Nelson Vanderlyn, still
in his travelling clothes, paused on the threshold
of his own dining-room and surveyed the scene with
pardonable satisfaction.
He was a short round man, with a grizzled
head, small facetious eyes and a large and credulous
smile.
At the luncheon table sat his wife,
between Charlie Strefford and Nick Lansing.
Next to Strefford, perched on her high chair, Clarissa
throned in infant beauty, while Susy Lansing cut up
a peach for her. Through wide orange awnings
the sun slanted in upon the white-clad group.
“Well—well—well!
So I’ve caught you at it!” cried the happy
father, whose inveterate habit it was to address his
wife and friends as if he had surprised them at an
inopportune moment. Stealing up from behind,
he lifted his daughter into the air, while a chorus
of “Hello, old Nelson,” hailed his appearance.
It was two or three years since Nick
Lansing had seen Mr. Vanderlyn, who was now the London
representative of the big New York bank of Vanderlyn
& Co., and had exchanged his sumptuous house in Fifth
Avenue for another, more sumptuous still, in Mayfair;
and the young man looked curiously and attentively
at his host.
Mr. Vanderlyn had grown older and
stouter, but his face still kept its look of somewhat
worn optimism. He embraced his wife, greeted
Susy affectionately, and distributed cordial hand-grasps
to the two men.
“Hullo,” he exclaimed,
suddenly noticing a pearl and coral trinket hanging
from Clarissa’s neck. “Who’s
been giving my daughter jewellery, I’d like
to know!”
“Oh, Streffy did—just
think, father! Because I said I’d rather
have it than a book, you know,” Clarissa lucidly
explained, her arms tight about her father’s
neck, her beaming eyes on Strefford.
Nelson Vanderlyn’s own eyes
took on the look of shrewdness which came into them
whenever there was a question of material values.
“What, Streffy? Caught
you at it, eh? Upon my soul-spoiling the brat
like that! You’d no business to, my dear
chap-a lovely baroque pearl—” he
protested, with the half-apologetic tone of the rich
man embarrassed by too costly a gift from an impecunious
friend.
“Oh, hadn’t I? Why?
Because it’s too good for Clarissa, or too
expensive for me? Of course you daren’t
imply the first; and as for me—I’ve
had a windfall, and am blowing it in on the ladies.”
Strefford, Lansing had noticed, always
used American slang when he was slightly at a loss,
and wished to divert attention from the main point.
But why was he embarrassed, whose attention did he
wish to divert, It was plain that Vanderlyn’s
protest had been merely formal: like most of
the wealthy, he had only the dimmest notion of what
money represented to the poor. But it was unusual
for Strefford to give any one a present, and especially
an expensive one: perhaps that was what had fixed
Vanderlyn’s attention.
“A windfall?” he gaily repeated.
“Oh, a tiny one: I was
offered a thumping rent for my little place at Como,
and dashed over here to squander my millions with
the rest of you,” said Strefford imperturbably.
Vanderlyn’s look immediately
became interested and sympathetic. “What—the
scene of the honey-moon?” He included Nick and
Susy in his friendly smile.
“Just so: the reward of
virtue. I say, give me a cigar, will you, old
man, I left some awfully good ones at Como, worse
luck—and I don’t mind telling you
that Ellie’s no judge of tobacco, and that Nick’s
too far gone in bliss to care what he smokes,”
Strefford grumbled, stretching a hand toward his host’s
cigar-case.
“I do like jewellery best,”
Clarissa murmured, hugging her father.
Nelson Vanderlyn’s first word
to his wife had been that he had brought her all her
toggery; and she had welcomed him with appropriate
enthusiasm. In fact, to the lookers-on her joy
at seeing him seemed rather too patently in proportion
to her satisfaction at getting her clothes.
But no such suspicion appeared to mar Mr. Vanderlyn’s
happiness in being, for once, and for nearly twenty-four
hours, under the same roof with his wife and child.
He did not conceal his regret at having promised
his mother to join her the next day; and added, with
a wistful glance at Ellie: “If only I’d
known you meant to wait for me!”
