STRETCHED out under an awning on the
deck of the Ibis, Nick Lansing looked up for a moment
at the vanishing cliffs of Malta and then plunged
again into his book.
He had had nearly three weeks of drug-taking
on the Ibis. The drugs he had absorbed were
of two kinds: visions of fleeing landscapes,
looming up from the blue sea to vanish into it again,
and visions of study absorbed from the volumes piled
up day and night at his elbow. For the first
time in months he was in reach of a real library,
just the kind of scholarly yet miscellaneous library,
that his restless and impatient spirit craved.
He was aware that the books he read, like the fugitive
scenes on which he gazed, were merely a form of anesthetic:
he swallowed them with the careless greed of the
sufferer who seeks only to still pain and deaden memory.
But they were beginning to produce in him a moral
languor that was not disagreeable, that, indeed, compared
with the fierce pain of the first days, was almost
pleasurable. It was exactly the kind of drug
that he needed.
There is probably no point on which
the average man has more definite views than on the
uselessness of writing a letter that is hard to write.
In the line he had sent to Susy from Genoa Nick had
told her that she would hear from him again in a few
days; but when the few days had passed, and he began
to consider setting himself to the task, he found
fifty reasons for postponing it.
Had there been any practical questions
to write about it would have been different; he could
not have borne for twenty-four hours the idea that
she was in uncertainty as to money. But that
had all been settled long ago. From the first
she had had the administering of their modest fortune.
On their marriage Nick’s own meagre income,
paid in, none too regularly, by the agent who had
managed for years the dwindling family properties,
had been transferred to her: it was the only
wedding present he could make. And the wedding
cheques had of course all been deposited in her name.
There were therefore no “business” reasons
for communicating with her; and when it came to reasons
of another order the mere thought of them benumbed
him.
For the first few days he reproached
himself for his inertia; then he began to seek reasons
for justifying it. After all, for both their
sakes a waiting policy might be the wisest he could
pursue. He had left Susy because he could not
tolerate the conditions on which he had discovered
their life together to be based; and he had told her
so. What more was there to say?
Nothing was changed in their respective
situations; if they came together it could be only
to resume the same life; and that, as the days went
by, seemed to him more and more impossible. He
had not yet reached the point of facing a definite
separation; but whenever his thoughts travelled back
over their past life he recoiled from any attempt
to return to it. As long as this state of mind
continued there seemed nothing to add to the letter
he had already written, except indeed the statement
that he was cruising with the Hickses. And he
saw no pressing reason for communicating that.
To the Hickses he had given no hint
of his situation. When Coral Hicks, a fortnight
earlier, had picked him up in the broiling streets
of Genoa, and carried him off to the Ibis, he had
thought only of a cool dinner and perhaps a moonlight
sail. Then, in reply to their friendly urging,
he had confessed that he had not been well—had
indeed gone off hurriedly for a few days’ change
of air—and that left him without defence
against the immediate proposal that he should take
his change of air on the Ibis. They were just
off to Corsica and Sardinia, and from there to Sicily:
he could rejoin the railway at Naples, and be back
at Venice in ten days.
Ten days of respite—the
temptation was irresistible. And he really liked
the kind uncomplicated Hickses. A wholesome
honesty and simplicity breathed through all their opulence,
as if the rich trappings of their present life still
exhaled the fragrance of their native prairies.
The mere fact of being with such people was like
a purifying bath. When the yacht touched at
Naples he agreed since they were so awfully kind—to
go on to Sicily. And when the chief steward,
going ashore at Naples for the last time before they
got up steam, said: “Any letters for the
post, sir?” he answered, as he had answered at
each previous halt: “No, thank you:
none.”
Now they were heading for Rhodes and
Crete—Crete, where he had never been, where
he had so often longed to go. In spite of the
lateness of the season the weather was still miraculously
fine: the short waves danced ahead under a sky
without a cloud, and the strong bows of the Ibis hardly
swayed as she flew forward over the flying crests.
Only his hosts and their daughter
were on the yacht-of course with Eldorada Tooker and
Mr. Beck in attendance. An eminent archaeologist,
who was to have joined them at Naples, had telegraphed
an excuse at the last moment; and Nick noticed that,
while Mrs. Hicks was perpetually apologizing for the
great man’s absence, Coral merely smiled and
said nothing.
As a matter of fact, Mr. and Mrs.
