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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 78615 ***
+
+
+
+
+ THE TIDE
+
+
+
+
+ RECENT BORZOI NOVELS
+
+
+ THREE PILGRIMS AND A TINKER
+ MARY BORDEN
+
+ THE TATTOOED COUNTESS
+ CARL VAN VECHTEN
+
+ THE ETERNAL HUNTRESS
+ RAYNER SEELIG
+
+ THE FIRE IN THE FLINT
+ WALTER F. WHITE
+
+ THE LORD OF THE SEA
+ M. P. SHIEL
+
+ BALISAND
+ JOSEPH HERGESHEIMER
+
+ SOUND AND FURY
+ JAMES HENLE
+
+ TREASURE TRAIL
+ ROLAND PERTWEE
+
+ WINGS
+ ETHEL M. KELLEY
+
+ ORDEAL
+ DALE COLLINS
+
+
+
+
+ MILDRED CRAM
+
+ _The Tide_
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+ _New York_ · 1924
+
+ ALFRED · A · KNOPF
+
+
+
+
+ COPYRIGHT, 1923, 1924, BY MILDRED CRAM · PUBLISHED,
+ OCTOBER, 1924. · SET UP, ELECTROTYPED
+ AND PRINTED BY THE QUINN & BODEN COMPANY,
+ RAHWAY, N. J. · ESPARTO PAPER MANUFACTURED
+ IN SCOTLAND AND FURNISHED BY W. F. ETHERINGTON
+ & CO., NEW YORK. · BOUND BY THE H. WOLFF
+ ESTATE, NEW YORK, N. Y.
+
+ MANUFACTURED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
+
+
+
+
+TO MY HUSBAND
+
+
+
+
+I
+
+
+Lilah closed the door of the apartment and walked slowly across the
+living-room to the window, removing her black hat and the chiffon veil
+which had about it an unpleasant and penetrating odor of mourning. The
+silence was good. To be rid of all those people, those eyes, trying to
+gauge her grief, to measure it, as if it were soluble! Tears! Suppose
+she hadn’t shed enough? Then they would have said that she had not
+loved her father....
+
+Well, she had.
+
+Now she could do as she pleased about everything. She turned her back
+to the window and with quick, critical eyes appraised the room her
+father had liked to call the “library.” He had brought his books and
+possessions from Ohio to New York when he accepted the professorship at
+Columbia. “No, my dear, we mustn’t leave this, or this--these things
+are very precious to me. They are--sanctified.”
+
+Sanctified! A little burst of laughter shook Lilah. She wanted to sweep
+everything into a great heap and set a match to it; to make a bonfire
+of sanctified ugliness.
+
+She felt very young and invincible as she stood there with her back
+to the window. She had asked to be alone because she was afraid of
+the exuberance that had taken possession of her on the way back
+from the cemetery. Everything had looked so fresh, so gay, so
+desirable--streets, houses, little flocks of sparrows, people passing
+with disinterested glances at the long procession of funeral hacks. She
+had wanted to jump out and walk. But she had kept her handkerchief over
+her face to hide the upward curving of her lips, the look she knew must
+be there of eagerness. She had gone through the business of burying
+her father famously, had made all the conventional gestures. Something
+within her had said: “I am free. This is the beginning for me.”
+
+She was sorry that she had pitied her father. She would have preferred
+to admire him. He had never understood, as she understood, life or
+men. A failure, he had capitalized his defeat. She had seen through
+him--his artful gentleness, his calculated patience, his martyrdom. He
+never complained, but his eyes looked out at you like a startled deer;
+you had a feeling that you had hurt him in some way. He was forever
+turning the other cheek, accepting reverses and disappointments with
+enthusiasm, as saints have worn and rejoiced in hair shirts.
+
+Lilah thought: “Did I love him? Of course I did. Old hypocrite! I
+shouldn’t. He lived his own life and never gave a thought to mine. And
+he has left me penniless. He made me love beautiful things and I’ve got
+to shift for myself in order to get them. But I loved him.”
+
+She remembered his hands, large, hairy hands with freckles, that had
+groped for hers in those last, terrified moments of wavering. And her
+heart contracted with a deep pity, a shame, a pervading loneliness.
+She began to cry....
+
+She would save the books, of course. They were valuable. Her father,
+who had been a gluttonous reader, had had excellent taste. Most of his
+salary had gone into first editions--that rare Aretino, the Baudelaire,
+the exquisite copy of Vasari’s “Vita di Leonardo da Vinci.” All the
+book clerks in the city had gone to the funeral. He had belonged to
+that rare genus, the veritable connoisseur.
+
+“Your father was a wonderful man, Miss Norris. Wonderful. I’ll always
+remember him prowling up and down between the shelves, peering and
+questioning. He knew how to handle books! _He_ never broke their backs!”
+
+Wiping the tears away, Lilah went into her bedroom. She hated herself
+in black; she was too blonde and too slender. She decided, leaning
+forward to stare at herself in the dressing-table mirror, that she
+was positively plain.... And she made a little face at herself. She
+undressed slowly, slipping out of the black dress she had bought for
+the funeral. Then, sitting on the edge of the bed in her underthings,
+she took stock of herself. She could still see herself in the mirror,
+rather blurred by the dim light, but charming, not plain now that the
+black was gone and her eyes were free of tears. She was one of those
+women who take a serious pleasure in regarding themselves; she was
+never unconscious of her cleverly modeled face, the misty quality of
+her loveliness. And because of this preoccupation, her expression was
+watchful, with something petulant in the droop of her mouth. She was
+small and compact; she had the broad shoulders and meager hips of
+a boy. Her hands were too large but she had inherited her mother’s
+pointed and lustrous nails and a certain fineness, almost an elegance
+of gesture. She was strong but indolent; she disliked fussy, unsteady
+people.
+
+She turned her head and gravely studied another angle of her face; she
+had always taken a peculiar delight in the possession of her own nose;
+its blunt, deft outlines were modern, audacious, “funny.” How lucky
+not to be aquiline, or worse, Roman! It was part of her good fortune
+to have been born in physical key with her period. She would have been
+considered ugly in the sixteenth, the eighteenth centuries; in the
+twentieth, she was delightful because her features were irregular and
+provocative.
+
+She thought again: “I am alone.”
+
+All young lives, she reflected, must begin, be founded upon, the
+death of some one already old. From the stale and disillusioned, such
+soaring as hers! For she meant to soar. Change, decline, a difference
+in her delicious outline, were remote and unimaginable calamities. She
+remembered, with a shudder, her father’s last year. He had seemed to
+surrender too easily to the little habits of senility--he had not been
+always--quite nice. Why were old people so pathetic, so remote, so
+unaware of their lack of grace?
+
+Now, she knew, she was glad that it was over. She could be free of that
+breathless pity, that impatience which had bordered on disgust and had
+hurt her so--
+
+She jumped up and went back to the library.
+
+Her father’s chair was drawn up beside the table, so that the light
+from the lamp might fall across his open book. He had been reading
+Emerson. Not Nietzsche, at the end. He had said, with one of his
+smiles, that as he drew nearer to the devil he sought a better
+acquaintance with God.
+
+Lilah wondered whether he had found God; whether, after that frantic
+struggle not to die, he had come upon green hills and clouds white as
+snow. She smiled at the thought of him, reading “Essays in Pessimism”
+and neglecting his harp, or his pitch fork. Perhaps he had sought
+acquaintance with God too late, as she herself was sure to.
+
+She sat down in the old chair and contemplated her slippers, her
+ankles, her legs. Pretty enough legs. She might try the stage. It was
+an amusing thought, and while it lasted, she saw herself, very much
+blonder, wearing one of those soubrette costumes with a bouffant skirt
+and a “plate” hat tied under her chin....
+
+The idea trailed off.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+When the telephone rang, she hesitated. It might be Aunt Jo--one of the
+relatives, who had made this pilgrimage to New York with the gusto of
+the confirmed funeral enthusiast. Or it might be David, who had made
+her grief an excuse for offering his shoulder again.
+
+On the chance that it might be Robert Peabody, she answered.
+
+His voice, with that peculiar hesitation, said: “Miss Norris?”
+
+He wanted to see her. He had only just heard. Might he come? Of course!
+To-night.... She was alone and unhappy, depressed. He could imagine....
+
+“Eight o’clock, then.”
+
+She put the instrument down and ran into her bedroom, her spirits
+flying again, like a whir of swift birds across a sunset sky. The
+window was open, and, bare-armed, she leaned on the sill, watching
+the tide in the street, people hurrying home, with bundles, with
+newspapers, with twisted cornucopias full of flowers. The sky was
+slate blue and the street a deep cañon full of purple shadows. All
+the ugliness was erased; the cornices had a sort of beauty. A tall
+apartment house over on the Avenue rose like a tower, a shaft of white
+stone set with lights and crowned with wisps of steam, purple-blue
+plumes in a giant’s cap. The murmur of the city rose, confused, a vast
+grumble. She thought again of her father, lying out there beneath
+a heap of flowers, and of herself, here, alive, with everything
+unfolding....
+
+He had always said that he had given his life to her. What he had
+really given her was a dubious inheritance. She had all of his
+impatience, his detestation of the crude or the banal.
+
+He had taken her with him on his annual vacations in Europe, meager
+excursions to Switzerland and Italy. Lilah summered in innumerable,
+obscure _pensions_. She wore crêpe waists that “did up” without ironing
+and comfortable German-Swiss shoes with hob-nails, and tramped through
+the Alpine valleys carrying a stick and a knapsack. Her quick eyes saw
+everything, took things in, assorted, rejected, accepted. She spoke
+French and Italian with a pert accent, and while her father sought out
+and worried his intellectual bones she absorbed the European Blue Book.
+
+Beyond the redolent _pensions_ with their grottoed gardens and dingy
+dining-rooms, there were the Grands Hôtels d’Europe, emblazoned
+_concièrges_ and _parcs_ equipped with statuary and pavilions. And
+beyond the hotels, a sacred circle of _chateâux_ and _villine_
+sheltering the lives of people whose very names stirred in her a
+melancholy envy. She had never thought herself socially inferior;
+she had the peculiar pride of the pedagogical aristocracy; she was,
+moreover, American in her assumption of equality. But she could not
+be patient, she could not accept what she knew to be a surrender to
+mediocrity.
+
+In the meantime, several men fell in love with her--a Swedish pianist
+with a bang and long finger-nails, an Italian cavalry officer and an
+English engineer who wanted her to go with him to South Africa. She
+knew, before she was twenty, the depth and the danger of passion. A man
+had groveled at her feet, begging for something she could not feel. She
+had known disgust and terror; afterwards, an exultation. She seemed to
+have a certain persuasion. Realizing it, she cultivated her charm, what
+men called her “mystery.” Part artifice, part instinct, this charm of
+hers was deepened, made permanent, during those summers in Europe. She
+was feminine and adroit. She knew that, given the right soil, she might
+cultivate a very rare garden indeed.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Now this....
+
+She closed the window and began to dress. Black again, she supposed.
+Robert Peabody was conventional enough to question grief in orchid
+chiffon; he would expect pallor--and pearls. Her own string was
+imitation and she threw it down again. The telephone was ringing ...
+David.... She crinkled her nose at herself in the mirror. Let him ring!
+He was one of those dumb, worshipful creatures made more ardent by
+rebuffs. He would ring to-morrow, and the next day, and the next, until
+she answered. Nothing must interfere with her seeing Robert Peabody
+alone.
+
+The bell stopped with a querulous note of surrender, and she went about
+the library, straightening the chairs, pushing the ugliest ornaments
+out of sight. She moved quickly, conscious of an unpleasant sensation
+of fear. Her father seemed to be there, watching her, mournful and
+beseeching, with those eyes of a dog or a wounded deer. She felt that
+she had done something unfair; that she might, she might have held him
+on this side a little longer--if she had resisted whatever it was that
+was pulling him down and away! How horrible! Death should never come
+near the living. It was unkind. Even to know--
+
+She had put a silk scarf over her shoulders. The fringed ends touched
+the floor; with one hand she held the heavy folds across her hips so
+that the grace of her figure was visible.
+
+When the door bell rang--it was one of the push-button variety--she
+waited a moment before answering, an artistic interval intended to stir
+a doubt in Peabody’s mind and then to reassure him so that he would
+mount the four flights of carpeted stairs with a sense of victory, of
+security.
+
+While he climbed, she leaned over the banister. She could see his blond
+head with the neat parting, his black and white muffler, a gloved hand
+on the railing.... The ghost in the room behind her drifted out of the
+window, back to the pyramid of flowers.
+
+She thought: “He has never been here before. He’ll hate the room.”
+
+But Robert Peabody seemed only to see her. His light eyes, not quick
+like her own, but steady and almost expressionless, stared at her as he
+took her hand: “I was so sorry to hear--so awfully sorry for you.”
+
+Lilah’s lips trembled. She led him back to the library and took from
+him the heavy overcoat, the silk muffler, his hat and gloves. The feel
+of them pleased her; they were so exactly right in texture.
+
+“I’ve been at the Point,” he said, taking her father’s chair. “I never
+see a paper there. Gillow told me when I got back this morning.” He
+hesitated. “I liked your father.”
+
+“Every one did,” Lilah said.
+
+“I know. I dare say he was better than most of us.”
+
+“He was.”
+
+“See here. I wish you wouldn’t cry! When people die, it’s a confounded
+shame to talk about their good qualities. I’m a fool. I didn’t mean to
+do what every one else does. I meant to cheer you up a bit.... Are you
+alone?”
+
+Lilah wiped her eyes. “Yes. I sent the relatives away. They enjoyed it
+too much.”
+
+He laughed. “Sensible of you! What can I talk to you about? Dogs?
+People? Gardens?”
+
+“Yourself,” Lilah answered. “I’m curious about you.”
+
+This was obvious, but he was not the sort to be alarmed.
+
+“Your father must have told you,” he said. And to her surprise he
+flushed. “I was his worst pupil. I flunked everything. I’m terribly
+stupid.”
+
+“I don’t believe that.”
+
+“But I am. I wouldn’t be anywhere to-day if it weren’t for my
+grandfather. He created the family, and he still runs it. Funny
+thing--he had all the creative instinct. He saw the possibilities in
+lumber sixty years ago. He saw, and, he dared. Magnificent old chap! He
+outlived my father. I dare say he’ll outlive me.”
+
+“Hardly.”
+
+“Eighty-four. Thin as a leaf and hard as steel! I’m third generation.
+And drinkin’.”
+
+“Why?”
+
+“What else is there to do? My grandfather had all the fun. He broke
+the ground and planted the seed. Now the trees are up--if I can put
+it that way--and there’s nothing for me to do but sit in the shade....
+Sometimes I envy him.”
+
+Lilah glanced down at her slippers. “You shouldn’t. He gives you
+everything.”
+
+“And laughs at me! Because I’m soft. And thick-pated. He couldn’t hate
+me any more than I hate myself. My God, Miss Norris, to be as rich as I
+am and to look like an English governess.... Now, don’t I? Honest? You
+ought to see my knees--they’re as pink as a baby’s! Look at my hands!
+And this hair--it parts like that, neat, in the middle! Great God!” He
+stared at her. “So I’m drinkin’.”
+
+“You don’t blame your grandfather for your knees, do you?”
+
+“Of course I do.” He slid forward and offered his cigarette case.
+“Smoke?”
+
+Lilah thought quickly: “Do I, or don’t I?”
+
+She decided: “Yes.”
+
+And leaning to the match he lighted, she puffed delicately, with quick
+little intakes of breath. The smoke came through her nostrils. She
+tipped her head back and let Peabody see the firm line of her throat,
+her chin, round and feminine.
+
+“I made you laugh, didn’t I? I wanted to.” His expression changed,
+and she saw again that bland, sympathetic look, an intensification,
+as if he were trying to focus on his emotion. He had no complexities
+of feeling; he seemed to grope for the most simple reaction. It was,
+Lilah thought, like one of those “slowed-up” pictures in the movies.
+You saw his mood change as you watched him. She could anticipate
+the conclusion before he was aware of it himself. Was he going to
+bore her too much? Her mind was not always accurate but it was quick
+as lightning. She saw--pounced--judged. She lay back in her chair
+watching this man whose path had crossed hers only twice, once in
+Europe, and again at a dinner given in honor of her father. He was
+the only rich man she knew. The satellites that had revolved about
+her in her _pension_ days had been on the lookout for the traditional
+American heiress; she had no _dot_, and therefore no claim to their
+serious attention. She knew this. And her attitude toward men had been
+unconsciously established; she believed that she could not advance
+without a compromise. She took it for granted that she would have to
+forego love. She was too ironical to consider the possibility of a
+lovable Robert Peabody.
+
+“See here,” he said. The match burned out between his fingers and he
+tossed it into the grate. “I have a suggestion.... You ought not to
+stay here alone. Suppose you let me take you back to the Point? My
+grandfather’s there. He’d love you. And there’s my Aunt Whiteside,
+who’s a sort of housekeeper. It would do you good. What do you say?”
+
+Lilah shook her head. “No.”
+
+“Why not?”
+
+She stood up, flicking the ashes into the hearth, with a gesture she
+had perhaps copied from some one--it was not insolent, but it was very
+“Russian.” She was picturesque, standing there, the lamplight on the
+curious silver-gold of her hair, which she wore straight back from
+her forehead. She had about her that peculiar and elusive element of
+elegance which is usually the patina, unmistakable, of wealth. There
+was no trace of her rather shoddy experience in either her carriage or
+her attitude. She was not arrogant. She was assured. And this was her
+most valuable asset.
+
+She shook her head again. “I can’t. I’m penniless. I’ve got to do
+something.”
+
+Robert Peabody stared at his hands as if they offended him. “I’m sorry.
+Terribly sorry. That’s rotten luck.”
+
+The rich can be magnificently casual about money. It was rotten luck!
+But to people like the Peabodys, financial calamity is too remote to be
+classed among the realities of life.
+
+Lilah, glancing down at the neat part in Robert Peabody’s hair, knew
+that she had made a misstep.
+
+“It’s all right,” she said lightly. “I’ll manage.”
+
+“Of course you will! Only I’d hoped that you’d come. It would be jolly
+for my grandfather. And for me.”
+
+It would have been jolly for her, if she could have afforded it.
+How could she tell Robert Peabody that she had only the one dress,
+and nothing for evening? If she had been a personality, some one
+established, a woman of importance, it would not have mattered. A
+great woman needs only her wits and her name. But Lilah was nobody.
+Twenty-seven years old, and nobody. She felt that her potentiality
+had been walled in. Her father had had a streak of something common
+in his nature; he had preferred mediocre people. He was always giving
+money to blatant, down-at-the-heel sycophants whom he suspected of
+talent or spiritual loveliness. He lent a sympathetic ear to tales
+of degradation. There was something coarse in him--a streak aslant
+the pure crystal of his intellect. His friends had called him a
+humanitarian; to Lilah, his passion for derelicts meant a lack of
+fastidiousness. She wanted him to be an epicurean; he had ended by
+being a pathetic Nietzschan bleating for God....
+
+Oh, to get away ... to forget, in the freshness of the country in May,
+the stale odor of crêpe and wilted carnations....
+
+“You ought to see the Point, Miss Norris. Some day, you must. I was
+brought up there. I’m pretty much of a country chap. I’d like to show
+you the kennels. D’you like spaniels?”
+
+“Rather.”
+
+“I’ve got a new litter. Four of the prettiest little chaps. Smooth as
+silk with perfectly gorgeous ears.”
+
+He went on, talking about spaniels, leaning back in her father’s chair.
+
+She smiled. But her mind was busy making pictures of the Point; she
+was walking down a garden path paved with brick between rose hedges.
+The sun was warm on her back; she could feel it through the lace of
+her gown, and on her neck, where her leghorn hat turned up and you saw
+her hair twisted so smoothly, honey-colored. She was not with Robert
+but with his grandfather. There was a look between them of perfect
+understanding, something warm, mutual, delicious. And the sky was like
+a Canaletto, flecked with “mackerel,” gentian and crystal. She saw the
+chimneys of a house, and a sort of terrace where a cow grazed under
+some trees....
+
+“The little chaps hadn’t opened their eyes.”
+
+“No?” she said. She came back out of the dream with a shiver of
+pleasure. Then one by one the details of the room assailed her. This
+was hers.
+
+She twisted her shoulders and smiled. “Aren’t you hungry? I’ll make a
+rarebit.”
+
+Robert Peabody flushed again. “Will you?”
+
+She led the way to the kitchen, and, letting the silk scarf fall
+into Robert’s hands, she put on an apron. She was very expert and
+swift, lighting the gas stove, opening and shutting the ice-box,
+grating cheese, toasting crackers, stirring and measuring. She put
+Robert in a corner, where he sat with her scarf between his hands,
+caressing the stuff, not as some men would have caressed it, with
+luxury, but with a sort of unconscious pleasure, as one strokes the
+silky ears of a dog. All the while he watched her. She had decided
+not to be ashamed of the way she lived; there was little or no use in
+pretending luxury. A medley of sounds rose from the court outside,
+and she closed the window. They were more alone in the silence. Their
+intimacy and their strangeness demanded words, but he said nothing,
+only watched, with emotions making their slow and obvious passage
+across his eyes. He found her fascinating and she puzzled him. She
+was practical, and pretty, a lady; you couldn’t be quite sure, these
+days; he might have a shot at a flirtation; he pitied her; he was a
+little afraid of her--but fascinating, by George. Damned attractive!
+Something foreign about her.... And then the idea of love crossed his
+mind. While she was stirring the rarebit, she watched the beginning of
+that idea. His eyes were fixed on her hands and arms, from which the
+black sleeves fell back. His eyes clouded with the poignant onslaught
+of his conception--to love her, to be loved by her. Tremendous. A
+responsibility. His mouth betrayed, by a droop at the corners, his
+humility and discouragement. And his hands, touching the silk fringes,
+began suddenly to caress them, gently.
+
+When she leaned across the table to pour the rarebit, he bent quickly
+and kissed her arm.
+
+Lilah said: “Oh.”
+
+“Forgive me, there’s a dear! I didn’t mean to. I swear I didn’t.”
+
+“And you pretend to be stupid?”
+
+“But I am. That’s just it.”
+
+She shrugged. Her reaction was immediate and would have startled him
+had he known how swift and inexorable her judgments were. She had
+decided to make him suffer, and to land him full and fair in her net.
+This one, and no other! You will see that she was romantic; only a
+very sentimental woman enjoys making a man suffer. As a gauge of love
+the process is primitive, even savage. It meant simply that in that
+moment, so light, so brief, when he had put his lips to her arm, he had
+attracted her.
+
+“It’s a good rarebit,” he said. “And it seems to me you’re awfully cozy
+here. Nice little flat. Everything comfortable.”
+
+“But I haven’t any money.”
+
+“Not literally?”
+
+“Quite. When the nurses and doctors are paid, I shan’t have anything.”
+
+She stifled a sudden depression. “I’ll do something. I can make hats!”
+
+He looked up from the rarebit. “I bet you can! I’ll tell Aunt Whiteside
+and the James girls. I know mobs of women....”
+
+He branched off into the eccentricities of his Aunt Whiteside’s
+hats. “Awful little bonnets with trees and crystal dew-dabs and
+strings--everything shakes and shivers--all of her hats have the palsy.
+But she pays like thunder for ’em. And the bills go to my grandfather.
+He always says: ‘The price of virtue’ when he writes the check. She’s
+sort of a mother superior in sequins. One day my grandfather said:
+‘Robert, have you ever noticed Grace Whiteside’s legs?’ I’d never
+thought of such a thing! But the next day I looked, and by George, they
+were magnificent! Something terrible about it.... An old lady with
+legs....”
+
+“Go on,” Lilah said.
+
+But Robert shook his head. “I’m shockin’ you.”
+
+“No. I’ve known Italian men. They all talk like that, only, in Italian,
+it sounds like d’Annunzio: _Le gambe belle di una vecchia donna_....”
+
+They laughed.
+
+He had forgotten about her poverty again.
+
+Before he left, standing in the darkened hallway with his muffler on
+and eyes sympathetic again, he said: “I’m going to ask Grace Fuller to
+come around and see you. She’s looking for a room-mate. Splendid girl.
+I’m rather sweet on her. You’d like her.”
+
+“Grace Fuller?”
+
+“She’s a nurse. Took care of me when I had my appendix. And she always
+sees Aunt Whiteside through the gall-stones.”
+
+He offered his hand.
+
+Lilah felt that, behind her, the ghost had drifted in again. “I’d be
+very glad,” she said faintly.
+
+“Now you cheer up.” His voice deepened a note. He was genuinely sorry
+for her. “Good night.”
+
+Lilah leaned against the closed door.... Tired.... Tired.... Grace
+Fuller.... Sweet on her.... What a damned fool of a man! What a bore!
+Stupid! Stupid! To have had him here at all! To have tried....
+
+She ran to the window and leaned out. A motor moved away with a silvery
+clink of chains. It had been raining.... He was gone.... The street
+lights were like balloons on sticks and an odor of wet dust rose,
+pungent, acrid.
+
+For a long time she leaned there, with dry eyes, her breath shallow.
+The day flowed back over her spirit and she saw herself, little,
+heartless, unsuccessful. She had better make up her mind to do with
+what she had. To accustom herself to such ugliness as this.
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+
+She had hoped for a little life-insurance; her father’s wail had been,
+whenever she wanted a new hat: “I can’t, my dear. I’ve got to pay the
+life-insurance--twenty dollars.” She had never questioned him; it had
+seemed unkind, but she knew that there was some sort of a policy. She
+went through his papers, vaguely excited. There were a few letters from
+some one who signed herself “Darling,” written in a spidery hand on
+blue paper. Lilah threw the package into the waste basket, unread....
+His knife. His precious letter of recommendation from Hadley.... A
+note, long overdue, forgotten, outlawed, hardly decipherable.... A long
+envelope containing snap-shots of his dog, Nellie, the old setter.
+Lilah felt a penetrating pity--her father, laughing, in a corduroy
+coat, with Nellie tugging at a leash. Her father, on a jig-saw veranda,
+with his pipe, and Nellie scratching fleas behind him.... Nellie....
+Nellie....
+
+The policy was not there. She emptied the drawers of an accumulation of
+cherished trash, all faded, incomprehensible.
+
+She was interrupted by a caller, a thin, waspish man who tried to
+be amiable, as if he expected, before the interview was over, to be
+thoroughly disagreeable.
+
+“Miss Norris? I represent Bilton and Chiswick, agents for this
+apartment. We have heard of your misfortune. We would like to know
+whether you intend to occupy the premises now that you are--alone--or
+whether you prefer to sub-lease.”
+
+Lilah said impatiently: “I’ll let you know.”
+
+He consulted a black book, very much thumbed. “Your lease expires in
+twenty days. Shall I prepare a new lease for the coming year? The rent,
+in all these apartments, has been raised. We are asking sixty-five a
+month for three rooms and bath.”
+
+“How on earth does he know,” Lilah wondered, “that I’m broke?”
+
+To shock him, she lighted a cigarette.
+
+He jumped up. “We expect an answer in the morning. There’s a great
+demand for these apartments.”
+
+“Is there?”
+
+Lilah went with him to the door and shut him out with a bang. These
+agents had a mysterious money instinct--they could smell out poverty.
+Beasts!
+
+She went back to the library, suddenly conscious of the inestimable
+blessing of a roof. She had sixty dollars. The doctor could be put
+off. Doctors never expected to be paid at once.... The nurse, no.
+Then, where would she be? Why hadn’t her father taught her to do
+something.... She had forgotten the grocer’s bill, the milk, ice, gas,
+newspaper....
+
+She would have to borrow. From whom? Not Aunt Jo. Nor her father’s
+cronies, the book clerks. Nor from any of the professors and
+assistants. Every one she knew was poor, struggling, limited.
+
+She signed a new lease. The waspish man was suspicious. He made a
+sucking sound with his tongue and snatched his fountain-pen back before
+Lilah had added the line and the two dots which usually ornamented her
+large, flourishing signature. She had no idea how she was going to
+thwart his obvious intention; he meant to evict her, bag and baggage,
+at the first opportunity. When he had gone, sucking his teeth all the
+way down stairs, Lilah telephoned David Brenner. He, at least, would
+know that coupons don’t grow in geranium pots.
+
+He came, smiling in that way he had of cherishing a secret.
+
+“David, I’m frightened.”
+
+“Broke?”
+
+She emptied her purse on the table. “Forty-one, seventy-seven.”
+
+He shook his head. “I’m not sorry for you, Lilah. You’re looking into a
+mirror at what you think is life. And the mirror is a trick mirror--it
+enlarges, distorts everything. You see your poverty--colossal! You
+see your limitations--gigantic! You see your fear--enormous! And look
+here--look! The Truth! You’re a pretty little humbug. You can earn your
+living, only you’re afraid to.”
+
+“David, I thought you loved me.”
+
+“I do.”
+
+The young Jew had eyes that went around her. “I do. Only--between the
+sublime and the ridiculous there is the breadth of a hair.”
+
+“Am I ridiculous?”
+
+“You are a little humbug,” he said stubbornly.
