The light of the October afternoon
lay on an old high-roofed house which enclosed in
its long expanse of brick and yellowish stone the
breadth of a grassy court filled with the shadow and
sound of limes.
From the escutcheoned piers at the
entrance of the court a level drive, also shaded by
limes, extended to a white-barred gate beyond which
an equally level avenue of grass, cut through a wood,
dwindled to a blue-green blur against a sky banked
with still white slopes of cloud.
In the court, half-way between house
and drive, a lady stood. She held a parasol
above her head, and looked now at the house-front,
with its double flight of steps meeting before a glazed
door under sculptured trophies, now down the drive
toward the grassy cutting through the wood. Her
air was less of expectancy than of contemplation:
she seemed not so much to be watching for any one,
or listening for an approaching sound, as letting
the whole aspect of the place sink into her while
she held herself open to its influence. Yet it
was no less apparent that the scene was not new to
her. There was no eagerness of investigation in
her survey: she seemed rather to be looking about
her with eyes to which, for some intimate inward reason,
details long since familiar had suddenly acquired
an unwonted freshness.
This was in fact the exact sensation
of which Mrs. Leath was conscious as she came forth
from the house and descended into the sunlit court.
She had come to meet her step-son, who was likely
to be returning at that hour from an afternoon’s
shooting in one of the more distant plantations, and
she carried in her hand the letter which had sent her
in search of him; but with her first step out of the
house all thought of him had been effaced by another
series of impressions.
The scene about her was known to satiety.
She had seen Givre at all seasons of the year, and
for the greater part of every year, since the far-off
day of her marriage; the day when, ostensibly driving
through its gates at her husband’s side, she
had actually been carried there on a cloud of iris-winged
visions.
The possibilities which the place
had then represented were still vividly present to
her. The mere phrase “a French chateau”
had called up to her youthful fancy a throng of romantic
associations, poetic, pictorial and emotional; and
the serene face of the old house seated in its park
among the poplar-bordered meadows of middle France,
had seemed, on her first sight of it, to hold out
to her a fate as noble and dignified as its own mien.
Though she could still call up that
phase of feeling it had long since passed, and the
house had for a time become to her the very symbol
of narrowness and monotony. Then, with the passing
of years, it had gradually acquired a less inimical
character, had become, not again a castle of dreams,
evoker of fair images and romantic legend, but the
shell of a life slowly adjusted to its dwelling:
the place one came back to, the place where one had
one’s duties, one’s habits and one’s
books, the place one would naturally live in till
one died: a dull house, an inconvenient house,
of which one knew all the defects, the shabbinesses,
the discomforts, but to which one was so used that
one could hardly, after so long a time, think one’s
self away from it without suffering a certain loss
of identity.
Now, as it lay before her in the autumn
mildness, its mistress was surprised at her own insensibility.
She had been trying to see the house through the
eyes of an old friend who, the next morning, would
be driving up to it for the first time; and in so
doing she seemed to be opening her own eyes upon it
after a long interval of blindness.
The court was very still, yet full
of a latent life: the wheeling and rustling of
pigeons about the rectangular yews and across the
sunny gravel; the sweep of rooks above the lustrous
greyish-purple slates of the roof, and the stir of
the tree-tops as they met the breeze which every day,
at that hour, came punctually up from the river.
Just such a latent animation glowed
in Anna Leath. In every nerve and vein she was
conscious of that equipoise of bliss which the fearful
human heart scarce dares acknowledge. She was
not used to strong or full emotions; but she had always
known that she should not be afraid of them.
She was not afraid now; but she felt a deep inward
stillness.
The immediate effect of the feeling
had been to send her forth in quest of her step-son.
She wanted to stroll back with him and have a quiet
talk before they re-entered the house. It was
always easy to talk to him, and at this moment he
was the one person to whom she could have spoken without
fear of disturbing her inner stillness. She was
glad, for all sorts of reasons, that Madame de Chantelle
and Effie were still at Ouchy with the governess,
and that she and Owen had the house to themselves.
