With a sigh of relief Susy drew
the pins from her hat and threw herself down on the
lounge.
The ordeal she had dreaded was over,
and Mr. and Mrs. Vanderlyn had safely gone their several
ways. Poor Ellie was not noted for prudence,
and when life smiled on her she was given to betraying
her gratitude too openly; but thanks to Susy’s
vigilance (and, no doubt, to Strefford’s tacit
co-operation), the dreaded twenty-four hours were
happily over. Nelson Vanderlyn had departed
without a shadow on his brow, and though Ellie’s,
when she came down from bidding Nick good-bye, had
seemed to Susy less serene than usual, she became her
normal self as soon as it was discovered that the
red morocco bag with her jewel-box was missing.
Before it had been discovered in the depths of the
gondola they had reached the station, and there was
just time to thrust her into her “sleeper,”
from which she was seen to wave an unperturbed farewell
to her friends.
“Well, my dear, we’ve
been it through,” Strefford remarked with a
deep breath as the St. Moritz express rolled away.
“Oh,” Susy sighed in mute
complicity; then, as if to cover her self-betrayal:
“Poor darling, she does so like what she likes!”
“Yes—even if it’s
a rotten bounder,” Strefford agreed.
“A rotten bounder? Why, I thought—”
“That it was still young Davenant?
Lord, no—not for the last six months.
Didn’t she tell you—?”
Susy felt herself redden. “I didn’t
ask her—”
“Ask her? You mean you didn’t let
her!”
“I didn’t let her.
And I don’t let you,” Susy added sharply,
as he helped her into the gondola.
“Oh, all right: I daresay
you’re right. It simplifies things,”
Strefford placidly acquiesced.
She made no answer, and in silence
they glided homeward.
Now, in the quiet of her own room,
Susy lay and pondered on the distance she had travelled
during the last year. Strefford had read her
mind with his usual penetration. It was true
that there had been a time when she would have thought
it perfectly natural that Ellie should tell her everything;
that the name of young Davenant’s successor
should be confided to her as a matter of course.
Apparently even Ellie had been obscurely aware of
the change, for after a first attempt to force her
confidences on Susy she had contented herself with
vague expressions of gratitude, allusive smiles and
sighs, and the pretty “surprise” of the
sapphire bangle slipped onto her friend’s wrist
in the act of their farewell embrace.
The bangle was extremely handsome.
Susy, who had an auctioneer’s eye for values,
knew to a fraction the worth of those deep convex
stones alternating with small emeralds and brilliants.
She was glad to own the bracelet, and enchanted with
the effect it produced on her slim wrist; yet, even
while admiring it, and rejoicing that it was hers,
she had already transmuted it into specie, and reckoned
just how far it would go toward the paying of domestic
necessities. For whatever came to her now interested
her only as something more to be offered up to Nick.
The door opened and Nick came in.
Dusk had fallen, and she could not see his face;
but something in the jerk of the door-handle roused
her ever-wakeful apprehension. She hurried toward
him with outstretched wrist.
“Look, dearest—wasn’t it too
darling of Ellie?”
She pressed the button of the lamp
that lit her dressing-table, and her husband’s
face started unfamiliarly out of the twilight.
She slipped off the bracelet and held it up to him.
“Oh, I can go you one better,”
he said with a laugh; and pulling a morocco case from
his pocket he flung it down among the scent-bottles.
Susy opened the case automatically,
staring at the pearl because she was afraid to look
again at Nick.
“Ellie—gave you this?” she
asked at length.
“Yes. She gave me this.”
There was a pause. “Would you mind telling
me,” Lansing continued in the same dead-level
tone, “exactly for what services we’ve
both been so handsomely paid?”
“The pearl is beautiful,”
Susy murmured, to gain time, while her head spun round
with unimaginable terrors.
“So are your sapphires; though,
on closer examination, my services would appear to
have been valued rather higher than yours. Would
you be kind enough to tell me just what they were?”
Susy threw her head back and looked
at him. “What on earth are you talking
about, Nick! Why shouldn’t Ellie have given
us these things? Do you forget that it’s
like our giving her a pen-wiper or a button-hook?
What is it you are trying to suggest?”
It had cost her a considerable effort
to hold his eyes while she put the questions.
Something had happened between him and Ellie, that
was evident-one of those hideous unforeseeable blunders
that may cause one’s cleverest plans to crumble
at a stroke; and again Susy shuddered at the frailty
of her bliss. But her old training stood her
in good stead. There had been more than one
moment in her past when everything-somebody else’s
everything-had depended on her keeping a cool head
and a clear glance. It would have been a wonder
if now, when she felt her own everything at stake,
she had not been able to put up as good a defence.
“What is it?” she repeated
impatiently, as Lansing continued to remain silent.
