Nick Lansing, in the Milan
express, was roused by the same bar of sunshine lying
across his knees. He yawned, looked with disgust
at his stolidly sleeping neighbours, and wondered why
he had decided to go to Milan, and what on earth he
should do when he got there. The difficulty
about trenchant decisions was that the next morning
they generally left one facing a void ….
When the train drew into the station
at Milan, he scrambled out, got some coffee, and having
drunk it decided to continue his journey to Genoa.
The state of being carried passively onward postponed
action and dulled thought; and after twelve hours of
furious mental activity that was exactly what he wanted.
He fell into a doze again, waking
now and then to haggard intervals of more thinking,
and then dropping off to the clank and rattle of the
train. Inside his head, in his waking intervals,
the same clanking and grinding of wheels and chains
went on unremittingly. He had done all his lucid
thinking within an hour of leaving the Palazzo Vanderlyn
the night before; since then, his brain had simply
continued to revolve indefatigably about the same
old problem. His cup of coffee, instead of clearing
his thoughts, had merely accelerated their pace.
At Genoa he wandered about in the
hot streets, bought a cheap suit-case and some underclothes,
and then went down to the port in search of a little
hotel he remembered there. An hour later he
was sitting in the coffee-room, smoking and glancing
vacantly over the papers while he waited for dinner,
when he became aware of being timidly but intently
examined by a small round-faced gentleman with eyeglasses
who sat alone at the adjoining table.
“Hullo—Buttles!”
Lansing exclaimed, recognising with surprise the
recalcitrant secretary who had resisted Miss Hicks’s
endeavour to convert him to Tiepolo.
Mr. Buttles, blushing to the roots
of his scant hair, half rose and bowed ceremoniously.
Nick Lansing’s first feeling
was of annoyance at being disturbed in his solitary
broodings; his next, of relief at having to postpone
them even to converse with Mr. Buttles.
“No idea you were here:
is the yacht in harbour?” he asked, remembering
that the Ibis must be just about to spread her wings.
Mr. Buttles, at salute behind his
chair, signed a mute negation: for the moment
he seemed too embarrassed to speak.
“Ah—you’re
here as an advance guard? I remember now—I
saw Miss Hicks in Venice the day before yesterday,”
Lansing continued, dazed at the thought that hardly
forty-eight hours had passed since his encounter with
Coral in the Scalzi.
Mr. Buttles, instead of speaking,
had tentatively approached his table. “May
I take this seat for a moment, Mr. Lansing? Thank
you. No, I am not here as an advance guard—though
I believe the Ibis is due some time to-morrow.”
He cleared his throat, wiped his eyeglasses on a
silk handkerchief, replaced them on his nose, and
went on solemnly: “Perhaps, to clear up
any possible misunderstanding, I ought to say that
I am no longer in the employ of Mr. Hicks.”
Lansing glanced at him sympathetically.
It was clear that he suffered horribly in imparting
this information, though his compact face did not
lend itself to any dramatic display of emotion.
“Really,” Nick smiled,
and then ventured: “I hope it’s not
owing to conscientious objections to Tiepolo?”
Mr. Buttles’s blush became a
smouldering agony. “Ah, Miss Hicks mentioned
to you … told you …? No, Mr. Lansing.
I am principled against the effete art of Tiepolo,
and of all his contemporaries, I confess; but if Miss
Hicks chooses to surrender herself momentarily to
the unwholesome spell of the Italian decadence it
is not for me to protest or to criticize. Her
intellectual and aesthetic range so far exceeds my
humble capacity that it would be ridiculous, unbecoming
....”
He broke off, and once more wiped
a faint moisture from his eyeglasses. It was
evident that he was suffering from a distress which
he longed and yet dreaded to communicate. But
Nick made no farther effort to bridge the gulf of his
own preoccupations; and Mr. Buttles, after an expectant
pause, went on: “If you see me here to-day
it is only because, after a somewhat abrupt departure,
I find myself unable to take leave of our friends
without a last look at the Ibis—the scene
of so many stimulating hours. But I must beg
you,” he added earnestly, “should you
see Miss Hicks—or any other member of the
party—to make no allusion to my presence
in Genoa. I wish,” said Mr. Buttles with
simplicity, “to preserve the strictest incognito.”
Lansing glanced at him kindly.
“Oh, but—isn’t that a little
unfriendly?”
“No other course is possible,
Mr. Lansing,” said the ex-secretary, “and
I commit myself to your discretion. The truth
is, if I am here it is not to look once more at the
Ibis, but at Miss Hicks: once only. You
will understand me, and appreciate what I am suffering.”
