When Violet Melrose had said
to Susy Branch, the winter before in New York:
“But why on earth don’t you and Nick go
to my little place at Versailles for the honeymoon?
I’m off to China, and you could have it to
yourselves all summer,” the offer had been tempting
enough to make the lovers waver.
It was such an artless ingenuous little
house, so full of the demoralizing simplicity of great
wealth, that it seemed to Susy just the kind of place
in which to take the first steps in renunciation.
But Nick had objected that Paris, at that time of
year, would be swarming with acquaintances who would
hunt them down at all hours; and Susy’s own
experience had led her to remark that there was nothing
the very rich enjoyed more than taking pot-luck with
the very poor. They therefore gave Strefford’s
villa the preference, with an inward proviso (on Susy’s
part) that Violet’s house might very conveniently
serve their purpose at another season.
These thoughts were in her mind as
she drove up to Mrs. Melrose’s door on a rainy
afternoon late in August, her boxes piled high on
the roof of the cab she had taken at the station.
She had travelled straight through from Venice, stopping
in Milan just long enough to pick up a reply to the
telegram she had despatched to the perfect housekeeper
whose permanent presence enabled Mrs. Melrose to say:
“Oh, when I’m sick of everything I just
rush off without warning to my little shanty at Versailles,
and live there all alone on scrambled eggs.”
The perfect house-keeper had replied
to Susy’s enquiry: “Am sure Mrs.
Melrose most happy”; and Susy, without further
thought, had jumped into a Versailles train, and now
stood in the thin rain before the sphinx-guarded threshold
of the pavilion.
The revolving year had brought around
the season at which Mrs. Melrose’s house might
be convenient: no visitors were to be feared
at Versailles at the end of August, and though Susy’s
reasons for seeking solitude were so remote from those
she had once prefigured, they were none the less cogent.
To be alone— alone! After those
first exposed days when, in the persistent presence
of Fred Gillow and his satellites, and in the mocking
radiance of late summer on the lagoons, she had fumed
and turned about in her agony like a trapped animal
in a cramping cage, to be alone had seemed the only
respite, the one craving: to be alone somewhere
in a setting as unlike as possible to the sensual
splendours of Venice, under skies as unlike its azure
roof. If she could have chosen she would have
crawled away into a dingy inn in a rainy northern
town, where she had never been and no one knew her.
Failing that unobtainable luxury, here she was on
the threshold of an empty house, in a deserted place,
under lowering skies. She had shaken off Fred
Gillow, sulkily departing for his moor (where she
had half-promised to join him in September); the Prince,
young Breckenridge, and the few remaining survivors
of the Venetian group, had dispersed in the direction
of the Engadine or Biarritz; and now she could at
least collect her wits, take stock of herself, and
prepare the countenance with which she was to face
the next stage in her career. Thank God it was
raining at Versailles!
The door opened, she heard voices
in the drawing-room, and a slender languishing figure
appeared on the threshold.
“Darling!” Violet Melrose
cried in an embrace, drawing her into the dusky perfumed
room.
“But I thought you were in China!” Susy
stammered.
“In China … in China,”
Mrs. Melrose stared with dreamy eyes, and Susy remembered
her drifting disorganised life, a life more planless,
more inexplicable than that of any of the other ephemeral
beings blown about upon the same winds of pleasure.
“Well, Madam, I thought so myself
till I got a wire from Mrs. Melrose last evening,”
remarked the perfect house-keeper, following with
Susy’s handbag.
Mrs. Melrose clutched her cavernous
temples in her attenuated hands. “Of course,
of course! I had meant to go to China—no,
India …. But I’ve discovered a genius
... and Genius, you know ….” Unable
to complete her thought, she sank down upon a pillowy
divan, stretched out an arm, cried: “Fulmer!
Fulmer!” and, while Susy Lansing stood in the
middle of the room with widening eyes, a man emerged
from the more deeply cushioned and scented twilight
of some inner apartment, and she saw with surprise
Nat Fulmer, the good Nat Fulmer of the New Hampshire
bungalow and the ubiquitous progeny, standing before
her in lordly ease, his hands in his pockets, a cigarette
between his lips, his feet solidly planted in the
insidious depths of one of Violet Melrose’s
white leopard skins.
