Almost as soon as the train left Calais
her head had dropped back into the corner, and she
had fallen asleep.
Sitting opposite, in the compartment
from which he had contrived to have other travellers
excluded, Darrow looked at her curiously. He
had never seen a face that changed so quickly.
A moment since it had danced like a field of daisies
in a summer breeze; now, under the pallid oscillating
light of the lamp overhead, it wore the hard stamp
of experience, as of a soft thing chilled into shape
before its curves had rounded: and it moved him
to see that care already stole upon her when she slept.
The story she had imparted to him
in the wheezing shaking cabin, and at the Calais buffet—where
he had insisted on offering her the dinner she had
missed at Mrs. Murrett’s— had given
a distincter outline to her figure. From the
moment of entering the New York boarding-school to
which a preoccupied guardian had hastily consigned
her after the death of her parents, she had found
herself alone in a busy and indifferent world.
Her youthful history might, in fact, have been summed
up in the statement that everybody had been too busy
to look after her. Her guardian, a drudge in
a big banking house, was absorbed by “the office”;
the guardian’s wife, by her health and her religion;
and an elder sister, Laura, married, unmarried, remarried,
and pursuing, through all these alternating phases,
some vaguely “artistic” ideal on which
the guardian and his wife looked askance, had (as
Darrow conjectured) taken their disapproval as a pretext
for not troubling herself about poor Sophy, to whom—perhaps
for this reason—she had remained the incarnation
of remote romantic possibilities.
In the course of time a sudden “stroke”
of the guardian’s had thrown his personal affairs
into a state of confusion from which—after
his widely lamented death—it became evident
that it would not be possible to extricate his ward’s
inheritance. No one deplored this more sincerely
than his widow, who saw in it one more proof of her
husband’s life having been sacrificed to the
innumerable duties imposed on him, and who could hardly—but
for the counsels of religion—have brought
herself to pardon the young girl for her indirect
share in hastening his end. Sophy did not resent
this point of view. She was really much sorrier
for her guardian’s death than for the loss of
her insignificant fortune. The latter had represented
only the means of holding her in bondage, and its
disappearance was the occasion of her immediate plunge
into the wide bright sea of life surrounding the island-of
her captivity. She had first landed—thanks
to the intervention of the ladies who had directed
her education—in a Fifth Avenue school-room
where, for a few months, she acted as a buffer between
three autocratic infants and their bodyguard of nurses
and teachers. The too-pressing attentions of
their father’s valet had caused her to fly this
sheltered spot, against the express advice of her
educational superiors, who implied that, in their
own case, refinement and self-respect had always sufficed
to keep the most ungovernable passions at bay.
The experience of the guardian’s widow having
been precisely similar, and the deplorable precedent
of Laura’s career being present to all their
minds, none of these ladies felt any obligation to
intervene farther in Sophy’s affairs; and she
was accordingly left to her own resources.
A schoolmate from the Rocky Mountains,
who was taking her father and mother to Europe, had
suggested Sophy’s accompanying them, and “going
round” with her while her progenitors, in the
care of the courier, nursed their ailments at a fashionable
bath. Darrow gathered that the “going
round” with Mamie Hoke was a varied and diverting
process; but this relatively brilliant phase of Sophy’s
career was cut short by the elopement of the inconsiderate
Mamie with a “matinee idol” who had followed
her from New York, and by the precipitate return of
her parents to negotiate for the repurchase of their
child.