But being a man of duty, in domestic
as well as business affairs, he did not even consider
the possibility of disappointing the exacting old
lady to whom he owed his being. “Mother
cares for so few people,” he used to say, not
without a touch of filial pride in the parental exclusiveness,
“that I have to be with her rather more than
if she were more sociable”; and with smiling
resignation he gave orders that Clarissa should be
ready to start the next evening.
“And meanwhile,” he concluded,
“we’ll have all the good time that’s
going.”
The ladies of the party seemed united
in the desire to further this resolve; and it was
settled that as soon as Mr. Vanderlyn had despatched
a hasty luncheon, his wife, Clarissa and Susy should
carry him off for a tea-picnic at Torcello. They
did not even suggest that Strefford or Nick should
be of the party, or that any of the other young men
of the group should be summoned; as Susy said, Nelson
wanted to go off alone with his harem. And Lansing
and Strefford were left to watch the departure of the
happy Pasha ensconced between attentive beauties.
“Well—that’s
what you call being married!” Strefford commented,
waving his battered Panama at Clarissa.
“Oh, no, I don’t!” Lansing laughed.
“He does. But do you know—”
Strefford paused and swung about on his companion—“do
you know, when the Rude Awakening comes, I don’t
care to be there. I believe there’ll be
some crockery broken.”
“Shouldn’t wonder,”
Lansing answered indifferently. He wandered
away to his own room, leaving Strefford to philosophize
to his pipe.
Lansing had always known about poor
old Nelson: who hadn’t, except poor old
Nelson? The case had once seemed amusing because
so typical; now, it rather irritated Nick that Vanderlyn
should be so complete an ass. But he would be
off the next day, and so would Ellie, and then, for
many enchanted weeks, the palace would once more be
the property of Nick and Susy. Of all the people
who came and went in it, they were the only ones who
appreciated it, or knew how it was meant to be lived
in; and that made it theirs in the only valid sense.
In this light it became easy to regard the Vanderlyns
as mere transient intruders.
Having relegated them to this convenient
distance, Lansing shut himself up with his book.
He had returned to it with fresh energy after his
few weeks of holiday-making, and was determined to
finish it quickly. He did not expect that it
would bring in much money; but if it were moderately
successful it might give him an opening in the reviews
and magazines, and in that case he meant to abandon
archaeology for novels, since it was only as a purveyor
of fiction that he could count on earning a living
for himself and Susy.
Late in the afternoon he laid down
his pen and wandered out of doors. He loved
the increasing heat of the Venetian summer, the bruised
peach-tints of worn house-fronts, the enamelling of
sunlight on dark green canals, the smell of half-decayed
fruits and flowers thickening the languid air.
What visions he could build, if he dared, of being
tucked away with Susy in the attic of some tumble-down
palace, above a jade-green waterway, with a terrace
overhanging a scrap of neglected garden—and
cheques from the publishers dropping in at convenient
intervals! Why should they not settle in Venice
if he pulled it off!
He found himself before the church
of the Scalzi, and pushing open the leathern door
wandered up the nave under the whirl of rose-and-lemon
angels in Tiepolo’s great vault. It was
not a church in which one was likely to run across
sight-seers; but he presently remarked a young lady
standing alone near the choir, and assiduously applying
her field-glass to the celestial vortex, from which
she occasionally glanced down at an open manual.
As Lansing’s step sounded on
the pavement, the young lady, turning, revealed herself
as Miss Hicks.
“Ah—you like this
too? It’s several centuries out of your
line, though, isn’t it!” Nick asked as
they shook hands.
She gazed at him gravely. “Why
shouldn’t one like things that are out of one’s
line?” she answered; and he agreed, with a
laugh, that it was often an incentive.
She continued to fix her grave eyes
on him, and after one or two remarks about the Tiepolos
he perceived that she was feeling her way toward a
subject of more personal interest.
“I’m glad to see you alone,”
she said at length, with an abruptness that might
have seemed awkward had it not been so completely
unconscious. She turned toward a cluster of straw
chairs, and signed to Nick to seat himself beside her.
“I seldom do,” she added,
with the serious smile that made her heavy face almost
handsome; and she went on, giving him no time to protest:
“I wanted to speak to you—to explain
about father’s invitation to go with us to Persia
and Turkestan.”
“To explain?”
