It was not Mrs. Vanderlyn’s
fault if, after her arrival, her palace seemed to
belong any less to the Lansings.
She arrived in a mood of such general
benevolence that it was impossible for Susy, when
they finally found themselves alone, to make her view
even her own recent conduct in any but the most benevolent
light.
“I knew you’d be the veriest
angel about it all, darling, because I knew you’d
understand me— especially now,” she
declared, her slim hands in Susy’s, her big eyes
(so like Clarissa’s) resplendent with past pleasures
and future plans.
The expression of her confidence was
unexpectedly distasteful to Susy Lansing, who had
never lent so cold an ear to such warm avowals.
She had always imagined that being happy one’s
self made one—as Mrs. Vanderlyn appeared
to assume —more tolerant of the happiness
of others, of however doubtful elements composed;
and she was almost ashamed of responding so languidly
to her friend’s outpourings. But she herself
had no desire to confide her bliss to Ellie; and why
should not Ellie observe a similar reticence?
“It was all so perfect—you
see, dearest, I was meant to be happy,” that
lady continued, as if the possession of so unusual
a characteristic singled her out for special privileges.
Susy, with a certain sharpness, responded
that she had always supposed we all were.
“Oh, no, dearest: not
governesses and mothers-in-law and companions, and
that sort of people. They wouldn’t know
how if they tried. But you and I, darling—”
“Oh, I don’t consider
myself in any way exceptional,” Susy intervened.
She longed to add: “Not in your way, at
any rate—” but a few minutes earlier
Mrs. Vanderlyn had told her that the palace was at
her disposal for the rest of the summer, and that
she herself was only going to perch there—if
they’d let her!—long enough to gather
up her things and start for St. Moritz. The
memory of this announcement had the effect of curbing
Susy’s irony, and of making her shift the conversation
to the safer if scarcely less absorbing topic of the
number of day and evening dresses required for a season
at St. Moritz.
As she listened to Mrs. Vanderlyn—no
less eloquent on this theme than on the other—Susy
began to measure the gulf between her past and present.
“This is the life I used to lead; these are
the things I used to live for,” she thought,
as she stood before the outspread glories of Mrs.
Vanderlyn’s wardrobe. Not that she did
not still care: she could not look at Ellie’s
laces and silks and furs without picturing herself
in them, and wondering by what new miracle of management
she could give herself the air of being dressed by
the same consummate artists. But these had become
minor interests: the past few months had given
her a new perspective, and the thing that most puzzled
and disconcerted her about Ellie was the fact that
love and finery and bridge and dining-out were seemingly
all on the same plane to her.
The inspection of the dresses lasted
a long time, and was marked by many fluctuations of
mood on the part of Mrs. Vanderlyn, who passed from
comparative hopefulness to despair at the total inadequacy
of her wardrobe. It wouldn’t do to go to
St. Moritz looking like a frump, and yet there was
no time to get anything sent from Paris, and, whatever
she did, she wasn’t going to show herself in
any dowdy re-arrangements done at home. But suddenly
light broke on her, and she clasped her hands for joy.
“Why, Nelson’ll bring them—I’d
forgotten all about Nelson! There’ll be
just time if I wire to him at once.”
“Is Nelson going to join you
at St. Moritz?” Susy asked, surprised.
“Heavens, no! He’s
coming here to pick up Clarissa and take her to some
stuffy cure in Austria with his mother. It’s
too lucky: there’s just time to telegraph
him to bring my things. I didn’t mean
to wait for him; but it won’t delay me more than
day or two.”
Susy’s heart sank. She
was not much afraid of Ellie alone, but Ellie and
Nelson together formed an incalculable menace.
No one could tell what spark of truth might dash
from their collision. Susy felt that she could
deal with the two dangers separately and successively,
but not together and simultaneously.
“But, Ellie, why should you
wait for Nelson? I’m certain to find someone
here who’s going to St. Moritz and will take
your things if he brings them. It’s a
pity to risk losing your rooms.”
