In the persistent drizzle of
a Paris winter morning Susy Lansing walked back alone
from the school at which she had just deposited the
four eldest Fulmers to the little house in Passy where,
for the last two months, she had been living with them.
She had on ready-made boots, an old
waterproof and a last year’s hat; but none of
these facts disturbed her, though she took no particular
pride in them. The truth was that she was too
busy to think much about them. Since she had
assumed the charge of the Fulmer children, in the
absence of both their parents in Italy, she had had
to pass through such an arduous apprenticeship of
motherhood that every moment of her waking hours was
packed with things to do at once, and other things
to remember to do later. There were only five
Fulmers; but at times they were like an army with
banners, and their power of self-multiplication was
equalled only by the manner in which they could dwindle,
vanish, grow mute, and become as it were a single
tumbled brown head bent over a book in some corner
of the house in which nobody would ever have thought
of hunting for them—and which, of course,
were it the bonne’s room in the attic, or the
subterranean closet where the trunks were kept, had
been singled out by them for that very reason.
These changes from ubiquity to invisibility
would have seemed to Susy, a few months earlier, one
of the most maddening of many characteristics not
calculated to promote repose. But now she felt
differently. She had grown interested in her
charges, and the search for a clue to their methods,
whether tribal or individual, was as exciting to her
as the development of a detective story.
What interested her most in the whole
stirring business was the discovery that they had
a method. These little creatures, pitched upward
into experience on the tossing waves of their parents’
agitated lives, had managed to establish a rough-and-ready
system of self-government. Junie, the eldest
(the one who already chose her mother’s hats,
and tried to put order in her wardrobe) was the recognized
head of the state. At twelve she knew lots of
things which her mother had never thoroughly learned,
and Susy, her temporary mother, had never even guessed
at: she spoke with authority on all vital subjects,
from castor-oil to flannel under-clothes, from the
fair sharing of stamps or marbles to the number of
helpings of rice-pudding or jam which each child was
entitled to.
There was hardly any appeal from her
verdict; yet each of her subjects revolved in his
or her own orbit of independence, according to laws
which Junie acknowledged and respected; and the interpreting
of this mysterious charter of rights and privileges
had not been without difficulty for Susy.
Besides this, there were material
difficulties to deal with. The six of them, and
the breathless bonne who cooked and slaved for them
all, had but a slim budget to live on; and, as Junie
remarked, you’d have thought the boys ate their
shoes, the way they vanished. They ate, certainly,
a great deal else, and mostly of a nourishing and
expensive kind. They had definite views about
the amount and quality of their food, and were capable
of concerted rebellion when Susy’s catering fell
beneath their standard. All this made her life
a hurried and harassing business, but never—
what she had most feared it would be a dull or depressing
one.
It was not, she owned to herself,
that the society of the Fulmer children had roused
in her any abstract passion for the human young.
She knew—had known since Nick’s first
kiss—how she would love any child of his
and hers; and she had cherished poor little Clarissa
Vanderlyn with a shrinking and wistful solicitude.
But in these rough young Fulmers she took a positive
delight, and for reasons that were increasingly clear
to her. It was because, in the first place, they
were all intelligent; and because their intelligence
had been fed only on things worth caring for.
However inadequate Grace Fulmer’s bringing-up
of her increasing tribe had been, they had heard in
her company nothing trivial or dull: good music,
good books and good talk had been their daily food,
and if at times they stamped and roared and crashed
about like children unblessed by such privileges,
at others they shone with the light of poetry and
spoke with the voice of wisdom.
That had been Susy’s discovery:
for the first time she was among awakening minds
which had been wakened only to beauty. >From their
cramped and uncomfortable household Grace and Nat
Fulmer had managed to keep out mean envies, vulgar
admirations, shabby discontents; above all the din
and confusion the great images of beauty had brooded,
like those ancestral figures that stood apart on their
shelf in the poorest Roman households.
No, the task she had undertaken for
want of a better gave Susy no sense of a missed vocation:
“mothering” on a large scale would never,
she perceived, be her job. Rather it gave her,
in odd ways, the sense of being herself mothered,
of taking her first steps in the life of immaterial
values which had begun to seem so much more substantial
than any she had known.
On the day when she had gone to Grace
Fulmer for counsel and comfort she had little guessed
that they would come to her in this form. She
had found her friend, more than ever distracted and
yet buoyant, riding the large untidy waves of her life
with the splashed ease of an amphibian. Grace
was probably the only person among Susy’s friends
who could have understood why she could not make up
her mind to marry Altringham; but at the moment Grace
was too much absorbed in her own problems to pay much
attention to her friend’s, and, according to
her wont, she immediately “unpacked” her
difficulties.