+
+“What can I do? I won’t cook. I won’t take care of babies. I won’t be a
+chorus girl.”
+
+“You’re too old.”
+
+“Old?”
+
+“Certainly. What else can you do?”
+
+“I can make hats.”
+
+Suddenly she raised her voice. “I hate poverty! It’s positively
+immoral.”
+
+“What a pretty speech! Wait until you know real poverty, as I have
+known it! Did I ever tell you--I escaped from Russia when I was
+sixteen? I stowed away from Vladivostok to San Francisco and lived
+like a rat for three years. Only then my name wasn’t Brenner--it was
+a mouthful! I don’t hate poverty. I hate the system which permits
+poverty....”
+
+Lilah interrupted. “I shan’t fail! I can get four with one and
+one-half. I’m quick. But I don’t like having to be quick. I prefer to
+wear chiffon and to walk in a garden....”
+
+His eyes softened “Poor Lilah.”
+
+“What shall I do?”
+
+“Work.”
+
+“_You_ don’t,” she said sharply.
+
+But he would not part with his secret. Spreading out his hands,
+he shrugged, and let her believe anything. Suspected of having
+dodged the draft, David Brenner kept strange company, maintained an
+enigmatic silence and, like all morose and discontented intellectuals,
+appeared to be more important than he was. He wore a cloak of vague
+disapproval. It was more an atmosphere than a militant conviction.
+He was not a fighter. There was something adolescent in his moody
+distraction, his hauteur, his indifference.
+
+“Lilah, I am an alley cat, pawing over garbage. I have come upon
+a glittering little fish, a fresh sardine--and that’s Lilah! I
+shall never be the same cat again.... I shall always be looking for
+sardines.... Will you lunch with me?”
+
+She would.
+
+They went to a Greenwich Village restaurant. In certain moods, Lilah
+enjoyed such places. She liked to sit aloof and peep between her
+fingers at these pathological bohemians. She smoked, veiled her eyes,
+and let David Brenner hold her hand. The table was a patch-work of
+initials and dates, egoistic trademarks. Lilah thought of Dante’s Tomb
+and the names scratched on the face of the Sphinx--little names, here
+and there, seen, gone ... nothing....
+
+David Brenner was no better than Robert Peabody. Men only wanted to
+kiss her.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+She left him and walked uptown, seeking the sacred pavements of upper
+Fifth Avenue with a deep breath of relief. Here, she could be herself.
+She drifted from one shop-window to another, absorbed, with something
+in her expression of the devotee. She might have been a woman of
+elegance, whereas she happened to be a little nobody with forty-one
+dollars and seventy-seven cents in the world.
+
+Characteristically, she postponed thinking about the future. She
+enjoyed the great symphony of the streets. The crowds gave her a
+feeling of security.
+
+She studied the hats. One, in particular, delighted her. It was
+_chinoiserie_, a poem in colored silks with a funny, pointed crown--no
+one but Lilah could wear such a hat.
+
+She went on; came back to stare.... Delightful.... Her father had not
+wanted her to wear mourning. And this little hat would give her some
+sort of glow....
+
+She went into the shop.
+
+It was a gray, padded, mirrored place. And a woman in a black dress,
+too short, with long, square sleeves, came forward.
+
+“The little hat in the window,” Lilah said in her best manner. “The
+Chinese one.” She made a gesture.
+
+“Ah, yes.”
+
+The hat was produced, twirled, tipped, turned upside down.
+
+“Let me see.”
+
+“Certainly.”
+
+Lilah sat down before a mirror and removed the black hat and veil. She
+ran her fingers through her hair and gave a downward and upward thrust
+of her head to receive this crown of bright, twisted silks.
+
+“Lanvin,” the saleswoman remarked.
+
+“Really?”
+
+“A copy.”
+
+“I thought so.”
+
+“But, Madam, it is exact. In everything. The silk; the ornament--you
+won’t see another.”
+
+Lilah studied her profile. She was indeed a quaint and delightful
+little person....
+
+“Do you like it?”
+
+“Very becoming, Madam.”
+
+Lilah felt a rush of excitement and pleasure.
+
+“How much is it?”
+
+“Thirty-five, Madam.”
+
+“That seems--”
+
+She broke off. It was really not expensive.
+
+“You look very well indeed, Madam. You wear that type of hat
+wonderfully. So few can!”
+
+“I’ll take it.”
+
+The woman’s manner changed. “May I show you others? We have a few
+models--it is rather early.... One very beautiful straw, from Molineux.
+This one ... a little more to one side.... You wear hats so well.”
+
+Lilah wanted to say: “I make them, too.”
+
+Instead, she wrinkled up her nose and became very contemptuous. “I
+don’t like it.”
+
+“No?”
+
+She went out of the shop wearing the little silk turban, and carrying
+the black hat in a striped box inscribed: _La Mode Chez Annette_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Beneath a slate-blue sky the light stone palaces of trade were
+curiously luminous. The Avenue itself, in shadow, was a revolving chain
+of motors; the great procession of glittering vehicles moved forward,
+stopped, was pierced by cross-town traffic, moved forward again. The
+Towers built about the Plaza rose into sunlight and were gilded at
+the tip. Lilah found the city very suave, mellow--there was none of
+the brazen clamor of Chicago, the sullen roar of London.... A woman
+approaching with a dog on a leash and wearing a long black cape and a
+plush tricorn, was like a figure by Longhi....
+
+Lilah was conscious of a keen esthetic pleasure. The hat had restored
+her self-confidence, the certainty of success.
+
+She was always alive to this pageant; its deeper meanings, its trend,
+escaped her. But she saw every face that passed--she could label them,
+put them in their niche. Old people touched her heart, if they were
+brave and jaunty; she could be infinitely sorry for some suffering
+and haughty face glimpsed in passing. The audacious, bow-legged, and
+blatant girl of the people, aping fashion, irritated her; vulgarity
+excluded the picturesque; there was nothing wistful about gum and
+lop-sided French heels. Lilah was not pitiless, but her pity was
+aroused by things in themselves not tragic--she was sorry only for
+the strong who are defeated by time or disease. The weak and helpless
+annoyed her because they made demands on her sympathy. She preferred to
+give, unsolicited.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+She turned aside at Fifty-seventh Street, eager to wear the hat into
+all the high-roads of fashion.
+
+Then, superior to fatigue, borne along on the crest of that little
+personal success, she walked downtown again, with her quick, short
+steps and the imperious carriage of her head, threading the impersonal
+crowds, stimulated, eager, warming herself against that pressure of
+life.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+She climbed the four flights of carpeted stairs slowly. All the zest
+was gone. If her father were only there--some one--
+
+A woman, rather tall, with a curious, ugly face and a bang of lightish
+hair under a queer hat, was leaning against the wall in the half-shadow
+at the top of the stairs.
+
+“Miss Norris? I’m Miss Fuller. I rang and you didn’t answer. But I came
+up anyway. Robert Peabody sent me.”
+
+Lilah said, in a voice she kept for strangers: “I’m so glad. Won’t you
+come in?”
+
+Miss Fuller followed and looked carefully at everything before she sat
+down.
+
+“This isn’t my taste,” Lilah said instantly.
+
+“It wouldn’t be. Robert raved about it and about you. He liked both the
+room and yourself. He has no discrimination, but he is a darling.”
+
+“What, exactly, do you mean by that?”
+
+“I mean that frills are wasted on him. He doesn’t see them. From what
+he told me, I did not expect--you.”
+
+Lilah laughed. Her good humor returned. She glanced at herself in the
+mirror.... Reassuring, that hat....
+
+“What did he tell you?”
+
+“Oh.... Pretty.... Sweet.... You’re not sweet. I hate the word. Why do
+men use it? Men are so stupid. When they think they’re in love with you
+they call you ‘sweet’ and they always muss up your hair. I hate being
+made love to. They never do it right. They either choke you or they
+scratch you. It makes me irritable, and they never try it again.”
+
+“Does Robert scratch you?” Lilah asked sweetly.
+
+“No. He chokes.”
+
+“He would,” Lilah said. “Do you let him?”
+
+“I compromise. I insist on vacations. Then we are platonic and he is
+pathetic. He is a child. He cries for a lollypop. So I say: ‘Go ahead.
+Kiss me.’ And he does. And, afterwards, I use liniment to limber up my
+neck.”
+
+“You look like a Vanderbilt,” Lilah remarked. “All that wooly hair. And
+that long neck. And those eyebrows.”
+
+“I’m Middle West. My grandfather was a Carlsen, a farmer. But my
+mother took a trip to Chicago before I was born and saw some wealth
+and fashion and marked me. I love luxury. I can achieve it with cheese
+cloth, safety pins and a little rouge. But now I’m bored. I want a
+French maid.”
+
+“Why don’t you marry Robert?”
+
+“I’m going to. If you don’t.”
+
+“I?”
+
+“He has called you sweet.” Miss Fuller lighted a cigarette. She did
+it in a characteristic way, a methodical, unhurried movement of her
+cool, thin hands. “I won’t fight. I can’t. You have all the weapons.
+And I have none. I’d be kind to him and you’d ruin his life. But you
+would keep him dancing and I would see to it that he sat by the fire. I
+understand him. You never will.” She tossed the match away. “And he’ll
+take you.”
+
+“Nonsense.” Lilah was pleased. She thought: “I’ll take _him_, rather.
+She’d better watch out.”
+
+Aloud, she said: “Robert says you’re a nurse.”
+
+“I met him six years ago, when I was the starchiest graduate you’ve
+ever seen--pink and white, with a cap pinned on a blonde pompadour. It
+used to be fashionable to fall in love with your nurse, and I had a
+bed-side technique. He asked me to marry him, but I wouldn’t, because
+that was always part of an appendix convalescence. Afterwards, he
+forgot. Of course! But later they sent me to the Point to nurse his
+Aunt Whiteside--”
+
+“I know! The gallstones!”
+
+“He told you?”
+
+Miss Fuller quenched her cigarette with the same, deliberate, unhurried
+gesture. She had a strange smile, sensitive, in contrast to the clipped
+irony of her conversational style. Lilah saw that this woman had
+been grievously hurt, shockingly buffeted. There was something about
+her calm which suggested the heroic self-control of the victim of a
+hurricane or an earthquake. She was afraid, but she was hanging on.
+
+“So I went. Starch, blonde bang, wrist-watch. Very cool.... That
+house.... The grandfather’s house. About Eighteen-Seventy. Carpets.
+Lots of silver. Walnut and ebony. Gongs for dinner. Velvet. You know
+the sort of thing.... I don’t like the grandfather.”
+
+“Why?”
+
+“He doesn’t like me. He likes pert women, who hiss like cats and
+scratch and then purr on his knee. My starch irritated him. But Robert
+liked it.”
+
+“Did he kiss you, then?”
+
+“No. Not for years.”
+
+Lilah said gently: “You love him.”
+
+“Yes. I do.”
+
+“Well--”
+
+“Something I see, that you get to see when you know him! A gentleness.
+He is kind to people and doesn’t make any fuss. There’s no mystery
+about him. I’m sick of mysteries.... Doctors.... You don’t know what
+those hospitals are! They make a cynic or a huntress out of you, unless
+you happen to be a Florence Nightingale. I’m not. I don’t believe in
+anything.”
+
+She broke off and Lilah said: “Tell me about yourself. More! Aren’t you
+happy?”
+
+“Sometimes. When I’m alone. And I’m never alone.”
+
+Lilah laughed. “Robert said you might live with me.”
+
+“I _could_ live with you! You’re not the sort of woman who talks, or
+fusses. You make me think of a feminine cat, licked, sitting on a
+cushion. Indifferent and mysterious, but cozy.”
+
+Lilah enjoyed this admiration; she knew that she possessed in an
+unusual degree the qualities which Grace Fuller lacked; she could be
+seductive because she had no particular sense of humor. Grace Fuller
+was the sort of woman who keeps her emotions under lock and key because
+she knows that she is ridiculous, that all emotion is ridiculous. She
+waited for some one to smash in her defenses and rescue her hidden
+self. In the meantime, she leaned on the door, fearful. But Lilah was a
+naked heart behind a grill.
+
+With a sudden impulse, Lilah said: “Come, then! There are two
+bedrooms.... I pay sixty-five a month.... I’ve got to do something ...
+make hats ... dance.... We’ll manage.”
+
+They lighted cigarettes and sat, talking, watching each other, until
+midnight.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Grace Fuller moved in--her two trunks and a neat bag were put in the
+room which had been Mr. Norris’. At once, an array of toilet articles
+appeared on the bureau--cosmetics and perfumes of very good make in
+crystal bottles, small, opaque boxes of rouge and lip sticks in metal
+cases. Miss Fuller had a passion for cosmetics, but she did not look
+like a woman who painted; her skin was her only claim to seduction, and
+the faint odor of perfume was an indication of her restraint. She was
+virginal, and, in her exaggerated loneliness, abnormal. She shut the
+door of her room against Lilah, and only emerged, fully dressed and
+curled, for formal conversation.
+
+She left the apartment early in the morning and returned, often, late
+at night, dog-tired, but unflinching.
+
+Lilah made one attempt to get work to do. She had heard that one of
+the fashionable men dressmakers wanted a designer. His shop, an entire
+house in the East Fifties, was furnished in the exotic manner of
+Poiret’s establishment in Paris. His mannequins inevitably graduated
+to the stage, or to society. Diana, Kitty, Carmencita ... opulent,
+tall girls with the hands and arms of goddesses.... Something about
+this man’s manner had always attracted Lilah. He made the exploitation
+of feminine vanity an enormously profitable business. She went to see
+him, relying on the poetic little hat and her manner to carry her past
+the guardians of his privacy to the inner sanctum, his office, a room
+decorated by Chanler.
+
+She found the approach unexpectedly easy. He was seated behind a desk.
+She was surprised, upset, by his youth and his concise greeting:
+
+“Won’t you sit down?”
+
+“Thank you.”
+
+“You are interested in a wardrobe? It is not the season. But there are
+a few models....”
+
+“No. I am a designer. Hats. I want a position with you.”
+
+“There is no opening.”
+
+“I thought....
+
+“Your experience?”
+
+“None. I have good taste....”
+
+“I see! That hat?”
+
+“Lanvin.”
+
+“Ah.”
+
+“But I am talented, myself.”
+
+“You know Paris?”
+
+“Very well.”
+
+“You are hard up?”
+
+With a flash of anger, Lilah said: “Yes. I am. I want a job.”
+
+“You shouldn’t have come to me. I am a busy man. Why didn’t you see
+Mr. O’Connor or Mrs. Frazer, at the work-rooms?” He wrote something on
+a card and tossed it across the desk. “There! If there’s room in the
+shop, they’ll give you a chance.... First, you must learn to put hats
+together. Later, perhaps, you can design them.”
+
+Lilah rose. She did not take the card. She felt his eyes, shrewd,
+appraising, absolutely without illusion, slide over her--it was a
+physical, a nauseating attachment.
+
+“Thank you,” she said.
+
+“Not at all.” He waved his hand. His expression changed. He dismissed
+her. “Good morning.”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+She postponed reality. There seemed to be no incentive, no immediate
+need; she was strangely lulled. She had, for years, searched for
+something vital, something with which to satisfy her restless longing
+for perfection. She had failed. There was nothing ahead that she could
+not, now, recognize as dull, inevitable, beyond her capacity for
+patient endurance.
+
+She was afraid of death, but she believed that, once dead, she would be
+thoroughly dead. As a child, she had had an overdose of religion; her
+mother had fed her all the gloomy details of the orthodox legend; on
+the other hand, she had been conscious that her father, secretly, knew
+better. It was the old tragedy of credulity, Santa Claus and the cotton
+beard.
+
+Her dreams were deeper, more hidden than is usual with women. She
+wanted love but not what she called suburban love. She secretly desired
+a man who would be indifferent to her contempt and beyond the reach of
+her irony. She could imagine herself in love, but the co-protagonist
+was always featureless; she invariably built her romance about her
+own personality. She was forever clothing herself in the garments of
+romance and falling in love with herself.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Robert Peabody reëntered her life a week after the relation with Grace
+Fuller had been established.
+
+He came one evening when the two women were together, Lilah sewing
+at some impractical square of brocade, Grace Fuller, her narrow feet
+elevated, smoking a cigarette in an amber holder. She had watched a man
+die that afternoon--an old man whose pet particular nurse and slave
+she had been for six months. Yet there was no sign of relaxation, of
+discouragement. Her pessimism was too deep, established, like some
+physical disease--slowly, she was hardening in the mold fate had made
+for her.
+
+Robert Peabody was embarrassed and jovial. Lilah found him amusing
+because, for the first time, she saw that another woman really wanted
+him.
+
+While he talked, as usual, about his dogs, Grace Fuller watched him.
+Her scrutiny, deep, unswerving, made Lilah conscious that he was, in
+a way, handsome. Always well-dressed, he had the deft outlines of a
+man accustomed to luxury; and his bland good humor was the result of
+an existence devoid of anxiety. His appendix had been the outstanding
+complication, so far. Something of his grandfather’s looks had passed
+to him; he had the high nose with flaring nostrils. But his eyes were
+his mother’s and hers the rather sensitive and melancholy mouth.
+
+He liked these two women. They were outside his sphere. He “played
+about” with the women who lived near Peabody’s Point, women he had
+watched grow up from spoiled little girls into a casual maturity; he
+had flirted with all of them, had seen them married and had settled
+into the bantering familiarity of the cherished bachelor in a “young
+married” community.
+
+Whatever he felt, inwardly, he was outwardly an inflexible optimist.
+Lilah wondered whether he saw Grace Fuller’s eyes, whether, if he saw,
+he could appreciate the extent, the danger, of that dedication. And she
+remembered, with an unexpected excitement, how he had kissed her arm.
+
+She went on sewing, bending her head so that the light from the lamp
+would fall on her hair. Her soft abstraction, her air of modesty and
+domestic content, drew him away from Grace Fuller. He leaned forward
+to finger the stuff she was making into a useless and ornamental bag,
+and she explained that the brocade came from a shop in Florence where
+the copying of ancient materials was a specialty. This was the robe
+of Boticelli’s Primavera, a delicate scattering of small flowers on a
+background of cream silk.
+
+Grace Fuller rose suddenly and went into her bedroom.
+
+“Don’t flirt with me,” Lilah said. “Miss Fuller won’t like it.”
+
+He flushed. “You’re quite mistaken.”
+
+“You told me you were ‘sweet’ on her.”
+
+“I am. But I can flirt with you all the same.”
+
+Already, they had the manner of conspirators. Robert lowered his voice
+and said: “Will you dine with me? To-morrow? Say ‘yes.’ I’m going back
+to the Point on Friday. We’ll take a hansom to the Park and eat there.
+What do you say?”
+
+Lilah whispered: “Yes. I’ll be ready at five. Not later.”
+
+The door opened and Grace Fuller came in again. She caught the
+quick lifting of Robert’s head, his smile, at once embarrassed and
+triumphant. She knew him so well that her heart ached for this
+duplicity; she could even pity him for having had to hurt her. But she
+said nothing.
+
+When he had gone, she spoke from the doorway to Lilah, who was winding
+rough, colored threads about cardboard spools.
+
+“I wonder if you know what love is? Oh, you can imagine it! You think
+about it a lot! But do you know? The pain.... Exhausting.... Of trying
+to pour yourself into a man’s consciousness.... And then being stupid.
+Hurting him--pushing him off.... Pretending.... Because you’re ashamed
+of wanting.... Killing what you want. Not wanting what you want until
+you’ve lost it....”
+
+“That’s a bit excessive,” Lilah said. “You’re morbid, aren’t you? I
+could make any man happy by learning to understand him. If he liked
+mystery, I’d be mysterious. If he wanted a pal, I’d pal. To the limit.”
+
+“Could you be domestic?”
+
+“Certainly.”
+
+Miss Fuller laughed that short, dry and brittle laugh. “What we all
+say! Pretend to be clay for the molding. Other women nag. We wouldn’t!
+Other women suffer jealousy. We wouldn’t! Other women fail in the
+little illusions and go about in curl-papers and a mask of cold cream,
+without their mental corsets. We wouldn’t! But married.... Well, it’s
+positively thrilling to observe the similitude of women.... Marriage is
+a sort of antiphlogistine--it brings out all the lurking devils.”
+
+“How do you know?”
+
+“I’ve observed ... remember, I am a nurse. The shades up and the light
+of day on the domestic drama....”
+
+Lilah said suddenly: “I may take your Robert away from you.”
+
+Miss Fuller seemed to consider. “I see what you mean. I’m jealous!” She
+shook her head. “Robert isn’t the man for you. He isn’t a snob. And you
+are. I mean, you care a great deal about things Robert never notices.
+At the Point he goes about like a hired man in a pair of corduroy
+trousers and an old green sweater. He’s lazy. And sometimes he says
+stupid things....”
+
+“What?” Lilah asked sharply.
+
+She felt a sharp pang of irritability slip into her consciousness,
+edged. Her eyes were lowered; her fingers flew around the cardboard
+spools.
+
+“Oh, he’s full of platitudes. He collects stamps. He reads the wrong
+books, and he wants children.”
+
+“Does he?” Lilah’s voice was cool. The inflection was iced.
+
+The thought crossed her mind that perhaps Grace Fuller had lived with
+Robert. This was at once a revelation and a weapon. She glanced up.
+With a look both appraising and sympathetic, she studied that worn,
+disillusioned face, in which the charm of a blonde freshness had given
+way to a shadow, a premonition of old age. Vaguely distinguished,
+aloof, sharp and bitter, she had a tender mental surface. Lilah knew
+that she herself could control Grace Fuller’s opinions; she was not
+afraid of her tongue; the woman was quivering under the skin.
+
+“I see what you’re thinking,” Grace Fuller said. “It isn’t true. I’ve
+loved, but not Robert--that way. You won’t believe me. He’s decent, as
+men have forgotten how to be decent.... Lilah, let me have him!”
+
+She crossed the room suddenly and stood before Lilah with her hands
+clenched at her sides, her face strained. “I love him!” she cried.
+
+Lilah tossed the silks upon the table. “Nonsense,” she said crisply.
+“I don’t want your Robert! He’s a fearful bore. He’s flat. He moves
+about on the face of the earth like a wet beetle. Grace, you’re biased.
+You’re lop-sided. You’re hypnotized by his morality--or his money!
+You’re making yourself ridiculous and Robert is flattered. He doesn’t
+intend to marry you. It’s too comfortable to know that he can make you
+suffer. Why not make him suffer? Men don’t appreciate martyrdom. You
+look like an old woman, at thirty. Am I unkind? I don’t mean to be. I’m
+awfully fond of you.... I tell you, I don’t want your Robert.... But I
+can’t help it if he should happen to fall in love with me.... Men do
+those things. They love the wrong woman.... If you didn’t care.... If
+you could....”
+
+She broke off.
+
+“Let’s go to bed. I’m tired. He tires me. I tell you he bores me. Let’s
+not talk about him.”
+
+Without a word, Grace Fuller went into her room and shut the door.
+
+In a few minutes she came out again. She had brushed her hair back from
+her forehead, and had a startled, innocent look. She kept rubbing cold
+cream into her face and neck with little upward, crawling motions of
+her finger-tips. She wore a corduroy wrapper and felt slippers. Lilah
+noticed that her feet were narrow and bony, like a priest’s. Her elbows
+were sharp. Her shoulders were too narrow.... Lilah felt round and
+cozy and soft. She felt warm; her flesh delighted her. She thought how
+delicious she must look, sitting there with her feet in high-heeled
+slippers tucked under her. She was sorry, in a comfortable sort of
+way, for Grace Fuller. She wanted, at that moment, to help her, to give
+her some of her own warmth and brilliance, to bring her into the circle
+of her inevitable success.... She saw herself making it very delightful
+for Grace Fuller at Peabody’s Point. “My dear Grace, Robert loves to
+have you.... He is so fond of you. You must stay as long as you can!”
+Perhaps giving her some decent clothes.... She would be quite smart in
+simple things, with eccentric hats and bizarre ornaments....
+
+Grace Fuller rubbed the cream into her finger-nails with the absorption
+she put into doing all unimportant things, as if performing a rite. As
+Lilah had never seen her out of the formality of curled hair and rouge,
+she felt a vague embarrassment.
+
+“I wanted to say,” Grace Fuller remarked presently, “that we mustn’t
+have a misunderstanding. You’re more important to me than Robert.”
+
+“I tell you, I don’t want him,” Lilah repeated.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+She dressed carefully for her meeting with Robert. The Chinese hat had
+lost some of its novelty, but she had added a French veil.... She was
+almost, literally, penniless.
+
+At five o’clock Robert Peabody arrived. He was eager, flushed.
+
+A shiny hansom-cab, deliciously out of balance, precarious, waited at
+the curb. A group of curious small boys gaped at this contrivance, and,
+as Lilah and Robert crossed the sidewalk, a window was thrown up and
+a burst of laughter floated down to them. Lilah was acutely conscious;
+Robert unaware. He had the fine indifference of the wealthy to other
+people’s little humiliations. She had a momentary feeling of defeat. He
+was infinitely removed. He intended, probably, to treat her as he had
+treated Grace Fuller....
+
+Then, abruptly, her mood changed.
+
+The cab turned uptown; the rhythmic clop of hoofs, the remote and
+cushioned cabin, like a sedan on wheels, her own youth.... Suddenly
+everything was desirable, delightful. This was what she wanted,
+deserved....
+
+She began to sparkle. She was so intimate, so gay, that Robert
+Peabody’s rather stolid expression changed to one of amazed delight in
+her. He turned around; their eyes met. She noticed that his eyes were
+not blue, but hazel, very clear and wide open. She pressed her shoulder
+against him, and he became aware of a delicate odor of sandalwood.
+They laughed a good deal. Because she thought that he would not be
+interested in her European experiences, she talked about the rare
+summers she had spent in American resorts. She spoke of her “good
+tennis arm” and how an Indian had taught her to handle a paddle. As a
+matter of fact, she was an indifferent sport. But she could imagine
+herself doing all these things. She believed she had done them.
+
+Robert Peabody discovered a new eloquence. He had an admirable passion
+for the out-of-doors. It kept him, he said, from drinkin’. In New York,
+he gave way in that point. Prohibition was a good thing--he’d be the
+last person to interfere with such a colossal experiment. But any one
+who could afford to drink, drank. He did. He supposed he wasn’t a
+good American. He never had been, in a literal sense. Politics didn’t
+exactly get under his skin; the country muddled through without him.
+He had his property, his dogs, his friendships, his conviction of an
+inalienable right to these possessions. If there should be social
+changes, upheavals, revolutions, he would accept whatever came. He
+believed in going with the times, never bucking the trend, whatever it
+was.
+
+The war hadn’t interfered with this facile philosophy; he had accepted
+the fact that the world was fighting mad, stark crazy, gibbering. A
+phase. It had happened before; it would happen again. He couldn’t stop
+it by stating a preference for open fields and dogs. So, he had gone
+to the first officers’ camp, and had agreed cheerfully to whatever
+“authority” said. A knack for details, hitherto undiscovered, had
+landed him in the ordnance and he had worn silver chevrons in cheerful
+glory at Rochester, New York. Captain Peabody!
+
+“Now it’s over, I am back where I want to be. The world hasn’t changed
+much. I don’t understand all this talk about a new consciousness. Men
+won’t change, either. We had our chance when Wilson went to Paris. But
+the recoil didn’t surprise me. We aren’t ready for practical idealism.
+You and I--people who see what might be--aren’t a drop in the bucket of
+public feeling. We’re swamped by millions of frightened ignoramuses.
+They’ll swing back to the doddering conservatives, bleating for
+normalcy. They’ll get it! We’re in for another Dark Age.”
+
+“Don’t you care?”
+
+“No. I never believed in the pet illusions we fought for, anyway.
+Civilization has always tickled my sense of humor. There are certain
+unchangeable, satisfactory things--well, dogs! And days when you
+can smell the sea, sweet, like flowers, blowing in over the fields.
+September days! I’d stack ’em up against every bloody war for
+supremacy, the confounded conceit of man--I’m talking like a poet. I’m
+not a poet. I’m lazy. I like peace, and plenty to eat.”
+
+He laughed. “And you. I like you. You’re cute as the devil.”
+
+Lilah turned to him again and let him see the curve of her lips. She
+had never been more vivacious. The city flowed by the cab windows with
+a dignity impossible in a motor, taking place, not as kaleidoscopic
+flashes in a cubistic ensemble, but as buildings, towers, parks and
+people. In the wide brilliance of Madison Square there was time to
+value the great campanile soaring out of the feathery green of the park
+into a bland sky.... Then, more slowly, up the long incline to the
+Library, where the lions seemed to gaze down their noses over invisible
+spectacles; they had, Lilah remarked, a sort of haughty senility--Grand
+Army of the Republic lions about to recite the “Battle of Gettysburg.”
+One of them had worn a rakish snow hat during a February blizzard,
+the other a white blanket about his middle, like a pet poodle in a
+wooly-wooly....
