Archer reddened, and his heart gave a leap of surprise. He had called only
twice on Madame Olenska, and each time he had sent her a box of yellow roses,
and each time without a card. She had never before made any allusion to the
flowers, and he supposed she had never thought of him as the sender. Now her
sudden recognition of the gift, and her associating it with the tender
leave-taking on the stage, filled him with an agitated pleasure.
"I was thinking of that too--I was going to leave the theatre in order
to take the picture away with me," he said.
To his surprise her colour rose, reluctantly and duskily. She looked down at
the mother-of-pearl opera-glass in her smoothly gloved hands, and said, after a
pause: "What do you do while May is away?"
"I stick to my work," he answered, faintly annoyed by the
question.
In obedience to a long-established habit, the Wellands had left the previous
week for St. Augustine, where, out of regard for the supposed susceptibility of
Mr. Welland's bronchial tubes, they always spent the latter part of the winter.
Mr. Welland was a mild and silent man, with no opinions but with many habits.
With these habits none might interfere; and one of them demanded that his wife
and daughter should always go with him on his annual journey to the south. To
preserve an unbroken domesticity was essential to his peace of mind; he would
not have known where his hair-brushes were, or how to provide stamps for his
letters, if Mrs. Welland had not been there to tell him.
As all the members of the family adored each other, and as Mr. Welland was
the central object of their idolatry, it never occurred to his wife and May to
let him go to St. Augustine alone; and his sons, who were both in the law, and
could not leave New York during the winter, always joined him for Easter and
travelled back with him.
It was impossible for Archer to discuss the necessity of May's accompanying
her father. The reputation of the Mingotts' family physician was largely based
on the attack of pneumonia which Mr. Welland had never had; and his insistence
on St. Augustine was therefore inflexible. Originally, it had been intended
that May's engagement should not be announced till her return from Florida, and
the fact that it had been made known sooner could not be expected to alter Mr.
Welland's plans. Archer would have liked to join the travellers and have a few
weeks of sunshine and boating with his betrothed; but he too was bound by
custom and conventions. Little arduous as his professional duties were, he
would have been convicted of frivolity by the whole Mingott clan if he had
suggested asking for a holiday in mid-winter; and he accepted May's departure
with the resignation which he perceived would have to be one of the principal
constituents of married life.
He was conscious that Madame Olenska was looking at him under lowered lids.
"I have done what you wished--what you advised," she said abruptly.
"Ah--I'm glad," he returned, embarrassed by her broaching the
subject at such a moment.
"I understand--that you were right," she went on a little
breathlessly; "but sometimes life is difficult . . . perplexing. . ."
"I know."
"And I wanted to tell you that I DO feel you were right; and that I'm
grateful to you," she ended, lifting her opera-glass quickly to her eyes
as the door of the box opened and Beaufort's resonant voice broke in on them.
Archer stood up, and left the box and the theatre.
Only the day before he had received a letter from May Welland in which, with
characteristic candour, she had asked him to "be kind to Ellen" in
their absence. "She likes you and admires you so much--and you know,
though she doesn't show it, she's still very lonely and unhappy. I don't think
Granny understands her, or uncle Lovell Mingott either; they really think she's
much worldlier and fonder of society than she is. And I can quite see that New
York must seem dull to her, though the family won't admit it. I think she's
been used to lots of things we haven't got; wonderful music, and picture shows,
and celebrities--artists and authors and all the clever people you admire.
Granny can't understand her wanting anything but lots of dinners and
clothes--but I can see that you're almost the only person in New York who can
talk to her about what she really cares for."
His wise May--how he had loved her for that letter! But he had not meant to
act on it; he was too busy, to begin with, and he did not care, as an engaged
man, to play too conspicuously the part of Madame Olenska's champion. He had an
idea that she knew how to take care of herself a good deal better than the
ingenuous May imagined. She had Beaufort at her feet, Mr. van der Luyden
hovering above her like a protecting deity, and any number of candidates
(Lawrence Lefferts among them) waiting their opportunity in the middle distance.
Yet he never saw her, or exchanged a word with her, without feeling that, after
all, May's ingenuousness almost amounted to a gift of divination. Ellen Olenska
was lonely and she was unhappy.
XIV.
As he came out into the lobby Archer ran across his friend Ned Winsett, the
only one among what Janey called his "clever people" with whom he
cared to probe into things a little deeper than the average level of club and
chop-house banter.
