It rose for them—their
honey-moon—over the waters of a lake so
famed as the scene of romantic raptures that they were
rather proud of not having been afraid to choose it
as the setting of their own.
“It required a total lack of
humour, or as great a gift for it as ours, to risk
the experiment,” Susy Lansing opined, as they
hung over the inevitable marble balustrade and watched
their tutelary orb roll its magic carpet across the
waters to their feet.
“Yes—or the loan
of Strefford’s villa,” her husband emended,
glancing upward through the branches at a long low
patch of paleness to which the moonlight was beginning
to give the form of a white house-front.
“Oh, come when we’d five
to choose from. At least if you count the Chicago
flat.”
“So we had—you wonder!”
He laid his hand on hers, and his touch renewed the
sense of marvelling exultation which the deliberate
survey of their adventure always roused in her ….
It was characteristic that she merely added, in her
steady laughing tone: “Or, not counting
the flat—for I hate to brag-just consider
the others: Violet Melrose’s place at Versailles,
your aunt’s villa at Monte Carlo—and
a moor!”
She was conscious of throwing in the
moor tentatively, and yet with a somewhat exaggerated
emphasis, as if to make sure that he shouldn’t
accuse her of slurring it over. But he seemed
to have no desire to do so. “Poor old
Fred!” he merely remarked; and she breathed
out carelessly: “Oh, well—”
His hand still lay on hers, and for
a long interval, while they stood silent in the enveloping
loveliness of the night, she was aware only of the
warm current running from palm to palm, as the moonlight
below them drew its line of magic from shore to shore.
Nick Lansing spoke at last.
“Versailles in May would have been impossible:
all our Paris crowd would have run us down within
twenty-four hours. And Monte Carlo is ruled out
because it’s exactly the kind of place everybody
expected us to go. So— with all respect
to you—it wasn’t much of a mental
strain to decide on Como.”
His wife instantly challenged this
belittling of her capacity. “It took a
good deal of argument to convince you that we could
face the ridicule of Como!”
“Well, I should have preferred
something in a lower key; at least I thought I should
till we got here. Now I see that this place
is idiotic unless one is perfectly happy; and that
then it’s-as good as any other.”
She sighed out a blissful assent.
“And I must say that Streffy has done things
to a turn. Even the cigars—who do you
suppose gave him those cigars?” She added thoughtfully:
“You’ll miss them when we have to go.”
“Oh, I say, don’t let’s
talk to-night about going. Aren’t we outside
of time and space …? Smell that guinea-a-bottle
stuff over there: what is it? Stephanotis?”
“Y-yes …. I suppose
so. Or gardenias …. Oh, the fire-flies!
Look … there, against that splash of moonlight on
the water. Apples of silver in a net-work of
gold ….” They leaned together, one flesh
from shoulder to finger-tips, their eyes held by the
snared glitter of the ripples.
“I could bear,” Lansing
remarked, “even a nightingale at this moment
....”
A faint gurgle shook the magnolias
behind them, and a long liquid whisper answered it
from the thicket of laurel above their heads.
“It’s a little late in
the year for them: they’re ending just
as we begin.”
Susy laughed. “I hope
when our turn comes we shall say good-bye to each
other as sweetly.”
It was in her husband’s mind
to answer: “They’re not saying good-bye,
but only settling down to family cares.”
But as this did not happen to be in his plan, or
in Susy’s, he merely echoed her laugh and pressed
her closer.
The spring night drew them into its
deepening embrace. The ripples of the lake had
gradually widened and faded into a silken smoothness,
and high above the mountains the moon was turning
from gold to white in a sky powdered with vanishing
stars. Across the lake the lights of a little
town went out, one after another, and the distant
shore became a floating blackness. A breeze
that rose and sank brushed their faces with the scents
of the garden; once it blew out over the water a great
white moth like a drifting magnolia petal. The
nightingales had paused and the trickle of the fountain
behind the house grew suddenly insistent.
When Susy spoke it was in a voice
languid with visions. “I have been thinking,”
she said, “that we ought to be able to make it
last at least a year longer.”
Her husband received the remark without
any sign of surprise or disapprobation; his answer
showed that he not only understood her, but had been
inwardly following the same train of thought.
“You mean,” he enquired
after a pause, “without counting your grandmother’s
pearls?”
“Yes—without the pearls.”
He pondered a while, and then rejoined
in a tender whisper: “Tell me again just
how.”
“Let’s sit down, then.
No, I like the cushions best.” He stretched
himself in a long willow chair, and she curled up on
a heap of boat-cushions and leaned her head against
his knee. Just above her, when she lifted her
lids, she saw bits of moonflooded sky incrusted like
silver in a sharp black patterning of plane-boughs.