This argument appealed for a moment
to Mrs. Vanderlyn. “That’s true;
they say all the hotels are jammed. You dear,
you’re always so practical!” She clasped
Susy to her scented bosom. “And you know,
darling, I’m sure you’ll be glad to get
rid of me—you and Nick! Oh, don’t
be hypocritical and say ‘Nonsense!’ You
see, I understand … I used to think of you so
often, you two … during those blessed weeks when
we two were alone….”
The sudden tears, brimming over Ellie’s
lovely eyes, and threatening to make the blue circles
below them run into the adjoining carmine, filled
Susy with compunction.
“Poor thing—oh, poor
thing!” she thought; and hearing herself called
by Nick, who was waiting to take her out for their
usual sunset on the lagoon, she felt a wave of pity
for the deluded creature who would never taste that
highest of imaginable joys. “But all the
same,” Susy reflected, as she hurried down to
her husband, “I’m glad I persuaded her
not to wait for Nelson.”
Some days had elapsed since Susy and
Nick had had a sunset to themselves, and in the interval
Susy had once again learned the superior quality of
the sympathy that held them together. She now
viewed all the rest of life as no more than a show:
a jolly show which it would have been a thousand
pities to miss, but which, if the need arose, they
could get up and leave at any moment—provided
that they left it together.
In the dusk, while their prow slid
over inverted palaces, and through the scent of hidden
gardens, she leaned against him and murmured, her
mind returning to the recent scene with Ellie:
“Nick, should you hate me dreadfully if I had
no clothes?”
Her husband was kindling a cigarette,
and the match lit up the grin with which he answered:
“But, my dear, have I ever shown the slightest
symptom—?”
“Oh, rubbish! When a woman
says: ‘No clothes,’ she means:
‘Not the right clothes.’”
He took a meditative puff. “Ah,
you’ve been going over Ellie’s finery
with her.”
“Yes: all those trunks
and trunks full. And she finds she’s got
nothing for St. Moritz!”
“Of course,” he murmured,
drowsy with content, and manifesting but a languid
interest in the subject of Mrs. Vanderlyn’s
wardrobe.
“Only fancy—she very
nearly decided to stop over for Nelson’s arrival
next week, so that he might bring her two or three
more trunkfuls from Paris. But mercifully I’ve
managed to persuade her that it would be foolish to
wait.”
Susy felt a hardly perceptible shifting
of her husband’s lounging body, and was aware,
through all her watchful tentacles, of a widening
of his half-closed lids.
“You ’managed’—?”
She fancied he paused on the word ironically.
“But why?”
“Why—what?”
“Why on earth should you try
to prevent Ellie’s waiting for Nelson, if for
once in her life she wants to?”
Susy, conscious of reddening suddenly,
drew back as though the leap of her tell-tale heart
might have penetrated the blue flannel shoulder against
which she leaned.
“Really, dearest—!”
she murmured; but with a sudden doggedness he renewed
his “Why?”
“Because she’s in such
a fever to get to St. Moritz—and in such
a funk lest the hotel shouldn’t keep her rooms,”
Susy somewhat breathlessly produced.
“Ah—I see.”
Nick paused again. “You’re a devoted
friend, aren’t you!”
“What an odd question!
There’s hardly anyone I’ve reason to be
more devoted to than Ellie,” his wife answered;
and she felt his contrite clasp on her hand.
“Darling! No; nor I—.
Or more grateful to for leaving us alone in this
heaven.”
Dimness had fallen on the waters,
and her lifted lips met his bending ones.
Trailing late into dinner that evening,
Ellie announced that, after all, she had decided it
was safest to wait for Nelson.
“I should simply worry myself
ill if I weren’t sure of getting my things,”
she said, in the tone of tender solicitude with which
she always discussed her own difficulties. “After
all, people who deny themselves everything do get
warped and bitter, don’t they?” she argued
plaintively, her lovely eyes wandering from one to
the other of her assembled friends.
