A SPIRIT IN TRAVAIL—ONE RUNG PUT BEHIND
When Carrie reached her own room she
had already fallen a prey to those doubts and misgivings
which are ever the result of a lack of decision.
She could not persuade herself as to the advisability
of her promise, or that now, having given her word,
she ought to keep it. She went over the whole
ground in Hurstwood’s absence, and discovered
little objections that had not occurred to her in
the warmth of the manager’s argument. She
saw where she had put herself in a peculiar light,
namely, that of agreeing to marry when she was already
supposedly married. She remembered a few things
Drouet had done, and now that it came to walking away
from him without a word, she felt as if she were doing
wrong. Now, she was comfortably situated, and
to one who is more or less afraid of the world, this
is an urgent matter, and one which puts up strange,
uncanny arguments. “You do not know what
will come. There are miserable things outside.
People go a-begging. Women are wretched.
You never can tell what will happen. Remember
the time you were hungry. Stick to what you
have.”
Curiously, for all her leaning towards
Hurstwood, he had not taken a firm hold on her understanding.
She was listening, smiling, approving, and yet not
finally agreeing. This was due to a lack of
power on his part, a lack of that majesty of passion
that sweeps the mind from its seat, fuses and melts
all arguments and theories into a tangled mass, and
destroys for the time being the reasoning power.
This majesty of passion is possessed by nearly every
man once in his life, but it is usually an attribute
of youth and conduces to the first successful mating.
Hurstwood, being an older man, could
scarcely be said to retain the fire of youth, though
he did possess a passion warm and unreasoning.
It was strong enough to induce the leaning toward
him which, on Carrie’s part, we have seen.
She might have been said to be imagining herself
in love, when she was not. Women frequently
do this. It flows from the fact that in each
exists a bias toward affection, a craving for the
pleasure of being loved. The longing to be shielded,
bettered, sympathised with, is one of the attributes
of the sex. This, coupled with sentiment and
a natural tendency to emotion, often makes refusing
difficult. It persuades them that they are in
love.
Once at home, she changed her clothes
and straightened the rooms for herself. In the
matter of the arrangement of the furniture she never
took the housemaid’s opinion. That young
woman invariably put one of the rocking-chairs in
the corner, and Carrie as regularly moved it out.
To-day she hardly noticed that it was in the wrong
place, so absorbed was she in her own thoughts.
She worked about the room until Drouet put in appearance
at five o’clock. The drummer was flushed
and excited and full of determination to know all
about her relations with Hurstwood. Nevertheless,
after going over the subject in his mind the livelong
day, he was rather weary of it and wished it over
with. He did not foresee serious consequences
of any sort, and yet he rather hesitated to begin.
Carrie was sitting by the window when he came in,
rocking and looking out. “Well,”
she said innocently, weary of her own mental discussion
and wondering at his haste and ill-concealed excitement,
“what makes you hurry so?”
Drouet hesitated, now that he was
in her presence, uncertain as to what course to pursue.
He was no diplomat. He could neither read nor
see.
“When did you get home?” he asked foolishly.
“Oh, an hour or so ago. What makes you
ask that?”
“You weren’t here,”
he said, “when I came back this morning, and
I thought you had gone out.”
“So I did,” said Carrie simply.
“I went for a walk.”
Drouet looked at her wonderingly.
For all his lack of dignity in such matters he did
not know how to begin. He stared at her in the
most flagrant manner until at last she said:
“What makes you stare at me so? What’s
the matter?”
“Nothing,” he answered. “I
was just thinking.”
“Just thinking what?”
she returned smilingly, puzzled by his attitude.
“Oh, nothing—nothing much.”
“Well, then, what makes you look so?”
Drouet was standing by the dresser,
gazing at her in a comic manner. He had laid
off his hat and gloves and was now fidgeting with
the little toilet pieces which were nearest him.
