Her husband’s note had briefly said:
“To-day at four o’clock. N.L.”
All day she pored over the words in
an agony of longing, trying to read into them regret,
emotion, memories, some echo of the tumult in her
own bosom. But she had signed “Susy,”
and he signed “N.L.” That seemed
to put an abyss between them. After all, she
was free and he was not. Perhaps, in view of
his situation, she had only increased the distance
between them by her unconventional request for a meeting.
She sat in the little drawing-room,
and the cast-bronze clock ticked out the minutes.
She would not look out of the window: it might
bring bad luck to watch for him. And it seemed
to her that a thousand invisible spirits, hidden demons
of good and evil, pressed about her, spying out her
thoughts, counting her heart-beats, ready to pounce
upon the least symptom of over-confidence and turn
it deftly to derision. Oh, for an altar on which
to pour out propitiatory offerings! But what
sweeter could they have than her smothered heart-beats,
her choked-back tears?
The bell rang, and she stood up as
if a spring had jerked her to her feet. In the
mirror between the dried grasses her face looked long
pale inanimate. Ah, if he should find her too
changed—! If there were but time to dash
upstairs and put on a touch of red ….
The door opened; it shut on him; he was there.
He said: “You wanted to see me?”
She answered: “Yes.” And her
heart seemed to stop beating.
At first she could not make out what
mysterious change had come over him, and why it was
that in looking at him she seemed to be looking at
a stranger; then she perceived that his voice sounded
as it used to sound when he was talking to other people;
and she said to herself, with a sick shiver of understanding,
that she had become an “other person”
to him.
There was a deathly pause; then she
faltered out, not knowing what she said: “Nick—you’ll
sit down?”
He said: “Thanks,”
but did not seem to have heard her, for he continued
to stand motionless, half the room between them.
And slowly the uselessness, the hopelessness of his
being there overcame her. A wall of granite
seemed to have built itself up between them.
She felt as if it hid her from him, as if with those
remote new eyes of his he were staring into the wall
and not at her. Suddenly she said to herself:
“He’s suffering more than I am, because
he pities me, and is afraid to tell me that he is
going to be married.”
The thought stung her pride, and she
lifted her head and met his eyes with a smile.
“Don’t you think,”
she said, “it’s more sensible-with everything
so changed in our lives—that we should meet
as friends, in this way? I wanted to tell you
that you needn’t feel—feel in the
least unhappy about me.”
A deep flush rose to his forehead.
“Oh, I know—I know that—”
he declared hastily; and added, with a factitious animation:
“But thank you for telling me.”
“There’s nothing, is there,”
she continued, “to make our meeting in this
way in the least embarrassing or painful to either
of us, when both have found ….” She
broke off, and held her hand out to him. “I’ve
heard about you and Coral,” she ended.
He just touched her hand with cold
fingers, and let it drop. “Thank you,”
he said for the third time.
“You won’t sit down?”
He sat down.
“Don’t you think,”
she continued, “that the new way of … of meeting
as friends … and talking things over without ill-will
... is much pleasanter and more sensible, after all?”
He smiled. “It’s immensely kind
of you to feel that.”
“Oh, I do feel it!” She
stopped short, and wondered what on earth she had
meant to say next, and why she had so abruptly lost
the thread of her discourse.
In the pause she heard him cough slightly
and clear his throat. “Let me say, then,”
he began, “that I’m glad too—immensely
glad that your own future is so satisfactorily settled.”
She lifted her glance again to his
walled face, in which not a muscle stirred.
“Yes: it—it
makes everything easier for you, doesn’t it?”
“For you too, I hope.”
He paused, and then went on: “I want
also to tell you that I perfectly understand—”
“Oh,” she interrupted,
“so do I; your point of view, I mean.”
They were again silent.
“Nick, why can’t we be
friends real friends? Won’t it be easier?”
she broke out at last with twitching lips.
“Easier—?”
“I mean, about talking things
over—arrangements. There are arrangements
to be made, I suppose?”
“I suppose so.”
He hesitated. “I’m doing what I’m
told-simply following out instructions. The
business is easy enough, apparently. I’m
taking the necessary steps—”
She reddened a little, and drew a
gasping breath. “The necessary steps:
what are they? Everything the lawyers tell
one is so confusing …. I don’t yet understand—how
it’s done.”
“My share, you mean? Oh,
it’s very simple.” He paused, and
added in a tone of laboured ease: “I’m
going down to Fontainebleau to-morrow—”
She stared, not understanding.
“To Fontainebleau—?”
Her bewilderment drew from him his
first frank smile. “Well— I
chose Fontainebleau—I don’t know why
... except that we’ve never been there together.”
At that she suddenly understood, and
the blood rushed to her forehead. She stood
up without knowing what she was doing, her heart in
her throat. “How grotesque—how
utterly disgusting!”
He gave a slight shrug. “I
didn’t make the laws ….”
“But isn’t it too stupid
and degrading that such things should be necessary
when two people want to part—?” She broke
off again, silenced by the echo of that fatal “want
to part.” ...
He seemed to prefer not to dwell farther
on the legal obligations involved.
“You haven’t yet told
me,” he suggested, “how you happen to be
living here.”
“Here—with the Fulmer
children?” She roused herself, trying to catch
his easier note. “Oh, I’ve simply
been governessing them for a few weeks, while Nat
and Grace are in Sicily.” She did not
say: “It’s because I’ve parted
with Strefford.” Somehow it helped her
wounded pride a little to keep from him the secret
of her precarious independence.
