Just such a revolt as she had
felt as a girl, such a disgusted recoil from the standards
and ideals of everybody about her as had flung her
into her mad marriage with Nick, now flamed in Susy
Lansing’s bosom.
How could she ever go back into that
world again? How echo its appraisals of life
and bow down to its judgments? Alas, it was
only by marrying according to its standards that she
could escape such subjection. Perhaps the same
thought had actuated Nick: perhaps he had understood
sooner than she that to attain moral freedom they
must both be above material cares. Perhaps …
Her talk with Ellie Vanderlyn had
left Susy so oppressed and humiliated that she almost
shrank from her meeting with Altringham the next day.
She knew that he was coming to Paris for his final
answer; he would wait as long as was necessary if
only she would consent to take immediate steps for
a divorce. She was staying at a modest hotel
in the Faubourg St. Germain, and had once more refused
his suggestion that they should lunch at the Nouveau
Luxe, or at some fashionable restaurant of the Boulevards.
As before, she insisted on going to an out-of-the-way
place near the Luxembourg, where the prices were moderate
enough for her own purse.
“I can’t understand,”
Strefford objected, as they turned from her hotel
door toward this obscure retreat, “why you insist
on giving me bad food, and depriving me of the satisfaction
of being seen with you. Why must we be so dreadfully
clandestine? Don’t people know by this
time that we’re to be married?”
Susy winced a little: she wondered
if the word would always sound so unnatural on his
lips.
“No,” she said, with a
laugh, “they simply think, for the present,
that you’re giving me pearls and chinchilla cloaks.”
He wrinkled his brows good-humouredly.
“Well, so I would, with joy—at this
particular minute. Don’t you think perhaps
you’d better take advantage of it? I don’t
wish to insist—but I foresee that I’m
much too rich not to become stingy.”
She gave a slight shrug. “At
present there’s nothing I loathe more than pearls
and chinchilla, or anything else in the world that’s
expensive and enviable ….”
Suddenly she broke off, colouring
with the consciousness that she had said exactly the
kind of thing that all the women who were trying for
him (except the very cleverest) would be sure to say;
and that he would certainly suspect her of attempting
the conventional comedy of disinterestedness, than
which nothing was less likely to deceive or to flatter
him.
His twinkling eyes played curiously
over her face, and she went on, meeting them with
a smile: “But don’t imagine, all
the same, that if I should … decide … it would
be altogether for your beaux yeux ….”
He laughed, she thought, rather drily.
“No,” he said, “I don’t suppose
that’s ever likely to happen to me again.”
“Oh, Streff—”
she faltered with compunction. It was odd-once
upon a time she had known exactly what to say to the
man of the moment, whoever he was, and whatever kind
of talk he required; she had even, in the difficult
days before her marriage, reeled off glibly enough
the sort of lime-light sentimentality that plunged
poor Fred Gillow into such speechless beatitude.
But since then she had spoken the language of real
love, looked with its eyes, embraced with its hands;
and now the other trumpery art had failed her, and
she was conscious of bungling and groping like a beginner
under Strefford’s ironic scrutiny.
They had reached their obscure destination
and he opened the door and glanced in.
“It’s jammed—not
a table. And stifling! Where shall we go?
Perhaps they could give us a room to ourselves—”
he suggested.
She assented, and they were led up
a cork-screw staircase to a squat-ceilinged closet
lit by the arched top of a high window, the lower
panes of which served for the floor below. Strefford
opened the window, and Susy, throwing her cloak on
the divan, leaned on the balcony while he ordered
luncheon.
On the whole she was glad they were
to be alone. Just because she felt so sure of
Strefford it seemed ungenerous to keep him longer
in suspense. The moment had come when they must
have a decisive talk, and in the crowded rooms below
it would have been impossible.
Strefford, when the waiter had brought
the first course and left them to themselves, made
no effort to revert to personal matters. He
turned instead to the topic always most congenial
to him: the humours and ironies of the human
comedy, as presented by his own particular group.
His malicious commentary on life had always amused
Susy because of the shrewd flashes of philosophy he
shed on the social antics they had so often watched
together. He was in fact the one person she knew
(excepting Nick) who was in the show and yet outside
of it; and she was surprised, as the talk proceeded,
to find herself so little interested in his scraps
of gossip, and so little amused by his comments on
them.
