IT was the firm conviction of Andora
Macy that every object in the Vincent Deerings’
charming little house at Neuilly had been expressly
designed for the Deerings’ son to play with.
The house was full of pretty things,
some not obviously applicable to the purpose; but
Miss Macy’s casuistry was equal tothe baby’s
appetite, and the baby’s mother was no match
for them in the art of defending her possessions.
There were moments, in fact, when Lizzie almost fell
in with Andora’s summary division of her works
of art into articles safe or unsafe for the baby to
lick, or resisted it only to the extent of occasionally
substituting some less precious or less perishable
object for the particular fragility on which her son’s
desire was fixed. And it was with this intention
that, on a certain fair spring morning—which
worethe added luster of being the baby’s second
birthday—she had murmured, with her mouth
in his curls, and one hand holding a bitof Chelsea
above his dangerous clutch: “Wouldn’t
he rather have that beautiful shiny thing over there
in Aunt Andorra’s hand?”
The two friends were together in Lizzie’s
little morning-room—the room she had chosen,
on acquiring the house, because, when she sat there,
she could hear Deering’s step as he paced up
and down before his easel in the studio she had built
for him. His step had been less regularly audible
than she had hoped, for, after three years of wedded
bliss, he had somehow failed to settle downto the great
work which was to result from that privileged state;
but even when she did not hear him she knew that he
was there, above her head, stretched out on the old
divan from Passy, and smoking endless cigarettes while
he skimmed the morning papers; and the sense of his
nearness had not yet lost its first keen edge of bliss.
Lizzie herself, on the day in question,
was engaged in a more arduous task than the study
of the morning’s news. She had neverunlearned
the habit of orderly activity, and the trait she least
understood in her husband’s character was his
way of letting the loose ends of life hang as they
would. She had been disposed at first to ascribe
this to the chronic incoherence of his first menage;
but now she knew that, though he basked under therule
of her beneficent hand, he would never feel any active
impulse to further its work. He liked to see
things fall into place about him at a wave of her
wand; but his enjoyment of her household magic in
no way diminished his smiling irresponsibility, and
it was with one of its least amiable consequences
that his wife and her friend were now dealing.
Before them stood two travel-worn
trunks and a distended portmanteau, which had shed
their contents in heterogeneous heapsover Lizzie’s
rosy carpet. They represented the hostages left
byher husband on his somewhat precipitate departure
from a New Yorkboarding-house, and indignantly redeemed
by her on her learning, in a curt letter from his
landlady, that the latter was not disposedto regard
them as an equivalent for the arrears of Deering’s
board.
Lizzie had not been shocked by the
discovery that her husband had left America in debt.
She had too sad an acquaintance with the economic
strain to see any humiliation in such accidents; but
it offended her sense of order that he should not
have liquidated his obligation in the three years
since their marriage. He took her remonstrance
with his usual disarming grace, and left her to forward
the liberating draft, though her delicacy had provided
him with a bank-account which assured his personal
independence. Lizzie had discharged the duty
without repugnance, since she knewthat his delegating
it to her was the result of his good-humored indolence
and not of any design on her exchequer. Deering
was not dazzled by money; his altered fortunes had
tempted him to no excesses: he was simply too
lazy to draw the check, as he had been too lazy to
remember the debt it canceled.
“No, dear! No!” Lizzie
lifted the Chelsea figure higher. “Can’t
you find something for him, Andora, among that rubbish
over there? Where’s the beaded bag you
had in your hand just now? I don’t think
it could hurt him to lick that.”
Miss Macy, bag in hand, rose from
her knees, and stumbled through the slough of frayed
garments and old studio properties. Before the
group of mother and son she fell into a raptured attitude.
“Do look at him reach for it,
the tyrant! Isn’t he just like the young
Napoleon?”
Lizzie laughed and swung her son in
air. “Dangle it before him, Andora.
If you let him have it too quickly, he won’t
care for it. He’s just like any man, I
think.”
Andora slowly lowered the shining
bag till the heir of the Deerings closed his masterful
fist upon it. “There—my Chelsea’ssafe!”
Lizzie smiled, setting her boy on the floor, and watchinghim
stagger away with his booty.
Andora stood beside her, watching
too. “Have you any idea where that bag
came from, Lizzie?”
Mrs. Deering, bent above a pile of
dis-collared shirts, shook an inattentive head.
“I never saw such wicked washing! There
isn’t one that’s fit to mend. The
bag? No; I’ve not the least idea.”
Andora surveyed her dramatically.
“Doesn’t it make you utterly miserable
to think that some woman may have made it for him?”
