Charlie Strefford’s
villa was like a nest in a rose-bush; the Nelson Vanderlyns’
palace called for loftier analogies.
Its vastness and splendour seemed,
in comparison, oppressive to Susy. Their landing,
after dark, at the foot of the great shadowy staircase,
their dinner at a dimly-lit table under a ceiling
weighed down with Olympians, their chilly evening in
a corner of a drawing room where minuets should have
been danced before a throne, contrasted with the happy
intimacies of Como as their sudden sense of disaccord
contrasted with the mutual confidence of the day before.
The journey had been particularly
jolly: both Susy and Lansing had had too long
a discipline in the art of smoothing things over not
to make a special effort to hide from each other the
ravages of their first disagreement. But, deep
down and invisible, the disagreement remained; and
compunction for having been its cause gnawed at Susy’s
bosom as she sat in her tapestried and vaulted bedroom,
brushing her hair before a tarnished mirror.
“I thought I liked grandeur;
but this place is really out of scale,” she
mused, watching the reflection of a pale hand move
back and forward in the dim recesses of the mirror.
“And yet,” she continued, “Ellie
Vanderlyn’s hardly half an inch taller than
I am; and she certainly isn’t a bit more dignified
.... I wonder if it’s because I feel so
horribly small to-night that the place seems so horribly
big.”
She loved luxury: splendid things
always made her feel handsome and high ceilings arrogant;
she did not remember having ever before been oppressed
by the evidences of wealth.
She laid down the brush and leaned
her chin on her clasped hands …. Even now
she could not understand what had made her take the
cigars. She had always been alive to the value
of her inherited scruples: her reasoned opinions
were unusually free, but with regard to the things
one couldn’t reason about she was oddly tenacious.
And yet she had taken Streffy’s cigars!
She had taken them—yes, that was the point—she
had taken them for Nick, because the desire to please
him, to make the smallest details of his life easy
and agreeable and luxurious, had become her absorbing
preoccupation. She had committed, for him, precisely
the kind of little baseness she would most have scorned
to commit for herself; and, since he hadn’t instantly
felt the difference, she would never be able to explain
it to him.
She stood up with a sigh, shook out
her loosened hair, and glanced around the great frescoed
room. The maid-servant had said something about
the Signora’s having left a letter for her;
and there it lay on the writing-table, with her mail
and Nick’s; a thick envelope addressed in Ellie’s
childish scrawl, with a glaring “Private”
dashed across the corner.
“What on earth can she have
to say, when she hates writing so,” Susy mused.
She broke open the envelope, and four
or five stamped and sealed letters fell from it.
All were addressed, in Ellie’s hand, to Nelson
Vanderlyn Esqre; and in the corner of each was faintly
pencilled a number and a date: one, two, three,
four—with a week’s interval between
the dates.
“Goodness—” gasped Susy, understanding.
She had dropped into an armchair near
the table, and for a long time she sat staring at
the numbered letters. A sheet of paper covered
with Ellie’s writing had fluttered out among
them, but she let it lie; she knew so well what it
would say! She knew all about her friend, of
course; except poor old Nelson, who didn’t,
But she had never imagined that Ellie would dare to
use her in this way. It was unbelievable …
she had never pictured anything so vile ….
The blood rushed to her face, and she sprang up angrily,
half minded to tear the letters in bits and throw
them all into the fire.
She heard her husband’s knock
on the door between their rooms, and swept the dangerous
packet under the blotting-book.
“Oh, go away, please, there’s
a dear,” she called out; “I haven’t
finished unpacking, and everything’s in such
a mess.” Gathering up Nick’s papers
and letters, she ran across the room and thrust them
through the door. “Here’s something
to keep you quiet,” she laughed, shining in
on him an instant from the threshold.
She turned back feeling weak with
shame. Ellie’s letter lay on the floor:
reluctantly she stooped to pick it up, and one by
one the expected phrases sprang out at her.
“One good turn deserves another
.... Of course you and Nick are welcome to stay
all summer …. There won’t be a particle
of expense for you—the servants have orders
.... If you’ll just be an angel and post
these letters yourself …. It’s been my
only chance for such an age; when we meet I’ll
explain everything. And in a month at latest
I’ll be back to fetch Clarissa ….”