With an inward shrug of discouragement
she said to herself that probably nothing would ever
really amuse her again; then, as she listened, she
began to understand that her disappointment arose
from the fact that Strefford, in reality, could not
live without these people whom he saw through and
satirized, and that the rather commonplace scandals
he narrated interested him as much as his own racy
considerations on them; and she was filled with terror
at the thought that the inmost core of the richly-decorated
life of the Countess of Altringham would be just as
poor and low-ceilinged a place as the little room in
which he and she now sat, elbow to elbow yet so unapproachably
apart.
If Strefford could not live without
these people, neither could she and Nick; but for
reasons how different! And if his opportunities
had been theirs, what a world they would have created
for themselves! Such imaginings were vain, and
she shrank back from them into the present.
After all, as Lady Altringham she would have the power
to create that world which she and Nick had dreamed
... only she must create it alone. Well, that
was probably the law of things. All human happiness
was thus conditioned and circumscribed, and hers, no
doubt, must always be of the lonely kind, since material
things did not suffice for it, even though it depended
on them as Grace Fulmer’s, for instance, never
had. Yet even Grace Fulmer had succumbed to
Ursula’s offer, and had arrived at Ruan the day
before Susy left, instead of going to Spain with her
husband and Violet Melrose. But then Grace was
making the sacrifice for her children, and somehow
one had the feeling that in giving up her liberty
she was not surrendering a tittle of herself.
All the difference was there ….
“How I do bore you!”
Susy heard Strefford exclaim. She became aware
that she had not been listening: stray echoes
of names of places and people—Violet Melrose,
Ursula, Prince Altineri, others of their group and
persuasion—had vainly knocked at her barricaded
brain; what had he been telling her about them?
She turned to him and their eyes met; his were full
of a melancholy irony.
“Susy, old girl, what’s wrong?”
She pulled herself together.
“I was thinking, Streff, just now—when
I said I hated the very sound of pearls and chinchilla—how
impossible it was that you should believe me; in fact,
what a blunder I’d made in saying it.”
He smiled. “Because it
was what so many other women might be likely to say
so awfully unoriginal, in fact?”
She laughed for sheer joy at his insight.
“It’s going to be easier than I imagined,”
she thought. Aloud she rejoined: “Oh,
Streff—how you’re always going to
find me out! Where on earth shall I ever hide
from you?”
“Where?” He echoed her
laugh, laying his hand lightly on hers. “In
my heart, I’m afraid.”
In spite of the laugh his accent shook
her: something about it took all the mockery
from his retort, checked on her lips the: “What?
A valentine!” and made her suddenly feel that,
if he were afraid, so was she. Yet she was touched
also, and wondered half exultingly if any other woman
had ever caught that particular deep inflexion of
his shrill voice. She had never liked him as
much as at that moment; and she said to herself, with
an odd sense of detachment, as if she had been rather
breathlessly observing the vacillations of someone
whom she longed to persuade but dared not: “Now—now,
if he speaks, I shall say yes!”
He did not speak; but abruptly, and
as startlingly to her as if she had just dropped from
a sphere whose inhabitants had other methods of expressing
their sympathy, he slipped his arm around her and
bent his keen ugly melting face to hers ….
It was the lightest touch—in
an instant she was free again. But something
within her gasped and resisted long after his arm
and his lips were gone, and he was proceeding, with
a too-studied ease, to light a cigarette and sweeten
his coffee.
He had kissed her …. Well,
naturally: why not? It was not the first
time she had been kissed. It was true that one
didn’t habitually associate Streff with such
demonstrations; but she had not that excuse for surprise,
for even in Venice she had begun to notice that he
looked at her differently, and avoided her hand when
he used to seek it.
No—she ought not to have
been surprised; nor ought a kiss to have been so disturbing.
Such incidents had punctuated the career of Susy
Branch: there had been, in particular, in far-off
discarded times, Fred Gillow’s large but artless
embraces. Well—nothing of that kind
had seemed of any more account than the click of a
leaf in a woodland walk. It had all been merely
epidermal, ephemeral, part of the trivial accepted
“business” of the social comedy.