Lizzie, bowed in anxious scrutiny
above the shirts, broke into an unruffled laugh.
“Really, Andora, really—six, seven,
nine; no, there isn’t even a dozen. There
isn’t a whole dozen of anything.
I don’t see how men live alone!”
Andora broodingly pursued her theme.
“Do you mean to tell me it doesn’t make
you jealous to handle these things of his that other
women may have given him?”
Lizzie shook her head again, and,
straightening herself with a smile, tossed a bundle
in her friend’s direction. “No, it
doesn’t make me the least bit jealous.
Here, count these socks for me, like a darling.”
Andora moaned, “Don’t
you feel anything at all?” asthe socks
landed in her hollow bosom; but Lizzie, intent upon
her task, tranquilly continued to unfold and sort.
She felt a great deal as she did so, but her feelings
were too deep and delicate for the simplifying process
of speech. She only knew that each article she
drew from the trunks sent through her the long tremor
of Deering’s touch. It was part of her
wonderful new life that everything belonging to him
contained an infinitesimal fraction of himself—a
fraction becoming visible in the warmth of her love
as certain secret elements become visible in rare
intensities of temperature. And in the case of
the objects before her, poor shabby witnesses of his
days of failure, what they gave out acquired a special
poignancy from its contrast to his present cherished
state. His shirts were all in round dozens now,
and washed as carefully as old lace. As for his
socks, she knew the pattern of every pair, and would
have liked to see the washerwoman who dared to mislay
one, or bring it home with the colors “run”!
And in these homely tokens of his well-being she saw
the symbol of what her tenderness had brought him.
He was safe in it, encompassed by it, morally and
materially, and she defied the embattled powers of
malice to reach him through the armor of her love.
Such feelings, however, were not communicable, even
had one desired to express them: they wereno
more to be distinguished from the sense of life itself
than bees from the lime-blossoms in which they murmur.
“Oh, do look at him,
Lizzie! He’s found out how toopen the bag!”
Lizzie lifted her head to smile a
moment at her son, who satthroned on a heap of studio
rubbish, with Andora before him on adoring knees.
She thought vaguely, “Poor Andora!” and
then resumed the discouraged inspection of a buttonless
white waistcoat. The next sound she was aware
of was a fluttered exclamation from her friend.
“Why, Lizzie, do you know what
he used the bag for? To keepyour letters in!”
Lizzie looked up more quickly.
She was aware that Andora’s pronoun had changed
its object, and was now applied to Deering. And
it struck her as odd, and slightly disagreeable, that
a letter of hers should be found among the rubbish
abandoned in her husband’s New York lodgings.
“How funny! Give it to me, please.”
“Give the bag to Aunt Andora,
darling! Here—look inside, and see
what else a big big boy can find there! Yes, here’s
another! Why, why—”
Lizzie rose with a shade of impatience
and crossed the floorto the romping group beside the
other trunk.
“What is it? Give me the
letters, please.” As she spoke, she suddenly
recalled the day when, in Mme. Clopin’s
pension, she had addressed a similar behest
to Andora Macy.
Andora had lifted a look of startled
conjecture. “Why, thisone’s never
been opened! Do you suppose that awful woman could
have kept it from him?”
Lizzie laughed. Andora’s
imaginings were really puerile. “What awful
woman? His landlady? Don’t be such
a goose, Andora. How can it have been kept back
from him, when we’ve found it here among his
things?”
“Yes; but then why was it never opened?”
Andora held out the letter, and Lizzie
took it. The writingwas hers; the envelop bore
the Passy postmark; and it was unopened. She stood
looking at it with a sudden sharp drop of the heart.
“Why, so are the others—all
unopened!” Andora threw out on a rising note;
but Lizzie, stooping over, stretched out her hand.
“Give them to me, please.”
“Oh, Lizzie, Lizzie—”
Andora, still on her knees, continued to hold back
the packet, her pale face paler with anger and compassion.
“Lizzie, they’re the letters I used to
post for you—the letters he never answered!
Look!”
“Give them back to me, please.”
The two women faced each other, Andora
kneeling, Lizzie motionless before her, the letters
in her hand. The blood had rushed to her face,
humming in her ears, and forcing itself into the veins
of her temples like hot lead. Then it ebbed,
and she felt cold and weak.
“It must have been some plot—some
conspiracy!” Andora cried, so fired by the ecstasy
of invention that for the moment she seemed lost to
all but the esthetic aspect of the case.
Lizzie turned away her eyes with an
effort, and they rested on the boy, who sat at her
feet placidly sucking the tassels of the bag.