All about them breathed of peace and beauty and stability,
and her happiness was so acute that it was almost
a relief to remember the stormy background of bills
and borrowing against which its frail structure had
been reared. “People with a balance can’t
be as happy as all this,” Susy mused, letting
the moonlight filter through her lazy lashes.
People with a balance had always been
Susy Branch’s bugbear; they were still, and
more dangerously, to be Susy Lansing’s.
She detested them, detested them doubly, as the natural
enemies of mankind and as the people one always had
to put one’s self out for. The greater
part of her life having been passed among them, she
knew nearly all that there was to know about them,
and judged them with the contemptuous lucidity of
nearly twenty years of dependence. But at the
present moment her animosity was diminished not only
by the softening effect of love but by the fact that
she had got out of those very people more—yes,
ever so much more—than she and Nick, in
their hours of most reckless planning, had ever dared
to hope for.
“After all, we owe them this!” she mused.
Her husband, lost in the drowsy beatitude
of the hour, had not repeated his question; but she
was still on the trail of the thought he had started.
A year—yes, she was sure now that with
a little management they could have a whole year of
it! “It” was their marriage, their
being together, and away from bores and bothers, in
a comradeship of which both of them had long ago guessed
the immediate pleasure, but she at least had never
imagined the deeper harmony.
It was at one of their earliest meetings—at
one of the heterogeneous dinners that the Fred Gillows
tried to think “literary”—that
the young man who chanced to sit next to her, and
of whom it was vaguely rumoured that he had “written,”
had presented himself to her imagination as the sort
of luxury to which Susy Branch, heiress, might conceivably
have treated herself as a crowning folly. Susy
Branch, pauper, was fond of picturing how this fancied
double would employ her millions: it was one
of her chief grievances against her rich friends that
they disposed of theirs so unimaginatively.
“I’d rather have a husband
like that than a steam-yacht!” she had thought
at the end of her talk with the young man who had
written, and as to whom it had at once been clear to
her that nothing his pen had produced, or might hereafter
set down, would put him in a position to offer his
wife anything more costly than a row-boat.
“His wife! As if he could
ever have one! For he’s not the kind to
marry for a yacht either.” In spite of
her past, Susy had preserved enough inner independence
to detect the latent signs of it in others, and also
to ascribe it impulsively to those of the opposite
sex who happened to interest her. She had a
natural contempt for people who gloried in what they
need only have endured. She herself meant eventually
to marry, because one couldn’t forever hang
on to rich people; but she was going to wait till
she found some one who combined the maximum of wealth
with at least a minimum of companionableness.
She had at once perceived young Lansing’s
case to be exactly the opposite: he was as poor
as he could be, and as companionable as it was possible
to imagine. She therefore decided to see as
much of him as her hurried and entangled life permitted;
and this, thanks to a series of adroit adjustments,
turned out to be a good deal. They met frequently
all the rest of that winter; so frequently that Mrs.
Fred Gillow one day abruptly and sharply gave Susy
to understand that she was “making herself ridiculous.”
“Ah—” said
Susy with a long breath, looking her friend and patroness
straight in the painted eyes.
“Yes,” cried Ursula Gillow
in a sob, “before you interfered Nick liked
me awfully … and, of course, I don’t want to
reproach you … but when I think ….”
Susy made no answer. How could
she, when she thought? The dress she had on
had been given her by Ursula; Ursula’s motor
had carried her to the feast from which they were both
returning. She counted on spending the following
August with the Gillows at Newport … and the only
alternative was to go to California with the Bockheimers,
whom she had hitherto refused even to dine with.
“Of course, what you fancy is
perfect nonsense, Ursula; and as to my interfering—”
Susy hesitated, and then murmured: “But
if it will make you any happier I’ll arrange
to see him less often ….” She sounded
the lowest depths of subservience in returning Ursula’s
tearful kiss ….
Susy Branch had a masculine respect
for her word; and the next day she put on her most
becoming hat and sought out young Mr. Lansing in his
lodgings. She was determined to keep her promise
to Ursula; but she meant to look her best when she
did it.
She knew at what time the young man
was likely to be found, for he was doing a dreary
job on a popular encyclopaedia (V to X), and had told
her what hours were dedicated to the hateful task.
“Oh, if only it were a novel!” she thought
as she mounted his dingy stairs; but immediately reflected
that, if it were the kind that she could bear to read,
it probably wouldn’t bring him in much more
than his encyclopaedia. Miss Branch had her
standards in literature ….
The apartment to which Mr. Lansing
admitted her was a good deal cleaner, but hardly less
dingy, than his staircase. Susy, knowing him
to be addicted to Oriental archaeology, had pictured
him in a bare room adorned by a single Chinese bronze
of flawless shape, or by some precious fragment of
Asiatic pottery. But such redeeming features
were conspicuously absent, and no attempt had been
made to disguise the decent indigence of the bed-sitting-room.
