“Look at those spangles, Miss
Bart—every one of ’em sewed on crooked.”
The tall forewoman, a pinched perpendicular
figure, dropped the condemned structure of wire and
net on the table at Lily’s side, and passed
on to the next figure in the line.
There were twenty of them in the work-room,
their fagged profiles, under exaggerated hair, bowed
in the harsh north light above the utensils of their
art; for it was something more than an industry, surely,
this creation of ever-varied settings for the face
of fortunate womanhood. Their own faces were sallow
with the unwholesomeness of hot air and sedentary
toil, rather than with any actual signs of want:
they were employed in a fashionable millinery establishment,
and were fairly well clothed and well paid; but the
youngest among them was as dull and colourless as
the middle-aged. In the whole work-room there
was only one skin beneath which the blood still visibly
played; and that now burned with vexation as Miss
Bart, under the lash of the forewoman’s comment,
began to strip the hat-frame of its over-lapping spangles.
To Gerty Farish’s hopeful spirit
a solution appeared to have been reached when she
remembered how beautifully Lily could trim hats.
Instances of young lady-milliners establishing themselves
under fashionable patronage, and imparting to their
“creations” that indefinable touch which
the professional hand can never give, had flattered
Gerty’s visions of the future, and convinced
even Lily that her separation from Mrs. Norma Hatch
need not reduce her to dependence on her friends.
The parting had occurred a few weeks
after Selden’s visit, and would have taken place
sooner had it not been for the resistance set up in
Lily by his ill-starred offer of advice. The sense
of being involved in a transaction she would not have
cared to examine too closely had soon afterward defined
itself in the light of a hint from Mr. Stancy that,
if she “saw them through,” she would have
no reason to be sorry. The implication that such
loyalty would meet with a direct reward had hastened
her flight, and flung her back, ashamed and penitent,
on the broad bosom of Gerty’s sympathy.
She did not, however, propose to lie there prone,
and Gerty’s inspiration about the hats at once
revived her hopes of profitable activity. Here
was, after all, something that her charming listless
hands could really do; she had no doubt of their capacity
for knotting a ribbon or placing a flower to advantage.
And of course only these finishing touches would be
expected of her: subordinate fingers, blunt, grey,
needle-pricked fingers, would prepare the shapes and
stitch the linings, while she presided over the charming
little front shop—a shop all white panels,
mirrors, and moss-green hangings—where her
finished creations, hats, wreaths, aigrettes and the
rest, perched on their stands like birds just poising
for flight.
But at the very outset of Gerty’s
campaign this vision of the green-and-white shop had
been dispelled. Other young ladies of fashion
had been thus “set-up,” selling their hats
by the mere attraction of a name and the reputed knack
of tying a bow; but these privileged beings could
command a faith in their powers materially expressed
by the readiness to pay their shop-rent and advance
a handsome sum for current expenses. Where was
Lily to find such support? And even could it
have been found, how were the ladies on whose approval
she depended to be induced to give her their patronage?
Gerty learned that whatever sympathy her friend’s
case might have excited a few months since had been
imperilled, if not lost, by her association with Mrs.
Hatch. Once again, Lily had withdrawn from an
ambiguous situation in time to save her self-respect,
but too late for public vindication. Freddy Van
Osburgh was not to marry Mrs. Hatch; he had been rescued
at the eleventh hour—some said by the efforts
of Gus Trenor and Rosedale—and despatched
to Europe with old Ned Van Alstyne; but the risk he
had run would always be ascribed to Miss Bart’s
connivance, and would somehow serve as a summing-up
and corroboration of the vague general distrust of
her. It was a relief to those who had hung back
from her to find themselves thus justified, and they
were inclined to insist a little on her connection
with the Hatch case in order to show that they had
been right.
Gerty’s quest, at any rate,
brought up against a solid wall of resistance; and
even when Carry Fisher, momentarily penitent for her
share in the Hatch affair, joined her efforts to Miss
Farish’s, they met with no better success.
Gerty had tried to veil her failure in tender ambiguities;
but Carry, always the soul of candour, put the case
squarely to her friend.
