The first thousand dollar cheque which
Lily received with a blotted scrawl from Gus Trenor
strengthened her self-confidence in the exact degree
to which it effaced her debts.
The transaction had justified itself
by its results: she saw now how absurd it would
have been to let any primitive scruple deprive her
of this easy means of appeasing her creditors.
Lily felt really virtuous as she dispensed the sum
in sops to her tradesmen, and the fact that a fresh
order accompanied each payment did not lessen her
sense of disinterestedness. How many women, in
her place, would have given the orders without making
the payment!
She had found it reassuringly easy
to keep Trenor in a good humour. To listen to
his stories, to receive his confidences and laugh
at his jokes, seemed for the moment all that was required
of her, and the complacency with which her hostess
regarded these attentions freed them of the least
hint of ambiguity. Mrs. Trenor evidently assumed
that Lily’s growing intimacy with her husband
was simply an indirect way of returning her own kindness.
“I’m so glad you and Gus
have become such good friends,” she said approvingly.
“It’s too delightful of you to be so nice
to him, and put up with all his tiresome stories.
I know what they are, because I had to listen to them
when we were engaged—I’m sure he
is telling the same ones still. And now I shan’t
always have to be asking Carry Fisher here to keep
him in a good-humour. She’s a perfect vulture,
you know; and she hasn’t the least moral sense.
She is always getting Gus to speculate for her, and
I’m sure she never pays when she loses.”
Miss Bart could shudder at this state
of things without the embarrassment of a personal
application. Her own position was surely quite
different. There could be no question of her not
paying when she lost, since Trenor had assured her
that she was certain not to lose. In sending
her the cheque he had explained that he had made five
thousand for her out of Rosedale’s “tip,”
and had put four thousand back in the same venture,
as there was the promise of another “big rise”;
she understood therefore that he was now speculating
with her own money, and that she consequently owed
him no more than the gratitude which such a trifling
service demanded. She vaguely supposed that, to
raise the first sum, he had borrowed on her securities;
but this was a point over which her curiosity did
not linger. It was concentrated, for the moment,
on the probable date of the next “big rise.”
The news of this event was received
by her some weeks later, on the occasion of Jack Stepney’s
marriage to Miss Van Osburgh. As a cousin of
the bridegroom, Miss Bart had been asked to act as
bridesmaid; but she had declined on the plea that,
since she was much taller than the other attendant
virgins, her presence might mar the symmetry of the
group. The truth was, she had attended too many
brides to the altar: when next seen there she
meant to be the chief figure in the ceremony.
She knew the pleasantries made at the expense of young
girls who have been too long before the public, and
she was resolved to avoid such assumptions of youthfulness
as might lead people to think her older than she really
was.
The Van Osburgh marriage was celebrated
in the village church near the paternal estate on
the Hudson. It was the “simple country
wedding” to which guests are convoyed in special
trains, and from which the hordes of the uninvited
have to be fended off by the intervention of the police.
While these sylvan rites were taking place, in a church
packed with fashion and festooned with orchids, the
representatives of the press were threading their
way, note-book in hand, through the labyrinth of wedding
presents, and the agent of a cinematograph syndicate
was setting up his apparatus at the church door.
It was the kind of scene in which Lily had often pictured
herself as taking the principal part, and on this
occasion the fact that she was once more merely a
casual spectator, instead of the mystically veiled
figure occupying the centre of attention, strengthened
her resolve to assume the latter part before the year
was over. The fact that her immediate anxieties
were relieved did not blind her to a possibility of
their recurrence; it merely gave her enough buoyancy
to rise once more above her doubts and feel a renewed
faith in her beauty, her power, and her general fitness
to attract a brilliant destiny. It could not
be that one conscious of such aptitudes for mastery
and enjoyment was doomed to a perpetuity of failure;
and her mistakes looked easily reparable in the light
of her restored self-confidence.
A special appositeness was given to
these reflections by the discovery, in a neighbouring
pew, of the serious profile and neatly-trimmed beard
of Mr. Percy Gryce. There was something almost
bridal in his own aspect: his large white gardenia
had a symbolic air that struck Lily as a good omen.
