Susy had decided to wait for Strefford in London.
The new Lord Altringham was with his
family in the north, and though she found a telegram
on arriving, saying that he would join her in town
the following week, she had still an interval of several
days to fill.
London was a desert; the rain fell
without ceasing, and alone in the shabby family hotel
which, even out of season, was the best she could
afford, she sat at last face to face with herself.
>From the moment when Violet Melrose
had failed to carry out her plan for the Fulmer children
her interest in Susy had visibly waned. Often
before, in the old days, Susy Branch had felt the
same abrupt change of temperature in the manner of
the hostess of the moment; and often—how
often—had yielded, and performed the required
service, rather than risk the consequences of estrangement.
To that, at least, thank heaven, she need never stoop
again.
But as she hurriedly packed her trunks
at Versailles, scraped together an adequate tip for
Mrs. Match, and bade good-bye to Violet (grown suddenly
fond and demonstrative as she saw her visitor safely
headed for the station)—as Susy went through
the old familiar mummery of the enforced leave-taking,
there rose in her so deep a disgust for the life of
makeshifts and accommodations, that if at that moment
Nick had reappeared and held out his arms to her,
she was not sure she would have had the courage to
return to them.
In her London solitude the thirst
for independence grew fiercer. Independence with
ease, of course. Oh, her hateful useless love
of beauty … the curse it had always been to her,
the blessing it might have been if only she had had
the material means to gratify and to express it!
And instead, it only gave her a morbid loathing of
that hideous hotel bedroom drowned in yellow rain-light,
of the smell of soot and cabbage through the window,
the blistered wall-paper, the dusty wax bouquets under
glass globes, and the electric lighting so contrived
that as you turned on the feeble globe hanging from
the middle of the ceiling the feebler one beside the
bed went out!
What a sham world she and Nick had
lived in during their few months together! What
right had either of them to those exquisite settings
of the life of leisure: the long white house
hidden in camellias and cypresses above the lake, or
the great rooms on the Giudecca with the shimmer of
the canal always playing over their frescoed ceilings!
Yet she had come to imagine that these places really
belonged to them, that they would always go on living,
fondly and irreproachably, in the frame of other people’s
wealth …. That, again, was the curse of her
love of beauty, the way she always took to it as if
it belonged to her!
Well, the awakening was bound to come,
and it was perhaps better that it should have come
so soon. At any rate there was no use in letting
her thoughts wander back to that shattered fool’s
paradise of theirs. Only, as she sat there and
reckoned up the days till Strefford arrived, what
else in the world was there to think of?
Her future and his?
But she knew that future by heart
already! She had not spent her life among the
rich and fashionable without having learned every
detail of the trappings of a rich and fashionable
marriage. She had calculated long ago just how
many dinner-dresses, how many tea-gowns and how much
lacy lingerie would go to make up the outfit of the
future Countess of Altringham. She had even
decided to which dressmaker she would go for her chinchilla
cloak-for she meant to have one, and down to her feet,
and softer and more voluminous and more extravagantly
sumptuous than Violet’s or Ursula’s …
not to speak of silver foxes and sables … nor yet
of the Altringham jewels.
She knew all this by heart; had always
known it. It all belonged to the make-up of
the life of elegance: there was nothing new
about it. What had been new to her was just that
short interval with Nick—a life unreal indeed
in its setting, but so real in its essentials:
the one reality she had ever known. As she
looked back on it she saw how much it had given her
besides the golden flush of her happiness, the sudden
flowering of sensuous joy in heart and body.
Yes—there had been the flowering too, in
pain like birth-pangs, of something graver, stronger,
fuller of future power, something she had hardly heeded
in her first light rapture, but that always came back
and possessed her stilled soul when the rapture sank:
the deep disquieting sense of something that Nick
and love had taught her, but that reached out even
beyond love and beyond Nick.
