Anna and Darrow, the next day, sat
alone in a compartment of the Paris train.
Anna, when they entered it, had put
herself in the farthest corner and placed her bag
on the adjoining seat. She had decided suddenly
to accompany Darrow to Paris, had even persuaded him
to wait for a later train in order that they might
travel together. She had an intense longing to
be with him, an almost morbid terror of losing sight
of him for a moment: when he jumped out of the
train and ran back along the platform to buy a newspaper
for her she felt as though she should never see him
again, and shivered with the cold misery of her last
journey to Paris, when she had thought herself parted
from him forever. Yet she wanted to keep him
at a distance, on the other side of the compartment,
and as the train moved out of the station she drew
from her bag the letters she had thrust in it as she
left the house, and began to glance over them so that
her lowered lids should hide her eyes from him.
She was his now, his for life:
there could never again be any question of sacrificing
herself to Effie’s welfare, or to any other
abstract conception of duty. Effie of course
would not suffer; Anna would pay for her bliss as a
wife by redoubled devotion as a mother. Her scruples
were not overcome; but for the time their voices were
drowned in the tumultuous rumour of her happiness.
As she opened her letters she was
conscious that Darrow’s gaze was fixed on her,
and gradually it drew her eyes upward, and she drank
deep of the passionate tenderness in his. Then
the blood rose to her face and she felt again the
desire to shield herself. She turned back to
her letters and her glance lit on an envelope inscribed
in Owen’s hand.
Her heart began to beat oppressively:
she was in a mood when the simplest things seemed
ominous. What could Owen have to say to her?
Only the first page was covered, and it contained
simply the announcement that, in the company of a
young compatriot who was studying at the Beaux Arts,
he had planned to leave for Spain the following evening.
“He hasn’t seen her, then!”
was Anna’s instant thought; and her feeling
was a strange compound of humiliation and relief.
The girl had kept her word, lived up to the line of
conduct she had set herself; and Anna had failed in
the same attempt. She did not reproach herself
with her failure; but she would have been happier
if there had been less discrepancy between her words
to Sophy Viner and the act which had followed them.
It irritated her obscurely that the girl should have
been so much surer of her power to carry out her purpose…
Anna looked up and saw that Darrow’s
eyes were on the newspaper. He seemed calm and
secure, almost indifferent to her presence.
“Will it become a matter of course to him so
soon?” she wondered with a twinge of jealousy.
She sat motionless, her eyes fixed on him, trying
to make him feel the attraction of her gaze as she
felt his. It surprised and shamed her to detect
a new element in her love for him: a sort of
suspicious tyrannical tenderness that seemed to deprive
it of all serenity. Finally he looked up, his
smile enveloped her, and she felt herself his in every
fibre, his so completely and inseparably that she
saw the vanity of imagining any other fate for herself.
To give herself a countenance she
held out Owen’s letter. He took it and
glanced down the page, his face grown grave.
She waited nervously till he looked up.
“That’s a good plan; the
best thing that could happen,” he said, a just
perceptible shade of constraint in his tone.
“Oh, yes,” she hastily
assented. She was aware of a faint current of
relief silently circulating between them. They
were both glad that Owen was going, that for a while
he would be out of their way; and it seemed to her
horrible that so much of the stuff of their happiness
should be made of such unavowed feelings…
“I shall see him this evening,”
she said, wishing Darrow to feel that she was not
afraid of meeting her step-son.
“Yes, of course; perhaps he
might dine with you.”
The words struck her as strangely
obtuse. Darrow was to meet his Ambassador at
the station on the latter’s arrival, and would
in all probability have to spend the evening with
him, and Anna knew he had been concerned at the thought
of having to leave her alone. But how could
he speak in that careless tone of her dining with
Owen? She lowered her voice to say: “I’m
afraid he’s desperately unhappy.”
He answered, with a tinge of impatience:
“It’s much the best thing that he should
travel.”
“Yes—but don’t
you feel…” She broke off. She knew
how he disliked these idle returns on the irrevocable,
and her fear of doing or saying what he disliked was
tinged by a new instinct of subserviency against which
her pride revolted. She thought to herself:
“He will see the change, and grow indifferent
to me as he did to her...” and for a moment
it seemed to her that she was reliving the experience
of Sophy Viner.
Darrow made no attempt to learn the
end of her unfinished sentence. He handed back
Owen’s letter and returned to his newspaper;
and when he looked up from it a few minutes later
it was with a clear brow and a smile that irresistibly
drew her back to happier thoughts.
The train was just entering a station,
and a moment later their compartment was invaded by
a commonplace couple preoccupied with the bestowal
of bulging packages. Anna, at their approach,
felt the possessive pride of the woman in love when
strangers are between herself and the man she loves.
She asked Darrow to open the window, to place her
bag in the net, to roll her rug into a cushion for
her feet; and while he was thus busied with her she
was conscious of a new devotion in his tone, in his
way of bending over her and meeting her eyes.
He went back to his seat, and they looked at each
other like lovers smiling at a happy secret.
