Selden paused in surprise. In
the afternoon rush of the Grand Central Station his
eyes had been refreshed by the sight of Miss Lily
Bart.
It was a Monday in early September,
and he was returning to his work from a hurried dip
into the country; but what was Miss Bart doing in
town at that season? If she had appeared to be
catching a train, he might have inferred that he had
come on her in the act of transition between one and
another of the country-houses which disputed her presence
after the close of the Newport season; but her desultory
air perplexed him. She stood apart from the crowd,
letting it drift by her to the platform or the street,
and wearing an air of irresolution which might, as
he surmised, be the mask of a very definite purpose.
It struck him at once that she was waiting for some
one, but he hardly knew why the idea arrested him.
There was nothing new about Lily Bart, yet he could
never see her without a faint movement of interest:
it was characteristic of her that she always roused
speculation, that her simplest acts seemed the result
of far-reaching intentions.
An impulse of curiosity made him turn
out of his direct line to the door, and stroll past
her. He knew that if she did not wish to be seen
she would contrive to elude him; and it amused him
to think of putting her skill to the test.
“Mr. Selden—what good luck!”
She came forward smiling, eager almost,
in her resolve to intercept him. One or two persons,
in brushing past them, lingered to look; for Miss
Bart was a figure to arrest even the suburban traveller
rushing to his last train.
Selden had never seen her more radiant.
Her vivid head, relieved against the dull tints of
the crowd, made her more conspicuous than in a ball-room,
and under her dark hat and veil she regained the girlish
smoothness, the purity of tint, that she was beginning
to lose after eleven years of late hours and indefatigable
dancing. Was it really eleven years, Selden found
himself wondering, and had she indeed reached the
nine-and-twentieth birthday with which her rivals credited
her?
“What luck!” she repeated.
“How nice of you to come to my rescue!”
He responded joyfully that to do so
was his mission in life, and asked what form the rescue
was to take.
“Oh, almost any—even
to sitting on a bench and talking to me. One
sits out a cotillion—why not sit out a train?
It isn’t a bit hotter here than in Mrs. Van
Osburgh’s conservatory—and some of
the women are not a bit uglier.” She broke
off, laughing, to explain that she had come up to
town from Tuxedo, on her way to the Gus Trenors’
at Bellomont, and had missed the three-fifteen train
to Rhinebeck. “And there isn’t another
till half-past five.” She consulted the
little jewelled watch among her laces. “Just
two hours to wait. And I don’t know what
to do with myself. My maid came up this morning
to do some shopping for me, and was to go on to Bellomont
at one o’clock, and my aunt’s house is
closed, and I don’t know a soul in town.”
She glanced plaintively about the station. “It
is hotter than Mrs. Van Osburgh’s, after
all. If you can spare the time, do take me somewhere
for a breath of air.”
He declared himself entirely at her
disposal: the adventure struck him as diverting.
As a spectator, he had always enjoyed Lily Bart; and
his course lay so far out of her orbit that it amused
him to be drawn for a moment into the sudden intimacy
which her proposal implied.
“Shall we go over to Sherry’s for a cup
of tea?”
She smiled assentingly, and then made a slight grimace.
“So many people come up to town
on a Monday—one is sure to meet a lot of
bores. I’m as old as the hills, of course,
and it ought not to make any difference; but if I’m
old enough, you’re not,” she objected
gaily. “I’m dying for tea—but
isn’t there a quieter place?”
He answered her smile, which rested
on him vividly. Her discretions interested him
almost as much as her imprudences: he was so
sure that both were part of the same carefully-elaborated
plan. In judging Miss Bart, he had always made
use of the “argument from design.”
“The resources of New York are
rather meagre,” he said; “but I’ll
find a hansom first, and then we’ll invent something.”
He led her through the throng of returning holiday-makers,
past sallow-faced girls in preposterous hats, and
flat-chested women struggling with paper bundles and
palm-leaf fans. Was it possible that she belonged
to the same race? The dinginess, the crudity of
this average section of womanhood made him feel how
highly specialized she was.
A rapid shower had cooled the air,
and clouds still hung refreshingly over the moist
street.
“How delicious! Let us
walk a little,” she said as they emerged from
the station.
