<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XXIV" id="CHAPTER_XXIV"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXIV</h2>
<p>But that night it happened, as it had happened once before, that the
stars seemed exaggerated in size and multiplied in number. On the breeze
came riding the distant voice of the surf with its call to staring
wakefulness and restlessness of spirit.</p>
<p>Conscience went early to her room, feeling that unless her taut nerves
could have the relaxation of solitude, she must scream out. To-day's
discovery had kindled anew all the fires of insurgency that burned in
her, inflaming her heart to demand the mating joy which could make of
marriage not a formula of duty and hard allegiance, but a splendid and
rightful fulfillment.</p>
<p>As she sat by the window of her unlighted room, her eyes were staring
tensely into the night and the pink ovals of her nails were pressed into
the palms of her hands. Her gaze, as if under a spell of hypnosis, was
following the glow of a cigar among the pines, where Stuart was seeking
to walk off the similar unrest which made sleep impossible. "He still
loves me," she kept repeating to herself with a stunned realization, "he
still loves me!"</p>
<p>She hoped fervently that Eben was asleep. To have to talk to him while
her strained mood was so full of rebellion would be hard; to have to
submit to his autumnal kiss, would make that mood blaze into revulsion.</p>
<p>But at last she heard a footfall on the stair and in the hall and held
her breath in a sort of terror as they ended just outside her threshold.
She knew that Eben was trying her door—trying it first without knocking
after his churlish custom. She hoped that he would<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_223" id="Page_223"></SPAN></span> pass on when
darkness and silence were his answers, but after a moment came a rap and
when it met with no reply it was repeated with a peremptory insistence.
Conscience drew a long breath, and, shivering with distaste, she slowly
lighted a candle. Then she went shudderingly to the door and opened it.</p>
<p>In the stress of the moment, as she shot back the bolt, she surrendered
for just an instant to her feelings; feelings which she had never before
allowed expression even in the confessional of her thoughts. She knew
now how Heloise had felt when she wildly told herself that she would
rather be mistress of Abelarde than wife to the King.</p>
<p>Eben standing in the doorway, smiling, seemed to her disordered mood the
figure of a Satyr.</p>
<hr class="smler" />
<p>"I've had a letter from Ebbett," Tollman commented one day at luncheon.
"Like Stuart here, he's been working too hard and he wants to know if he
can run down for the week-end."</p>
<p>When Conscience had declared her approval the host turned to
Farquaharson. "I shouldn't wonder if you'd like Ebbett. We were
classmates at college, and he was my best man. Aside from that, he's one
of the leading exponents, in this country, of the newer psychology—a
disciple of Freud and Jung, and while many of his ideas strike me as
extreme they are often interesting."</p>
<p>The prophecy proved more than true, for with Dr. Ebbett as a guide,
Farquaharson gratified that avid interest which every sincere writer
must feel for explorations into new fields of thought.</p>
<p>One evening the two sat alone on the terrace in the communion of lighted
cigars and creature comfort long after their host and hostess had gone
to their beds, and Ebbett said thoughtfully, and without introduction:</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_224" id="Page_224"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"It seems to have worked out. And God knows I'm glad, because I had my
misgivings."</p>
<p>"What has worked out?" inquired the younger man and the neurologist
jerked his head toward the house.</p>
<p>"This marriage," he said. "When I came to the wedding, I could not
escape a heavy portent of danger. There was the difference in age to
start with and it was heightened by Eben's solemn and grandiose
tendencies. His nature had too much shadow—not enough sunlight. The
girl on the other hand had a vitality which was supernormal."</p>
<p>He paused and Stuart Farquaharson, restrained by a flood of personal
reminiscence, said nothing. Finally the doctor went on:</p>
<p>"But there was more than that. I'm a Massachusetts man myself, but Eben
is—or was—in type, too damned much the New Englander."</p>
<p>Stuart smiled to himself, but his prompting question came in the tone of
commonplace.</p>
<p>"Just what does that mean to you, Doctor—too much the New Englander?"</p>
<p>Ebbett laughed. "I use the word only as a term—as descriptive of an
intolerance which exists everywhere, north and south, east and west—but
in Eben it was exaggerated. Fortunately, his wife's exuberance of spirit
seems to have brightened it into normality."</p>
<p>"But what, exactly, did you fear, Doctor?"</p>
<p>"I'm afraid I'd have to grow tediously technical to make that clear, but
if you can stand it, I'll try."</p>
<p>"I wish you would," the younger man assured him.</p>
<p>Dr. Ebbett leaned back and studied the ash of his cigar. "Have you ever
noticed in your experience," he abruptly demanded, "that oftentimes the
man who most craftily evades his taxes or indulges in devious business
methods, cannot bring himself to sanction any of the polite and innocent
lies which society accepts as conventions?"</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_225" id="Page_225"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>Stuart nodded and the physician went on:</p>
<p>"In short we encounter, every day, the apparent hypocrite. Yet many such
men are not consciously dishonest. They are merely victims of
disassociation."</p>
<p>"I'm afraid," acknowledged Stuart, "I'm still too much the tyro to
understand the term very fully."</p>
<p>"None of us understand it as fully as we'd like," Dr. Ebbett assured
him. "But we are gradually learning. In every man's consciousness there
is a stream of thought which we call the brain content. Below the
surface of consciousness, there is a second stream of thought as
unrecognized as a dream, but none the less potent."</p>
<p>The speaker paused and Farquaharson waited in silence for him to
continue.</p>
<p>"The broader a man's habit of thought," went on the physician slowly,
"the fewer impulses he is called upon to repress because he is frank.