Nat was not getting what she had hoped
out of his European opportunity. Oh, she was
enough of an artist herself to know that there must
be fallow periods—that the impact of new
impressions seldom produced immediate results.
She had allowed for all that. But her past
experience of Nat’s moods had taught her to
know just when he was assimilating, when impressions
were fructifying in him. And now they were not,
and he knew it as well as she did. There had
been too much rushing about, too much excitement and
sterile flattery … Mrs. Melrose? Well,
yes, for a while … the trip to Spain had been a love-journey,
no doubt. Grace spoke calmly, but the lines of
her face sharpened: she had suffered, oh horribly,
at his going to Spain without her. Yet she couldn’t,
for the children’s sake, afford to miss the
big sum that Ursula Gillow had given her for her fortnight
at Ruan. And her playing had struck people, and
led, on the way back, to two or three profitable engagements
in private houses in London. Fashionable society
had made “a little fuss” about her, and
it had surprised and pleased Nat, and given her a
new importance in his eyes. “He was beginning
to forget that I wasn’t only a nursery-maid,
and it’s been a good thing for him to be reminded
... but the great thing is that with what I’ve
earned he and I can go off to southern Italy and Sicily
for three months. You know I know how to manage
... and, alone with me, Nat will settle down to work:
to observing, feeling, soaking things in. It’s
the only way. Mrs. Melrose wants to take him,
to pay all the expenses again-well she shan’t.
I’ll pay them.” Her worn cheek flushed
with triumph. “And you’ll see what
wonders will come of it …. Only there’s
the problem of the children. Junie quite agrees
that we can’t take them ….”
Thereupon she had unfolded her idea.
If Susy was at a loose end, and hard up, why shouldn’t
she take charge of the children while their parents
were in Italy? For three months at most-Grace
could promise it shouldn’t be longer. They
couldn’t pay her much, of course, but at least
she would be lodged and fed. “And, you
know, it will end by interesting you—I’m
sure it will,” the mother concluded, her irrepressible
hopefulness rising even to this height, while Susy
stood before her with a hesitating smile.
Take care of five Fulmers for three
months! The prospect cowed her. If there
had been only Junie and Geordie, the oldest and youngest
of the band, she might have felt less hesitation.
But there was Nat, the second in age, whose motor-horn
had driven her and Nick out to the hill-side on their
fatal day at the Fulmers’ and there were the
twins, Jack and Peggy, of whom she had kept memories
almost equally disquieting. To rule this uproarious
tribe would be a sterner business than trying to beguile
Clarissa Vanderlyn’s ladylike leisure; and she
would have refused on the spot, as she had refused
once before, if the only possible alternatives had
not come to seem so much less bearable, and if Junie,
called in for advice, and standing there, small, plain
and competent, had not said in her quiet grown-up
voice: “Oh, yes, I’m sure Mrs. Lansing
and I can manage while you’re away—especially
if she reads aloud well.”
Reads aloud well! The stipulation
had enchanted Susy. She had never before known
children who cared to be read aloud to; she remembered
with a shiver her attempts to interest Clarissa in
anything but gossip and the fashions, and the tone
in which the child had said, showing Strefford’s
trinket to her father: “Because I said
I’d rather have it than a book.”
And here were children who consented
to be left for three months by their parents, but
on condition that a good reader was provided for them!
“Very well—I will!
But what shall I be expected to read to you?”
she had gaily questioned; and Junie had answered, after
one of her sober pauses of reflection: “The
little ones like nearly everything; but Nat and I
want poetry particularly, because if we read it to
ourselves we so often pronounce the puzzling words
wrong, and then it sounds so horrid.”
“Oh, I hope I shall pronounce
them right,” Susy murmured, stricken with self-distrust
and humility.
Apparently she did; for her reading
was a success, and even the twins and Geordie, once
they had grown used to her, seemed to prefer a ringing
page of Henry V, or the fairy scenes from the Midsummer
Night’s Dream, to their own more specialized
literature, though that had also at times to be provided.
There were, in fact, no lulls in her
life with the Fulmers; but its commotions seemed to
Susy less meaningless, and therefore less fatiguing,
than those that punctuated the existence of people
like Altringham, Ursula Gillow, Ellie Vanderlyn and
their train; and the noisy uncomfortable little house
at Passy was beginning to greet her with the eyes
of home when she returned there after her tramps to
and from the children’s classes. At any
rate she had the sense of doing something useful and
even necessary, and of earning her own keep, though
on so modest a scale; and when the children were in
their quiet mood, and demanded books or music (or,
even, on one occasion, at the surprising Junie’s
instigation, a collective visit to the Louvre, where
they recognized the most unlikely pictures, and the
two elders emitted startling technical judgments, and
called their companion’s attention to details
she had not observed); on these occasions, Susy had
a surprised sense of being drawn back into her brief
life with Nick, or even still farther and deeper,
into those visions of Nick’s own childhood on
which the trivial later years had heaped their dust.