“Susy!” he shouted with
open arms; and Mrs. Melrose murmured: “You
didn’t know, then? You hadn’t heard
of his masterpieces?”
In spite of herself, Susy burst into
a laugh. “Is Nat your genius?”
Mrs. Melrose looked at her reproachfully.
Fulmer laughed. “No; I’m
Grace’s. But Mrs. Melrose has been our
Providence, and ….”
“Providence?” his hostess
interrupted. “Don’t talk as if you
were at a prayer-meeting! He had an exhibition
in New York … it was the most fabulous success.
He’s come abroad to make studies for the decoration
of my music-room in New York. Ursula Gillow
has given him her garden-house at Roslyn to do.
And Mrs. Bockheimer’s ball-room—oh,
Fulmer, where are the cartoons?” She sprang
up, tossed about some fashion-papers heaped on a lacquer
table, and sank back exhausted by the effort.
“I’d got as far as Brindisi. I’ve
travelled day and night to be here to meet him,”
she declared. “But, you darling,”
and she held out a caressing hand to Susy, “I’m
forgetting to ask if you’ve had tea?”
An hour later, over the tea-table,
Susy already felt herself mysteriously reabsorbed
into what had so long been her native element.
Ellie Vanderlyn had brought a breath of it to Venice;
but Susy was then nourished on another air, the air
of Nick’s presence and personality; now that
she was abandoned, left again to her own devices,
she felt herself suddenly at the mercy of the influences
from which she thought she had escaped.
In the queer social whirligig from
which she had so lately fled, it seemed natural enough
that a shake of the box should have tossed Nat Fulmer
into celebrity, and sent Violet Melrose chasing back
from the ends of the earth to bask in his success.
Susy knew that Mrs. Melrose belonged to the class of
moral parasites; for in that strange world the parts
were sometimes reversed, and the wealthy preyed upon
the pauper. Wherever there was a reputation
to batten on, there poor Violet appeared, a harmless
vampire in pearls who sought only to feed on the notoriety
which all her millions could not create for her.
Any one less versed than Susy in the shallow mysteries
of her little world would have seen in Violet Melrose
a baleful enchantress, in Nat Fulmer her helpless
victim. Susy knew better. Violet, poor
Violet, was not even that. The insignificant
Ellie Vanderlyn, with her brief trivial passions,
her artless mixture of amorous and social interests,
was a woman with a purpose, a creature who fulfilled
herself; but Violet was only a drifting interrogation.
And what of Fulmer? Mustering
with new eyes his short sturdily-built figure, his
nondescript bearded face, and the eyes that dreamed
and wandered, and then suddenly sank into you like
claws, Susy seemed to have found the key to all his
years of dogged toil, his indifference to neglect,
indifference to poverty, indifference to the needs
of his growing family …. Yes: for the
first time she saw that he looked commonplace enough
to be a genius—was a genius, perhaps, even
though it was Violet Melrose who affirmed it!
Susy looked steadily at Fulmer, their eyes met, and
he smiled at her faintly through his beard.
“Yes, I did discover him—I
did,” Mrs. Melrose was insisting, from the depths
of the black velvet divan in which she lay sunk like
a wan Nereid in a midnight sea. “You mustn’t
believe a word that Ursula Gillow tells you about
having pounced on his ‘Spring Snow Storm’
in a dark corner of the American Artists’ exhibition—skied,
if you please! They skied him less than a year
ago! And naturally Ursula never in her life looked
higher than the first line at a picture-show.
And now she actually pretends … oh, for pity’s
sake don’t say it doesn’t matter, Fulmer!
Your saying that just encourages her, and makes people
think she did. When, in reality, any one who
saw me at the exhibition on varnishing-day ….
Who? Well, Eddy Breckenridge, for instance.
He was in Egypt, you say? Perhaps he was!
As if one could remember the people about one, when
suddenly one comes upon a great work of art, as St.
Paul did— didn’t he?—and
the scales fell from his eyes. Well … that’s
exactly what happened to me that day … and Ursula,
everybody knows, was down at Roslyn at the time,
and didn’t come up for the opening of the exhibition
at all. And Fulmer sits there and laughs, and
says it doesn’t matter, and that he’ll
paint another picture any day for me to discover!”
