"I
don't know what you mean by realities. The only reality to me is this."
She
met the words with a long silence, during which the carriage rolled down an
obscure side-street and then turned into the searching illumination of Fifth
Avenue.
"Is
it your idea, then, that I should live with you as your mistress--since I can't
be your wife?" she asked.
The
crudeness of the question startled him: the word was one that women of his
class fought shy of, even when their talk flitted closest about the topic. He
noticed that Madame Olenska pronounced it as if it had a recognised place in
her vocabulary, and he wondered if it had been used familiarly in her presence
in the horrible life she had fled from. Her question pulled him up with a jerk,
and he floundered.
"I
want--I want somehow to get away with you into a world where words like
that--categories like that-- won't exist. Where we shall be simply two human
beings who love each other, who are the whole of life to each other; and
nothing else on earth will matter."
She
drew a deep sigh that ended in another laugh. "Oh, my dear--where is that
country? Have you ever been there?" she asked; and as he remained sullenly
dumb she went on: "I know so many who've tried to find it; and, believe
me, they all got out by mistake at wayside stations: at places like Boulogne,
or Pisa, or Monte Carlo--and it wasn't at all different from the old world
they'd left, but only rather smaller and dingier and more promiscuous."
He
had never heard her speak in such a tone, and he remembered the phrase she had
used a little while before.
"Yes,
the Gorgon HAS dried your tears," he said.
"Well,
she opened my eyes too; it's a delusion to say that she blinds people. What she
does is just the contrary--she fastens their eyelids open, so that they're
never again in the blessed darkness. Isn't there a Chinese torture like that?
There ought to be. Ah, believe me, it's a miserable little country!"
The
carriage had crossed Forty-second Street: May's sturdy brougham-horse was
carrying them northward as if he had been a Kentucky trotter. Archer choked
with the sense of wasted minutes and vain words.
"Then
what, exactly, is your plan for us?" he asked.
"For
US? But there's no US in that sense! We're near each other only if we stay far
from each other. Then we can be ourselves. Otherwise we're only Newland Archer,
the husband of Ellen Olenska's cousin, and Ellen Olenska, the cousin of Newland
Archer's wife, trying to be happy behind the backs of the people who trust
them."
"Ah,
I'm beyond that," he groaned.
"No,
you're not! You've never been beyond. And I have," she said, in a strange
voice, "and I know what it looks like there."
He
sat silent, dazed with inarticulate pain. Then he groped in the darkness of the
carriage for the little bell that signalled orders to the coachman. He
remembered that May rang twice when she wished to stop. He pressed the bell,
and the carriage drew up beside the curbstone.
"Why
are we stopping? This is not Granny's," Madame Olenska exclaimed.
"No:
I shall get out here," he stammered, opening the door and jumping to the
pavement. By the light of a street-lamp he saw her startled face, and the
instinctive motion she made to detain him. He closed the door, and leaned for a
moment in the window.
"You're
right: I ought not to have come today," he said, lowering his voice so
that the coachman should not hear. She bent forward, and seemed about to speak;
but he had already called out the order to drive on, and the carriage rolled
away while he stood on the corner. The snow was over, and a tingling wind had
sprung up, that lashed his face as he stood gazing. Suddenly he felt something
stiff and cold on his lashes, and perceived that he had been crying, and that
the wind had frozen his tears.
He
thrust his hands in his pockets, and walked at a sharp pace down Fifth Avenue
to his own house.
XXX.
That
evening when Archer came down before dinner he found the drawing-room empty.
He
and May were dining alone, all the family engagements having been postponed
since Mrs. Manson Mingott's illness; and as May was the more punctual of the
two he was surprised that she had not preceded him. He knew that she was at
home, for while he dressed he had heard her moving about in her room; and he
wondered what had delayed her.
He
had fallen into the way of dwelling on such conjectures as a means of tying his
thoughts fast to reality. Sometimes he felt as if he had found the clue to his
father-in-law's absorption in trifles; perhaps even Mr. Welland, long ago, had
had escapes and visions, and had conjured up all the hosts of domesticity to
defend himself against them.
When
May appeared he thought she looked tired. She had put on the low-necked and
tightly-laced dinnerdress which the Mingott ceremonial exacted on the most
informal occasions, and had built her fair hair into its usual accumulated
coils; and her face, in contrast, was wan and almost faded. But she shone on
him with her usual tenderness, and her eyes had kept the blue dazzle of the day
before.
