The Duke said "Rather" from the depths of his beard, and Archer
withdrew with a stiffly circular bow that made him feel as full of spine as a
self-conscious school-boy among careless and unnoticing elders.
He was not sorry for the denouement of his visit: he only wished it had come
sooner, and spared him a certain waste of emotion. As he went out into the
wintry night, New York again became vast and imminent, and May Welland the
loveliest woman in it. He turned into his florist's to send her the daily box
of lilies-of-the-valley which, to his confusion, he found he had forgotten that
morning.
As he wrote a word on his card and waited for an envelope he glanced about
the embowered shop, and his eye lit on a cluster of yellow roses. He had never
seen any as sun-golden before, and his first impulse was to send them to May
instead of the lilies. But they did not look like her--there was something too
rich, too strong, in their fiery beauty. In a sudden revulsion of mood, and
almost without knowing what he did, he signed to the florist to lay the roses
in another long box, and slipped his card into a second envelope, on which he
wrote the name of the Countess Olenska; then, just as he was turning away, he
drew the card out again, and left the empty envelope on the box.
"They'll go at once?" he enquired, pointing to the roses.
The florist assured him that they would.
X.
The next day he persuaded May to escape for a walk in the Park after
luncheon. As was the custom in old-fashioned Episcopalian New York, she usually
accompanied her parents to church on Sunday afternoons; but Mrs. Welland
condoned her truancy, having that very morning won her over to the necessity of
a long engagement, with time to prepare a hand-embroidered trousseau containing
the proper number of dozens.
The day was delectable. The bare vaulting of trees along the Mall was ceiled
with lapis lazuli, and arched above snow that shone like splintered crystals.
It was the weather to call out May's radiance, and she burned like a young
maple in the frost. Archer was proud of the glances turned on her, and the
simple joy of possessorship cleared away his underlying perplexities.
"It's so delicious--waking every morning to smell lilies-of-the-valley
in one's room!" she said.
"Yesterday they came late. I hadn't time in the morning--"
"But your remembering each day to send them makes me love them so much
more than if you'd given a standing order, and they came every morning on the
minute, like one's music-teacher--as I know Gertrude Lefferts's did, for instance,
when she and Lawrence were engaged."
"Ah--they would!" laughed Archer, amused at her keenness. He
looked sideways at her fruit-like cheek and felt rich and secure enough to add:
"When I sent your lilies yesterday afternoon I saw some rather gorgeous yellow
roses and packed them off to Madame Olenska. Was that right?"
"How dear of you! Anything of that kind delights her. It's odd she
didn't mention it: she lunched with us today, and spoke of Mr. Beaufort's
having sent her wonderful orchids, and cousin Henry van der Luyden a whole
hamper of carnations from Skuytercliff. She seems so surprised to receive
flowers. Don't people send them in Europe? She thinks it such a pretty
custom."
"Oh, well, no wonder mine were overshadowed by Beaufort's," said
Archer irritably. Then he remembered that he had not put a card with the roses,
and was vexed at having spoken of them. He wanted to say: "I called on
your cousin yesterday," but hesitated. If Madame Olenska had not spoken of
his visit it might seem awkward that he should. Yet not to do so gave the
affair an air of mystery that he disliked. To shake off the question he began
to talk of their own plans, their future, and Mrs. Welland's insistence on a
long engagement.
"If you call it long! Isabel Chivers and Reggie were engaged for two
years: Grace and Thorley for nearly a year and a half. Why aren't we very well
off as we are?"
It was the traditional maidenly interrogation, and he felt ashamed of
himself for finding it singularly childish. No doubt she simply echoed what was
said for her; but she was nearing her twenty-second birthday, and he wondered
at what age "nice" women began to speak for themselves.
"Never, if we won't let them, I suppose," he mused, and recalled
his mad outburst to Mr. Sillerton Jackson: "Women ought to be as free as
we are--"
It would presently be his task to take the bandage from this young woman's
eyes, and bid her look forth on the world. But how many generations of the
women who had gone to her making had descended bandaged to the family vault? He
shivered a little, remembering some of the new ideas in his scientific books,
and the much-cited instance of the Kentucky cave-fish, which had ceased to
develop eyes because they had no use for them. What if, when he had bidden May
Welland to open hers, they could only look out blankly at blankness?
"We might be much better off. We might be altogether together--we might
travel."
Her face lit up. "That would be lovely," she owned: she would love
to travel. But her mother would not understand their wanting to do things so
differently.