The narrower his code, the more things there are which are thrust down
into his proscribed list of inhibitions. The peril lies in the fact that
this stream of repressed thought is acting almost as directly on the
man's life and conduct, as the one of which he is constantly aware. He
has more than one self, and since he admits but one, the others are in
constant and secret intrigue, against him."</p>
<p>"And this makes for unconscious hypocrisy?"</p>
<p>"Undoubtedly. Such a man may be actively dishonest and escape all sense
of guilt because he has in his mind logic-proof compartments in which
certain matters are kept immured and safe from conflict with the reason
that he employs for other affairs. It was this exact quirk of lopsided
righteousness which enabled our grandsires to burn witches while they
sang psalms."</p>
<p>"You think our host is of the type most susceptible to such a danger?"</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_226" id="Page_226"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Yes, because the intolerant man always stands on the border of
insanity."</p>
<p>"But, Doctor," Stuart put his question with a keenly edged interest,
"for such a condition as you describe, is there a cure, or is it only a
matter of analysis?"</p>
<p>"Ah," replied Ebbett gravely, "that's a large question. Usually a cure
is quite possible, but it always depends upon the uncompromising
frankness of the patient's confessions. He must strip his soul naked
before we can help him. If we can trace back into subconsciousness and
identify the disturbing influences, they resolve themselves into a sore
that has been lanced. They are no longer making war from the
darkness—and with light they cease to exist."</p>
<p>As the neurologist broke off the aged and decrepit dog for which Eben
Tollman had discovered no fondness until it had been exiled to the
garage, came limping around the corner of the terrace and licked
wistfully at Stuart's knee.</p>
<p>"That dog," commented the physician, "ought to be put out of his misery.
He's a hopeless cripple and he needs a merciful dose of morphine. I'll
mention it to Eben."</p>
<p>"It would be a gracious act," assented the younger man. "Life has become
a burden to the old fellow."</p>
<p>Dr. Ebbett rose and tossed his cigar stump outward. "We've been sitting
here theorizing for hours after the better-ordered members of the
household have gone to their beds," he said. "It's about time to say
good night." And the two men climbed the stairs and separated toward the
doors of their respective rooms.</p>
<p>Dr. Ebbett left just after breakfast the next day, but on the verge of
his departure he remembered and mentioned the dog.</p>
<p>"I've been meaning to shoot him," confessed Tollman, "but I've shrunk
from playing executioner."</p>
<p>"Shooting is an awkward method," advised the <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_227" id="Page_227"></SPAN></span>doctor. "I have here a
grain and a half of morphine in quarter-grain tablets. They will cause
no suffering. They are readily soluble, won't be tasted, and will do the
work."</p>
<p>"How much shall I give? I don't want to bungle it."</p>
<p>"It's simply a question of dosage. Let him have a half grain, I
shouldn't care to give that much to either a dog or a man—unless a drug
habitué—without expecting death—but there's the car and it's been a
delightful visit."</p>
<p>Possibly some instinct warned the superannuated dog of his master's
design. At all events he was never poisoned—he merely disappeared, and
for the mystery of his fading from sight there was no solution.</p>
<hr class="smler" />
<p>The case for the prosecution was going well, thought Eben Tollman, and
building upward step by step toward a conviction. But step by step, too,
was growing the development of his own condition toward madness, the
more grewsomely terrible because its monomania gave no outward
indication.</p>
<p>One evening as the three sat on the terrace, it pleased Eben Tollman to
regale them with music. He was not himself an instrumentalist, but in
the living-room was a machine which supplied that deficiency, and this
afternoon had brought a fresh consignment of records from Boston. This,
too, was a night of stars, but rather of languorous than disquieting
influences, and the talk had flowed along in serenity, until gradually,
under the spell of the music the two younger members of the trio fell
musingly silent.</p>
<p>Tollman had chosen a program out of which breathed a potency of passion
and allurement. Voices rich with the gold of love's abandon sang the
songs of composers, wholly dedicated to love's own form of expression.</p>
<p>Stuart Farquaharson's cigar had gone out and he<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_228" id="Page_228"></SPAN></span> sat meditative in the
shadows of the terrace—himself a shadowy shape, with his eyes fixed
upon Conscience, and Conscience, too, remained quiet with that
unstirring stillness which bespeaks a mood of dreams. Something in the
air, subtle yet powerful, was working upon them its influence.</p>
<p>"Eben seems to be in a sentimental mood this evening," suggested
Farquaharson at last, bringing himself with something of a wrench out of
his abstraction and speaking in a matter-of-fact voice. He remembered
belatedly that his cigar had gone out and as he relighted it there was a
slight trembling of his fingers.</p>
<p>"Yes, doesn't he?" Mrs. Tollman's laugh held a trace of nervous tremor,
too. "And I remember saying once that that was just as possible as the
idea of Napoleon going into a monastery."</p>
<p>"Are we going to swim before breakfast to-morrow?" asked the man,
distrusting himself just now with topics touching the past and
sentiment.</p>
<p>"Suppose we walk down to the float and have a look at the state of the
tide," she suggested. "Then as Ira would say we can 'fore-lay' for the
morning."</p>
<hr />
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_229" id="Page_229"></SPAN></span></p>
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