+
+Lilah found the city astonishingly beautiful--but something held her
+from telling Robert Peabody so. He would not have shared her delight in
+the unfinished masterpiece. New York, to him, was simply New York; like
+so many New Yorkers, he suffered from a familiarity with marvels. Lilah
+found it both monstrous and audacious. She had always tasted cities
+as a connoisseur tastes wine. Now, in this slate-blue twilight, she
+shivered with pleasure. The lava-stream of motors filled the air with a
+sort of luxurious purring; it seemed to Lilah that the hidden springs
+of vitality within herself had begun to vibrate, to hum, like harp
+strings; she was vibrant. If some one would write a grand opera, not
+in the manner of “Louise,” not lyric, amorous, but metallic, about New
+York! The leit-motif, a theme of feverish, restless striving. The minor
+melodies, machines, riveters, steam jets, whistles, sirens, bells,
+six million human voices--unceasing, beating against the human heart
+like the tom-tom of African drums. The sets ... from a window, streets
+like Sienese back-alleys enormously exaggerated. Vast, tilting walls.
+A few lights on the face of the cañon. Weight of stone and steel and
+swaying towers. Or, a bloodless avenue of square monoliths, imposing,
+imponderable, significant....
+
+The cab turned into the Plaza, so long an upheaval of derricks, mud,
+French Gothic and erratic statuary, now settled into a beauty of its
+own, and Robert Peabody said: “Shall we stop here? Or do you prefer
+the Park?”
+
+Lilah preferred the Park.
+
+They dined out-of-doors, their faces close together over a narrow
+table. She found him more attractive here. He had a genial yet vigorous
+manner of dealing with waiters and hat-boys, an almost aristocratic
+indifference to publicity and he did not, after calling her “cute
+as the devil,” come back to the attack. He let her see that he was
+aware of the privilege of her company. There were other women in the
+restaurant; a startlingly brunette girl in black satin which made her
+look, Lilah thought, like a wet cod-fish, sat almost at his elbow,
+yet he disposed of her, and her seduction, with a glance. He ordered
+planked shad and regretted that there was no white wine; at the Point,
+he had over a thousand bottles of Sauterne....
+
+“I want to meet your grandfather,” Lilah interrupted.
+
+“He would like you. He doesn’t like Grace Fuller.”
+
+“Why?”
+
+Robert’s face puckered. “I don’t know.”
+
+Lilah said quickly, in a way she had of disposing of things: “She’s
+not quite sane. She will never be contented. She’s such a darling ...
+but she takes life too seriously. She depresses me. She’s like white
+grass growing in a dark place.... I don’t know.... Yes, I do know.
+She’s a celibate. I hope she’ll never marry. For her own sake. But more
+for the man’s. I’d pity a man who found that instead of a woman he
+had an obstinate, distorted idea in his arms. Not love at all, but a
+misconception of love. She wants experience but runs away from it--she
+curls her hair and rouges and then hides.”
+
+“I like her,” Peabody said. “But I don’t pretend to understand her.
+Perhaps you are right.”
+
+“I know I’m right.”
+
+She dismissed Grace Fuller and set about captivating this rather
+ponderous intelligence. Again, she relied on her quickness, her
+intuition, her adroit penetration. He had been, evidently, upset by
+mention of Grace Fuller; either he had a sense of responsibility or he
+was annoyed by Lilah’s analysis. His was a basic honesty and loyalty.
+She changed the subject to herself. She could see that she excited
+him; he was, she had heard from Grace Fuller, accustomed to women who
+preferred sport clothes and who rode to hounds; he had been brought up
+in a society which imitated, on a smaller, more restricted scale, the
+life of the English counties. He had had no intellectual companionship.
+He could not juggle with the stock phrases of the _cognoscenti_; he
+was too simple, or too indifferent, to acquire a modern vocabulary
+of names and cults, movements and personalities. But she could stir
+his imagination with herself, her decisive manner, her melting eyes,
+the little upward turn of her mouth, as if, always, she wanted to be
+kissed. She felt him leaning toward her, absorbed. She knew how to
+make what she said audacious, and, by a subtle turn, to leave the
+implication in doubt. She suggested desire without feeling it. This
+was a part of what other people called her “technique.” She was not
+unaware of it, but she did not consider that it was something she ought
+to be ashamed of. Rather, it gave her an inestimable advantage.
+
+After dinner they walked through the park, their arms and shoulders
+touching in the darkness. There was everywhere a subdued gurgle of
+water in shallow basins or lipping the banks of the lake. Couples
+passed, drifting, close together, with a murmur of voices. The blatant
+artificiality of the landscape was blurred, softened, gathered into
+somber walls of vegetation, threaded with globes of light. Groups of
+people passed in and out of the shadows, made mysterious, dignified by
+an unreality that had about it something of the theater. Faces glimpsed
+in passing were indefinite; the sound of feet on the asphalt paths, the
+murmur of voices were Venetian, melancholy....
+
+Robert Peabody drew her arm through his. At Eighty-fifth Street, as
+they crossed the road, he raised his cane and signalled for a cab.
+Lilah sank back with a little sigh.
+
+“This is comfortable! Let’s drive.”
+
+Suddenly his arm went about her shoulders. She was surprised at the
+strength, the violence of his grasp.
+
+“You’re adorable. Let me kiss you.”
+
+She shook her head. “No.”
+
+But he bent down, kissed her, once, twice, a dozen times. She was
+breathless, angry, frightened, but helpless in the circle of his arm.
+“Don’t! Don’t!” she said. “Please. Here....”
+
+She heard him say: “I love you. I want you to marry me.”
+
+Her heart contracted. How on earth had this happened? What would the
+driver think of such a scene? This was what, all along, she had wanted.
+He had everything ... everything.... Something in his eyes, his voice,
+husky, shaken, made her know that he loved her. It would be easy to
+manage him.... Love.... She couldn’t expect to kiss him like that at
+once. As always, she shrank from contact. But if she....
+
+“Answer. Open your eyes.”
+
+She made a struggle to throw into her expression something ardent,
+convincing. And lifting her face, she kissed him. She need not say, at
+once, the words he expected. She was not as dishonest as that.... A
+wave of feeling, relief, excitement, went over her. His head fell back,
+down again, on her shoulder. He was, suddenly, weak, surrendered to
+his emotion. She saw the back of his neck, his close, blonde hair. The
+intimacy of their attitude assailed her and she pushed him away.
+
+“Not here. Later....”
+
+“You’ll marry me?”
+
+“Yes. Yes.”
+
+She lifted her arms and straightened her hat. Then she felt her hand
+seized and his lips fastened on her fingers, hungry, insatiable....
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+
+Lilah was afraid to tell Grace Fuller that she had promised to marry
+Robert Peabody. Her conscience, an inconsistent element in her nature,
+disturbed her to the extent of making her irritable. She went to her
+room without saying good night.
+
+She was trembling with excitement and could not sleep. Instead, wrapped
+in a kimono, she paced the floor, seeing her white face at intervals in
+the oval mirror of her dressing-table.
+
+What would her life be with Robert Peabody? Not what she had dreamed,
+certainly. She would have the scope money affords. But not the pride of
+love; she would always be a little ashamed of Robert. She did not know
+why, exactly. To justify her acceptance of him, she assured herself
+that she could change him, pour him out of his mold into hers. Yet she
+shivered with apprehension. He might guess her lack of feeling and
+grow cold himself. Men wanted love, the gestures and jealousies, the
+unconsidered, delicious abandonments, passion. She could never give him
+this. And she would miss the wild sweetness, the danger, the pain of
+love that is mutual, acknowledged. But she wanted ease....
+
+She paused to stare at herself. Perhaps she was wrong. There might
+not be love of that sort. Perhaps she was giving Robert all that he,
+or any man, expected--her prettiness, her charm, her youth. He must
+be forty. He had had experience--but, good heavens, she couldn’t be
+jealous! Only he mustn’t go on; if she married him, he must be loyal....
+
+Pacing the room again, she pictured herself in possession, at last,
+of security. It was humiliating to battle with poverty when you had
+no wits with which to pull yourself out; if she had been one of those
+clever girls who stalk success, on the stage, in studios, newspaper
+offices, shops.... She hadn’t their courage or their audacity; she
+despised struggle.
+
+Persistently, the idea returned, that she was cheating. She recalled,
+with a shudder, an instinctive recoil, his attitude as he bent over her
+hands--it had been both supplicating and possessive.
+
+What she was doing was immoral, wrong. She had been brought up to
+believe that such a step leads to good, old-fashioned perdition,
+hell, damnation and brim-stone. Experience had taught her that in all
+probability she would suffer, but that if she were clever she could
+balance the advantage against the price; wealth against Robert, love
+against comfort; she threw her charm in, to square the account. She
+could be generous on that score. She would dress remarkably well; she
+would create an interesting atmosphere, and if Robert did not know
+the most entertaining personalities in New York, she would get them
+together; before long, she would be a famous hostess. In just that,
+her ability to attract people, lay her genius. She could, given the
+means, make living an art, create, out of places and people, something
+unique and memorable, as Lorenzo of the Medici had made his pages, his
+poets, his ladies and his gardens into an immortal legend. Why not?
+American literature had recently exploited the soda-water clerk and the
+corner groceryman, the farmer, the traveling salesman, the immigrant
+and the crook. No one was interested in the spiritual reactions of
+that almost extinct dodo, the gentleman. Nothing was art that did not
+deal with a profane ape groping for the stars and missing them! The
+more interesting and complex society was overlooked in this effort to
+capture the soul of what Lilah called the proletariat; it proved, this
+soul, as elusive as a flea. One was left with the conviction that the
+country was populated by illiterate sensualists--a vast, imponderable
+mediocrity. There was no one else. The fine flower had withered in the
+clutches of this overwhelming parasite. An inchoate fumbling at the
+foundations ... a wail of protest ... ignorance and braggadocio....
+
+Or else, they advertised the flapper, the country-club habitué, the
+pathological spinster and the cad. Society was constantly being
+reminded that it was rotten. Novelists were what David Brenner had
+called himself, alley-cats pawing over garbage. Apparently, the brave
+and the witty, the poetic, the exquisite were, for artistic purposes,
+fresh sardines. The cry was for Truth, and the whole pack ignored any
+truth that was not putrefied, or, at least, stale....
+
+Lilah thought: “I can do something to change this.”
+
+The idea trailed off into a vision, a spectacle, a kind of
+entertainment in which she played the leading rôle. She saw the house
+she would have in New York. Herself, in gray brocade trimmed at the
+neck and hem with fur, her feet in brocaded slippers, advancing across
+an immense, glowing room, her hand outstretched....
+
+ * * * * *
+
+She did not want to hurt Grace Fuller. At breakfast she shivered with
+dread. It would be like putting poison in a cat’s milk. She expected to
+see Grace Fuller actually foam and shriek and stiffen and then stretch
+out dead on the kitchen floor, her bang in curl and the pallor of her
+cheeks brushed faintly with expensive rouge.
+
+Lilah was very tender. She made pop-overs and cooked the hominy in a
+double boiler. She hovered over Grace Fuller, who ate with precision,
+as if she were afraid of exuberance, as if, Lilah thought, she were
+guarding herself against some strain of hysteria.
+
+Lilah said suddenly: “Robert asked me to marry him last night. I said
+I would. I know you’ll think I’m a liar. I didn’t really want him
+yesterday morning! When he kissed me--I did.”
+
+Miss Fuller went on buttering a slice of toast. She did it thoroughly.
+Then she said in an absolutely unchanged voice: “What are you going to
+do for a trousseau?”
+
+Lilah flushed crimson. To cover her relief, she opened the oven door.
+She had expected something more--more feminine. She said: “I thought
+you cared.”
+
+“I do.... I learned certain things in France. One of them was not to
+care too much.”
+
+“I didn’t know you went to France, Grace.”
+
+“Three years.... And things like this happened.... At Soissons there
+was a French boy, about twenty-two years old. He looked nineteen. They
+brought him in with a wound in his abdomen--he told me, that first day,
+that he had looked down at himself and had seen his own intestine. He
+was going to die. They all said so. We were being shelled, and every
+night we had to carry the wounded into the cellar. He couldn’t be
+moved. And while all the rest of them cried out and groaned or made a
+joke of it, he said nothing. The wards were dark. They let me have a
+baby flash which I held under my apron, and I used to run back to him.
+Sometimes the racket was fearful--that long howl and screech of shells
+passing over. Sometimes it was quiet as the tomb. I was never sure
+whether that boy was alive until I saw his eyes, blue, steady, patient,
+asking me to pull him through.... Well, I did! He was my case. He got
+well. The day came when he was out in the garden in a chair, and then
+he was in uniform again, going home....”
+
+Grace Fuller shrugged her shoulders. “I cared. Terribly. It was my own
+little victory. He was a brave boy. I used to gloat over the fact that
+I had cheated death.... Then, one night, a year later, they brought him
+in again. I was standing in the hall when the ambulances came. There
+had been a drive and we had our hands full. Suddenly I saw him. His
+stretcher was sopping with blood. He had gone back as an observer and
+his plane had been shot down ... he was riddled. But he knew me. And
+again he asked me to see him through. _I couldn’t!_ He died there, in
+the hall ... my victory! And I had to see those patient eyes fill up
+with distrust, with protest, with a sort of mocking challenge, as he
+felt himself slipping out of my arms into that red tide....”
+
+She rose, folding her napkin into a neat square.
+
+“Since then, I haven’t let myself care.”
+
+“How did you stand it?”
+
+“What?”
+
+“The war.”
+
+“I didn’t stand it. I changed my nature.”
+
+Lilah said: “I wanted to do something--help.... But the women over
+here acted so badly I was ashamed.... They seemed to enjoy, some of
+them, all the risk and death. You’d see them rushing down the library
+steps, their faces red, clutching at men, trying to drag them into it:
+‘You’re going to fight, aren’t you? Why aren’t _you_ in khaki?’ And
+then the Liberty drives ... a sort of circus parade of ambulances,
+stretchers, posters smeared with blood, pictures of atrocities--that
+terrible one by George Bellows, of a massacre at Dinard.... People
+were excited. They took a sort of morbid pleasure. I wanted to stay
+out of it and hold on to sanity, if I could. It never ‘got’ me. And
+when the wounded began to arrive, it was worse. One of the doctors at
+Greenhut’s told me that they had to force the women out. They weren’t
+all of them sympathetic; they wanted to look at the wounded. The way
+a crowd rushes to an accident.... Morbid. Even the women who danced
+with the soldiers and sailors and knitted in the theaters struck me as
+ridiculous.... I hated it.”
+
+“It was better in France.”
+
+A silence fell and Lilah’s cheeks burned again. She rolled the sleeves
+of her dress above her elbows and began to clear the table. Miss Fuller
+stood, rigid and uncompromising. Presently, in her usual precise voice,
+she said: “If you are going to marry Robert, you’ll have to have some
+clothes. Have you any money?”
+
+“No.”
+
+“How much would you need to see you through? I have saved a little.
+I’ll let you have it.”
+
+“I can’t allow you to do that.”
+
+“Why not?”
+
+“I’ve hurt you----”
+
+“No, you haven’t.” Unexpectedly, she put her arms around Lilah. “I want
+you to be happy. I admire you enormously.”
+
+Lilah hugged her. “Darling Grace! After all, it’s better that I should
+have him. You’ve got strength, and I haven’t. Left alone, I’d sink.”
+
+“Oh, I’ll swim,” Grace Fuller admitted. “Women like me always do! We
+give the impression of strength because we have our imaginations under
+control. I’m as helpless as you are, but I won’t admit it. The men of
+my family were all farmers. From them, perhaps, I got my tolerance. I
+can’t blame you. I wish I could! I can’t blame Robert. I have none
+of the usual feminine eagerness to blame men for everything that goes
+wrong. You probably think I have no standards. I haven’t. I understand
+too well.”
+
+She went into the other room and came back wearing her hat, with a
+rather dog-eared fur neck-piece clasped under her chin; in high, tight
+collars she had the swan-like look of Consuela. Lilah was deeply sorry
+for her. For the moment she felt herself inferior.
+
+“I can let you have five hundred dollars, Lilah. Don’t tell Robert.”
+
+The telephone rang. They looked at each other with a glance stripped
+naked of pretense.
+
+“Go. It’s Robert.”
+
+“No! No!”
+
+“Hurry! Please.”
+
+Lilah went. She put the receiver to her ear with a certain dread, a
+reluctance.
+
+And she heard Robert’s voice, vibrant, saying: “Lilah? Sweetheart! I
+want you to meet me for lunch. We’ll buy that ring. What d’you say?” He
+broke off. “Is Grace there?”
+
+“No,” Lilah said distinctly.
+
+She turned her head and saw the door closing.
+
+“No,” she repeated. “I’m alone.”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Lilah was married a month later, in Junius Peabody’s house at the Point.
+
+She had had an overwhelming four weeks. Grace Fuller’s five hundred
+dollars had no more than cleared the first hurdle. When Robert Peabody
+asked her whether she wanted pearls or a bandeau of diamonds, she had
+replied: “I prefer the money. I don’t care for jewels, and there are
+all sorts of things I want, and need; foolish things I can’t afford.”
+
+He had given her a check for five thousand dollars.
+
+With this sum deposited and in possession of a book of blanks smartly
+bound in leather, Lilah reversed her mask of poverty. She wore,
+instead, her most devastating sophistication, a fetching air of
+patronage and sweetness. Her first pilgrimage was to the gray stone
+house in the Fifties occupied by the esthetic and sharp couturière who
+had refused her a chance to work. She sent word to him that she was
+interested, this time, in a “wardrobe.” She was wearing a slim and
+expensive frock of red crêpe and a Paisley turban. She was positively
+beautiful; her slimness, her arched feet in delicate shoes, her gloves,
+were dominating.
+
+The dressmaker (his name was Maurice) pretended not to recognize her.
+With a bow, he led her to his show rooms and, summoning a saleswoman,
+entered, in French, into a passionate discussion of Lilah’s height, her
+coloring, her possibilities. One of the deep-skinned models trailed
+upon the scene in a sheath of gold cloth, dragging behind her a tail of
+emerald green chiffon. She met Lilah’s stare with an expression totally
+blank, as if she were walking in her sleep. Maurice sent for materials,
+yards and yards of brocade, metallic cloth, crêpe de Chine; jade,
+orange, violet and dull red mingled on the floor, the backs of chairs,
+across lacquered screens and tables. This profligate heap of stuffs
+went to Lilah’s head, but she preserved her air of polite indifference,
+sitting with crossed knees, her feet, in the elaborate, strapped shoes,
+displayed.... The model, she decided, had ugly ankles.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+At lunch that day she told Robert of her purchases.
+
+He shook his head. “Where shall you wear them? Peabody’s Point is a
+wilderness--the three houses, my own, my father’s and my grandfather’s,
+a deep forest of maples, pines and birch, and the sea! We seldom see
+any one, but when we do, they come on horse-back or by motor. It is
+astonishing when the women wear evening clothes. On great occasions, a
+house warming or a birthday or a dance--once, or twice, a year--there
+is some show of ceremony.... You will find us very rural.”
+
+Lilah stifled her disappointment. “Shan’t we live in town in the
+winter?”
+
+“If you like. We have a house in Thirty-eighth Street. It is closed
+now.”
+
+“Take me there!”
+
+The rooms were dark, and when, admitted by a caretaker, Lilah and
+Robert explored the first two floors, they found the furniture
+swaddled in linen, the chandeliers wearing net veils, like Bluebeard’s
+brides, and the rugs rolled back. The house was an exact example of
+the New York residence of the early Eighties. The marble mantels were
+surmounted by elaborate, wooden fret-work, an intricacy of shelves
+and pilasters, screens and grills, roosting place for those useless,
+ugly and enormously expensive vases of the period. Mirrors divided the
+windows and curtains of dark red velvet were looped up, held clear of
+the floor by chenille ropes. There was a multiplicity of cushions,
+tables, tabourettes; paintings, in deep frames, by Rosa Bonheur, Henner
+and Corot, and one luminous and arresting Inness, a landscape with elms
+and a river, sunlight and haze, russet, gold, and blue. Lilah seized
+upon this as a reason for enthusiasm.
+
+“My grandfather understands pictures,” Robert explained. “Even the
+modern fellows! I don’t. No one has ever taken the trouble to explain
+what they’re all about.”
+
+“Don’t you like this?”
+
+“Oh, yes. But Inness wasn’t a modern exactly.”
+
+Suddenly he put his arm through Lilah’s and said: “You’re so clever. If
+I didn’t know what a darling you are, I’d be afraid of you. I want you
+to teach me all these things--what I should like, and why. I don’t want
+you to be ashamed of me.”
+
+Lilah, with a pretty bend of her head, put her face against his
+shoulder. She was feeling mellow, generous. This house, a valuable
+property in Murray Hill, was soon to be hers. Going from room to room,
+she mentally refurnished it.
+
+“I don’t like the house,” she said frankly. “It’s hideous--all this
+Victorian velvet and ebony. Horrible!”
+
+“Lilah!”
+
+His expression warned her. “You sweet old stupid! Of course it’s
+horrible.”
+
+He stammered: “It’s a sort of--of monument to my grandmother.”
+
+“A mausoleum,” she corrected. “We’ll change it.”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Miss Fuller would not go to the Point for the wedding. She had, she
+insisted, an important case out of town. And, with her neat traveling
+bag and the fur neck-piece, she started off the day before Lilah left
+town. She had agreed to keep the apartment and to pay the astonished
+agent on the first of every month.
+
+Lilah went alone. Robert had engaged a compartment for her; she found
+flowers, candy, books there; _Lilah Norris_, written on Robert’s
+cards, thrust hastily into envelopes stamped with the names of shops
+internationally famous. The porter, judging from his eagerness, had
+been tipped. When he closed her into this walnut and green plush cell,
+he reminded her that he would call her at five. She would be “put off”
+at Peabody’s Point at five forty-five....
+
+The train moved out of the city, boring its way through the tunnel into
+a twilight studded with red and green, white and topaz-yellow flashes.
+A glimpse of the river. Tall stacks. Then darkness, broken by suburban
+stations, where, for an instant, people and motors were glimpsed in a
+strange immobility, as if painted on the car windows.
+
+Lilah undressed. She enjoyed the unaccustomed luxury of her traveling
+things, so unlike the pack she had slung across her shoulder in
+Switzerland. Her night-gown was sheer batiste, scalloped, threaded with
+white ribbon. She braided her hair, switched off the light and lay on
+her side, staring out of the window. The silence was clamorous, yet she
+could hear the beating of her own heart. She pressed her hands there,
+frightened.
+
+She was going to marriage, in which, supposedly, she would never again
+be alone, like this.... Never again alone.... She ran her hands over
+her body, jealous of herself. Life, the crude fact, was unimaginable;
+she was aloof; somehow, she would gain time, hold herself for herself a
+little longer.... Outside a late moon had pierced the usual smokiness
+of a city sky. Trees brushed by. The odor of the flowers sent by Robert
+was sickish in the close room.... Lilah felt suddenly the weight of
+his affection, his conquest. She burned with anger, with a sort of
+resentment. How could he think, expect.... She thought of running away,
+giving him the slip.... They would find the compartment, the roses, his
+fatuous cards, but no Lilah. No woman. She pressed her face into the
+pillow and cried. She was infinitely sorry for herself, desolate. If
+only she were simple! If only she could love, accept, like other women!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In the morning she was happier, sustained by excitement.
+
+While she dressed, she glanced out of the window at a northern
+landscape of carelessly cleared fields now white with daisies, patches
+of pine and maple, and, beyond, a range of hills, sharply outlined
+against a clear, white sky. Puffs of air came through the screen
+infinitely fresh and cool; country air. Lilah took deep breaths.
+
+At the station, where the train stopped only long enough to let down
+a grinning porter and a step, Robert was waiting. He lifted her down,
+kissed her. She was instantly conscious of a difference in him; his
+coat was rough and cold; his face was red, sun-burned. And his hair,
+always so smooth and well-brushed, had blown askew, over his forehead.
+It got in his eyes and he smoothed it back with an impatience, a
+carelessness, new to her.
+
+“Grandfather is waiting. The early morning air isn’t awfully good for
+him. He sent apologies.”
+
+He hurried her into an open motor and the robe was adjusted about her
+knees. Robert drove. And again she noticed that he was in some sense
+more free. His hands on the wheel were casual but in control; with a
+quick turn of his head he scanned the road and turned north with a
+burst of speed startling in a man usually so hesitant and cautious.
+
+“Five miles,” he shouted. “We live at the end of nowhere. Our property
+already--all these fields. Wait until you see the woods!”
+
+The woods were somber in the morning light, green as trees are in
+stage-settings, immensely tall and close and straight, upon a carpet of
+moss and fern, wintergreen and arbutus. The road at intervals crossed a
+bridle-path, now and then emerging into cleared spaces where a tangle
+of clover, buttercups and daisies grew lush, knee-deep.
+
+Robert brought the car to a standstill and turned to Lilah. His face
+was older in an unexpected seriousness. “This is all yours, Lilah. I
+am yours. Does it mean anything to you that I love you so? Your coming
+here has made me terribly happy--a queer sort of happiness, for I
+can’t sleep or eat. I ache for you. I want you to kiss me of your own
+accord....”
+
+“Haven’t I, ever?”
+
+“No.”
+
+She lifted her face, but at the first light contact of her lips, he
+could not have told whether she loved him or not. He gave to the
+embrace all the feeling he craved from her. She was overwhelmed,
+relieved. Nothing was required of her; she need not show herself, give
+herself up. Not yet.... She smiled, with closed eyes....
+
+Suddenly he let her go. Almost violently he relaxed his hold, so that
+she fell back and away from him.
+
+“If you don’t love me, Lilah,” he said, in a dry voice, “say so.”
+
+Lilah protested: “I do! What on earth makes you ask?”
+
+Robert Peabody did not answer, but sat bent forward over the wheel,
+as if, at a signal from her, he would start the car and drive back to
+the station. His expression was terrible; somehow, she knew that he
+had sensed her relief in the moment just passed. She had hurt him. It
+wasn’t going to be altogether easy.
+
+In a silence made poignant by a stir of branches and the early morning
+clamor of birds, she fought for the right words, the gesture that would
+reassure him. Her hand touched his sleeve, crept down to his hand
+clenched on the wheel. “It is all new,” she began, “strange.... It
+isn’t love so much that I feel, but recognition ... of you, and this
+place ... mine ... you might be a little patient....”
+
+He bent swiftly and kissed her fingers. The car sprang forward into the
+forest again.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+She did not glimpse the sea until they were fairly out of the wood and
+making a wide turn in a sort of park, where moss and fern gave way
+to an incredibly deep sward, smooth, emerald-green. She saw a house,
+another, and a sparkle of water beyond. At once she could smell the
+sea, kelp, sweet and sickish, salty. Robert had not spoken, but now he
+turned and said: “Here we are! Lilah! Home!”
+
+He swept into a gravel driveway and under a porte-cochère.... She
+was getting out, rather faint, frightened now that she had committed
+herself.... A servant spoke to her and Robert said: “Miss Norris,
+Maisie.”
+
+“How do you do, Miss Norris? I’m sure we’re all very glad.”
+
+The hall, within, was dark--too much wood-work, and a huge, stone
+mantel, top-heavy. Lilah put her hand up to her hat, and, turning
+instinctively in search of a mirror, found herself confronting an old
+man.
+
+“My grandfather,” Robert said. “This is Lilah.”
+
+Junius Peabody was tall and very handsome, at eighty-four. He offered
+his hand, and Lilah, giving her own into that dry, rather bony clasp,
+met his eyes. They were black, deep-set, with something ironic,
+quizzical, in their depths, like a spark of light at the bottom of a
+well. He wore a heavy mustache, perhaps to hide the leanness of his
+cheeks. He had what Robert had missed, a flame of some sort, a feeling
+for things, for life, for women, for beauty.
+
+“Lilah? May I?”
+
+She felt his lips on her cheek, and noticed a faint odor of Cologne.
+
+“You must be tired. Will you breakfast with us? Or, perhaps, later--”
+
+“Breakfast, by all means,” Lilah said. “I’m not tired. I’m very excited
+and happy.”
+
+She was, inexplicably, exhilarated again. The old man’s look had been
+appraising, and satisfied. He found her delightful. She knew this,
+and because she was certain that he was not easily pleased, she could
+afford to be flattered. He moved at her side through the house, across
+a large, cluttered room to a veranda, where Venetian shades were
+half-drawn against the brilliance of the sea in full sunlight; a table
+had been set for breakfast. Geraniums in boxes hedged the veranda on
+three sides. Beyond, a narrow garden separated the house from a pebbly
+beach and rocks covered with brown kelp.
+
+“Low tide,” Junius Peabody remarked.
+
+It was not the house she had pictured. There were no Italian gardens.
+But there was something substantial and vigorously assertive in the
+ugly width and spread of the wings, the turrets and verandas and
+useless, expensive ornamentation. In the Eighties this would have been
+a “place.” Meadows of wet kelp mingled with the fragrant spiciness of
+geraniums. A man servant in an apron, very old, with a crumpled mouth
+in a pink face, brought coffee. And Robert said: “Miss Norris, Edwin.”