“Yes. You found the letter
when you arrived here just after your marriage, didn’t
you? You must have thought it odd, our asking
you just then; but we hadn’t heard that you were
married.”
“Oh, I guessed as much:
it happened very quietly, and I was remiss about
announcing it, even to old friends.”
Lansing frowned. His thoughts
had wandered away to the evening when he had found
Mrs. Hicks’s letter in the mail awaiting him
at Venice. The day was associated in his mind
with the ridiculous and mortifying episode of the
cigars—the expensive cigars that Susy had
wanted to carry away from Strefford’s villa.
Their brief exchange of views on the subject had left
the first blur on the perfect surface of his happiness,
and he still felt an uncomfortable heat at the remembrance.
For a few hours the prospect of life with Susy had
seemed unendurable; and it was just at that moment
that he had found the letter from Mrs. Hicks, with
its almost irresistible invitation. If only
her daughter had known how nearly he had accepted it!
“It was a dreadful temptation,” he said,
smiling.
“To go with us? Then why—?”
“Oh, everything’s different
now: I’ve got to stick to my writing.”
Miss Hicks still bent on him the same
unblinking scrutiny. “Does that mean that
you’re going to give up your real work?”
“My real work—archaeology?”
He smiled again to hide a twitch of regret.
“Why, I’m afraid it hardly produces a
living wage; and I’ve got to think of that.”
He coloured suddenly, as if suspecting that Miss
Hicks might consider the avowal an opening for he
hardly knew what ponderous offer of aid. The
Hicks munificence was too uncalculating not to be
occasionally oppressive. But looking at her
again he saw that her eyes were full of tears.
“I thought it was your vocation,” she
said.
“So did I. But life comes along, and upsets
things.”
“Oh, I understand. There
may be things—worth giving up all other
things for.”
“There are!” cried Nick with beaming emphasis.
He was conscious that Miss Hicks’s
eyes demanded of him even more than this sweeping
affirmation.
“But your novel may fail,” she said with
her odd harshness.
“It may—it probably
will,” he agreed. “But if one stopped
to consider such possibilities—”
“Don’t you have to, with a wife?”
“Oh, my dear Coral—how
old are you? Not twenty?” he questioned,
laying a brotherly hand on hers.
She stared at him a moment, and sprang
up clumsily from her chair. “I was never
young … if that’s what you mean. It’s
lucky, isn’t it, that my parents gave me such
a grand education? Because, you see, art’s
a wonderful resource.” (She pronounced it re-source.)
He continued to look at her kindly.
“You won’t need it—or any
other—when you grow young, as you will some
day,” he assured her.
“Do you mean, when I fall in
love? But I am in love—Oh, there’s
Eldorada and Mr. Beck!” She broke off with a
jerk, signalling with her field-glass to the pair
who had just appeared at the farther end of the nave.
“I told them that if they’d meet me here
to-day I’d try to make them understand Tiepolo.
Because, you see, at home we never really have understood
Tiepolo; and Mr. Beck and Eldorada are the only ones
to realize it. Mr. Buttles simply won’t.”
She turned to Lansing and held out her hand.
“I am in love,” she repeated earnestly,
“and that’s the reason why I find art such
a re source.”
She restored her eye-glasses, opened
her manual, and strode across the church to the expectant
neophytes.
Lansing, looking after her, wondered
for half a moment whether Mr. Beck were the object
of this apparently unrequited sentiment; then, with
a queer start of introspection, abruptly decided that,
no, he certainly was not. But then—but
then—. Well, there was no use in following
up such conjectures …. He turned home-ward,
wondering if the picnickers had already reached Palazzo
Vanderlyn.
They got back only in time for a late
dinner, full of chaff and laughter, and apparently
still enchanted with each other’s society.
Nelson Vanderlyn beamed on his wife, sent his daughter
off to bed with a kiss, and leaning back in his armchair
before the fruit-and-flower-laden table, declared
that he’d never spent a jollier day in his life.
