenever she told herself she did not love him, she
must lie. Now she was Tollman's wife. It had almost come in time.
Perhaps it <i>had</i> come in time.</p>
<p>Conscience turned to the bridesmaid with a queer and unnatural ring in
her voice.</p>
<p>"Mary," she asked, "just exactly when did this message arrive?"</p>
<p>"It must have been immediately before the ceremony," the girl answered
with a puckered brow, striving for exactness. "One of the servants
handed it to me just as we started down the steps—of course, I couldn't
give it to you then."</p>
<p>"No," Conscience spoke as if her words came from a long distance and
again she caught her lower lip between her teeth. She had to do that to
keep from screaming or breaking into a bitter laugh. "No, of course, you
couldn't give it to me then, and yet—"<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_131" id="Page_131"></SPAN></span> She broke off and Eleanor
Kent's arms encircled her.</p>
<p>"Conscience, dear," she demanded, "was it anything you should have
known?"</p>
<p>Conscience straightened slowly and shook her head. She even forced a
stiff smile. "No," she lied with an effort of fulfilment for her first
wifely duty. "It was just what Mary thought. A message about my
marriage. I must write an answer."</p>
<p>Farquaharson, sitting in his stateroom, unfolded his cablegram with the
feeling of a defendant who sees the door of the jury-room swing open.</p>
<p>With a stunned sense of despair he read:</p>
<blockquote><p>"Don't hurry home to explain. It's too late for that. We will be
glad to see you when your trip ends.</p>
<p class="right">"<span class="smcap">Conscience Tollman</span>."</p>
</blockquote>
<p>Conscience Tollman! There was no longer a Conscience Williams then. He
could only realize that some hideous mistake had made absolute a
life-wrecking edict which—had he only known before—might, perhaps have
been set aside. Now it was irrevocable and his own blindness and a
stubbornness masquerading as pride were to blame.</p>
<p>Now she was the wife of Eben Tollman, the bigot whose narrowness would
cramp her life into a dreary torture. His imagination eddied in
bewildered wretchedness about that whirlpool of thought, bringing
transient impulses of madness and self-destruction.</p>
<p>The thought of her as the wife of any man except himself must have meant
to him a withering agony—but the idea of marital intimacy between
Conscience and Eben Tollman, seemed an unthinkable desecration at which
his flesh crawled. He vainly argued with himself that this was no sudden
loss which had struck his life barren, but one to which he had already
shaped his resignation. All that self-schooling had been swept away as
fiercely as fragments of drift in the freshet<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_132" id="Page_132"></SPAN></span> of news that came with
her letter. She had not exiled him but had asked him to return. She had
spoken of a bitterness born of disappointment, which she had conquered:
a bitterness for which he was responsible. Stark pictures shaped
themselves across his brooding: pictures of the gray life to which his
desertion had condemned her ... the gradually crushing tyranny of
weakness ... the final surrender. It had been a surrender after years of
siege, not because her courage had failed, but because she had waited in
vain for the reinforcement of his loyalty. This was what he had done
with his life and hers. For him there was an empty future: for her
marriage with a coldly selfish sensualist who called his greed piety.
Stuart Farquaharson sat in a chilled inertia of despair while the ship's
bells recorded the passing of hours. From the decks above drifted little
fragments of human talk and human laughter, but to him they were
meaningless. Late in the evening he rose with an effort and went on deck
where he sought out an unoccupied place. Phosphorescent gleams broke
luminously in the wake. Clusters of great stars and the bright dust of
star-spray sprinkled the sky, but whether he looked up or down Stuart
Farquaharson could see only the light of victorious surrender in the
eyes of the woman he loved, declaring her love for him. Now she was in
the arms of another man—a man who had cunningly and patiently
subordinated every lesser thing to his determination of possessing her.</p>
<p>The voice of impulse pleaded with him fiercely to go back and tax that
man, panoplied though he was in the sanction of society and the church,
with having won foully. Tollman would never kindle the fire that burned
deep and blue-flamed in his wife's nature. Her life with him would be
thirst and hunger. But Stuart's fever turned to chill again as he
remembered. He had forfeited his rights and stood foresworn. His vows
had<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_133" id="Page_133"></SPAN></span> been brave and his performance craven. He acknowledged with
self-scorn that his eagerness to break through Tollman's force of
possession went back to a motive more selfish than exalted. He was
driven by a personal craving to hold another man's wife in his arms. He
was tempted by the sense of insurmountable power which he knew he held
upon her thoughts, her love and her imagination.</p>
<p>This must be the persuasiveness of some devil's advocate which whispered
to him: "Go now! Despite all her stern allegiance to duty you can make
her come into your arms. This marriage is all a hideous mistake. The
bigots have trapped her with a bait of false martyrdom. Go while she is