+Lilah put just the right shade of interest into the pronouncement
+of the word “Edwin” with a rising inflection. She loved Edwin. She
+loved Junius. She loved Robert. She was conscious of being more
+charming, more herself, than she had ever been in a life given over to
+being, always, some one unlike the real Lilah. The real Lilah was a
+delightful, amusing, affecting little person.
+
+Once over that moment of appraisal, Junius Peabody made it plain that
+he approved of her.
+
+And after breakfast, brushing his mustache with a large cambric
+handkerchief, he walked with her into what he called the “greenery,”
+a park-like place at the back of the house away from the sea where a
+gardener worked among formal beds of Spring flowers. “No, Robert, you
+stay back--I want Lilah to myself.”
+
+Robert disappeared and Lilah threw a kiss, very prettily, at his back.
+
+“Robert would like to show you the kennels, but that can wait.”
+
+Lilah said impulsively: “It was good of you to let me come here to be
+married. I am very alone.... The few relatives I have are in the West,
+and I don’t like any of them. They will not approve of my marrying so
+soon. But my father wouldn’t care, so why should I?”
+
+They crossed the greenery and, without comment, Junius Peabody pointed
+out another house. “My son’s. He died ten years ago. We have closed
+the place. Robert didn’t like it. I’ll show you his house, later.
+Although I dare say you will want to change it, it is modern enough.
+This, you see, is what I call the East Aurora period; it was built in
+nineteen-four, when America was beginning to absorb the Morris a b c’s.
+Inside it is worse.... Hand-tooled by Fra Bunco....” He broke off.
+“What perfume is that? Sandalwood? Delicious. My dear, we are delighted
+to welcome you.” And before she could thank him, he began again: “I am
+really astonished. I didn’t expect you to be--what you are. You are
+very clever; I can see that. Robert won’t understand you, but that
+won’t matter if you see to it that he isn’t humiliated. A woman must
+never be conspicuously superior to her husband. I dare say you know
+just what you are doing.”
+
+With a flash of anger, she said: “I am very fond of him!”
+
+“I’m glad of that.”
+
+They came into a small grove of pines, young trees near the sea, and
+on the shore, built upon the dunes, she saw another, smaller house,
+gray-shingled with gray blinds and stone chimneys. This, she realized,
+was to be her home. At first glance, it seemed a desolate place;
+there was no garden, only the white sand blown into little hills, and
+glistening, thick blades of dune grass and, beyond, the sea. Always
+keen to beauty, she resented the uncompromising grayness of the house.
+“The blinds should be blue,” she said quickly, “and there should be
+yellow and blue awnings and a brick terrace at the back with hydrangeas
+in pots. Why not a wall on this side and turf and some poplars?”
+
+Junius Peabody laughed. “You must ask Robert. He will do anything you
+suggest. He is very much in love with you.... I think you two will
+make a go of it if you won’t be impatient. Robert will be stubborn if
+you criticize him. He isn’t as simple or as pliable as he seems, on
+the surface, to be. His father, not I, was responsible for his career.
+My son had no more sense of the beautiful than his house indicates;
+he lived only to serve my creation, Peabody and Sons. He never loved
+or needed to love. He quite literally worked himself to death and
+collapsed in harness. But he wanted Robert to do the same thing, and,
+to prepare him, sent him to a boys’ school at Territet and then to
+Columbia! And then, by way of hardening him, a trip around the world!
+For one year before his father died, Robert sat in an office in the
+Peabody Building in Boston, staring out of the window.... It might have
+been, in the end, a tragedy.”
+
+He took her arm. “Let’s go back. Robert will want you, and I don’t like
+the sun.”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+That night she talked to him again. A mist had come up, opaque,
+chilly, and at intervals a buoy beyond the reef tolled like a ship’s
+bell. A fire was lighted in the drawing-room, and Lilah, in a gown of
+disturbing simplicity, very short, faced Junius Peabody. He had the
+outlines she most admired, a distinguished thinness; his wrists and
+ankles were characteristic, slender. His elegance was stressed; he had
+not Robert’s unawareness; the details of Junius Peabody’s dress were,
+to the least fold of a tie, considered, epicurean. And this ceremony
+somehow detracted from his age, gave him an appearance not in the least
+jaunty, but vivacious. When Lilah dressed for dinner, she chose her
+gown for him, not for Robert; she had found, in Junius, an audience
+appreciative of those things Robert overlooked. She thought: “While
+he’s alive, I shall be happy here. I like him because he won’t give
+in to being old. He never apologizes.” She had, she knew, brought him
+something he longed for and was too proud to seek, youth and the little
+drama of furbelows and perfumes, ribbons and silk stockings. She was
+pert enough to amuse him. He would have despised a sentimental woman.
+
+Robert left them again. One of his favorite dogs had developed a
+distemper and he went away, wrapped in a great coat, to spend a
+watchful night beside a box full of straw where the silver gray bitch
+lay on her side, panting. Robert’s face was puckered with regret and
+humiliation. “I know you’ll think I’m a fool! But that dog’s damned
+sick, Lilah.”
+
+When he had gone, Junius Peabody said: “In my day, Edwin would have sat
+up with the dog. Love isn’t what it used to be.”
+
+“I don’t mind,” Lilah said. “Grace Fuller warned me.”
+
+“She did, did she?” The old man jerked in his chair. “Unpleasant
+female. I never liked her. She made me feel that my illusions were
+hocus-pocus, rubbish. As if she had spotted all my weaknesses and could
+put her finger on them, the way those osteopath chaps pick out sore
+spots on your spine. Here, vanity. There, arrogance. And down the line.”
+
+He chose a cigar from a silver box at his elbow.
+
+“I don’t want the truth. At my age, it’s dangerous. I am like a twist
+of paper that has gone up in flames; the shape remains, but at a touch
+will crumble away.... Excuse me, my dear. I do not often mention my
+age. After all, I may live twenty years, and I must not shrink from the
+dust too soon.”
+
+He reflected, with a curious gratification, that he was at last
+very safe from life, because he no longer cared what happened to
+him--nothing _could_ happen. He was free from his old restless
+curiosity, his desire to be always in contact with experience.
+
+“You, my dear, are still seeking the unattainable. Immeasurably
+superior--old age! You want big happenings; I am content with little
+happenings. Thank God, I’m not a dyspeptic ... men who understand food
+never are. I’ve never bolted, like these modern business men. To
+be appreciated, done justice, breakfast must be given half an hour,
+luncheon an hour, dinner two hours. There’s something vulgar in this
+dishing up and gobbling down.... Robert says you’re a good cook.”
+
+“I am,” Lilah admitted.
+
+“You must make something for me. Even a potato--boiled with
+art--Consider the slow, the exquisite processes of its growth! The
+earth must be turned, the seed planted. Then the feathery stalks, the
+white blossoms, the root upturned, the gathering.... Some conception of
+the potato must be in the seed, an immortal thought contained within
+the physical means of realization. Very comforting, that idea! It gives
+one at least the security of divine attention. Could there have been,
+before I was at all, a picture of me, dry as dust, tall and gaunt, with
+this mustache? Perhaps! The finished product must be contained in the
+germ, irrevocable, bound to materialize.”
+
+“Fatalist!” Lilah cried.
+
+“Otherwise, wouldn’t an onion grow into an oak tree, a toad into
+an eagle, a mushroom into a man? The intention must be there along
+with the cell structure! Stay as you are, my dear--you are a lovely
+celestial mistake, an orchid grown into a woman!”
+
+He was very particular about his cigar--a mild panetela with an easy
+pull. He sliced off the tip with a pen-knife, squeezed slowly between
+thumb and forefinger, held the cigar against the light, took it between
+his lips, sucked, closed his eyes, and, opening them suddenly, applied
+the match.
+
+“Havana,” he said. “I smoked my first cigar in Hergesheimerland.... But
+I mustn’t go back! Old men are always doing that, perhaps because youth
+takes on a patina with years.”
+
+“Were you happy?” Lilah asked.
+
+“Never! Avid. Insatiable. Restless. Always goaded by desire--but not
+happy. Now, at eighty-four, I know how to live. I know that familiarity
+is more precious than novelty, and that relaxation is sweeter than
+distraction.”
+
+Lilah shook her head. “I don’t believe you. You are as eager as I am,
+perhaps more so.”
+
+“The world of men is behind--the world of spirit opens up. You don’t
+believe that, either. Wait until you are alone with yourself--if you
+out-live your family, as I have. My wife, Minnie, my two brothers, my
+son. Robert doesn’t count. He is a remote descendant.”
+
+“You won’t die,” Lilah said.
+
+“I may,” he admitted, with a smile faintly ironic. “Although I have
+always believed that I neither would nor could! The earth is too sweet
+and I have loved ... everything. Other men don’t. They die complaining
+of a lack, where I have found a surfeit of beauty. For twenty years
+I’ve been burying people who didn’t love enough, little disappointed
+people, jealous, enraged, all of them! Because youth had gone! Youth!”
+
+He stood up. And with that quick, faintly unsteady gait, he went to the
+mantel, staring up at the portrait of a young man in a black coat, a
+white waist-coat and tie who sat, stiff and somehow violent, in a red
+velvet chair. The thick, black brows almost met above the bridge of the
+nose; the lips were full, both sensual and ironic; the eyes small and
+dark. A dark skin stained with red--
+
+“They used to say I was ‘foreign’ looking. And I was proud of it. My
+wife rather disapproved.”
+
+He sat down again, stroking his chin. “Poor Minnie! Poor girl! To be
+foreign wasn’t quite respectable in the ’Sixties. But there you have
+me--young! And miserable.”
+
+“Why miserable?”
+
+“What do you know about love?” he demanded suddenly. “Pretty minx,
+sitting there with your cigarette, talking to me when you should be out
+in the fog with your lover. You modern women are as cold as ice. You’re
+not normal. Nothing about you is rational except your love of finery.
+I have a streak of it in myself. I can remember my wife’s night gowns
+where I have forgotten her opinions. You haven’t changed in _that_. So
+many scents and sachets, little scissors, sticks, powders, essences,
+curls, bandoline and brilliantine, creams and rouges. Precious things
+put away in drawers, wrapped in tissue-paper, hidden in boxes! Rites of
+beauty! For men? For love? Instinct? Nothing else is left--”
+
+He broke off. Lilah watched the fire-light strike flashes in the
+buckles of her slippers. What an amusing old sensualist! What was he
+trying to prove? That he hadn’t loved his wife or that she didn’t love
+Robert?
+
+“I won’t argue,” she said. “Women _are_ different. Why not? They are no
+longer deceived about love....”
+
+“Ah.” He stared at her down his nose.
+
+“There isn’t time for loving nowadays.” Lilah insisted. “Not your sort.”
+
+“My sort?”
+
+“I realize--”
+
+“What you youngsters _don’t_ realize,” he interrupted, with a touch of
+anger, “is that the old are unchanged, within. The casing is rusty, but
+the springs and wheels are as good as ever. What makes us different is
+our nearness to death. We don’t change, otherwise.”
+
+He rose again and beckoned to her. “Come into the library; I want to
+show you something.”
+
+As she followed him, he said: “This isn’t my taste. My wife controlled
+the furnishing of our houses--a Victorian feminine prerogative.”
+
+“I know. I have seen the house in Murray Hill.”
+
+“I never live there. It is cruelly innocent.”
+
+“May I change it?”
+
+“Of course.”
+
+“Then you aren’t sentimental.”
+
+He stroked his chin, again Lilah saw that look of rather Hogarthian
+humor.
+
+“My wife was a dear little soul. She loved me; she disapproved of me;
+she died for me, not guessing, thank God, that she had never entered
+my imagination.... This tobacco jar was my grand-uncle Stephen’s. He
+brought it from England, a hundred years ago.”
+
+He paused in the hall. “A few of these things are mine. If I could
+count on twenty years, I’d build the sort of house I like. These
+Chippendale chairs--gratifying, aren’t they? That ship’s model over the
+door--a full-rigged whaler! And this jade; milky, like moonlight....
+The Chinese are real craftsmen. ‘White plates and cups, clean-gleaming,
+ringed with blue lines--’ Eh? Why not? Better than hymns and prayers
+and incantations. Now you know how spiritual I am! If love of this sort
+of thing is pagan, then I am pagan, and proud of it. I would rather
+carve a piece of jade into such loveliness than save a soul....”
+
+He opened a door and Lilah preceded him into a room smaller than the
+others. A coal-fire had burned low in a shallow grate. There were
+several lamps, easy chairs and many shelves of books.
+
+Lilah put her pointed slipper on the fender and glanced up at him.
+“Your room?”
+
+He said: “It’s quiet, and everything is mine. That picture up there is
+by Kent.”
+
+“I don’t like it. It’s too frosty.”
+
+“How about this Shinn?”
+
+“Naughty!” Lilah exclaimed, rather shocked by the naked little woman in
+a garden hat who was reading a French novel. “Do you like it?”
+
+“Very much.”
+
+Suddenly he tossed the unfinished cigar into the grate. “Sit down. I
+want to tell you something. Something very personal. About myself.
+I’ve never told any one. It needn’t embarrass you. But it might help
+you.”
+
+He went to a writing desk that was closed, and, producing a key from
+his watch-chain, he unlocked the top and opened it. It seemed to Lilah
+that he was a bit unsteady. Perhaps so much talk wasn’t good for
+him. He turned, holding a small package of letters, the envelopes,
+inscribed to Junius Peabody in a big, square hand, bearing the stamp
+of Italy like a seal. “I can recapture,” he said, “the old magic, just
+by touching these letters.... They are letters from a woman.... They
+have nothing to do with my wife, or my son, or Robert. But they have
+everything to do with people like ourselves.”
+
+He sat down in the chair facing hers; sank back, still holding the
+slender packet of letters. He seemed, in an odd way, to be conjuring
+up some memory, summoning back a great happening that had grown dim in
+outline. For a moment, she thought he had ceased to breathe. Then, in a
+rather broken voice, he began to tell her what he saw:
+
+ * * * * *
+
+He was in Venice, Venice still under the shadow of the Austrian eagle,
+yet, as always, incomparable; a city of bizarre façades reflected in
+salty lagoons; nothing classical--he despised neo-classicism--but
+cupids, garlands, fore-shortened goddesses, golden! He had sensed the
+Venice of Longhi, thank God! Of Titian. Of Veronese. These catapulting
+Venuses and rampant Mars, these lions and gilt domes and love-songs!
+Nothing mattered save his own recognition of beauty. And for a while
+it bowled him over.
+
+A woman was part of it, touched by the same unreality, removed from all
+experience.
+
+He had left Minnie, his wife, that summer, in this very house, while he
+went off to Europe chasing rainbows.
+
+The quest had been much deeper than that, only he had been afraid to
+acknowledge it. Rainbows were no part of his need; he was in pursuit
+of the intangible justification, something Minnie could not give him.
+Minnie was life. He wanted, as he supposed all such men sooner or later
+want, the illusion of life.
+
+In Venice, he had met the woman. No need to tell Lilah her name; that
+would be beyond the point. She had put him right again, reaching
+delicately, expertly, into his spirit, setting his psychic house in
+order.
+
+How? He didn’t know. She was a woman of women, sane, fearless,
+magnificent.
+
+A week only. Out of a lifetime, he reflected, this seemed meager
+compensation. Yet he supposed that few men had had as much. A week in
+Longhi’s Venice with a woman in whom purity wore a lace mask; a woman
+strangely aloof, strangely seductive, possessed of a miraculous and
+unbroken mystery. She had loved him and had told him nothing of herself.
+
+He remembered her, wearing white; he could not recall the style, but
+people stared at her. She was a tawny woman, dark-skinned, tall, with
+topaz eyes, and she moved with a sort of slow grace--every pose an
+immortal loveliness. A foreigner. That something “foreign” in him had
+leaped to the encounter. So, at least, he justified his passion. They
+seldom spoke. It had been, nevertheless, communion. Everything about
+her delighted him--her jewels, her parasols, her perfumes. She was
+distinguished.
+
+Yet she could play her part in their brief personal drama like an
+artist, delighting in him, in their climaxes, their interludes,
+their sure approach to the inevitable finale, savoring each detail.
+What a woman! He had had no twinge of conscience; almost, he had
+forgotten Minnie. He had had his week. No vulgarity. No reproaches. No
+questioning. Beauty.
+
+Well....
+
+She had gone.
+
+These three letters, written from Belaggio. Then, no more, as it should
+have been!
+
+“There must be some reason, my dear, for these glimpses. A divine
+tantalization, perhaps. Souls led to heaven as a donkey follows a
+carrot to the crest of a hill.... Some day you will love this way.
+Wouldn’t it be wiser to wait? You are very like me.”
+
+Lilah stood up with a quick, almost violent gesture of rebellion. “No!
+How can you?”
+
+A door opened out from the library to the veranda. Lilah threw it back
+and ran outside.
+
+The veranda was wet, and a heavy mist poured in from the sea. Lilah
+crossed the garden and hurried toward the kennels along a narrow gravel
+path. The mist stung her bare arms, drenched her hair, soaked through
+the thin soles of her slippers.
+
+Some one loomed out of the shadows and she recognized Robert, still in
+his great-coat, bare-headed.
+
+He cried: “Lilah!” And, startled, blocked the path.
+
+Lilah caught his arm. “Robert. Kiss me again. Again. Make me kiss
+you.... I want to! I want to! Your grandfather’s wrong. I’ll love you.
+Kiss me.”
+
+They clung together. Her emotion, her fear, became desire. She could
+not see Robert’s face; his restless hands slipped down her arms to her
+waist, back again to her shoulders. She cried, pressing herself against
+him: “Robert!”
+
+“Poor little girl. Poor little Lilah. It’s all right....”
+
+Her lips against his, her arms pinioned, she thought: “I love him. That
+detestable old man.... This is love--_this_.”
+
+Aloud, she asked again: “Do you love me?”
+
+For answer, he lifted her clear of the ground and held her, so that she
+could hear his heart and her own, beating together.
+
+
+
+
+IV
+
+
+There was no going back now, and Lilah went forward swiftly,
+forgetting, in the excitement of the wedding, her hours of doubt.
+She clung to the memory of that moment in the fog; it was at once a
+disguise and a justification. To Junius Peabody she had said simply: “I
+promise you; it will be all right.”
+
+She was married one morning, out-of-doors, before an altar made of
+syringa bloom. For this occasion, Robert’s Aunt Whiteside came from
+some Virginia spa, caparisoned, as Junius Peabody put it, like a
+Christmas tree. She found Lilah a “useless ornament.” And said so in an
+astonishing bass voice.
+
+There was nothing fashionable about this wedding. A few friendly,
+rather shy and inarticulate people, appeared for the ceremony, were
+introduced, and disappeared immediately.
+
+Lilah kissed Junius, noticed again the odor of Cologne, and was hurried
+away toward the traditional honeymoon in Robert’s motor ... Portland
+... Bath ... Bar Harbor.... It would soon be over and she could be
+herself....
+
+Six months later she was established in Thirty-eighth Street.
+
+A small army of decorators occupied the doorstep and besieged Lilah
+by letter and telephone. And Mrs. Junius Peabody’s Victorianism was
+pulled up, literally, by the roots. Gilt-framed mirrors went headlong
+down the “stoop” into moving vans. Chinese porcelains and top-heavy
+vases disappeared into barrels. Mantels were ripped out, parquet floors
+became, in some instances, black and white tiles, in others smooth
+painted surfaces. Tabourettes, gilded what-nots, ponderous buffets
+vanished on the backs of moving men, and the discreet marbles and
+pedestaled bronzes were banished to heaven knows what storage vault.
+
+“No one would _buy_ these things,” Lilah explained. “You couldn’t
+_give_ them away! The Ladies’ Home Journal has changed all that. I’m
+not sure whether what they’ve got is any better, but at least it’s no
+worse.”
+
+“I liked it,” Robert said. “It was cozy.”
+
+Lilah sniffed.
+
+During the reconstruction they lived on the top floor, in rooms
+occupied in Mrs. Junius Peabody’s era by servants. Lilah had painted
+the furniture herself and had hung at the windows curtains of glazed
+chintz--parrots, cabbage roses and gay Kundry-blooms. Robert slept in a
+cottage bed beneath a quilted spread and shaved peering into a crackled
+mirror. He was vaguely uncomfortable and dubious. Beneath him, the
+familiar house of his childhood was disintegrating, falling to pieces.
+One by one the precious familiarities disappeared. But if it pleased
+Lilah, why, for God’s sake, on with the game!
+
+What it all meant was beyond Robert’s comprehension. His mother had
+been content to spend half a lifetime with walnut and plush.... And why
+all the fuss about the front door, the brownstone steps?
+
+“But they’re _hideous_,” Lilah cried. “_No one_ has them! Every house
+on the block, except ours, has an English front.”
+
+Robert shrugged his shoulders, and a month later the stone façade
+became a brick façade; the steps gave way to a white doorway with a
+fan grill, and window boxes planted with evergreens added that touch
+of a Mayfair dwelling. It was all very discreet, and, to Robert, very
+startling. He could not believe his eyes. He wrote to his grandfather
+that Thirty-eighth Street was “jolly giddy.”
+
+Lilah was supremely happy. She wore chintz aprons and bound her hair
+in silk, as if she were gardening. Her eyes had a critical, appraising
+look. Robert never saw her unless he pursued her to the top of a
+step-ladder or forced his way through the ranks of decorators. These
+people frightened him; they had such an air--as if they thought and
+spoke in symbols. It was a secret order to which, apparently, Lilah had
+been initiated, for she tossed off the phraseology with a reckless, and
+sometimes condescending, carelessness.
+
+“Isn’t it too delicious? This needle-point? Miss de Blauvelt wants
+brocade, but I insisted....”
+
+“It’s rather--pale,” Robert said lamely.
+
+“Nonsense. It’s exquisite.... The panels are to be painted all the way
+to the ceiling. Ships and cliffs and trees and great folds of silk,
+like Claude Lorraine, with steps, you know”--she made a gesture--“and
+funny clouds.”
+
+She pulled him by the hand. “Come into the dining-room--I want you to
+see something. It’s here! The Venetian glass.... Look! Look!”
+
+Robert said guardedly: “Purple glass? What for?”
+
+“For use, silly.”
+
+“And what are these--vegetables?”
+
+“For the console--they’re merely decorative.”
+
+“But I don’t like them!”
+
+“Never mind. You will, when everything is finished! An Aubusson rug.
+Gray walls. A great mirror, cut in squares, here. An enameled table
+with strips of old lace or brocade. Your grandfather’s Boucher here. A
+screen, there. And crystal--”
+
+“Lilah! Lilah!”
+
+Robert picked his way through plaster, lathes, packing-cases and
+excelsior whenever he left the house to go to the dubious comfort of
+his Club. He wanted the country, his dogs, his old green sweater. But
+if Lilah was happy....
+
+And Lilah happy was less difficult than Lilah unhappy. At the Point,
+during the summer, there had been days when she was too restive to
+be quite comfortable. He was to blame for something; eventually he
+discovered that he was to blame for liking the out-of-doors. The
+implication was vague. Whenever Robert let himself go, Lilah would
+say: “Beautiful? Yes?” As if there were some reason for resentment.
+When Robert discovered that she wanted New York, and Thirty-eighth
+Street, he capitulated at once. But he had faced mysterious rebuffs,
+inexplicable moods, hurts that were more damnable for being beyond
+analysis. He had wondered. He had questioned himself. He had, more
+than once, blamed himself. For what? Why, for failing her somehow!
+He hated to see that look of resentful discontent. He was ashamed of
+being happy! And this was a new sensation. He had always been happy.
+But he encountered the feminine rebellion against a mood which does
+not exactly match her own; and at last depressed by the atmosphere of
+blame, he gave way to temper, flung himself down and hid his head in
+his arms. Then, Lilah had been repentant; he felt her hand on his hair.
+“Robert, what’s the matter?” He had not answered. And Lilah had kissed
+the back of his neck and had called him “cross old Bobsie.”
+
+With New York an accomplished fact, and the woods, the rocks, exchanged
+for a sultry October in town, she was gracious, delightful.
+
+Robert promised himself that he would never again deprive Lilah of
+anything. She was worthy of the most unselfish behavior.... He adored
+her.... He would do anything to hear her call him “cross old Bobsie.”
+
+He made the mistake of becoming his most cheerful, his most optimistic
+self.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The panels were to be done by an American artist, a man famous for the
+facility of his execution; he painted like a fury. One day you had the
+cartoons, in red chalk--a swirl of draperies, figures of long-limbed,
+rather sheep-like women and top-heavy columns in the Tiepolo manner.
+The next, a finished canvas.
+
+Robert began to stumble over this Elmer Shawhan in his comings and
+goings. He had none of the trappings Robert expected of painters, but
+worked in a disreputable coat, collarless. He was small and agile,
+Irish, with the head of a vaudeville actor and the feet of a Brazilian
+dancer.
+
+Lilah found him violent and amusing.
+
+“I despise women,” he told her, “but I can’t keep away from ’em. It’s
+their drawing--ankles and knees and long arms and necks. They’re so
+damned graceful.”
+
+He was sitting on a scaffold ten feet above her head, dangling a pair
+of patent pumps and ankles encased in sheer silk socks. Lilah’s walls
+were already transformed. Shawhan painted the panels in his studio and
+mounted them himself.
+
+Lilah could not rest until she found out whether he considered her
+pretty. He made her feel dumpy and too blonde, because the women he
+painted were like fresh strawberries mounted on long silk legs. No
+woman had legs like that....
+
+“I know,” he said. “I paint legs plus the universal male exaggeration
+of their importance. That’s why my stuff sells. I got seventy-five
+thousand dollars for covering a millionaire’s home with silk stockings
+and frillies. He thinks he likes it because it’s art.”
+
+“Isn’t it?” Lilah demanded.
+
+“My stuff? Of course not. Mister Tiepolo of New York! No, I’m clever. I
+have a certain facility, that’s all. I learned to draw when I was a cub
+reporter on a southern daily--I had to make quick sketches of murders,
+suicides, hangings and celebrities; President Cleveland in the morning
+and Lulu the opium-queen in the afternoon. I _had_ to draw! Then I came
+to New York and drew New York. Slums and ‘L’ stations and bums in the
+park and snow and fire-engines and horse ’buses. In those days New York
+was a _place_. Twenty years ago....”
+
+“I was seven,” Lilah interrupted.
+
+“Well, I wasn’t! I was twenty-three. And what I had you’ll never have.”
+
+“Why?”
+
+“It doesn’t exist any more. You’ll never see Ethel Barrymore in
+‘Captain Jinks’ with those eyes of hers and that bass voice and that
+Barrymore bend. Davis was on the crest of the wave and Gibson was
+immortalizing the shirtwaist. It meant something in those days to be
+tailored in England and to wear the kind of shoes I wear--look at
+’em--no tips--soft as a glove! Davis and I wore wing collars when
+it was considered degenerate, and we carried canes in the face of
+public ridicule and private envy. Stanford White was building glorious
+houses. Most of us were in love with Minnie Ashley. Talk about the age
+of innocence! Clyde Fitch, Maxine Elliot, Elsie de Wolfe and Clara
+Bloodgood.... I could name a dozen. We were the American aristocracy of
+wit. What we said and did was shocking and unique. It was worth while
+being clever because almost no one was. To live in Gramercy Park, to
+eat at the old Café Martin and _not_ to wear pads in your shoulders--”
+
+He went back to his canvas with a sort of violence.
+
+“I object to to-day because every one is superficially clever! And
+there are ten geniuses to one, twenty years ago, men who can write
+colossal novels about the war; men you’ve never heard of, like Dos
+Passos, producing a sort of heroic poem, every verse beginning and
+ending with Goddam! Gorgeous! And chaps like Manship and Simonson. And
+Bellows. And God knows who--there are thousands of ’em.”
+
+“Well?” Lilah said, being very Russian with her cigarette.
+
+Shawhan came down the ladder. He had a most engaging and roguish smile.
+With the neck of his shirt turned in, he was more Byronesque than
+vaudevillian; he would have been romantic if he had not looked out at
+you through eyes so initiated and so skeptical.
+
+“And there you are! Genius is a drug on the market.”
+
+“Then you’re asking too much for these panels,” Lilah said sweetly.
+
+“I’m a specialist,” was his shrewd reply, “not a genius. I have cashed
+in on my facility. You’re paying, not for my work, but for my name.
+When people come into this room, they will know who decorated your
+walls and your stock will jump!”
+
+“How did you manage it?” Lilah asked.
+
+He smiled. “The New York way. A very exotic house and studio. Two
+marriages with famous and temperamental women both of whom divorced
+me, quite amicably. A dash of scandal. Parties every one wanted to get
+to because they were both beautiful and risquè and the guests were
+limited.... Thirty, no less, no more! An impassioned, and anonymous,
+press agent. Kissing the finger-tips of such women as you. Getting the
+reputation of being a misogynist. _And legs!_”
+
+Lilah laughed. “And now?”
+
+“You pay for it.”
+
+“And you?”
+
+“It doesn’t leave much to believe in, does it? That’s why I sneeze when
+people drag in art. Art! Oh, my God. The whole thing is an elaborate
+hoax. You want these walls--these lovely empty spaces--filled with
+something gracious, pretty, to harmonize with your furniture and your
+lamp-shades.”
