Strefford was leaving for England.
Once assured that Susy had taken the
first step toward freeing herself, he frankly regarded
her as his affianced wife, and could see no reason
for further mystery. She understood his impatience
to have their plans settled; it would protect him
from the formidable menace of the marriageable, and
cause people, as he said, to stop meddling.
Now that the novelty of his situation was wearing
off, his natural indolence reasserted itself, and
there was nothing he dreaded more than having to be
on his guard against the innumerable plans that his
well-wishers were perpetually making for him.
Sometimes Susy fancied he was marrying her because
to do so was to follow the line of least resistance.
“To marry me is the easiest
way of not marrying all the others,” she laughed,
as he stood before her one day in a quiet alley of
the Bois de Boulogne, insisting on the settlement of
various preliminaries. “I believe I’m
only a protection to you.”
An odd gleam passed behind his eyes,
and she instantly guessed that he was thinking:
“And what else am I to you?”
She changed colour, and he rejoined,
laughing also: “Well, you’re that
at any rate, thank the Lord!”
She pondered, and then questioned:
“But in the interval-how are you going to defend
yourself for another year?”
“Ah, you’ve got to see
to that; you’ve got to take a little house in
London. You’ve got to look after me, you
know.”
It was on the tip of her tongue to
flash back: “Oh, if that’s all you
care—!” But caring was exactly the factor
she wanted, as much as possible, to keep out of their
talk and their thoughts. She could not ask him
how much he cared without laying herself open to the
same question; and that way terror lay. As a
matter of fact, though Strefford was not an ardent
wooer—perhaps from tact, perhaps from temperament,
perhaps merely from the long habit of belittling and
disintegrating every sentiment and every conviction—yet
she knew he did care for her as much as he was capable
of caring for anyone. If the element of habit
entered largely into the feeling—if he liked
her, above all, because he was used to her, knew her
views, her indulgences, her allowances, knew he was
never likely to be bored, and almost certain to be
amused, by her; why, such ingredients though not of
the fieriest, were perhaps those most likely to keep
his feeling for her at a pleasant temperature.
She had had a taste of the tropics, and wanted more
equable weather; but the idea of having to fan his
flame gently for a year was unspeakably depressing
to her. Yet all this was precisely what she
could not say. The long period of probation,
during which, as she knew, she would have to amuse
him, to guard him, to hold him, and to keep off the
other women, was a necessary part of their situation.
She was sure that, as little Breckenridge would have
said, she could “pull it off”; but she
did not want to think about it. What she would
have preferred would have been to go away—no
matter where and not see Strefford again till they
were married. But she dared not tell him that
either.
“A little house in London—?” She
wondered.
“Well, I suppose you’ve
got to have some sort of a roof over your head.”
“I suppose so.”
He sat down beside her. “If
you like me well enough to live at Altringham some
day, won’t you, in the meantime, let me provide
you with a smaller and more convenient establishment?”
Still she hesitated. The alternative,
she knew, would be to live on Ursula Gillow, Violet
Melrose, or some other of her rich friends, any one
of whom would be ready to lavish the largest hospitality
on the prospective Lady Altringham. Such an
arrangement, in the long run, would be no less humiliating
to her pride, no less destructive to her independence,
than Altringham’s little establishment.
But she temporized. “I shall go over
to London in December, and stay for a while with various
people—then we can look about.”
“All right; as you like.”
He obviously considered her hesitation ridiculous,
but was too full of satisfaction at her having started
divorce proceedings to be chilled by her reply.
“And now, look here, my dear;
couldn’t I give you some sort of a ring?”
“A ring?” She flushed
at the suggestion. “What’s the use,
Streff, dear? With all those jewels locked away
in London—”
“Oh, I daresay you’ll
think them old-fashioned. And, hang it, why
shouldn’t I give you something new, I ran across
Ellie and Bockheimer yesterday, in the rue de la Paix,
picking out sapphires. Do you like sapphires,
or emeralds? Or just a diamond? I’ve
seen a thumping one …. I’d like you to
have it.”
Ellie and Bockheimer! How she
hated the conjunction of the names! Their case
always seemed to her like a caricature of her own,
and she felt an unreasoning resentment against Ellie
for having selected the same season for her unmating
and re-mating.
“I wish you wouldn’t speak
of them, Streff … as if they were like us!
I can hardly bear to sit in the same room with Ellie
Vanderlyn.”
“Hullo? What’s wrong?
You mean because of her giving up Clarissa?”
“Not that only …. You
don’t know …. I can’t tell you
....” She shivered at the memory, and rose
restlessly from the bench where they had been sitting.
Strefford gave his careless shrug.
