It seemed to Lily, as Mrs. Peniston’s
door closed on her, that she was taking a final leave
of her old life. The future stretched before
her dull and bare as the deserted length of Fifth
Avenue, and opportunities showed as meagrely as the
few cabs trailing in quest of fares that did not come.
The completeness of the analogy was, however, disturbed
as she reached the sidewalk by the rapid approach
of a hansom which pulled up at sight of her.
From beneath its luggage-laden top,
she caught the wave of a signalling hand; and the
next moment Mrs. Fisher, springing to the street,
had folded her in a demonstrative embrace.
“My dear, you don’t mean
to say you’re still in town? When I saw
you the other day at Sherry’s I didn’t
have time to ask—–” She broke
off, and added with a burst of frankness: “The
truth is I was horrid, Lily, and I’ve wanted
to tell you so ever since.”
“Oh—–”
Miss Bart protested, drawing back from her penitent
clasp; but Mrs. Fisher went on with her usual directness:
“Look here, Lily, don’t let’s beat
about the bush: half the trouble in life is caused
by pretending there isn’t any. That’s
not my way, and I can only say I’m thoroughly
ashamed of myself for following the other women’s
lead. But we’ll talk of that by and bye—tell
me now where you’re staying and what your plans
are. I don’t suppose you’re keeping
house in there with Grace Stepney, eh?—and
it struck me you might be rather at loose ends.”
In Lily’s present mood there
was no resisting the honest friendliness of this appeal,
and she said with a smile: “I am at loose
ends for the moment, but Gerty Farish is still in town,
and she’s good enough to let me be with her
whenever she can spare the time.”
Mrs. Fisher made a slight grimace.
“H’m—that’s a temperate
joy. Oh, I know—Gerty’s a trump,
and worth all the rest of us put together; but A La
LONGUE you’re used to a little higher seasoning,
aren’t you, dear? And besides, I suppose
she’ll be off herself before long—the
first of August, you say? Well, look here, you
can’t spend your summer in town; we’ll
talk of that later too. But meanwhile, what do
you say to putting a few things in a trunk and coming
down with me to the Sam Gormers’ tonight?”
And as Lily stared at the breathless
suddenness of the suggestion, she continued with her
easy laugh: “You don’t know them
and they don’t know you; but that don’t
make a rap of difference. They’ve taken
the Van Alstyne place at Roslyn, and I’ve got
CARTE BLANCHE to bring my friends down there—the
more the merrier. They do things awfully well,
and there’s to be rather a jolly party there
this week—–” she broke off,
checked by an undefinable change in Miss Bart’s
expression. “Oh, I don’t mean your
particular set, you know: rather a different crowd,
but very good fun. The fact is, the Gormers have
struck out on a line of their own: what they
want is to have a good time, and to have it in their
own way. They gave the other thing a few months’
trial, under my distinguished auspices, and they were
really doing extremely well—getting on
a good deal faster than the Brys, just because they
didn’t care as much—but suddenly they
decided that the whole business bored them, and that
what they wanted was a crowd they could really feel
at home with. Rather original of them, don’t
you think so? Mattie Gormer has got aspirations
still; women always have; but she’s awfully
easy-going, and Sam won’t be bothered, and they
both like to be the most important people in sight,
so they’ve started a sort of continuous performance
of their own, a kind of social Coney Island, where
everybody is welcome who can make noise enough and
doesn’t put on airs. I think it’s
awfully good fun myself—some of the artistic
set, you know, any pretty actress that’s going,
and so on. This week, for instance, they have
Audrey Anstell, who made such a hit last spring in
‘The Winning of Winny’; and Paul Morpeth—he’s
painting Mattie Gormer—and the Dick Bellingers,
and Kate Corby—well, every one you can think
of who’s jolly and makes a row. Now don’t
stand there with your nose in the air, my dear—it
will be a good deal better than a broiling Sunday in
town, and you’ll find clever people as well as
noisy ones—Morpeth, who admires Mattie
enormously, always brings one or two of his set.”
Mrs. Fisher drew Lily toward the hansom
with friendly authority. “Jump in now,
there’s a dear, and we’ll drive round to
your hotel and have your things packed, and then we’ll
have tea, and the two maids can meet us at the train.”
