The next day a lot of people
turned up unannounced for luncheon. They were
not of the far-fetched and the exotic, in whom Mrs.
Melrose now specialized, but merely commonplace fashionable
people belonging to Susy’s own group, people
familiar with the amusing romance of her penniless
marriage, and to whom she had to explain (though none
of them really listened to the explanation) that Nick
was not with her just now but had gone off cruising
... cruising in the AEgean with friends … getting
up material for his book (this detail had occurred
to her in the night).
It was the kind of encounter she had
most dreaded; but it proved, after all, easy enough
to go through compared with those endless hours of
turning to and fro, the night before, in the cage
of her lonely room. Anything, anything, but to
be alone ….
Gradually, from the force of habit,
she found herself actually in tune with the talk of
the luncheon table, interested in the references to
absent friends, the light allusions to last year’s
loves and quarrels, scandals and absurdities.
The women, in their pale summer dresses, were so
graceful, indolent and sure of themselves, the men
so easy and good-humoured! Perhaps, after all,
Susy reflected, it was the world she was meant for,
since the other, the brief Paradise of her dreams,
had already shut its golden doors upon her.
And then, as they sat on the terrace after luncheon,
looking across at the yellow tree-tops of the park,
one of the women said something—made just
an allusion—that Susy would have let pass
unnoticed in the old days, but that now filled her
with a sudden deep disgust …. She stood up
and wandered away, away from them all through the
fading garden.
Two days later Susy and Strefford
sat on the terrace of the Tuileries above the Seine.
She had asked him to meet her there, with the desire
to avoid the crowded halls and drawing-room of the
Nouveau Luxe where, even at that supposedly “dead”
season, people one knew were always drifting to and
fro; and they sat on a bench in the pale sunlight,
the discoloured leaves heaped at their feet, and no
one to share their solitude but a lame working-man
and a haggard woman who were lunching together mournfully
at the other end of the majestic vista.
Strefford, in his new mourning, looked
unnaturally prosperous and well-valeted; but his ugly
untidy features remained as undisciplined, his smile
as whimsical, as of old. He had been on cool
though friendly terms with the pompous uncle and the
poor sickly cousin whose joint disappearance had so
abruptly transformed his future; and it was his way
to understate his feelings rather than to pretend
more than he felt. Nevertheless, beneath his
habitual bantering tone Susy discerned a change.
The disaster had shocked him profoundly; already,
in his brief sojourn among his people and among the
great possessions so tragically acquired, old instincts
had awakened, forgotten associations had spoken in
him. Susy listened to him wistfully, silenced
by her imaginative perception of the distance that
these things had put between them.
“It was horrible … seeing
them both there together, laid out in that hideous
Pugin chapel at Altringham … the poor boy especially.
I suppose that’s really what’s cutting
me up now,” he murmured, almost apologetically.
“Oh, it’s more than that—more
than you know,” she insisted; but he jerked
back: “Now, my dear, don’t be edifying,
please,” and fumbled for a cigarette in the
pocket which was already beginning to bulge with his
miscellaneous properties.
“And now about you—for
that’s what I came for,” he continued,
turning to her with one of his sudden movements.
“I couldn’t make head or tail of your
letter.”
She paused a moment to steady her
voice. “Couldn’t you? I suppose
you’d forgotten my bargain with Nick. He
hadn’t-and he’s asked me to fulfil it.”
Strefford stared. “What—that
nonsense about your setting each other free if either
of you had the chance to make a good match?”
She signed “Yes.”
“And he’s actually asked you—?”
“Well: practically.
He’s gone off with the Hickses. Before
going he wrote me that we’d better both consider
ourselves free. And Coral sent me a postcard
to say that she would take the best of care of him.”
Strefford mused, his eyes upon his
cigarette. “But what the deuce led up
to all this? It can’t have happened like
that, out of a clear sky.”
Susy flushed, hesitated, looked away.