After all, seen in an assemblage of his kind he was
not ridiculous-looking: a friendly critic might
have called his heaviness weighty, and he was at his
best in the attitude of vacant passivity which brings
out the oddities of the restless. She fancied
he was the kind of man whose sentimental associations
would be stirred by the conventional imagery of a
wedding, and she pictured herself, in the seclusion
of the Van Osburgh conservatories, playing skillfully
upon sensibilities thus prepared for her touch.
In fact, when she looked at the other women about
her, and recalled the image she had brought away from
her own glass, it did not seem as though any special
skill would be needed to repair her blunder and bring
him once more to her feet.
The sight of Selden’s dark head,
in a pew almost facing her, disturbed for a moment
the balance of her complacency. The rise of her
blood as their eyes met was succeeded by a contrary
motion, a wave of resistance and withdrawal. She
did not wish to see him again, not because she feared
his influence, but because his presence always had
the effect of cheapening her aspirations, of throwing
her whole world out of focus. Besides, he was
a living reminder of the worst mistake in her career,
and the fact that he had been its cause did not soften
her feelings toward him. She could still imagine
an ideal state of existence in which, all else being
superadded, intercourse with Selden might be the last
touch of luxury; but in the world as it was, such a
privilege was likely to cost more than it was worth.
“Lily, dear, I never saw you
look so lovely! You look as if something delightful
had just happened to you!”
The young lady who thus formulated
her admiration of her brilliant friend did not, in
her own person, suggest such happy possibilities.
Miss Gertrude Farish, in fact, typified the mediocre
and the ineffectual. If there were compensating
qualities in her wide frank glance and the freshness
of her smile, these were qualities which only the
sympathetic observer would perceive before noticing
that her eyes were of a workaday grey and her lips
without haunting curves. Lily’s own view
of her wavered between pity for her limitations and
impatience at her cheerful acceptance of them.
To Miss Bart, as to her mother, acquiescence in dinginess
was evidence of stupidity; and there were moments
when, in the consciousness of her own power to look
and to be so exactly what the occasion required, she
almost felt that other girls were plain and inferior
from choice. Certainly no one need have confessed
such acquiescence in her lot as was revealed in the
“useful” colour of Gerty Farish’s
gown and the subdued lines of her hat: it is
almost as stupid to let your clothes betray that you
know you are ugly as to have them proclaim that you
think you are beautiful.
Of course, being fatally poor and
dingy, it was wise of Gerty to have taken up philanthropy
and symphony concerts; but there was something irritating
in her assumption that existence yielded no higher
pleasures, and that one might get as much interest
and excitement out of life in a cramped flat as in
the splendours of the Van Osburgh establishment.
Today, however, her chirping enthusiasms did not irritate
Lily. They seemed only to throw her own exceptionalness
into becoming relief, and give a soaring vastness
to her scheme of life.
“Do let us go and take a peep
at the presents before everyone else leaves the dining-room!”
suggested Miss Farish, linking her arm in her friend’s.
It was characteristic of her to take a sentimental
and unenvious interest in all the details of a wedding:
she was the kind of person who always kept her handkerchief
out during the service, and departed clutching a box
of wedding-cake.
“Isn’t everything beautifully
done?” she pursued, as they entered the distant
drawing-room assigned to the display of Miss Van Osburgh’s
bridal spoils. “I always say no one does
things better than cousin Grace! Did you ever
taste anything more delicious than that MOUSSE of
lobster with champagne sauce? I made up my mind
weeks ago that I wouldn’t miss this wedding,
and just fancy how delightfully it all came about.
When Lawrence Selden heard I was coming, he insisted
on fetching me himself and driving me to the station,
and when we go back this evening I am to dine with
him at Sherry’s. I really feel as excited
as if I were getting married myself!”
Lily smiled: she knew that Selden
had always been kind to his dull cousin, and she had
sometimes wondered why he wasted so much time in such
an unremunerative manner; but now the thought gave
her a vague pleasure.
“Do you see him often?” she asked.