“I went straight to Judy Trenor;
she has fewer prejudices than the others, and besides
she’s always hated Bertha Dorset. But what
have you done to her, Lily? At the very first
word about giving you a start she flamed out about
some money you’d got from Gus; I never knew
her so hot before. You know she’ll let him
do anything but spend money on his friends: the
only reason she’s decent to me now is that she
knows I’m not hard up.—He speculated
for you, you say? Well, what’s the harm?
He had no business to lose. He didn’t
lose? Then what on earth—but I never
could understand you, Lily!”
The end of it was that, after anxious
enquiry and much deliberation, Mrs. Fisher and Gerty,
for once oddly united in their effort to help their
friend, decided on placing her in the work-room of
Mme. Regina’s renowned millinery establishment.
Even this arrangement was not effected without considerable
negotiation, for Mme. Regina had a strong prejudice
against untrained assistance, and was induced to yield
only by the fact that she owed the patronage of Mrs.
Bry and Mrs. Gormer to Carry Fisher’s influence.
She had been willing from the first to employ Lily
in the show-room: as a displayer of hats, a fashionable
beauty might be a valuable asset. But to this
suggestion Miss Bart opposed a negative which Gerty
emphatically supported, while Mrs. Fisher, inwardly
unconvinced, but resigned to this latest proof of
Lily’s unreason, agreed that perhaps in the end
it would be more useful that she should learn the
trade. To Regina’s work-room Lily was therefore
committed by her friends, and there Mrs. Fisher left
her with a sigh of relief, while Gerty’s watchfulness
continued to hover over her at a distance.
Lily had taken up her work early in
January: it was now two months later, and she
was still being rebuked for her inability to sew spangles
on a hat-frame. As she returned to her work she
heard a titter pass down the tables. She knew
she was an object of criticism and amusement to the
other work-women. They were, of course, aware
of her history—the exact situation of every
girl in the room was known and freely discussed by
all the others—but the knowledge did not
produce in them any awkward sense of class distinction:
it merely explained why her untutored fingers were
still blundering over the rudiments of the trade.
Lily had no desire that they should recognize any social
difference in her; but she had hoped to be received
as their equal, and perhaps before long to show herself
their superior by a special deftness of touch, and
it was humiliating to find that, after two months
of drudgery, she still betrayed her lack of early
training. Remote was the day when she might aspire
to exercise the talents she felt confident of possessing;
only experienced workers were entrusted with the delicate
art of shaping and trimming the hat, and the forewoman
still held her inexorably to the routine of preparatory
work.
She began to rip the spangles from
the frame, listening absently to the buzz of talk
which rose and fell with the coming and going of Miss
Haines’s active figure. The air was closer
than usual, because Miss Haines, who had a cold, had
not allowed a window to be opened even during the
noon recess; and Lily’s head was so heavy with
the weight of a sleepless night that the chatter of
her companions had the incoherence of a dream.
“I told her he’d
never look at her again; and he didn’t.
I wouldn’t have, either—I think she
acted real mean to him. He took her to the Arion
Ball, and had a hack for her both ways…. She’s
taken ten bottles, and her headaches don’t seem
no better—but she’s written a testimonial
to say the first bottle cured her, and she got five
dollars and her picture in the paper…. Mrs.
Trenor’s hat? The one with the green Paradise?
Here, Miss Haines—it’ll be ready right
off…. That was one of the Trenor girls here
yesterday with Mrs. George Dorset. How’d
I know? Why, Madam sent for me to alter the flower
in that Virot hat—the blue tulle:
she’s tall and slight, with her hair fuzzed
out—a good deal like Mamie Leach, on’y
thinner….”
On and on it flowed, a current of
meaningless sound, on which, startlingly enough, a
familiar name now and then floated to the surface.
It was the strangest part of Lily’s strange experience,
the hearing of these names, the seeing the fragmentary
and distorted image of the world she had lived in reflected
in the mirror of the working-girls’ minds.
She had never before suspected the mixture of insatiable
curiosity and contemptuous freedom with which she
and her kind were discussed in this underworld of
toilers who lived on their vanity and self-indulgence.