He had caught sight, across the house, of Winsett's shabby round-shouldered
back, and had once noticed his eyes turned toward the Beaufort box. The two men
shook hands, and Winsett proposed a bock at a little German restaurant around
the corner. Archer, who was not in the mood for the kind of talk they were
likely to get there, declined on the plea that he had work to do at home; and
Winsett said: "Oh, well so have I for that matter, and I'll be the
Industrious Apprentice too."
They strolled along together, and presently Winsett said: "Look here,
what I'm really after is the name of the dark lady in that swell box of
yours--with the Beauforts, wasn't she? The one your friend Lefferts seems so
smitten by."
Archer, he could not have said why, was slightly annoyed. What the devil did
Ned Winsett want with Ellen Olenska's name? And above all, why did he couple it
with Lefferts's? It was unlike Winsett to manifest such curiosity; but after
all, Archer remembered, he was a journalist.
"It's not for an interview, I hope?" he laughed.
"Well--not for the press; just for myself," Winsett rejoined.
"The fact is she's a neighbour of mine--queer quarter for such a beauty to
settle in--and she's been awfully kind to my little boy, who fell down her area
chasing his kitten, and gave himself a nasty cut. She rushed in bareheaded,
carrying him in her arms, with his knee all beautifully bandaged, and was so
sympathetic and beautiful that my wife was too dazzled to ask her name."
A pleasant glow dilated Archer's heart. There was nothing extraordinary in
the tale: any woman would have done as much for a neighbour's child. But it was
just like Ellen, he felt, to have rushed in bareheaded, carrying the boy in her
arms, and to have dazzled poor Mrs. Winsett into forgetting to ask who she was.
"That is the Countess Olenska--a granddaughter of old Mrs.
Mingott's."
"Whew--a Countess!" whistled Ned Winsett. "Well, I didn't
know Countesses were so neighbourly. Mingotts ain't."
"They would be, if you'd let them."
"Ah, well--" It was their old interminable argument as to the
obstinate unwillingness of the "clever people" to frequent the
fashionable, and both men knew that there was no use in prolonging it.
"I wonder," Winsett broke off, "how a Countess happens to
live in our slum?"
"Because she doesn't care a hang about where she lives--or about any of
our little social sign-posts," said Archer, with a secret pride in his own
picture of her.
"H'm--been in bigger places, I suppose," the other commented.
"Well, here's my corner."
He slouched off across Broadway, and Archer stood looking after him and
musing on his last words.
Ned Winsett had those flashes of penetration; they were the most interesting
thing about him, and always made Archer wonder why they had allowed him to
accept failure so stolidly at an age when most men are still struggling.
Archer had known that Winsett had a wife and child, but he had never seen
them. The two men always met at the Century, or at some haunt of journalists
and theatrical people, such as the restaurant where Winsett had proposed to go
for a bock. He had given Archer to understand that his wife was an invalid;
which might be true of the poor lady, or might merely mean that she was lacking
in social gifts or in evening clothes, or in both. Winsett himself had a savage
abhorrence of social observances: Archer, who dressed in the evening because he
thought it cleaner and more comfortable to do so, and who had never stopped to
consider that cleanliness and comfort are two of the costliest items in a
modest budget, regarded Winsett's attitude as part of the boring
"Bohemian" pose that always made fashionable people, who changed
their clothes without talking about it, and were not forever harping on the
number of servants one kept, seem so much simpler and less self-conscious than
the others. Nevertheless, he was always stimulated by Winsett, and whenever he
caught sight of the journalist's lean bearded face and melancholy eyes he would
rout him out of his corner and carry him off for a long talk.
Winsett was not a journalist by choice. He was a pure man of letters,
untimely born in a world that had no need of letters; but after publishing one
volume of brief and exquisite literary appreciations, of which one hundred and
twenty copies were sold, thirty given away, and the balance eventually
destroyed by the publishers (as per contract) to make room for more marketable
material, he had abandoned his real calling, and taken a sub-editorial job on a
women's weekly, where fashionplates and paper patterns alternated with New England
love-stories and advertisements of temperance drinks.
On the subject of "Hearth-fires" (as the paper was called) he was
inexhaustibly entertaining; but beneath his fun lurked the sterile bitterness
of the still young man who has tried and given up. His conversation always made
Archer take the measure of his own life, and feel how little it contained; but
Winsett's, after all, contained still less, and though their common fund of
intellectual interests and curiosities made their talks exhilarating, their
exchange of views usually remained within the limits of a pensive dilettantism.
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