Strefford remarked gravely that it
was the complaint which had fatally undermined his
own health; and in the laugh that followed the party
drifted into the great vaulted dining-room.
“Oh, I don’t mind your
laughing at me, Streffy darling,” his hostess
retorted, pressing his arm against her own; and Susy,
receiving the shock of their rapidly exchanged glance,
said to herself, with a sharp twinge of apprehension:
“Of course Streffy knows everything; he showed
no surprise at finding Ellie away when he arrived.
And if he knows, what’s to prevent Nelson’s
finding out?” For Strefford, in a mood of mischief,
was no more to be trusted than a malicious child.
Susy instantly resolved to risk speaking
to him, if need be even betraying to him the secret
of the letters. Only by revealing the depth
of her own danger could she hope to secure his silence.
On the balcony, late in the evening,
while the others were listening indoors to the low
modulations of a young composer who had embroidered
his fancies on Browning’s “Toccata,”
Susy found her chance. Strefford, unsummoned,
had followed her out, and stood silently smoking at
her side.
“You see, Streff—oh,
why should you and I make mysteries to each other?”
she suddenly began.
“Why, indeed: but do we?”
Susy glanced back at the group around
the piano. “About Ellie, I mean—and
Nelson.”
“Lord! Ellie and Nelson?
You call that a mystery? I should as soon apply
the term to one of the million candle-power advertisements
that adorn your native thoroughfares.”
“Well, yes. But—”
She stopped again. Had she not tacitly promised
Ellie not to speak?
“My Susan, what’s wrong?” Strefford
asked.
“I don’t know….”
“Well, I do, then: you’re
afraid that, if Ellie and Nelson meet here, she’ll
blurt out something—injudicious.”
“Oh, she won’t!” Susy cried with
conviction.
“Well, then—who will!
I trust that superhuman child not to. And you
and I and Nick—”
“Oh,” she gasped, interrupting
him, “that’s just it. Nick doesn’t
know … doesn’t even suspect. And if he
did….”
Strefford flung away his cigar and
turned to scrutinize her. “I don’t
see—hanged if I do. What business
is it of any of us, after all?”
That, of course, was the old view
that cloaked connivance in an air of decency.
But to Susy it no longer carried conviction, and
she hesitated.
“If Nick should find out that I know….”
“Good Lord—doesn’t
he know that you know? After all, I suppose
it’s not the first time—”
She remained silent.
“The first time you’ve
received confidences—from married friends.
Does Nick suppose you’ve lived even to your
tender age without … Hang it, what’s
come over you, child?”
What had, indeed, that she could make
clear to him? And yet more than ever she felt
the need of having him securely on her side.
Once his word was pledged, he was safe: otherwise
there was no limit to his capacity for wilful harmfulness.
“Look here, Streff, you and
I know that Ellie hasn’t been away for a cure;
and that if poor Clarissa was sworn to secrecy it
was not because it ‘worries father’ to
think that mother needs to take care of her health.”
She paused, hating herself for the ironic note she
had tried to sound.
“Well—?” he questioned,
from the depths of the chair into which he had sunk.
“Well, Nick doesn’t …
doesn’t dream of it. If he knew that we
owed our summer here to … to my knowing….”
Strefford sat silent: she felt
his astonished stare through the darkness. “Jove!”
he said at last, with a low whistle Susy bent over
the balustrade, her heart thumping against the stone
rail.
“What was left of soul, I wonder—?”
the young composer’s voice shrilled through
the open windows.
Strefford sank into another silence,
from which he roused himself only as Susy turned back
toward the lighted threshold.
“Well, my dear, we’ll
see it through between us; you and I-and Clarissa,”
he said with his rasping laugh, rising to follow her.
He caught her hand and gave it a short pressure as
they re-entered the drawing-room, where Ellie was
saying plaintively to Fred Gillow: “I
can never hear that thing sung without wanting to
cry like a baby.”