“Yes; he is very good about
dropping in on Sundays. And now and then we do
a play together; but lately I haven’t seen much
of him. He doesn’t look well, and he seems
nervous and unsettled. The dear fellow!
I do wish he would marry some nice girl. I told
him so today, but he said he didn’t care for
the really nice ones, and the other kind didn’t
care for him—but that was just his joke,
of course. He could never marry a girl who wasn’t
nice. Oh, my dear, did you ever see such pearls?”
They had paused before the table on
which the bride’s jewels were displayed, and
Lily’s heart gave an envious throb as she caught
the refraction of light from their surfaces—the
milky gleam of perfectly matched pearls, the flash
of rubies relieved against contrasting velvet, the
intense blue rays of sapphires kindled into light
by surrounding diamonds: all these precious tints
enhanced and deepened by the varied art of their setting.
The glow of the stones warmed Lily’s veins like
wine. More completely than any other expression
of wealth they symbolized the life she longed to lead,
the life of fastidious aloofness and refinement in
which every detail should have the finish of a jewel,
and the whole form a harmonious setting to her own
jewel-like rareness.
“Oh, Lily, do look at this diamond
pendant—it’s as big as a dinner-plate!
Who can have given it?” Miss Farish bent short-sightedly
over the accompanying card. “Mr. Simon
Rosedale. What, that horrid man? Oh,
yes—I remember he’s a friend of Jack’s,
and I suppose cousin Grace had to ask him here today;
but she must rather hate having to let Gwen accept
such a present from him.”
Lily smiled. She doubted Mrs.
Van Osburgh’s reluctance, but was aware of Miss
Farish’s habit of ascribing her own delicacies
of feeling to the persons least likely to be encumbered
by them.
“Well, if Gwen doesn’t
care to be seen wearing it she can always exchange
it for something else,” she remarked.
“Ah, here is something so much
prettier,” Miss Farish continued. “Do
look at this exquisite white sapphire. I’m
sure the person who chose it must have taken particular
pains. What is the name? Percy Gryce?
Ah, then I’m not surprised!” She smiled
significantly as she replaced the card. “Of
course you’ve heard that he’s perfectly
devoted to Evie Van Osburgh? Cousin Grace is
so pleased about it—it’s quite a romance!
He met her first at the George Dorsets’, only
about six weeks ago, and it’s just the nicest
possible marriage for dear Evie. Oh, I don’t
mean the money—of course she has plenty
of her own—but she’s such a quiet
stay-at-home kind of girl, and it seems he has just
the same tastes; so they are exactly suited to each
other.”
Lily stood staring vacantly at the
white sapphire on its velvet bed. Evie Van Osburgh
and Percy Gryce? The names rang derisively through
her brain. Evie Van Osburgh?
The youngest, dumpiest, dullest of the four dull and
dumpy daughters whom Mrs. Van Osburgh, with unsurpassed
astuteness, had “placed” one by one in
enviable niches of existence! Ah, lucky girls
who grow up in the shelter of a mother’s love—a
mother who knows how to contrive opportunities without
conceding favours, how to take advantage of propinquity
without allowing appetite to be dulled by habit!
The cleverest girl may miscalculate where her own
interests are concerned, may yield too much at one
moment and withdraw too far at the next: it takes
a mother’s unerring vigilance and foresight
to land her daughters safely in the arms of wealth
and suitability.
Lily’s passing light-heartedness
sank beneath a renewed sense of failure. Life
was too stupid, too blundering! Why should Percy
Gryce’s millions be joined to another great fortune,
why should this clumsy girl be put in possession of
powers she would never know how to use?
She was roused from these speculations
by a familiar touch on her arm, and turning saw Gus
Trenor beside her. She felt a thrill of vexation:
what right had he to touch her? Luckily Gerty
Farish had wandered off to the next table, and they
were alone.
Trenor, looking stouter than ever
in his tight frock-coat, and unbecomingly flushed
by the bridal libations, gazed at her with undisguised
approval.
“By Jove, Lily, you do look
a stunner!” He had slipped insensibly into the
use of her Christian name, and she had never found
the right moment to correct him. Besides, in
her set all the men and women called each other by
their Christian names; it was only on Trenor’s
lips that the familiar address had an unpleasant significance.