He bowed again, and trotted away on
his small, tightly-booted feet; pausing on the threshold
to say: “From the first it was hopeless,”
before he disappeared through the glass doors.
A gleam of commiseration flashed through
Nick’s mind: there was something quaintly
poignant in the sight of the brisk and efficient Mr.
Buttles reduced to a limp image of unrequited passion.
And what a painful surprise to the Hickses to be thus
suddenly deprived of the secretary who possessed “the
foreign languages”! Mr. Beck kept the
accounts and settled with the hotel-keepers; but it
was Mr. Buttles’s loftier task to entertain
in their own tongues the unknown geniuses who flocked
about the Hickses, and Nick could imagine how disconcerting
his departure must be on the eve of their Grecian
cruise which Mrs. Hicks would certainly call an Odyssey.
The next moment the vision of Coral’s
hopeless suitor had faded, and Nick was once more
spinning around on the wheel of his own woes.
The night before, when he had sent his note to Susy,
from a little restaurant close to Palazzo Vanderlyn
that they often patronized, he had done so with the
firm intention of going away for a day or two in order
to collect his wits and think over the situation.
But after his letter had been entrusted to the landlord’s
little son, who was a particular friend of Susy’s,
Nick had decided to await the lad’s return.
The messenger had not been bidden to ask for an answer;
but Nick, knowing the friendly and inquisitive Italian
mind, was almost sure that the boy, in the hope of
catching a glimpse of Susy, would linger about while
the letter was carried up. And he pictured the
maid knocking at his wife’s darkened room, and
Susy dashing some powder on her tear-stained face
before she turned on the light— poor foolish
child!
The boy had returned rather sooner
than Nick expected, and he had brought no answer,
but merely the statement that the signora was out:
that everybody was out.
“Everybody?”
“The signora and the four gentlemen
who were dining at the palace. They all went
out together on foot soon after dinner. There
was no one to whom I could give the note but the gondolier
on the landing, for the signora had said she would
be very late, and had sent the maid to bed; and the
maid had, of course, gone out immediately with her
innamorato.”
“Ah—” said
Nick, slipping his reward into the boy’s hand,
and walking out of the restaurant.
Susy had gone out—gone
out with their usual band, as she did every night
in these sultry summer weeks, gone out after her talk
with Nick, as if nothing had happened, as if his whole
world and hers had not crashed in ruins at their feet.
Ah, poor Susy! After all, she had merely obeyed
the instinct of self preservation, the old hard habit
of keeping up, going ahead and hiding her troubles;
unless indeed the habit had already engendered indifference,
and it had become as easy for her as for most of her
friends to pass from drama to dancing, from sorrow
to the cinema. What of soul was left, he wondered—?
His train did not start till midnight,
and after leaving the restaurant Nick tramped the
sultry by-ways till his tired legs brought him to
a standstill under the vine-covered pergola of a gondolier’s
wine-shop at a landing close to the Piazzetta.
There he could absorb cooling drinks until it was time
to go to the station.
It was after eleven, and he was beginning
to look about for a boat, when a black prow pushed
up to the steps, and with much chaff and laughter
a party of young people in evening dress jumped out.
Nick, from under the darkness of the vine, saw that
there was only one lady among them, and it did not
need the lamp above the landing to reveal her identity.
Susy, bareheaded and laughing, a light scarf slipping
from her bare shoulders, a cigarette between her fingers,
took Strefford’s arm and turned in the direction
of Florian’s, with Gillow, the Prince and young
Breckenridge in her wake ….
Nick had relived this rapid scene
hundreds of times during his hours in the train and
his aimless trampings through the streets of Genoa.
In that squirrel-wheel of a world of his and Susy’s
you had to keep going or drop out—and Susy,
it was evident, had chosen to keep going. Under
the lamp-flare on the landing he had had a good look
at her face, and had seen that the mask of paint and
powder was carefully enough adjusted to hide any ravages
the scene between them might have left. He even
fancied that she had dropped a little atropine into
her eyes ….
There was no time to spare if he meant
to catch the midnight train, and no gondola in sight
but that which his wife had just left. He sprang
into it, and bade the gondolier carry him to the station.
The cushions, as he leaned back, gave out a breath
of her scent; and in the glare of electric light at
the station he saw at his feet a rose which had fallen
from her dress. He ground his heel into it as
he got out.