Susy lifted the letter to the lamp
to be sure she had read aright. To fetch Clarissa!
Then Ellie’s child was here? Here, under
the roof with them, left to their care? She read
on, raging. “She’s so delighted,
poor darling, to know you’re coming. I’ve
had to sack her beastly governess for impertinence,
and if it weren’t for you she’d be all
alone with a lot of servants I don’t much trust.
So for pity’s sake be good to my child, and
forgive me for leaving her. She thinks I’ve
gone to take a cure; and she knows she’s not
to tell her Daddy that I’m away, because it
would only worry him if he thought I was ill.
She’s perfectly to be trusted; you’ll
see what a clever angel she is ….” And
then, at the bottom of the page, in a last slanting
postscript: “Susy darling, if you’ve
ever owed me anything in the way of kindness, you won’t,
on your sacred honour, say a word of this to any one,
even to Nick. And I know I can count on you
to rub out the numbers.”
Susy sprang up and tossed Mrs. Vanderlyn’s
letter into the fire: then she came slowly back
to the chair. There, at her elbow, lay the four
fatal envelopes; and her next affair was to make up
her mind what to do with them.
To destroy them on the spot had seemed,
at first thought, inevitable: it might be saving
Ellie as well as herself. But such a step seemed
to Susy to involve departure on the morrow, and this
in turn involved notifying Ellie, whose letter she
had vainly scanned for an address. Well—perhaps
Clarissa’s nurse would know where one could
write to her mother; it was unlikely that even Ellie
would go off without assuring some means of communication
with her child. At any rate, there was nothing
to be done that night: nothing but to work out
the details of their flight on the morrow, and rack
her brains to find a substitute for the hospitality
they were rejecting. Susy did not disguise from
herself how much she had counted on the Vanderlyn
apartment for the summer: to be able to do so
had singularly simplified the future. She knew
Ellie’s largeness of hand, and had been sure
in advance that as long as they were her guests their
only expense would be an occasional present to the
servants. And what would the alternative be?
She and Lansing, in their endless talks, had so lived
themselves into the vision of indolent summer days
on the lagoon, of flaming hours on the beach of the
Lido, and evenings of music and dreams on their broad
balcony above the Giudecca, that the idea of having
to renounce these joys, and deprive her Nick of them,
filled Susy with a wrath intensified by his having
confided in her that when they were quietly settled
in Venice he “meant to write.” Already
nascent in her breast was the fierce resolve of the
author’s wife to defend her husband’s privacy
and facilitate his encounters with the Muse.
It was abominable, simply abominable, that Ellie
Vanderlyn should have drawn her into such a trap!
Well—there was nothing
for it but to make a clean breast of the whole thing
to Nick. The trivial incident of the cigars-how
trivial it now seemed!—showed her the kind
of stand he would take, and communicated to her something
of his own uncompromising energy. She would
tell him the whole story in the morning, and try to
find a way out with him: Susy’s faith
in her power of finding a way out was inexhaustible.
But suddenly she remembered the adjuration at the
end of Mrs. Vanderlyn’s letter: “If
you’re ever owed me anything in the way of kindness,
you won’t, on your sacred honour, say a word
to Nick ….”
It was, of course, exactly what no
one had the right to ask of her: if indeed the
word “right”, could be used in any conceivable
relation to this coil of wrongs. But the fact
remained that, in the way of kindness, she did owe
much to Ellie; and that this was the first payment
her friend had ever exacted. She found herself,
in fact, in exactly the same position as when Ursula
Gillow, using the same argument, had appealed to her
to give up Nick Lansing. Yes, Susy reflected;
but then Nelson Vanderlyn had been kind to her too;
and the money Ellie had been so kind with was Nelson’s
.... The queer edifice of Susy’s standards
tottered on its base she honestly didn’t know
where fairness lay, as between so much that was foul.
The very depth of her perplexity puzzled
her. She had been in “tight places”
before; had indeed been in so few that were not, in
one way or another, constricting! As she looked
back on her past it lay before her as a very network
of perpetual concessions and contrivings. But
never before had she had such a sense of being tripped
up, gagged and pinioned. The little misery of
the cigars still galled her, and now this big humiliation
superposed itself on the raw wound. Decidedly,
the second month of their honey-moon was beginning
cloudily ….