“Well, my dear, you can hardly expect me to
agree, for after all it was to Ellie I owed the luck
of being so long alone with you in Venice. If
she and Algie hadn’t prolonged their honeymoon
at the villa—”
He stopped abruptly, and looked at
Susy. She was conscious that every drop of blood
had left her face. She felt it ebbing away from
her heart, flowing out of her as if from all her severed
arteries, till it seemed as though nothing were left
of life in her but one point of irreducible pain.
“Ellie—at your villa?
What do you mean? Was it Ellie and Bockheimer
who—?”
Strefford still stared. “You
mean to say you didn’t know?”
“Who came after Nick and me…?” she insisted.
“Why, do you suppose I’d
have turned you out otherwise? That beastly
Bockheimer simply smothered me with gold. Ah,
well, there’s one good thing: I shall
never have to let the villa again! I rather
like the little place myself, and I daresay once in
a while we might go there for a day or two ….
Susy, what’s the matter?” he exclaimed.
She returned his stare, but without
seeing him. Everything swam and danced before
her eyes.
“Then she was there while I
was posting all those letters for her—?”
“Letters—what letters?
What makes you look so frightfully upset?”
She pursued her thought as if he had
not spoken. “She and Algie Bockheimer
arrived there the very day that Nick and I left?”
“I suppose so. I thought
she’d told you. Ellie always tells everybody
everything.”
“She would have told me, I daresay—but
I wouldn’t let her.”
“Well, my dear, that was hardly
my fault, was it? Though I really don’t
see—”
But Susy, still blind to everything
but the dance of dizzy sparks before her eyes, pressed
on as if she had not heard him. “It was
their motor, then, that took us to Milan! It
was Algie Bockheimer’s motor!” She did
not know why, but this seemed to her the most humiliating
incident in the whole hateful business. She remembered
Nick’s reluctance to use the motor-she remembered
his look when she had boasted of her “managing.”
The nausea mounted to her throat.
Strefford burst out laughing.
“I say—you borrowed their motor?
And you didn’t know whose it was?”
“How could I know? I persuaded
the chauffeur … for a little tip …. It was
to save our railway fares to Milan … extra luggage
costs so frightfully in Italy ….”
“Good old Susy! Well done!
I can see you doing it—”
“Oh, how horrible—how horrible!”
she groaned.
“Horrible? What’s horrible?”
“Why, your not seeing … not
feeling …” she began impetuously; and then
stopped. How could she explain to him that what
revolted her was not so much the fact of his having
given the little house, as soon as she and Nick had
left it, to those two people of all others—though
the vision of them in the sweet secret house, and
under the plane-trees of the terrace, drew such a
trail of slime across her golden hours? No, it
was not that from which she most recoiled, but from
the fact that Strefford, living in luxury in Nelson
Vanderlyn’s house, should at the same time have
secretly abetted Ellie Vanderlyn’s love-affairs,
and allowed her—for a handsome price—to
shelter them under his own roof. The reproach
trembled on her lip—but she remembered
her own part in the wretched business, and the impossibility
of avowing it to Strefford, and of revealing to him
that Nick had left her for that very reason.
She was not afraid that the discovery would diminish
her in Strefford’s eyes: he was untroubled
by moral problems, and would laugh away her avowal,
with a sneer at Nick in his new part of moralist.
But that was just what she could not bear: that
anyone should cast a doubt on the genuineness of Nick’s
standards, or should know how far below them she had
fallen.
She remained silent, and Strefford,
after a moment, drew her gently down to the seat beside
him. “Susy, upon my soul I don’t
know what you’re driving at. Is it me you’re
angry with-or yourself? And what’s it
all about! Are you disgusted because I let the
villa to a couple who weren’t married!
But, hang it, they’re the kind that pay the
highest price and I had to earn my living somehow!
One doesn’t run across a bridal pair every
day ….”
She lifted her eyes to his puzzled
incredulous face. Poor Streff! No, it
was not with him that she was angry. Why should
she be? Even that ill-advised disclosure had
told her nothing she had not already known about him.
It had simply revealed to her once more the real
point of view of the people he and she lived among,
had shown her that, in spite of the superficial difference,
he felt as they felt, judged as they judged, was blind
as they were-and as she would be expected to be, should
she once again become one of them. What was the
use of being placed by fortune above such shifts and
compromises, if in one’s heart one still condoned
them? And she would have to—she would
catch the general note, grow blunted as those other
people were blunted, and gradually come to wonder
at her own revolt, as Strefford now honestly wondered
at it. She felt as though she were on the point
of losing some new-found treasure, a treasure precious
only to herself, but beside which all he offered her
was nothing, the triumph of her wounded pride nothing,
the security of her future nothing.
“What is it, Susy?” he
asked, with the same puzzled gentleness.