He hesitated to believe that the pretty woman before
him was involved in anything so unsatisfactory to
himself. He was very much inclined to feel that
it was all right, after all. Yet the knowledge
imparted to him by the chambermaid was rankling in
his mind. He wanted to plunge in with a straight
remark of some sort, but he knew not what.
“Where did you go this morning?” he finally
asked weakly.
“Why, I went for a walk,” said Carrie.
“Sure you did?” he asked.
“Yes, what makes you ask?”
She was beginning to see now that
he knew something. Instantly she drew herself
into a more reserved position. Her cheeks blanched
slightly.
“I thought maybe you didn’t,”
he said, beating about the bush in the most useless
manner.
Carrie gazed at him, and as she did
so her ebbing courage halted. She saw that he
himself was hesitating, and with a woman’s intuition
realised that there was no occasion for great alarm.
“What makes you talk like that?”
she asked, wrinkling her pretty forehead. “You
act so funny to-night.”
“I feel funny,” he answered.
They looked at one another for a moment, and then Drouet
plunged desperately into his subject.
“What’s this about you and Hurstwood?”
he asked.
“Me and Hurstwood—what do you mean?”
“Didn’t he come here a dozen times while
I was away?”
“A dozen times,” repeated
Carrie, guiltily. “No, but what do you
mean?”
“Somebody said that you went
out riding with him and that he came here every night.”
“No such thing,” answered
Carrie. “It isn’t true. Who
told you that?”
She was flushing scarlet to the roots
of her hair, but Drouet did not catch the full hue
of her face, owing to the modified light of the room.
He was regaining much confidence as Carrie defended
herself with denials.
“Well, some one,” he said.
“You’re sure you didn’t?”
“Certainly,” said Carrie.
“You know how often he came.”
Drouet paused for a moment and thought.
“I know what you told me,” he said finally.
He moved nervously about, while Carrie looked at him
confusedly.
“Well, I know that I didn’t
tell you any such thing as that,” said Carrie,
recovering herself.
“If I were you,” went
on Drouet, ignoring her last remark, “I wouldn’t
have anything to do with him. He’s a married
man, you know.”
“Who—who is?” said Carrie,
stumbling at the word.
“Why, Hurstwood,” said
Drouet, noting the effect and feeling that he was
delivering a telling blow.
“Hurstwood!” exclaimed
Carrie, rising. Her face had changed several
shades since this announcement was made. She
looked within and without herself in a half-dazed
way.
“Who told you this?” she
asked, forgetting that her interest was out of order
and exceedingly incriminating.
“Why, I know it. I’ve
always known it,” said Drouet.
Carrie was feeling about for a right
thought. She was making a most miserable showing,
and yet feelings were generating within her which
were anything but crumbling cowardice.
“I thought I told you,” he added.
“No, you didn’t,”
she contradicted, suddenly recovering her voice.
“You didn’t do anything of the kind.”
Drouet listened to her in astonishment.
This was something new.
“I thought I did,” he said.
Carrie looked around her very solemnly,
and then went over to the window.
“You oughtn’t to have
had anything to do with him,” said Drouet in
an injured tone, “after all I’ve done for
you.”
“You,” said Carrie, “you!
What have you done for me?”
Her little brain had been surging
with contradictory feelings— shame at exposure,
shame at Hurstwood’s perfidy, anger at Drouet’s
deception, the mockery he had made at her. Now
one clear idea came into her head. He was at
fault. There was no doubt about it. Why
did he bring Hurstwood out—Hurstwood, a
married man, and never say a word to her? Never
mind now about Hurstwood’s perfidy—why
had he done this? Why hadn’t he warned
her? There he stood now, guilty of this miserable
breach of confidence and talking about what he had
done for her!
“Well, I like that,” exclaimed
Drouet, little realising the fire his remark had generated.
“I think I’ve done a good deal.”
“You have, eh?” she answered.
“You’ve deceived me—that’s
what you’ve done. You’ve brought
your old friends out here under false pretences.