And she was glad that even he was not yet in sight.
She wanted to be alone a little longer; not to think,
but to let the long slow waves of joy break over her
one by one.
She walked out of the court and sat
down on one of the benches that bordered the drive.
From her seat she had a diagonal view of the long
house-front and of the domed chapel terminating one
of the wings. Beyond a gate in the court-yard
wall the flower-garden drew its dark-green squares
and raised its statues against the yellowing background
of the park. In the borders only a few late
pinks and crimsons smouldered, but a peacock strutting
in the sun seemed to have gathered into his out-spread
fan all the summer glories of the place.
In Mrs. Leath’s hand was the
letter which had opened her eyes to these things,
and a smile rose to her lips at the mere feeling of
the paper between her fingers. The thrill it
sent through her gave a keener edge to every sense.
She felt, saw, breathed the shining world as though
a thin impenetrable veil had suddenly been removed
from it.
Just such a veil, she now perceived,
had always hung between herself and life. It
had been like the stage gauze which gives an illusive
air of reality to the painted scene behind it, yet
proves it, after all, to be no more than a painted
scene.
She had been hardly aware, in her
girlhood, of differing from others in this respect.
In the well-regulated well-fed Summers world the
unusual was regarded as either immoral or ill-bred,
and people with emotions were not visited. Sometimes,
with a sense of groping in a topsy-turvy universe,
Anna had wondered why everybody about her seemed to
ignore all the passions and sensations which formed
the stuff of great poetry and memorable action.
In a community composed entirely of people like her
parents and her parents’ friends she did not
see how the magnificent things one read about could
ever have happened. She was sure that if anything
of the kind had occurred in her immediate circle her
mother would have consulted the family clergyman, and
her father perhaps even have rung up the police; and
her sense of humour compelled her to own that, in
the given conditions, these precautions might not
have been unjustified.
Little by little the conditions conquered
her, and she learned to regard the substance of life
as a mere canvas for the embroideries of poet and
painter, and its little swept and fenced and tended
surface as its actual substance. It was in the
visioned region of action and emotion that her fullest
hours were spent; but it hardly occurred to her that
they might be translated into experience, or connected
with anything likely to happen to a young lady living
in West Fifty- fifth Street.
She perceived, indeed, that other
girls, leading outwardly the same life as herself,
and seemingly unaware of her world of hidden beauty,
were yet possessed of some vital secret which escaped
her. There seemed to be a kind of freemasonry
between them; they were wider awake than she, more
alert, and surer of their wants if not of their opinions.
She supposed they were “cleverer”, and
accepted her inferiority good-humouredly, half aware,
within herself, of a reserve of unused power which
the others gave no sign of possessing.
This partly consoled her for missing
so much of what made their “good time”;
but the resulting sense of exclusion, of being somehow
laughingly but firmly debarred from a share of their
privileges, threw her back on herself and deepened
the reserve which made envious mothers cite her as
a model of ladylike repression. Love, she told
herself, would one day release her from this spell
of unreality. She was persuaded that the sublime
passion was the key to the enigma; but it was difficult
to relate her conception of love to the forms it wore
in her experience. Two or three of the girls
she had envied for their superior acquaintance with
the arts of life had contracted, in the course of
time, what were variously described as “romantic”
or “foolish” marriages; one even made
a runaway match, and languished for a while under a
cloud of social reprobation. Here, then, was
passion in action, romance converted to reality; yet
the heroines of these exploits returned from them
untransfigured, and their husbands were as dull as
ever when one had to sit next to them at dinner.