+
+“Oh, no--” Lilah interrupted.
+
+“Oh, yes! I beg pardon. Yes! Your husband wouldn’t live with a wall by
+Michelangelo--big, fat torsos and bumpy females and snakes. And how
+would you look, in that gown, against a Gaugin jungle? Be honest.”
+
+“Well--”
+
+“You go to Miss de Blauvelt. She wants to sell you some Louis Quatre
+chairs and one of those French sofas, an escritoire and a five hundred
+dollar footstool. So she looks through her mental card-index and says:
+‘French. Shawhan.’ Then she phones me. I get the specifications and the
+limitations and the architects’ blue-prints. I go to the Palais Royal
+and make sketches on the back of the menu-card. Mrs. Robert Peabody’s
+Louis Quatre drawing-room for November twenty-eighth. Lots of pink. A
+swing, with four Watteau ladies and satin garters, a poodle on a yellow
+cushion, some fuzzy trees, a cupid on a pedestal and five hundred yards
+of Alice Blue silk looped back with Fragonard tassels. One Tiepolo
+column, one Boucher bosom and a knot of flowers.”
+
+“You’re disgusting,” Lilah said.
+
+“This is the Twentieth Century,” he reminded her, “and you are living
+in New York.”
+
+He backed away from his work, twisting the ladder aside. “What do you
+think of it?”
+
+“I like it. I believe you do. Isn’t your contempt a part of your
+business manner?”
+
+“Don’t you see--all this is very sad?” he remarked. “What I’ve told
+you--what I am and what you are, and our buying and selling this way--”
+He broke off. “Yes, I like it,” he admitted.
+
+He stood, his hands on his hips, his head tilted, staring at the
+exquisite thing he had somehow summoned out of his staleness and
+disillusionment. Into his expression something mocking appeared to
+contradict his absorption.
+
+“Some day,” he said, “I shall decorate a pork-packer’s ballroom. Two
+hundred thousand down and no interference! I shall paint what I like--a
+series of cartoons--sky-scrapers, flappers, head-waiters, taxicabs,
+chorus girls, Jews and fashionable women, cabarets, streets, theaters
+and--the whole mess! Wouldn’t it be gorgeous? A parade, all the way
+around the ballroom, where my pork-packer had expected nymphs in
+panniers?”
+
+Lilah tossed her cigarette away and yawned. “I see. You’re an artist,
+after all. And a humbug.”
+
+He laughed, and their eyes met with appreciation.
+
+“Perhaps,” Lilah suggested, “you’ll put me into that cartoon.”
+
+His glance deepened; his expression changed; as if he sensed the trap
+laid down by her, he said dryly: “Perhaps.”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Lilah told Robert that Elmer Shawhan was an egoist.
+
+“Probably,” Robert said. “He looks it.”
+
+“Why? Because he is spectacular?”
+
+Robert sensed opposition. “Why, yes. His hair--”
+
+“Externals!” Lilah cried.
+
+“That’s one of your phrases, Lilah. Don’t trip me unfairly. Hair _is_
+an external, but the way a man cuts it is indicative of something
+internal. I suspect your artist of being what you call him, an egoist,
+because he has patiently cultivated a pompadour. Now, whiskers--”
+
+Lilah put her fingers in her ears.
+
+As the house began to take form and to emerge from the chaos of
+reconstruction into a very harmonious and comfortable air of
+permanence, Lilah discovered that she was being too extravagant. The
+bills for all this mannered luxury began to appear, statements that had
+a matter-of-fact coldness, a finality. She must face, placate Robert,
+make him see, as always, in smaller things, her rightness.
+
+Miss de Blauvelt had an exaggerated and flattering conception of
+the wealth of her clients. She was accustomed to magnificence and
+munificence. She spent other people’s money, Lilah discovered, with the
+largest possible gesture, and then added her own fee, a compensation
+out of all proportion to her services; she was “cheeky” in a way too
+subtle for rebuff.
+
+With a graceful sweep of her hands, she would say: “I can do a
+delightful boudoir for ten thousand. Not perfect, of course--for
+_that_--but modern and witty, a perverse little room. Leave it to me.
+You don’t mind?”
+
+The names of social celebrities flowed in and out of the stream of
+her talk like minnows. She knew every one. Lilah gathered that at her
+own house at Dinard she gathered together the froth of fashionable
+and artistic Europe--skimmed off the cream for her own amusement.
+With this woman, business seemed to be an excuse for indulging in
+extravagances. The account, rendered before the workmen were out of the
+house, staggered Lilah. She had, she realized, spent a fortune. Her
+heart contracted and the blood rushed to her face, receding to leave
+her trembling, frightened, sick. She had no idea how she was going to
+face Robert with this fact--it was done; there was no going back. She
+should have consulted him. The whole thing suggested a sort of vulgar
+eagerness on her part, a head-long impatience. And she had made it
+only too evident that Robert bored her. She must go back, patiently,
+and try to understand herself and him, prepare him, somehow, for this
+preposterous bill headed simply De Blauvelt, Interiors, Paris, New York.
+
+Miss de Blauvelt appeared on the following day to make what proved to
+be a final inspection of her handiwork. Lilah, caught unawares, felt
+at a disadvantage in the presence of this compact little cosmopolitan.
+There was something decidedly challenging in the frivolity of her
+beautiful feet and ankles and the whiteness of her hair. She was an
+old woman sustained by the success and color of her life. Everything
+had been done that could be done by science and art to preserve, make
+permanent, her famous slimness, her provocative and ugly features, her
+_chic_. The result was not quite human; there were no wrinkles, no
+visible signs of age; in the transparent mask of her face, only her
+eyes seemed to be alive, black, intelligent and cruel. She never smiled
+and Lilah decided that she couldn’t; plastic surgery had deprived her
+of animation. She wore a tube-like dress, short in the fashion of the
+moment, a turban of dyed metallic cloth and the curious square-toed,
+clumsy, strapped slippers affected by the Parisian _mondaine_.
+
+“Well? You like it?” she demanded.
+
+“Very much.”
+
+“You had better let me do your country place before I go back to
+France.”
+
+Lilah said decidedly: “Thanks. No.”
+
+“Why not?”
+
+“Your bill was exorbitant.”
+
+Miss de Blauvelt’s eyes came around with a pounce. “Nonsense. I was
+more than charitable! If you expected department store economies--”
+
+She broke off. “Surely, you understood--”
+
+“Oh, yes,” Lilah said hurriedly. “But I shan’t undertake another--not
+now.”
+
+“You must come to Dinard,” Miss de Blauvelt said in an even voice; “I
+live there with two amusing and talented women, a sculptress and a
+pianiste. It’s very simple and very beautiful.”
+
+She made an expressive gesture. “This is my last house in America. You
+may tell every one so. It will give your interior a peculiar luster and
+perhaps reconcile you to the expense.”
+
+And with a nod, she walked quickly out, and across the pavement to her
+motor.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Lilah spent the rest of the afternoon at her desk adding up a list of
+bills, De Blauvelt, Shawhan, plumbers, painters, masons, upholsterers,
+warehouses, rugs, electricians, florists, contractors....
+
+She was interrupted by a servant, a new acquisition like everything
+else, who said: “Miss Fuller” in a dubious voice as if he were weary
+of ushering in tradespeople and nobodies.
+
+Lilah turned with relief. She hated details. She almost ran forward to
+meet Grace Fuller, who came into the room unruffled and casual, as she
+had entered the flat in Ninth Street.
+
+Lilah forgot the bills in the excitement of displaying her possessions.
+And as Grace Fuller followed her from room to room she felt her
+enthusiasm mounting. For the first time her dreams seemed to be
+concrete, her security certain. Her feet slipped along the rugs with a
+luxurious appreciation of their softness. Grace Fuller followed, saying
+very little. But then she never did have any enthusiasm. She might be
+regretting--poor soul! This warmth and glow, after the room in Ninth
+Street, the gas-log, the oak table, the green lamp and her father’s
+chair, worn hollow.
+
+“It’s quite like you,” Grace Fuller said. “Purry. I feel stroked
+myself. Tea? By all means. I’m dog-tired.... New York all summer--heat
+that withered the geraniums on the fire escape! I had to open the
+dumb-waiter door for ventilation....”
+
+She lighted a cigarette. “How’s Robert?”
+
+“Awfully well.”
+
+Lilah busied herself with cups and saucers. She did not care to discuss
+Robert. But Grace Fuller said: “He hates New York at this time of year.”
+
+“He has his club.”
+
+“Has he?”
+
+“Are you being disagreeable?”
+
+“I don’t think so. I want you to be happy, and it seems to me that you
+are doing figure eights around the danger sign.... In November, the
+Maine natives go down East for deer. Robert always hunts with his gang
+of Perkins and Littlefields and Brewsters. Hasn’t he told you?”
+
+“We have been married less than six months. He wouldn’t leave me,”
+Lilah said concisely.
+
+“He would, if you gave him the least little push! He wanted a moose
+this year.”
+
+Abruptly, she changed the subject. She told Lilah that she was very
+nearly worn out. It seemed to be her fortune to get nothing but
+“hopeless cases,” invalids engaged in the long-drawn-out process of
+dying by inches. She had had to witness so much poor, human suffering,
+to face the mute or the querulous questions of people who “had to
+know.” “The ones who suffer most are the ones who want to stay. They
+seem to love life. They’re so futile, so pathetic! I’ve listened for
+hours to women who could remember every detail of their girlhood--how
+pretty they were, and the number of tucks on their graduation dress,
+and all about their wedding day: what he said and the cinders on the
+honeymoon journey, and how he took the littlest, weeniest bite out of
+the lobe of her ear.... They want it all back again! I’m dog-tired,
+trying to get it for them. When they die, they give me just the funny,
+accusing look that boy in France gave me.”
+
+“Poor Grace.”
+
+“I’d like to nurse an alcoholic case or a pretty actress with the
+mumps. Something to amuse me. I don’t understand death. I wish I did.
+To put us here, to inform us that our stay is limited, to offer no
+proof of immortality--it’s damnable! Animals don’t know, do they?
+They’re afraid of being hurt, but do they know, when they’re old enough
+to know anything, that some day, no matter how brave and quick they
+are, they’ve got to give it all up?”
+
+Lilah twisted her shoulders. “For heaven’s sake, Grace, be cheerful.”
+
+“I can’t. I live in an atmosphere of dread and tip-toeing. Doctors
+tip-toeing in and out. Relatives tip-toeing in and out. And the
+poor creature on the bed yearning for life! I’m no good any more. A
+rebellious nurse had better stop nursing. I’m going to stop, and come
+back again when I have found something to offer them.”
+
+Lilah had been turning a new idea over in her mind. Sparring for time,
+she said: “You can’t justify death, Grace.”
+
+“I might. I sometimes think it is more justifiable than life.”
+
+“Don’t be bitter.”
+
+“I’m not.” Grace Fuller put her tea-cup down. Her expression was
+excited, she flushed and clasped her hands together as she always did
+when she felt anything deeply. “It seems such a waste of power. Youth,
+with all that energy. A wave of youth rising up in every generation and
+spending itself against the facts of life. Why must it be? I remember,
+when I was a child, how wonderful it all seemed, fields and clouds,
+and wind. Even the seasons were exciting; when the first snow came, I
+was in ecstasy, watching the landscape change. Something was always
+waiting for me. I never knew, or cared to know what--but if I were to
+open my eyes wide or stretch out my hand, there it would be--shining
+and glorious, mine!”
+
+She relaxed and sank back, the old cynical look reappearing, as if she
+had lost hope again.
+
+“I’m a fool. It happens to everybody.”
+
+Lilah turned quickly and asked: “Would you have been happier with
+Robert?”
+
+That slow flush remounted. “No.”
+
+“Then I want you to do something for me. I’m swamped with details,
+correspondence, bills, people I don’t want to see and people I must
+see. I need some one to help me. Some one, like you, who has a good
+telephone voice and decent manners. Will you try it? Please don’t say
+no! I hate talking business, but I assure you you won’t lose anything.
+You can rent the flat in Ninth Street and come here. Now that the
+second floor is finished, you can have our quarters on the third. The
+servants are on the fourth.”
+
+Seeing Robert in the doorway, Lilah called to him: “Hello! Just in time
+for tea! Grace is going to be my secretary. Isn’t it wonderful?”
+
+Robert took Grace Fuller’s hand and bent down a little to smile at her.
+“I’m glad,” he said.
+
+“Then I’ll come,” Grace Fuller answered.
+
+Robert sat down beside Lilah on the narrow French sofa that bulked so
+conspicuously as an item in the De Blauvelt account. He seemed heavier
+than usual, very pink from his walk across town in a sharp November
+wind. His eyes had that untroubled expression which particularly
+irritated Lilah because it was an indication of profound inner content.
+She did not want him to be contented, to take for granted her love, as
+if a gift so inestimable could be accepted easily. Something warned her
+to keep her temper; if Grace Fuller were watching for a rift in the
+lute she would be disappointed.
+
+She may have made a mistake in asking this waspish woman to live under
+the same roof. Strangely enough, the prospect excited her. Without
+Grace Fuller, there would be no rebound to life. She could fling her
+challenge: “See what I am, what I have become,” at this surface, and
+catch, in the deepening irony of the other, her own particular shimmer
+and brilliance. Lacking Junius Peabody, who was desirable because he
+enjoyed watching Lilah wrestle with destiny, Grace Fuller would be the
+necessary audience. To know that she had loved Robert would make Robert
+more endurable. Grace would pore over his stamp-albums and condone his
+canine complex and perhaps read aloud to him the terrible books he
+preferred, murder mysteries and western melodramas: “Nothing like a
+crackerjack mystery, Lilah! Now this chap, Jenkins, was locked up in a
+house on the Hudson and there was a sort of secret passage leading down
+to the river--”
+
+Lilah came back with a start to the unfamiliar outlines of her
+drawing-room. Robert was being very genial and talkative. His enameled
+boots caught the fire-light. Lilah’s eyes rested on his hands; she
+noticed for the first time the breadth and strength of his fingers,
+the blond hair on the backs of his hands. Whenever she came in contact
+with the physical, she felt revulsion. She would have preferred a
+disembodied Robert, or no Robert at all. She turned her eyes away with
+a little shiver of apprehension....
+
+When Grace Fuller had gone, Lilah sat for a long time in silence.
+Robert lighted a cigarette mounted in a long tortoise-shell holder
+with a gold mouth-piece. One hand rested over hers. She wondered what
+he was thinking, whether he liked the room, the house, this brand-new
+air of expensive perfection. The sound of his breathing, heavy and
+regular, was audible above the muffled rumble of traffic in the street.
+A servant removed the tea things and drew the shades, kindling lights
+here and there on tables and against the paneled walls.
+
+“Do you like it?” she said at last.
+
+Robert moved. His answer came with the usual slow marshaling of facts
+and words: “Shall I tell you the truth? I prefer the old house at the
+Point.” His hand tightened over hers; she tried to draw her fingers
+away, but he held them within his. “I’ve hurt you! But you don’t want
+me to be a lap-dog, do you? Must I bark every time you say: ‘Speak,
+Fido’?”
+
+“Why didn’t you tell me so in the beginning? did you let me spend all
+this money?”
+
+“Because I love you,” he said simply.
+
+“Do you?”
+
+“Very much.”
+
+Lilah hurried to the issue. “I’ve spent thousands and thousands. For
+something you hate--”
+
+“I know very little about such matters,” he said. “I left it to you
+to re-furnish the house. I expected a certain expense. Ten or twenty
+thousand--”
+
+“I’ve spent forty thousand,” Lilah said, trying to keep her voice
+steady.
+
+There was a short silence. Robert’s grasp relaxed and she drew her hand
+away. Presently he said: “That is a great deal of money, my dear.”
+
+With a flash of temper she answered sharply: “Why didn’t you stop me,
+then? Instead of letting me go blindly on, believing that I had your
+consent? Was it a trick to trip me up?”
+
+“Lilah!”
+
+“Both you and your grandfather think I married you because I was hard
+up and frightened! You’ve made me feel your suspicion. Suppose I had
+really loved you--and I tried to make you see that I did--wouldn’t your
+doubting me make me self-conscious?”
+
+“Now you’re being nasty.”
+
+She closed her eyes. Shivers of feeling ran through her like currents
+of poison. “Nasty! What a primitive word! I’m being frank, if that’s
+what you mean.”
+
+“I thought you _did_ love me,” Robert said. “I’m probably
+old-fashioned, but I admit that I had an entirely different idea of
+love. I’ve read a lot of trash and believed a lot of sentimental
+idiocy, perhaps....”
+
+“What, exactly, did you expect?”
+
+He turned. “Lilah! We mustn’t talk like this!”
+
+She insisted: “What did you expect that I haven’t given you?”
+
+He made a gesture of surrender. “If I told you, you’d laugh at me.”
+
+“Do I laugh at you? How unfair you are! You are trying to make me out a
+cheat.”
+
+“No. I love you. Only don’t you see--I wanted, and still want,
+companionship. You rather took this house out of my hands, didn’t you?
+As far as I’m concerned, it might be a hotel. Even if I have rotten
+taste, I like a little of it around--in my own room, for instance. Why
+not? Am I irrational?” He unclasped his hands and clasped them again
+with a slow pressure that whitened his knuckles. “I wanted to plan
+things--go over things with you. I didn’t want this woman to buy my
+bed--it’s none of her business! I’ve always dreamed of building a home
+with the woman I loved and married.... I suppose you’re laughing at me.”
+
+Lilah said nothing. She could not trust her voice.
+
+She felt that her power over him had been shattered. None of the old
+tricks would do. She must find new magic, and quickly, if she wanted
+him.
+
+“I’m not laughing at you,” she said at last. “If I’ve done wrong, I’ll
+do the only thing I can do, under the circumstances; I’ll go.”
+
+“You mean, leave me? Lilah, you’re joking! We’re a grown man and woman
+trying to understand each other. I don’t care a damn about that forty
+thousand. It’s you I’ve got to get at--and I can’t buy your heart. I’m
+not rich enough....”
+
+“That was a very pretty speech, Robert.”
+
+“I didn’t mean it to be. I’m in deadly earnest. I’m not contented with
+myself as I am. No one is, perhaps. But my case is extreme. I’m pretty
+much of a waster. I waste myself on harmless amusements, but I waste
+myself. I thought--I just imagined--it was a damn foolish notion--but I
+wanted you to stir me up, get me started at something, make me want to
+serve, somewhere, somehow. And when you married me, you dropped me out
+entirely--” he spread his hands, “for this.”
+
+He turned to her, his face white and strained. “There shouldn’t be much
+of a toss-up between a house and a human being.”
+
+She did not answer, but sat with her body drawn away, her shoulders
+hunched, her breath quick and shallow. Her expression was guarded
+but she permitted herself a half-smile that was both patient and
+contemptuous.
+
+“You’re so damned feminine,” he said. “My mother was like that. She’d
+bang doors and sulk. And my father would rap and beg her to come out,
+and she wouldn’t. Not for hours, while the rest of us went around with
+lead in our hearts, feeling ashamed! When she did open the door, she’d
+sort of smile. She was my mother, but I hated her when she did that....”
+
+“What do you want me to say?” Lilah demanded.
+
+“Something honest,” was his surprising answer.
+
+She stood up suddenly. “I won’t stand this any longer. I won’t!”
+
+She did not cry easily, but now she burst suddenly into a storm of
+tears. The flood gates of fear and questioning broke; she was swept
+away. Through it all, she was aware of the room, of her own attitude
+and of Robert, frightened, aghast, repentant, trying to tear her hands
+away from her face.
+
+“Don’t cry. Lilah, don’t cry.”
+
+She collapsed against him and he drew her down on his knees. His
+unsteady hands caressed her hair. She felt his lips on her neck. She
+drew in her breath sharply and the tears stopped; with shut eyes she
+remained against his shoulder, motionless. The storm of feeling had
+passed, leaving again that curious unreality. Robert was not a part of
+experience; he was in her life for some purpose, to carry her forward a
+little way. Without discontent there could be no advance. From him, she
+would go on, perhaps to love.... But he already felt what she could not
+feel, and this involved her because she had given herself. She shivered
+and a deep sigh cut through her immobility. His arms tightened. He kept
+on whispering, with his lips against her ear, but she heard nothing.
+
+She became conscious again of the large expanse of Aubusson and of
+pools of light in which hot-house flowers seemed made of wax, and of
+sleek surfaces, smooth contours. Her own slippers, the chiffon across
+her knees, were a part of the vision.
+
+Robert was saying: “We mustn’t quarrel. It’s childish. I’ll do any
+earthly thing for you.”
+
+With a quick, almost feline motion, she turned in his arms. “Here
+goes,” she said to herself.
+
+And very deliberately, purposefully, she kissed him.
+
+
+
+
+V
+
+
+With that perilous moment bridged, Robert given again his unquestioning
+security in her, Lilah began her search for experience, for
+satisfaction, for a vague, undetermined happiness. She had for so many
+years peered over the wall at the social garden-party, at women in
+light dresses and men in polished hats, marionettes, voiceless, yet
+animated, infinitely removed--she had imagined so much, given these
+people a wholly romantic and unnatural luster--Now she found herself
+about to drop into the garden, among them, and her eagerness took
+Robert’s breath away. He told himself that he must be patient; when the
+novelty had worn off, when Lilah had rubbed elbows with a world already
+familiar to him, she, too, would discard it. In the meantime, he tried
+to content himself with her rare impulses of affection, hasty caresses,
+light kisses that stung his flesh and penetrated to his heart like
+thin, precise knife-thrusts. For the most part she met him with banter
+and postponement, as if she were skimming over the dark depths of life,
+a vivid and elusive skater on silver skates....
+
+He found himself, suddenly, a slave to hope. Some day she would skim
+back to him, into the circle made by his love, his arms, and remain
+there, safe. But she must first dart here and there, fearless and
+foolish, enjoying herself. It became his dubious pleasure to watch,
+ready to pull her out if the ice should crack.
+
+Robert was not exactly a fool, although he took no pains to appear
+otherwise. What he had seen of the world had landed him back at the
+Point again, where, he argued, all the facts of life and death, of love
+and hate, were uncomplicated and recognizable. He could not see, he
+told Lilah, why experience should acquire anything by multiplication.
+You were born, you loved, hated and died. You could do all these
+things, and get out of it what there was in it, as well in one place as
+in another; nothing was gained by chasing down the horizon--once you
+got there, it was the same, love and life, hate and death. He preferred
+a limited existence to the accumulated sensations offered by such
+cities as New York and Paris. Crowds gave him a mental indigestion.
+Ideas, unless they were based on truths, caused him to suffer an
+intellectual heart-burn. He was not swift enough to chase the casual
+and elusive theories of most modernists, who were content with the
+haphazard because no one could pause long enough to argue or to prove.
+
+But he was willing, after that sharp quarrel with Lilah, to experiment.
+
+He made a hurried trip to Maine and shamefacedly kissed his spaniels,
+turning back to New York with an assumed eagerness that deceived even
+himself. In the train, he left the sleeper for the smoking-car and
+sat up all night trying, as he put it, to reduce Lilah to a common
+denominator. The secret of her fascination lay in her swift and
+inexplicable changes of mood; he waited for favors with a feverish
+sort of excitement. It was probably unhealthy, bad for him to be so
+buffeted about by feeling, alternately exalted to heaven and left flat,
+with a sense of humiliation and shame.
+
+Another type of man might spare himself indignity by letting her see
+a certain brutality. But Robert was not so gifted. He could only be
+himself.
+
+For her he had abandoned his “drinkin’” and had tried desperately to
+part his hair on the side. The green sweater had gone down before her
+contempt. In a hundred little ways he tried to re-make, improve, the
+outward man; he knew when he bored her, although he was never certain
+why he bored her. His enthusiasms were as authentic as hers. But
+Lilah was Lilah, and for such a woman he, any man, would attempt the
+impossible.
+
+He had wanted a strong, sweet, fearless love, ecstasy and pride and
+recognition.
+
+What he had was different, but he could not be sure that he had not
+wanted too much. Perhaps all women were like Lilah, and tormented you,
+where they should offer their breasts for you to put your head against
+and rest, and rest, from life.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+When Grace Fuller moved in, Robert felt more comfortable. She was a
+familiar, understanding sort of woman.
+
+He wondered whether Lilah were justified in calling Grace a deliberate
+celibate. He began to study her face, to question his knowledge of
+her. She had never enjoyed kissing him, but had always pushed him
+away, with an expression almost of fear in her eyes. He couldn’t say
+that he had enjoyed it, either; it was too much like forcing her to
+his will.... There were times, at night, when Lilah was strange and
+emotional, when she pressed against him and ran her fingers up and down
+the back of his neck with the caress he liked, and kissed him, quick,
+almost furtive kisses; when she relaxed in his arms, suddenly, as if
+she were about to surrender, and then was tense again, pushing him
+away, turning her face aside....
+
+He couldn’t understand.
+
+Grace left him alone, left his senses alone. She was a good companion
+in spite of her sharp tongue. He supposed that all nurses had that same
+air of watching out for you, mothering you, seeing that things were
+comfortable and orderly. There was no trace in her manner or her look,
+of remembering; she let him off, magnificently. He would say that for
+her; she was a sport! They began again, as people who have only just
+met. And all those meaningless kisses and casual, artificial embraces
+were forgotten in their common passion for Lilah.
+
+Lilah became a bond between them. When Robert came in and Lilah was not
+at home, he sought Grace and questioned her.
+
+Lilah was fascinating, reckless, just a little terrible and they never
+tired of discussing her. She had done this, or that. This one and
+that one had telephoned. She had bought a new dress or a new book.
+Everything she did startled them, because, once certain of Robert,
+Lilah had become more startling, more reckless and more insatiable than
+ever.
+
+It was as if she had come into full possession of life without
+questioning her right to it. She was not, as far as Robert could see,
+happy, but she was, on the other hand, arrogant with fulfillment.
+Because she herself had succeeded, she could not help having contempt
+for people who had failed.
+
+This amused Robert, but it was also cause for a certain amount of
+chagrin, since he saw that his position had been the lever she needed
+to lift her out of obscurity. She could never have done it alone.
+
+But because he loved her, he did for her everything she seemed to
+require. Before long, she knew every one of importance in Robert’s
+world. It was a world limited by necessity to a few hundred souls.
+Lilah called them Murray Hill blackbirds. They were, in fact, the old
+guard, a thinned-out company of so-called Knickerbockers, New Yorkers
+long enough to cherish their few square blocks of sacred soil with a
+tenacity that was almost aristocratic.
+
+They gave Lilah critical inspection; her house was less important and
+could, in its severe restraint and exact emphasis, be taken for granted.
+
+Flushed, beautiful, excited, Lilah received them. The sleek Aubusson
+became the arena of her first social struggle. These people were
+fashionable but not modish. For them, sensing their prejudices, Lilah
+wore black and was over-careful of her accent. Her Russian atmosphere
+was discarded for the occasion, and Robert and Grace were amazed,
+embarrassed, by a totally different Lilah, a châtelaine, wistful,
+eager and disarming.
+
+Robert was rather proud of the gathering; people like this made him
+feel safer about the future; they cemented the cracks in society. He
+adored dowdy wealth because it was an indication of permanence, a stand
+against the upstart, ’Change. There was something plucky about foulard,
+sensible shoes and elaborate whiskers in the Jazz age. While these
+people lived, the last cable held. Their names were less impressive now
+that their city had become unaware of them. But Lilah seemed to enjoy
+juggling these rather musty titles. Robert didn’t know it, but she was,
+consciously, laying a foundation down. She would stand, eventually, not
+upon the quicksand of new, untried, if glamorous names, but upon the
+veritable, bed-rock Manhattanese.
+
+Afterwards, to Grace and Robert, she was explicit: “What fearful bores!
+All of them, except Mrs. Humphrey-hyphen-whatever-her-name-is.... The
+red-headed one.”
+
+“She goes everywhere,” Robert explained, “and is invited nowhere. She
+_was_ glorious, thirty years ago.”
+
+“She is now.”
+
+“She’s a bad egg,” Robert said.
+
+“What do you mean, exactly?”
+
+“Oh, she left her husband, and lived with a chap--some one--I’ve
+forgotten.... She’s quite purple.”
+
+Lilah laughed. “I’d die if I had to know these people.... I liked your
+purple one. She was human. The rest ... _blackbirds_!”
+
+She was being Russian again.... While the new servant, placated by the
+announcement of so many celebrated blackbirds, removed the tea tables
+and gathered up cups and saucers, Lilah disposed of Robert’s friends
+with a tirade of pointed witticisms. She could afford to laugh at them
+because now, she knew, she could subjugate them. All she had to do was
+to snub the purple lady, entertain discreetly, grow old, and die. In
+ten years she would look just like the rest of them--ground-grippers
+and a pince-nez, a maribou boa, a bit of real lace, amethysts and
+rheumatism in her finger-joints.... She preferred more difficult
+attainment....
+
+Suddenly she went to the piano and, still smoking, played a rakish
+accompaniment to a French song.
