Symptoms
of a lumbering coquetry became visible in her, and Archer found the strength to
break in: "But Madame Olenska--has she gone to Newport too?"
Miss
Blenker looked at him with surprise. "Madame Olenska--didn't you know
she'd been called away?"
"Called
away?--"
"Oh,
my best parasol! I lent it to that goose of a Katie, because it matched her
ribbons, and the careless thing must have dropped it here. We Blenkers are all
like that . . . real Bohemians!" Recovering the sunshade with a powerful
hand she unfurled it and suspended its rosy dome above her head. "Yes,
Ellen was called away yesterday: she lets us call her Ellen, you know. A
telegram came from Boston: she said she might be gone for two days. I do LOVE
the way she does her hair, don't you?" Miss Blenker rambled on.
Archer
continued to stare through her as though she had been transparent. All he saw
was the trumpery parasol that arched its pinkness above her giggling head.
After
a moment he ventured: "You don't happen to know why Madame Olenska went to
Boston? I hope it was not on account of bad news?"
Miss
Blenker took this with a cheerful incredulity. "Oh, I don't believe so.
She didn't tell us what was in the telegram. I think she didn't want the
Marchioness to know. She's so romantic-looking, isn't she? Doesn't she remind
you of Mrs. Scott-Siddons when she reads `Lady Geraldine's Courtship'? Did you
never hear her?"
Archer
was dealing hurriedly with crowding thoughts. His whole future seemed suddenly
to be unrolled before him; and passing down its endless emptiness he saw the
dwindling figure of a man to whom nothing was ever to happen. He glanced about
him at the unpruned garden, the tumble-down house, and the oakgrove under which
the dusk was gathering. It had seemed so exactly the place in which he ought to
have found Madame Olenska; and she was far away, and even the pink sunshade was
not hers . . .
He
frowned and hesitated. "You don't know, I suppose-- I shall be in Boston
tomorrow. If I could manage to see her--"
He
felt that Miss Blenker was losing interest in him, though her smile persisted.
"Oh, of course; how lovely of you! She's staying at the Parker House; it
must be horrible there in this weather."
After
that Archer was but intermittently aware of the remarks they exchanged. He
could only remember stoutly resisting her entreaty that he should await the
returning family and have high tea with them before he drove home. At length,
with his hostess still at his side, he passed out of range of the wooden Cupid,
unfastened his horses and drove off. At the turn of the lane he saw Miss
Blenker standing at the gate and waving the pink parasol.
XXIII.
The
next morning, when Archer got out of the Fall River train, he emerged upon a steaming
midsummer Boston. The streets near the station were full of the smell of beer
and coffee and decaying fruit and a shirtsleeved populace moved through them
with the intimate abandon of boarders going down the passage to the bathroom.
Archer
found a cab and drove to the Somerset Club for breakfast. Even the fashionable
quarters had the air of untidy domesticity to which no excess of heat ever
degrades the European cities. Care-takers in calico lounged on the door-steps
of the wealthy, and the Common looked like a pleasure-ground on the morrow of a
Masonic picnic. If Archer had tried to imagine Ellen Olenska in improbable
scenes he could not have called up any into which it was more difficult to fit
her than this heat-prostrated and deserted Boston.
He
breakfasted with appetite and method, beginning with a slice of melon, and
studying a morning paper while he waited for his toast and scrambled eggs. A
new sense of energy and activity had possessed him ever since he had announced
to May the night before that he had business in Boston, and should take the
Fall River boat that night and go on to New York the following evening. It had
always been understood that he would return to town early in the week, and when
he got back from his expedition to Portsmouth a letter from the office, which
fate had conspicuously placed on a corner of the hall table, sufficed to
justify his sudden change of plan. He was even ashamed of the ease with which
the whole thing had been done: it reminded him, for an uncomfortable moment, of
Lawrence Lefferts's masterly contrivances for securing his freedom. But this
did not long trouble him, for he was not in an analytic mood.
After
breakfast he smoked a cigarette and glanced over the Commercial Advertiser.
While he was thus engaged two or three men he knew came in, and the usual
greetings were exchanged: it was the same world after all, though he had such a
queer sense of having slipped through the meshes of time and space.