It was a good deal better than a broiling
Sunday in town—of that no doubt remained
to Lily as, reclining in the shade of a leafy verandah,
she looked seaward across a stretch of greensward
picturesquely dotted with groups of ladies in lace
raiment and men in tennis flannels. The huge
Van Alstyne house and its rambling dependencies were
packed to their fullest capacity with the Gormers’
week-end guests, who now, in the radiance of the Sunday
forenoon, were dispersing themselves over the grounds
in quest of the various distractions the place afforded:
distractions ranging from tennis-courts to shooting-galleries,
from bridge and whiskey within doors to motors and
steam-launches without. Lily had the odd sense
of having been caught up into the crowd as carelessly
as a passenger is gathered in by an express train.
The blonde and genial Mrs. Gormer might, indeed, have
figured the conductor, calmly assigning seats to the
rush of travellers, while Carry Fisher represented
the porter pushing their bags into place, giving them
their numbers for the dining-car, and warning them
when their station was at hand. The train, meanwhile,
had scarcely slackened speed—life whizzed
on with a deafening’ rattle and roar, in which
one traveller at least found a welcome refuge from
the sound of her own thoughts. The Gormer MILIEU
represented a social out-skirt which Lily had always
fastidiously avoided; but it struck her, now that she
was in it, as only a flamboyant copy of her own world,
a caricature approximating the real thing as the “society
play” approaches the manners of the drawing-room.
The people about her were doing the same things as
the Trenors, the Van Osburghs and the Dorsets:
the difference lay in a hundred shades of aspect and
manner, from the pattern of the men’s waistcoats
to the inflexion of the women’s voices.
Everything was pitched in a higher key, and there was
more of each thing: more noise, more colour, more
champagne, more familiarity—but also greater
good-nature, less rivalry, and a fresher capacity
for enjoyment.
Miss Bart’s arrival had been
welcomed with an uncritical friendliness that first
irritated her pride and then brought her to a sharp
sense of her own situation—of the place
in life which, for the moment, she must accept and
make the best of. These people knew her story—of
that her first long talk with Carry Fisher had left
no doubt: she was publicly branded as the heroine
of a “queer” episode—but instead
of shrinking from her as her own friends had done,
they received her without question into the easy promiscuity
of their lives. They swallowed her past as easily
as they did Miss Anstell’s, and with no apparent
sense of any difference in the size of the mouthful:
all they asked was that she should—in her
own way, for they recognized a diversity of gifts—contribute
as much to the general amusement as that graceful
actress, whose talents, when off the stage, were of
the most varied order. Lily felt at once that
any tendency to be “stuck-up,” to mark
a sense of differences and distinctions, would be
fatal to her continuance in the Gormer set. To
be taken in on such terms—and into such
a world!—was hard enough to the lingering
pride in her; but she realized, with a pang of self-contempt,
that to be excluded from it would, after all, be harder
still. For, almost at once, she had felt the insidious
charm of slipping back into a life where every material
difficulty was smoothed away. The sudden escape
from a stifling hotel in a dusty deserted city to
the space and luxury of a great country-house fanned
by sea breezes, had produced a state of moral lassitude
agreeable enough after the nervous tension and physical
discomfort of the past weeks. For the moment she
must yield to the refreshment her senses craved—after
that she would reconsider her situation, and take
counsel with her dignity. Her enjoyment of her
surroundings was, indeed, tinged by the unpleasant
consideration that she was accepting the hospitality
and courting the approval of people she had disdained
under other conditions. But she was growing less
sensitive on such points: a hard glaze of indifference
was fast forming over her delicacies and susceptibilities,
and each concession to expediency hardened the surface
a little more.
On the Monday, when the party disbanded
with uproarious adieux, the return to town threw into
stronger relief the charms of the life she was leaving.
The other guests were dispersing to take up the same
existence in a different setting: some at Newport,
some at Bar Harbour, some in the elaborate rusticity
of an Adirondack camp. Even Gerty Farish, who
welcomed Lily’s return with tender solicitude,
would soon be preparing to join the aunt with whom
she spent her summers on Lake George: only Lily
herself remained without plan or purpose, stranded
in a backwater of the great current of pleasure.