Hicks were never as pleasant as when one had them
to one’s self. In company, Mr. Hicks ran
the risk of appearing over-hospitable, and Mrs. Hicks
confused dates and names in the desire to embrace
all culture in her conversation. But alone with
Nick, their old travelling-companion, they shone
out in their native simplicity, and Mr. Hicks talked
soundly of investments, and Mrs. Hicks recalled her
early married days in Apex City, when, on being brought
home to her new house in Aeschylus Avenue, her first
thought had been: “How on earth shall I
get all those windows washed?”
The loss of Mr. Buttles had been as
serious to them as Nick had supposed: Mr. Beck
could never hope to replace him. Apart from
his mysterious gift of languages, and his almost superhuman
faculty for knowing how to address letters to eminent
people, and in what terms to conclude them, he had
a smattering of archaeology and general culture on
which Mrs. Hicks had learned to depend—her
own memory being, alas, so inadequate to the range
of her interests.
Her daughter might perhaps have helped
her; but it was not Miss Hicks’s way to mother
her parents. She was exceedingly kind to them,
but left them, as it were, to bring themselves up as
best they could, while she pursued her own course
of self-development. A sombre zeal for knowledge
filled the mind of this strange girl: she appeared
interested only in fresh opportunities of adding to
her store of facts. They were illuminated by
little imagination and less poetry; but, carefully
catalogued and neatly sorted in her large cool brain,
they were always as accessible as the volumes in an
up-to-date public library.
To Nick there was something reposeful
in this lucid intellectual curiosity. He wanted
above all things to get away from sentiment, from
seduction, from the moods and impulses and flashing
contradictions that were Susy. Susy was not a
great reader: her store of facts was small,
and she had grown up among people who dreaded ideas
as much as if they had been a contagious disease.
But, in the early days especially, when Nick had
put a book in her hand, or read a poem to her, her
swift intelligence had instantly shed a new light on
the subject, and, penetrating to its depths, had extracted
from them whatever belonged to her. What a pity
that this exquisite insight, this intuitive discrimination,
should for the most part have been spent upon reading
the thoughts of vulgar people, and extracting a profit
from them—should have been wasted, since
her childhood, on all the hideous intricacies of “managing”!
And visible beauty—how
she cared for that too! He had not guessed it,
or rather he had not been sure of it, till the day
when, on their way through Paris, he had taken her
to the Louvre, and they had stood before the little
Crucifixion of Mantegna. He had not been looking
at the picture, or watching to see what impression
it produced on Susy. His own momentary mood
was for Correggio and Fragonard, the laughter of the
Music Lesson and the bold pagan joys of the Antiope;
and then he had missed her from his side, and when
he came to where she stood, forgetting him, forgetting
everything, had seen the glare of that tragic sky
in her face, her trembling lip, the tears on her lashes.
That was Susy ….
Closing his book he stole a glance
at Coral Hicks’s profile, thrown back against
the cushions of the deck-chair at his side. There
was something harsh and bracing in her blunt primitive
build, in the projection of the black eyebrows that
nearly met over her thick straight nose, and the faint
barely visible black down on her upper lip.
Some miracle of will-power, combined with all the
artifices that wealth can buy, had turned the fat
sallow girl he remembered into this commanding young
woman, almost handsome at times indisputably handsome—in
her big authoritative way. Watching the arrogant
lines of her profile against the blue sea, he remembered,
with a thrill that was sweet to his vanity, how twice—under
the dome of the Scalzi and in the streets of Genoa—he
had seen those same lines soften at his approach,
turn womanly, pleading and almost humble. That
was Coral ….
Suddenly she said, without turning
toward him: “You’ve had no letters
since you’ve been on board.”
He looked at her, surprised.
“No—thank the Lord!” he laughed.
“And you haven’t written
one either,” she continued in her hard statistical
tone.
“No,” he again agreed, with the same laugh.
“That means that you really are free—”
“Free?”
He saw the cheek nearest him redden.
“Really off on a holiday, I mean; not tied
down.” After a pause he rejoined:
“No, I’m not particularly tied down.”
“And your book?”
“Oh, my book—”
He stopped and considered. He had thrust The
Pageant of Alexander into his handbag on the night
of his Bight from Venice; but since then he had never
looked at it. Too many memories and illusions
were pressed between its pages; and he knew just at
what page he had felt Ellie Vanderlyn bending over
him from behind, caught a whiff of her scent, and heard
her breathless “I had to thank you!”