“That’s what I’m
here to ask,” he returned, keeping his eyes as
steady as she kept hers. “There’s
no reason on earth, as you say, why Ellie shouldn’t
give us presents—as expensive presents
as she likes; and the pearl is a beauty. All
I ask is: for what specific services were they
given? For, allowing for all the absence of
scruple that marks the intercourse of truly civilized
people, you’ll probably agree that there are
limits; at least up to now there have been limits
....”
“I really don’t know what
you mean. I suppose Ellie wanted to show that
she was grateful to us for looking after Clarissa.”
“But she gave us all this in
exchange for that, didn’t she?” he suggested,
with a sweep of the hand around the beautiful shadowy
room. “A whole summer of it if we choose.”
Susy smiled. “Apparently
she didn’t think that enough.”
“What a doting mother!
It shows the store she sets upon her child.”
“Well, don’t you set store upon Clarissa?”
“Clarissa is exquisite; but
her mother didn’t mention her in offering me
this recompense.”
Susy lifted her head again.
“Whom did she mention?”
“Vanderlyn,” said Lansing.
“Vanderlyn? Nelson?”
“Yes—and some letters
... something about letters …. What is it,
my dear, that you and I have been hired to hide from
Vanderlyn? Because I should like to know,”
Nick broke out savagely, “if we’ve been
adequately paid.”
Susy was silent: she needed
time to reckon up her forces, and study her next move;
and her brain was in such a whirl of fear that she
could at last only retort: “What is it
that Ellie said to you?”
Lansing laughed again. “That’s
just what you’d like to find out—isn’t
it?—in order to know the line to take in
making your explanation.”
The sneer had an effect that he could
not have foreseen, and that Susy herself had not expected.
“Oh, don’t—don’t
let us speak to each other like that!” she cried;
and sinking down by the dressing-table she hid her
face in her hands.
It seemed to her, now, that nothing
mattered except that their love for each other, their
faith in each other, should be saved from some unhealable
hurt. She was willing to tell Nick everything—she
wanted to tell him everything—if only she
could be sure of reaching a responsive chord in him.
But the scene of the cigars came back to her, and
benumbed her. If only she could make him see
that nothing was of any account as long as they continued
to love each other!
His touch fell compassionately on
her shoulder. “Poor child—
don’t,” he said.
Their eyes met, but his expression
checked the smile breaking through her tears.
“Don’t you see,” he continued, “that
we’ve got to have this thing out?”
She continued to stare at him through
a prism of tears. “I can’t—while
you stand up like that,” she stammered, childishly.
She had cowered down again into a
corner of the lounge; but Lansing did not seat himself
at her side. He took a chair facing her, like
a caller on the farther side of a stately tea-tray.
“Will that do?” he asked with a stiff
smile, as if to humour her.
“Nothing will do—as long as you’re
not you!”
“Not me?”
She shook her head wearily.
“What’s the use? You accept things
theoretically—and then when they happen
....”
“What things? What has happened!”
A sudden impatience mastered her.
What did he suppose, after all—? “But
you know all about Ellie. We used to talk about
her often enough in old times,” she said.
“Ellie and young Davenant?”
“Young Davenant; or the others ….”
“Or the others. But what business was
it of ours?”
“Ah, that’s just what
I think!” she cried, springing up with an explosion
of relief. Lansing stood up also, but there was
no answering light in his face.
“We’re outside of all
that; we’ve nothing to do with it, have we?”
he pursued.
“Nothing whatever.”
“Then what on earth is the meaning
of Ellie’s gratitude? Gratitude for what
we’ve done about some letters—and
about Vanderlyn?”
“Oh, not you,” Susy cried, involuntarily.
“Not I? Then you?”
He came close and took her by the wrist. “Answer
me. Have you been mixed up in some dirty business
of Ellie’s?”
There was a pause. She found
it impossible to speak, with that burning grasp on
the wrist where the bangle had been. At length
he let her go and moved away. “Answer,”
he repeated.
“I’ve told you it was my business and
not yours.”
He received this in silence; then
he questioned: “You’ve been sending
letters for her, I suppose? To whom?”
“Oh, why do you torment me?
Nelson was not supposed to know that she’d
been away. She left me the letters to post to
him once a week. I found them here the night
we arrived …. It was the price—for
this. Oh, Nick, say it’s been worth it-say
at least that it’s been worth it!” she
implored him.
He stood motionless, unresponding.
One hand drummed on the corner of her dressing-table,
making the jewelled bangle dance.
“How many letters?”
“I don’t know … four … five …
What does it matter?”
“And once a week, for six weeks—?”
“Yes.”
“And you took it all as a matter of course?”
“No: I hated it. But what could
I do?”
“What could you do?”
“When our being together depended
on it? Oh, Nick, how could you think I’d
give you up?”
“Give me up?” he echoed.