Her own case, of course, would be
different. Some day she would find the magic
bridge between West Fifty-fifth Street and life; once
or twice she had even fancied that the clue was in
her hand. The first time was when she had met
young Darrow. She recalled even now the stir
of the encounter. But his passion swept over
her like a wind that shakes the roof of the forest
without reaching its still glades or rippling its
hidden pools. He was extraordinarily intelligent
and agreeable, and her heart beat faster when he was
with her. He had a tall fair easy presence and
a mind in which the lights of irony played pleasantly
through the shades of feeling. She liked to
hear his voice almost as much as to listen to what
he was saying, and to listen to what he was saying
almost as much as to feel that he was looking at her;
but he wanted to kiss her, and she wanted to talk
to him about books and pictures, and have him insinuate
the eternal theme of their love into every subject
they discussed.
Whenever they were apart a reaction
set in. She wondered how she could have been
so cold, called herself a prude and an idiot, questioned
if any man could really care for her, and got up in
the dead of night to try new ways of doing her hair.
But as soon as he reappeared her head straightened
itself on her slim neck and she sped her little shafts
of irony, or flew her little kites of erudition, while
hot and cold waves swept over her, and the things
she really wanted to say choked in her throat and
burned the palms of her hands.
Often she told herself that any silly
girl who had waltzed through a season would know better
than she how to attract a man and hold him; but when
she said “a man” she did not really mean
George Darrow.
Then one day, at a dinner, she saw
him sitting next to one of the silly girls in question:
the heroine of the elopement which had shaken West
Fifty-fifth Street to its base. The young lady
had come back from her adventure no less silly than
when she went; and across the table the partner of
her flight, a fat young man with eye-glasses, sat
stolidly eating terrapin and talking about polo and
investments.
The young woman was undoubtedly as
silly as ever; yet after watching her for a few minutes
Miss Summers perceived that she had somehow grown
luminous, perilous, obscurely menacing to nice girls
and the young men they intended eventually to accept.
Suddenly, at the sight, a rage of possessorship awoke
in her. She must save Darrow, assert her right
to him at any price. Pride and reticence went
down in a hurricane of jealousy. She heard him
laugh, and there was something new in his laugh…She
watched him talking, talking…He sat slightly sideways,
a faint smile beneath his lids, lowering his voice
as he lowered it when he talked to her. She
caught the same inflections, but his eyes were different.
It would have offended her once if he had looked at
her like that. Now her one thought was that
none but she had a right to be so looked at.
And that girl of all others! What illusions
could he have about a girl who, hardly a year ago,
had made a fool of herself over the fat young man stolidly
eating terrapin across the table? If that was
where romance and passion ended, it was better to
take to district visiting or algebra!
All night she lay awake and wondered:
“What was she saying to him? How shall
I learn to say such things?” and she decided
that her heart would tell her—that the next
time they were alone together the irresistible word
would spring to her lips. He came the next day,
and they were alone, and all she found was: “I
didn’t know that you and Kitty Mayne were such
friends.”
He answered with indifference that
he didn’t know it either, and in the reaction
of relief she declared: “She’s certainly
ever so much prettier than she was…”
“She’s rather good fun,”
he admitted, as though he had not noticed her other
advantages; and suddenly Anna saw in his eyes the
look she had seen there the previous evening.
She felt as if he were leagues and
leagues away from her. All her hopes dissolved,
and she was conscious of sitting rigidly, with high
head and straight lips, while the irresistible word
fled with a last wing-beat into the golden mist of
her illusions…
She was still quivering with the pain
and bewilderment of this adventure when Fraser Leath
appeared. She met him first in Italy, where
she was travelling with her parents; and the following
winter he came to New York. In Italy he had seemed
interesting: in New York he became remarkable.
He seldom spoke of his life in Europe, and let drop
but the most incidental allusions to the friends,
the tastes, the pursuits which filled his cosmopolitan
days; but in the atmosphere of West Fifty-fifth Street
he seemed the embodiment of a storied past.
He presented Miss Summers with a prettily-bound anthology
of the old French poets and, when she showed a discriminating
pleasure in the gift, observed with his grave smile:
“I didn’t suppose I should find any one
here who would feel about these things as I do.”