They turned into Madison Avenue and
began to stroll northward. As she moved beside
him, with her long light step, Selden was conscious
of taking a luxurious pleasure in her nearness:
in the modelling of her little ear, the crisp upward
wave of her hair—was it ever so slightly
brightened by art?—and the thick planting
of her straight black lashes. Everything about
her was at once vigorous and exquisite, at once strong
and fine. He had a confused sense that she must
have cost a great deal to make, that a great many
dull and ugly people must, in some mysterious way,
have been sacrificed to produce her. He was aware
that the qualities distinguishing her from the herd
of her sex were chiefly external: as though a
fine glaze of beauty and fastidiousness had been applied
to vulgar clay. Yet the analogy left him unsatisfied,
for a coarse texture will not take a high finish;
and was it not possible that the material was fine,
but that circumstance had fashioned it into a futile
shape?
As he reached this point in his speculations
the sun came out, and her lifted parasol cut off his
enjoyment. A moment or two later she paused with
a sigh.
“Oh, dear, I’m so hot
and thirsty—and what a hideous place New
York is!” She looked despairingly up and down
the dreary thoroughfare. “Other cities
put on their best clothes in summer, but New York
seems to sit in its shirtsleeves.” Her eyes
wandered down one of the side-streets. “Someone
has had the humanity to plant a few trees over there.
Let us go into the shade.”
“I am glad my street meets with
your approval,” said Selden as they turned the
corner.
“Your street? Do you live here?”
She glanced with interest along the
new brick and limestone house-fronts, fantastically
varied in obedience to the American craving for novelty,
but fresh and inviting with their awnings and flower-boxes.
“Ah, yes—to be sure:
The Benedick. What a nice-looking building!
I don’t think I’ve ever seen it before.”
She looked across at the flat-house with its marble
porch and pseudo-Georgian facade. “Which
are your windows? Those with the awnings down?”
“On the top floor—yes.”
“And that nice little balcony
is yours? How cool it looks up there!”
He paused a moment. “Come
up and see,” he suggested. “I can
give you a cup of tea in no time—and you
won’t meet any bores.”
Her colour deepened—she
still had the art of blushing at the right time—but
she took the suggestion as lightly as it was made.
“Why not? It’s too
tempting—I’ll take the risk,”
she declared.
“Oh, I’m not dangerous,”
he said in the same key. In truth, he had never
liked her as well as at that moment. He knew she
had accepted without afterthought: he could never
be a factor in her calculations, and there was a surprise,
a refreshment almost, in the spontaneity of her consent.
On the threshold he paused a moment,
feeling for his latchkey.
“There’s no one here;
but I have a servant who is supposed to come in the
mornings, and it’s just possible he may have
put out the tea-things and provided some cake.”
He ushered her into a slip of a hall
hung with old prints. She noticed the letters
and notes heaped on the table among his gloves and
sticks; then she found herself in a small library,
dark but cheerful, with its walls of books, a pleasantly
faded Turkey rug, a littered desk and, as he had foretold,
a tea-tray on a low table near the window. A
breeze had sprung up, swaying inward the muslin curtains,
and bringing a fresh scent of mignonette and petunias
from the flower-box on the balcony.
Lily sank with a sigh into one of
the shabby leather chairs.
“How delicious to have a place
like this all to one’s self! What a miserable
thing it is to be a woman.” She leaned back
in a luxury of discontent.
Selden was rummaging in a cupboard for the cake.
“Even women,” he said,
“have been known to enjoy the privileges of
a flat.”
“Oh, governesses—or
widows. But not girls—not poor, miserable,
marriageable girls!”
“I even know a girl who lives in a flat.”
She sat up in surprise. “You do?”
“I do,” he assured her,
emerging from the cupboard with the sought-for cake.
“Oh, I know—you mean
Gerty Farish.” She smiled a little unkindly.
“But I said marriageable—and
besides, she has a horrid little place, and no maid,
and such queer things to eat. Her cook does the
washing and the food tastes of soap. I should
hate that, you know.”
“You shouldn’t dine with
her on wash-days,” said Selden, cutting the
cake.
They both laughed, and he knelt by
the table to light the lamp under the kettle, while
she measured out the tea into a little tea-pot of
green glaze. As he watched her hand, polished
as a bit of old ivory, with its slender pink nails,
and the sapphire bracelet slipping over her wrist,
he was struck with the irony of suggesting to her
such a life as his cousin Gertrude Farish had chosen.
She was so evidently the victim of the civilization
which had produced her, that the links of her bracelet
seemed like manacles chaining her to her fate.
She seemed to read his thought.
“It was horrid of me to say that of Gerty,”
she said with charming compunction. “I forgot
she was your cousin. But we’re so different,
you know: she likes being good, and I like being
happy. And besides, she is free and I am not.
If I were, I daresay I could manage to be happy even
in her flat. It must be pure bliss to arrange
the furniture just as one likes, and give all the
horrors to the ash-man. If I could only do over
my aunt’s drawing-room I know I should be a better
woman.”