But this kiss of Strefford’s was what Nick’s
had been, under the New Hampshire pines, on the day
that had decided their fate. It was a kiss with
a future in it: like a ring slipped upon her
soul. And now, in the dreadful pause that followed—while
Strefford fidgeted with his cigarette-case and rattled
the spoon in his cup, Susy remembered what she had
seen through the circle of Nick’s kiss:
that blue illimitable distance which was at once
the landscape at their feet and the future in their
souls ….
Perhaps that was what Strefford’s
sharply narrowed eyes were seeing now, that same illimitable
distance that she had lost forever—perhaps
he was saying to himself, as she had said to herself
when her lips left Nick’s: “Each
time we kiss we shall see it all again ….”
Whereas all she herself had felt was the gasping
recoil from Strefford’s touch, and an intenser
vision of the sordid room in which he and she sat,
and of their two selves, more distant from each other
than if their embrace had been a sudden thrusting
apart ….
The moment prolonged itself, and they
sat numb. How long had it lasted? How
long ago was it that she had thought: “It’s
going to be easier than I imagined”? Suddenly
she felt Strefford’s queer smile upon her, and
saw in his eyes a look, not of reproach or disappointment,
but of deep and anxious comprehension. Instead
of being angry or hurt, he had seen, he had understood,
he was sorry for her!
Impulsively she slipped her hand into
his, and they sat silent for another moment.
Then he stood up and took her cloak from the divan.
“Shall we go now! I’ve got cards
for the private view of the Reynolds exhibition at
the Petit Palais. There are some portraits from
Altringham. It might amuse you.”
In the taxi she had time, through
their light rattle of talk, to readjust herself and
drop back into her usual feeling of friendly ease
with him. He had been extraordinarily considerate,
for anyone who always so undisguisedly sought his
own satisfaction above all things; and if his considerateness
were just an indirect way of seeking that satisfaction
now, well, that proved how much he cared for her,
how necessary to his happiness she had become.
The sense of power was undeniably pleasant; pleasanter
still was the feeling that someone really needed her,
that the happiness of the man at her side depended
on her yes or no. She abandoned herself to the
feeling, forgetting the abysmal interval of his caress,
or at least saying to herself that in time she would
forget it, that really there was nothing to make a
fuss about in being kissed by anyone she liked as
much as Streff ….
She had guessed at once why he was
taking her to see the Reynoldses. Fashionable
and artistic Paris had recently discovered English
eighteenth century art. The principal collections
of England had yielded up their best examples of the
great portrait painter’s work, and the private
view at the Petit Palais was to be the social event
of the afternoon. Everybody— Strefford’s
everybody and Susy’s—was sure to be
there; and these, as she knew, were the occasions
that revived Strefford’s intermittent interest
in art. He really liked picture shows as much
as the races, if one could be sure of seeing as many
people there. With Nick how different it would
have been! Nick hated openings and varnishing
days, and worldly aesthetics in general; he would
have waited till the tide of fashion had ebbed, and
slipped off with Susy to see the pictures some morning
when they were sure to have the place to themselves.
But Susy divined that there was another
reason for Strefford’s suggestion. She
had never yet shown herself with him publicly, among
their own group of people: now he had determined
that she should do so, and she knew why. She
had humbled his pride; he had understood, and forgiven
her. But she still continued to treat him as
she had always treated the Strefford of old, Charlie
Strefford, dear old negligible impecunious Streff;
and he wanted to show her, ever so casually and adroitly,
that the man who had asked her to marry him was no
longer Strefford, but Lord Altringham.
At the very threshold, his Ambassador’s
greeting marked the difference: it was followed,
wherever they turned, by ejaculations of welcome from
the rulers of the world they moved in. Everybody
rich enough or titled enough, or clever enough or
stupid enough, to have forced a way into the social
citadel, was there, waving and flag-flying from the
battlements; and to all of them Lord Altringham had
become a marked figure. During their slow progress
through the dense mass of important people who made
the approach to the pictures so well worth fighting
for, he never left Susy’s side, or failed to
make her feel herself a part of his triumphal advance.