Every girl in Mme. Regina’s work-room knew
to whom the headgear in her hands was destined, and
had her opinion of its future wearer, and a definite
knowledge of the latter’s place in the social
system. That Lily was a star fallen from that
sky did not, after the first stir of curiosity had
subsided, materially add to their interest in her.
She had fallen, she had “gone under,”
and true to the ideal of their race, they were awed
only by success—by the gross tangible image
of material achievement. The consciousness of
her different point of view merely kept them at a
little distance from her, as though she were a foreigner
with whom it was an effort to talk.
“Miss Bart, if you can’t
sew those spangles on more regular I guess you’d
better give the hat to Miss Kilroy.”
Lily looked down ruefully at her handiwork.
The forewoman was right: the sewing on of the
spangles was inexcusably bad. What made her so
much more clumsy than usual? Was it a growing
distaste for her task, or actual physical disability?
She felt tired and confused: it was an effort
to put her thoughts together. She rose and handed
the hat to Miss Kilroy, who took it with a suppressed
smile.
“I’m sorry; I’m
afraid I am not well,” she said to the forewoman.
Miss Haines offered no comment.
From the first she had augured ill of Mme. Regina’s
consenting to include a fashionable apprentice among
her workers. In that temple of art no raw beginners
were wanted, and Miss Haines would have been more than
human had she not taken a certain pleasure in seeing
her forebodings confirmed.
“You’d better go back
to binding edges,” she said drily. Lily
slipped out last among the band of liberated work-women.
She did not care to be mingled in their noisy dispersal:
once in the street, she always felt an irresistible
return to her old standpoint, an instinctive shrinking
from all that was unpolished and promiscuous.
In the days—how distant they now seemed!—when
she had visited the Girls’ Club with Gerty Farish,
she had felt an enlightened interest in the working-classes;
but that was because she looked down on them from
above, from the happy altitude of her grace and her
beneficence. Now that she was on a level with
them, the point of view was less interesting.
She felt a touch on her arm, and met
the penitent eye of Miss Kilroy. “Miss
Bart, I guess you can sew those spangles on as well
as I can when you’re feeling right. Miss
Haines didn’t act fair to you.”
Lily’s colour rose at the unexpected
advance: it was a long time since real kindness
had looked at her from any eyes but Gerty’s.
“Oh, thank you: I’m
not particularly well, but Miss Haines was right.
I am clumsy.”
“Well, it’s mean work
for anybody with a headache.” Miss Kilroy
paused irresolutely. “You ought to go right
home and lay down. Ever try orangeine?”
“Thank you.” Lily
held out her hand. “It’s very kind
of you—I mean to go home.”
She looked gratefully at Miss Kilroy,
but neither knew what more to say. Lily was aware
that the other was on the point of offering to go
home with her, but she wanted to be alone and silent—even
kindness, the sort of kindness that Miss Kilroy could
give, would have jarred on her just then.
“Thank you,” she repeated as she turned
away.
She struck westward through the dreary
March twilight, toward the street where her boarding-house
stood. She had resolutely refused Gerty’s
offer of hospitality. Something of her mother’s
fierce shrinking from observation and sympathy was
beginning to develop in her, and the promiscuity of
small quarters and close intimacy seemed, on the whole,
less endurable than the solitude of a hall bedroom
in a house where she could come and go unremarked among
other workers. For a while she had been sustained
by this desire for privacy and independence; but now,
perhaps from increasing physical weariness, the lassitude
brought about by hours of unwonted confinement, she
was beginning to feel acutely the ugliness and discomfort
of her surroundings. The day’s task done,
she dreaded to return to her narrow room, with its
blotched wallpaper and shabby paint; and she hated
every step of the walk thither, through the degradation
of a New York street in the last stages of decline
from fashion to commerce.
But what she dreaded most of all was
having to pass the chemist’s at the corner of
Sixth Avenue. She had meant to take another street:
she had usually done so of late. But today her
steps were irresistibly drawn toward the flaring plate-glass
corner; she tried to take the lower crossing, but
a laden dray crowded her back, and she struck across
the street obliquely, reaching the sidewalk just opposite
the chemist’s door.