Her nerves were racked by the ceaseless
swish, swish of the rain on the dirty panes and the
smell of cabbage and coal that came in under the door
when she shut the window. This nauseating foretaste
of the luncheon she must presently go down to was more
than she could bear. It brought with it a vision
of the dank coffee-room below, the sooty Smyrna rug,
the rain on the sky-light, the listless waitresses
handing about food that tasted as if it had been rained
on too. There was really no reason why she should
let such material miseries add to her depression ….
She sprang up, put on her hat and
jacket, and calling for a taxi drove to the London
branch of the Nouveau Luxe hotel. It was just
one o’clock and she was sure to pick up a luncheon,
for though London was empty that great establishment
was not. It never was. Along those sultry
velvet-carpeted halls, in that great flowered and
scented dining-room, there was always a come-and-go
of rich aimless people, the busy people who, having
nothing to do, perpetually pursue their inexorable
task from one end of the earth to the other.
Oh, the monotony of those faces—the
faces one always knew, whether one knew the people
they belonged to or not! A fresh disgust seized
her at the sight of them: she wavered, and then
turned and fled. But on the threshold a still
more familiar figure met her: that of a lady
in exaggerated pearls and sables, descending from
an exaggerated motor, like the motors in magazine
advertisements, the huge arks in which jewelled beauties
and slender youths pause to gaze at snowpeaks from
an Alpine summit.
It was Ursula Gillow—dear
old Ursula, on her way to Scotland— and
she and Susy fell on each other’s necks.
It appeared that Ursula, detained till the next evening
by a dress-maker’s delay, was also out of a
job and killing time, and the two were soon smiling
at each other over the exquisite preliminaries of a
luncheon which the head-waiter had authoritatively
asked Mrs. Gillow to “leave to him, as usual.”
Ursula was in a good humour.
It did not often happen; but when it did her benevolence
knew no bounds.
Like Mrs. Melrose, like all her tribe
in fact, she was too much absorbed in her own affairs
to give more than a passing thought to any one else’s;
but she was delighted at the meeting with Susy, as
her wandering kind always were when they ran across
fellow-wanderers, unless the meeting happened to interfere
with choicer pleasures. Not to be alone was
the urgent thing; and Ursula, who had been forty-eight
hours alone in London, at once exacted from her friend
a promise that they should spend the rest of the day
together. But once the bargain struck her mind
turned again to her own affairs, and she poured out
her confidences to Susy over a succession of dishes
that manifested the head-waiter’s understanding
of the case.
Ursula’s confidences were always
the same, though they were usually about a different
person. She demolished and rebuilt her sentimental
life with the same frequency and impetuosity as that
with which she changed her dress-makers, did over her
drawing-rooms, ordered new motors, altered the mounting
of her jewels, and generally renewed the setting of
her life. Susy knew in advance what the tale
would be; but to listen to it over perfect coffee,
an amber-scented cigarette at her lips, was pleasanter
than consuming cold mutton alone in a mouldy coffee-room.
The contrast was so soothing that she even began to
take a languid interest in her friend’s narrative.
After luncheon they got into the motor
together and began a systematic round of the West
End shops: furriers, jewellers and dealers in
old furniture. Nothing could be more unlike Violet
Melrose’s long hesitating sessions before the
things she thought she wanted till the moment came
to decide. Ursula pounced on silver foxes and
old lacquer as promptly and decisively as on the objects
of her surplus sentimentality: she knew at once
what she wanted, and valued it more after it was hers.
“And now—I wonder
if you couldn’t help me choose a grand piano?”
she suggested, as the last antiquarian bowed them out.
“A piano?”
“Yes: for Ruan.
I’m sending one down for Grace Fulmer.
She’s coming to stay … did I tell you?
I want people to hear her. I want her to get
engagements in London. My dear, she’s a
Genius.”
“A Genius—Grace!”
Susy gasped. “I thought it was Nat ….”
“Nat—Nat Fulmer?
Ursula laughed derisively. “Ah, of course—
you’ve been staying with that silly Violet!