“Well,” he continued,
still jovially impervious to her annoyance, “have
you made up your mind which of these little trinkets
you mean to duplicate at Tiffany’s tomorrow?
I’ve got a cheque for you in my pocket that
will go a long way in that line!”
Lily gave him a startled look:
his voice was louder than usual, and the room was
beginning to fill with people. But as her glance
assured her that they were still beyond ear-shot a
sense of pleasure replaced her apprehension.
“Another dividend?” she
asked, smiling and drawing near him in the desire
not to be overheard.
“Well, not exactly: I sold
out on the rise and I’ve pulled off four thou’
for you. Not so bad for a beginner, eh? I
suppose you’ll begin to think you’re a
pretty knowing speculator. And perhaps you won’t
think poor old Gus such an awful ass as some people
do.”
“I think you the kindest of
friends; but I can’t thank you properly now.”
She let her eyes shine into his with
a look that made up for the hand-clasp he would have
claimed if they had been alone—and how
glad she was that they were not! The news filled
her with the glow produced by a sudden cessation of
physical pain. The world was not so stupid and
blundering after all: now and then a stroke of
luck came to the unluckiest. At the thought her
spirits began to rise: it was characteristic
of her that one trifling piece of good fortune should
give wings to all her hopes. Instantly came the
reflection that Percy Gryce was not irretrievably
lost; and she smiled to think of the excitement of
recapturing him from Evie Van Osburgh. What chance
could such a simpleton have against her if she chose
to exert herself? She glanced about, hoping to
catch a glimpse of Gryce; but her eyes lit instead
on the glossy countenance of Mr. Rosedale, who was
slipping through the crowd with an air half obsequious,
half obtrusive, as though, the moment his presence
was recognized, it would swell to the dimensions of
the room.
Not wishing to be the means of effecting
this enlargement, Lily quickly transferred her glance
to Trenor, to whom the expression of her gratitude
seemed not to have brought the complete gratification
she had meant it to give.
“Hang thanking me—I
don’t want to be thanked, but I should like
the chance to say two words to you now and then,”
he grumbled. “I thought you were going
to spend the whole autumn with us, and I’ve
hardly laid eyes on you for the last month. Why
can’t you come back to Bellomont this evening?
We’re all alone, and Judy is as cross as two
sticks. Do come and cheer a fellow up. If
you say yes I’ll run you over in the motor,
and you can telephone your maid to bring your traps
from town by the next train.”
Lily shook her head with a charming
semblance of regret. “I wish I could—but
it’s quite impossible. My aunt has come
back to town, and I must be with her for the next
few days.”
“Well, I’ve seen a good
deal less of you since we’ve got to be such
pals than I used to when you were Judy’s friend,”
he continued with unconscious penetration.
“When I was Judy’s friend?
Am I not her friend still? Really, you say the
most absurd things! If I were always at Bellomont
you would tire of me much sooner than Judy—but
come and see me at my aunt’s the next afternoon
you are in town; then we can have a nice quiet talk,
and you can tell me how I had better invest my fortune.”
It was true that, during the last
three or four weeks, she had absented herself from
Bellomont on the pretext of having other visits to
pay; but she now began to feel that the reckoning she
had thus contrived to evade had rolled up interest
in the interval.
The prospect of the nice quiet talk
did not appear as all-sufficing to Trenor as she had
hoped, and his brows continued to lower as he said:
“Oh, I don’t know that I can promise you
a fresh tip every day. But there’s one
thing you might do for me; and that is, just to be
a little civil to Rosedale. Judy has promised
to ask him to dine when we get to town, but I can’t
induce her to have him at Bellomont, and if you would
let me bring him up now it would make a lot of difference.
I don’t believe two women have spoken to him
this afternoon, and I can tell you he’s a chap
it pays to be decent to.”
Miss Bart made an impatient movement,
but suppressed the words which seemed about to accompany
it. After all, this was an unexpectedly easy
way of acquitting her debt; and had she not reasons
of her own for wishing to be civil to Mr. Rosedale?