“Is it so very bad?” he asked sympathetically.
She smiled at him across the tea-pot
which she was holding up to be filled.
“That shows how seldom you come
there. Why don’t you come oftener?”
“When I do come, it’s
not to look at Mrs. Peniston’s furniture.”
“Nonsense,” she said.
“You don’t come at all—and yet
we get on so well when we meet.”
“Perhaps that’s the reason,”
he answered promptly. “I’m afraid
I haven’t any cream, you know—shall
you mind a slice of lemon instead?”
“I shall like it better.”
She waited while he cut the lemon and dropped a thin
disk into her cup. “But that is not the
reason,” she insisted.
“The reason for what?”
“For your never coming.”
She leaned forward with a shade of perplexity in her
charming eyes. “I wish I knew—I
wish I could make you out. Of course I know there
are men who don’t like me—one can
tell that at a glance. And there are others who
are afraid of me: they think I want to marry
them.” She smiled up at him frankly.
“But I don’t think you dislike me—and
you can’t possibly think I want to marry you.”
“No—I absolve you of that,”
he agreed.
“Well, then—–?”
He had carried his cup to the fireplace,
and stood leaning against the chimney-piece and looking
down on her with an air of indolent amusement.
The provocation in her eyes increased his amusement—he
had not supposed she would waste her powder on such
small game; but perhaps she was only keeping her hand
in; or perhaps a girl of her type had no conversation
but of the personal kind. At any rate, she was
amazingly pretty, and he had asked her to tea and
must live up to his obligations.
“Well, then,” he said with a plunge, “perhaps
that’s the reason.”
“What?”
“The fact that you don’t
want to marry me. Perhaps I don’t regard
it as such a strong inducement to go and see you.”
He felt a slight shiver down his spine as he ventured
this, but her laugh reassured him.
“Dear Mr. Selden, that wasn’t
worthy of you. It’s stupid of you to make
love to me, and it isn’t like you to be stupid.”
She leaned back, sipping her tea with an air so enchantingly
judicial that, if they had been in her aunt’s
drawing-room, he might almost have tried to disprove
her deduction.
“Don’t you see,”
she continued, “that there are men enough to
say pleasant things to me, and that what I want is
a friend who won’t be afraid to say disagreeable
ones when I need them? Sometimes I have fancied
you might be that friend—I don’t know
why, except that you are neither a prig nor a bounder,
and that I shouldn’t have to pretend with you
or be on my guard against you.” Her voice
had dropped to a note of seriousness, and she sat gazing
up at him with the troubled gravity of a child.
“You don’t know how much
I need such a friend,” she said. “My
aunt is full of copy-book axioms, but they were all
meant to apply to conduct in the early fifties.
I always feel that to live up to them would include
wearing book-muslin with gigot sleeves. And the
other women—my best friends—well,
they use me or abuse me; but they don’t care
a straw what happens to me. I’ve been about
too long—people are getting tired of me;
they are beginning to say I ought to marry.”
There was a moment’s pause,
during which Selden meditated one or two replies calculated
to add a momentary zest to the situation; but he rejected
them in favour of the simple question: “Well,
why don’t you?”
She coloured and laughed. “Ah,
I see you are a friend after all, and that is
one of the disagreeable things I was asking for.”
“It wasn’t meant to be
disagreeable,” he returned amicably. “Isn’t
marriage your vocation? Isn’t it what you’re
all brought up for?”
She sighed. “I suppose so. What else
is there?”
“Exactly. And so why not take the plunge
and have it over?”
She shrugged her shoulders. “You
speak as if I ought to marry the first man who came
along.”
“I didn’t mean to imply
that you are as hard put to it as that. But there
must be some one with the requisite qualifications.”
She shook her head wearily. “I
threw away one or two good chances when I first came
out—I suppose every girl does; and you know
I am horribly poor—and very expensive.
I must have a great deal of money.”
Selden had turned to reach for a cigarette-box
on the mantelpiece.
“What’s become of Dillworth?” he
asked.
“Oh, his mother was frightened—she
was afraid I should have all the family jewels reset.
And she wanted me to promise that I wouldn’t
do over the drawing-room.”
“The very thing you are marrying for!”
“Exactly. So she packed him off to India.”
“Hard luck—but you can do better
than Dillworth.”
He offered the box, and she took out
three or four cigarettes, putting one between her
lips and slipping the others into a little gold case
attached to her long pearl chain.