On another occasion he asked her acceptance of a half-effaced
eighteenth century pastel which he had surprisingly
picked up in a New York auction-room. “I
know no one but you who would really appreciate it,”
he explained.
He permitted himself no other comments,
but these conveyed with sufficient directness that
he thought her worthy of a different setting.
That she should be so regarded by a man living in
an atmosphere of art and beauty, and esteeming them
the vital elements of life, made her feel for the first
time that she was understood. Here was some one
whose scale of values was the same as hers, and who
thought her opinion worth hearing on the very matters
which they both considered of supreme importance.
The discovery restored her self-confidence, and
she revealed herself to Mr. Leath as she had never
known how to reveal herself to Darrow.
As the courtship progressed, and they
grew more confidential, her suitor surprised and delighted
her by little explosions of revolutionary sentiment.
He said: “Shall you mind, I wonder, if
I tell you that you live in a dread-fully conventional
atmosphere?” and, seeing that she manifestly
did not mind: “Of course I shall say things
now and then that will horrify your dear delightful
parents—I shall shock them awfully, I warn
you.”
In confirmation of this warning he
permitted himself an occasional playful fling at the
regular church-going of Mr. and Mrs. Summers, at the
innocuous character of the literature in their library,
and at their guileless appreciations in art.
He even ventured to banter Mrs. Summers on her refusal
to receive the irrepressible Kitty Mayne who, after
a rapid passage with George Darrow, was now involved
in another and more flagrant adventure.
“In Europe, you know, the husband
is regarded as the only judge in such matters.
As long as he accepts the situation —”
Mr. Leath explained to Anna, who took his view the
more emphatically in order to convince herself that,
personally, she had none but the most tolerant sentiments
toward the lady.
The subversiveness of Mr. Leath’s
opinions was enhanced by the distinction of his appearance
and the reserve of his manners. He was like
the anarchist with a gardenia in his buttonhole who
figures in the higher melodrama. Every word,
every allusion, every note of his agreeably-modulated
voice, gave Anna a glimpse of a society at once freer
and finer, which observed the traditional forms but
had discarded the underlying prejudices; whereas the
world she knew had discarded many of the forms and
kept almost all the prejudices.
In such an atmosphere as his an eager
young woman, curious as to all the manifestations
of life, yet instinctively desiring that they should
come to her in terms of beauty and fine feeling, must
surely find the largest scope for self-expression.
Study, travel, the contact of the world, the comradeship
of a polished and enlightened mind, would combine
to enrich her days and form her character; and it
was only in the rare moments when Mr. Leath’s
symmetrical blond mask bent over hers, and his kiss
dropped on her like a cold smooth pebble, that she
questioned the completeness of the joys he offered.
There had been a time when the walls
on which her gaze now rested had shed a glare of irony
on these early dreams. In the first years of
her marriage the sober symmetry of Givre had suggested
only her husband’s neatly-balanced mind.
It was a mind, she soon learned, contentedly absorbed
in formulating the conventions of the unconventional.
West Fifty-fifth Street was no more conscientiously
concerned than Givre with the momentous question of
“what people did”; it was only the type
of deed investigated that was different. Mr.
Leath collected his social instances with the same
seriousness and patience as his snuff-boxes.
He exacted a rigid conformity to his rules of non-conformity
and his scepticism had the absolute accent of a dogma.
He even cherished certain exceptions to his rules
as the book-collector prizes a “defective”
first edition. The Protestant church-going of
Anna’s parents had provoked his gentle sarcasm;
but he prided himself on his mother’s devoutness,
because Madame de Chantelle, in embracing her second
husband’s creed, had become part of a society
which still observes the outward rites of piety.
Anna, in fact, had discovered in her
amiable and elegant mother-in-law an unexpected embodiment
of the West Fifty-fifth Street ideal. Mrs.