He
looked at his watch, and finding that it was half-past nine got up and went
into the writing-room. There he wrote a few lines, and ordered a messenger to
take a cab to the Parker House and wait for the answer. He then sat down behind
another newspaper and tried to calculate how long it would take a cab to get to
the Parker House.
"The
lady was out, sir," he suddenly heard a waiter's voice at his elbow; and
he stammered: "Out?--" as if it were a word in a strange language.
He
got up and went into the hall. It must be a mistake: she could not be out at
that hour. He flushed with anger at his own stupidity: why had he not sent the
note as soon as he arrived?
He
found his hat and stick and went forth into the street. The city had suddenly
become as strange and vast and empty as if he were a traveller from distant
lands. For a moment he stood on the door-step hesitating; then he decided to go
to the Parker House. What if the messenger had been misinformed, and she were
still there?
He
started to walk across the Common; and on the first bench, under a tree, he saw
her sitting. She had a grey silk sunshade over her head--how could he ever have
imagined her with a pink one? As he approached he was struck by her listless
attitude: she sat there as if she had nothing else to do. He saw her drooping
profile, and the knot of hair fastened low in the neck under her dark hat, and
the long wrinkled glove on the hand that held the sunshade. He came a step or
two nearer, and she turned and looked at him.
"Oh"--she
said; and for the first time he noticed a startled look on her face; but in
another moment it gave way to a slow smile of wonder and contentment.
"Oh"--she
murmured again, on a different note, as he stood looking down at her; and
without rising she made a place for him on the bench.
"I'm
here on business--just got here," Archer explained; and, without knowing
why, he suddenly began to feign astonishment at seeing her. "But what on
earth are you doing in this wilderness?" He had really no idea what he was
saying: he felt as if he were shouting at her across endless distances, and she
might vanish again before he could overtake her.
"I?
Oh, I'm here on business too," she answered, turning her head toward him
so that they were face to face. The words hardly reached him: he was aware only
of her voice, and of the startling fact that not an echo of it had remained in
his memory. He had not even remembered that it was low-pitched, with a faint
roughness on the consonants.
"You
do your hair differently," he said, his heart beating as if he had uttered
something irrevocable.
"Differently?
No--it's only that I do it as best I can when I'm without Nastasia."
"Nastasia;
but isn't she with you?"
"No;
I'm alone. For two days it was not worth while to bring her."
"You're
alone--at the Parker House?"
She
looked at him with a flash of her old malice. "Does it strike you as
dangerous?"
"No;
not dangerous--"
"But
unconventional? I see; I suppose it is." She considered a moment. "I
hadn't thought of it, because I've just done something so much more
unconventional." The faint tinge of irony lingered in her eyes. "I've
just refused to take back a sum of money--that belonged to me."
Archer
sprang up and moved a step or two away. She had furled her parasol and sat
absently drawing patterns on the gravel. Presently he came back and stood
before her.
"Some
one--has come here to meet you?"
"Yes."
"With
this offer?"
She
nodded.
"And
you refused--because of the conditions?"
"I
refused," she said after a moment.
He
sat down by her again. "What were the conditions?"
"Oh,
they were not onerous: just to sit at the head of his table now and then."
There
was another interval of silence. Archer's heart had slammed itself shut in the
queer way it had, and he sat vainly groping for a word.
"He
wants you back--at any price?"
"Well--a
considerable price. At least the sum is considerable for me."
He
paused again, beating about the question he felt he must put.
"It
was to meet him here that you came?"
She
stared, and then burst into a laugh. "Meet him--my husband? HERE? At this season
he's always at Cowes or Baden."
"He
sent some one?"
"Yes."
"With
a letter?"
She
shook her head. "No; just a message. He never writes. I don't think I've
had more than one letter from him." The allusion brought the colour to her
cheek, and it reflected itself in Archer's vivid blush.
"Why
does he never write?"
"Why
should he? What does one have secretaries for?"
The
young man's blush deepened. She had pronounced the word as if it had no more
significance than any other in her vocabulary. For a moment it was on the tip
of his tongue to ask: "Did he send his secretary, then?" But the
remembrance of Count Olenski's only letter to his wife was too present to him.
He paused again, and then took another plunge.
"And
the person?"--
"The
emissary? The emissary," Madame Olenska rejoined, still smiling,
"might, for all I care, have left already; but he has insisted on waiting
till this evening . . . in case . . . on the chance . . ."
"And
you came out here to think the chance over?"
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