Ah, the loneliness of never being
able to make him understand! She had felt lonely
enough when the flaming sword of Nick’s indignation
had shut her out from their Paradise; but there had
been a cruel bliss in the pain. Nick had not
opened her eyes to new truths, but had waked in her
again something which had lain unconscious under years
of accumulated indifference. And that re-awakened
sense had never left her since, and had somehow kept
her from utter loneliness because it was a secret shared
with Nick, a gift she owed to Nick, and which, in
leaving her, he could not take from her. It
was almost, she suddenly felt, as if he had left her
with a child.
“My dear girl,” Strefford
said, with a resigned glance at his watch, “you
know we’re dining at the Embassy ….”
At the Embassy? She looked at
him vaguely: then she remembered. Yes,
they were dining that night at the Ascots’,
with Strefford’s cousin, the Duke of Dunes, and
his wife, the handsome irreproachable young Duchess;
with the old gambling Dowager Duchess, whom her son
and daughter-in-law had come over from England to
see; and with other English and French guests of a
rank and standing worthy of the Duneses. Susy
knew that her inclusion in such a dinner could mean
but one thing: it was her definite recognition
as Altringham’s future wife. She was “the
little American” whom one had to ask when one
invited him, even on ceremonial occasions. The
family had accepted her; the Embassy could but follow
suit.
“It’s late, dear; and
I’ve got to see someone on business first,”
Strefford reminded her patiently.
“Oh, Streff—I can’t,
I can’t!” The words broke from her without
her knowing what she was saying. “I can’t
go with you—I can’t go to the Embassy.
I can’t go on any longer like this ….”
She lifted her eyes to his in desperate appeal.
“Oh, understand-do please understand!”
she wailed, knowing, while she spoke, the utter impossibility
of what she asked.
Strefford’s face had gradually
paled and hardened. From sallow it turned to
a dusky white, and lines of obstinacy deepened between
the ironic eyebrows and about the weak amused mouth.
“Understand? What do you
want me to understand,” He laughed. “That
you’re trying to chuck me already?”
She shrank at the sneer of the “already,”
but instantly remembered that it was the only thing
he could be expected to say, since it was just because
he couldn’t understand that she was flying from
him.
“Oh, Streff—if I knew how to tell
you!”
“It doesn’t so much matter
about the how. Is that what you’re trying
to say?”
Her head drooped, and she saw the
dead leaves whirling across the path at her feet,
lifted on a sudden wintry gust.
“The reason,” he continued,
clearing his throat with a stiff smile, “is
not quite as important to me as the fact.”
She stood speechless, agonized by
his pain. But still, she thought, he had remembered
the dinner at the Embassy. The thought gave
her courage to go on.
“It wouldn’t do, Streff.
I’m not a bit the kind of person to make you
happy.”
“Oh, leave that to me, please, won’t you?”
“No, I can’t. Because I should be
unhappy too.”
He clicked at the leaves as they whirled
past. “You’ve taken a rather long
time to find it out.” She saw that his
new-born sense of his own consequence was making him
suffer even more than his wounded affection; and that
again gave her courage.
“If I’ve taken long it’s
all the more reason why I shouldn’t take longer.
If I’ve made a mistake it’s you who would
have suffered from it ….”
“Thanks,” he said, “for your extreme
solicitude.”
She looked at him helplessly, penetrated
by the despairing sense of their inaccessibility to
each other. Then she remembered that Nick, during
their last talk together, had seemed as inaccessible,
and wondered if, when human souls try to get too near
each other, they do not inevitably become mere blurs
to each other’s vision. She would have
liked to say this to Streff-but he would not have
understood it either. The sense of loneliness
once more enveloped her, and she groped in vain for
a word that should reach him.
“Let me go home alone, won’t
you?” she appealed to him.
“Alone?”
She nodded. “To-morrow—to-morrow
....”
He tried, rather valiantly, to smile.
“Hang tomorrow! Whatever is wrong, it
needn’t prevent my seeing you home.”
He glanced toward the taxi that awaited them at the
end of the deserted drive.
“No, please. You’re
in a hurry; take the taxi. I want immensely
a long long walk by myself … through the streets,
with the lights coming out ….”
He laid his hand on her arm.
“I say, my dear, you’re not ill?”
“No; I’m not ill.
But you may say I am, to-night at the Embassy.”
He released her and drew back.
“Oh, very well,” he answered coldly;
and she understood by his tone that the knot was cut,
and that at that moment he almost hated her.
She turned away, hastening down the deserted alley,
flying from him, and knowing, as she fled, that he
was still standing there motionless, staring after
her, wounded, humiliated, uncomprehending. It
was neither her fault nor his ….