+
+“_Je sais que c’est une folie!_”
+
+Robert and Grace Fuller turned about in their chairs and listened. She
+seemed to be unaware of them. With her head thrown back, the cigarette
+aslant, she sang in a light, high voice, a little song about madness
+and youth and _la tendresse_ and, meltingly, _l’amour_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+From this little occasion, Lilah stepped off into New York. There were,
+she discovered, no barriers raised against a pretty, witty and wealthy
+woman. She had all the ingredients to make a very potent brew.
+
+In the beginning, Robert was always at her elbow, puzzled, but
+stimulated in exact proportion to her own pleasure. New York was not
+“dry” and before long Robert was drinking again with that boastful
+abandonment characteristic of prohibition. Everywhere there was gin,
+and according to the social scale, it was either genuine, or frankly
+synthetic. Lilah drank for the first time in her life, steadily,
+carelessly. She explained to Robert that there was no other way to
+“fizz” at dinner or to hold off fatigue. And, happening to discover a
+substantial supply of good wines and whisky in the cellar of the Murray
+Hill house, she wrote to Junius Peabody and obtained his somewhat
+satirical permission to uncork all but the rarest vintages. Those,
+he explained, belonged to his “heirs” and were to be handed down as
+historical evidence. Lilah must consider, take pity on the parched
+palates of her sons....
+
+Lilah tossed the letter into the fire. She did not intend that there
+should be sons. She was infected by the casuistry of the age, a
+total lack of interest in the coming generation. Behind men’s lives
+there was no longer any sustaining idealism, any heroic faith in an
+unbroken purpose. The war had severed a link in the chain of passions,
+spiritual, national and racial. The day, the needs and fulfillments of
+the day, sufficed.
+
+Robert could find nothing to refute her claim that the war had made
+morality ridiculous and had stripped adolescent humanity of its
+illusions. Everywhere, in both men and women, he encountered the
+cynicism that goes, usually, with embittered old age, with failure and
+disappointment. People were reckless because the moral skids were off;
+there was a gay determination, everywhere evident, to meet disaster
+as gayly as possible. But this was not heroic; it was cowardly, and
+Robert found himself despising the times he lived in.
+
+As usual, he was not expressive. Something about his physical pinkness
+and blondness, his air of being extremely well-fed and well-brushed,
+held him back from complaining. Lilah might be right. Certainly, there
+was no evidence of spirituality, of change.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+New York was dancing-mad, in a mood essentially unlike the madness
+of Nineteen-Fourteen, when blind satiety had twirled on the lid of a
+seething volcano. This madness was sophisticated and purposeful. The
+Argentine tango had given way to the primitive rhythms of Africa and
+Maylasia, a brutal tom-toming, savagery stalking progress through a
+maze of the senses. There were very few private dances. Robert could
+remember the day of the cotillion leader, Ward McAllister’s reign. Now,
+society patronized the commercial dance-halls or the exclusive “clubs”
+given over to all-night dancing, in defiance of a closing law which
+arbitrarily separated jazzing couples at one in the morning. There were
+few formal occasions; hostesses relied upon haphazard dinner-parties, a
+box at the theater or the opera, and the confused, prismatic, exciting
+contact afterwards.
+
+Lilah danced beautifully, without a trace of vulgarity, but Robert
+objected to the frank enticement of her gowns that displayed her flesh
+to the casual observer. She answered that he belonged in the Dark Ages;
+no one paid any attention to backs and arms; the sight was too usual.
+Fashion had freed women because women had first freed themselves.
+They were too frankly undressed to be alluring, and men ought to be
+grateful; nudity rid them of obscene imaginings.
+
+Robert was not certain that women’s clothes were a symbol of masculine
+indifference. Lilah might be right; she was infinitely more clever than
+he, and besides she said things with a conviction, a finality, that
+floored him. It is hard to contradict a woman you love. He had his
+reservations.
+
+They rarely dined at home. As the winter progressed, their program
+of pleasure became more complicated. The details were left to Grace
+Fuller, who sat at a desk the better part of every day, answering
+the telephone and attending to Lilah’s correspondence. An avalanche
+of people had swept Robert’s handful of Murray Hill blackbirds out
+of the picture. It had been but a step from these conservatives to
+their children, the reckless generation that had outlived but had not
+out-thought the war; and from them to the professionals, a little world
+of hard, bright, amazingly talented modernists, racially nondescript,
+intellectually polyglot, artistically indeterminate.
+
+Robert encountered too many enthusiasms to have much faith in a
+standard of taste. A sort of united press-agentry conspired to prove
+that there was an American art. Painstakingly, Robert sought what Lilah
+declared already existed, and he failed to find it. He found, instead,
+a horde of facile, astonishing copyists. The extremists irritated him
+because they struck him as being too lazy to study. Further than that,
+he refused to express himself.
+
+For several months he followed wherever Lilah led. Then it became
+an easy matter to excuse himself. He did not dance, and the rôle of
+caryatid to the striped awning at the Palais Royal was proving irksome.
+Conversation, he insisted, had been annihilated by those jungle noises
+produced by the saxophone, the oboe, the violin, the piano and the
+bass-drum. He was not capable of feeling the necessary emotion; he
+preferred staying at home to holding a half-dozen strange and hectic
+women in his arms.
+
+“By all means, stay,” Lilah said agreeably. She kissed him on the top
+of his head and went out, wrapped in a voluminous coat of gold cloth,
+from which her face emerged, powdered, delicately rouged, like the face
+of a bisque figurine.
+
+Her mistiness had taken on a certain sharp and defined quality; she
+was more accentuated, less shadowy. The petulant droop of her lips
+was pronounced; her eyes were larger and more brilliant--they sought
+admiration frankly, if disdainfully, and gave nothing in return.
+
+Robert went to his easy chair with a sense of having been left flat. He
+expected at least a show of protest, of regret.
+
+Grace Fuller was at work, in the library; he heard the click of her
+typewriter. He might go to her. Damn it, why not? She might be able to
+tell him what Lilah had meant when she said, “By all means, stay.”
+
+He climbed the stairs slowly, puffing his cigar. He was, he realized,
+very tired. Pleasure exhausted him because he didn’t believe in it. To
+Lilah, it had all the luster of a Cause.
+
+Grace Fuller glanced up.
+
+“Not going?”
+
+“Not going.”
+
+“Why?”
+
+Robert said lightly: “I’m fagged. Old age, I suppose.”
+
+She pushed the machine away and sat staring at him with an expression
+which made him vaguely uncomfortable.
+
+“What did Lilah say?”
+
+Robert laughed: “She invited me by all means to suit myself.”
+
+“You made a mistake. Why didn’t you tell her how tired you are and make
+her stay at home?”
+
+“I can’t _make_ Lilah do anything.”
+
+“I wouldn’t admit it, if I were you.”
+
+“Why not? She is undisciplined, but I would be the last one to try to
+curb her.”
+
+“It’s too late, Robert. Lilah has taken the bit. She’s running away
+from you.”
+
+With a pang of irritable fear, Robert said sharply: “Nonsense.”
+
+Grace Fuller jerked the typewriter forward again and struck at the keys
+with her long, cool fingers. Her mouth had hardened; her eyes were
+obstinate. “Very well,” she said.
+
+“See here, Grace. Don’t exaggerate! Lilah’s excited. She has never
+seen life. She isn’t stale. And you and I are.... She’ll get over it.
+There’s good in her.”
+
+“It isn’t ‘bad’ to love life,” Grace answered. “I am only suggesting
+that it is bad for you.”
+
+“I can stand it.”
+
+Grace Fuller gathered together her day’s work with deliberate gestures,
+sheaves of gray note-paper heavily embossed with the Thirty-eighth
+Street address in the English fashion, square envelopes, checks and
+receipted bills. Then she rose and stood for a moment looking down at
+Robert.
+
+“I’m really very happy, Grace,” he said, on his guard against something
+in her expression.
+
+“I’m awfully glad,” she said finally, “to hear that.”
+
+She turned to leave the room, but Robert spoke quickly: “Don’t go. I
+want to talk to you....” He hesitated, and then said awkwardly, “about
+yourself.”
+
+“Myself?” Grace Fuller hesitated, flushing. “Please don’t.”
+
+But she came back, and sank with a deep sigh, a sudden, almost pathetic
+relaxation, into a chair before the fire. Robert had never seen her
+looking so positively ugly; the guards were down; her distinction
+had given way to the essential woman, a creature defeated by her own
+disbelief. It was shocking, and to Robert, humiliating. He turned his
+eyes away.
+
+“Don’t talk about me,” Grace said. “I prefer to be left in my own
+Nirvana of self-forgetfulness. I have conquered ambition and regret,
+and you’re sorry for me! You ought to congratulate me....”
+
+She caught her breath sharply. “How well that sounded! I almost
+convinced myself....” She smiled crookedly at him, with a funny little
+grimace. “You can’t get Nirvana without surrendering. I suppose there’s
+some primal bug of hope in my system; I still cherish the unattainable.
+I wish I had had the courage to fling myself away, as nuns do. What
+peace! To believe ... I can’t.... Here I am, talking about myself....”
+
+“There ought to be some way,” Robert said, “to live in the world
+and like it. I used to. At one time I had things reduced to pretty
+simple terms. Lilah has shaken me out of my security. She is like a
+humming-bird, or something swift and alive. You’re right--she has left
+me behind! My own world is stale, and hers is beyond my comprehension.
+Those darts and flights and quick stabs at things.... When a man gets
+to be my age, he wants to stand on a sort of hill and look off at his
+future. I’m too old to be puffing up the nether side. Frankly, I don’t
+know where Lilah is leading me, or whether, if I ever over-take her,
+I shall see anything beyond. Have I said too much? This isn’t in the
+nature of a confession. I’m not disgruntled. Only I thought that you
+might....”
+
+Grace interrupted: “I can’t analyze her. She dazzles me. For all I
+know she is shallow water, but I am more inclined to think that she
+is beyond our depth, yours and mine. We’re making rather fools of
+ourselves trying to reach her and drag her up to our level into the
+common light of day. I adore her. She is the only human being I’ve ever
+known I could believe in, because she is absolutely honest.”
+
+“Then why--” Robert began.
+
+“Because you’ll never understand her! Dear old Robert. You’re a
+brownstone-front and Lilah is an English basement. You’ve inherited all
+the prejudices and social quaverings of the ’Eighties. Lilah is--I wish
+there were a superlative for the word modern; would it be futurist? She
+has bolted into a new generation, with all its recklessness and daring
+and passion for facts. She likes things as they are, raw and naked. And
+that makes her saner than you and me, and safer.”
+
+“I’m not sure that you’re right,” Robert said after a moment. “I think
+Lilah dodges reality. And what I’m afraid of is that the facts will
+spring out from ambush and hurt her terribly. I don’t want her hurt!
+There’s something ... at times ... like a willful child....” His
+expression changed. He became unaware of Grace Fuller’s watchfulness.
+“I have failed to show her anything.”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+When Lilah came in at two o’clock, she found them still together, in
+the library filmed with the smoke of cigars and cigarettes and before a
+fire that had burned out.
+
+She crossed the room swiftly, letting her gold cloak slip away from
+her as the petals of a flower fold back from a slender stamen. She
+was dressed in pollen yellow with amber ornaments; barbaric ear-rings
+brushed her shoulders. She wore no rings, not liking them; her wedding
+ring had been discarded an hour after her wedding.
+
+“Hello! Still awake? I thought you were sleepy, Robert! Who has a
+cigarette? I came back before I wanted to because I had twinges of
+conscience. I thought afterwards, that you might be ill. It was foolish
+of me. I made apologies to the Sinclairs and painted a terrible
+picture--Robert with a fever. They wanted me to go on to the Club,
+so I went. Reluctantly! Now don’t you both feel silly? I danced with
+Heifetz. He has eyes like agates set in satin cushions. He dances
+divinely, but I was afraid he might scratch one of his famous hands
+on this girdle of mine--the beads are so sharp. He thought me quite
+Austrian, not French. He is coming here with that American violinist
+who made such a hit in Rome and has married a pretty American girl
+when he had a choice of titles and millions. It was really awfully
+amusing. Poiret was there, looking us over. He is rather like a
+Bedouin--Barker’s Constantine Madras. He thinks American women
+potential; but they lack something the French have. Now you know, both
+of you, that we don’t know how to wear hats; if we’re picturesque,
+we’re not _chic_, and if we’re _chic_, we’re not picturesque. I’m
+sick and tired of hearing about Cécile Sorel. Poiret raved, too, and
+there was a little Roumanian attaché from Washington who declared
+that she is the most beautiful woman in the world. I can’t see it.
+She has a wonderful neck, but that mouth! And there’s nothing subtle
+about flamingo-pink ostrich feathers in a Roman helmet made out of
+rhinestones. Bordoni is lovelier; she has the most provocative feet
+in the world. Heifetz likes olive women with eyebrows ... at least,
+I think so--he danced with one and his expression was like the last
+movement of Debussy’s _L’Après-Midi d’un Faune_.... Another cigarette,
+Robert. Aren’t you two being rather glum? What have you been talking
+about? Me, of course! I suppose you dished me up from soup to nuts.
+Is there anything left of me? Do you like me? I’m a trusting soul, to
+leave you together! Not a servant in sight and you two marooned in the
+library, picking my mortal bones....”
+
+She perched on the arm of Robert’s chair and the cloak fell to the
+floor. She was as alive, as vivacious, as if the night were only begun.
+She had an imperishable luster, a surface brilliance that was beginning
+to harden, like the skin of a pearl....
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Lilah dreaded the approach of Spring. Summer meant the Point, where she
+had no one to stand between Robert and herself except Junius. There
+had been no appreciable abatement of the New York season; very few
+people had gone South, since all eyes were turning again toward Europe.
+Lilah suggested Paris to Robert, but he was, for once, determined. He
+expected her to go with him, in June, to Maine.
+
+Lilah had been launched with a certain momentum; now she could not
+stop. She ran from one important pleasure to another. Her time was
+taken up by the meaningless activities of the young married set, the
+débutantes of an immediate yesterday who were now tasting freedom and
+a characteristic dissipation; marriage seemed to be not a bondage but
+an excuse for license; the manners, and the casual morality of these
+matrons were the result, they said, of the War. Most of them had
+married in a hurry, but there were no signs of leisurely repentance;
+rather, divorce was spoken of across the dinner-table and accomplished
+after breakfast. Speech was reckless, profane and satirical; there was
+nothing left to be shocked at because everything had been said. Love
+was always possible, but never probable unless tinged, at least, with
+the illicit. Concessions were made to any one who had “a line,” and
+lapses from social grace were condoned and even glorified.
+
+There was, Lilah discovered, a code, astonishing to the older
+generation. But this had always been so. The difference lay, not in the
+code itself, but in the mental condition that had produced it. This
+generation had been hurled against the bayonets, into the mud-pits and
+stench holes, the heroisms and pitiless defeats of war. Brought up to
+believe in progress, in their own infallibility and triumph, they had,
+in adolescence, been stripped of their most inestimable faith. It was
+natural that they should scorn both their teachers and the untruth
+they had been fed, as with a spoon. They made their own deductions;
+impatient, ironic, and without sentiment, they raced forward.
+
+The men were more balanced than the women; a preponderance of
+serious-minded men were intent on finding out something, no matter
+what. Lilah listened to much bitter speculation. While they speculated,
+they either drank or danced or, without emotion, experimented in the
+flesh.
+
+Lilah met some strange fish. There were times when her over-stimulated
+mind refused to accept impressions and she saw faces swimming,
+floating, snatched away, reappearing, like the fantastic denizens of
+an aquarium. The city required that a woman should appear impervious
+to fatigue; Lilah fell into the luxurious habit of having her tired
+face “patted” into lines of animation at so much an hour. Tilted back
+in a combination barber-chair and operating table, she gave herself
+up to the fingers of a beauty specialist. Lilah submitted to hours
+of manipulation; her face was smothered in clay masks, packed in
+ice, slapped, pinched, and stroked. These were her only moments of
+relaxation. At the mercy of the expert, her body rested, her mind swam
+in and out of the mazes. At her side, upon a highly antiseptic glass
+table, bottles and jars contained the supposedly mysterious ingredients
+of youth; Lilah believed in their advertised potency. Lulled by the
+touch of soothing fingers and the odor of creams, lotions, tonics,
+herbs, sachets, rouges and powders, Lilah spent hours in these brocaded
+salons. Other hours, fixed appointments rigorously kept, were spent at
+the hairdressers’, where, before a triple mirror, beneath a cluster
+of lights, her vanity was fed by a mannered Frenchman who wielded the
+Marcel irons with a sort of tenderness. Her hands, surrendered to
+a pale girl in black, became smooth and pointed, tinted, polished.
+She enjoyed the odor of this establishment--a combination of violet
+brilliantine, singed hair and a Gallic thrift.
+
+Early in February her life took a strange turn. She went around a
+corner into a new street.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+She had been invited, significantly, without Robert. May Sinclair
+thought Robert a wet-blanket and had said: “Come alone. It’s going to
+be a bit wild. Robert wouldn’t understand. Give him his slippers and
+leave him at home.”
+
+The Sinclairs lived in a Park Avenue apartment, fifteen stories above
+ground. A columbarium maze of small rooms had been transformed, by a
+judicious knocking out of walls, into a stately salon. Upon this lofty
+shelf Mrs. Sinclair lived and entertained, in the fashion of modern New
+York, any one who amused her.
+
+Lilah found the company already there. A man sat at the piano,
+improvising. She recognized Montague Wilder and his inevitable tumbler
+of whisky. He couldn’t play, he said, unless he was thoroughly drunk.
+Then he played divinely. He looked up as Lilah came in and, not
+pausing, called: “Lilah! Lovely Lilah! Dance for us! This is a waltz on
+a poem by von Hofmanstahl. Listen! Isn’t it lovely? Dance. Something
+Viennese! Cupids and garlands, hoops and little waists....”
+
+Lilah lifted her arms. Suddenly she felt very gay and triumphant. She
+was conscious of people sitting in the shadowy corners of the room,
+watching her. She began to waltz. The little square of cloth that did
+for a train got between her feet and she caught it up, exposing her
+ankles to the frank admiration of her audience. No one said anything.
+This was the lazy after-dinner hour before vivacity had worked its way
+to the surface. Later, every one would talk at once.
+
+Lilah said breathlessly: “Mrs. Vernon Castle!” And waltzed into the
+arms of Chivers Chew, who was the only man in the room on his feet.
+They whirled for a minute (Chew danced abominably) and then Lilah sat
+down beside Wilder. “That was wonderful, Montague. But play something
+serious. Chopin.”
+
+“For God’s sake, Montague, cut it out,” Chew complained. “I’m blue
+enough.”
+
+“Use your mind,” some one advised. “You can do anything with your mind.”
+
+Montague Wilder improvised on the theme “Kalua.” Glittering scales
+ornamented the melody; he took it by the hand and led it into the
+Debussy half-tones, so that the South Sea ragtime tune became a wistful
+French song, a thing of strangeness and nuance. His left hand reached
+for the whisky glass without seeming to know what his right hand did,
+but there was no break in the invention of technical feats. Through
+this dissonance and unexpected harmony the familiar melody seemed
+classical, important. “You’re wickedly clever,” Lilah said.
+
+“Wait until I’ve had a quart,” he answered. “I’ll play the D-flat waltz
+in thirds. Rosenthal could do it, but no one else ever has.”
+
+“Who’s here?” Lilah asked.
+
+“Oh, the Heywoods. Pound, the shipbuilder. He’s middle-class English.
+‘The wife’ is with him and she’s worse. Carey; the Hawaiian Carey. Miss
+Wagner--pronounced with a wag. Putnam Flagg and a girl from San Diego
+who writes. May has never drawn such a hand--aces and eights! Why are
+_we_ here?”
+
+“Who is Putnam Flagg?” Lilah interrupted.
+
+“I don’t know.”
+
+“What is May going to do with us?”
+
+“The opera. Then back here. And then talk, until morning.”
+
+“Talk?”
+
+May Sinclair unfolded and rose from a long sofa upholstered in taupe
+velvet. “Come on! ‘Butterfly’!”
+
+“‘Butterfly’! Good God,” Wilder groaned.
+
+“Let’s stay here and play, you and I,” Lilah whispered.
+
+“No, you don’t!” May Sinclair’s clear, high voice came between them.
+“Drink that whisky, Montague, and bring Lilah! Farrar’s singing.”
+
+“Worse and worse,” Montague Wilder said. But he rose, and Lilah found
+her wrap.
+
+In the elevator she brushed shoulders with a tall man who stared at
+her down his nose. May Sinclair never introduced any one. This, Lilah
+supposed, was Putnam Flagg. Afterwards, long afterwards, it used to
+amuse her to think of their meeting in a stuffy little elevator that
+slid down fifteen stories while they stared at each other.
+
+He had a curious, rather flat nose, eyes like an animal and the
+beautifully modeled full mouth of a satyr.
+
+They did not speak, but Lilah thought: “I hope May will let him come
+with me.”
+
+The Sinclair motor waited at the curb, and Lilah hung back, pretending
+to adjust the collar of her wrap. She heard Mrs. Sinclair call:
+“Lilah! Lilah!” With a flurry, the writer from San Diego and the
+elder Carey embarked, the Englishman and his wife followed and the
+attendant, closing the door of the limousine, signaled for Lilah’s
+little brougham.... She was to have the tall man and Montague Wilder to
+herself.
+
+She beckoned to them; the car slipped into the stream of downtown
+traffic upon the heels of May Sinclair’s crowded chariot, and again she
+became conscious of the pressure of her shoulder against his.
+
+“I am Mrs. Peabody,” she explained.
+
+“Major Flagg,” he answered briefly.
+
+They did not speak again until a skillful and precarious landing had
+been made before the Opera. It was Montague Wilder’s monologue. He
+complained on the way across town that opera in New York was debased,
+a commercial side-show. There were no voices worth mentioning. No one
+below the peanut heaven knew anything about music; tradition was lost
+on the balance of the house, and therefore the singers played fast and
+loose with the scores. He had heard a distinguished prima donna cheat
+three times in one evening, substituting a b flat for a high c to the
+rage and mortification of Moranzoni; but the audience was unaware, so
+why bother to sing? Galli flatted to her heart’s content. Now that
+Caruso was gone, there was no one. No one, that is, save Diaz, who was
+permitted to sing once or twice a season--it was worth going a thousand
+miles to hear him do the prologue of the “Coq d’Or” and the rag-picker
+in “Louise.”
+
+But who could sing “Depuis le Jour” since Mary had gone to Chicago?
+Jeritza would snuff out like a rocket, in two years, or less. She was
+too damned Teutonic....
+
+In the lobby, May Sinclair gathered her aces and eights and led them
+around the red velvet corridors to her box. She was a tall, blonde,
+long-waisted woman who had reduced from two hundred to one hundred and
+thirty-five pounds in less than a year and had had a sort of personal
+renaissance, a rebirth. From a fat placidity, a dowdy gentleness, she
+had entered upon a willowy emotionalism; she was enormously interested
+in what she had, for years, surrendered because of her sense of the
+fitness of things. She was experimenting; it was no longer ridiculous
+to experiment. She was forty but she was not fat.
+
+Butterfly’s relatives were retreating before a matter-of-fact
+Pinkerton, sung by Martinelli. Farrar, in a nasturtium-red kimono with
+a metallic obi, her blue-black hair a pinwheel of lacquered ornaments,
+crouched before an artificial cherry tree in the fullness of unnatural
+blossoming. Lilah saw the stage, a pool of light, and the two small
+gesticulating figures, across the shoulders of Mrs. Sinclair and the
+writer from San Diego. That music, melting, propitiating, assailed her,
+like a personal appeal. _Bimba, dagli occhi pieni di malia--_
+
+If Martinelli would only cut his hair....
+
+The house was not crowded, but, as always, the boxes made a show--poor
+relatives of the holders, or relatives of the poor relatives, or music
+teachers, or God knows who.... Lilah had not heard “Butterfly” often
+enough to be bored. But Montague Wilder had curled up in the ante-room
+and had gone sound asleep.
+
+Suddenly Lilah’s eyes turned to Major Flagg. She had wanted him to be
+watching her, and he was. Their eyes held. It was a game. His eyes
+were unwavering and yet something kept flickering in them; it was as
+if a shutter opened and closed. Whenever she was about to leap into
+his eyes, he shut her out. More than anything she had ever wanted, she
+wanted to get by that barrier, whatever it was, into his eyes. Once
+inside, she could conquer him, but never so long as he kept her out.
+
+She had not spoken to him except to say that she was Mrs. Peabody and
+to receive his polite but noncommittal answer.
+
+He was winning the game....
+
+Lilah shrugged her shoulders and turned back to the stage, where
+Pinkerton, feeling carefully behind him for the steps, drew Butterfly
+into the _dolce dimora_. Farrar, abandoned, Carmen in a kimono, swayed
+forward, lost in ecstasy; her feet, in gold lacquer sandals, mounted
+the steps, slowly, slowly, as her head tilted back to that kiss on the
+threshold....
+
+“Oh, God,” Montague Wilder said, sitting up, disheveled and sleepy.
+“Puccini! Lilah--let’s go back and drink more of May’s Scotch.”
+
+She shook her head.
+
+It was no use pretending they had not looked at each other like that.
+
+In the corridor, pacing up and down with Mrs. Sinclair, who couldn’t
+find any one to smile at because it was a parade of “loans,” Lilah
+heard in snatches that Putnam Flagg was “queer,” that he had “ideas.”
+He had been gassed and had a bad heart. It made Mrs. Sinclair jumpy
+because at any moment he might faint.
+
+“Talk to him, Lilah, I can’t.” Mrs. Sinclair caught sight of old
+“Rosie” Jackson and shed Lilah.
+
+Lilah found herself at Flagg’s side. He was too tall. She felt little
+and silly. But more than that she was excited, a dangerous, unfamiliar
+excitement. She could not explain it, then, or later. He spoke of the
+opera. He liked it. He liked Farrar. “Because she is alive. A woman
+like that....”
+
+“Well?”
+
+“Magnificent! Not quite feminine.”
+
+“Do you know her?”
+
+“No. I shouldn’t want to.”
+
+“Why?”
+
+“I hate finding sawdust in dolls.”
+
+“Perhaps you wouldn’t.”
+
+“I might.” He smiled down at her. “And then I’d have one less
+enthusiasm. I can’t do with too few! It’s lonely enough as it is. Rows
+of ’em, prone, with the sawdust spilling out of their heads! Leave me
+Farrar, please.”
+
+After a moment he said: “This is the first opera I’ve heard in five
+years. I’ve been in New Mexico for two years. Before that, in France, I
+didn’t care to go. I hope Mrs. Sinclair won’t leave early. I want to be
+in at the death.”
+
+“Montague Wilder would consider you very unsophisticated. He laughs at
+Puccini, or, as you know, he goes to sleep.”
+
+Flagg seemed for a moment to consider. “I don’t dare to laugh at
+things,” he said presently. “It’s dangerous. You begin by laughing at
+your pet little detestations and you wind up by losing your big faiths.
+It doesn’t pay to be too fastidious.”
+
+“Doesn’t it?” Lilah said lightly.
+
+He shut her out again. As if embarrassed by having made a confidence,
+he turned his head away. People were staring at them and Lilah wondered
+whether she had been recognized. Her photograph, taken by a flattering
+man of title against a background of Florentine brocade, had been
+published broadcast in those magazines whose business it is to foster
+the idea that an American society really exists. Lilah had discovered
+that it is not altogether easy to get yourself advertised, even though
+you happened to be Mrs. Robert Peabody. But she had taken this hurdle,
+as she took all of them, with alacrity, and it was therefore not
+improbable that this strolling crowd stared at her for the reason that
+the American crowd loves its celebrity as the Englishman loves his
+duke. Ordinarily, she would have been content to enjoy the flattery
+implied by this attention alone, but to-night her pleasure was doubled
+because she particularly wanted this man to be aware of her. He could
+scarcely be unaware that she was attracting attention.
+
+At the box door, Mrs. Sinclair waited with the air of being about to
+sweep them into a net. “We’re going on to the Rendezvous after the
+second act. Montague’s fearfully bored and Carey has a Gilda Gray
+complex. I hope you won’t mind, you two.”
+
+Flagg made a polite if not enthusiastic gesture and Lilah, catching his
+eyes deliberately, permitted her own to say: “I’m sorry, for your sake.”
+
+As they entered the box, he remarked simply: “I have a rotten heart and
+can’t dance.... Who is Gilda Gray?”
+
+“She is a lovely, initiated, transplanted savage,” Lilah explained,
+“who dances the hula-hula on Forty-fourth Street.”
+
+Again their eyes held. The lights dimmed; with a sigh, a rustle, the
+great audience faced again the glowing proscenium. Lilah had a curious
+sensation of being isolated, alone, in a crowded emptiness, with this
+man. Life, for the moment, was immeasurably suspended. There was a
+dignity, a beauty about the impending, the imminent disaster. She would
+love this man. She could not help herself. She paused, amazed, before
+the strangeness and the splendor of that recognition. The moment
+prolonged itself, until, in the fixed and intense meeting of their
+eyes there was mutual declaration. It seemed that they must sit thus,
+strangers, in a shadowy balcony above a pool of music, forever....