"What
became of you, dear?" she asked. "I was waiting at Granny's, and
Ellen came alone, and said she had dropped you on the way because you had to
rush off on business. There's nothing wrong?"
"Only
some letters I'd forgotten, and wanted to get off before dinner."
"Ah--"
she said; and a moment afterward: "I'm sorry you didn't come to
Granny's--unless the letters were urgent."
"They
were," he rejoined, surprised at her insistence. "Besides, I don't
see why I should have gone to your grandmother's. I didn't know you were
there."
She
turned and moved to the looking-glass above the mantel-piece. As she stood there,
lifting her long arm to fasten a puff that had slipped from its place in her
intricate hair, Archer was struck by something languid and inelastic in her
attitude, and wondered if the deadly monotony of their lives had laid its
weight on her also. Then he remembered that, as he had left the house that
morning, she had called over the stairs that she would meet him at her
grandmother's so that they might drive home together. He had called back a
cheery "Yes!" and then, absorbed in other visions, had forgotten his
promise. Now he was smitten with compunction, yet irritated that so trifling an
omission should be stored up against him after nearly two years of marriage. He
was weary of living in a perpetual tepid honeymoon, without the temperature of
passion yet with all its exactions. If May had spoken out her grievances (he
suspected her of many) he might have laughed them away; but she was trained to
conceal imaginary wounds under a Spartan smile.
To
disguise his own annoyance he asked how her grandmother was, and she answered
that Mrs. Mingott was still improving, but had been rather disturbed by the
last news about the Beauforts.
"What
news?"
"It
seems they're going to stay in New York. I believe he's going into an insurance
business, or something. They're looking about for a small house."
The
preposterousness of the case was beyond discussion, and they went in to dinner.
During dinner their talk moved in its usual limited circle; but Archer noticed
that his wife made no allusion to Madame Olenska, nor to old Catherine's
reception of her. He was thankful for the fact, yet felt it to be vaguely
ominous.
They
went up to the library for coffee, and Archer lit a cigar and took down a
volume of Michelet. He had taken to history in the evenings since May had shown
a tendency to ask him to read aloud whenever she saw him with a volume of
poetry: not that he disliked the sound of his own voice, but because he could
always foresee her comments on what he read. In the days of their engagement
she had simply (as he now perceived) echoed what he told her; but since he had
ceased to provide her with opinions she had begun to hazard her own, with
results destructive to his enjoyment of the works commented on.
Seeing
that he had chosen history she fetched her workbasket, drew up an arm-chair to
the green-shaded student lamp, and uncovered a cushion she was embroidering for
his sofa. She was not a clever needlewoman; her large capable hands were made
for riding, rowing and open-air activities; but since other wives embroidered
cushions for their husbands she did not wish to omit this last link in her
devotion.
She
was so placed that Archer, by merely raising his eyes, could see her bent above
her work-frame, her ruffled elbow-sleeves slipping back from her firm round arms,
the betrothal sapphire shining on her left hand above her broad gold
wedding-ring, and the right hand slowly and laboriously stabbing the canvas. As
she sat thus, the lamplight full on her clear brow, he said to himself with a
secret dismay that he would always know the thoughts behind it, that never, in
all the years to come, would she surprise him by an unexpected mood, by a new
idea, a weakness, a cruelty or an emotion. She had spent her poetry and romance
on their short courting: the function was exhausted because the need was past.
Now she was simply ripening into a copy of her mother, and mysteriously, by the
very process, trying to turn him into a Mr. Welland. He laid down his book and
stood up impatiently; and at once she raised her head.
"What's
the matter?"
"The
room is stifling: I want a little air."
He
had insisted that the library curtains should draw backward and forward on a
rod, so that they might be closed in the evening, instead of remaining nailed
to a gilt cornice, and immovably looped up over layers of lace, as in the
drawing-room; and he pulled them back and pushed up the sash, leaning out into
the icy night. The mere fact of not looking at May, seated beside his table,
under his lamp, the fact of seeing other houses, roofs, chimneys, of getting
the sense of other lives outside his own, other cities beyond New York, and a
whole world beyond his world, cleared his brain and made it easier to breathe.
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