But Carry Fisher, who had insisted on transporting
her to her own house, where she herself was to perch
for a day or two on the way to the Brys’ camp,
came to the rescue with a new suggestion.
“Look here, Lily—I’ll
tell you what it is: I want you to take my place
with Mattie Gormer this summer. They’re
taking a party out to Alaska next month in their private
car, and Mattie, who is the laziest woman alive, wants
me to go with them, and relieve her of the bother
of arranging things; but the Brys want me too—oh,
yes, we’ve made it up: didn’t I tell
you?—and, to put it frankly, though I like
the Gormers best, there’s more profit for me
in the Brys. The fact is, they want to try Newport
this summer, and if I can make it a success for them
they—well, they’ll make it a success
for me.” Mrs. Fisher clasped her hands
enthusiastically. “Do you know, Lily, the
more I think of my idea the better I like it—quite
as much for you as for myself. The Gormers have
both taken a tremendous fancy to you, and the trip
to Alaska is—well—the very thing
I should want for you just at present.”
Miss Bart lifted her eyes with a keen
glance. “To take me out of my friends’
way, you mean?” she said quietly; and Mrs. Fisher
responded with a deprecating kiss: “To keep
you out of their sight till they realize how much
they miss you.”
Miss Bart went with the Gormers to
Alaska; and the expedition, if it did not produce
the effect anticipated by her friend, had at least
the negative advantage of removing her from the fiery
centre of criticism and discussion. Gerty Farish
had opposed the plan with all the energy of her somewhat
inarticulate nature. She had even offered to
give up her visit to Lake George, and remain in town
with Miss Bart, if the latter would renounce her journey;
but Lily could disguise her real distaste for this
plan under a sufficiently valid reason.
“You dear innocent, don’t
you see,” she protested, “that Carry is
quite right, and that I must take up my usual life,
and go about among people as much as possible?
If my old friends choose to believe lies about me
I shall have to make new ones, that’s all; and
you know beggars mustn’t be choosers. Not
that I don’t like Mattie Gormer—I
do like her: she’s kind and honest
and unaffected; and don’t you suppose I feel
grateful to her for making me welcome at a time when,
as you’ve yourself seen, my own family have
unanimously washed their hands of me?”
Gerty shook her head, mutely unconvinced.
She felt not only that Lily was cheapening herself
by making use of an intimacy she would never have
cultivated from choice, but that, in drifting back
now to her former manner of life, she was forfeiting
her last chance of ever escaping from it. Gerty
had but an obscure conception of what Lily’s
actual experience had been: but its consequences
had established a lasting hold on her pity since the
memorable night when she had offered up her own secret
hope to her friend’s extremity. To characters
like Gerty’s such a sacrifice constitutes a
moral claim on the part of the person in whose behalf
it has been made. Having once helped Lily, she
must continue to help her; and helping her, must believe
in her, because faith is the main-spring of such natures.
But even if Miss Bart, after her renewed taste of
the amenities of life, could have returned to the
barrenness of a New York August, mitigated only by
poor Gerty’s presence, her worldly wisdom would
have counselled her against such an act of abnegation.
She knew that Carry Fisher was right: that an
opportune absence might be the first step toward rehabilitation,
and that, at any rate, to linger on in town out of
season was a fatal admission of defeat. From
the Gormers’ tumultuous progress across their
native continent, she returned with an altered view
of her situation. The renewed habit of luxury—the
daily waking to an assured absence of care and presence
of material ease—gradually blunted her
appreciation of these values, and left her more conscious
of the void they could not fill. Mattie Gormer’s
undiscriminating good-nature, and the slap-dash sociability
of her friends, who treated Lily precisely as they
treated each other—all these characteristic
notes of difference began to wear upon her endurance;
and the more she saw to criticize in her companions,
the less justification she found for making use of
them. The longing to get back to her former surroundings
hardened to a fixed idea; but with the strengthening
of her purpose came the inevitable perception that,
to attain it, she must exact fresh concessions from
her pride. These, for the moment, took the unpleasant
form of continuing to cling to her hosts after their
return from Alaska. Little as she was in the key
of their MILIEU, her immense social facility, her
long habit of adapting herself to others without suffering
her own outline to be blurred, the skilled manipulation
of all the polished implements of her craft, had won
for her an important place in the Gormer group.