“Oh, bring him by all means,”
she said smiling; “perhaps I can get a tip out
of him on my own account.”
Trenor paused abruptly, and his eyes
fixed themselves on hers with a look which made her
change colour.
“I say, you know—you’ll
please remember he’s a blooming bounder,”
he said; and with a slight laugh she turned toward
the open window near which they had been standing.
The throng in the room had increased,
and she felt a desire for space and fresh air.
Both of these she found on the terrace, where only
a few men were lingering over cigarettes and liqueur,
while scattered couples strolled across the lawn to
the autumn-tinted borders of the flower-garden.
As she emerged, a man moved toward
her from the knot of smokers, and she found herself
face to face with Selden. The stir of the pulses
which his nearness always caused was increased by a
slight sense of constraint. They had not met
since their Sunday afternoon walk at Bellomont, and
that episode was still so vivid to her that she could
hardly believe him to be less conscious of it.
But his greeting expressed no more than the satisfaction
which every pretty woman expects to see reflected in
masculine eyes; and the discovery, if distasteful
to her vanity, was reassuring to her nerves.
Between the relief of her escape from Trenor, and
the vague apprehension of her meeting with Rosedale,
it was pleasant to rest a moment on the sense of complete
understanding which Lawrence Selden’s manner
always conveyed.
“This is luck,” he said
smiling. “I was wondering if I should be
able to have a word with you before the special snatches
us away. I came with Gerty Farish, and promised
not to let her miss the train, but I am sure she is
still extracting sentimental solace from the wedding
presents. She appears to regard their number and
value as evidence of the disinterested affection of
the contracting parties.”
There was not the least trace of embarrassment
in his voice, and as he spoke, leaning slightly against
the jamb of the window, and letting his eyes rest
on her in the frank enjoyment of her grace, she felt
with a faint chill of regret that he had gone back
without an effort to the footing on which they had
stood before their last talk together. Her vanity
was stung by the sight of his unscathed smile.
She longed to be to him something more than a piece
of sentient prettiness, a passing diversion to his
eye and brain; and the longing betrayed itself in
her reply.
“Ah,” she said, “I
envy Gerty that power she has of dressing up with
romance all our ugly and prosaic arrangements!
I have never recovered my self-respect since you showed
me how poor and unimportant my ambitions were.”
The words were hardly spoken when
she realized their infelicity. It seemed to be
her fate to appear at her worst to Selden.
“I thought, on the contrary,”
he returned lightly, “that I had been the means
of proving they were more important to you than anything
else.”
It was as if the eager current of
her being had been checked by a sudden obstacle which
drove it back upon itself. She looked at him
helplessly, like a hurt or frightened child: this
real self of hers, which he had the faculty of drawing
out of the depths, was so little accustomed to go
alone!
The appeal of her helplessness touched
in him, as it always did, a latent chord of inclination.
It would have meant nothing to him to discover that
his nearness made her more brilliant, but this glimpse
of a twilight mood to which he alone had the clue seemed
once more to set him in a world apart with her.
“At least you can’t think
worse things of me than you say!” she exclaimed
with a trembling laugh; but before he could answer,
the flow of comprehension between them was abruptly
stayed by the reappearance of Gus Trenor, who advanced
with Mr. Rosedale in his wake.
“Hang it, Lily, I thought you’d
given me the slip: Rosedale and I have been hunting
all over for you!”
His voice had a note of conjugal familiarity:
Miss Bart fancied she detected in Rosedale’s
eye a twinkling perception of the fact, and the idea
turned her dislike of him to repugnance.
She returned his profound bow with
a slight nod, made more disdainful by the sense of
Selden’s surprise that she should number Rosedale
among her acquaintances. Trenor had turned away,
and his companion continued to stand before Miss Bart,
alert and expectant, his lips parted in a smile at
whatever she might be about to say, and his very back
conscious of the privilege of being seen with her.