Susy had rung the door-bell with a
hand trembling with eagerness—eagerness
to be alone, to be quiet, to stare her situation in
the face, and collect herself before she came out
again among her kind. She had stood on the door-step,
cowering among her bags, counting the instants till
a step sounded and the door-knob turned, letting her
in from the searching glare of the outer world ….
And now she had sat for an hour in Violet’s
drawing-room, in the very house where her honey-moon
might have been spent; and no one had asked her where
she had come from, or why she was alone, or what was
the key to the tragedy written on her shrinking face
....
That was the way of the world they
lived in. Nobody questioned, nobody wondered
any more-because nobody had time to remember.
The old risk of prying curiosity, of malicious gossip,
was virtually over: one was left with one’s
drama, one’s disaster, on one’s hands,
because there was nobody to stop and notice the little
shrouded object one was carrying. As Susy watched
the two people before her, each so frankly unaffected
by her presence, Violet Melrose so engrossed in her
feverish pursuit of notoriety, Fulmer so plunged in
the golden sea of his success, she felt like a ghost
making inaudible and imperceptible appeals to the
grosser senses of the living.
“If I wanted to be alone,”
she thought, “I’m alone enough, in all
conscience.” There was a deathly chill
in such security. She turned to Fulmer.
“And Grace?”
He beamed back without sign of embarrassment.
“Oh, she’s here, naturally—we’re
in Paris, kids and all. In a pension, where we
can polish up the lingo. But I hardly ever lay
eyes on her, because she’s as deep in music
as I am in paint; it was as big a chance for her as
for me, you see, and she’s making the most of
it, fiddling and listening to the fiddlers. Well,
it’s a considerable change from New Hampshire.”
He looked at her dreamily, as if making an intense
effort to detach himself from his dream, and situate
her in the fading past. “Remember the
bungalow? And Nick—ah, how’s
Nick?” he brought out triumphantly.
“Oh, yes—darling
Nick?” Mrs. Melrose chimed in; and Susy, her
head erect, her cheeks aflame, declared with resonance:
“Most awfully well—splendidly!”
“He’s not here, though?” from Fulmer.
“No. He’s off travelling—cruising.”
Mrs. Melrose’s attention was
faintly roused. “With anybody interesting?”
“No; you wouldn’t know
them. People we met ….” She did
not have to continue, for her hostess’s gaze
had again strayed.
“And you’ve come for your
clothes, I suppose, darling? Don’t listen
to people who say that skirts are to be wider.
I’ve discovered a new woman—a Genius—and
she absolutely swathes you…. Her name’s
my secret; but we’ll go to her together.”
Susy rose from her engulphing armchair.
“Do you mind if I go up to my room? I’m
rather tired—coming straight through.”
“Of course, dear. I think
there are some people coming to dinner … Mrs.
Match will tell you. She has such a memory ….
Fulmer, where on earth are those cartoons of the music-room?”
Their voices pursued Susy upstairs,
as, in Mrs. Match’s perpendicular wake, she
mounted to the white-panelled room with its gay linen
hangings and the low bed heaped with more cushions.
“If we’d come here,”
she thought, “everything might have been different.”
And she shuddered at the sumptuous memories of the
Palazzo Vanderlyn, and the great painted bedroom where
she had met her doom.
Mrs. Match, hoping she would find
everything, and mentioning that dinner was not till
nine, shut her softly in among her terrors.
“Find everything?” Susy
echoed the phrase. Oh, yes, she would always
find everything: every time the door shut on
her now, and the sound of voices ceased, her memories
would be there waiting for her, every one of them,
waiting quietly, patiently, obstinately, like poor
people in a doctor’s office, the people who
are always last to be attended to, but whom nothing
will discourage or drive away, people to whom time
is nothing, fatigue nothing, hunger nothing, other
engagements nothing: who just wait ….
Thank heaven, after all, that she had not found the
house empty, if, whenever she returned to her room,
she was to meet her memories there!
It was just a week since Nick had
left her. During that week, crammed with people,
questions, packing, explaining, evading, she had believed
that in solitude lay her salvation. Now she
understood that there was nothing she was so unprepared
for, so unfitted for. When, in all her life,
had she ever been alone? And how was she to bear
it now, with all these ravening memories besetting
her!
Dinner not till nine? What on
earth was she to do till nine o’clock?
She knelt before her boxes, and feverishly began to
unpack.