She heard her name mentioned: “Lansing—a
Mrs. Lansing—an American … Susy
Lansing? Yes, of course …. You remember
her? At Newport, At St. Moritz? Exactly….
Divorced already? They say so … Susy
darling! I’d no idea you were here …
and Lord Altringham! You’ve forgotten
me, I know, Lord Altringham …. Yes, last year,
in Cairo … or at Newport … or in Scotland …
Susy, dearest, when will you bring Lord Altringham
to dine? Any night that you and he are free I’ll
arrange to be ….”
“You and he”: they were “you
and he” already!
“Ah, there’s one of them—of
my great-grandmothers,” Strefford explained,
giving a last push that drew him and Susy to the front
rank, before a tall isolated portrait which, by sheer
majesty of presentment, sat in its great carved golden
frame as on a throne above the other pictures.
Susy read on the scroll beneath it:
“The Hon’ble Diana Lefanu, fifteenth
Countess of Altringham”—and heard
Strefford say: “Do you remember?
It hangs where you noticed the empty space above
the mantel-piece, in the Vandyke room. They say
Reynolds stipulated that it should be put with the
Vandykes.”
She had never before heard him speak
of his possessions, whether ancestral or merely material,
in just that full and satisfied tone of voice:
the rich man’s voice. She saw that he
was already feeling the influence of his surroundings,
that he was glad the portrait of a Countess of Altringham
should occupy the central place in the principal room
of the exhibition, that the crowd about it should
be denser there than before any of the other pictures,
and that he should be standing there with Susy, letting
her feel, and letting all the people about them guess,
that the day she chose she could wear the same name
as his pictured ancestress.
On the way back to her hotel, Strefford
made no farther allusion to their future; they chatted
like old comrades in their respective corners of the
taxi. But as the carriage stopped at her door
he said: “I must go back to England the
day after to-morrow, worse luck! Why not dine
with me to-night at the Nouveau Luxe? I’ve
got to have the Ambassador and Lady Ascot, with their
youngest girl and my old Dunes aunt, the Dowager Duchess,
who’s over here hiding from her creditors; but
I’ll try to get two or three amusing men to
leaven the lump. We might go on to a boite afterward,
if you’re bored. Unless the dancing amuses
you more ….”
She understood that he had decided
to hasten his departure rather than linger on in uncertainty;
she also remembered having heard the Ascots’
youngest daughter, Lady Joan Senechal, spoken of as
one of the prettiest girls of the season; and she recalled
the almost exaggerated warmth of the Ambassador’s
greeting at the private view.
“Of course I’ll come,
Streff dear!” she cried, with an effort at gaiety
that sounded successful to her own strained ears, and
reflected itself in the sudden lighting up of his face.
She waved a good-bye from the step,
saying to herself, as she looked after him:
“He’ll drive me home to-night, and I shall
say ‘yes’; and then he’ll kiss me
again. But the next time it won’t be nearly
as disagreeable.”
She turned into the hotel, glanced
automatically at the empty pigeon-hole for letters
under her key-hook, and mounted the stairs following
the same train of images. “Yes, I shall
say ‘yes’ to-night,” she repeated
firmly, her hand on the door of her room. “That
is, unless, they’ve brought up a letter ….”
She never re-entered the hotel without imagining that
the letter she had not found below had already been
brought up.
Opening the door, she turned on the
light and sprang to the table on which her correspondence
sometimes awaited her.
There was no letter; but the morning
papers, still unread, lay at hand, and glancing listlessly
down the column which chronicles the doings of society,
she read:
“After an extended cruise in
the AEgean and the Black Sea on their steam-yacht
Ibis, Mr. and Mrs. Mortimer Hicks and their daughter
are established at the Nouveau Luxe in Rome.
They have lately had the honour of entertaining at
dinner the Reigning Prince of Teutoburger-Waldhain
and his mother the Princess Dowager, with their suite.
Among those invited to meet their Serene Highnesses
were the French and Spanish Ambassadors, the Duchesse
de Vichy, Prince and Princess Bagnidilucca, Lady Penelope
Pantiles—” Susy’s eye flew impatiently
on over the long list of titles—“and
Mr. Nicholas Lansing of New York, who has been cruising
with Mr. and Mrs. Hicks on the Ibis for the last few
months.”