(a) Viv was free with no loss of principle.
(b) Poppy"s tax was paid, with no loss of principle.
(c) "A Mere Man" was not apprehended.
(d) Basil reappeared, after a heavy cold.
I was not present when Viv and Poppy met, owing to some formalities of my release. I drove to the house with Poppy"s money in my bag, and went up unannounced. Viv was not pale and wan. He looked rested and fit, and Poppy was on his knee. When I went in she moved to the arm of his chair, but no further, and she kept her profile toward him.
They were very apologetic and said how sorry they were, and Poppy said she knew Daphne and I meant well, but that one wrong would never help another. I was speechless with rage, and I took from my bag her money and held it out to her.
"Of course," I said, "Vivian has no idea of who "A Mere Man" is?"
"None whatever," said Viv shamelessly.
"That"s curious," I observed. "I saw him quite distinctly, you know, as I went down the stairs."
(I had--his back!)
I went out, with my head up. They called to me, and I think Vivian started to follow. But I got into a taxicab and drove to Daphne"s. I was very depressed.
Basil came to see me that night. Daphne was still in jail, and very comfortable. She sent me word not to worry, as she was getting new material for speeches, and had two ready.
I refused to see Basil, but he followed the maid back, and stood looking down at me.
"Viv says you saw me," he began without any preamble.
"I did, but I didn"t recognise you. You"ve committed yourself."
He changed colour.
"What else was there to do?" he demanded. "Those two geese would have gone on forever. Viv had the money in his desk, but it was my plan, not his."
As it happened, I had sent father a cablegram about Viv and Poppy just before I was arrested, and now I saw his reply on the mantel.
"Sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander," he had cabled. Well, I had had the jail, and Basil had had--a cold! Basil followed my eyes.
"More cablegrams!" he said. "Why doesn"t that chap come over and get you?"
"Because I am going back to him. I can"t stand the pressure, Basil. Viv and Poppy are all right for this year, but how about next? Is it to be the same thing again?"
"They"re going to Italy to live."
"A compromise?" I quoted, rather bitterly. ""Not victory but a truce."
You and I made that marriage. It was the T. C. that did it."
Basil took the cablegram from the mantel and deliberately read it. When he got to the signature he drew a long breath and then he grinned.
"So that"s that!" he said. "Well, Maggie, are you going back to father, or--staying here with me?"
"You"re afraid of me."
"I"ll take the risk, Madge. I didn"t tell you, Uncle Egbert died while you were away."
"I"ve been in jail for stealing," I quavered. "And I"d do it again, Basil, for the Cause."
"Bless the Cause," said Basil manfully. "Why shouldn"t you vote, if you want to? Aren"t you cleverer, and lovelier, and more courageous than any man that ever lived? Anyhow, you"re right. Things are rotten. What sane government would lock a man up because his wife refuses to pay her taxes?"
I lifted my head from his shoulder.
"That wretched house at home----" I began.
But he was quite cheerful.
"We"ll sell it," he said, "and you shall spend the money for pretties to wear, that don"t pay a tax."
It was compromise again. I knew it, but I yielded. After a time I said:
"Basil, what was the retort you gave Poppy about the T. C.?"
"Nothing much," he replied complacently, "I told her, if any one sprung it at her again, to say that if men had made the Ten Commandments, they"d have added an eleventh amendment long ago, or else have annulled them."