“Have I time? Just a whiff,
then.” She leaned forward, holding the
tip of her cigarette to his. As she did so, he
noted, with a purely impersonal enjoyment, how evenly
the black lashes were set in her smooth white lids,
and how the purplish shade beneath them melted into
the pure pallour of the cheek.
She began to saunter about the room,
examining the bookshelves between the puffs of her
cigarette-smoke. Some of the volumes had the
ripe tints of good tooling and old morocco, and her
eyes lingered on them caressingly, not with the appreciation
of the expert, but with the pleasure in agreeable
tones and textures that was one of her inmost susceptibilities.
Suddenly her expression changed from desultory enjoyment
to active conjecture, and she turned to Selden with
a question.
“You collect, don’t you—you
know about first editions and things?”
“As much as a man may who has
no money to spend. Now and then I pick up something
in the rubbish heap; and I go and look on at the big
sales.”
She had again addressed herself to
the shelves, but her eyes now swept them inattentively,
and he saw that she was preoccupied with a new idea.
“And Americana—do you collect Americana?”
Selden stared and laughed.
“No, that’s rather out
of my line. I’m not really a collector,
you see; I simply like to have good editions of the
books I am fond of.”
She made a slight grimace. “And
Americana are horribly dull, I suppose?”
“I should fancy so—except
to the historian. But your real collector values
a thing for its rarity. I don’t suppose
the buyers of Americana sit up reading them all night—old
Jefferson Gryce certainly didn’t.”
She was listening with keen attention.
“And yet they fetch fabulous prices, don’t
they? It seems so odd to want to pay a lot for
an ugly badly-printed book that one is never going
to read! And I suppose most of the owners of
Americana are not historians either?”
“No; very few of the historians
can afford to buy them. They have to use those
in the public libraries or in private collections.
It seems to be the mere rarity that attracts the average
collector.”
He had seated himself on an arm of
the chair near which she was standing, and she continued
to question him, asking which were the rarest volumes,
whether the Jefferson Gryce collection was really
considered the finest in the world, and what was the
largest price ever fetched by a single volume.
It was so pleasant to sit there looking
up at her, as she lifted now one book and then another
from the shelves, fluttering the pages between her
fingers, while her drooping profile was outlined against
the warm background of old bindings, that he talked
on without pausing to wonder at her sudden interest
in so unsuggestive a subject. But he could never
be long with her without trying to find a reason for
what she was doing, and as she replaced his first
edition of La Bruyere and turned away from the bookcases,
he began to ask himself what she had been driving
at. Her next question was not of a nature to enlighten
him. She paused before him with a smile which
seemed at once designed to admit him to her familiarity,
and to remind him of the restrictions it imposed.
“Don’t you ever mind,”
she asked suddenly, “not being rich enough to
buy all the books you want?”
He followed her glance about the room,
with its worn furniture and shabby walls.
“Don’t I just? Do
you take me for a saint on a pillar?”
“And having to work—do you mind that?”
“Oh, the work itself is not so bad—I’m
rather fond of the law.”
“No; but the being tied down:
the routine—don’t you ever want to
get away, to see new places and people?”
“Horribly—especially
when I see all my friends rushing to the steamer.”
She drew a sympathetic breath.
“But do you mind enough—to marry
to get out of it?”
Selden broke into a laugh. “God
forbid!” he declared.
She rose with a sigh, tossing her
cigarette into the grate.
“Ah, there’s the difference—a
girl must, a man may if he chooses.” She
surveyed him critically. “Your coat’s
a little shabby—but who cares? It
doesn’t keep people from asking you to dine.
If I were shabby no one would have me: a woman
is asked out as much for her clothes as for herself.
The clothes are the background, the frame, if you
like: they don’t make success, but they
are a part of it. Who wants a dingy woman?
We are expected to be pretty and well-dressed till
we drop—and if we can’t keep it up
alone, we have to go into partnership.”
Selden glanced at her with amusement:
it was impossible, even with her lovely eyes imploring
him, to take a sentimental view of her case.
“Ah, well, there must be plenty
of capital on the look-out for such an investment.
Perhaps you’ll meet your fate tonight at the
Trenors’.”
She returned his look interrogatively.
“I thought you might be going
there—oh, not in that capacity! But
there are to be a lot of your set—Gwen Van
Osburgh, the Wetheralls, Lady Cressida Raith—and
the George Dorsets.”
She paused a moment before the last
name, and shot a query through her lashes; but he
remained imperturbable.
“Mrs. Trenor asked me; but I
can’t get away till the end of the week; and
those big parties bore me.”
“Ah, so they do me,” she exclaimed.
“Then why go?”