+
+
+
+
+VI
+
+
+When Lilah returned to the Thirty-eighth Street house, late that night,
+it was her inclination to avoid any encounter with Robert. She hoped
+that he had fallen asleep. Dismissing the servant, Lilah entered the
+electric elevator, another of De Blauvelt’s innovations, and got out on
+the second floor. The door was noisy and as she turned toward her room
+she saw a light flash on in Robert’s room across the hall. He called:
+“Lilah?”
+
+“Yes,” she said, and paused, holding her breath. She ought to go in.
+But she could not. She felt that her excitement had written itself on
+her face and she hated to invent reasons for that animation. She wanted
+most of all to be alone and to see herself, clearly, before she went
+further. Robert might surprise her into saying something before she was
+ready.
+
+“I’m tired,” she called out. “Good night!”
+
+She locked herself into her room, suddenly determined to have her
+way. She must deal with this new feeling before anything happened to
+diminish it, to mar its shining beauty. Robert expected to be kissed;
+it was a part of the utterly stupid and peremptory rite of marriage,
+devoid of spontaneous affection or of that emotion which is led up to,
+prepared, by word and touch. Why did he insist, when he knew that it
+was a conventional gesture and could lead to nothing, create nothing,
+change nothing? She heard his hand sliding over the panels of the door,
+and again he called: “Lilah?”
+
+She saw herself reflected in all the mirrors in an attitude of disgust
+and rebellion and she was struck by her loneliness. No one could help
+her. This was a primitive feeling, so powerful that it was all she
+could do not to hurl her dismissal at the closed door. What, in a man
+she loved, would have been lovable, in Robert was revolting.
+
+“Go away,” she said in a low voice.
+
+At once he was silent, as if she had struck him dead. She listened for
+the sound of his retreating footsteps, but she could hear nothing. He
+must have gone swiftly, silently; or else was still standing there, his
+hand suspended, his gesture arrested by something final in her voice.
+
+She spoke again: “I’m very tired.”
+
+There was no answer. And slowly she undressed, trembling as if there
+had been an actual disaster.
+
+She slipped into bed and switched off the light. The silence of the
+room was permeated by a low and continuous sound, a distant mingling of
+voices, victorious, hopeless, a vast, removed dissonance.... The city.
+
+She got up again and kneeled by an open window. There, the sound took
+form, was less terrifying. The street, beneath a moon at the full,
+was empty, like a street in a nightmare. Office buildings were like
+pyramids in a forest of pyramids, inscrutable, lifeless. And one
+tower, higher than the rest, was pierced by a loggia, rimmed with
+moonlight, romantic.
+
+She tried to piece together the fragmentary happenings of that
+evening. The idea came to her that perhaps she had over-estimated
+Flagg’s interest; her own had been immediate, sharp, an emotion more
+penetrating than anything she had experienced. The meeting had upset
+her whole philosophy of conduct; she had thought herself safe within
+the defined circle of her material desires; her inner self, what
+idealists were pleased to call her soul, she had believed secure
+against temptation; beauty, in things, was to have been enough. And now
+she saw, dimly, that she had stepped outside the circle into a strange
+territory where beauty, to be beauty at all, must be of the spirit.
+
+She recalled their silence in the motor, the brief contact of
+shoulders, an ostentatious indifference when, seated at the Rendezvous,
+their interest had either to disguise itself or be subjected to remark.
+Flagg had not danced, but Lilah did, because it was expected of her.
+The writer from San Diego claimed Flagg. She was witty and tangibly
+human, a woman, Lilah decided, in daylight. Broad of feature, with
+a tanned skin and careless braids of thick brown hair, she had an
+enviable indifference to what men thought of her which assured her
+their instant, delighted attention. Whenever Flagg laughed Lilah’s
+heart contracted with something like hate. She had thought herself
+incapable of jealousy. What she felt was worse than jealousy; it was a
+primitive, an atrocious suffering. She had gone on dancing, smiling,
+but her eyes had sought Flagg again and again, had sought, across
+the crowded room blue with smoke and dust, confirmation of something
+she had only glimpsed and might have imagined--his head, the short,
+smooth hair, his features, his expression of humorous, sensitive
+understanding. He leaned a little sideways, to catch the ironic
+comments of the sun-burned lady from San Diego, but his eyes never
+failed to meet Lilah’s, to let her in a little way and then, abruptly,
+to shut her out....
+
+Once, she had found herself alone at the table with him.
+
+“You have shown yourself to me,” he said abruptly in a lowered voice,
+staring away from her at the crowd. “Perhaps because of something in
+me or because of something that has happened to make you careless. No.
+Don’t interrupt. You are right. We are not alike but we are different
+enough to be dangerous to each other. I am going to be frank with you.
+Nothing could have flattered me more than your being aware of me, for
+now I know that something I thought had died in me is still alive. But
+I can’t be what you might want me to be. I can’t play any game but my
+own. You see, I have chosen to stay alive at the expense of my old
+enthusiasms--and failings. I have only a margin of life. Like that chap
+of Conrad’s, I have an enemy in my breast. I must be watchful and I
+must feel nothing. And here you are, commanding me to feel. I haven’t
+any existence of my own. I am dedicated to my unstable heart, fending
+off reality to spare myself a damnable pain that makes me red in the
+face, sick, unconscious.... I haven’t any life of my own. I am as dead
+as dust. I am a man who buys life, day by day, simply by sparing his
+heart.... Love is selfish.... If I love you, it will be selfishly. I
+warn you. I have no desire to play the game of hide-and-seek, to dodge
+jealous husbands. I haven’t anything to offer you--either money or
+feeling or security.”
+
+Lilah had said quickly: “Thank you! You are very explicit.”
+
+A momentary fear passed to leave her trembling. She realized that while
+he was speaking she had lost all sense of the crowding dancers, the
+barbaric throb of the music, their publicity. She put up her hand to
+hide what she knew must be an expression of utter rage.
+
+“Even to-day,” she began, in an unsteady voice, “when anything is
+permitted--you dare--I don’t understand--”
+
+Suddenly he turned and looked at her. “Even to-day preliminary
+skirmishes are ridiculous. I beg your pardon. I took it for granted
+that you were experienced enough to hear the truth.”
+
+They were interrupted by Chivers Chew who bore Lilah away without
+the formality of an apology to Flagg; he rose and let Lilah go with
+the conventional reluctance. In Chew’s arms, held too close, Lilah
+suffered panic. She had no idea what Flagg had meant; whether he had
+laughed at her or whether, without question, he wanted her. Whatever
+he had intended, one thing was certain, the feeling she had wanted
+to avoid was being thrust upon her. The immediate future held a great
+selfishness or a great daring. This feeling was bound to assert itself
+or destroy her. She could not be certain that it was, in the romantic
+sense, love.
+
+She could not, even now, be certain; kneeling in the open window with
+her blank gaze on the city, she wondered....
+
+They had not spoken again. She might not see him, ever. But that was
+impossible! She had left the party, at one o’clock, to come home alone.
+Her coming had been in the nature of a flight, an escape from an
+intangible danger, a fatal, desirable, disastrous happiness....
+
+She rose, with a sudden impulse to go back.... They would be at May
+Sinclair’s apartment, talking, drinking, until dawn....
+
+She switched on the electric light again. Her cloak lay across a chair.
+She threw it over her shoulders, thrust her bare feet into the slippers
+that lay where she had kicked them off and opened the door.
+
+Robert was standing outside, his face curiously puckered. “Where on
+earth are you going?” he demanded.
+
+Lilah said furiously: “Why on earth are you listening at my door?”
+
+“I wasn’t listening.”
+
+He lifted his arms. “I forgot. You spoke to me.... I was waiting....
+Well, by God, I was a fool!”
+
+Lilah closed the door. Her teeth were chattering. She flung the wrap
+aside. “Go away. Go away,” she said. “Go away.”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It seemed of sudden, vital importance that she should be happy. Since
+there was no certain immortality, temporal happiness was necessary at
+any cost. She had been cheated because she did not love; but Robert had
+loved her, still loved her. He had failed because he had not fulfilled
+the promise of that moment in the fog. He was like all prosaic lovers;
+he had thought of nothing better to say than: “Poor Lilah! Poor little
+girl.” She had always despised pity. She denied all the feminine
+attributes other women used as defensive weapons. She preferred
+admiration to sympathy; and in this she was unusual; most women like to
+cry against a masculine shoulder. Lilah wanted the fullness of success,
+recognition of her strength.
+
+She went to the telephone and in a cautious voice gave Mrs. Sinclair’s
+number.
+
+“Lilah!” The high, clear tones came into the receiver against a
+confused background of music and voices. “I thought you found us dull!”
+
+“May I come back?”
+
+“Now?” Then, with a burst of amused laughter: “Of course! Come.”
+
+Lilah called a taxi and dressed hurriedly. From her window she saw the
+car slip down the hill from Madison Avenue and the driver, jumping out,
+glanced up.... He mustn’t ring! Mustn’t!
+
+She flew downstairs. Robert’s door was closed. If he heard, he made no
+attempt, this time, to stop her. The house was dimly lighted, muffled,
+close; there was an unreality about the formal arrangement of chairs,
+the stiff, precise folds of curtains and draperies, as if no one had
+ever lived in these rooms or passed up and down the stairs.... The
+thought crossed Lilah’s mind that she had, after all, failed to create
+a livable home. Her heart hadn’t been in it....
+
+She made violent signals to the chauffeur of the taxi: “_Don’t ring!_
+Here I am! Take me to four-seventy Park.”
+
+The man gave her a curious look as he shut the door. Then she realized
+that it was three o’clock.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Mrs. Sinclair’s party was still in progress. The formal luxury of
+the room had been put askew. Wilder was at the piano. Carey sat
+cross-legged on a table, singing Hawaiian ditties in a soft, saccharine
+voice. With shut eyes and upcurling lips, he was like an elderly Buddha
+in a dinner-jacket.
+
+Lilah saw immediately that Flagg was there and her heart leaped, but
+she said, smiling at him: “I’m not a bit of a coward. I came back to
+apologize.”
+
+They sat down together, unexpectedly embarrassed. It was not possible
+to fence effectively before a roomful of people. But Lilah felt that
+she had committed herself. She studied his face, his well-modeled
+hands. He was harder, more mature than Robert; the nature of his
+aloofness was not clear to her. Either he was cruel, or he was
+removed, by the nature of his experience, from ordinary behavior.
+He said nothing but sat with his eyes on the fire which had burned
+low in a shallow hearth of yellow and black marble. May Sinclair was
+flirting, in her intense, experimental fashion, with Chivers Chew. The
+shipbuilding Englishman and his wife had disappeared. Nearby, stretched
+at full length with her head in Heywood’s lap, the writer from San
+Diego was explaining the hows and the whys of the short-story game:
+
+“It’s perfectly easy. Any boob can do it. All you have to know is human
+nature and God knows human nature doesn’t cringe from publicity, these
+days! All of us skin our souls in public. I’m successful because I
+skin mine a little closer. I give the public naked hearts, as you hand
+around olives at a picnic--on a pickle fork! People are sick and tired
+of flappers. They want ‘strong stuff,’ be it pseudo or not; heroic love
+and sacrifice. Divorce has lost its novelty. I’ve been writing the most
+exalted morality-tales.... You’ll see--in another year skirts will go
+down and manners will go up. It isn’t going to be fashionable to lie
+with your head on a strange gentleman’s bony knee--”
+
+“Then why do you do it?” Heywood demanded, not stirring.
+
+“Because it’s quite roguish in San Diego.”
+
+“San Diego--where on earth is San Diego?”
+
+Lilah turned to Flagg. He smiled. “What a lot of rubbish! Why do people
+generalize about taste and morals? To-day, when propriety is a vice in
+New York, a cigarette is immoral in San Diego. And if skirts go down
+in New York, they’ll go up in San Diego, because San Diego is always
+two years behind--and what does that prove?”
+
+He leaned forward, lowered his voice: “Is it decided, then? Are we to
+go on?”
+
+Lilah said simply: “Yes.”
+
+She rose, tossing her cigarette away. She was languid again; her eyes
+drooped. She brushed against him, but he sat, immovable, his expression
+guarded.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+“May,” she said, “I don’t like your party. I’m going home.”
+
+“Have a drink,” was the succinct reply.
+
+Lilah’s hostess did not trouble to rise. And Chivers Chew, peering
+over the back of the sofa with a blurred expression said: “Don’t be
+a grouch, Lilah! We’re all danced out. Listen to Carey. He’s on the
+fiftieth verse of the Hawaiian poem in praise of the first Missionary
+Carey, who had fifteen wives and sixty-two sons. Tune in--there’s a
+good girl.”
+
+Flagg followed Lilah into the corridor. His offer to accompany her was,
+in its tempered formality, old-fashioned. She could not understand
+just wherein he differed from the men she knew; he was more bold, more
+direct than they, but he seemed devoid of the fashionable carelessness
+which made them, very often, insulting. The women were responsible for
+most of it--they let themselves be slapped on the back and addressed as
+“old girl.”
+
+As they stepped into the elevator they heard Montague Wilder entering
+upon the D-flat waltz, in thirds.
+
+“The stale hour,” Flagg remarked, as they waited on the curb for a
+night-prowler. With his cane he signalled a skulking vehicle that
+turned out of a side-street. A sharp, cool wind whipped Lilah’s cloak;
+the sky was already pale with dawn. But the streets were deserted; in
+pools of light cast by the tall, globed arcs, an occasional figure was
+visible, unreal, moving upon strange errands; cars passed, rarely, with
+a smooth purring of tires, bearing shadowy, drooping women, and men in
+the attitude of relaxed satiety.
+
+Flagg did not speak, and Lilah became conscious of his unswerving
+regard.
+
+“I don’t understand what’s happened,” she said unsteadily. “I am not
+willing--I want happiness. But I can’t hurt, too much, some one who has
+been kind to me. I’m selfish. You’ll see. I want--things. But this is
+new. I don’t know. I’m frightened.”
+
+“Don’t be,” he said.
+
+He continued to stare at her. He seemed to be dreaming, sunk in a
+reverie. Lilah’s fear deepened. If he had touched her, or had spoken,
+she would have thrust him aside with all of her accustomed scorn and
+impatience. But there was something in his silence that was devotional,
+innocent, almost immaterial. She recognized that he was above self,
+absorbed in her.... With a shiver, she recalled Robert, at her door....
+
+The taxi swerved and stopped before the Thirty-eighth Street house.
+
+Lilah gave her hand into Flagg’s clasp and as they looked again at each
+other her lips trembled. She heard herself asking him to come, as soon
+as possible; then, conscious of a too apparent eagerness, she added:
+“Thursday. I’m fearfully busy.”
+
+“To-morrow.”
+
+“No. No. I can’t. Give me a day or two. Thursday, at four.”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+At breakfast, Lilah said sweetly: “Was I cross last night? I’m sorry.”
+
+Robert lowered the newspaper. His answer surprised her, but she did not
+alter her smile that had in it a touch of malice. “Cross? No. Why?”
+
+“I thought perhaps--”
+
+“I’m going to the Point,” he interrupted. “My grandfather isn’t well.”
+
+“Oh, Robert--”
+
+“It’s not serious,” he said. And added, with no apparent irony: “I’ll
+come back!”
+
+Lilah lowered her eyes to hide her expression. This little
+circumstance, unlooked for, outside her volition or her intention, was
+a part of her unfailing luck. In every circumstance, she was triumphant.
+
+“I’m terribly sorry,” she began.
+
+“He has a cold. Damned nuisance! Old men shouldn’t have colds. He might
+die. I’m fond of him. And besides, he holds the business together. An
+enormous amount of correspondence goes to the Point. In the end, he
+makes all the important decisions, defines policies--his preferences
+are respected. If he should die, I would have to take his place. But
+there are other reasons why I don’t want him to die.”
+
+“Shall I go?” Lilah asked. “I will. But wouldn’t Grace be more useful?”
+
+“He doesn’t need a nurse. He’s lonely. If you will come with me, and
+wear your prettiest dresses and perhaps play poker with him--he will
+get well. Old people sometimes die because they are ignored. They
+live alone until they lose the sense of their own reality; they sort
+of--vanish.”
+
+Lilah said briefly: “Let me see his letter.”
+
+Junius Peabody’s fine, careful writing with the curious, looped s’s
+covered half a sheet of stationery. He said simply that he would be
+glad of company since he was confined to his bed and feverish. “They
+won’t let me up, confound them!”
+
+“He’s not very ill,” Lilah remarked. “You go, and if I’m really needed,
+wire me.” She added: “You’ll be happy, because you love the country.
+And I have a great deal to do. Oh, unimportant things! But if I’m to go
+away in June, I won’t have more than just enough time to get ready.”
+
+When Robert said: “Very well,” she had the feeling that she was safe.
+The immediate future held, not the necessity for speaking a dangerous
+truth, but an adventure, delectable, mysterious, exciting.
+
+Suddenly gracious, she gave her hand to Robert. “I’ll miss you, cross
+old Bobsie,” she said sweetly.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The next two weeks were as exciting as she could have wished.
+
+She heard from Robert that his grandfather was better but that the
+spaniel had canker of the ear. “It’s terrible. She moans like a human
+being and shakes her head and tries to get her hind foot into her ear.
+The vet came--that old fellow from Biddeford--and operated. Last night
+I sat up until four o’clock putting ice on her nose and pouring stuff
+into her ear. She wouldn’t sleep and kept looking at me. I’ve been away
+too long. Edwin shut her head in a door because she wanted to get into
+the warm kitchen and lie under the stove. My God, why can’t people
+understand that animals are human? I’ll never like Edwin again. It
+makes me sick to look at him. If I had a son, I’d act this way, only
+worse. The silver bitch is the only son I’ve ever had.... I’ve been
+thinking over you and me. I have failed with you and I don’t know why.
+No one could love you more than I do. But I suffer in my love, and that
+isn’t right--love ought not to betray, but it seems to. Will you help
+me? Perhaps you know what I mean. If we had a son, there would be no
+complications. Last night when I sat there giving that pup pieces of
+ice that melted as if I’d put them on a red-hot stove, I saw a good
+many things clearly. The ice ran over my hand and up my arm and ruined
+my shirt, and at the risk of your hating me I’ll tell you that I cried
+like a baby and my tears ruined my tie. When I got through I looked
+like the sole survivor of the Flood. (You write Biblical words with
+capitals, don’t you?) And, as I was saying, certain things were sort of
+washed clean or clear, or both. If I could only put my thoughts down
+on paper so that you would understand! I know that if I could explain
+myself to you, you’d come, quick! Love shouldn’t be a sacrifice; it
+should be a service. That goes down easily on paper, but it took hours
+to bubble up out of my unconscious. And another thing, it doesn’t pay
+to go running around looking for new material to work with. What you
+have at hand is usually workable, if you are patient enough. Success
+is, after all, making what you have into a decent sort of achievement.
+The people who fail are the ones who kick about never having had a
+chance. We all have a chance. I could be specific, only I won’t. I am
+offering myself to you as a lump of clay for your fashioning. You might
+make something of me--the life-size statue of a happy man. Isn’t it
+worth trying?”
+
+Lilah did not know what to answer; she postponed answering, and, after
+a while, forgot. The issue was not pressing. To placate Robert, she
+sent a wire: “Love to you both. Lilah.”
+
+These two weeks were exclusively her own. She did not want to
+serve love or to use the material at hand. She hated smug, decent,
+stereotyped domesticity. Other women could spend year after year with
+the details of a home and children; it was unthinkable that she should
+surrender to monotony. She must live to the full; she was willing,
+she assured herself, to take both the reward and the punishment. The
+penalty, however, was too remote to be considered.
+
+Putnam Flagg had been a professor before he became a major. He
+preferred the first title to the second, since he declared that he was
+not, by nature, a soldier. He disapproved of the advantage offered
+by rank and insignia to men who might be disposed to bully their
+inferiors, but he approved of awards that carried with them nothing
+but recognition of work well done. As a teacher and a scientist,
+he had known abstract adventure; no war could equal the hazards of
+research. Yet his ability had forced him into the most terrible branch
+of warfare and, as an expert in the use of poison-gas, he had had a
+dose of his own medicine. This struck him as an altogether exquisite
+justice; he had been an unwilling but an intelligent servant of his
+country--once convinced of his duty he had used all of his knowledge,
+and had, temporarily, laid aside his scruples. He despised war, but he
+also despised despotism. He was one of the few thinkers whose faith
+had not been shaken by the tragedy; rather, he emerged from it with
+an even deeper belief in man’s progress. Flagg was convinced that
+society had gone too far to turn back; surrender, discouragement, meant
+annihilation; the battle must be fought to the end.
+
+He did not shrink from facts; he believed that the esthetic imagination
+would be supplanted by the scientific imagination. There was no limit
+to the audacity of man; no limit to what he might dare, what he might
+do....
+
+Flagg was to go back to his university in the Autumn. Lilah got a
+very definite picture of a small city, a group of Gothic buildings
+unhallowed by age, the plain, a wide river, brown polished, slow and
+resistless.... Flagg would have a house “on the campus” and a small
+laboratory of his own. Three times a week, in a Gothic room, before
+an un-Gothic audience of farmers’ sons and business men in embryo,
+he would lecture. His “subject” he told her, was zoölogy. Lilah
+shuddered. She could not understand Mendelian heredity, but she had
+understood what Junius Peabody said about the adult being in some
+manner contained within the germ. She could not see what was gained,
+exactly, by knowing.... In the end, you always stumbled upon God, and
+the inscrutable beginnings.
+
+“We must make certain,” Flagg said, “that there is not a God beyond
+God. Perhaps our conception is childish.”
+
+Lilah put her hand over his mouth. “Let’s not talk about it. I’m more
+interested in your college, your guinea pigs and rabbits and test
+tubes.”
+
+His smile was mocking. “Guinea pigs and God,” he remarked. Suddenly
+he caught her hands. “I think I love you because you are beautiful.
+There’s nothing else to love! Yet I love you! Do you care? Or are you
+playing with me?”
+
+Lilah had not, so far, committed herself. They were spending an hour
+before her fire, sharing the French sofa that had been too small for
+Robert. Flagg’s touch frightened her.
+
+She had been so happy. A week had passed like a day; it had contained
+the essence of experience. If she let herself love, she must face exile
+in a western university town--but that was impossible; Flagg would not
+be spared because he happened to be an unusual and valuable man. She
+would have to wait, and divorce Robert. She saw a year, two years, of
+postponement, poverty again, criticism, ugliness, the battle to justify
+passion. If she did not love, there was Robert, and this, and this--A
+house! Or Flagg might die....
+
+Her hands trembled in his, but she was obstinately silent. Outside, a
+heavy rain fell, obliterating, for the moment, the rumble of traffic in
+Madison Avenue. A servant, or Grace Fuller, might come in and find her
+hands in this man’s hands, her face, with a look of lost desire, turned
+up to his.... If she kissed him, she knew, she would be powerless
+to turn back to the facile little enthusiasms of her life. If she
+didn’t kiss him, she would be safe, forever, in her rooms frescoed by
+Shawhan and decorated by De Blauvelt, in her chosen interests, in the
+perfunctory embraces of her marriage.
+
+On the other hand, there was happiness. Happiness, at that moment,
+seemed terrible, a dark undertaking, something forbidden and murderous.
+It involved Robert. The intensity of that moment in the fog, when she
+had promised Robert love, was nothing more than a betrayal. She must
+not promise again, and fail.
+
+Somehow this feeling was different. She was swayed by more than her own
+part in the drama; for once she turned out from herself toward another
+human being. Pity had no part in her love for Flagg; his affliction
+was not evident; she had learned to accept his guarded manner as part
+of his personality. His appearance--that length and leanness and the
+pagan outlines of his face--stirred her. His eyes were brown, without
+sparkle, lifted, under heavy lids, like the eyes of a cat. “You belong
+in mythology,” she said. He was not ready to her hand; she felt always
+that he might turn suddenly, with a feline indifference, and walk away
+from her. He seemed always to be amused by her artificialities, yet
+delighted, as if he had come upon an unusually winning little mouse.
+
+She wanted to hate him, because it would be more comfortable to hate
+than to love him. Without quite knowing what she did, but staring
+straight into his eyes with a look full of questioning, she leaned
+forward until their lips met.
+
+He whispered: “Lilah!” and caught her close to him. When she heard
+his heart beating, she realized what she had done. She could not
+draw away.... This was the reality of giving. She must keep it....
+How beautiful! How final! She could not turn back, undo what she had
+done, or cease to feel what she was feeling.... Helpless, she leaned
+against him, hardly conscious of his lips on her forehead, her hair.
+He kept on whispering: “Lilah! Lilah!” She had not expected him to be
+so gentle. When finally she opened her eyes and pushed him away, she
+saw that he was suffering. His face was flushed, transformed, made
+ugly and pathetic by pain. The feeling of death was there, tangible,
+sickening.... His eyes were wide open, and in them an expression of
+surprise deepened into horror.
+
+Lilah cried: “Your heart!”
+
+He nodded and, loosening the grasp of her hands, tried to stand up.
+
+“Don’t! Stay where you are. I’ll get help....”
+
+He said in a surprisingly loud voice: “No! I’ll be all right. Wait....”
+
+His struggle was short and sharp. He seemed to be trying, over and
+over again, to start the interrupted action of his heart. With every
+failure, fear and amazement made more horrible the expression of his
+wide-open eyes. Lilah watched. Once she cried out: “You mustn’t! For
+my sake!” Flagg tried to smile, to reassure her. He seemed to be
+listening. And the blood left his face, drained out, like a tide. His
+flesh was blue-white, livid. The physical agony seemed to waste him.
+Soon, Lilah thought, he would fall out of her arms. But he held himself
+upright with an effort, meeting the enemy again and again, and it was
+as if he held himself precariously on the rim of space.
+
+Suddenly, for no appreciable reason, it was over. He slipped sideways,
+back upon the sofa, and his eyes closed. “I’m all right.... Only
+sorry.... Perhaps you know, now, how I love you....”
+
+A servant was coming into the room. With a wrenching effort, Lilah
+steadied her voice and said: “What time is it?”
+
+“Six o’clock, madam.”
+
+“Is Miss Fuller in the library?”
+
+“Yes, madam.”
+
+“Ask her to come here.”
+
+Grace Fuller came at once. Between them, they made Flagg comfortable;
+he lay with his arm under his head, apparently asleep. With deft,
+impersonal touches, Grace Fuller ascertained his pulse, wiped off his
+forehead, which was drenched with sweat, gave him water. She said
+nothing. Lilah did not meet her eyes. Her own feelings were confused;
+now that Flagg was safe, she could sense to the full her triumph; but
+how fragile a thing happiness had become--it depended on this man’s
+living! And it was doubtful whether he could resist the fatal pressure
+of the inevitable emotion. He lay exhausted, pallid, one hand hanging
+limply with fingers that brushed the floor.
+
+Lilah turned her face away, afraid that Grace Fuller might see her
+expression, the mingling of pity and glory, of fear and expectancy.
+
+“Is he all right? Will he die?”
+
+“No,” Grace Fuller said.
+
+At that, Flagg opened his eyes. “Die? Of course not! This happens very
+often. I shall be all right in half a second. I’m sorry and ashamed.
+Your kindness....”
+
+He sat up.
+
+Lilah’s gesture toward him was immediate; before she tempered its
+meaning, Grace Fuller had seen. But the nurse remained with her cool
+fingers on Flagg’s wrist. Only her lips twisted as if, before that
+revelation, she wanted to laugh. She helped Flagg to his feet.
+
+“Good of you,” he said.
+
+He bowed, apologized again and with a glance at Lilah, unreadable, went
+out and quickly downstairs.
+
+“That’s war,” Grace Fuller remarked dryly. “Thousands like him, trying
+to....”
+
+Lilah brushed her aside. “I’m going with him! He’s ill.... Let me go, I
+tell you....”
+
+Grace Fuller caught Lilah’s arm, held her. “Lilah, don’t be a fool.”
+
+Lilah cried wildly: “Let me go! I must.... He’s ill.... Oh, damn you!”
+
+In a white fury she struck, clawed, but Grace Fuller pinioned her arms,
+shook her, twisted her back, away from the door.
+
+“I love him! I love him! I’m not ashamed. Tell Robert! Tell every one!
+I want it over.”
+
+“You’re hysterical,” Grace Fuller said.
+
+Lilah ceased struggling. For an appalling moment she thought her own
+heart had stopped. She sagged against Grace Fuller’s shoulder; while a
+dark tide of feeling rose, submerged her, receded again.
+
+“I love him,” she repeated in a dull voice. “That’s all. What can I
+say, or do?”
+
+She straightened and pushed Grace Fuller away. “Now, you two can dance
+on my grave.”
+
+
+
+
+VII
+
+
+In her own room again, Lilah went to the telephone and called Flagg at
+his apartment. A man’s voice answered that Major Flagg was not well.
+
+“I know,” Lilah said impatiently. “I am Mrs. Peabody. I must speak to
+him.”
+
+“I am Major Flagg’s physician,” was the reply, in a tone Lilah thought
+a shade too dry. “He cannot speak to any one.” He went on to explain
+that Major Flagg was not seriously ill, but that he must, for a
+fortnight, be absolutely quiet.