His mother stooped and extracted them from his rosy
mouth, which a cry of wrath immediately filled.
She lifted him in her arms, and for the first time
no current of life ran from his bodyinto hers.
He felt heavy and clumsy, like some one else’s
child; and his screams annoyed her.
“Take him away, please, Andora.”
“Oh, Lizzie, Lizzie!” Andora wailed.
Lizzie held out the child, and Andora,
struggling to her feet, received him.
“I know just how you feel,” she gasped
out above the baby’s head.
Lizzie, in some dark hollow of herself,
heard the echo of a laugh. Andora always thought
she knew how people felt!
“Tell Marthe to take him with
her when she fetches Juliet home from school.”
“Yes, yes.” Andora
gloated over her. “If you’d only give
way, my darling!”
The baby, howling, dived over Andora’s
shoulder for the bag.
“Oh, take him!” his mother ordered.
Andora, from the door, cried out:
“I’ll be back at once. Remember,
love, you’re not alone!”
But Lizzie insisted, “Go with
them—I wish you to go with them,”
in the tone to which Miss Macy had never learned the
answer.
The door closed on her outraged back,
and Lizzie stood alone. She looked about the
disordered room, which offered a dreary image of the
havoc of her life. An hour or two ago everything
about her had been so exquisitely ordered, without
and within; her thoughtsand emotions had lain outspread
before her like delicate jewels laid away symmetrically
in a collector’s cabinet. Now they had been
tossed down helter-skelter among the rubbish there
on the floor, and had themselves turned to rubbish
like the rest. Yes, there lay her life at her
feet, among all that tarnished trash.
She knelt and picked up her letters,
ten in all, and examined the flaps of the envelops.
Not one had been opened—not one. Asshe
looked, every word she had written fluttered to life,
and every feeling prompting it sent a tremor through
her. With vertiginousspeed and microscopic vision
she was reliving that whole period of her life, stripping
bare again the black ruin over which the drift of
three happy years had fallen.
She laughed at Andora’s notion
of a conspiracy—of the letters having been
“kept back.” She required no extraneous
aid in deciphering the mystery: her three years’
experience of Deering shed on it all the light she
needed. And yet a moment before shehad believed
herself to be perfectly happy! Now it was the
worstpart of her anguish that it did not really surprise
her.
She knew so well how it must have
happened. The letters hadreached him when he
was busy, occupied with something else, and had been
put aside to be read at some future time—a
time which nevercame. Perhaps on his way to America,
on the steamer, even, he had met “some one else”—the
“some one” who lurks, veiled and ominous,
in the background of every woman’s thoughts
about her lover. Or perhaps he had been merely
forgetful. She had learned from experience that
the sensations which he seemed to feel with the most
exquisite intensity left no reverberations in his
mind—thathe did not relive either his pleasures
or his pains. She needed no better proof of that
than the lightness of his conduct toward hisdaughter.
He seemed to have taken it for granted that Juliet
would remain indefinitely with the friends who had
received her after her mother’s death, and it
was at Lizzie’s suggestion that the littlegirl
was brought home and that they had established themselves
at Neuilly to be near her school. But Juliet
once with them, he became the model of a tender father,
and Lizzie wondered that he had not felt the child’s
absence, since he seemed so affectionately aware of
her presence.
Lizzie had noted all this in Juliet’s
case, but had taken for granted that her own was different;
that she formed, for Deering, the exception which
every woman secretly supposes herself to formin the
experience of the man she loves. Certainly, she
had learned by this time that she could not modify
his habits, but she imagined that she had deepened
his sensibilities, had furnished him with an “ideal”—angelic
function! And she now saw that the fact of her
letters—her unanswered letters—having,
on his own assurance, “meant so much”
to him, had been the basis on which this beautiful
fabric was reared.
There they lay now, the letters, precisely
as when they had left her hands. He had not had
time to read them; and there had been a moment in
her past when that discovery would have been thesharpest
pang imaginable to her heart. She had traveled
far beyond that point. She could have forgiven
him now for having forgottenher; but she could never
forgive him for having deceived her.
She sat down, and looked again vaguely
about the room. Suddenly she heard his step overhead,
and her heart contracted. She was afraid he was
coming down to her. She sprang up and bolted the
door; then she dropped into the nearest chair, tremulous
and exhausted, as if the pushing of the bolt had required
an immense muscular effort. A moment later she
heard him on the stairs, andher tremor broke into a
cold fit of shaking. “I loathe you—I
loathe you!” she cried.