It was curious to think that if he
and she had remained together, and she had had a child—the
vision used to come to her, in her sleepless hours,
when she looked at little Geordie, in his cot by her
bed—their life together might have been
very much like the life she was now leading, a small
obscure business to the outer world, but to themselves
how wide and deep and crowded!
She could not bear, at that moment,
the thought of giving up this mystic relation to the
life she had missed. In spite of the hurry and
fatigue of her days, the shabbiness and discomfort
of everything, and the hours when the children were
as “horrid” as any other children, and
turned a conspiracy of hostile faces to all her appeals;
in spite of all this she did not want to give them
up, and had decided, when their parents returned, to
ask to go back to America with them. Perhaps,
if Nat’s success continued, and Grace was able
to work at her music, they would need a kind of governess-companion.
At any rate, she could picture no future less distasteful.
She had not sent to Mr. Spearman Nick’s
answer to her letter. In the interval between
writing to him and receiving his reply she had broken
with Strefford; she had therefore no object in seeking
her freedom. If Nick wanted his, he knew he had
only to ask for it; and his silence, as the weeks
passed, woke a faint hope in her. The hope flamed
high when she read one day in the newspapers a vague
but evidently “inspired” allusion to the
possibility of an alliance between his Serene Highness
the reigning Prince of Teutoburg-Waldhain and Miss
Coral Hicks of Apex City; it sank to ashes when, a
few days later, her eye lit on a paragraph wherein
Mr. and Mrs. Mortimer Hicks “requested to state”
that there was no truth in the report.
On the foundation of these two statements
Susy raised one watch-tower of hope after another,
feverish edifices demolished or rebuilt by every chance
hint from the outer world wherein Nick’s name
figured with the Hickses’. And still, as
the days passed and she heard nothing, either from
him or from her lawyer, her flag continued to fly
from the quaking structures.
Apart from the custody of the children
there was indeed little to distract her mind from
these persistent broodings. She winced sometimes
at the thought of the ease with which her fashionable
friends had let her drop out of sight. In the
perpetual purposeless rush of their days, the feverish
making of winter plans, hurrying off to the Riviera
or St. Moritz, Egypt or New York, there was no time
to hunt up the vanished or to wait for the laggard.
Had they learned that she had broken her “engagement”
(how she hated the word!) to Strefford, and had the
fact gone about that she was once more only a poor
hanger-on, to be taken up when it was convenient,
and ignored in the intervals? She did not know;
though she fancied Strefford’s newly-developed
pride would prevent his revealing to any one what
had passed between them. For several days after
her abrupt flight he had made no sign; and though
she longed to write and ask his forgiveness she could
not find the words. Finally it was he who wrote:
a short note, from Altringham, typical of all that
was best in the old Strefford. He had gone down
to Altringham, he told her, to think quietly over
their last talk, and try to understand what she had
been driving at. He had to own that he couldn’t;
but that, he supposed, was the very head and front
of his offending. Whatever he had done to displease
her, he was sorry for; but he asked, in view of his
invincible ignorance, to be allowed not to regard
his offence as a cause for a final break. The
possibility of that, he found, would make him even
more unhappy than he had foreseen; as she knew, his
own happiness had always been his first object in life,
and he therefore begged her to suspend her decision
a little longer. He expected to be in Paris within
another two months, and before arriving he would write
again, and ask her to see him.
The letter moved her but did not make
her waver. She simply wrote that she was touched
by his kindness, and would willingly see him if he
came to Paris later; though she was bound to tell
him that she had not yet changed her mind, and did
not believe it would promote his happiness to have
her try to do so.
He did not reply to this, and there
was nothing further to keep her thoughts from revolving
endlessly about her inmost hopes and fears.
On the rainy afternoon in question,
tramping home from the “cours” (to which
she was to return at six), she had said to herself
that it was two months that very day since Nick had
known she was ready to release him—and that
after such a delay he was not likely to take any further
steps. The thought filled her with a vague ecstasy.
She had had to fix an arbitrary date as the term
of her anguish, and she had fixed that one; and behold
she was justified. For what could his silence
mean but that he too ….
On the hall-table lay a typed envelope
with the Paris postage-mark. She opened it
carelessly, and saw that the letter-head bore Mr.
Spearman’s office address. The words beneath
spun round before her eyes …. “Has notified
us that he is at your disposal … carry out your
wishes … arriving in Paris … fix an appointment
with his lawyers ….”