still sickened with the first bitterness of this profanation of youth in
the custody of age." Then into this hot-blooded counsel crept the old,
cold voice of logic, like a calm speaker quieting the incendiary passion
of a mob.</p>
<p>It was her right to make the test unhampered, since—through his own
delinquency—it was too late to avoid the test.</p>
<p>Two courses lay open to him now that the past was sealed. He might
return to his own country, excusing himself on the shallow pretense that
he meant only to "stand by" in case she needed rescue from the
unendurable, or he might turn his face east and put between himself and
temptation as much of space as lies between Cape Cod and the Ganges.</p>
<p>The two alternatives were, roughly, those of passion and reason, yet
each was led by so many tributary problems that it was not easy to
disentangle the threads of their elements.</p>
<p>Stuart Farquaharson's inheritance of fighting blood brought a red
blindness which at times made the voice of reason seem contemptible and
pallid with cowardice.</p>
<p>Could Eben Tollman, whom he had always distrusted, have engineered the
thing?</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_134" id="Page_134"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>Stuart, pacing the deck, halted at the thought and his fevered temples
turned abruptly cold. His face set itself into malignant lines of
vengeance. If such a thing could be proven—as there was a God in
Heaven—Tollman was his to kill and he should die! He stood for a while,
his chest heaving with the agitation of his resolve—and then he smiled
grimly to himself. The calmer voice denounced him for a fool running
amuck with passion. These were thoughts suited to a homicidal half-wit.</p>
<p>How could Eben have achieved such an end? It was absurd to seek such a
reason for the fatality of his own senseless course. He had himself to
blame.</p>
<p>Buffeted between the two influences, fighting a desperate duel with
himself, Farquaharson paced the deck all night.</p>
<p>At times his face burned and his eyes smoldered with a fever only half
sane. At times cold sweat stood on his temples and he trembled, with
every muscle lax and inert. As dawn began to lighten the eastern
sky-line no man could say—and least of all himself—which counsel would
in the end prevail.</p>
<p>When the purser appeared on deck he gazed perplexedly at the haggard and
distracted face which confronted him and the nervous pitch of the voice
that put rapid questions. It was obvious that this solitary passenger
had not been in his berth.</p>
<p>"What is our first port of call, and when do we reach it?" demanded
Farquaharson.</p>
<p>"Brindisi. To-morrow."</p>
<p>"From Brindisi what are the most immediate connections respectively—for
the States and—for India."</p>
<p>The officer replied with a directness that rose superior to personal
curiosity.</p>
<p>"For the States the quickest course is to leave this vessel at
Gibraltar. I can't tell you precisely what<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_135" id="Page_135"></SPAN></span> connection you could make
there—but I dare say the delay would be only the matter of a day or
two."</p>
<p>"And for the east?"</p>
<p>"You mean back-tracking over the route we've come?"</p>
<p>"Yes."</p>
<p>"We should anchor at Brindisi at two o'clock to-morrow afternoon. At
two-thirty the <i>Mogul</i> weighs anchor for Port Said ... and the Indian
Ocean."</p>
<p>Upon the forehead of the passenger who stood in the freshness of the
morning air were beads of sweat. His face was pale and drawn with the
stress of one called upon for swift decision and terrifically shaken by
irresolution. Knowing only that this seemed a stricken man, the purser
pitied him.</p>
<p>Farquaharson let his eyes roam west and a momentary light of eagerness
leaped in them. Then he wheeled eastward and the light paled into the
deadness of despair. After a moment he straightened himself and braced
his shoulders. At the end he spoke with a quiet decisiveness.</p>
<p>"Be good enough to send a wireless to Brindisi for me. Please do what
you can to have the <i>Mogul</i> held in the event of our being delayed. It's
a matter of the utmost importance."</p>
<p>The purser nodded. "Very good, sir," was his ready reply. "It may be a
near thing, but I fancy you'll make it."</p>
<hr class="smler" />
<p>Stuart Farquaharson's acknowledgment of the cablegram was brief. For the
same reason which had made him so urgent in entreating Conscience to
take no step until he arrived, it seemed better now that he should
remain absent. He added assurances that he had never received any letter
from her and mentioned the one he had written at the time of their
parting. He wished her every conceivable happiness. As for himself, he<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_136" id="Page_136"></SPAN></span>
would be indefinitely in the Orient where life was colorful enough to be
diverting.</p>
<p>Of course, Conscience did not receive that letter until her return from
the wedding trip, made brief because of her father's condition. The trip
itself had seemed in many ways as unreal and distorted an experience as
the ceremony had been. She had constantly reminded herself of how much
she owed to the generous devotion of her husband, but no self-reproach
could stir into life the more fiery sentiments of her heart. For his
virtues she had the admiration of a daughter, a friend or a sister—but
not the bright enthusiasm of a bride.</p>
<p>Tollman himself, the observer would have said, had left nothing to ask.