“My book’s hung up,”
he said impatiently, annoyed with Miss Hicks’s
lack of tact. There was a girl who never put
out feelers ….
“Yes; I thought it was,”
she went on quietly, and he gave her a startled glance.
What the devil else did she think, he wondered?
He had never supposed her capable of getting far
enough out of her own thick carapace of self-sufficiency
to penetrate into any one else’s feelings.
“The truth is,” he continued,
embarrassed, “I suppose I dug away at it rather
too continuously; that’s probably why I felt
the need of a change. You see I’m only
a beginner.”
She still continued her relentless
questioning. “But later— you’ll
go on with it, of course?”
“Oh, I don’t know.”
He paused, glanced down the glittering deck, and
then out across the glittering water. “I’ve
been dreaming dreams, you see. I rather think
I shall have to drop the book altogether, and try
to look out for a job that will pay. To indulge
in my kind of literature one must first have an assured
income.”
He was instantly annoyed with himself
for having spoken. Hitherto in his relations
with the Hickses he had carefully avoided the least
allusion that might make him feel the heavy hand of
their beneficence. But the idle procrastinating
weeks had weakened him and he had yielded to the need
of putting into words his vague intentions.
To do so would perhaps help to make them more definite.
To his relief Miss Hicks made no immediate
reply; and when she spoke it was in a softer voice
and with an unwonted hesitation.
“It seems a shame that with
gifts like yours you shouldn’t find some kind
of employment that would leave you leisure enough to
do your real work ….”
He shrugged ironically. “Yes—there
are a goodish number of us hunting for that particular
kind of employment.”
Her tone became more business-like.
“I know it’s hard to find—almost
impossible. But would you take it, I wonder,
if it were offered to you—?”
She turned her head slightly, and
their eyes met. For an instant blank terror
loomed upon him; but before he had time to face it
she continued, in the same untroubled voice:
“Mr. Buttles’s place, I mean. My
parents must absolutely have some one they can count
on. You know what an easy place it is ….
I think you would find the salary satisfactory.”
Nick drew a deep breath of relief.
For a moment her eyes had looked as they had in the
Scalzi—and he liked the girl too much not
to shrink from reawakening that look. But Mr.
Buttles’s place: why not?
“Poor Buttles!” he murmured, to gain time.
“Oh,” she said, “you
won’t find the same reasons as he did for throwing
up the job. He was the martyr of his artistic
convictions.”
He glanced at her sideways, wondering.
After all she did not know of his meeting with Mr.
Buttles in Genoa, nor of the latter’s confidences;
perhaps she did not even know of Mr. Buttles’s
hopeless passion. At any rate her face remained
calm.
“Why not consider it—at
least just for a few months? Till after our
expedition to Mesopotamia?” she pressed on, a
little breathlessly.
“You’re awfully kind: but I don’t
know—”
She stood up with one of her abrupt
movements. “You needn’t, all at
once. Take time think it over. Father wanted
me to ask you,” she appended.
He felt the inadequacy of his response.
“It tempts me awfully, of course. But
I must wait, at any rate—wait for letters.
The fact is I shall have to wire from Rhodes to have
them sent. I had chucked everything, even letters,
for a few weeks.”
“Ah, you are tired,” she
murmured, giving him a last downward glance as she
turned away.
>From Rhodes Nick Lansing telegraphed
to his Paris bank to send his letters to Candia; but
when the Ibis reached Candia, and the mail was brought
on board, the thick envelope handed to him contained
no letter from Susy.
Why should it, since he had not yet written to her?
He had not written, no: but
in sending his address to the bank he knew he had
given her the opportunity of reaching him if she wished
to. And she had made no sign.
Late that afternoon, when they returned
to the yacht from their first expedition, a packet
of newspapers lay on the deck-house table. Nick
picked up one of the London journals, and his eye
ran absently down the list of social events.
He read:
“Among the visitors expected
next week at Ruan Castle (let for the season to Mr.
Frederick J. Gillow of New York) are Prince Altineri
of Rome, the Earl of Altringham and Mrs. Nicholas
Lansing, who arrived in London last week from Paris.
“Nick threw down the paper. It was just
a month since he had left the Palazzo Vanderlyn and
flung himself into the night express for Milan.
A whole month—and Susy had not written.
Only a month— and Susy and Strefford were
already together!