Anna, before going back to Givre,
had suggested Owen’s moving into her apartment,
but he had preferred to remain at the hotel to which
he had sent his luggage, and on arriving in Paris
she decided to drive there at once. She was
impatient to have the meeting over, and glad that Darrow
was obliged to leave her at the station in order to
look up a colleague at the Embassy. She dreaded
his seeing Owen again, and yet dared not tell him
so, and to ensure his remaining away she mentioned
an urgent engagement with her dress-maker and a long
list of commissions to be executed for Madame de Chantelle.
“I shall see you to-morrow morning,”
she said; but he replied with a smile that he would
certainly find time to come to her for a moment on
his way back from meeting the Ambassador; and when
he had put her in a cab he leaned through the window
to press his lips to hers.
She blushed like a girl, thinking,
half vexed, half happy: “Yesterday he would
not have done it…” and a dozen scarcely definable
differences in his look and manner seemed all at once
to be summed up in the boyish act. “After
all, I’m engaged to him,” she reflected,
and then smiled at the absurdity of the word.
The next instant, with a pang of self-reproach, she
remembered Sophy Viner’s cry: “I knew
all the while he didn’t care…”
“Poor thing, oh poor thing!” Anna murmured…
At Owen’s hotel she waited in
a tremor while the porter went in search of him.
Word was presently brought back that he was in his
room and begged her to come up, and as she crossed
the hall she caught sight of his portmanteaux lying
on the floor, already labelled for departure.
Owen sat at a table writing, his back
to the door; and when he stood up the window was behind
him, so that, in the rainy afternoon light, his features
were barely discernible.
“Dearest—so you’re
really off?” she said, hesitating a moment on
the threshold.
He pushed a chair forward, and they
sat down, each waiting for the other to speak.
Finally she put some random question about his travelling-companion,
a slow shy meditative youth whom he had once or twice
brought down to Givre. She reflected that it
was natural he should have given this uncommunicative
comrade the preference over his livelier acquaintances,
and aloud she said: “I’m so glad
Fred Rempson can go with you.”
Owen answered in the same tone, and
for a few minutes their talk dragged itself on over
a dry waste of common-places. Anna noticed that,
though ready enough to impart his own plans, Owen
studiously abstained from putting any questions about
hers. It was evident from his allusions that
he meant to be away for some time, and he presently
asked her if she would give instructions about packing
and sending after him some winter clothes he had left
at Givre. This gave her the opportunity to say
that she expected to go back within a day or two and
would attend to the matter as soon as she returned.
She added: “I came up this morning with
George, who is going on to London to-morrow,”
intending, by the use of Darrow’s Christian
name, to give Owen the chance to speak of her marriage.
But he made no comment, and she continued to hear
the name sounding on unfamiliarly between them.
The room was almost dark, and she
finally stood up and glanced about for the light-switch,
saying: “I can’t see you, dear.”
“Oh, don’t—I
hate the light!” Owen exclaimed, catching her
by the wrist and pushing her back into her seat.
He gave a nervous laugh and added: “I’m
half-blind with neuralgia. I suppose it’s
this beastly rain.”
“Yes; it will do you good to get down to Spain.”
She asked if he had the remedies the
doctor had given him for a previous attack, and on
his replying that he didn’t know what he’d
done with the stuff, she sprang up, offering to go
to the chemist’s. It was a relief to have
something to do for him, and she knew from his “Oh,
thanks—would you?” that it was a
relief to him to have a pretext for not detaining
her. His natural impulse would have been to
declare that he didn’t want any drugs, and would
be all right in no time; and his acquiescence showed
her how profoundly he felt the uselessness of their
trying to prolong their talk. His face was now
no more than a white blur in the dusk, but she felt
its indistinctness as a veil drawn over aching intensities
of expression. “He knows…he knows…”
she said to herself, and wondered whether the truth
had been revealed to him by some corroborative fact
or by the sheer force of divination.
He had risen also, and was clearly
waiting for her to go, and she turned to the door,
saying: “I’ll be back in a moment.”
“Oh, don’t come up again,
please!” He paused, embarrassed. “I
mean—I may not be here. I’ve
got to go and pick up Rempson, and see about some
final things with him.” She stopped on
the threshold with a sinking heart. He meant
this to be their leave-taking, then—and
he had not even asked her when she was to be married,
or spoken of seeing her again before she set out for
the other side of the world.
“Owen!” she cried, and turned back.
He stood mutely before her in the dimness.
“You haven’t told me how long you’re
to be gone.”
“How long? Oh, you see…that’s
rather vague…I hate definite dates, you know…”
He paused and she saw he did not mean
to help her out. She tried to say: “You’ll
be here for my wedding?” but could not bring
the words to her lips. Instead she murmured:
“In six weeks I shall be going too…”
and he rejoined, as if he had expected the announcement
and prepared his answer: “Oh, by that time,
very likely…”
“At any rate, I won’t
say good-bye,” she stammered, feeling the tears
beneath her veil.
“No, no; rather not!”
he declared; but he made no movement, and she went
up and threw her arms about him. “You’ll
write me, won’t you?”
“Of course, of course——”
Her hands slipped down into his, and
for a minute they held each other dumbly in the darkness;
then he gave a vague laugh and said: “It’s
really time to light up.” He pressed the
electric button with one hand while with the other
he opened the door; and she passed out without daring
to turn back, lest the light on his face should show
her what she feared to see.