It was then—after an interval
of repose with compassionate but impecunious American
friends in Paris—that Miss Viner had been
drawn into the turbid current of Mrs. Murrett’s
career. The impecunious compatriots had found
Mrs. Murrett for her, and it was partly on their account
(because they were such dears, and so unconscious,
poor confiding things, of what they were letting her
in for) that Sophy had stuck it out so long in the
dreadful house in Chelsea. The Farlows, she
explained to Darrow, were the best friends she had
ever had (and the only ones who had ever “been
decent” about Laura, whom they had seen once,
and intensely admired); but even after twenty years
of Paris they were the most incorrigibly inexperienced
angels, and quite persuaded that Mrs. Murrett was
a woman of great intellectual eminence, and the house
at Chelsea “the last of the salons” —Darrow
knew what she meant? And she hadn’t liked
to undeceive them, knowing that to do so would be
virtually to throw herself back on their hands, and
feeling, moreover, after her previous experiences,
the urgent need of gaining, at any cost, a name for
stability; besides which—she threw it off
with a slight laugh—no other chance, in
all these years, had happened to come to her.
She had brushed in this outline of
her career with light rapid strokes, and in a tone
of fatalism oddly untinged by bitterness. Darrow
perceived that she classified people according to
their greater or less “luck” in life, but
she appeared to harbour no resentment against the
undefined power which dispensed the gift in such unequal
measure. Things came one’s way or they
didn’t; and meanwhile one could only look on,
and make the most of small compensations, such as
watching “the show” at Mrs. Murrett’s,
and talking over the Lady Ulricas and other footlight
figures. And at any moment, of course, a turn
of the kaleidoscope might suddenly toss a bright spangle
into the grey pattern of one’s days.
This light-hearted philosophy was
not without charm to a young man accustomed to more
traditional views. George Darrow had had a fairly
varied experience of feminine types, but the women
he had frequented had either been pronouncedly “ladies”
or they had not. Grateful to both for ministering
to the more complex masculine nature, and disposed
to assume that they had been evolved, if not designed,
to that end, he had instinctively kept the two groups
apart in his mind, avoiding that intermediate society
which attempts to conciliate both theories of life.
“Bohemianism” seemed to him a cheaper
convention than the other two, and he liked, above
all, people who went as far as they could in their
own line—liked his “ladies”
and their rivals to be equally unashamed of showing
for exactly what they were. He had not indeed—the
fact of Lady Ulrica was there to remind him—
been without his experience of a third type; but that
experience had left him with a contemptuous distaste
for the woman who uses the privileges of one class
to shelter the customs of another.
As to young girls, he had never thought
much about them since his early love for the girl
who had become Mrs. Leath. That episode seemed,
as he looked back on it, to bear no more relation
to reality than a pale decorative design to the confused
richness of a summer landscape. He no longer
understood the violent impulses and dreamy pauses of
his own young heart, or the inscrutable abandonments
and reluctances of hers. He had known a moment
of anguish at losing her—the mad plunge
of youthful instincts against the barrier of fate;
but the first wave of stronger sensation had swept
away all but the outline of their story, and the memory
of Anna Summers had made the image of the young girl
sacred, but the class uninteresting.
Such generalisations belonged, however,
to an earlier stage of his experience. The more
he saw of life the more incalculable he found it;
and he had learned to yield to his impressions without
feeling the youthful need of relating them to others.
It was the girl in the opposite seat who had roused
in him the dormant habit of comparison. She was
distinguished from the daughters of wealth by her avowed
acquaintance with the real business of living, a familiarity
as different as possible from their theoretical proficiency;
yet it seemed to Darrow that her experience had made
her free without hardness and self-assured without
assertiveness.
The rush into Amiens, and the flash
of the station lights into their compartment, broke
Miss Viner’s sleep, and without changing her
position she lifted her lids and looked at Darrow.
There was neither surprise nor bewilderment in the
look. She seemed instantly conscious, not so
much of where she was, as of the fact that she was
with him; and that fact seemed enough to reassure
her. She did not even turn her head to look
out; her eyes continued to rest on him with a vague
smile which appeared to light her face from within,
while her lips kept their sleepy droop.