Susy seemed to come in for a full share of his approbation,
and Lansing thought that Ellie was unusually demonstrative
to her friend. Strefford, from his hostess’s
side, glanced across now and then at young Mrs. Lansing,
and his glance seemed to Lansing a confidential comment
on the Vanderlyn raptures. But then Strefford
was always having private jokes with people or about
them; and Lansing was irritated with himself for perpetually
suspecting his best friends of vague complicities
at his expense. “If I’m going to
be jealous of Streffy now—!” he concluded
with a grimace of self-derision.
Certainly Susy looked lovely enough
to justify the most irrational pangs. As a girl
she had been, for some people’s taste, a trifle
fine-drawn and sharp-edged; now, to her old lightness
of line was added a shadowy bloom, a sort of star-reflecting
depth. Her movements were slower, less angular;
her mouth had a needing droop, her lids seemed weighed
down by their lashes; and then suddenly the old spirit
would reveal itself through the new languor, like
the tartness at the core of a sweet fruit. As
her husband looked at her across the flowers and lights
he laughed inwardly at the nothingness of all things
else.
Vanderlyn and Clarissa left betimes
the next morning; and Mrs. Vanderlyn, who was to start
for St. Moritz in the afternoon, devoted her last
hours to anxious conferences with her maid and Susy.
Strefford, with Fred Gillow and the others, had gone
for a swim at the Lido, and Lansing seized the opportunity
to get back to his book.
The quietness of the great echoing
place gave him a foretaste of the solitude to come.
By mid-August all their party would be scattered:
the Hickses off on a cruise to Crete and the AEgean,
Fred Gillow on the way to his moor, Strefford to stay
with friends in Capri till his annual visit to Northumberland
in September. One by one the others would follow,
and Lansing and Susy be left alone in the great sun-proof
palace, alone under the star-laden skies, alone with
the great orange moons-still theirs!—above
the bell-tower of San Giorgio. The novel, in
that blessed quiet, would unfold itself as harmoniously
as his dreams.
He wrote on, forgetful of the passing
hours, till the door opened and he heard a step behind
him. The next moment two hands were clasped
over his eyes, and the air was full of Mrs. Vanderlyn’s
last new scent.
“You dear thing—I’m
just off, you know,” she said. “Susy
told me you were working, and I forbade her to call
you down. She and Streffy are waiting to take
me to the station, and I’ve run up to say good-bye.”
“Ellie, dear!” Full of
compunction, Lansing pushed aside his writing and
started up; but she pressed him back into his seat.
“No, no! I should never
forgive myself if I’d interrupted you.
I oughtn’t to have come up; Susy didn’t
want me to. But I had to tell you, you dear
.... I had to thank you…”
In her dark travelling dress and hat,
so discreetly conspicuous, so negligent and so studied,
with a veil masking her paint, and gloves hiding her
rings, she looked younger, simpler, more natural than
he had ever seen her. Poor Ellie such a good
fellow, after all!
“To thank me? For what?
For being so happy here?” he laughed, taking
her hands.
She looked at him, laughed back, and
flung her arms about his neck.
“For helping me to be so happy
elsewhere—you and Susy, you two blessed
darlings!” she cried, with a kiss on his cheek.
Their eyes met for a second; then
her arms slipped slowly downward, dropping to her
sides. Lansing sat before her like a stone.
“Oh,” she gasped, “why
do you stare so? Didn’t you know …?”
They heard Strefford’s shrill
voice on the stairs. “Ellie, where the
deuce are you? Susy’s in the gondola.
You’ll miss the train!”
Lansing stood up and caught Mrs. Vanderlyn
by the wrist. “What do you mean?
What are you talking about?”
“Oh, nothing … But you
were both such bricks about the letters ….
And when Nelson was here, too …. Nick, don’t
hurt my wrist so! I must run!”
He dropped her hand and stood motionless,
staring after her and listening to the click of her
high heels as she fled across the room and along the
echoing corridor.
When he turned back to the table he
noticed that a small morocco case had fallen among
his papers. In falling it had opened, and before
him, on the pale velvet lining, lay a scarf-pin set
with a perfect pearl. He picked the box up,
and was about to hasten after Mrs. Vanderlyn—it
was so like her to shed jewels on her path!—when
he noticed his own initials on the cover.
He dropped the box as if it had been
a hot coal, and sat for a long while gazing at the
gold N. L., which seemed to have burnt itself into
his flesh.
At last he roused himself and stood up.