Over the counter she caught the eye
of the clerk who had waited on her before, and slipped
the prescription into his hand. There could be
no question about the prescription: it was a copy
of one of Mrs. Hatch’s, obligingly furnished
by that lady’s chemist. Lily was confident
that the clerk would fill it without hesitation; yet
the nervous dread of a refusal, or even of an expression
of doubt, communicated itself to her restless hands
as she affected to examine the bottles of perfume
stacked on the glass case before her.
The clerk had read the prescription
without comment; but in the act of handing out the
bottle he paused.
“You don’t want to increase
the dose, you know,” he remarked. Lily’s
heart contracted.
What did he mean by looking at her in that way?
“Of course not,” she murmured, holding
out her hand.
“That’s all right:
it’s a queer-acting drug. A drop or two
more, and off you go—the doctors don’t
know why.”
The dread lest he should question
her, or keep the bottle back, choked the murmur of
acquiescence in her throat; and when at length she
emerged safely from the shop she was almost dizzy with
the intensity of her relief. The mere touch of
the packet thrilled her tired nerves with the delicious
promise of a night of sleep, and in the reaction from
her momentary fear she felt as if the first fumes
of drowsiness were already stealing over her.
In her confusion she stumbled against
a man who was hurrying down the last steps of the
elevated station. He drew back, and she heard
her name uttered with surprise. It was Rosedale,
fur-coated, glossy and prosperous—but why
did she seem to see him so far off, and as if through
a mist of splintered crystals? Before she could
account for the phenomenon she found herself shaking
hands with him. They had parted with scorn on
her side and anger upon his; but all trace of these
emotions seemed to vanish as their hands met, and
she was only aware of a confused wish that she might
continue to hold fast to him.
“Why, what’s the matter,
Miss Lily? You’re not well!” he exclaimed;
and she forced her lips into a pallid smile of reassurance.
“I’m a little tired—it’s
nothing. Stay with me a moment, please,”
she faltered. That she should be asking this service
of Rosedale!
He glanced at the dirty and unpropitious
corner on which they stood, with the shriek of the
“elevated” and the tumult of trams and
waggons contending hideously in their ears.
“We can’t stay here; but
let me take you somewhere for a cup of tea. The
LONGWORTH is only a few yards off, and there’ll
be no one there at this hour.”
A cup of tea in quiet, somewhere out
of the noise and ugliness, seemed for the moment the
one solace she could bear. A few steps brought
them to the ladies’ door of the hotel he had
named, and a moment later he was seated opposite to
her, and the waiter had placed the tea-tray between
them.
“Not a drop of brandy or whiskey
first? You look regularly done up, Miss Lily.
Well, take your tea strong, then; and, waiter, get
a cushion for the lady’s back.”
Lily smiled faintly at the injunction
to take her tea strong. It was the temptation
she was always struggling to resist. Her craving
for the keen stimulant was forever conflicting with
that other craving for sleep—the midnight
craving which only the little phial in her hand could
still. But today, at any rate, the tea could
hardly be too strong: she counted on it to pour
warmth and resolution into her empty veins.
As she leaned back before him, her
lids drooping in utter lassitude, though the first
warm draught already tinged her face with returning
life, Rosedale was seized afresh by the poignant surprise
of her beauty. The dark pencilling of fatigue
under her eyes, the morbid blue-veined pallour of
the temples, brought out the brightness of her hair
and lips, as though all her ebbing vitality were centred
there. Against the dull chocolate-coloured background
of the restaurant, the purity of her head stood out
as it had never done in the most brightly-lit ball-room.
He looked at her with a startled uncomfortable feeling,
as though her beauty were a forgotten enemy that had
lain in ambush and now sprang out on him unawares.
To clear the air he tried to take
an easy tone with her. “Why, Miss Lily,
I haven’t seen you for an age. I didn’t
know what had become of you.”
As he spoke, he was checked by an
embarrassing sense of the complications to which this
might lead. Though he had not seen her he had
heard of her; he knew of her connection with Mrs.
Hatch, and of the talk resulting from it. Mrs.
Hatch’s MILIEU was one which he had once assiduously
frequented, and now as devoutly shunned.
