Nick Lansing arrived in Paris
two days after his lawyer had announced his coming
to Mr. Spearman.
He had left Rome with the definite
purpose of freeing himself and Susy; and though he
was not pledged to Coral Hicks he had not concealed
from her the object of his journey. In vain had
he tried to rouse in himself any sense of interest
in his own future. Beyond the need of reaching
a definite point in his relation to Susy his imagination
could not travel. But he had been moved by Coral’s
confession, and his reason told him that he and she
would probably be happy together, with the temperate
happiness based on a community of tastes and an enlargement
of opportunities. He meant, on his return to
Rome, to ask her to marry him; and he knew that she
knew it. Indeed, if he had not spoken before
leaving it was with no idea of evading his fate, or
keeping her longer in suspense, but simply because
of the strange apathy that had fallen on him since
he had received Susy’s letter. In his
incessant self-communings he dressed up this apathy
as a discretion which forbade his engaging Coral’s
future till his own was assured. But in truth
he knew that Coral’s future was already engaged,
and his with it: in Rome the fact had seemed
natural and even inevitable.
In Paris, it instantly became the
thinnest of unrealities. Not because Paris was
not Rome, nor because it was Paris; but because hidden
away somewhere in that vast unheeding labyrinth was
the half-forgotten part of himself that was Susy ….
For weeks, for months past, his mind had been saturated
with Susy: she had never seemed more insistently
near him than as their separation lengthened, and
the chance of reunion became less probable.
It was as if a sickness long smouldering in him had
broken out and become acute, enveloping him in the
Nessus-shirt of his memories. There were moments
when, to his memory, their actual embraces seemed
perfunctory, accidental, compared with this deep deliberate
imprint of her soul on his.
Yet now it had become suddenly different.
Now that he was in the same place with her, and might
at any moment run across her, meet her eyes, hear
her voice, avoid her hand—now that penetrating
ghost of her with which he had been living was sucked
back into the shadows, and he seemed, for the first
time since their parting, to be again in her actual
presence. He woke to the fact on the morning
of his arrival, staring down from his hotel window
on a street she would perhaps walk through that very
day, and over a limitless huddle of roofs, one of
which covered her at that hour. The abruptness
of the transition startled him; he had not known that
her mere geographical nearness would take him by the
throat in that way. What would it be, then, if
she were to walk into the room?
Thank heaven that need never happen!
He was sufficiently informed as to French divorce
proceedings to know that they would not necessitate
a confrontation with his wife; and with ordinary luck,
and some precautions, he might escape even a distant
glimpse of her. He did not mean to remain in
Paris more than a few days; and during that time it
would be easy—knowing, as he did, her tastes
and Altringham’s—to avoid the places
where she was likely to be met. He did not know
where she was living, but imagined her to be staying
with Mrs. Melrose, or some other rich friend, or else
lodged, in prospective affluence, at the Nouveau Luxe,
or in a pretty flat of her own. Trust Susy—ah,
the pang of it—to “manage”!
His first visit was to his lawyer’s;
and as he walked through the familiar streets each
approaching face, each distant figure seemed hers.
The obsession was intolerable. It would not
last, of course; but meanwhile he had the exposed
sense of a fugitive in a nightmare, who feels himself
the only creature visible in a ghostly and besetting
multitude. The eye of the metropolis seemed
fixed on him in an immense unblinking stare.
At the lawyer’s he was told
that, as a first step to freedom, he must secure a
domicile in Paris. He had of course known of
this necessity: he had seen too many friends
through the Divorce Court, in one country or another,
not to be fairly familiar with the procedure.
But the fact presented a different aspect as soon
as he tried to relate it to himself and Susy:
it was as though Susy’s personality were a
medium through which events still took on a transfiguring
colour. He found the “domicile”
that very day: a tawdrily furnished rez-de-chaussee,
obviously destined to far different uses. And
as he sat there, after the concierge had discreetly
withdrawn with the first quarter’s payment in
her pocket, and stared about him at the vulgar plushy
place, he burst out laughing at what it was about to
figure in the eyes of the law: a Home, and a
Home desecrated by his own act! The Home in
which he and Susy had reared their precarious bliss,
and seen it crumble at the brutal touch of his unfaithfulness
and his cruelty—for he had been told that
he must be cruel to her as well as unfaithful!
He looked at the walls hung with sentimental photogravures,
at the shiny bronze “nudes,” the moth-eaten
animal-skins and the bedizened bed-and once more the
unreality, the impossibility, of all that was happening
to him entered like a drug into his veins.
To rouse himself he stood up, turned
the key on the hideous place, and returned to his
lawyer’s. He knew that in the hard dry
atmosphere of the office the act of giving the address
of the flat would restore some kind of reality to
the phantasmal transaction. And with wonder
he watched the lawyer, as a matter of course, pencil
the street and the number on one of the papers enclosed
in a folder on which his own name was elaborately
engrossed.