She listened apprehensively for his
touch on the handle of the door. He would come
in, humming a tune, to ask some idle question and lay
a caress on her hair. But no, the door was bolted;
she was safe. She continued to listen, and the
step passed on. He had not been coming to her,
then. He must have gone down-stairs to fetchsomething—another
newspaper, perhaps. He seemed to read little
else, and she sometimes wondered when he had found
time to store the material that used to serve for
their famous “literary” talks. The
wonder shot through her again, barbed with a sneer.
At that moment it seemed to her that everything he
had ever done and beenwas a lie.
She heard the house-door close, and
started up. Was he going out? It was not
his habit to leave the house in the morning.
She crossed the room to the window,
and saw him walking, with a quick decided step, between
the budding lilacs to the gate. What could have
called him forth at that unwonted hour? It was
odd that he should not have told her. The fact
that she thought it odd suddenly showed her how closely
their lives were interwoven. Shehad become a
habit to him, and he was fond of his habits. But
toher it was as if a stranger had opened the gate
and gone out. She wondered what he would feel
if he knew that she felt that.
“In an hour he will know,”
she said to herself, with a kind of fierce exultation;
and immediately she began to dramatize the scene.
As soon as he came in she meant to call him up to her
room and hand him the letters without a word.
For a moment she gloated on the picture; then her
imagination recoiled from it. She was humiliated
by the thought of humiliating him. She wanted
to keephis image intact; she would not see him.
He had lied to her about her letters—had
lied to her when he found it to his interest to regain
her favor. Yes, there was thepoint to hold fast.
He had sought her out when he learned that she was
rich. Perhaps he had come back from America on
purpose to marry her; no doubt he had come back on
purpose. It was incredible that she had not seen
this at the time. She turned sick at the thought
of her fatuity and of the grossness of his arts.
Well, the event proved that they were all heneeded.
But why had he gone out at such an hour? She
was irritated to find herself still preoccupied by
his comings and goings.
Turning from the window, she sat down
again. She wondered what she meant to do next.
No, she would not show him the letters; she would
simply leave them on his table and go away. She
would leave the house with her boy and Andora.
It was a relief to feela definite plan forming itself
in her mind—something that her uprooted
thoughts could fasten on. She would go away, of
course; and meanwhile, in order not to see him, she
would feign a headache, and remain in her room till
after luncheon. Then she and Andora would pack
a few things, and fly with the child while he was dawdling
about up-stairs in the studio. When one’s
house fell, one fled from the ruins: nothing
could be simpler, more inevitable.
Her thoughts were checked by the impossibility
of picturing what would happen next. Try as she
would, she could not see herself and the child away
from Deering. But that, of course, was because
of her nervous weakness. She had youth, money,
energy: all the trumps were on her side.
It was much more difficult to imagine what would become
of Deering. He was so dependent on her, and they
had been so happy together! The fact struck her
as illogical, and even immoral, and yet she knew he
had been happy with her. It never happened like
that in novels: happiness “built on a lie”
always crumbled, and buried the presumptuous architect
beneath the ruins. According to the laws of every
novel she had ever read, Deering, having deceived her
once, would inevitably have gone on deceiving her.
Yet she knew he had not gone on deceiving her.
She tried again to picture her new
life. Her friends, of course, would rally about
her. But the prospect left her cold; she did not
want them to rally. She wanted only one thing—the
life she had been living before she had given her
baby the embroideredbag to play with. Oh, why
had she given him the bag? She had been so happy,
they had all been so happy! Every nerve in her
clamored for her lost happiness, angrily, unreasonably,
as the boy had clamored for his bag! It was horrible
to know too much; there was always blood in the foundations.
Parents “kept things” from children—protected
them from all the dark secrets of pain and evil.
And was any life livable unless it were thus protected?
Could any one look in the Medusa’s face and
live?
But why should she leave the house,
since it was hers? Here, with her boy and Andora,
she could still make for herself the semblance of
a life. It was Deering who would have to go; he
would understand that as soon as he saw the letters.
She pictured him in the act of going—leaving
the house as he had left it just now. She saw
the gate closing on him for the last time. Now
her vision was acute enough: she saw him as distinctlyas
if he were in the room. Ah, he would not like
returning to the old life of privations and expedients!
And yet she knew he wouldnot plead with her.
Suddenly a new thought rushed through
her mind. What if Andora had rushed to him with
the tale of the discovery of the letters—with
the “Fly, you are discovered!” of romantic
fiction? What if he had left her for good?
It would not be unlikehim, after all. Under his
wonderful gentleness he was always evasive and inscrutable.