Shouts and the hurried tread of travellers
came to them through the confusing cross-lights of
the platform. A head appeared at the window,
and Darrow threw himself forward to defend their solitude;
but the intruder was only a train hand going his round
of inspection. He passed on, and the lights and
cries of the station dropped away, merged in a wider
haze and a hollower resonance, as the train gathered
itself up with a long shake and rolled out again into
the darkness.
Miss Viner’s head sank back
against the cushion, pushing out a dusky wave of hair
above her forehead. The swaying of the train
loosened a lock over her ear, and she shook it back
with a movement like a boy’s, while her gaze
still rested on her companion.
“You’re not too tired?”
She shook her head with a smile.
“We shall be in before midnight.
We’re very nearly on time.” He
verified the statement by holding up his watch to
the lamp.
She nodded dreamily. “It’s
all right. I telegraphed Mrs. Farlow that they
mustn’t think of coming to the station; but
they’ll have told the concierge to look out for
me.”
“You’ll let me drive you there?”
She nodded again, and her eyes closed.
It was very pleasant to Darrow that she made no effort
to talk or to dissemble her sleepiness. He sat
watching her till the upper lashes met and mingled
with the lower, and their blent shadow lay on her
cheek; then he stood up and drew the curtain over the
lamp, drowning the compartment in a bluish twilight.
As he sank back into his seat he thought
how differently Anna Summers—or even Anna
Leath—would have behaved. She would
not have talked too much; she would not have been
either restless or embarrassed; but her adaptability,
her appropriateness, would not have been nature but
“tact.” The oddness of the situation
would have made sleep impossible, or, if weariness
had overcome her for a moment, she would have waked
with a start, wondering where she was, and how she
had come there, and if her hair were tidy; and nothing
short of hairpins and a glass would have restored her
self-possession…
The reflection set him wondering whether
the “sheltered” girl’s bringing-up
might not unfit her for all subsequent contact with
life. How much nearer to it had Mrs. Leath been
brought by marriage and motherhood, and the passage
of fourteen years? What were all her reticences
and evasions but the result of the deadening process
of forming a “lady”? The freshness
he had marvelled at was like the unnatural whiteness
of flowers forced in the dark.
As he looked back at their few days
together he saw that their intercourse had been marked,
on her part, by the same hesitations and reserves
which had chilled their earlier intimacy. Once
more they had had their hour together and she had
wasted it. As in her girlhood, her eyes had made
promises which her lips were afraid to keep.
She was still afraid of life, of its ruthlessness,
its danger and mystery. She was still the petted
little girl who cannot be left alone in the dark…His
memory flew back to their youthful story, and long-forgotten
details took shape before him. How frail and
faint the picture was! They seemed, he and she,
like the ghostly lovers of the Grecian Urn, forever
pursuing without ever clasping each other. To
this day he did not quite know what had parted them:
the break had been as fortuitous as the fluttering
apart of two seed-vessels on a wave of summer air…
The very slightness, vagueness, of
the memory gave it an added poignancy. He felt
the mystic pang of the parent for a child which has
just breathed and died. Why had it happened thus,
when the least shifting of influences might have made
it all so different? If she had been given to
him then he would have put warmth in her veins and
light in her eyes: would have made her a woman
through and through. Musing thus, he had the
sense of waste that is the bitterest harvest of experience.
A love like his might have given her the divine gift
of self-renewal; and now he saw her fated to wane
into old age repeating the same gestures, echoing the
words she had always heard, and perhaps never guessing
that, just outside her glazed and curtained consciousness,
life rolled away, a vast blackness starred with lights,
like the night landscape beyond the windows of the
train.
The engine lowered its speed for the
passage through a sleeping station. In the light
of the platform lamp Darrow looked across at his companion.
Her head had dropped toward one shoulder, and her
lips were just far enough apart for the reflection
of the upper one to deepen the colour of the other.
The jolting of the train had again shaken loose the
lock above her ear. It danced on her cheek like
the flit of a brown wing over flowers, and Darrow
felt an intense desire to lean forward and put it
back behind her ear.