It was the moment for tact; for the
quick bridging over of gaps; but Selden still leaned
against the window, a detached observer of the scene,
and under the spell of his observation Lily felt herself
powerless to exert her usual arts. The dread of
Selden’s suspecting that there was any need
for her to propitiate such a man as Rosedale checked
the trivial phrases of politeness. Rosedale still
stood before her in an expectant attitude, and she
continued to face him in silence, her glance just level
with his polished baldness. The look put the
finishing touch to what her silence implied.
He reddened slowly, shifting from
one foot to the other, fingered the plump black pearl
in his tie, and gave a nervous twist to his moustache;
then, running his eye over her, he drew back, and
said, with a side-glance at Selden: “Upon
my soul, I never saw a more ripping get-up. Is
that the last creation of the dress-maker you go to
see at the Benedick? If so, I wonder all the other
women don’t go to her too!”
The words were projected sharply against
Lily’s silence, and she saw in a flash that
her own act had given them their emphasis. In
ordinary talk they might have passed unheeded; but
following on her prolonged pause they acquired a special
meaning. She felt, without looking, that Selden
had immediately seized it, and would inevitably connect
the allusion with her visit to himself. The consciousness
increased her irritation against Rosedale, but also
her feeling that now, if ever, was the moment to propitiate
him, hateful as it was to do so in Selden’s presence.
“How do you know the other women
don’t go to my dress-maker?” she returned.
“You see I’m not afraid to give her address
to my friends!”
Her glance and accent so plainly included
Rosedale in this privileged circle that his small
eyes puckered with gratification, and a knowing smile
drew up his moustache.
“By Jove, you needn’t
be!” he declared. “You could give
’em the whole outfit and win at a canter!”
“Ah, that’s nice of you;
and it would be nicer still if you would carry me
off to a quiet corner, and get me a glass of lemonade
or some innocent drink before we all have to rush
for the train.”
She turned away as she spoke, letting
him strut at her side through the gathering groups
on the terrace, while every nerve in her throbbed
with the consciousness of what Selden must have thought
of the scene.
But under her angry sense of the perverseness
of things, and the light surface of her talk with
Rosedale, a third idea persisted: she did not
mean to leave without an attempt to discover the truth
about Percy Gryce. Chance, or perhaps his own
resolve, had kept them apart since his hasty withdrawal
from Bellomont; but Miss Bart was an expert in making
the most of the unexpected, and the distasteful incidents
of the last few minutes—the revelation
to Selden of precisely that part of her life which
she most wished him to ignore—increased
her longing for shelter, for escape from such humiliating
contingencies. Any definite situation would be
more tolerable than this buffeting of chances, which
kept her in an attitude of uneasy alertness toward
every possibility of life.
Indoors there was a general sense
of dispersal in the air, as of an audience gathering
itself up for departure after the principal actors
had left the stage; but among the remaining groups,
Lily could discover neither Gryce nor the youngest
Miss Van Osburgh. That both should be missing
struck her with foreboding; and she charmed Mr. Rosedale
by proposing that they should make their way to the
conservatories at the farther end of the house.
There were just enough people left in the long suite
of rooms to make their progress conspicuous, and Lily
was aware of being followed by looks of amusement
and interrogation, which glanced off as harmlessly
from her indifference as from her companion’s
self-satisfaction. She cared very little at that
moment about being seen with Rosedale: all her
thoughts were centred on the object of her search.
The latter, however, was not discoverable in the conservatories,
and Lily, oppressed by a sudden conviction of failure,
was casting about for a way to rid herself of her now
superfluous companion, when they came upon Mrs. Van
Osburgh, flushed and exhausted, but beaming with the
consciousness of duty performed.
She glanced at them a moment with
the benign but vacant eye of the tired hostess, to
whom her guests have become mere whirling spots in
a kaleidoscope of fatigue; then her attention became
suddenly fixed, and she seized on Miss Bart with a
confidential gesture. “My dear Lily, I
haven’t had time for a word with you, and now
I suppose you are just off. Have you seen Evie?
She’s been looking everywhere for you:
she wanted to tell you her little secret; but I daresay
you have guessed it already. The engagement is
not to be announced till next week—but you
are such a friend of Mr. Gryce’s that they both
wished you to be the first to know of their happiness.”