Lily, to whom the tea had restored
her usual clearness of mind, saw what was in his thoughts
and said with a slight smile: “You would
not be likely to know about me. I have joined
the working classes.”
He stared in genuine wonder.
“You don’t mean—? Why, what
on earth are you doing?”
“Learning to be a milliner—at
least trying to learn,” she hastily qualified
the statement.
Rosedale suppressed a low whistle
of surprise. “Come off—you ain’t
serious, are you?”
“Perfectly serious. I’m
obliged to work for my living.”
“But I understood—I
thought you were with Norma Hatch.”
“You heard I had gone to her as her secretary?”
“Something of the kind, I believe.”
He leaned forward to refill her cup.
Lily guessed the possibilities of
embarrassment which the topic held for him, and raising
her eyes to his, she said suddenly: “I
left her two months ago.”
Rosedale continued to fumble awkwardly
with the tea-pot, and she felt sure that he had heard
what had been said of her. But what was there
that Rosedale did not hear?
“Wasn’t it a soft berth?”
he enquired, with an attempt at lightness.
“Too soft—one might
have sunk in too deep.” Lily rested one
arm on the edge of the table, and sat looking at him
more intently than she had ever looked before.
An uncontrollable impulse was urging her to put her
case to this man, from whose curiosity she had always
so fiercely defended herself.
“You know Mrs. Hatch, I think?
Well, perhaps you can understand that she might make
things too easy for one.”
Rosedale looked faintly puzzled, and
she remembered that allusiveness was lost on him.
“It was no place for you, anyhow,”
he agreed, so suffused and immersed in the light of
her full gaze that he found himself being drawn into
strange depths of intimacy. He who had had to
subsist on mere fugitive glances, looks winged in flight
and swiftly lost under covert, now found her eyes
settling on him with a brooding intensity that fairly
dazzled him.
“I left,” Lily continued,
“lest people should say I was helping Mrs. Hatch
to marry Freddy Van Osburgh—who is not in
the least too good for her—and as they
still continue to say it, I see that I might as well
have stayed where I was.”
“Oh, Freddy—–”
Rosedale brushed aside the topic with an air of its
unimportance which gave a sense of the immense perspective
he had acquired. “Freddy don’t count—but
I knew you weren’t mixed up in that.
It ain’t your style.”
Lily coloured slightly: she could
not conceal from herself that the words gave her pleasure.
She would have liked to sit there, drinking more tea,
and continuing to talk of herself to Rosedale.
But the old habit of observing the conventions reminded
her that it was time to bring their colloquy to an
end, and she made a faint motion to push back her
chair.
Rosedale stopped her with a protesting
gesture. “Wait a minute—don’t
go yet; sit quiet and rest a little longer. You
look thoroughly played out. And you haven’t
told me—–” He broke off, conscious
of going farther than he had meant. She saw the
struggle and understood it; understood also the nature
of the spell to which he yielded as, with his eyes
on her face, he began again abruptly: “What
on earth did you mean by saying just now that you
were learning to be a milliner?”
“Just what I said. I am an apprentice at
Regina’s.”
“Good Lord—you?
But what for? I knew your aunt had turned you
down: Mrs. Fisher told me about it. But I
understood you got a legacy from her—–”
“I got ten thousand dollars;
but the legacy is not to be paid till next summer.”
“Well, but—look here:
you could borrow on it any time you wanted.”
She shook her head gravely. “No;
for I owe it already.”
“Owe it? The whole ten thousand?”
“Every penny.” She
paused, and then continued abruptly, with her eyes
on his face: “I think Gus Trenor spoke to
you once about having made some money for me in stocks.”
She waited, and Rosedale, congested
with embarrassment, muttered that he remembered something
of the kind.
“He made about nine thousand
dollars,” Lily pursued, in the same tone of
eager communicativeness. “At the time, I
understood that he was speculating with my own money:
it was incredibly stupid of me, but I knew nothing
of business. Afterward I found out that he had
not used my money—that what he said
he had made for me he had really given me. It
was meant in kindness, of course; but it was not the
sort of obligation one could remain under. Unfortunately
I had spent the money before I discovered my mistake;
and so my legacy will have to go to pay it back.