You’ve made me out to be—Oh,”
and with this her voice broke and she pressed her
two little hands together tragically.
“I don’t see what that’s
got to do with it,” said the drummer quaintly.
“No,” she answered, recovering
herself and shutting her teeth. “No, of
course you don’t see. There isn’t
anything you see. You couldn’t have told
me in the first place, could you? You had to
make me out wrong until it was too late. Now
you come sneaking around with your information and
your talk about what you have done.”
Drouet had never suspected this side
of Carrie’s nature. She was alive with
feeling, her eyes snapping, her lips quivering, her
whole body sensible of the injury she felt, and partaking
of her wrath.
“Who’s sneaking?”
he asked, mildly conscious of error on his part, but
certain that he was wronged.
“You are,” stamped Carrie.
“You’re a horrid, conceited coward, that’s
what you are. If you had any sense of manhood
in you, you wouldn’t have thought of doing any
such thing.”
The drummer stared.
“I’m not a coward,”
he said. “What do you mean by going with
other men, anyway?”
“Other men!” exclaimed
Carrie. “Other men—you know
better than that. I did go with Mr. Hurstwood,
but whose fault was it? Didn’t you bring
him here? You told him yourself that he should
come out here and take me out. Now, after it’s
all over, you come and tell me that I oughtn’t
to go with him and that he’s a married man.”
She paused at the sound of the last
two words and wrung her hands. The knowledge
of Hurstwood’s perfidy wounded her like a knife.
“Oh,” she sobbed, repressing herself wonderfully
and keeping her eyes dry. “Oh, oh!”
“Well, I didn’t think
you’d be running around with him when I was
away,” insisted Drouet.
“Didn’t think!”
said Carrie, now angered to the core by the man’s
peculiar attitude. “Of course not.
You thought only of what would be to your satisfaction.
You thought you’d make a toy of me—a
plaything. Well, I’ll show you that you
won’t. I’ll have nothing more to
do with you at all. You can take your old things
and keep them,” and unfastening a little pin
he had given her, she flung it vigorously upon the
floor and began to move about as if to gather up the
things which belonged to her.
By this Drouet was not only irritated
but fascinated the more. He looked at her in
amazement, and finally said:
“I don’t see where your
wrath comes in. I’ve got the right of
this thing. You oughtn’t to have done anything
that wasn’t right after all I did for you.”
“What have you done for me?”
asked Carrie blazing, her head thrown back and her
lips parted.
“I think I’ve done a good
deal,” said the drummer, looking around.
“I’ve given you all the clothes you wanted,
haven’t I? I’ve taken you everywhere
you wanted to go. You’ve had as much as
I’ve had, and more too.”
Carrie was not ungrateful, whatever
else might be said of her. In so far as her mind
could construe, she acknowledged benefits received.
She hardly knew how to answer this, and yet her wrath
was not placated. She felt that the drummer had
injured her irreparably.
“Did I ask you to?” she returned.
“Well, I did it,” said Drouet, “and
you took it.”
“You talk as though I had persuaded
you,” answered Carrie. “You stand
there and throw up what you’ve done. I
don’t want your old things. I’ll
not have them. You take them to-night and do
what you please with them. I’ll not stay
here another minute.”
“That’s nice!” he
answered, becoming angered now at the sense of his
own approaching loss. “Use everything and
abuse me and then walk off. That’s just
like a woman. I take you when you haven’t
got anything, and then when some one else comes along,
why I’m no good. I always thought it’d
come out that way.”
He felt really hurt as he thought
of his treatment, and looked as if he saw no way of
obtaining justice.
“It’s not so,” said
Carrie, “and I’m not going with anybody
else. You have been as miserable and inconsiderate
as you can be. I hate you, I tell you, and I
wouldn’t live with you another minute.
You’re a big, insulting”—here
she hesitated and used no word at all—“or
you wouldn’t talk that way.”