“It’s part of the business—you
forget! And besides, if I didn’t, I should
be playing bezique with my aunt at Richfield Springs.”
“That’s almost as bad
as marrying Dillworth,” he agreed, and they
both laughed for pure pleasure in their sudden intimacy.
She glanced at the clock.
“Dear me! I must be off. It’s
after five.”
She paused before the mantelpiece,
studying herself in the mirror while she adjusted
her veil. The attitude revealed the long slope
of her slender sides, which gave a kind of wild-wood
grace to her outline—as though she were
a captured dryad subdued to the conventions of the
drawing-room; and Selden reflected that it was the
same streak of sylvan freedom in her nature that lent
such savour to her artificiality.
He followed her across the room to
the entrance-hall; but on the threshold she held out
her hand with a gesture of leave-taking.
“It’s been delightful;
and now you will have to return my visit.”
“But don’t you want me to see you to the
station?”
“No; good bye here, please.”
She let her hand lie in his a moment, smiling up at
him adorably.
“Good bye, then—and
good luck at Bellomont!” he said, opening the
door for her.
On the landing she paused to look
about her. There were a thousand chances to one
against her meeting anybody, but one could never tell,
and she always paid for her rare indiscretions by
a violent reaction of prudence. There was no one
in sight, however, but a char-woman who was scrubbing
the stairs. Her own stout person and its surrounding
implements took up so much room that Lily, to pass
her, had to gather up her skirts and brush against
the wall. As she did so, the woman paused in her
work and looked up curiously, resting her clenched
red fists on the wet cloth she had just drawn from
her pail. She had a broad sallow face, slightly
pitted with small-pox, and thin straw-coloured hair
through which her scalp shone unpleasantly.
“I beg your pardon,” said
Lily, intending by her politeness to convey a criticism
of the other’s manner.
The woman, without answering, pushed
her pail aside, and continued to stare as Miss Bart
swept by with a murmur of silken linings. Lily
felt herself flushing under the look. What did
the creature suppose? Could one never do the
simplest, the most harmless thing, without subjecting
one’s self to some odious conjecture? Half
way down the next flight, she smiled to think that
a char-woman’s stare should so perturb her.
The poor thing was probably dazzled by such an unwonted
apparition. But were such apparitions unwonted
on Selden’s stairs? Miss Bart was not familiar
with the moral code of bachelors’ flat-houses,
and her colour rose again as it occurred to her that
the woman’s persistent gaze implied a groping
among past associations. But she put aside the
thought with a smile at her own fears, and hastened
downward, wondering if she should find a cab short
of Fifth Avenue.
Under the Georgian porch she paused
again, scanning the street for a hansom. None
was in sight, but as she reached the sidewalk she
ran against a small glossy-looking man with a gardenia
in his coat, who raised his hat with a surprised exclamation.
“Miss Bart? Well—of
all people! This is luck,” he declared;
and she caught a twinkle of amused curiosity between
his screwed-up lids.
“Oh, Mr. Rosedale—how
are you?” she said, perceiving that the irrepressible
annoyance on her face was reflected in the sudden
intimacy of his smile.
Mr. Rosedale stood scanning her with
interest and approval. He was a plump rosy man
of the blond Jewish type, with smart London clothes
fitting him like upholstery, and small sidelong eyes
which gave him the air of appraising people as if they
were bric-a-brac. He glanced up interrogatively
at the porch of the Benedick.
“Been up to town for a little
shopping, I suppose?” he said, in a tone which
had the familiarity of a touch.
Miss Bart shrank from it slightly,
and then flung herself into precipitate explanations.
“Yes—I came up to
see my dress-maker. I am just on my way to catch
the train to the Trenors’.”
“Ah—your dress-maker;
just so,” he said blandly. “I didn’t
know there were any dress-makers in the Benedick.”
“The Benedick?” She looked
gently puzzled. “Is that the name of this
building?”
“Yes, that’s the name:
I believe it’s an old word for bachelor, isn’t
it? I happen to own the building—that’s
the way I know.” His smile deepened as
he added with increasing assurance: “But
you must let me take you to the station. The Trenors
are at Bellomont, of course? You’ve barely
time to catch the five-forty. The dress-maker
kept you waiting, I suppose.”
Lily stiffened under the pleasantry.
“Oh, thanks,” she stammered;
and at that moment her eye caught a hansom drifting
down Madison Avenue, and she hailed it with a desperate
gesture.
“You’re very kind; but
I couldn’t think of troubling you,” she
said, extending her hand to Mr. Rosedale; and heedless
of his protestations, she sprang into the rescuing
vehicle, and called out a breathless order to the
driver.