She glanced at the enamel led travelling-clock
on her dressing table—one of the few wedding-presents
she had consented to accept in kind—and
was startled at the lateness of the hour. In
a moment Nick would be coming; and an uncomfortable
sensation in her throat warned her that through sheer
nervousness and exasperation she might blurt out something
ill-advised. The old habit of being always on
her guard made her turn once more to the looking-glass.
Her face was pale and haggard; and having, by a swift
and skilful application of cosmetics, increased its
appearance of fatigue, she crossed the room and softly
opened her husband’s door.
He too sat by a lamp, reading a letter
which he put aside as she entered. His face
was grave, and she said to herself that he was certainly
still thinking about the cigars.
“I’m very tired, dearest,
and my head aches so horribly that I’ve come
to bid you good-night.” Bending over the
back of his chair, she laid her arms on his shoulders.
He lifted his hands to clasp hers, but, as he threw
his head back to smile up at her she noticed that
his look was still serious, almost remote. It
was as if, for the first time, a faint veil hung between
his eyes and hers.
“I’m so sorry: it’s
been a long day for you,” he said absently,
pressing his lips to her hands
She felt the dreaded twitch in her throat.
“Nick!” she burst out,
tightening her embrace, “before I go, you’ve
got to swear to me on your honour that you know I should
never have taken those cigars for myself!”
For a moment he stared at her, and
she stared back at him with equal gravity; then the
same irresistible mirth welled up in both, and Susy’s
compunctions were swept away on a gale of laughter.
When she woke the next morning the
sun was pouring in between her curtains of old brocade,
and its refraction from the ripples of the Canal was
drawing a network of golden scales across the vaulted
ceiling. The maid had just placed a tray on a
slim marquetry table near the bed, and over the edge
of the tray Susy discovered the small serious face
of Clarissa Vanderlyn. At the sight of the little
girl all her dormant qualms awoke.
Clarissa was just eight, and small
for her age: her little round chin was barely
on a level with the tea-service, and her clear brown
eyes gazed at Susy between the ribs of the toast-rack
and the single tea-rose in an old Murano glass.
Susy had not seen her for two years, and she seemed,
in the interval, to have passed from a thoughtful
infancy to complete ripeness of feminine experience.
She was looking with approval at her mother’s
guest.
“I’m so glad you’ve
come,” she said in a small sweet voice.
“I like you so very much. I know I’m
not to be often with you; but at least you’ll
have an eye on me, won’t you?”
“An eye on you! I shall
never want to have it off you, if you say such nice
things to me!” Susy laughed, leaning from her
pillows to draw the little girl up to her side.
Clarissa smiled and settled herself
down comfortably on the silken bedspread. “Oh,
I know I’m not to be always about, because you’re
just married; but could you see to it that I have
my meals regularly?”
“Why, you poor darling! Don’t you
always?”
“Not when mother’s away
on these cures. The servants don’t always
obey me: you see I’m so little for my age.
In a few years, of course, they’ll have to—even
if I don’t grow much,” she added judiciously.
She put out her hand and touched the string of pearls
about Susy’s throat. “They’re
small, but they’re very good. I suppose
you don’t take the others when you travel?”
“The others? Bless you!
I haven’t any others—and never shall
have, probably.”
“No other pearls?”
“No other jewels at all.”
Clarissa stared. “Is that
really true?” she asked, as if in the presence
of the unprecedented.
“Awfully true,” Susy confessed.
“But I think I can make the servants obey me
all the same.”
This point seemed to have lost its
interest for Clarissa, who was still gravely scrutinizing
her companion. After a while she brought forth
another question.
“Did you have to give up all
your jewels when you were divorced?”
“Divorced—?” Susy
threw her head back against the pillows and laughed.
“Why, what are you thinking of? Don’t
you remember that I wasn’t even married the
last time you saw me?”
“Yes; I do. But that was
two years ago.” The little girl wound
her arms about Susy’s neck and leaned against
her caressingly. “Are you going to be soon,
then? I’ll promise not to tell if you don’t
want me to.”
“Going to be divorced?
Of course not! What in the world made you think
so? “
“Because you look so awfully
happy,” said Clarissa Vanderlyn simply.