Nick—it was Nick the words
were talking of! It was the fact of Nick’s
return to Paris that was being described in those
preposterous terms! She sank down on the bench
beside the dripping umbrella-stand and stared vacantly
before her. It had fallen at last—this
blow in which she now saw that she had never really
believed! And yet she had imagined she was prepared
for it, had expected it, was already planning her
future life in view of it—an effaced impersonal
life in the service of somebody else’s children—when,
in reality, under that thin surface of abnegation
and acceptance, all the old hopes had been smouldering
red-hot in their ashes! What was the use of
any self-discipline, any philosophy, any experience,
if the lawless self underneath could in an instant
consume them like tinder?
She tried to collect herself—to
understand what had happened. Nick was coming
to Paris—coming not to see her but to consult
his lawyer! It meant, of course, that he had
definitely resolved to claim his freedom; and that,
if he had made up his mind to this final step, after
more than six months of inaction and seeming indifference,
it could be only because something unforeseen and
decisive had happened to him. Feverishly, she
put together again the stray scraps of gossip and the
newspaper paragraphs that had reached her in the last
months. It was evident that Miss Hicks’s
projected marriage with the Prince of Teutoburg-Waldhain
had been broken off at the last moment; and broken
off because she intended to marry Nick. The announcement
of his arrival in Paris and the publication of Mr.
and Mrs. Hicks’s formal denial of their daughter’s
betrothal coincided too closely to admit of any other
inference. Susy tried to grasp the reality of
these assembled facts, to picture to herself their
actual tangible results. She thought of Coral
Hicks bearing the name of Mrs. Nick Lansing—her
name, Susy’s own!—and entering drawing-rooms
with Nick in her wake, gaily welcomed by the very
people who, a few months before, had welcomed Susy
with the same warmth. In spite of Nick’s
growing dislike of society, and Coral’s attitude
of intellectual superiority, their wealth would fatally
draw them back into the world to which Nick was attached
by all his habits and associations. And no doubt
it would amuse him to re-enter that world as a dispenser
of hospitality, to play the part of host where he
had so long been a guest; just as Susy had once fancied
it would amuse her to re-enter it as Lady Altringham
.... But, try as she would, now that the reality
was so close on her, she could not visualize it or
relate it to herself. The mere juxtaposition
of the two names—Coral, Nick—which
in old times she had so often laughingly coupled,
now produced a blur in her brain.
She continued to sit helplessly beside
the hall-table, the tears running down her cheeks.
The appearance of the bonne aroused her. Her
youngest charge, Geordie, had been feverish for a day
or two; he was better, but still confined to the nursery,
and he had heard Susy unlock the house-door, and could
not imagine why she had not come straight up to him.
He now began to manifest his indignation in a series
of racking howls, and Susy, shaken out of her trance,
dropped her cloak and umbrella and hurried up.
“Oh, that child!” she groaned.
Under the Fulmer roof there was little
time or space for the indulgence of private sorrows.
From morning till night there was always some immediate
practical demand on one’s attention; and Susy
was beginning to see how, in contracted households,
children may play a part less romantic but not less
useful than that assigned to them in fiction, through
the mere fact of giving their parents no leisure to
dwell on irremediable grievances. Though her
own apprenticeship to family life had been so short,
she had already acquired the knack of rapid mental
readjustment, and as she hurried up to the nursery
her private cares were dispelled by a dozen problems
of temperature, diet and medicine.
Such readjustment was of course only
momentary; yet each time it happened it seemed to
give her more firmness and flexibility of temper.
“What a child I was myself six months ago!”
she thought, wondering that Nick’s influence,
and the tragedy of their parting, should have done
less to mature and steady her than these few weeks
in a house full of children.
Pacifying Geordie was not easy, for
he had long since learned to use his grievances as
a pretext for keeping the offender at his beck with
a continuous supply of stories, songs and games.
“You’d better be careful never to put yourself
in the wrong with Geordie,” the astute Junie
had warned Susy at the outset, “because he’s
got such a memory, and he won’t make it up with
you till you’ve told him every fairy-tale he’s
ever heard before.”
But on this occasion, as soon as he
saw her, Geordie’s indignation melted.
She was still in the doorway, compunctious, abject
and racking her dazed brain for his favourite stories,
when she saw, by the smoothing out of his mouth and
the sudden serenity of his eyes, that he was going
to give her the delicious but not wholly reassuring
shock of being a good boy.
Thoughtfully he examined her face
as she knelt down beside the cot; then he poked out
a finger and pressed it on her tearful cheek.
“Poor Susy got a pain too,”
he said, putting his arms about her; and as she hugged
him close, he added philosophically: “Tell
Geordie a new story, darling, and you’ll forget
all about it.”