That is the reason why I am trying to learn a trade.”
She made the statement clearly, deliberately,
with pauses between the sentences, so that each should
have time to sink deeply into her hearer’s mind.
She had a passionate desire that some one should know
the truth about this transaction, and also that the
rumour of her intention to repay the money should reach
Judy Trenor’s ears. And it had suddenly
occurred to her that Rosedale, who had surprised Trenor’s
confidence, was the fitting person to receive and
transmit her version of the facts. She had even
felt a momentary exhilaration at the thought of thus
relieving herself of her detested secret; but the
sensation gradually faded in the telling, and as she
ended her pallour was suffused with a deep blush of
misery.
Rosedale continued to stare at her
in wonder; but the wonder took the turn she had least
expected.
“But see here—if
that’s the case, it cleans you out altogether?”
He put it to her as if she had not
grasped the consequences of her act; as if her incorrigible
ignorance of business were about to precipitate her
into a fresh act of folly.
“Altogether—yes,” she calmly
agreed.
He sat silent, his thick hands clasped
on the table, his little puzzled eyes exploring the
recesses of the deserted restaurant.
“See here—that’s fine,”
he exclaimed abruptly.
Lily rose from her seat with a deprecating
laugh. “Oh, no—it’s merely
a bore,” she asserted, gathering together the
ends of her feather scarf.
Rosedale remained seated, too intent
on his thoughts to notice her movement. “Miss
Lily, if you want any backing—I like pluck—–”
broke from him disconnectedly.
“Thank you.” She
held out her hand. “Your tea has given me
a tremendous backing. I feel equal to anything
now.”
Her gesture seemed to show a definite
intention of dismissal, but her companion had tossed
a bill to the waiter, and was slipping his short arms
into his expensive overcoat.
“Wait a minute—you’ve
got to let me walk home with you,” he said.
Lily uttered no protest, and when
he had paused to make sure of his change they emerged
from the hotel and crossed Sixth Avenue again.
As she led the way westward past a long line of areas
which, through the distortion of their paintless rails,
revealed with increasing candour the DISJECTA MEMBRA
of bygone dinners, Lily felt that Rosedale was taking
contemptuous note of the neighbourhood; and before
the doorstep at which she finally paused he looked
up with an air of incredulous disgust.
“This isn’t the place?
Some one told me you were living with Miss Farish.”
“No: I am boarding here.
I have lived too long on my friends.”
He continued to scan the blistered
brown stone front, the windows draped with discoloured
lace, and the Pompeian decoration of the muddy vestibule;
then he looked back at her face and said with a visible
effort: “You’ll let me come and see
you some day?”
She smiled, recognizing the heroism
of the offer to the point of being frankly touched
by it. “Thank you—I shall be
very glad,” she made answer, in the first sincere
words she had ever spoken to him.
That evening in her own room Miss
Bart—who had fled early from the heavy
fumes of the basement dinner-table—sat musing
upon the impulse which had led her to unbosom herself
to Rosedale. Beneath it she discovered an increasing
sense of loneliness—a dread of returning
to the solitude of her room, while she could be anywhere
else, or in any company but her own. Circumstances,
of late, had combined to cut her off more and more
from her few remaining friends. On Carry Fisher’s
part the withdrawal was perhaps not quite involuntary.
Having made her final effort on Lily’s behalf,
and landed her safely in Mme. Regina’s work-room,
Mrs. Fisher seemed disposed to rest from her labours;
and Lily, understanding the reason, could not condemn
her. Carry had in fact come dangerously near
to being involved in the episode of Mrs. Norma Hatch,
and it had taken some verbal ingenuity to extricate
herself. She frankly owned to having brought Lily
and Mrs. Hatch together, but then she did not know
Mrs. Hatch—she had expressly warned Lily
that she did not know Mrs. Hatch—and besides,
she was not Lily’s keeper, and really the girl
was old enough to take care of herself. Carry
did not put her own case so brutally, but she allowed
it to be thus put for her by her latest bosom friend,
Mrs. Jack Stepney: Mrs. Stepney, trembling over
the narrowness of her only brother’s escape,
but eager to vindicate Mrs. Fisher, at whose house
she could count on the “jolly parties”
which had become a necessity to her since marriage
had emancipated her from the Van Osburgh point of
view.