As he took leave it occurred to him
to ask where Susy was living. At least he imagined
that it had just occurred to him, and that he was
making the enquiry merely as a measure of precaution,
in order to know what quarter of Paris to avoid; but
in reality the question had been on his lips since
he had first entered the office, and lurking in his
mind since he had emerged from the railway station
that morning. The fact of not knowing where
she lived made the whole of Paris a meaningless unintelligible
place, as useless to him as the face of a huge clock
that has lost its hour hand.
The address in Passy surprised him:
he had imagined that she would be somewhere in the
neighborhood of the Champs Elysees or the Place de
l’Etoile. But probably either Mrs. Melrose
or Ellie Vanderlyn had taken a house at Passy.
Well—it was something of a relief to know
that she was so far off. No business called
him to that almost suburban region beyond the Trocadero,
and there was much less chance of meeting her than
if she had been in the centre of Paris.
All day he wandered, avoiding the
fashionable quarters, the streets in which private
motors glittered five deep, and furred and feathered
silhouettes glided from them into tea-rooms, picture-galleries
and jewellers’ shops. In some such scenes
Susy was no doubt figuring: slenderer, finer,
vivider, than the other images of clay, but imitating
their gestures, chattering their jargon, winding her
hand among the same pearls and sables. He struck
away across the Seine, along the quays to the Cite,
the net-work of old Paris, the great grey vaults of
St. Eustache, the swarming streets of the Marais.
He gazed at monuments dawdled before shop-windows,
sat in squares and on quays, watching people bargain,
argue, philander, quarrel, work-girls stroll past
in linked bands, beggars whine on the bridges, derelicts
doze in the pale winter sun, mothers in mourning hasten
by taking children to school, and street-walkers beat
their weary rounds before the cafes.
The day drifted on. Toward evening
he began to grow afraid of his solitude, and to think
of dining at the Nouveau Luxe, or some other fashionable
restaurant where he would be fairly sure to meet acquaintances,
and be carried off to a theatre, a boite or a dancing-hall.
Anything, anything now, to get away from the maddening
round of his thoughts. He felt the same blank
fear of solitude as months ago in Genoa ….
Even if he were to run across Susy and Altringham,
what of it? Better get the job over. People
had long since ceased to take on tragedy airs about
divorce: dividing couples dined together to the
last, and met afterward in each other’s houses,
happy in the consciousness that their respective remarriages
had provided two new centres of entertainment.
Yet most of the couples who took their re-matings
so philosophically had doubtless had their hour of
enchantment, of belief in the immortality of loving;
whereas he and Susy had simply and frankly entered
into a business contract for their mutual advantage.
The fact gave the last touch of incongruity to his
agonies and exaltations, and made him appear to himself
as grotesque and superannuated as the hero of a romantic
novel.
He stood up from a bench on which
he had been lounging in the Luxembourg gardens, and
hailed a taxi. Dusk had fallen, and he meant
to go back to his hotel, take a rest, and then go out
to dine. But instead, he threw Susy’s
address to the driver, and settled down in the cab,
resting both hands on the knob of his umbrella and
staring straight ahead of him as if he were accomplishing
some tiresome duty that had to be got through with
before he could turn his mind to more important things.
“It’s the easiest way,” he heard
himself say.
At the street-corner—her
street-corner—he stopped the cab, and stood
motionless while it rattled away. It was a short
vague street, much farther off than he had expected,
and fading away at the farther end in a dusky blur
of hoardings overhung by trees. A thin rain
was beginning to fall, and it was already night in
this inadequately lit suburban quarter. Lansing
walked down the empty street. The houses stood
a few yards apart, with bare-twigged shrubs between,
and gates and railings dividing them from the pavement.
He could not, at first, distinguish their numbers;
but presently, coming abreast of a street-lamp, he
discovered that the small shabby facade it illuminated
was precisely the one he sought. The discovery
surprised him. He had imagined that, as frequently
happened in the outlying quarters of Passy and La
Muette, the mean street would lead to a stately private
hotel, built upon some bowery fragment of an old country-place.
It was the latest whim of the wealthy to establish
themselves on these outskirts of Paris, where there
was still space for verdure; and he had pictured Susy
behind some pillared house-front, with lights pouring
across glossy turf to sculptured gateposts.
Instead, he saw a six-windowed house, huddled among
neighbours of its kind, with the family wash fluttering
between meagre bushes. The arc-light beat ironically
on its front, which had the worn look of a tired work-woman’s
face; and Lansing, as he leaned against the opposite
railing, vainly tried to fit his vision of Susy into
so humble a setting.