The poor thing is off her head about Nat—it’s
really pitiful. Of course he has talent:
I saw that long before Violet had ever heard of him.
Why, on the opening day of the American Artists’
exhibition, last winter, I stopped short before his
‘Spring Snow-Storm’ (which nobody else
had noticed till that moment), and said to the Prince,
who was with me: ‘The man has talent.’
But genius—why, it’s his wife who
has genius! Have you never heard Grace play
the violin? Poor Violet, as usual, is off on
the wrong tack. I’ve given Fulmer my garden-house
to do—no doubt Violet told you—because
I wanted to help him. But Grace is my discovery,
and I’m determined to make her known, and to
have every one understand that she is the genius of
the two. I’ve told her she simply must
come to Ruan, and bring the best accompanyist she
can find. You know poor Nerone is dreadfully
bored by sport, though of course he goes out with the
guns. And if one didn’t have a little
art in the evening …. Oh, Susy, do you mean
to tell me you don’t know how to choose a piano?
I thought you were so fond of music!”
“I am fond of it; but without
knowing anything about it—in the way we’re
all of us fond of the worthwhile things in our stupid
set,” she added to herself—since it
was obviously useless to impart such reflections to
Ursula.
“But are you sure Grace is coming?”
she questioned aloud.
“Quite sure. Why shouldn’t
she? I wired to her yesterday. I’m
giving her a thousand dollars and all her expenses.”
It was not till they were having tea
in a Piccadilly tea-room that Mrs. Gillow began to
manifest some interest in her companion’s plans.
The thought of losing Susy became suddenly intolerable
to her. The Prince, who did not see why he should
be expected to linger in London out of season, was
already at Ruan, and Ursula could not face the evening
and the whole of the next day by herself.
“But what are you doing in town,
darling, I don’t remember if I’ve asked
you,” she said, resting her firm elbows on the
tea-table while she took a light from Susy’s
cigarette.
Susy hesitated. She had foreseen
that the time must soon come when she should have
to give some account of herself; and why should she
not begin by telling Ursula?
But telling her what?
Her silence appeared to strike Mrs.
Gillow as a reproach, and she continued with compunction:
“And Nick? Nick’s with you?
How is he, I thought you and he still were in Venice
with Ellie Vanderlyn.”
“We were, for a few weeks.”
She steadied her voice. “It was delightful.
But now we’re both on our own again—for
a while.”
Mrs. Gillow scrutinized her more searchingly.
“Oh, you’re alone here, then; quite alone?”
“Yes: Nick’s cruising
with some friends in the Mediterranean.”
Ursula’s shallow gaze deepened
singularly. “But, Susy darling, then if
you’re alone—and out of a job, just
for the moment?”
Susy smiled. “Well, I’m not sure.”
“Oh, but if you are, darling,
and you would come to Ruan! I know Fred asked
you didn’t he? And he told me that both
you and Nick had refused. He was awfully huffed
at your not coming; but I suppose that was because
Nick had other plans. We couldn’t have
him now, because there’s no room for another
gun; but since he’s not here, and you’re
free, why you know, dearest, don’t you, how
we’d love to have you? Fred would be too
glad—too outrageously glad—but
you don’t much mind Fred’s love-making,
do you? And you’d be such a help to me—if
that’s any argument! With that big house
full of men, and people flocking over every night
to dine, and Fred caring only for sport, and Nerone
simply loathing it and ridiculing it, and not a minute
to myself to try to keep him in a good humour ….
Oh, Susy darling, don’t say no, but let me
telephone at once for a place in the train to morrow
night!”
Susy leaned back, letting the ash
lengthen on her cigarette. How familiar, how
hatefully familiar, was that old appeal! Ursula
felt the pressing need of someone to flirt with Fred
for a few weeks … and here was the very person she
needed. Susy shivered at the thought.
She had never really meant to go to Ruan. She
had simply used the moor as a pretext when Violet
Melrose had gently put her out of doors. Rather
than do what Ursula asked she would borrow a few hundred
pounds of Strefford, as he had suggested, and then
look about for some temporary occupation until—
Until she became Lady Altringham?