“Well—doesn’t
our being together depend on—on what we
can get out of people? And hasn’t there
always got to be some give-and-take? Did you
ever in your life get anything for nothing?”
she cried with sudden exasperation. “You’ve
lived among these people as long as I have; I suppose
it’s not the first time—”
“By God, but it is,” he
exclaimed, flushing. “And that’s
the difference—the fundamental difference.”
“The difference!”
“Between you and me. I’ve
never in my life done people’s dirty work for
them—least of all for favours in return.
I suppose you guessed it, or you wouldn’t have
hidden this beastly business from me.”
The blood rose to Susy’s temples
also. Yes, she had guessed it; instinctively,
from the day she had first visited him in his bare
lodgings, she had been aware of his stricter standard.
But how could she tell him that under his influence
her standard had become stricter too, and that it
was as much to hide her humiliation from herself as
to escape his anger that she had held her tongue?
“You knew I wouldn’t have
stayed here another day if I’d known,”
he continued.
“Yes: and then where in
the world should we have gone?”
“You mean that—in
one way or another—what you call give-and-take
is the price of our remaining together?”
“Well—isn’t it,” she
faltered.
“Then we’d better part, hadn’t we?”
He spoke in a low tone, thoughtfully
and deliberately, as if this had been the inevitable
conclusion to which their passionate argument had
led.
Susy made no answer. For a moment
she ceased to be conscious of the causes of what had
happened; the thing itself seemed to have smothered
her under its ruins.
Nick wandered away from the dressing-table
and stood gazing out of the window at the darkening
canal flecked with lights. She looked at his
back, and wondered what would happen if she were to
go up to him and fling her arms about him. But
even if her touch could have broken the spell, she
was not sure she would have chosen that way of breaking
it. Beneath her speechless anguish there burned
the half-conscious sense of having been unfairly treated.
When they had entered into their queer compact, Nick
had known as well as she on what compromises and concessions
the life they were to live together must be based.
That he should have forgotten it seemed so unbelievable
that she wondered, with a new leap of fear, if he
were using the wretched Ellie’s indiscretion
as a means of escape from a tie already wearied of.
Suddenly she raised her head with a laugh.
“After all—you were
right when you wanted me to be your mistress.”
He turned on her with an astonished
stare. “You—my mistress?”
Through all her pain she thrilled
with pride at the discovery that such a possibility
had long since become unthinkable to him. But
she insisted. “That day at the Fulmers’—have
you forgotten? When you said it would be sheer
madness for us to marry.”
Lansing stood leaning in the embrasure
of the window, his eyes fixed on the mosaic volutes
of the floor.
“I was right enough when I said
it would be sheer madness for us to marry,”
he rejoined at length.
She sprang up trembling. “Well,
that’s easily settled. Our compact—”
“Oh, that compact—”
he interrupted her with an impatient laugh.
“Aren’t you asking me to carry it out
now?”
“Because I said we’d better
part?” He paused. “But the compact—I’d
almost forgotten it—was to the effect, wasn’t
it, that we were to give each other a helping hand
if either of us had a better chance? The thing
was absurd, of course; a mere joke; from my point
of view, at least. I shall never want any better
chance … any other chance ….”
“Oh, Nick, oh, Nick … but
then ….” She was close to him, his face
looming down through her tears; but he put her back.
“It would have been easy enough,
wouldn’t it,” he rejoined, “if we’d
been as detachable as all that? As it is, it’s
going to hurt horribly. But talking it over
won’t help. You were right just now when
you asked how else we were going to live. We’re
born parasites, both, I suppose, or we’d have
found out some way long ago. But I find there
are things I might put up with for myself, at a pinch—and
should, probably, in time that I can’t let you
put up with for me … ever …. Those cigars
at Como: do you suppose I didn’t know it
was for me? And this too? Well, it won’t
do … it won’t do ….”
He stopped, as if his courage failed
him; and she moaned out: “But your writing—if
your book’s a success ….”
“My poor Susy—that’s
all part of the humbug. We both know that my
sort of writing will never pay. And what’s
the alternative except more of the same kind of baseness?
And getting more and more blunted to it? At
least, till now, I’ve minded certain things;
I don’t want to go on till I find myself taking
them for granted.”
She reached out a timid hand.
“But you needn’t ever, dear … if you’d
only leave it to me ….”
He drew back sharply. “That
seems simple to you, I suppose? Well, men are
different.” He walked toward the dressing-table
and glanced at the little enamelled clock which had
been one of her wedding-presents.
“Time to dress, isn’t
it? Shall you mind if I leave you to dine with
Streffy, and whoever else is coming? I’d
rather like a long tramp, and no more talking just
at present except with myself.”
He passed her by and walked rapidly
out of the room. Susy stood motionless, unable
to lift a detaining hand or to find a final word of
appeal. On her disordered dressing-table Mrs.
Vanderlyn’s gifts glittered in the rosy lamp-light.
Yes: men were different, as he said.