It took two brimming taxi-cabs
to carry the Nicholas Lansings to the station on their
second honey-moon. In the first were Nick, Susy
and the luggage of the whole party (little Nat’s
motor horn included, as a last concession, and because
he had hitherto forborne to play on it); and in the
second, the five Fulmers, the bonne, who at the eleventh
hour had refused to be left, a cage-full of canaries,
and a foundling kitten who had murderous designs on
them; all of which had to be taken because, if the
bonne came, there would be nobody left to look after
them.
At the corner Susy tore herself from
Nick’s arms and held up the procession while
she ran back to the second taxi to make sure that
the bonne had brought the house-key. It was found
of course that she hadn’t but that Junie had;
whereupon the caravan got under way again, and reached
the station just as the train was starting; and there,
by some miracle of good nature on the part of the
guard, they were all packed together into an empty
compartment—no doubt, as Susy remarked,
because train officials never failed to spot a newly-married
couple, and treat them kindly.
The children, sentinelled by Junie,
at first gave promise of superhuman goodness; but
presently their feelings overflowed, and they were
not to be quieted till it had been agreed that Nat
should blow his motor-horn at each halt, while the
twins called out the names of the stations, and Geordie,
with the canaries and kitten, affected to change trains.
Luckily the halts were few; but the
excitement of travel, combined with over-indulgence
in the chocolates imprudently provided by Nick, overwhelmed
Geordie with a sudden melancholy that could be appeased
only by Susy’s telling him stories till they
arrived at Fontainebleau.
The day was soft, with mild gleams
of sunlight on decaying foliage; and after luggage
and livestock had been dropped at the pension Susy
confessed that she had promised the children a scamper
in the forest, and buns in a tea-shop afterward.
Nick placidly agreed, and darkness had long fallen,
and a great many buns been consumed, when at length
the procession turned down the street toward the pension,
headed by Nick with the sleeping Geordie on his shoulder,
while the others, speechless with fatigue and food,
hung heavily on Susy.
It had been decided that, as the bonne
was of the party, the children might be entrusted
to her for the night, and Nick and Susy establish
themselves in an adjacent hotel. Nick had flattered
himself that they might remove their possessions there
when they returned from the tea-room; but Susy, manifestly
surprised at the idea, reminded him that her charges
must first be given their supper and put to bed.
She suggested that he should meanwhile take the bags
to the hotel, and promised to join him as soon as
Geordie was asleep.
She was a long time coming, but waiting
for her was sweet, even in a deserted hotel reading-room
insufficiently heated by a sulky stove; and after
he had glanced through his morning’s mail, hurriedly
thrust into his pocket as he left Paris, he sank into
a state of drowsy beatitude. It was all the maddest
business in the world, yet it did not give him the
sense of unreality that had made their first adventure
a mere golden dream; and he sat and waited with the
security of one in whom dear habits have struck deep
roots. In this mood of acquiescence even the
presence of the five Fulmers seemed a natural and
necessary consequence of all the rest; and when Susy
at length appeared, a little pale and tired, with the
brooding inward look that busy mothers bring from
the nursery, that too seemed natural and necessary,
and part of the new order of things.
They had wandered out to a cheap restaurant
for dinner; now, in the damp December night, they
were walking back to the hotel under a sky full of
rain-clouds. They seemed to have said everything
to each other, and yet barely to have begun what they
had to tell; and at each step they took, their heavy
feet dragged a great load of bliss.
In the hotel almost all the lights
were already out; and they groped their way to the
third floor room which was the only one that Susy
had found cheap enough. A ray from a street-lamp
struck up through the unshuttered windows; and after
Nick had revived the fire they drew their chairs close
to it, and sat quietly for a while in the dark.
Their silence was so sweet that Nick
could not make up his mind to break it; not to do
so gave his tossing spirit such a sense of permanence,
of having at last unlimited time before him in which
to taste his joy and let its sweetness stream through
him. But at length he roused himself to say:
“It’s queer how things coincide.
I’ve had a little bit of good news in one of
the letters I got this morning.”
Susy took the announcement serenely.
“Well, you would, you know,” she commented,
as if the day had been too obviously designed for
bliss to escape the notice of its dispensers.
“Yes,” he continued with
a thrill of pardonable pride. “During
the cruise I did a couple of articles on Crete—oh,
just travel-impressions, of course; they couldn’t
be more. But the editor of the New Review has
accepted them, and asks for others. And here’s
his cheque, if you please! So you see you might
have let me take the jolly room downstairs with the
pink curtains. And it makes me awfully hopeful
about my book.”