Seemingly his one wish was to treat his life as a slate upon which every
unacceptable word and line should be sponged out and rewritten.</p>
<p>The wife sat in the study of her husband's house a day or two after
their return, when Tollman entered with a face full of apprehension. He
had just suffered a fright which had made his heart miss a beat or two
and had set his brain swirling with a fevered vision of all future
happiness wrecked on a shoal of damnable folly. When he had presented
his wife with the keys of his house he had not laid upon her any
Bluebeard injunction that one door she must never open. Bluebeard lived
in a more rudimentary age, and his needs included a secret chamber. The
things which Eben Tollman earnestly desired to conceal from his wife's
view could be adequately stored in the small safe of his study, since
they were less cumbersome than the mortal remains of prior wives done to
death. They were in fact only documents—but for him pregnant with
peril—and what had stamped his face suddenly with terror was the
realization that now for the only time in all his meticulously careful
life—he had left them open to other eyes than his own.</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_137" id="Page_137"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>The old minister had been moved bag, baggage and creed over to
Tollman's larger house, and in these days of reaccommodated régime, the
road between the two places was one busy with errand-running. On one of
these missions Eben had been driving with the slow sedateness which was
his wont, when upon pleasant reflections, like shrapnel disturbing a
picnic, burst the sense of danger, and the realization of his folly. It
struck the self-congratulation from his face as abruptly as a broken
circuit quenches a lighting system.</p>
<p>He saw the table in his study as he had left it: the strongbox open—the
safe, too, from which he had taken it, agape: papers lying in
unprotected confusion. Among them were the two purloined letters which
had made his marriage possible, and which if discovered would end it in
the volcanic flames of his wife's wrath. There were also certain
memoranda concerning the affairs of William Williams which might have
raised an ugly implication of an estate wrecked at the hands of a
trusted friend. His fear-inflamed imagination went a step further until
it saw also his wife's figure halting in her task of tidying up the
study and her eyes first widening in bewilderment, then blazing into an
unspeakable fury—and scorn. How could he have done such a thing—he the
martinet of business caution? It seemed to himself inconceivable and not
to be accounted for merely by the explanation of a new husband's
abstraction.</p>
<p>He remembered now. These particular papers had formerly been kept in a
separate box—safe from confusion with others. In sorting things out
prior to his wedding trip he had made several changes of
arrangement—and had until this moment forgotten that change.</p>
<p>A sudden sweat broke out on his forehead and, snatching the whip from
its stalk on the dashboard, he<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_138" id="Page_138"></SPAN></span> belabored his aged and infirm mare into
a rickety effort at speed.</p>
<p>Ira Forman, standing by the green doors of his barn, watched the rich
man go by with this unaccustomed excitement. Ira's small resources had,
on occasion, felt the weight of Eben's hand and as he gazed, his
observation was made without friendliness. "In a manner of speakin' Eben
'pears to be busier than the devil in a gale of wind. I wonder who he
cal'lates to rob at the present time."</p>
<p>Eben had occasion to be busy. He had often told himself that it was the
part of prudence to burn those documents, yet some jackdaw quality of
setting store by weird trinkets had always saved them from destruction.
In a fashion they were trophies of triumph. With indefinable certainty
he felt that some time—somehow—their possession would be of
incalculable value. They constituted his birth certificate in this new
life.</p>
<p>While a frenzy of haste drove him, the realization of what he might find
when he arrived made him wish that he dared postpone the issue, and the
hand which fitted a key to his own front door trembled with trepidation.
Once he had seen his wife's face he would know. Her anger would not burn
slowly, in such a case, but in the conflagration of tinder laid to
powder. Yet when he stole quietly to the study door and looked in,
anxiety made his breath uneven. She was sitting there, within arm's
length of the table—which, thank God, seemed to the casual glance, just
as he had left it,—but in her fingers she held what appeared to be a
letter, and as he watched, unobserved, she crumpled it and tossed it
into the flames that cast bright flecks of color on her cheeks. Her face
looked somewhat miserable and distraught—but that hardly comported with
what should be expected had she learned the truth—unless possibly it
was the exhaustion of wretchedness following the <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_139" id="Page_139"></SPAN></span>violence of a swiftly
sweeping and cyclonic storm. On the whole, her attitude was reassuring,
he thought, and in any event a bold course was best. So he entered the
room, smiling.</p>
<hr />
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_140" id="Page_140"></SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />