A FAILURE IN TACTICS
Miss Eleanor Stanley Maxwell Elliot,
home from her wanderings, stretched her hammock and
herself in it between two trees in a rose-sweet nook
at Greenvale, and gave herself up to a reckoning of
assets and liabilities. Decidedly the balance
was on the wrong side. Miss Esmé could not dodge
the unseemly conclusion that she was far from pleased
with herself. This was perhaps a salutary frame
of mind, but not a pleasant one. If possible,
she was even less pleased with the world in which she
lived. And this was neither salutary nor pleasant.
Furthermore, it was unique in her experience.
Hitherto she had been accustomed to a universe made
to her order and conducted on much the same principle.
Now it no longer ran with oiled smoothness.
Her trip on the Pierce yacht had been
much less restful than she had anticipated. For
this she blamed that sturdy knight of the law, Mr.
William Douglas. Mr. Douglas’s offense was
that he had inveigled her into an engagement. (I am
employing her own term descriptive of the transaction.)
It was a crime of brief duration and swift penalty.
The relation had endured just four weeks. Possibly
its tenure of life might have been longer had not
the young-middle-aged lawyer accepted, quite naturally,
an invitation to join the cruise of the Pierce family
and his fiancée. The lawyer’s super-respectful
attitude toward his principal client disgusted Esmé.
She called it servile.
For contrast she had the memory of
another who had not been servile, even to his dearest
hope. There were more personal contrasts of memory,
too; subtler, more poignant, that flushed in her blood
and made the mere presence of her lover repellent
to her. The status became unbearable. Esmé
ended it. In plain English, she jilted the highly
eligible Mr. William Douglas. To herself she made
the defense that he was not what she had thought,
that he had changed. This was unjust. He
had not changed in the least; he probably never would
change from being the private-secretary type of lawyer.
Toward her, in his time of trial, he behaved not ill.
Justifiably, he protested against her decision.
Finding her immovable, he accepted the prevailing Worthingtonian
theory of Miss Elliot’s royal prerogative as
regards the male sex, and returned, miserably enough,
to his home and his practice.
Another difficulty had arisen to make
distasteful the Pierce hospitality. Kathleen
Pierce, in a fit of depression foreign to her usually
blithe and easy-going nature, had become confidential
and had blurted out certain truths which threw a new
and, to Esmé, disconcerting light upon the episode
of the motor accident. In her first appeal to
Esmé, it now appeared, the girl had been decidedly
less than frank. Therefore, in her own judgment
of Hal and the “Clarion,” Esmé had been
decidedly less than just. In her resentment, Esmé
had almost quarreled with her friend. Common
honesty, she pointed out, required a statement to
Harrington Surtaine upon the point. Would Kathleen
write such a letter? No! Kathleen would
not. In fact, Kathleen would be d-a-m-n-e-d,
darned, if she would. Very well; then it remained
only (this rather loftily) for Esmé herself to explain
to Mr. Surtaine. Later, she decided to explain
by word of mouth. This would involve her return
to Worthington, which she had come to long for.
She had become sensible of a species of homesickness.
In some ill-defined way Harrington
Surtaine was involved in that nostalgia. Not
that she had any desire to see him! But she felt
a certain justifiable curiosity—she was
satisfied that it was justifiable—to know
what he was doing with the “Clarion,” since
her established sphere of influence had ceased to
be influential. Was he really as unyielding in
other tests of principle as he had shown himself with
her? Already she had altered her attitude to the
extent of admitting that it was principle,
even though mistaken. Esmé had been subscribing
to the “Clarion,” and studying it; also
she had written, withal rather guardedly, to sundry
people who might throw light on the subject; to her
uncle, to Dr. Hugh Merritt, her old and loyal friend
largely by virtue of being one of the few young men
of the place who never had been in love with her (he
had other preoccupations), to young Denton the reporter,
who was a sort of cousin, and to Mrs. Festus Willard,
who, alone of the correspondents, suspected the underlying
motive. From these sundry informants she garnered
diverse opinions; the sum and substance of which was
that, on the whole, Hal was fighting the good fight
and with some success. Thereupon Esmé hated him
harder than before—and with considerably
more difficulty.
On a late May day she had slipped
quietly back into Worthington. That small portion
of the populace which constituted Worthington society
was ready to welcome her joyously. But she had
no wish to be joyously welcomed. She didn’t
feel particularly joyous, herself. And society
meant going to places where she would undoubtedly meet
Will Douglas and would probably not meet Hal Surtaine.
Esmé confessed to herself that Douglas was rather
on her conscience, a fact which, in itself, marked
some change of nature in the Great American Pumess.
She decided that society was a bore. For refuge
she turned to her interest in the slums, where the
Reverend Norman Hale, for whom she had a healthy, honest
respect and liking, was, so she learned, finding his
hands rather more than full. Always an enthusiast
in her pursuits, she now threw herself into this to
the total exclusion of all other interests.
To herself she explained this on the
theory that she needed something to occupy her mind.
Something else she really meant, for Mr. Harrington
Surtaine was now occupying it to an inexcusable extent.
She wished very much to see Harrington Surtaine, and,
for the first time in her life, she feared what she
wished. What she had so loftily announced to
Kathleen Pierce as her unalterable determination toward
the editor of the “Clarion” wasn’t
as easy to perform as to promise. Yet, the explanation
of the partial error, into which the self-excusatory
Miss Pierce had led her, was certainly due him, according
to her notions of fair play. If she sent for
him to come, he would, she shrewdly judged, decline.
The alternative was to beard him in his office.
In the strengthening and self-revealing solitude of
her garden, this glowing summer day, Esmé sat trying
to make up her mind. A daring brown thrasher,
his wings a fair match for the ruddy-golden glow in
the girl’s eyes, hopped into her haunt, and
twittered his counsel of courage.
“I’ll do it NOW,”
said Esmé, and the bird, with a triumphant chirp of
congratulation, swooped off to tell the news to the
world of wings and flowers.
To the consequent interview there
was no witness. So it may best be chronicled
in the report made by the interviewer to her friend
Mrs. Festus Willard, who, in the cool seclusion of
her sewing-room, was overwhelmed by a rush of Esmé
to the heart, as she put it. Not having been
apprised of Miss Elliot’s conflicting emotions
since her departure, Mrs. Willard’s mind was
as a page blank for impressions when her visitor burst
in upon her, pirouetted around the room, appropriated
the softest corner of the divan, and announced spiritedly:
“You needn’t ask me where
I’ve been, for I won’t tell you; or what
I’ve been doing, for it’s my own affair;
anyway, you wouldn’t be interested. And
if you insist on knowing, I’ve been revisiting
the pale glimpses of the moon—at three
o’clock P.M.”
“What do you mean, moon?”
inquired Mrs. Willard, unconsciously falling into
a pit of slang.
“The moon we all cry for and
don’t get. In this case a haughty young
editor.”
“You’ve been to see Hal Surtaine,”
deduced Mrs. Willard.
“You have guessed it—with considerable
aid and assistance.”
“What for?”
“On a matter of journalistic import,”
said Miss Elliot solemnly.
“But you don’t cry for
Hal Surtaine,” objected her friend, reverting
to the lunar metaphor.
“Don’t I? I’d
have cried—I’d have burst into a perfect
storm of tears—for him—or you—or
anybody who so much as pointed a finger at me, I was
so scared.”
“Scared? You! I don’t believe
it.”
“I don’t believe it myself—now,”
confessed Esmé, candidly. “But it felt
most extremely like it at the time.”
“You know I don’t at all approve of—”
“Of me. I know you don’t, Jinny.
Neither does he.”
“What did you do to him?”
“Me? I cooed at him like a dove of peace.
“But he was very stiff and proud
He said,
‘You needn’t talk so loud,’”
chanted Miss Esmé mellifluously.
“He didn’t!”
“Well, if he didn’t, he
meant it. He wanted to know what the big, big
D-e-v, dev, I was doing there, anyway.”
“Norrie Elliot! Tell me the truth.”
“Very well,” said Miss
Elliot, aggrieved. “You report the conversation,
then, since you won’t accept my version.”
“If you would give me a start—”
“Just what he wouldn’t
do for me,” interrupted Esmé. “I went
in there to explain something and he pointed the finger
of scorn at me and accused me of frequenting low and
disreputable localities.”
“Norrie!”
“Well,” replied the girl
brazenly, “he said he’d seen me about the
Rookeries district; and if that isn’t a low—”
“Had he?”
“Nothing more probable, though I didn’t
happen to see him there.”
“What were you doing there?”
“Precisely what he wanted to
know. He said it rather as if he owned the place.
So I explained in words of one syllable that I went
there to pick edelweiss from the fire escapes.
Jinny, dear, you don’t know how hard it is to
crowd ‘edelweiss’ into one syllable until
you’ve tried. It splutters.”
“So do you,” said the
indignant Mrs. Willard. “You do worse; you
gibber. If you weren’t just the prettiest
thing that Heaven ever made, some one would have slain
you long ago for your sins.”
“Pretty, yourself,” retorted
Esmé. “My real charm lies in my rigid adherence
to the spirit of truth. Your young friend Mr.
Surtaine scorned my floral jest. He indicated
that I ought not to be about the tenements. He
said there was a great deal of sickness there.
That was why I was there, I explained politely.
Then he said that the sickness might be contagious,
and he muttered something about an epidemic and then
looked as if he wished he hadn’t.”
“I’ve heard some talk
of sickness in the Rookeries. Ought you to be
going there?” asked the other anxiously.
“Mr. Surtaine thinks not.
Quite severely. And in elderly tones. Naturally
I asked him what kind of an epidemic it was. He
said he didn’t know, but he was sure the place
was dangerous, and he was surprised that Uncle Guardy
hadn’t warned me. Uncle Guardy had,
but I don’t do everything I’m warned about.
So then I asked young Mr. Editor why, as he knew there
was a dangerous epidemic about, he should warn little
me privately instead of warning the big public, publicly.”
“Meddlesome child! Can
you never learn to keep your hands off?”
“I was spurring him to his editorial duties.
“But he was very proud and stiff
...
He said that he would tell me, if—”
lilted Miss Esmé, rising to do a pas
seul upon the Willards’ priceless Anatolian
rug.
“Sit down,” commanded her hostess.
“If—what?”
“If nothing. Just if.
That’s the end of the song. Don’t
you know your Lewis Carroll?
“I sent a message to the fish,
I told them, ‘This is what
I wish.’
The little fishes of the sea,
They sent an answer—”
“I don’t want to know
about the fish,” disclaimed Mrs. Willard vehemently.
“I want to know what happened between you and
Hal Surtaine.”
“And you the Vice-President
of the Poetry Club!” reproached Esmé. “Very
well. He was very proud and—Oh, I said
that before. But he really was, this time.
He said, ’Our last discussion of the policy of
the “Clarion” closed that topic between
us.’ Somebody called him away before I could
think of anything mean and superior enough to answer,
and when he came back—always supposing
he isn’t still hiding in the cellar—I
was no longer present.”
“Then you didn’t give him the message
you went for.”
“No. Didn’t I say I was scared?”
Mrs. Willard excused herself, ostensibly
to speak to a maid; in reality to speak to a telephone.
On her return she made a frontal attack:—
“Norrie, what made you break your engagement
to Will Douglas?”
“Why? Don’t you approve?”
“Did you break it for the same reason that drove
you into it?”
“What reason do you think drove me into it?”
“Hal Surtaine.”
“He didn’t!” she denied furiously.
“And you didn’t break it because of him?”
“No! I broke it because
I don’t want to get married,” cried the
girl in a rush of words. “Not to Will Douglas.
Or to—to anybody. Why should I?
I don’t want to—I won’t,”
she continued, half laughing, half sobbing, “go
and have to bother about running a house and have a
lot of babies and lose my pretty figure—and
get fat—and dowdy—and slow-poky—and
old. Look at Molly Vane: twins already.
She’s a horrible example. Why do people
always have to have children—”
She stopped, abruptly, herself stricken
at the stricken look in the other’s face.
“Oh, Jinny, darling Jinny,” she gasped;
“I forgot! Your baby. Your little,
dead baby! I’m a fool; a poor little silly
fool, chattering of realities that I know nothing
about.”
“You will know some day, my
dear,” said the other woman, smiling valiantly.
“Don’t deny the greatest reality of all,
when it comes. Are you sure you’re not
denying it now?”
The sunbeams crept and sparkled, like
light upon ruffled waters, across Esmé’s obstinately
shaken head.
“Perhaps you couldn’t
help hurting him. But be sure you aren’t
hurting yourself, too.”
“That’s the worst of it,”
said the girl, with one of her sudden accesses of
sweet candor. “I needn’t have hurt
him at all. I was stupid.” She paused
in her revelation. “But he was stupider,”
she declared vindictively; “so it serves him
right.”
“How was he stupider?”
“He thought,” said Esmé
with sorrowful solemnity, “that I was just as
bad as I seemed. He ought to have known me better.”
The older woman bent and laid a cheek
against the sunny hair. “And weren’t
you just as bad as you seemed?”
“Worse! Anyway, I’m
afraid so,” said the confessional voice, rather
muffled in tone. “But I—I just
got led into it. Oh, Jinny, I’m not awfully
happy.”
Mrs. Willard’s head went up
and she cocked an attentive ear, like an expectant
robin. “Some one outside,” said she.
“I’ll be back in a moment. You sit
there and think it over.”
Esmé curled back on the divan.
A minute later she heard the curtains part at the
end of the dim room, and glanced up with a smile, to
face, not Jeannette Willard, but Hal Surtaine.
“You ’phoned for me, Lady
Jinny,” he began: and then, with a start,
“Esmé! I—I didn’t expect
to find you here.”
“Nor I to see you,” she
said, with a calmness that belied her beating heart.
“Sit down, please. I have something to tell
you. It’s what I really came to the office
to say.”
“Yes?”
“About Kathleen Pierce.”
Hal frowned. “Do you think there can be
any use—”
“Please,” she begged,
with uplifted eyes of entreaty. “She—she
didn’t tell me the truth about that interview
with your reporter. It was true; but she made
me think it wasn’t. She confessed to me,
and she feels very badly. So do I. I believed
that you had deliberately made that up, about her
saying that she didn’t turn back because she
wanted to catch a train. I believed, too, that
the editorial was written after our—our
talk. I’m sorry.”
Hal stood above her, looking rather
stern, and a little old and worn, she thought.
“If that is an apology, it is
accepted,” he said with surface politeness.
To him she was, in that moment, a
light-minded woman apologizing for the petty misdeed,
and paying no heed to the graver wrong that she had
done him. Jeannette Willard could have set him
right in a word; could have shown him what the girl
felt, unavowedly to herself but with underlying conviction,
that for so great an offense no apology could suffice;
nothing short of complete surrender. But Mrs.
Willard was not there to help out. She was waiting
hopefully, outside.
“And that is all?” he
said, after a pause, with just a shade of contempt
in his voice.
“All,” she said lightly,
“unless you choose to tell me how the ‘Clarion’
is getting on.”
“As well as could be expected.
We pay high for our principles. But thus far
we’ve held to them. You should read the
paper.”
“I do.”
“To expect your approval would be too much,
I suppose.”
“No. In many ways I like
it. In fact, I think I’ll renew my subscription.”
It was innocently said, without thought
of the old playful bargain between them, which had
terminated with the mailing of the withered arbutus.
But to Hal it seemed merely a brazen essay in coquetry;
an attempt to reconstitute the former relation, for
her amusement.
“The subscription lists are
closed, on the old terms,” he said crisply.
“Oh, you couldn’t have
thought I meant that!” she whispered; but he
was already halfway down the room, on the echo of
his “Good-afternoon, Miss Elliot.”
As before, he turned at the door.
And he carried with him, to muse over in the depths
of his outraged heart once more, the mystery of that
still and desperate smile. Any woman could have
solved it for him. Any, except, possibly, Esmé
Elliot.
“It didn’t come out as
I hoped, Festus,” said the sorrowful little Mrs.
Willard to her husband that evening. “I
don’t know that Hal will ever believe in her
again. How can he be so—so stupidly
unforgiving!”
“Always the man’s fault,
of course,” said her big husband comfortably.
“No. She’s to blame.
But it’s the fault of men in general that Norrie
is what she is; the men of this town, I mean.
No man has ever been a man with Norrie Elliot.”
“What have they been?”
“Mice. It’s a tradition
of the place. They lie down in rows for her to
trample on. So of course she tramples on them.”
“Well, I never trampled on mice
myself,” observed Festus Willard. “It
sounds like uncertain footing. But I’ll
bet you five pounds of your favorite candy against
one of your very best kisses, that if she undertakes
to make a footpath of Hal Surtaine she’ll get
her feet hurt.”
“Or her heart,” said his
wife. “And, oh, Festus dear, it’s
such a real, warm, dear heart, under all the spoiled-childness
of her.”