There it was, then; that was the last
picture he was to have of her. For he knew now
that he was not going back; at least not to take up
their life together. He supposed he should have
to see her once, to talk things over, settle something
for their future. He had been sincere in saying
that he bore her no ill-will; only he could never
go back into that slough again. If he did, he
knew he would inevitably be drawn under, slipping
downward from concession to concession ….
The noises of a hot summer night in
the port of Genoa would have kept the most care-free
from slumber; but though Nick lay awake he did not
notice them, for the tumult in his brain was more
deafening. Dawn brought a negative relief, and
out of sheer weariness he dropped into a heavy sleep.
When he woke it was nearly noon, and from his window
he saw the well-known outline of the Ibis standing
up dark against the glitter of the harbour. He
had no fear of meeting her owners, who had doubtless
long since landed and betaken themselves to cooler
and more fashionable regions: oddly enough,
the fact seemed to accentuate his loneliness, his
sense of having no one on earth to turn to.
He dressed, and wandered out disconsolately to pick
up a cup of coffee in some shady corner.
As he drank his coffee his thoughts
gradually cleared. It became obvious to him
that he had behaved like a madman or a petulant child—he
preferred to think it was like a madman. If
he and Susy were to separate there was no reason why
it should not be done decently and quietly, as such
transactions were habitually managed among people
of their kind. It seemed grotesque to introduce
melodrama into their little world of unruffled Sybarites,
and he felt inclined, now, to smile at the incongruity
of his gesture …. But suddenly his eyes filled
with tears. The future without Susy was unbearable,
inconceivable. Why, after all, should they separate?
At the question, her soft face seemed close to his,
and that slight lift of the upper lip that made her
smile so exquisite. Well-he would go back.
But not with any presence of going to talk things
over, come to an agreement, wind up their joint life
like a business association. No—if
he went back he would go without conditions, for good,
forever ….
Only, what about the future?
What about the not far-distant day when the wedding
cheques would have been spent, and Granny’s
pearls sold, and nothing left except unconcealed and
unconditional dependence on rich friends, the role
of the acknowledged hangers-on? Was there no
other possible solution, no new way of ordering their
lives? No—there was none: he
could not picture Susy out of her setting of luxury
and leisure, could not picture either of them living
such a life as the Nat Fulmers, for instance!
He remembered the shabby untidy bungalow in New Hampshire,
the slatternly servants, uneatable food and ubiquitous
children. How could he ask Susy to share such
a life with him? If he did, she would probably
have the sense to refuse. Their alliance had
been based on a moment’s midsummer madness;
now the score must be paid ….
He decided to write. If they
were to part he could not trust himself to see her.
He called a waiter, asked for pen and paper, and
pushed aside a pile of unread newspapers on the corner
of the table where his coffee had been served.
As he did so, his eye lit on a Daily Mail of two
days before. As a pretext for postponing his
letter, he took up the paper and glanced down the
first page. He read:
“Tragic Yachting Accident in
the Solent. The Earl of Altringham and his son
Viscount d’Amblay drowned in midnight collision.
Both bodies recovered.”
He read on. He grasped the fact
that the disaster had happened the night before he
had left Venice and that, as the result of a fog in
the Solent, their old friend Strefford was now Earl
of Altringham, and possessor of one of the largest
private fortunes in England. It was vertiginous
to think of their old impecunious Streff as the hero
of such an adventure. And what irony in that
double turn of the wheel which, in one day, had plunged
him, Nick Lansing, into nethermost misery, while it
tossed the other to the stars!
With an intenser precision he saw
again Susy’s descent from the gondola at the
calle steps, the sound of her laughter and of Strefford’s
chaff, the way she had caught his arm and clung to
it, sweeping the other men on in her train. Strefford—Susy
and Strefford! ... More than once, Nick had
noticed the softer inflections of his friend’s
voice when he spoke to Susy, the brooding look in
his lazy eyes when they rested on her. In the
security of his wedded bliss Nick had made light of
those signs. The only real jealousy he had felt
had been of Fred Gillow, because of his unlimited
power to satisfy a woman’s whims. Yet
Nick knew that such material advantages would never
again suffice for Susy. With Strefford it was
different. She had delighted in his society
while he was notoriously ineligible; might not she
find him irresistible now?
The forgotten terms of their bridal
compact came back to Nick: the absurd agreement
on which he and Susy had solemnly pledged their faith.
But was it so absurd, after all? It had been
Susy’s suggestion (not his, thank God!); and
perhaps in making it she had been more serious than
he imagined. Perhaps, even if their rupture
had not occurred, Strefford’s sudden honours
might have caused her to ask for her freedom ….