She had secured her hat and jacket
and slipped the latter on over her little evening
dress. Some wisps of wavy hair had loosened
from the bands at the side of her head and were straggling
over her hot, red cheeks. She was angry, mortified,
grief-stricken. Her large eyes were full of the
anguish of tears, but her lids were not yet wet.
She was distracted and uncertain, deciding and doing
things without an aim or conclusion, and she had not
the slightest conception of how the whole difficulty
would end.
“Well, that’s a fine finish,”
said Drouet. “Pack up and pull out, eh?
You take the cake. I bet you were knocking around
with Hurstwood or you wouldn’t act like that.
I don’t want the old rooms. You needn’t
pull out for me. You can have them for all I
care, but b’George, you haven’t done me
right.”
“I’ll not live with you,”
said Carrie. “I don’t want to live
with you. You’ve done nothing but brag
around ever since you’ve been here.”
“Aw, I haven’t anything of the kind,”
he answered.
Carrie walked over to the door.
“Where are you going?”
he said, stepping over and heading her off.
“Let me out,” she said.
“Where are you going?” he repeated.
He was, above all, sympathetic, and
the sight of Carrie wandering out, he knew not where,
affected him, despite his grievance.
Carrie merely pulled at the door.
The strain of the situation was too
much for her, however. She made one more vain
effort and then burst into tears.
“Now, be reasonable, Cad,”
said Drouet gently. “What do you want
to rush out for this way? You haven’t any
place to go. Why not stay here now and be quiet?
I’ll not bother you. I don’t want
to stay here any longer.”
Carrie had gone sobbing from the door
to the window. She was so overcome she could
not speak.
“Be reasonable now,” he
said. “I don’t want to hold you.
You can go if you want to, but why don’t you
think it over? Lord knows, I don’t want
to stop you.”
He received no answer. Carrie
was quieting, however, under the influence of his
plea.
“You stay here now, and I’ll go,”
he added at last.
Carrie listened to this with mingled
feelings. Her mind was shaken loose from the
little mooring of logic that it had. She was
stirred by this thought, angered by that—her
own injustice, Hurstwood’s, Drouet’s,
their respective qualities of kindness and favour,
the threat of the world outside, in which she had failed
once before, the impossibility of this state inside,
where the chambers were no longer justly hers, the
effect of the argument upon her nerves, all combined
to make her a mass of jangling fibres—an
anchorless, storm-beaten little craft which could do
absolutely nothing but drift.
“Say,” said Drouet, coming
over to her after a few moments, with a new idea,
and putting his hand upon her.
“Don’t!” said Carrie,
drawing away, but not removing her handkerchief from
her eyes. “Never mind about this quarrel
now. Let it go. You stay here until the
month’s out, anyhow, and then you can tell better
what you want to do. Eh?”
Carrie made no answer.
“You’d better do that,”
he said. “There’s no use your packing
up now. You can’t go anywhere.”
Still he got nothing for his words.
“If you’ll do that, we’ll
call it off for the present and I’ll get out.”
Carrie lowered her handkerchief slightly
and looked out of the window.
“Will you do that?” he asked.
Still no answer.
“Will you?” he repeated.
She only looked vaguely into the street.
“Aw! come on,” he said, “tell me.
Will you?”
“I don’t know,” said Carrie softly,
forced to answer.
“Promise me you’ll do
that,” he said, “and we’ll quit talking
about it. It’ll be the best thing for you.”
Carrie heard him, but she could not
bring herself to answer reasonably. She felt
that the man was gentle, and that his interest in
her had not abated, and it made her suffer a pang of
regret. She was in a most helpless plight.
As for Drouet, his attitude had been
that of the jealous lover. Now his feelings were
a mixture of anger at deception, sorrow at losing
Carrie, misery at being defeated. He wanted his
rights in some way or other, and yet his rights included
the retaining of Carrie, the making her feel her error.
“Will you?” he urged.
“Well, I’ll see,” said Carrie.