He looked his wonder. “All
alone with that bewildered bonne? But how many
of them are there? Five? Good Lord!”
He contemplated the clock with unseeing eyes, and
then turned them again on her face.
“I should have thought a lot
of children would rather get on your nerves.”
“Oh, not these children. They’re
so good to me.”
“Ah, well, I suppose it won’t be for long.”
He sent his eyes again about the room,
which his absent-minded gaze seemed to reduce to its
dismal constituent elements, and added, with an obvious
effort at small talk: “I hear the Fulmers
are not hitting it off very well since his success.
Is it true that he’s going to marry Violet
Melrose?”
The blood rose to Susy’s face.
“Oh, never, never! He and Grace are travelling
together now.”
“Oh, I didn’t know.
People say things ….” He was visibly
embarrassed with the subject, and sorry that he had
broached it.
“Some of the things that people
say are true. But Grace doesn’t mind.
She says she and Nat belong to each other. They
can’t help it, she thinks, after having been
through such a lot together.”
“Dear old Grace!”
He had risen from his chair, and this
time she made no effort to detain him. He seemed
to have recovered his self-composure, and it struck
her painfully, humiliatingly almost, that he should
have spoken in that light way of the expedition to
Fontainebleau on the morrow …. Well, men were
different, she supposed; she remembered having felt
that once before about Nick.
It was on the tip of her tongue to
cry out: “But wait—wait!
I’m not going to marry Strefford after all!”—but
to do so would seem like an appeal to his compassion,
to his indulgence; and that was not what she wanted.
She could never forget that he had left her because
he had not been able to forgive her for “managing”—and
not for the world would she have him think that this
meeting had been planned for such a purpose.
“If he doesn’t see that
I am different, in spite of appearances … and that
I never was what he said I was that day—if
in all these months it hasn’t come over him,
what’s the use of trying to make him see it
now?” she mused. And then, her thoughts
hurrying on: “Perhaps he’s suffering
too—I believe he is suffering-at any rate,
he’s suffering for me, if not for himself.
But if he’s pledged to Coral, what can he do?
What would he think of me if I tried to make him
break his word to her?”
There he stood—the man
who was “going to Fontainebleau to-morrow”;
who called it “taking the necessary steps!”
Who could smile as he made the careless statement!
A world seemed to divide them already: it was
as if their parting were already over. All the
words, cries, arguments beating loud wings in her
dropped back into silence. The only thought left
was: “How much longer does he mean to
go on standing there?”
He may have read the question in her
face, for turning back from an absorbed contemplation
of the window curtains he said: “There’s
nothing else?”
“Nothing else?”
“I mean: you spoke of things to be settled—”
She flushed, suddenly remembering
the pretext she had used to summon him.
“Oh,” she faltered, “I
didn’t know … I thought there might be
.... But the lawyers, I suppose ….”
She saw the relief on his contracted
face. “Exactly. I’ve always
thought it was best to leave it to them. I assure
you”— again for a moment the smile
strained his lips— “I shall do nothing
to interfere with a quick settlement.”
She stood motionless, feeling herself
turn to stone. He appeared already a long way
off, like a figure vanishing down a remote perspective.
“Then—good-bye,”
she heard him say from its farther end.
“Oh,—good-bye,”
she faltered, as if she had not had the word ready,
and was relieved to have him supply it.
He stopped again on the threshold,
looked back at her, began to speak. “I’ve—”
he said; then he repeated “Good-bye,” as
though to make sure he had not forgotten to say it;
and the door closed on him.
It was over; she had had her last
chance and missed it. Now, whatever happened,
the one thing she had lived and longed for would never
be. He had come, and she had let him go again
....
How had it come about? Would
she ever be able to explain it to herself? How
was it that she, so fertile in strategy, so practiced
in feminine arts, had stood there before him, helpless,
inarticulate, like a school-girl a-choke with her
first love-longing? If he was gone, and gone
never to return, it was her own fault, and none but
hers. What had she done to move him, detain
him, make his heart beat and his head swim as hers
were beating and swimming? She stood aghast at
her own inadequacy, her stony inexpressiveness ….
And suddenly she lifted her hands
to her throbbing forehead and cried out: “But
this is love! This must be love!”
She had loved him before, she supposed;
for what else was she to call the impulse that had
drawn her to him, taught her how to overcome his scruples,
and whirled him away with her on their mad adventure?
Well, if that was love, this was something so much
larger and deeper that the other feeling seemed the
mere dancing of her blood in tune with his ….
But, no! Real love, great love,
the love that poets sang, and privileged and tortured
beings lived and died of, that love had its own superior
expressiveness, and the sure command of its means.
The petty arts of coquetry were no farther from it
than the numbness of the untaught girl. Great
love was wise, strong, powerful, like genius, like
any other dominant form of human power. It knew
itself, and what it wanted, and how to attain its
ends.
Not great love, then … but just
the common humble average of human love was hers.
And it had come to her so newly, so overwhelmingly,
with a face so grave, a touch so startling, that she
had stood there petrified, humbled at the first look
of its eyes, recognizing that what she had once taken
for love was merely pleasure and spring-time, and
the flavour of youth.
“But how was I to know?
And now it’s too late!” she wailed.