He had expected a rapturous outburst,
and perhaps some reassertion of wifely faith in the
glorious future that awaited The Pageant of Alexander;
and deep down under the lover’s well-being
the author felt a faint twinge of mortified vanity
when Susy, leaping to her feet, cried out, ravenously
and without preamble: “Oh, Nick, Nick—let
me see how much they’ve given you!”
He flourished the cheque before her
in the firelight. “A couple of hundred,
you mercenary wretch!”
“Oh, oh—” she
gasped, as if the good news had been almost too much
for her tense nerves; and then surprised him by dropping
to the ground, and burying her face against his knees.
“Susy, my Susy,” he whispered,
his hand on her shaking shoulder. “Why,
dear, what is it? You’re not crying?”
“Oh, Nick, Nick—two
hundred? Two hundred dollars? Then I’ve
got to tell you—oh now, at once!”
A faint chill ran over him, and involuntarily
his hand drew back from her bowed figure.
“Now? Oh, why now?”
he protested. “What on earth does it matter
now—whatever it is?”
“But it does matter—it
matters more than you can think!”
She straightened herself, still kneeling
before him, and lifted her head so that the firelight
behind her turned her hair into a ruddy halo.
“Oh, Nick, the bracelet—Ellie’s
bracelet …. I’ve never returned it to
her,” she faltered out.
He felt himself recoiling under the
hands with which she clutched his knees. For
an instant he did not remember what she alluded to;
it was the mere mention of Ellie Vanderlyn’s
name that had fallen between them like an icy shadow.
What an incorrigible fool he had been to think they
could ever shake off such memories, or cease to be
the slaves of such a past!
“The bracelet?—Oh,
yes,” he said, suddenly understanding, and feeling
the chill mount slowly to his lips.
“Yes, the bracelet …
Oh, Nick, I meant to give it back at once; I did—I
did; but the day you went away I forgot everything
else. And when I found the thing, in the bottom
of my bag, weeks afterward, I thought everything was
over between you and me, and I had begun to see Ellie
again, and she was kind to me and how could I?”
To save his life he could have found no answer, and
she pressed on: “And so this morning, when
I saw you were frightened by the expense of bringing
all the children with us, and when I felt I couldn’t
leave them, and couldn’t leave you either, I
remembered the bracelet; and I sent you off to telephone
while I rushed round the corner to a little jeweller’s
where I’d been before, and pawned it so that
you shouldn’t have to pay for the children ….
But now, darling, you see, if you’ve got all
that money, I can get it out of pawn at once, can’t
I, and send it back to her?”
She flung her arms about him, and
he held her fast, wondering if the tears he felt were
hers or his. Still he did not speak; but as
he clasped her close she added, with an irrepressible
flash of her old irony: “Not that Ellie
will understand why I’ve done it. She’s
never yet been able to make out why you returned her
scarf-pin.”
For a long time she continued to lean
against him, her head on his knees, as she had done
on the terrace of Como on the last night of their
honeymoon. She had ceased to talk, and he sat
silent also, passing his hand quietly to and fro over
her hair. The first rapture had been succeeded
by soberer feelings. Her confession had broken
up the frozen pride about his heart, and humbled him
to the earth; but it had also roused forgotten things,
memories and scruples swept aside in the first rush
of their reunion. He and she belonged to each
other for always: he understood that now.
The impulse which had first drawn them together again,
in spite of reason, in spite of themselves almost,
that deep-seated instinctive need that each had of
the other, would never again wholly let them go.
Yet as he sat there he thought of Strefford, he thought
of Coral Hicks. He had been a coward in regard
to Coral, and Susy had been sincere and courageous
in regard to Strefford. Yet his mind dwelt on
Coral with tenderness, with compunction, with remorse;
and he was almost sure that Susy had already put Strefford
utterly out of her mind.
It was the old contrast between the
two ways of loving, the man’s way and the woman’s;
and after a moment it seemed to Nick natural enough
that Susy, from the very moment of finding him again,
should feel neither pity nor regret, and that Strefford
should already be to her as if he had never been.
After all, there was something Providential in such
arrangements.
He stooped closer, pressed her dreaming
head between his hands, and whispered: “Wake
up; it’s bedtime.”
She rose; but as she moved away to
turn on the light he caught her hand and drew her
to the window. They leaned on the sill in the
darkness, and through the clouds, from which a few
drops were already falling, the moon, labouring upward,
swam into a space of sky, cast her troubled glory
on them, and was again hidden.