Lily understood the situation and
could make allowances for it. Carry had been
a good friend to her in difficult days, and perhaps
only a friendship like Gerty’s could be proof
against such an increasing strain. Gerty’s
friendship did indeed hold fast; yet Lily was beginning
to avoid her also. For she could not go to Gerty’s
without risk of meeting Selden; and to meet him now
would be pure pain. It was pain enough even to
think of him, whether she considered him in the distinctness
of her waking thoughts, or felt the obsession of his
presence through the blur of her tormented nights.
That was one of the reasons why she had turned again
to Mrs. Hatch’s prescription. In the uneasy
snatches of her natural dreams he came to her sometimes
in the old guise of fellowship and tenderness; and
she would rise from the sweet delusion mocked and
emptied of her courage. But in the sleep which
the phial procured she sank far below such half-waking
visitations, sank into depths of dreamless annihilation
from which she woke each morning with an obliterated
past.
Gradually, to be sure, the stress
of the old thoughts would return; but at least they
did not importune her waking hour. The drug gave
her a momentary illusion of complete renewal, from
which she drew strength to take up her daily work.
The strength was more and more needed as the perplexities
of her future increased. She knew that to Gerty
and Mrs. Fisher she was only passing through a temporary
period of probation, since they believed that the
apprenticeship she was serving at Mme. Regina’s
would enable her, when Mrs. Peniston’s legacy
was paid, to realize the vision of the green-and-white
shop with the fuller competence acquired by her preliminary
training. But to Lily herself, aware that the
legacy could not be put to such a use, the preliminary
training seemed a wasted effort. She understood
clearly enough that, even if she could ever learn to
compete with hands formed from childhood for their
special work, the small pay she received would not
be a sufficient addition to her income to compensate
her for such drudgery. And the realization of
this fact brought her recurringly face to face with
the temptation to use the legacy in establishing her
business. Once installed, and in command of her
own work-women, she believed she had sufficient tact
and ability to attract a fashionable CLIENTELE; and
if the business succeeded she could gradually lay
aside money enough to discharge her debt to Trenor.
But the task might take years to accomplish, even
if she continued to stint herself to the utmost; and
meanwhile her pride would be crushed under the weight
of an intolerable obligation.
These were her superficial considerations;
but under them lurked the secret dread that the obligation
might not always remain intolerable. She knew
she could not count on her continuity of purpose,
and what really frightened her was the thought that
she might gradually accommodate herself to remaining
indefinitely in Trenor’s debt, as she had accommodated
herself to the part allotted her on the Sabrina, and
as she had so nearly drifted into acquiescing with
Stancy’s scheme for the advancement of Mrs.
Hatch. Her danger lay, as she knew, in her old
incurable dread of discomfort and poverty; in the
fear of that mounting tide of dinginess against which
her mother had so passionately warned her. And
now a new vista of peril opened before her. She
understood that Rosedale was ready to lend her money;
and the longing to take advantage of his offer began
to haunt her insidiously. It was of course impossible
to accept a loan from Rosedale; but proximate possibilities
hovered temptingly before her. She was quite
sure that he would come and see her again, and almost
sure that, if he did, she could bring him to the point
of offering to marry her on the terms she had previously
rejected. Would she still reject them if they
were offered? More and more, with every fresh
mischance befalling her, did the pursuing furies seem
to take the shape of Bertha Dorset; and close at hand,
safely locked among her papers, lay the means of ending
their pursuit. The temptation, which her scorn
of Rosedale had once enabled her to reject, now insistently
returned upon her; and how much strength was left
her to oppose it?
What little there was must at any
rate be husbanded to the utmost; she could not trust
herself again to the perils of a sleepless night.
Through the long hours of silence the dark spirit
of fatigue and loneliness crouched upon her breast,
leaving her so drained of bodily strength that her
morning thoughts swam in a haze of weakness.
The only hope of renewal lay in the little bottle
at her bed-side; and how much longer that hope would
last she dared not conjecture.