Well, perhaps. At any rate, she was not going
back to slave for Ursula.
She shook her head with a faint smile.
“I’m so sorry, Ursula: of course
I want awfully to oblige you—”
Mrs. Gillow’s gaze grew reproachful.
“I should have supposed you would,” she
murmured. Susy, meeting her eyes, looked into
them down a long vista of favours bestowed, and perceived
that Ursula was not the woman to forget on which side
the obligation lay between them.
Susy hesitated: she remembered
the weeks of ecstasy she had owed to the Gillows’
wedding cheque, and it hurt her to appear ungrateful.
“If I could, Ursula … but
really … I’m not free at the moment.”
She paused, and then took an abrupt decision.
“The fact is, I’m waiting here to see
Strefford.”
“Strefford’ Lord Altringham?”
Ursula stared. “Ah, yes-I remember.
You and he used to be great friends, didn’t
you?” Her roving attention deepened ….
But if Susy were waiting to see Lord Altringham—one
of the richest men in England! Suddenly Ursula
opened her gold-meshed bag and snatched a miniature
diary from it.
“But wait a moment—yes,
it is next week! I knew it was next week he’s
coming to Ruan! But, you darling, that makes
everything all right. You’ll send him a
wire at once, and come with me tomorrow, and meet
him there instead of in this nasty sloppy desert ….
Oh, Susy, if you knew how hard life is for me in
Scotland between the Prince and Fred you couldn’t
possibly say no!”
Susy still wavered; but, after all,
if Strefford were really bound for Ruan, why not see
him there, agreeably and at leisure, instead of spending
a dreary day with him in roaming the wet London streets,
or screaming at him through the rattle of a restaurant
orchestra? She knew he would not be likely to
postpone his visit to Ruan in order to linger in London
with her: such concessions had never been his
way, and were less than ever likely to be, now that
he could do so thoroughly and completely as he pleased.
For the first time she fully understood
how different his destiny had become. Now of
course all his days and hours were mapped out in advance:
invitations assailed him, opportunities pressed on
him, he had only to choose …. And the women!
She had never before thought of the women.
All the girls in England would be wanting to marry
him, not to mention her own enterprising compatriots.
And there were the married women, who were even more
to be feared. Streff might, for the time, escape
marriage; though she could guess the power of persuasion,
family pressure, all the converging traditional influences
he had so often ridiculed, yet, as she knew, had never
completely thrown off …. Yes, those quiet
invisible women at Altringham-his uncle’s widow,
his mother, the spinster sisters—it was
not impossible that, with tact and patience—and
the stupidest women could be tactful and patient on
such occasions—they might eventually persuade
him that it was his duty, they might put just the
right young loveliness in his way …. But meanwhile,
now, at once, there were the married women. Ah,
they wouldn’t wait, they were doubtless laying
their traps already! Susy shivered at the thought.
She knew too much about the way the trick was done,
had followed, too often, all the sinuosities of such
approaches. Not that they were very sinuous nowadays:
more often there was just a swoop and a pounce when
the time came; but she knew all the arts and the wiles
that led up to it. She knew them, oh, how she
knew them—though with Streff, thank heaven,
she had never been called upon to exercise them!
His love was there for the asking: would she
not be a fool to refuse it?
Perhaps; though on that point her
mind still wavered. But at any rate she saw
that, decidedly, it would be better to yield to Ursula’s
pressure; better to meet him at Ruan, in a congenial
setting, where she would have time to get her bearings,
observe what dangers threatened him, and make up her
mind whether, after all, it was to be her mission
to save him from the other women.
“Well, if you like, then, Ursula ….”
“Oh, you angel, you! I’m
so glad! We’ll go to the nearest post
office, and send off the wire ourselves.”
As they got into the motor Mrs. Gillow
seized Susy’s arm with a pleading pressure.
“And you will let Fred make love to you a little,
won’t you, darling?”