The probable explanation was that
his lawyer had given him the wrong address; not only
the wrong number but the wrong street. He pulled
out the slip of paper, and was crossing over to decipher
it under the lamp, when an errand-boy appeared out
of the obscurity, and approached the house.
Nick drew back, and the boy, unlatching the gate,
ran up the steps and gave the bell a pull.
Almost immediately the door opened;
and there stood Susy, the light full upon her, and
upon a red-checked child against her shoulder.
The space behind them was dark, or so dimly lit that
it formed a black background to her vivid figure.
She looked at the errand-boy without surprise, took
his parcel, and after he had turned away, lingered
a moment in the door, glancing down the empty street.
That moment, to her watcher, seemed
quicker than a flash yet as long as a life-time.
There she was, a stone’s throw away, but utterly
unconscious of his presence: his Susy, the old
Susy, and yet a new Susy, curiously transformed, transfigured
almost, by the new attitude in which he beheld her.
In the first shock of the vision he
forgot his surprise at her being in such a place,
forgot to wonder whose house she was in, or whose
was the sleepy child in her arms. For an instant
she stood out from the blackness behind her, and through
the veil of the winter night, a thing apart, an unconditioned
vision, the eternal image of the woman and the child;
and in that instant everything within him was changed
and renewed. His eyes were still absorbing her,
finding again the familiar curves of her light body,
noting the thinness of the lifted arm that upheld
the little boy, the droop of the shoulder he weighed
on, the brooding way in which her cheek leaned to
his even while she looked away; then she drew back,
the door closed, and the street-lamp again shone on
blankness.
“But she’s mine!”
Nick cried, in a fierce triumph of recovery …
His eyes were so full of her that
he shut them to hold in the crowding vision.
It remained with him, at first, as
a complete picture; then gradually it broke up into
its component parts, the child vanished, the strange
house vanished, and Susy alone stood before him, his
own Susy, only his Susy, yet changed, worn, tempered—older,
even—with sharper shadows under the cheek-bones,
the brows drawn, the joint of the slim wrist more
prominent. It was not thus that his memory had
evoked her, and he recalled, with a remorseful pang,
the fact that something in her look, her dress, her
tired and drooping attitude, suggested poverty, dependence,
seemed to make her after all a part of the shabby
house in which, at first sight, her presence had seemed
so incongruous.
“But she looks poor!”
he thought, his heart tightening. And instantly
it occurred to him that these must be the Fulmer children
whom she was living with while their parents travelled
in Italy. Rumours of Nat Fulmer’s sudden
ascension had reached him, and he had heard that the
couple had lately been seen in Naples and Palermo.
No one had mentioned Susy’s name in connection
with them, and he could hardly tell why he had arrived
at this conclusion, except perhaps because it seemed
natural that, if Susy were in trouble, she should turn
to her old friend Grace.
But why in trouble? What trouble?
What could have happened to check her triumphant
career?
“That’s what I mean to find out!”
he exclaimed.
His heart was beating with a tumult
of new hopes and old memories. The sight of
his wife, so remote in mien and manner from the world
in which he had imagined her to be re-absorbed, changed
in a flash his own relation to life, and flung a mist
of unreality over all that he had been trying to think
most solid and tangible. Nothing now was substantial
to him but the stones of the street in which he stood,
the front of the house which hid her, the bell-handle
he already felt in his grasp. He started forward,
and was halfway to the threshold when a private motor
turned the corner, the twin glitter of its lamps carpeting
the wet street with gold to Susy’s door.
Lansing drew back into the shadow
as the motor swept up to the house. A man jumped
out, and the light fell on Strefford’s shambling
figure, its lazy disjointed movements so unmistakably
the same under his fur coat, and in the new setting
of prosperity.
Lansing stood motionless, staring
at the door. Strefford rang, and waited.
Would Susy appear again? Perhaps she had done
so before only because she had been on the watch ….
But no: after a slight delay
a bonne appeared —the breathless maid-of-all-work
of a busy household—and at once effaced
herself, letting the visitor in. Lansing was
sure that not a word passed between the two, of enquiry
on Lord Altringham’s part, or of acquiescence
on the servant’s. There could be no doubt
that he was expected.
The door closed on him, and a light
appeared behind the blind of the adjoining window.
The maid had shown the visitor into the sitting-room
and lit the lamp. Upstairs, meanwhile, Susy was
no doubt running skilful fingers through her tumbled
hair and daubing her pale lips with red. Ah,
how Lansing knew every movement of that familiar rite,
even to the pucker of the brow and the pouting thrust-out
of the lower lip! He was seized with a sense
of physical sickness as the succession of remembered
gestures pressed upon his eyes …. And the other
man? The other man, inside the house, was perhaps
at that very instant smiling over the remembrance
of the same scene!
At the thought, Lansing plunged away
into the night.