If their resonant hilarity could never be hers, she
contributed a note of easy elegance more valuable
to Mattie Gormer than the louder passages of the band.
Sam Gormer and his special cronies stood indeed a
little in awe of her; but Mattie’s following,
headed by Paul Morpeth, made her feel that they prized
her for the very qualities they most conspicuously
lacked. If Morpeth, whose social indolence was
as great as his artistic activity, had abandoned himself
to the easy current of the Gormer existence, where
the minor exactions of politeness were unknown or ignored,
and a man could either break his engagements, or keep
them in a painting-jacket and slippers, he still preserved
his sense of differences, and his appreciation of
graces he had no time to cultivate. During the
preparations for the Brys’ TABLEAUX he had been
immensely struck by Lily’s plastic possibilities—“not
the face: too self-controlled for expression;
but the rest of her—gad, what a model she’d
make!”—and though his abhorrence of
the world in which he had seen her was too great for
him to think of seeking her there, he was fully alive
to the privilege of having her to look at and listen
to while he lounged in Mattie Gormer’s dishevelled
drawing-room.
Lily had thus formed, in the tumult
of her surroundings, a little nucleus of friendly
relations which mitigated the crudeness of her course
in lingering with the Gormers after their return.
Nor was she without pale glimpses of her own world,
especially since the breaking-up of the Newport season
had set the social current once more toward Long Island.
Kate Corby, whose tastes made her as promiscuous as
Carry Fisher was rendered by her necessities, occasionally
descended on the Gormers, where, after a first stare
of surprise, she took Lily’s presence almost
too much as a matter of course. Mrs. Fisher,
too, appearing frequently in the neighbourhood, drove
over to impart her experiences and give Lily what
she called the latest report from the weather-bureau;
and the latter, who had never directly invited her
confidence, could yet talk with her more freely than
with Gerty Farish, in whose presence it was impossible
even to admit the existence of much that Mrs. Fisher
conveniently took for granted.
Mrs. Fisher, moreover, had no embarrassing
curiosity. She did not wish to probe the inwardness
of Lily’s situation, but simply to view it from
the outside, and draw her conclusions accordingly;
and these conclusions, at the end of a confidential
talk, she summed up to her friend in the succinct
remark: “You must marry as soon as you
can.”
Lily uttered a faint laugh—for
once Mrs. Fisher lacked originality. “Do
you mean, like Gerty Farish, to recommend the unfailing
panacea of ’a good man’s love’?”
“No—I don’t
think either of my candidates would answer to that
description,” said Mrs. Fisher after a pause
of reflection.
“Either? Are there actually two?”
“Well, perhaps I ought to say one and a half—for
the moment.”
Miss Bart received this with increasing
amusement. “Other things being equal, I
think I should prefer a half-husband: who is he?”
“Don’t fly out at me till you hear my
reasons—George Dorset.”
“Oh—–”
Lily murmured reproachfully; but Mrs. Fisher pressed
on unrebuffed. “Well, why not? They
had a few weeks’ honeymoon when they first got
back from Europe, but now things are going badly with
them again. Bertha has been behaving more than
ever like a madwoman, and George’s powers of
credulity are very nearly exhausted. They’re
at their place here, you know, and I spent last Sunday
with them. It was a ghastly party—no
one else but poor Neddy Silverton, who looks like
a galley-slave (they used to talk of my making that
poor boy unhappy!)—and after luncheon George
carried me off on a long walk, and told me the end
would have to come soon.”
Miss Bart made an incredulous gesture.
“As far as that goes, the end will never come—Bertha
will always know how to get him back when she wants
him.”
Mrs. Fisher continued to observe her
tentatively. “Not if he has any one else
to turn to! Yes—that’s just what
it comes to: the poor creature can’t stand
alone. And I remember him such a good fellow,
full of life and enthusiasm.” She paused,
and went on, dropping her glance from Lily’s:
“He wouldn’t stay with her ten minutes
if he knew—–”
“Knew—–?” Miss Bart repeated.