Gradually, imperceptibly, the subtle
influences of her old life were stealing into her.
As she pulled out her tossed and crumpled dresses
she remembered Violet’s emphatic warning:
“Don’t believe the people who tell you
that skirts are going to be wider.” Were
hers, perhaps, too wide as it was? She looked
at her limp raiment, piling itself up on bed and sofa,
and understood that, according to Violet’s standards,
and that of all her set, those dresses, which Nick
had thought so original and exquisite, were already
commonplace and dowdy, fit only to be passed on to
poor relations or given to one’s maid.
And Susy would have to go on wearing them till they
fell to bits-or else …. Well, or else begin
the old life again in some new form ….
She laughed aloud at the turn of her
thoughts. Dresses? How little they had
mattered a few short weeks ago! And now, perhaps,
they would again be one of the foremost considerations
in her life. How could it be otherwise, if she
were to return again to her old dependence on Ellie
Vanderlyn, Ursula Gillow, Violet Melrose? And
beyond that, only the Bockheimers and their kind awaited
her ….
A knock on the door—what
a relief! It was Mrs. Match again, with a telegram.
To whom had Susy given her new address? With
a throbbing heart she tore open the envelope and read:
“Shall be in Paris Friday for
twenty-four hours where can I see you write Nouveau
Luxe.”
Ah, yes—she remembered
now: she had written to Strefford! And
this was his answer: he was coming. She
dropped into a chair, and tried to think. What
on earth had she said in her letter? It had been
mainly, of course, one of condolence; but now she
remembered having added, in a precipitate postscript:
“I can’t give your message to Nick, for
he’s gone off with the Hickses-I don’t
know where, or for how long. It’s all right,
of course: it was in our bargain.”
She had not meant to put in that last
phrase; but as she sealed her letter to Strefford
her eye had fallen on Nick’s missive, which
lay beside it. Nothing in her husband’s
brief lines had embittered her as much as the allusion
to Strefford. It seemed to imply that Nick’s
own plans were made, that his own future was secure,
and that he could therefore freely and handsomely
take thought for hers, and give her a pointer in the
right direction. Sudden rage had possessed her
at the thought: where she had at first read
jealousy she now saw only a cold providence, and in
a blur of tears she had scrawled her postscript to
Strefford. She remembered that she had not even
asked him to keep her secret. Well—after
all, what would it matter if people should already
know that Nick had left her? Their parting could
not long remain a mystery, and the fact that it was
known might help her to keep up a presence of indifference.
“It was in the bargain—in
the bargain,” rang through her brain as she
re-read Strefford’s telegram. She understood
that he had snatched the time for this hasty trip
solely in the hope of seeing her, and her eyes filled.
The more bitterly she thought of Nick the more this
proof of Strefford’s friendship moved her.
The clock, to her relief, reminded
her that it was time to dress for dinner. She
would go down presently, chat with Violet and Fulmer,
and with Violet’s other guests, who would probably
be odd and amusing, and too much out of her world
to embarrass her by awkward questions. She would
sit at a softly-lit table, breathe delicate scents,
eat exquisite food (trust Mrs. Match!), and be gradually
drawn again under the spell of her old associations.
Anything, anything but to be alone ….
She dressed with even more than her
habitual care, reddened her lips attentively, brushed
the faintest bloom of pink over her drawn cheeks,
and went down—to meet Mrs. Match coming
up with a tray.
“Oh, Madam, I thought you were
too tired …. I was bringing it up to you myself—just
a little morsel of chicken.”
Susy, glancing past her, saw, through
the open door, that the lamps were not lit in the
drawing-room.
“Oh, no, I’m not tired,
thank you. I thought Mrs. Melrose expected friends
at dinner!”
“Friends at dinner-to-night?”
Mrs. Match heaved a despairing sigh. Sometimes,
the sigh seemed to say, her mistress put too great
a strain upon her. “Why, Mrs. Melrose and
Mr. Fulmer were engaged to dine in Paris. They
left an hour ago. Mrs. Melrose told me she’d
told you,” the house-keeper wailed.
Susy kept her little fixed smile.
“I must have misunderstood. In that case
... well, yes, if it’s no trouble, I believe
I will have my tray upstairs. “
Slowly she turned, and followed the
housekeeper up into the dread solitude she had just
left.