He might have said to himself that he would forestall
her action, and place himself at once on the defensive.
It might be that she had seen him go out of
the gate forthe last time.
She looked about the room again, as
if this thought had given it a new aspect. Yes,
this alone could explain her husband’s going
out. It was past twelve o’clock, their
usual luncheon hour, and he was scrupulously punctual
at meals, and gently reproachful if shekept him waiting.
Only some unwonted event could have caused himto leave
the house at such an hour and with such marks of haste.
Well, perhaps it was better that Andora should have
spoken. She mistrusted her own courage; she almost
hoped the deed had been done for her. Yet her
next sensation was one of confused resentment.
She said to herself, “Why has Andora interfered?”
She felt baffled and angry, as though her prey had
escaped her. If Deering had been in the house,
she would have gone to him instantly and overwhelmed
him with her scorn. But he had gone out, and
she did not know where he had gone, and oddly mingled
with her anger against him was the latent instinct
of vigilance, thesolicitude of the woman accustomed
to watch over the man she loves. It would be
strange never to feel that solicitude again, never
to hear him say, with his hand on her hair: “Why,
you foolish child, were you worried? Am I late?”
The sense of his touch was so real
that she stiffened herself against it, flinging back
her head as if to throw off his hand. The mere
thought of his caress was hateful; yet she felt it
in all her traitorous veins. Yes, she felt it,
but with horror and repugnance. It was something
she wanted to escape from, and the fact of struggling
against it was what made its hold so strong. It
was as though her mind were sounding her body to make
sure of itsallegiance, spying on it for any secret
movement of revolt.
To escape from the sensation, she
rose and went again to thewindow. No one was
in sight. But presently the gate began to swing
back, and her heart gave a leap—she knew
not whether up ordown. A moment later the gate
opened slowly to admit a perambulator, propelled by
the nurse and flanked by Juliet and Andora. Lizzie’s
eyes rested on the familiar group as if she hadnever
seen it before, and she stood motionless, instead
of flyingdown to meet the children.
Suddenly there was a step on the stairs,
and she heard Andora’s agitated knock.
She unbolted the door, and was strainedto her friend’s
emaciated bosom.
“My darling!” Miss Macy
cried. “Remember you have your child—and
me!”
Lizzie loosened herself gently.
She looked at Andora with afeeling of estrangement
which she could not explain.
“Have you spoken to my husband?”
she asked, drawing coldly back.
“Spoken to him? No.”
Andora stared at her in genuine wonder.
“Then you haven’t met him since he left
me?”
“No, my love. Is he out? I haven’t
met him.”
Lizzie sat down with a confused sense
of relief, which welled up to her throat and made
speech difficult.
Suddenly light came to Andora.
“I understand, dearest. Youdon’t feel
able to see him yourself. You want me to go to
him for you.” She looked about her, scenting
the battle. “You’re right, darling.
As soon as he comes in I’ll go to him.
The sooner we get it over the better.”
She followed Lizzie, who without answering
her had turned mechanically back to the window.
As they stood there, the gate moved again, and Deering
entered the garden.
“There he is now!” Lizzie
felt Andora’s fervent clutch uponher arm.
“Where are the letters? I will go down at
once. You allow me to speak for you? You
trust my woman’s heart? Oh, believe me,
darling,” Miss Macy panted, “I shall know
just what to say to him!”
“What to say to him?” Lizzie absently
repeated.
As her husband advanced up the path
she had a sudden trembling vision of their three years
together. Those years were her wholelife; everything
before them had been colorless and unconscious, like
the blind life of the plant before it reaches the
surface ofthe soil. They had not been exactly
what she dreamed; but if they had taken away certain
illusions, they had left richer realities in their
stead. She understood now that she had gradually
adjusted herself to the new image of her husband as
he was, as he would always be. He was not the
hero of her dream, but he was the man she loved, and
who had loved her. For she saw now, in this last
wide flash of pity and initiation, that, as a solid
marble may bemade out of worthless scraps of mortar,
glass and pebbles, so outof mean mixed substances
may be fashioned a love that will bear the stress
of life.
More urgently, she felt the pressure
of Miss Macy’s hand.
“I shall hand him the letters
without a word. You may rely, love, on my sense
of dignity. I know everything you’re feeling
at this moment!”
Deering had reached the door-step.
Lizzie continued to watch him in silence till he disappeared
under the glazed roof of the porch below the window;
then she turned and looked almost compassionately at
her friend.
“Oh, poor Andora, you don’t
know anything—you don’t know anything
at all!” she said.
THE END