Money, luxury, fashion, pleasure:
those were the four cornerstones of her existence.
He had always known it—she herself had
always acknowledged it, even in their last dreadful
talk together; and once he had gloried in her frankness.
How could he ever have imagined that, to have her
fill of these things, she would not in time stoop
lower than she had yet stooped? Perhaps in giving
her up to Strefford he might be saving her.
At any rate, the taste of the past was now so bitter
to him that he was moved to thank whatever gods there
were for pushing that mortuary paragraph under his
eye ….
“Susy, dear [he wrote], the
fates seem to have taken our future in hand, and spared
us the trouble of unravelling it. If I have
sometimes been selfish enough to forget the conditions
on which you agreed to marry me, they have come back
to me during these two days of solitude. You’ve
given me the best a man can have, and nothing else
will ever be worth much to me. But since I haven’t
the ability to provide you with what you want, I recognize
that I’ve no right to stand in your way.
We must owe no more Venetian palaces to underhand
services. I see by the newspapers that Streff
can now give you as many palaces as you want.
Let him have the chance—I fancy he’ll
jump at it, and he’s the best man in sight.
I wish I were in his shoes.
“I’ll write again in a
day or two, when I’ve collected my wits, and
can give you an address. Nick.”
He added a line on the subject of
their modest funds, put the letter into an envelope,
and addressed it to Mrs. Nicholas Lansing. As
he did so, he reflected that it was the first time
he had ever written his wife’s married name.
“Well—by God, no
other woman shall have it after her,” he vowed,
as he groped in his pocketbook for a stamp.
He stood up with a stretch of weariness—the
heat was stifling! —and put the letter
in his pocket.
“I’ll post it myself,
it’s safer,” he thought; “and then
what in the name of goodness shall I do next, I wonder?”
He jammed his hat down on his head and walked out
into the sun-blaze.
As he was turning away from the square
by the general Post Office, a white parasol waved
from a passing cab, and Coral Hicks leaned forward
with outstretched hand. “I knew I’d
find you,” she triumphed. “I’ve
been driving up and down in this broiling sun for
hours, shopping and watching for you at the same time.”
He stared at her blankly, too bewildered
even to wonder how she knew he was in Genoa; and she
continued, with the kind of shy imperiousness that
always made him feel, in her presence, like a member
of an orchestra under a masterful baton; “Now
please get right into this carriage, and don’t
keep me roasting here another minute.”
To the cabdriver she called out: Al porto.”
Nick Lansing sank down beside her.
As he did so he noticed a heap of bundles at her feet,
and felt that he had simply added one more to the
number. He supposed that she was taking her
spoils to the Ibis, and that he would be carried up
to the deck-house to be displayed with the others.
Well, it would all help to pass the day—and
by night he would have reached some kind of a decision
about his future.
On the third day after Nick’s
departure the post brought to the Palazzo Vanderlyn
three letters for Mrs. Lansing.
The first to arrive was a word from
Strefford, scribbled in the train and posted at Turin.
In it he briefly said that he had been called home
by the dreadful accident of which Susy had probably
read in the daily papers. He added that he would
write again from England, and then—in a
blotted postscript—: “I wanted
uncommonly badly to see you for good-bye, but the hour
was impossible. Regards to Nick. Do write
me just a word to Altringham.”
The other two letters, which came
together in the afternoon, were both from Genoa.
Susy scanned the addresses and fell upon the one
in her husband’s writing. Her hand trembled
so much that for a moment she could not open the envelope.
When she had done so, she devoured the letter in
a flash, and then sat and brooded over the outspread
page as it lay on her knee. It might mean so
many things—she could read into it so many
harrowing alternatives of indifference and despair,
of irony and tenderness! Was he suffering tortures
when he wrote it, or seeking only to inflict them
upon her? Or did the words represent his actual
feelings, no more and no less, and did he really intend
her to understand that he considered it his duty to
abide by the letter of their preposterous compact?
He had left her in wrath and indignation, yet, as
a closer scrutiny revealed, there was not a word of
reproach in his brief lines. Perhaps that was
why, in the last issue, they seemed so cold to her
.... She shivered and turned to the other envelope.
The large stilted characters, though
half-familiar, called up no definite image.
She opened the envelope and discovered a post-card
of the Ibis, canvas spread, bounding over a rippled
sea. On the back was written:
“So awfully dear of you to lend
us Mr. Lansing for a little cruise. You may
count on our taking the best of care of him.
Coral”