MISS MACY’s room was next to
Miss West’s, and the Southerner’s knock
often appealed to Lizzie’s hospitality when Mme.
Clopin’s early curfew had driven her boarders
from the salon. It sounded thus one evening
just as Lizzie, tired from an unusually long day of
tuition, was in the act of removing her dress.
She was in too indulgent a mood to withhold her “Come
in,” and as Miss Macy crossed the threshold,
Lizzie felt that Vincent Deering’s first letter—the
letter from the train—had slipped from her
loosened bodice to the floor.
Miss Macy, as promptly noting the
fact, darted forward to recover the letter. Lizzie
stooped also, fiercely jealous of her touch; but the
other reached the precious paper first, andas she seized
it, Lizzie knew that she had seen whence it fell,
and was weaving round the incident a rapid web of
romance.
Lizzie blushed with annoyance.
“It’s too stupid, having no pockets!
If one gets a letter as she is going out in the morning,
she has to carry it in her blouse all day.”
Miss Macy looked at her with swimming
eyes. “It’s warm fromyour heart!”
she breathed, reluctantly yielding up the missive.
Lizzie laughed, for she knew better:
she knew it was the letter that had warmed her heart.
Poor Andora Macy! She would never know.
Her bleak bosom would never take fire from such a
contact. Lizzie looked at her with kind eyes,
secretly chafing at the injustice of fate.
The next evening, on her return home,
she found Andora hovering in the entrance hall.
“I thought you’d like
me to put this in your own hand,” Miss Macy
whispered significantly, pressing a letter upon Lizzie.
“I couldn’t bear to see it lying
on the table with theothers.”
It was Deering’s letter from
the steamer. Lizzie blushed tothe forehead, but
without resenting Andora’s divination. She
could not have breathed a word of her bliss, but she
was not altogethersorry to have it guessed, and pity
for Andora’s destitution yielded to the pleasure
of using it as a mirror for her own abundance.
DEERING wrote again on reaching New York, a long,
fond, dissatisfied letter, vague in its indication
of his own projects, specific in the expression of
his love. Lizzie brooded over every syllable of
it till they formed the undercurrent of all her waking
thoughts, and murmured through her midnight dreams;
but she wouldhave been happier if they had shed some
definite light on the future.
That would come, no doubt, when he
had had time to look about and get his bearings.
She counted up the days that must elapse before she
received his next letter, and stole down early to peepat
the papers, and learn when the next American mail
was due. Atlength the happy date arrived, and
she hurried distractedly through the day’s work,
trying to conceal her impatience by the endearments
she bestowed upon her pupils. It was easier,
in her present mood, to kiss them than to keep them
at their grammars.
That evening, on Mme. Clopin’s
threshold, her heart beat so wildly that she had to
lean a moment against the door-post beforeentering.
But on the hall table, where the letters lay, there
was none for her.
She went over them with a feverish
hand, her heart dropping down and down, as she had
sometimes fallen down an endless stairway in a dream—the
very same stairway up which she had seemed to flywhen
she climbed the long hill to Deering’s door.
Then it suddenly struck her that Andora might have
found and secreted her letter, and with a spring she
was on the actual stairs and rattling Miss Macy’s
door-handle.
“You’ve a letter for me, haven’t
you?” she panted.
Miss Macy, turning from the toilet-table,
inclosed her in attenuated arms. “Oh, darling,
did you expect one to-day?”
“Do give it to me!” Lizzie pleaded with
burning eyes.
“But I haven’t any! There hasn’t
been a sign of a letter for you.”
“I know there is. There
must be,” Lizzie persisted, stamping her
foot.
“But, dearest, I’ve watched
for you, and there’sbeen nothing, absolutely
nothing.”
Day after day, for the ensuing weeks,
the same scene reenacted itself with endless variations.
Lizzie, after the first sharp spasm of disappointment,
made no effort to conceal her anxiety from Miss Macy,
and the fond Andora was charged to keep a vigilant
eyeupon the postman’s coming, and to spy on
the bonne for possible negligence or perfidy.
But these elaborate precautions remained fruitless,
and no letter from Deering came.
During the first fortnight of silence
Lizzie exhausted all the ingenuities of explanation.
She marveled afterward at the reasons she had found
for Deering’s silence: there were moments
when she almost argued herself into thinking it more
natural than his continuing to write. There was
only one reason which her intelligence consistently
rejected, and that was the possibility that he had
forgotten her, that the wholeepisode had faded from
his mind like a breath from a mirror. From that
she resolutely turned her thoughts, aware that if
she suffered herself to contemplate it, the motive
power of life would fail, and she would no longer
understand why she rose up in the morning and laydown
at night.
If she had had leisure to indulge
her anguish she might havebeen unable to keep such
speculations at bay. But she had to be up and
working: the blanchisseuse had to be paid,
and Mme. Clopin’s weekly bill, and all
the little “extras” that even her frugal
habits had to reckon with. And in the depths
of her thought dwelt the dogging fear of illness and
incapacity, goading her to work while she could.
She hardly remembered the time when she had been without
that fear; it was second nature now, and it kept her
on her feet when other incentives might have failed.
In the blankness of her misery shefelt no dread of
death; but the horror of being ill and “dependent”
was in her blood.
In the first weeks of silence she
wrote again and again to Deering, entreating him for
a word, for a mere sign of life. From the first
she had shrunk from seeming to assert any claim on
his future, yet in her aching bewilderment she now
charged herself with having been too possessive, too
exacting in her tone. She told herself that his
fastidiousness shrank from any but a “light touch,”
and that hers had not been light enough. She
should havekept to the character of the “little
friend,” the artless consciousness in which tormented
genius may find an escape from its complexities; and
instead, she had dramatized their relation, exaggerated
her own part in it, presumed, forsooth, to share the
front of the stage with him, instead of being content
to serve asscenery or chorus.
But though to herself she admitted,
and even insisted on, the episodical nature of the
experience, on the fact that for Deeringit could be
no more than an incident, she was still convinced that
his sentiment for her, however fugitive, had been
genuine.
His had not been the attitude of the
unscrupulous male seeking a vulgar “advantage.”
For a moment he had really needed her, andif he was
silent now, it was perhaps because he feared that she
had mistaken the nature of the need and built vain
hopes on its possible duration.
It was of the very essence of Lizzie’s
devotion that it sought instinctively the larger freedom
of its object; she could not conceive of love under
any form of exaction or compulsion. To make this
clear to Deering became an overwhelming need, and in
a last short letter she explicitly freed him from
whatever sentimental obligation its predecessors might
have seemed to impose. In thisstudied communication
she playfully accused herself of having unwittingly
sentimentalized their relation, affirming, in self-defense,
a retrospective astuteness, a sense of the impermanence
of the tenderer sentiments, that almost put Deering
in the fatuous position of having mistaken coquetry
for surrender. And she ended gracefully with
a plea for the continuance of the friendly regardwhich
she had “always understood” to be the basis
of their sympathy. The document, when completed,
seemed to her worthy of what she conceived to be Deering’s
conception of a woman of the world, and she found
a spectral satisfaction in the thought of making her
final appearance before him in that distinguished character.
But she was never destined to learn what effect the
appearance produced; for the letter, like those it
sought to excuse, remained unanswered.