She had meant to tell Strefford the whole story;
it had been one of her chief reasons for wishing to
see him again, and half-unconsciously, perhaps, she
had hoped, in his laxer atmosphere, to recover something
of her shattered self-esteem. But now she suddenly
felt the impossibility of confessing to anyone the
depths to which Nick’s wife had stooped.
She fancied that her companion guessed the nature
of her hesitation.
“Don’t tell me anything
you don’t want to, you know, my dear.”
“No; I do want to; only it’s
difficult. You see—we had so very
little money ….”
“Yes?”
“And Nick—who was
thinking of his book, and of all sorts of big things,
fine things—didn’t realise … left
it all to me … to manage ….”
She stumbled over the word, remembering
how Nick had always winced at it. But Strefford
did not seem to notice her, and she hurried on, unfolding
in short awkward sentences the avowal of their pecuniary
difficulties, and of Nick’s inability to understand
that, to keep on with the kind of life they were leading,
one had to put up with things … accept favours ….
“Borrow money, you mean?”
“Well—yes; and all
the rest.” No—decidedly she
could not reveal to Strefford the episode of Ellie’s
letters. “Nick suddenly felt, I suppose,
that he couldn’t stand it,” she continued;
“and instead of asking me to try—to
try to live differently, go off somewhere with him
and live, like work-people, in two rooms, without
a servant, as I was ready to do; well, instead he
wrote me that it had all been a mistake from the beginning,
that we couldn’t keep it up, and had better
recognize the fact; and he went off on the Hickses’
yacht. The last evening that you were in Venice—the
day he didn’t come back to dinner—he
had gone off to Genoa to meet them. I suppose
he intends to marry Coral.”
Strefford received this in silence.
“Well—it was your bargain, wasn’t
it?” he said at length.
“Yes; but—”
“Exactly: I always told
you so. You weren’t ready to have him
go yet—that’s all.”
She flushed to the forehead.
“Oh, Streff—is it really all?”
“A question of time? If
you doubt it, I’d like to see you try, for a
while, in those two rooms without a servant; and then
let me hear from you. Why, my dear, it’s
only a question of time in a palace, with a steam
yacht lying off the door-step, and a flock of motors
in the garage; look around you and see. And did
you ever imagine that you and Nick, of all people,
were going to escape the common doom, and survive
like Mr. and Mrs. Tithonus, while all about you the
eternal passions were crumbling to pieces, and your
native Divorce-states piling up their revenues?”
She sat with bent head, the weight
of the long years to come pressing like a leaden load
on her shoulders.
“But I’m so young …
life’s so long. What does last, then?”
“Ah, you’re too young
to believe me, if I were to tell you; though you’re
intelligent enough to understand.”
“What does, then?”
“Why, the hold of the things
we all think we could do without. Habits—they
outstand the Pyramids. Comforts, luxuries, the
atmosphere of ease … above all, the power to get
away from dulness and monotony, from constraints and
uglinesses. You chose that power, instinctively,
before you were even grown up; and so did Nick.
And the only difference between you is that he’s
had the sense to see sooner than you that those are
the things that last, the prime necessities.”
“I don’t believe it!”
“Of course you don’t:
at your age one doesn’t reason one’s
materialism. And besides you’re mortally
hurt that Nick has found out sooner than you, and
hasn’t disguised his discovery under any hypocritical
phrases.”
“But surely there are people—”
“Yes—saints and geniuses
and heroes: all the fanatics! To which
of their categories do you suppose we soft people belong?
And the heroes and the geniuses—haven’t
they their enormous frailties and their giant appetites?
And how should we escape being the victims of our
little ones?”
She sat for a while without speaking.
“But, Streff, how can you say such things,
when I know you care: care for me, for instance!”
“Care?” He put his hand
on hers. “But, my dear, it’s just
the fugitiveness of mortal caring that makes it so
exquisite! It’s because we know we can’t
hold fast to it, or to each other, or to anything
....”