“What you must, for instance—with
the opportunities you’ve had! If he had
positive proof, I mean—–”
Lily interrupted her with a deep blush
of displeasure. “Please let us drop the
subject, Carry: it’s too odious to me.”
And to divert her companion’s attention she
added, with an attempt at lightness: “And
your second candidate? We must not forget him.”
Mrs. Fisher echoed her laugh.
“I wonder if you’ll cry out just as loud
if I say—Sim Rosedale?”
Miss Bart did not cry out: she
sat silent, gazing thoughtfully at her friend.
The suggestion, in truth, gave expression to a possibility
which, in the last weeks, had more than once recurred
to her; but after a moment she said carelessly:
“Mr. Rosedale wants a wife who can establish
him in the bosom of the Van Osburghs and Trenors.”
Mrs. Fisher caught her up eagerly.
“And so you could—with his money!
Don’t you see how beautifully it would work out
for you both?”
“I don’t see any way of
making him see it,” Lily returned, with a laugh
intended to dismiss the subject.
But in reality it lingered with her
long after Mrs. Fisher had taken leave. She had
seen very little of Rosedale since her annexation
by the Gormers, for he was still steadily bent on
penetrating to the inner Paradise from which she was
now excluded; but once or twice, when nothing better
offered, he had turned up for a Sunday, and on these
occasions he had left her in no doubt as to his view
of her situation. That he still admired her was,
more than ever, offensively evident; for in the Gormer
circle, where he expanded as in his native element,
there were no puzzling conventions to check the full
expression of his approval. But it was in the
quality of his admiration that she read his shrewd
estimate of her case. He enjoyed letting the
Gormers see that he had known “Miss Lily”—she
was “Miss Lily” to him now—before
they had had the faintest social existence: enjoyed
more especially impressing Paul Morpeth with the distance
to which their intimacy dated back. But he let
it be felt that that intimacy was a mere ripple on
the surface of a rushing social current, the kind
of relaxation which a man of large interests and manifold
preoccupations permits himself in his hours of ease.
The necessity of accepting this view
of their past relation, and of meeting it in the key
of pleasantry prevalent among her new friends, was
deeply humiliating to Lily. But she dared less
than ever to quarrel with Rosedale. She suspected
that her rejection rankled among the most unforgettable
of his rebuffs, and the fact that he knew something
of her wretched transaction with Trenor, and was sure
to put the basest construction on it, seemed to place
her hopelessly in his power. Yet at Carry Fisher’s
suggestion a new hope had stirred in her. Much
as she disliked Rosedale, she no longer absolutely
despised him. For he was gradually attaining
his object in life, and that, to Lily, was always
less despicable than to miss it. With the slow
unalterable persistency which she had always felt
in him, he was making his way through the dense mass
of social antagonisms. Already his wealth, and
the masterly use he had made of it, were giving him
an enviable prominence in the world of affairs, and
placing Wall Street under obligations which only Fifth
Avenue could repay. In response to these claims,
his name began to figure on municipal committees and
charitable boards; he appeared at banquets to distinguished
strangers, and his candidacy at one of the fashionable
clubs was discussed with diminishing opposition.
He had figured once or twice at the Trenor dinners,
and had learned to speak with just the right note
of disdain of the big Van Osburgh crushes; and all
he now needed was a wife whose affiliations would
shorten the last tedious steps of his ascent.
It was with that object that, a year earlier, he had
fixed his affections on Miss Bart; but in the interval
he had mounted nearer to the goal, while she had lost
the power to abbreviate the remaining steps of the
way. All this she saw with the clearness of vision
that came to her in moments of despondency. It
was success that dazzled her—she could
distinguish facts plainly enough in the twilight of
failure. And the twilight, as she now sought
to pierce it, was gradually lighted by a faint spark
of reassurance. Under the utilitarian motive
of Rosedale’s wooing she had felt, clearly enough,
the heat of personal inclination. She would not
have detested him so heartily had she not known that
he dared to admire her. What, then, if the passion
persisted, though the other motive had ceased to sustain
it? She had never even tried to please him—he
had been drawn to her in spite of her manifest disdain.
What if she now chose to exert the power which, even
in its passive state, he had felt so strongly?
What if she made him marry her for love, now that
he had no other reason for marrying her?