Lansing welcomed his visitor with
every sign of pleasure, and with apparent indifference
as to what she thought of his furniture. He
seemed to be conscious only of his luck in seeing
her on a day when they had not expected to meet.
This made Susy all the sorrier to execute her promise,
and the gladder that she had put on her prettiest
hat; and for a moment or two she looked at him in
silence from under its conniving brim.
Warm as their mutual liking was, Lansing
had never said a word of love to her; but this was
no deterrent to his visitor, whose habit it was to
speak her meaning clearly when there were no reasons,
worldly or pecuniary, for its concealment. After
a moment, therefore, she told him why she had come;
it was a nuisance, of course, but he would understand.
Ursula Gillow was jealous, and they would have to
give up seeing each other.
The young man’s burst of laughter
was music to her; for, after all, she had been rather
afraid that being devoted to Ursula might be as much
in his day’s work as doing the encyclopaedia.
“But I give you my word it’s
a raving-mad mistake! And I don’t believe
she ever meant me, to begin with—”
he protested; but Susy, her common-sense returning
with her reassurance, promptly cut short his denial.
“You can trust Ursula to make
herself clear on such occasions. And it doesn’t
make any difference what you think. All that
matters is what she believes.”
“Oh, come! I’ve
got a word to say about that too, haven’t I?”
Susy looked slowly and consideringly
about the room. There was nothing in it, absolutely
nothing, to show that he had ever possessed a spare
dollar—or accepted a present.
“Not as far as I’m concerned,”
she finally pronounced.
“How do you mean? If I’m as free
as air—?”
“I’m not.”
He grew thoughtful. “Oh,
then, of course—. It only seems a little
odd,” he added drily, “that in that case,
the protest should have come from Mrs. Gillow.”
“Instead of coming from my millionaire
bridegroom, Oh, I haven’t any; in that respect
I’m as free as you.”
“Well, then—? Haven’t we
only got to stay free?”
Susy drew her brows together anxiously.
It was going to be rather more difficult than she
had supposed.
“I said I was as free in that
respect. I’m not going to marry—and
I don’t suppose you are?”
“God, no!” he ejaculated fervently.
“But that doesn’t always imply complete
freedom ….”
He stood just above her, leaning his
elbow against the hideous black marble arch that framed
his fireless grate. As she glanced up she saw
his face harden, and the colour flew to hers.
“Was that what you came to tell me?” he
asked.
“Oh, you don’t understand—and
I don’t see why you don’t, since we’ve
knocked about so long among exactly the same kind of
people.” She stood up impulsively and laid
her hand on his arm. “I do wish you’d
help me—!”
He remained motionless, letting the hand lie untouched.
“Help you to tell me that poor
Ursula was a pretext, but that there is someone
who—for one reason or another—really
has a right to object to your seeing me too often?”
Susy laughed impatiently. “You
talk like the hero of a novel— the kind
my governess used to read. In the first place
I should never recognize that kind of right, as you
call it—never!”
“Then what kind do you?”
he asked with a clearing brow.
“Why—the kind I suppose
you recognize on the part of your publisher.”
This evoked a hollow laugh from him. “A
business claim, call it,” she pursued.
“Ursula does a lot for me: I live on
her for half the year. This dress I’ve
got on now is one she gave me. Her motor is
going to take me to a dinner to-night. I’m
going to spend next summer with her at Newport ….
If I don’t, I’ve got to go to California
with the Bockheimers-so good-bye.”
Suddenly in tears, she was out of
the door and down his steep three flights before he
could stop her—though, in thinking it over,
she didn’t even remember if he had tried to.
She only recalled having stood a long time on the
corner of Fifth Avenue, in the harsh winter radiance,
waiting till a break in the torrent of motors laden
with fashionable women should let her cross, and saying
to herself: “After all, I might have promised
Ursula … and kept on seeing him ….”
Instead of which, when Lansing wrote
the next day entreating a word with her, she had sent
back a friendly but firm refusal; and had managed
soon afterward to get taken to Canada for a fortnight’s
ski-ing, and then to Florida for six weeks in a house-boat
....
As she reached this point in her retrospect
the remembrance of Florida called up a vision of moonlit
waters, magnolia fragrance and balmy airs; merging
with the circumambient sweetness, it laid a drowsy
spell upon her lids. Yes, there had been a bad
moment: but it was over; and she was here, safe
and blissful, and with Nick; and this was his knee
her head rested on, and they had a year ahead of them
... a whole year …. “Not counting the
pearls,” she murmured, shutting her eyes ….