“Yes … yes … but hush, please!
Oh, don’t say it!” She stood up, the
tears in her throat, and he rose also.
“Come along, then; where do
we lunch?” he said with a smile, slipping his
hand through her arm.
“Oh, I don’t know.
Nowhere. I think I’m going back to Versailles.”
“Because I’ve disgusted
you so deeply? Just my luck—when I
came over to ask you to marry me!”
She laughed, but he had become suddenly
grave. “Upon my soul, I did.”
“Dear Streff! As if—now—”
“Oh, not now—I know.
I’m aware that even with your accelerated divorce
methods—”
“It’s not that.
I told you it was no use, Streff—I told
you long ago, in Venice.”
He shrugged ironically. “It’s
not Streff who’s asking you now. Streff
was not a marrying man: he was only trifling
with you. The present offer comes from an elderly
peer of independent means. Think it over, my
dear: as many days out as you like, and five
footmen kept. There’s not the least hurry,
of course; but I rather think Nick himself would advise
it.”
She flushed to the temples, remembering
that Nick had; and the remembrance made Strefford’s
sneering philosophy seem less unbearable. Why
should she not lunch with him, after all? In
the first days of his mourning he had come to Paris
expressly to see her, and to offer her one of the
oldest names and one of the greatest fortunes in England.
She thought of Ursula Gillow, Ellie Vanderlyn, Violet
Melrose, of their condescending kindnesses, their
last year’s dresses, their Christmas cheques,
and all the careless bounties that were so easy to
bestow and so hard to accept. “I should
rather enjoy paying them back,” something in
her maliciously murmured.
She did not mean to marry Strefford—she
had not even got as far as contemplating the possibility
of a divorce but it was undeniable that this sudden
prospect of wealth and freedom was like fresh air
in her lungs. She laughed again, but now without
bitterness.
“Very good, then; we’ll
lunch together. But it’s Streff I want
to lunch with to-day.”
“Ah, well,” her companion
agreed, “I rather think that for a tete-a-tete
he’s better company.”
During their repast in a little restaurant
over the Seine, where she insisted on the cheapest
dishes because she was lunching with “Streff,”
he became again his old whimsical companionable self.
Once or twice she tried to turn the talk to his altered
future, and the obligations and interests that lay
before him; but he shrugged away from the subject,
questioning her instead about the motley company at
Violet Melrose’s, and fitting a droll or malicious
anecdote to each of the people she named.
It was not till they had finished
their coffee, and she was glancing at her watch with
a vague notion of taking the next train, that he asked
abruptly: “But what are you going to do?
You can’t stay forever at Violet’s.”
“Oh, no!” she cried with a shiver.
“Well, then—you’ve got some
plan, I suppose?”
“Have I?” she wondered,
jerked back into grim reality from the soothing interlude
of their hour together.
“You can’t drift indefinitely,
can you? Unless you mean to go back to the old
sort of life once for all.”
She reddened and her eyes filled.
“I can’t do that, Streff—I
know I can’t!”
“Then what—?”
She hesitated, and brought out with
lowered head: “Nick said he would write
again—in a few days. I must wait—”
“Oh, naturally. Don’t
do anything in a hurry.” Strefford also
glanced at his watch. “Garcon, l’addition!
I’m taking the train back to-night, and I’ve
a lot of things left to do. But look here, my
dear—when you come to a decision one way
or the other let me know, will you? Oh, I don’t
mean in the matter I’ve most at heart; we’ll
consider that closed for the present. But at
least I can be of use in other ways—hang
it, you know, I can even lend you money. There’s
a new sensation for our jaded palates!”
“Oh, Streff … Streff!”
she could only falter; and he pressed on gaily:
“Try it, now do try it—I assure you
there’ll be no interest to pay, and no conditions
attached. And promise to let me know when you’ve
decided anything. “
She looked into his humorously puckered
eyes, answering. Their friendly smile with hers.
“I promise!” she said.