"As if the mere `differently' didn't account for it!" the wooer
insisted.
"Newland! You're so original!" she exulted.
His heart sank, for he saw that he was saying all the things that young men
in the same situation were expected to say, and that she was making the answers
that instinct and tradition taught her to make--even to the point of calling
him original.
"Original! We're all as like each other as those dolls cut out of the
same folded paper. We're like patterns stencilled on a wall. Can't you and I
strike out for ourselves, May?"
He had stopped and faced her in the excitement of their discussion, and her
eyes rested on him with a bright unclouded admiration.
"Mercy--shall we elope?" she laughed.
"If you would--"
"You DO love me, Newland! I'm so happy."
"But then--why not be happier?"
"We can't behave like people in novels, though, can we?"
"Why not--why not--why not?"
She looked a little bored by his insistence. She knew very well that they
couldn't, but it was troublesome to have to produce a reason. "I'm not
clever enough to argue with you. But that kind of thing is rather--vulgar,
isn't it?" she suggested, relieved to have hit on a word that would
assuredly extinguish the whole subject.
"Are you so much afraid, then, of being vulgar?"
She was evidently staggered by this. "Of course I should hate it--so
would you," she rejoined, a trifle irritably.
He stood silent, beating his stick nervously against his boot-top; and
feeling that she had indeed found the right way of closing the discussion, she
went on lightheartedly: "Oh, did I tell you that I showed Ellen my ring?
She thinks it the most beautiful setting she ever saw. There's nothing like it
in the rue de la Paix, she said. I do love you, Newland, for being so
artistic!"
The next afternoon, as Archer, before dinner, sat smoking sullenly in his
study, Janey wandered in on him. He had failed to stop at his club on the way
up from the office where he exercised the profession of the law in the
leisurely manner common to well-to-do New Yorkers of his class. He was out of
spirits and slightly out of temper, and a haunting horror of doing the same
thing every day at the same hour besieged his brain.
"Sameness--sameness!" he muttered, the word running through his
head like a persecuting tune as he saw the familiar tall-hatted figures
lounging behind the plateglass; and because he usually dropped in at the club
at that hour he had gone home instead. He knew not only what they were likely
to be talking about, but the part each one would take in the discussion. The
Duke of course would be their principal theme; though the appearance in Fifth
Avenue of a golden-haired lady in a small canary-coloured brougham with a pair
of black cobs (for which Beaufort was generally thought responsible) would also
doubtless be thoroughly gone into. Such "women" (as they were called)
were few in New York, those driving their own carriages still fewer, and the
appearance of Miss Fanny Ring in Fifth Avenue at the fashionable hour had
profoundly agitated society. Only the day before, her carriage had passed Mrs.
Lovell Mingott's, and the latter had instantly rung the little bell at her
elbow and ordered the coachman to drive her home. "What if it had happened
to Mrs. van der Luyden?" people asked each other with a shudder. Archer
could hear Lawrence Lefferts, at that very hour, holding forth on the
disintegration of society.
He raised his head irritably when his sister Janey entered, and then quickly
bent over his book (Swinburne's "Chastelard"--just out) as if he had
not seen her. She glanced at the writing-table heaped with books, opened a
volume of the "Contes Drolatiques," made a wry face over the archaic
French, and sighed: "What learned things you read!"
"Well--?" he asked, as she hovered Cassandra-like before him.
"Mother's very angry."
"Angry? With whom? About what?"
"Miss Sophy Jackson has just been here. She brought word that her
brother would come in after dinner: she couldn't say very much, because he
forbade her to: he wishes to give all the details himself. He's with cousin
Louisa van der Luyden now."
"For heaven's sake, my dear girl, try a fresh start. It would take an
omniscient Deity to know what you're talking about."
"It's not a time to be profane, Newland. . . . Mother feels badly
enough about your not going to church . . ."
With a groan he plunged back into his book.
"NEWLAND! Do listen. Your friend Madame Olenska was at Mrs. Lemuel
Struthers's party last night: she went there with the Duke and Mr.
Beaufort."
At the last clause of this announcement a senseless anger swelled the young
man's breast. To smother it he laughed. "Well, what of it? I knew she
meant to."
Janey paled and her eyes began to project. "You knew she meant to--and
you didn't try to stop her? To warn her?"
"Stop her? Warn her?" He laughed again. "I'm not engaged to
be married to the Countess Olenska!" The words had a fantastic sound in
his own ears.
"You're marrying into her family."
"Oh, family--family!" he jeered.
|