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Sally came down to the courts and listened to his cross-examination of the woman who against a thousand incriminating circ.u.mstances was fighting, with white lips and piteously hunted eyes, to keep her name from the mud into which Traill was striving to drag it.
There she saw the cruelty in him again. It was impossible for her, listening with every sense taut to the uttermost, to obliterate the personal element, to think that he was merely a machine grinding, in the course of his duty, as the implacable mills crush the yielding grain into the listless powder of flour.
"Didn't it strike you at all," he asked the trembling woman, his voice barren of all feeling and edged with biting incredulity. "Didn't it strike you at all, when you kissed the co-respondent, that you were betraying your husband's confidence in you?"
"No, not when I kissed him. We--we cared for each other--I admit to that; but--but kissing did not seem wrong."
"You didn't consider kissing wrong?"
"No."
"At what point then in your intimate relations with a man--with the co-respondent in particular--would you have considered that wrong began and right ended?"
The wretched woman had looked pitiably at the judge. The judge looked unseeingly before him into the well of the court.
"At what point?" Traill had insisted.
"I don't know how to say it," she pleaded feebly.
"Then can I a.s.sist you? Would you have considered it wrong--having kissed you--for him to put his arms round you?"
"Yes, I think so."
"There is all the difference, then, in your mind between a man's kissing you and putting his arms round you. All the difference between right and wrong?"
"No, I suppose there isn't."
"Then you would not have considered that wrong?"
"No."
"Would you have considered it wrong to sit on his knee?"
Seeing how her case was weakening--realizing how he was belittling her scruples--she had admitted that she would not think it wrong, hoping that the ready admission of that would remedy the effect of her previous indecision.
"Then am I to understand--" asked Traill with a voice stirred in well-simulated anger, "am I to understand that because you loved the co-respondent, you kissed him, thinking no wrong in it and yet, thinking no wrong in sitting on his knee or having his arms about you, you yet--loving him--refused these things in which you saw no harm? Is that what you wish his lords.h.i.+p and the jury to understand?"
"I--I--may have let him put his arms round me--perhaps I did sit on his knee--once or twice."
"Then why," shouted Traill, "when the last witness affirmed that she had seen you sitting in the drawing-room with the co-respondent's arm round your neck, did you so vehemently deny it?"
Into the trap she had fallen--into the trap which with his cold cunning he had laid for her--and from that moment, rigidly denying her misconduct on her oath before G.o.d, the wretched creature was brought on the rack of his questioning to almost every admission but that of adultery. At last Sally had left the court. She could bear the strain of it no longer.
The thoughts which that incident had given rise to in her mind, had thrown their shadows upon all her lightness of heart for many days afterwards. There she had seen the keen acid of implacable justice separating, with undeviating precision, the dross from the gold. She had beheld the naked fact of adultery--stripped of all the silk of glamour, all the velvet of romance which once it had worn--held in its cringing shame before the unsympathetic eyes of twelve men in a public court of law. And he who had done it, he who had wrenched away the silken garments, torn off the folds of velvet and flung the naked deed before their eyes, was the man into whose keeping she had given her whole existence.
"You, who admittedly can play with pa.s.sion at the fringe of adultery," she heard him crying out as she stole from the court, "do you expect a jury of men, who know the world, to believe that a mere scruple has withheld you from giving yourself to the importunate desires of this man--the co-respondent?"
Was that what he thought of her--was that what he thought she had done to her shame with him? Sally had cried out these questions to herself, as he had cried them to the woman; but when that evening, he asked her in a quiet voice what she had thought of the case, she had evaded any expression that would disclose the trouble of her mind.
"I couldn't stay till the end, you know," she said. "I had to go before the verdict. What happened?"
"Oh, we won--hands down; but upon my soul I'm not sure that she did actually commit adultery. There are some women--men too, for that matter--who'll play with fire till their hearts are burnt out--but conventionality drags 'em back from the one deed that will absolutely crush their conscience, and they think themselves confoundedly ill-treated when they get their retribution. They whine, like that woman did to-day; but I'm inclined to believe that on the vital clause she was telling the truth."