Summers and Madame de Chantelle, however strongly
they would have disagreed as to the authorized source
of Christian dogma, would have found themselves completely
in accord on all the momentous minutiae of drawing-room
conduct; yet Mr. Leath treated his mother’s
foibles with a respect which Anna’s experience
of him forbade her to attribute wholly to filial affection.
In the early days, when she was still
questioning the Sphinx instead of trying to find an
answer to it, she ventured to tax her husband with
his inconsistency.
“You say your mother won’t
like it if I call on that amusing little woman who
came here the other day, and was let in by mistake;
but Madame de Chantelle tells me she lives with her
husband, and when mother refused to visit Kitty Mayne
you said——”
Mr. Leath’s smile arrested her.
“My dear child, I don’t pretend to apply
the principles of logic to my poor mother’s
prejudices.”
“But if you admit that they are prejudices——?”
“There are prejudices and prejudices.
My mother, of course, got hers from Monsieur de Chantelle,
and they seem to me as much in their place in this
house as the pot-pourri in your hawthorn jar.
They preserve a social tradition of which I should
be sorry to lose the least perfume. Of course
I don’t expect you, just at first, to feel the
difference, to see the nuance. In the case of
little Madame de Vireville, for instance: you
point out that she’s still under her husband’s
roof. Very true; and if she were merely a Paris
acquaintance—especially if you had met her,
as one still might, in the right kind of
house in Paris—I should be the last to
object to your visiting her. But in the country
it’s different. Even the best provincial
society is what you would call narrow: I don’t
deny it; and if some of our friends met Madame de
Vireville at Givre— well, it would produce
a bad impression. You’re inclined to ridicule
such considerations, but gradually you’ll come
to see their importance; and meanwhile, do trust me
when I ask you to be guided by my mother. It
is always well for a stranger in an old society to
err a little on the side of what you call its prejudices
but I should rather describe as its traditions.”
After that she no longer tried to
laugh or argue her husband out of his convictions.
They were convictions, and therefore unassailable.
Nor was any insincerity implied in the fact that
they sometimes seemed to coincide with hers.
There were occasions when he really did look at things
as she did; but for reasons so different as to make
the distance between them all the greater. Life,
to Mr. Leath, was like a walk through a carefully
classified museum, where, in moments of doubt, one
had only to look at the number and refer to one’s
catalogue; to his wife it was like groping about in
a huge dark lumber-room where the exploring ray of
curiosity lit up now some shape of breathing beauty
and now a mummy’s grin.
In the first bewilderment of her new
state these discoveries had had the effect of dropping
another layer of gauze between herself and reality.
She seemed farther than ever removed from the strong
joys and pangs for which she felt herself made.
She did not adopt her husband’s views, but
insensibly she began to live his life. She tried
to throw a compensating ardour into the secret excursions
of her spirit, and thus the old vicious distinction
between romance and reality was re-established for
her, and she resigned herself again to the belief
that “real life” was neither real nor
alive.
The birth of her little girl swept
away this delusion. At last she felt herself
in contact with the actual business of living:
but even this impression was not enduring.
Everything but the irreducible crude
fact of child-bearing assumed, in the Leath household,
the same ghostly tinge of unreality. Her husband,
at the time, was all that his own ideal of a husband
required. He was attentive, and even suitably
moved: but as he sat by her bedside, and thoughtfully
proffered to her the list of people who had “called
to enquire”, she looked first at him, and then
at the child between them, and wondered at the blundering
alchemy of Nature…
With the exception of the little girl
herself, everything connected with that time had grown
curiously remote and unimportant. The days that
had moved so slowly as they passed seemed now to have
plunged down head-long steeps of time; and as she
sat in the autumn sun, with Darrow’s letter
in her hand, the history of Anna Leath appeared to
its heroine like some grey shadowy tale that she might
have read in an old book, one night as she was falling
asleep…