This left the matter as open as before,
but it was something. It looked as if the quarrel
would blow over, if they could only get some way of
talking to one another. Carrie was ashamed, and
Drouet aggrieved. He pretended to take up the
task of packing some things in a valise.
Now, as Carrie watched him out of
the corner of her eye, certain sound thoughts came
into her head. He had erred, true, but what
had she done? He was kindly and good-natured for
all his egotism. Throughout this argument he
had said nothing very harsh. On the other hand,
there was Hurstwood—a greater deceiver than
he. He had pretended all this affection, all
this passion, and he was lying to her all the while.
Oh, the perfidy of men! And she had loved him.
There could be nothing more in that quarter.
She would see Hurstwood no more. She would
write him and let him know what she thought.
Thereupon what would she do? Here were these
rooms. Here was Drouet, pleading for her to remain.
Evidently things could go on here somewhat as before,
if all were arranged. It would be better than
the street, without a place to lay her head.
All this she thought of as Drouet
rummaged the drawers for collars and laboured long
and painstakingly at finding a shirt-stud.
He was in no hurry to rush this matter. He felt
an attraction to Carrie which would not down.
He could not think that the thing would end by his
walking out of the room. There must be some
way round, some way to make her own up that he was
right and she was wrong—to patch up a peace
and shut out Hurstwood for ever. Mercy, how
he turned at the man’s shameless duplicity.
“Do you think,” he said,
after a few moments’ silence, “that you’ll
try and get on the stage?”
He was wondering what she was intending.
“I don’t know what I’ll do yet,”
said Carrie.
“If you do, maybe I can help
you. I’ve got a lot of friends in that
line.”
She made no answer to this.
“Don’t go and try to knock
around now without any money. Let me help you,”
he said. “It’s no easy thing to go
on your own hook here.”
Carrie only rocked back and forth in her chair.
“I don’t want you to go up against a hard
game that way.”
He bestirred himself about some other
details and Carrie rocked on.
“Why don’t you tell me
all about this thing,” he said, after a time,
“and let’s call it off? You don’t
really care for Hurstwood, do you?”
“Why do you want to start on
that again?” said Carrie. “You were
to blame.”
“No, I wasn’t,” he answered.
“Yes, you were, too,”
said Carrie. “You shouldn’t have
ever told me such a story as that.”
“But you didn’t have much
to do with him, did you?” went on Drouet, anxious
for his own peace of mind to get some direct denial
from her.
“I won’t talk about it,”
said Carrie, pained at the quizzical turn the peace
arrangement had taken.
“What’s the use of acting
like that now, Cad?” insisted the drummer, stopping
in his work and putting up a hand expressively.
“You might let me know where I stand, at least.”
“I won’t,” said
Carrie, feeling no refuge but in anger. “Whatever
has happened is your own fault.”
“Then you do care for him?”
said Drouet, stopping completely and experiencing
a rush of feeling.
“Oh, stop!” said Carrie.
“Well, I’ll not be made a fool of,”
exclaimed Drouet. “You may trifle around
with him if you want to, but you can’t lead me.
You can tell me or not, just as you want to, but I
won’t fool any longer!”
He shoved the last few remaining things
he had laid out into his valise and snapped it with
a vengeance. Then he grabbed his coat, which
he had laid off to work, picked up his gloves, and
started out.
“You can go to the deuce as
far as I am concerned,” he said, as he reached
the door. “I’m no sucker,”
and with that he opened it with a jerk and closed
it equally vigorously.
Carrie listened at her window view,
more astonished than anything else at this sudden
rise of passion in the drummer. She could hardly
believe her senses—so good-natured and tractable
had he invariably been. It was not for her to
see the wellspring of human passion. A real
flame of love is a subtle thing. It burns as
a will-o’-the-wisp, dancing onward to fairylands
of delight. It roars as a furnace. Too
often jealousy is the quality upon which it feeds.