Sally had looked at him, wondering and in amazement; but she had said nothing, mistrusting herself to speak.
The effect of this incident upon her mind had softened with time--in time she had practically forgotten about it. And then came round the end of the third year. The previous year he had given up journalism entirely, his time being fully occupied with legal business at the courts. He took chambers to himself in the Temple. Sometimes Sally came down there on a quiet day and they had tea together.
"We'll pretend," she would say, "that you've never met me before--and it's awfully unwise for me to come and see you in chambers--but I come and then perhaps--while I'm making the tea--you suddenly put your arms round my waist, and of course I'm awfully offended. Then you kiss me, and I begin to get fond of you--and then--" So she led him through a child's game to the outburst of a man's pa.s.sion and he, amused with being the child, found in it all the burning zest of being a man.
In the Spring that followed the conclusion of that third year, she had reminded him of his promise to take her once to Apsley. He jumped at it.
"A day in the country 'll do me all the good in the world!" he exclaimed--"and you too. I'll write to Dolly at once and see that no one's down there on Friday. If there isn't, we'll go."
CHAPTER III
They made a day of it. In Trafalgar Square at eleven o'clock the next morning, they stepped into a taxi-cab--the same little vehicle that Taylor, from the dining-room window, had seen spinning round the curve of the drive. The hood was put down; the warm suns.h.i.+ne, just touched with a light sting from the regions of cold air through which it had pa.s.sed, beat upon their faces. To such a day, from the grey fogs and lightless hours of winter, one comes, finding life well worth its while. Sally sat with her hand wrapped in Traill's, giving vent to a thousand expressions of delight, drawing his sudden attention to the thousand things that pleased her eye--the faint wash of green from the buds upon the hedgerows, the bright cl.u.s.ters of primroses that struck light through the shadows in the wood, forcing life through the thick carpet of dead leaves that the trees had given back to earth.
"Does it worry you--my keeping on pointing out things?" she asked at last.
"Worry? Lord, no! Shout as much as you like. It reminds me of when I was a kid, coming back from Harrow to Apsley for the holidays."
When they came in sight of the Manor, could perceive through rents in the cloak of cedars that enveloped it, the high, graceful Elizabethan chimneys and the points of the red gables on which the starlings congregated, Traill half rose to his feet with a straining of his neck--a light of excitement in his eyes.
"There it is!" he exclaimed. "That place through the dark trees there.
Jove, I haven't seen it for more than three years."
She followed the direction in which his extended finger pointed, and her eyes took in, not only Apsley, but his life and the true gulf that lay between them. As she saw it from there, she recognized it as a place which, pa.s.sing, even in those better days when her father had lived in the quaint little rectory at Cailsham, she might have exclaimed--"Oh, what a lovely place that is! I wonder who lives there?" And it had belonged to him--this man who had taken her life out of its dreary groove and placed it in a pleasure-garden of plenty; but the garden gate was not locked and the key was not in her keeping.
This mood was momentary. It pa.s.sed, scudding across her mind, a fringe of rain cloud that the wind has caught hanging between the hill-tops and driven at its will. When Traill leant out of the car and gave peremptory orders of direction, she forgot about it. Then, in his almost boyish excitement, she realized how much the place really was to him; how much, notwithstanding all his Bohemianism, it counted in his life.
"You love this place--don't you?" she said, when he dropped back again into his seat.
"Yes--I should think so. I know every stick and stone for miles round here. See that little lane up there?"
"Yes."
"Had a fight there once with a gamekeeper. Much more exciting, I can tell you, than that show you saw that night."
"Were you hurt?" she asked, frowning.
"Oh, not much; not more than he was. It was stopped precipitously by a stick, wielded by my governor. He'd got wind of it. We hadn't much time to make a mess of each other."
"I suppose it must be full of memories," she said. "I can never understand why you should have given it up."