+
+“I saw him less than an hour ago,” Lilah insisted. “He seemed quite all
+right.”
+
+The physician, with some acerbity, added that Major Flagg had had
+another attack on his way home. He was in bed and must stay there,
+undisturbed....
+
+“Thank you,” Lilah said.
+
+She turned away from the instrument with a frightened gesture. She
+couldn’t see him! That meant she must meet disaster alone; she had,
+irrevocably, committed herself to Grace Fuller. No matter what happened
+to Flagg, whether he lived or died, she had lost Robert....
+
+She began, unsteadily, to dress for dinner. The Sinclairs, the
+lissome May and her husband, were coming, and, as a balance to their
+unimportant millions, Lilah had invited the American violinist and his
+curtly intelligent bride, a woman who might amuse the Sinclairs because
+she belonged to one of the richest families in the country. In the
+Sinclairs, two fortunes had come together, and the only enthusiasm they
+had in common was money. Their interest was not vulgar, it was, rather,
+fraternal. They enjoyed communion with the rare, kindred blessed.
+
+Lilah thought: “I’ve got to pretend. But none of this is mine--”
+
+In her chemise, with her hair tumbled on her shoulders, she realized
+that she had not called her maid. When she did, it was with a certain
+humility that she said: “I am very late.”
+
+The maid said: “Yes, m’am,” and went into the bathroom to start the
+tub. She was a pretty mulatto, a soft, slight creature with the gait of
+an enchantress. Lilah had never liked her because she had the air of
+knowing everything, and the suave, the velvet quality of her St. Kitt’s
+English gave her a certain distinction.
+
+Lilah wondered: “Could she have heard that row with Grace?”
+
+She studied the girl’s back, her unhurried, expert gestures, and when
+she straightened suddenly, and turned, Lilah was embarrassed.
+
+“The bath’s ready, m’am.”
+
+A shower of violet crystals sparkled in the tub, and as Lilah stirred
+them, testing the scented water with the tips of her fingers, she had
+a sharp memory of tin tubs and basins in Swiss _pensions_.... And,
+willfully, she recalled the lovers of Lorelay.... She glanced down at
+herself, silver-white, with little bubbles, like quicksilver, climbing
+over her skin, bursting on the surface of the water. How lovely her
+thighs were, indented, slim, young.... And her knees, her feet....
+She could go to Lorelay with Flagg and send for that famous, that
+notorious, tin tub without shame. She was like Manet’s Olympe, not
+classical but adorable. Flagg would understand if she mentioned Lorelay
+and Olympe. Robert would not; or, if he did, he would be shocked....
+
+“Seven o’clock, m’am.”
+
+“Coming!”
+
+In a robe of dark blue silk, thrown over a shift of cream chiffon, she
+faced her mirror, while the mulatto girl dressed her hair. Her panic
+had been replaced by exuberance. She felt certain that she could handle
+Grace. Flagg would say, do, nothing. She was safe for a fortnight, with
+both love and beauty....
+
+“Draw it back, away from my ears. Not fluffy! Here, give me the comb!
+I’ve told you so many times.”
+
+“Sorry, m’am.”
+
+That pretty, petulant face, honey-colored, was reflected in the triple
+mirror in an unguarded moment and Lilah caught a flash of dislike and
+contempt from eyes that were usually turned aside.
+
+“Have you a sweetheart?” Lilah asked, twisting her hair into the Second
+Empire contour she affected.
+
+“Yes, m’am.”
+
+“Does he love you?”
+
+The mulatto shrugged her shoulders. “I don’t know. Men are funny. He’s
+a pretty man, but he gambles. He spends all my money. He’s a sailor.”
+
+“Get me the black dress. I’ll want the white cameo ear-rings. No! Not
+there! In the leather box. Stupid! Stupid! I’m late.”
+
+On her way downstairs, where the financial rating of the violinist’s
+wife was just dawning on the Sinclairs, Lilah stopped to speak to Grace
+Fuller.
+
+“Grace?”
+
+“Yes.” Grace Fuller was having her own dinner, in the fashion of
+nursery governesses, on a card-table before the fire.
+
+“You’ve had dinner?”
+
+“I’m having it--just.”
+
+Lilah came into the room. She was very lovely. She wore no jewelry,
+save the heavy white cameos, set in gold, that dangled from her ears.
+She gave no hint of her actual years; Grace Fuller thought, in a
+moment of judgment, that she was like the city, a creation of that
+energy which is all nerves. There was something ageless in the slim,
+provocative, sexless body, thrust a little forward, the carriage of her
+head, with its dense weight of hair coiled under, her lips, painted
+like an Oriental’s, not scarlet, but magenta. She said lightly: “Am I
+all right? Will I do?”
+
+“Beautifully,” Grace said, flushing.
+
+Lilah bent down, and Grace became conscious of the odor of sandalwood.
+“Dear old Grace; I’m absolutely in your hands.”
+
+“If you mean that I am not to say anything to Robert,” Grace replied,
+“I won’t. Things like this are too personal, too terrible, for an
+outsider--”
+
+“I will know what to say when I see Robert,” Lilah interrupted. Her
+manner became, abruptly, sharp and decisive. “Or whether to say
+anything at all.” She added, almost carelessly: “My feeling may have
+been pity.”
+
+Grace said nothing. The flush had mounted until her face burned, as if
+the shame of Lilah’s confession were hers. For the first time she had
+had a glimpse of Lilah’s weakness--she saw her exposed to defeat; the
+revelation was, somehow, humiliating. Grace Fuller turned her eyes away.
+
+“I think you can trust me,” she said. And, instantly, she hated herself
+for not having struck. Now it was too late.
+
+Lilah went downstairs.
+
+Her guests were already launched. Fred Sinclair was staring at the
+violinist’s wife with the satisfaction of an entomologist who has
+happened upon a singularly rare insect. Mrs. Sinclair was testing her
+charm upon an unyielding surface; the violinist was more a priest than
+an artist. Lilah found him parrying Mrs. Sinclair’s sentimental thrusts
+with his own peculiar irony. He despised any one who wasted his time.
+Lilah trembled for the success of her dinner. She said deftly that in
+Robert’s absence she depended perhaps too much on her friends; she
+suggested loneliness and a peculiar sensitiveness to “atmospheres.” The
+violinist promptly pocketed his ill-temper and his bride surrendered
+to Mr. Sinclair’s butterfly-on-a-pin manner. On the way in to dinner,
+she graciously stated the size of her fortune, Mr. Sinclair’s
+collection thereby gaining a precious specimen.
+
+Lilah had counted on Flagg as a sixth at the table. In her failure
+to warn the servants, a place had been set and she had to explain.
+Immediately, the silver and glass were removed, the chair taken away,
+but Flagg’s name had interested the violinist.
+
+“I’m sorry. I’ve always wanted to know him. What a thundering crime--a
+man like that, gassed! There could be no survival of the fittest in
+such warfare.”
+
+He spoke with bitterness of the destruction of the world’s best brains
+and of the inevitable hiatus--there would be a wide break in both
+science and art. As it was, the few who were left carried a double
+burden; their responsibility to the past and to the generation that had
+had no expression save in death. Flagg was one of the men the world
+could not spare. The indignity of his suffering now--
+
+The violinist broke off: “I know it isn’t considered polite to talk
+about the war. In Europe, people aren’t so squeamish. It happened. It
+may happen again.”
+
+Mrs. Sinclair thought not.
+
+Lilah smiled at the violence of his retort; he had served on the
+Russian front, had seen the Kolchak debacle, and, before that, had
+flown over Triest and Pola, Villach and Wien, with d’Annunzio. Mrs.
+Sinclair listened to his tirade with a pained expression, as if he
+were being intentionally disagreeable. Why on earth talk about war when
+you could talk about the theaters, reducing and prohibition--there were
+enough interesting things....
+
+Lilah pictured Mrs. Sinclair in her Long Island house, a Tudor mansion
+set down in a vast wilderness of new rose-gardens upon a featureless
+plain, not unadorned but unhallowed. Her security, established when
+she was a child, had been deepened by the possession of this enormous
+stone house, a fortress against chance or change; in rooms as cold,
+as cheerless, as echoing as a series of railway terminals, she seemed
+removed from those things which happen to all of us; the walls were
+too thick and too new to admit defeat. Lilah wondered what Mrs.
+Sinclair would do if the armies the violinist invoked should trample
+the Sinclair flower-beds and pepper the Tudor walls with machine-gun
+bullets.... Send for the Swiss butler, probably, and die, game and
+unconvinced, sipping a dry Martini.... Lilah could not decide which
+counted for more--the indifference of the Sinclairs or the awareness
+of the violinist; they believed that the future was negligible, the
+present amusing, which sufficed; he believed that the world could
+be saved only by incredible effort, a supreme, unending, unified
+intention....
+
+He complained that there was no flame in humanity--too much water had
+been thrown on it, perhaps. Life was drab unless kept at an artificial,
+stimulated pitch; pleasure, purchased, had taken the place of faith....
+
+Mrs. Sinclair, bending her willowy body from the waist, whispered to
+Lilah: “My dear--what’s this I hear about you and Putnam Flagg? It
+wouldn’t do for you--it wouldn’t do at all! He’s penniless. Now, don’t
+look innocent. A dozen people have seen you together, lunching at _tea
+rooms_ and meeting in _art galleries_ ... it’s awfully touching, but no
+one believes these naïve--”
+
+“May,” her husband said.
+
+“Oh, yes.” She turned again to the violinist. “Faith. You were
+saying--?”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In the morning Flagg telephoned. “Did you think that I would pay any
+attention to a doctor’s orders? I want to see you.”
+
+His voice unnerved Lilah. Every time it was like the first time--a
+breathless recognition, a summons, alarming and unavoidable, to a self
+beyond self. “He was very severe--” Suddenly her voice broke. Through a
+flood of frightened tears, she stammered: “Oh, my darling! My darling!”
+
+Flagg said gravely: “Lilah--if I could comfort you.... Will you get
+your hat and come over here? It’s quite respectable. There’s a nurse,
+who will, if I ask her, leave us alone. Or, if you prefer, she will
+stay in the room.”
+
+“I can’t. It isn’t possible! I might be seen.”
+
+“And what if you are? Before long every one who knows you will know
+that you love me. Things like this can’t be gone at politely. When you
+break up a marriage, it’s war. It’s got to be war. And neither of us
+can afford to be afraid, now, or later. You understand, don’t you?”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“Then come!”
+
+“But--”
+
+He was silent, and Lilah knew that the issue was important. If she
+refused, she would in all probability never see Flagg again.
+
+“You’re better?”
+
+“Yes.... Take a taxi. You know the number. These are bachelor quarters,
+but I’ve prepared the elevator man--he’ll bring you up.... I’ll be a
+lot better when I see you.”
+
+Lilah thought: “Don’t be squeamish. All the women you know do this sort
+of thing.”
+
+Aloud, she said: “I’ll come at once.”
+
+She dressed with a romantic attention to detail. She chose a small
+black hat with an air of intrigue and sophistication; a veil that
+seemed to shut her beauty away so that her eyes were remote, enticing
+beneath the rakish brim of the tricorn.
+
+A streak of conventionality, a dislike of criticism, warred with her
+eagerness to see Flagg. She sent her motor away and walked westward to
+the Avenue, then uptown. Lilah wanted to have her own way but to be
+considered above reproach. The possibility of scandal frightened her;
+she thought: “I’m not a coward! Only, to be torn to bits and thrown to
+the yellow journals to make a middle-class holiday! A Sunday supplement
+martyr! It’s so stupid.... So ugly.... Robert and Junius, all of us--”
+With a shock of relief, she thought: “I’m glad I haven’t a child.”
+
+Still, she might have. Even now, she might have! Robert’s child. Even
+now, as she went to Flagg. But that would be a loathsome trick of
+destiny; it couldn’t be! Couldn’t.... She didn’t deserve punishment;
+not such a punishment! God thought of people--there must be some sort
+of divine justice. Now that she had love--But suppose, as Flagg had
+said, that there were a God beyond God, and no one watching, no one
+caring....
+
+She found herself standing before a shop window, and was conscious of
+the blurred reflection of herself, the fashionable outline of a woman
+of the world. There was security, insurance against a detestable, a
+repugnant reality, in the fact of her worldliness. Like Mrs. Sinclair,
+she was a product of civilization, a vital, representative image of
+society, removed, by her unquestioned right to her position, from the
+blind attacks of destiny. She was powerful because she was instructed.
+She was indomitable because she was intelligent. If there was a God
+beyond a God she could reach Him. She would not take punishment--need
+not--
+
+She shook herself, tried to stare at the things in the window--a
+Florentine chair, more graceful than most of them; a Persian bowl; a
+Flemish chest; a Luini; a strip of ecclesiastical velvet; a pair of
+Waterford glass chandeliers....
+
+Her thoughts flew back to the house she had just left. She had wanted
+glass chandeliers for her bedroom--one on either side of the narrow
+mantel, to balance the _trumeau_. These were delightful--a shower
+of crystals, delicate as cobwebs after a rain. They were, probably,
+expensive....
+
+Lilah hesitated. Her room was lifeless, almost gloomy; it needed such
+a sparkle as these little chandeliers would give.... She saw herself,
+moving about in a bland, crystal light....
+
+She went into the shop, conscious, as always, nowadays, of her ability
+to reach out and take what she wanted. The chandeliers were displayed
+by a collector who flattered her by making no comments. That they were
+genuine, and rare, was beyond question.
+
+“I’ll take them.”
+
+“Very well.”
+
+“Mrs. Robert Peabody.”
+
+“I know. We had the pleasure of importing some Venetian glass--”
+
+Lilah interrupted: “Be sure to send a man to hang the chandeliers.”
+
+“Certainly. To-morrow.”
+
+She went out again, somehow relieved, as if she had come unscathed
+through a hurricane. Buying things always gave her a sense of security.
+Silly of her, to have been afraid of something that could never happen
+to her ... never....
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Flagg lived in the West Fifties, not far from the noisy “L” track where
+trains passed like steel comets, clattering, insistent.... An old man
+in an alpaca jacket admitted her to a narrow hallway and to a slow,
+dingy elevator operated by a cable. His face was scarlet; there seemed
+to have been an explosion of veins beneath the surface of the skin....
+Without glancing at Lilah, he let the cable slip through his hands, as
+if, in his dejection and ennui, there could be no end to this ascent.
+Lilah thought: “How easy, after all.” He let her out and indicated a
+door “to the left. Push the button.”
+
+Lilah saw the name “Flagg.” There was a rustle behind the door and it
+opened sharply. A woman in starched linen said: “Mrs. Peabody? Major
+Flagg is waiting. This way, please.”
+
+Lilah had expected him to be in bed. But he rose from an arm-chair and
+smiled down at her.
+
+“You’re better?”
+
+“Yes.... Now! You were a long time getting here.”
+
+“I walked.”
+
+“Miss Peterson--Mrs. Peabody.”
+
+The starched woman, who was, to Lilah, as featureless as an egg, bowed,
+murmured something and went out, closing the door.
+
+“Don’t be afraid,” Flagg said. “I won’t keel over again. I’ll give
+you tea presently. But now I want to talk to you. You lovely thing!
+She can’t hear--there’s a corridor, and then my bedroom, where she’s
+sitting. Shall I send her away?”
+
+“No. No.” Lilah shook her head. “It’s bad enough--my being here.”
+
+He leaned forward and caught her hands, smiling. He drew off her
+gloves, turned her palms over and kissed them. His gestures were
+slow but there was nothing of Robert’s hesitancy about him; his eyes
+flew over her. She felt again that penetrating delight in him, and
+because he did not expect pity, her pity made her tremble; there was
+a maternal, a brooding pain in her heart. Without speaking, she went
+back to her eager search for the things she loved, enumerated them--the
+line of his cheek, the peculiar, sharp modelling of his lips, his
+lids, a way his hair had of growing, like a sort of fur, short, thick,
+lusterless--she wanted to stroke it, but she didn’t. Somehow, he was
+still a stranger whose presence excited and embarrassed her. She
+wondered if any one had ever known him; whether she would ever know
+him. Robert was like a plant that recoils at the touch of a prying
+finger. But Flagg was like an animal; he had the grace, the aloofness
+of an animal, the eyes of an animal. She was almost afraid to touch
+him. His absorption flattered her, as if a creature of the woods had
+strayed close to rub against her and purr--a big cat. Without stirring,
+she let him kiss her fingers, one after the other. And she felt again
+that sense of a moment prolonged, suspended, until she lost reality.
+
+Her glance went beyond him to the room. She had never thought of him as
+living anywhere.... A shabby, slovenly room. Rows of white shelves were
+weighted with books. There were no photographs. Only a small bronze of
+a woman and a jar filled with pipes....
+
+“This isn’t my place,” he said, glancing up quickly. “It belongs to
+a man I knew in France, who’s broke. He loves books, and I’ve had a
+feast....”
+
+His eyes deepened and there came into them that look of a satyr,
+mischievous and sensual. She wanted to kiss him, but she held herself
+away. Something told her that there would be no going back after
+to-day; he would not grant her a reprieve.
+
+“I’m sorry,” he began, “for what I said yesterday. In time, you’ll love
+love--not the idea, but the thing itself. That’s what I’m waiting for.
+When it comes to you, so that you understand it--its beauty and its
+penalty--you will lose yourself. And then you will be exquisite.”
+
+“I love you,” she insisted, “now.”
+
+He shook his head.
+
+He relinquished her hands and, crossing the room, filled and lighted a
+pipe. Then he asked abruptly: “What are you going to tell your husband?”
+
+“I don’t know.” Catching her breath, she evaded him: “Must I tell him
+anything?”
+
+He did not answer. His expression was mocking. And angrily Lilah cried:
+“It isn’t easy! For you, yes! But for me--to break with a man who loves
+me and who doesn’t suspect--”
+
+“Oh. He loves you. I didn’t know that. I had hoped that he didn’t. Are
+you sure he does?”
+
+“Of course! It will kill him. He trusts me.”
+
+“You haven’t betrayed him!” Flagg said sharply.
+
+“What do you mean?”
+
+“Love is never a betrayal. It’s the truth! I am convinced that it is a
+sin to deny love, under any circumstances, for any reason--to live with
+one man and love another is unmoral, ugly, inexcusable. To live with
+one woman and love another is to betray them both. I am not arguing on
+the side of promiscuousness. I despise filth. But there is, after all,
+a definite standard. A responsibility--to the emotion itself. There’s
+your obligation! Only, the world won’t recognize it.... You’ve got to
+be sure--dead certain--that what you feel justifies what you do.”
+
+“You’re putting it up to me, then?”
+
+He came over and kneeled beside her. He was asking something. His
+body pressed against her knees. His hands were supplicating. For
+the first time he was humble, but more than ever insistent; life
+itself, demanding that she say yes or no, that she take or leave,
+give or refuse. In spite of herself, she touched his hair, and with a
+terrifying sense of being lost, slipped forward into his arms.
+
+“I’ll tell him, simply, that I love you.”
+
+“When?”
+
+She struggled back, away from him again. But Flagg remained on his
+knees, no longer a suppliant; stubbornly, he repeated: “When?”
+
+“When he comes back--next week.”
+
+She added, with a flash of disdain: “You might at least be sorry for
+him!” She put out her hand quickly and caught his. “I didn’t mean that!
+I hurt everybody. Don’t let me hurt you!”
+
+Flagg laughed. “I don’t let myself be hurt.”
+
+What he thought was: “If she cares for me, I can hurt her--that’s my
+weapon, and she knows it.” He got up and went to the window, stood
+there, smoking, his back turned. He waited with admirable restraint for
+Lilah to speak again. Behind him, she was absolutely silent. The sun
+had gone. The room was fading into the gray shadows of late afternoon,
+retreating, dimming, like a blurred photograph. Flagg kept his eyes
+on the street; his senses were aware of her; he had no comfort in her
+presence, but he wanted her there. Suddenly, she was close to him,
+soft, propitiating. She put her arms around him, pressed her face
+against his back and they stood, in silence, for a long time. Flagg
+no longer saw the city; that slate-gray twilight seemed to envelope
+them both, to isolate them. And he had a deep pity for himself and
+for her. What should be so simple, so natural, so uncomplicated,
+would be raveled and frayed and tarnished.... Between this moment and
+anything like the realization of happiness, there would be a struggle
+of egos--rebellion, shocked pride, jealousy, in conflict. Before he
+could show himself to her and lose himself in her loveliness, both
+of them would suffer. And for what? Because life was so confounded
+complicated--no passion could be single, perfect, but must be linked up
+to other passions, an endless tangle of little, petty feelings--like
+lichens on a tree. The growth was hindered, the sap cut off so that the
+blossoms withered and the whole plant, tree and parasite, came down
+into the dust, choked to death....
+
+“Are you sure we’re right?” Lilah asked. “I’ve got to be sure! Isn’t it
+selfish to be happy?”
+
+Flagg answered that to be unhappy was the worst sort of selfishness.
+For centuries the world had been in the grip of a superstitious fear of
+acknowledged happiness, as if being contented with one’s lot were an
+indication of alliance with the devil. If you sang, in old Salem, you
+were hanged for a witch. “But to-day, if you sing, you are selfish! And
+it amounts to the same thing--the world has its fingers crossed....”
+
+Flagg asked, without turning: “Have you ever loved your husband, Lilah?”
+
+Lilah pressed against him. “Don’t ask me, now, to say.... A moment....
+Perhaps, yes. But not like this! I am perfectly willing to divorce him.”
+
+Flagg wanted to know what reasons she would give. She said impatiently:
+“Why--I _want_ a divorce! Isn’t that enough? Such things are arranged.
+Nowadays, you don’t have to give reasons, do you?”
+
+Flagg answered that he would prefer that she allow Robert to bring
+suit; the defection, such as it was, was hers; she had tired of her
+bargain; she had broken her word; she had found compensation. If
+any one was to blame, she was.... Lilah interrupted: “You’re mad!
+It would ruin me! It is accepted, usual, for men to take the public
+blame for these things--every one understands. It isn’t serious. Don’t
+you know--you silly--idealist--that in New York a man can arrange an
+adulterous affair by simply hiring a woman, a room and a witness? I
+know decent men, respectable men, who have done it, not once, but
+several times. Like vaccination, it doesn’t always take. My darling,
+you don’t want me talked about.... And it would be so funny.... Robert,
+in silk pajamas, entertaining a chorus girl.”
+
+“You and I, in love--and your husband, caught with a hired adulteress
+in a rotten hotel, for your sake! What cheap irony! Such things
+are damned ugly. You and I will take our medicine, Lilah. Or we’ll
+renounce, now, what might be so fine. If you’re afraid, say so.”
+
+After a moment, Lilah said, “I’m not afraid.”
+
+She drew away. A knock at the door was followed, discreetly, by a
+professional inquiry: “You are feeling better, Major Flagg?” And that
+starched, rustling presence entered, carrying a glass. With a gesture
+of rebellion, funny because it was unconscious, Flagg took the mixture
+and drank it.
+
+“You’re talking too much,” the nurse said. With another crackle of
+starched skirts, she moved from lamp to lamp and the room came into
+sharp outline. The slovenly carpet and worn chairs, a frayed scarf on
+the table....
+
+“I’ll go,” Lilah said quickly.
+
+“Hang the doctor!” Flagg exploded. “I beg your pardon, Miss
+Peterson--but doctors don’t always understand.”
+
+She took the empty glass from him, shrugging her shoulders. And the
+door closed upon her with a disapproving bang.
+
+“I must go,” Lilah said again. “I must. If anything should happen to
+you--”
+
+Flagg made her sit down. He made her remove the concealing veil and
+the little black hat. He began to take the pins out of her hair, but,
+laughing, she stopped him. She could not, now, imagine that he had
+ever been ill; a mood of playfulness had followed his rebellion; he
+was curiously like a young animal again, lost in his delight in her.
+He was lovable, willful; she stayed because he wanted it. It was hard
+to refuse him anything. And she couldn’t see that her being there hurt
+him--he had forgotten his enemy in his discovery of Lilah. Sitting
+on the floor with his arm thrown across her knees, he talked about
+himself. Himself, as a little boy. As an almost grown boy. As a young
+man. It was as if he wanted her to share everything, all in a moment;
+as if he could make her see the whole pattern of his life, so that he
+would never be alone again. Lilah could feel herself change, relent,
+bend down to him with a lovely tenderness. It was what she had always
+wanted to be, the way she had wanted to feel, only that no one had
+let her be herself. People had allowed her to be hard and bright and
+dominating! Now she was the woman she might have been. The simplest
+things he said touched her. She had no desire to ridicule, to hurt him.
+She wanted him to want her, to need her, to get closer and closer to
+her heart.
+
+“I wish I had seen you when you were a little boy,” she said.
+
+“I was a sort of flat face and terribly earnest. From the beginning,
+before I could reason, I wanted to know about God. I couldn’t believe.
+And the harder they tried to make me believe, the more stubborn I was.
+God was unimaginable. They sent me to Sunday school, where I sat with
+my underlip sticking out, denying God with my muscular system--braced
+against acceptance. I remember that this refusal made me, in my own
+eyes, an outcast. I thought of myself as the loneliest and wickedest
+child on the crust of the globe. But I believed only what I could see,
+touch or smell.” He shook his head. “And I never got a whiff of God! I
+remember that one day a sort of evangelist came to the Sunday school.
+He asked all the little boys and girls who believed in God to stand up.
+I sat where I was, burning with shame. He leveled at me a shouting and
+frothing, invective, hate and threats of damnation--eternal. And how I
+loathed God! When he got through he asked all the little boys and girls
+who didn’t believe in God to stand up, and I stood up, alone....
+
+“Aren’t kids everlastingly funny? I hadn’t an ounce of prevarication in
+me; I told the truth, always, until I was a grown man, when I learned
+that there are times when the truth hurts. Then I drew in my claws. I
+make velvet paws nowadays. But that doesn’t affect my honesty--I am
+deadly honest with myself.”
+
+Lilah wondered whether he could feel her shivering with delight in
+being near him, whether he saw how her eyes looked at him. She could
+never go back to Robert. She could never again pretend. It was going to
+be hard. It was going to hurt her to strip herself naked of pretense
+and fight for this new, this strange and wonderful raiment.
+
+“Did you ever change,” she asked unsteadily, “about God?”
+
+He was launched again. He told her about his student days in
+Germany--how he had gone back, patiently, to the sources. His days of
+pessimism. His romantic year. A period of mysticism. A frightened, at
+first tentative groping through the mazes of science. Then, something
+like a personal conviction, emerging.... He began to shake off support
+and to stand alone, almost against his will, for to stand alone was
+a responsibility. It forever removed him from the sensuous, happy,
+careless self he had wanted to be and demanded that he face facts,
+cold, brutal, unadorned and make of them what he could. God came to him
+out of these facts--not the God he had refused to believe in--a vastly
+different--
+
+He made her see, somehow, why he was not afraid of pain or death, and
+why he was reconciled. He hadn’t much longer--but why should he have
+longer? Only to love her. To make her happy, if that was what she
+wanted.
+
+“I didn’t know you could care like this. But since you do--”
+
+She still trembled; he could not help but see what she was feeling. The
+thing that hurt her now was that he would have to know how little and
+selfish she had been. The self she had to offer him was inadequate.
+Her magic was tawdry, like cheap spangles on a dancer’s skirt. Her
+beauty was painted on. The reality, the real Lilah had nothing to give
+him. And some day, when he had stopped loving her technique, he would
+look for her art, and find nothing, only fear and an ugly desire to
+keep him, at all costs. She saw herself, in a sort of contorted and
+nightmarish vision, pleading with him; she saw his indifference--no,
+his recognition--crushing her down. It wasn’t Robert and Junius,
+scandal, that she was afraid of; it was not having Flagg. That was the
+most terrible thing--to be alone again, inventing enthusiasms, because
+the reason for being was not there.
+
+This was what Robert had meant.
+
+“You’re not listening,” Flagg said.
+
+“I am. I am.”
+
+“I changed,” he went on, from what beginning Lilah could not guess, “as
+every one changed. And like every one else, I saw freedom as the most
+desirable end, gaining it all important. Only that I differed from most
+in that I didn’t want freedom for personal reasons. I’ve always been
+singularly free of the crooked, inherited notions that hold men back.
+But a freedom that releases the mental power of humanity--I can’t make
+you understand; I’ve only the vaguest notion myself! But I see that if
+we don’t adapt ourselves, we’ll disappear from the earth. We don’t need
+web feet or fluffy little wings or snouts, yet we do need an entirely
+new sort of mind. And the old way of thinking has got to be pitched
+out, forgotten.”
+
+He clasped her hands, tight, between both of his. “But we can’t pitch
+it out all at once! The social wheel is still revolving, although the
+engine has been smashed--it is carried forward by its own momentum,
+down-hill--a few hundred years of coasting! The survivors will look
+back at us as we look back at the Neanderthal ape--that’s how fast
+we’re going.... In the meantime, here we are, you and I, trying to
+conform to the decencies.”
+
+“Are we?” Lilah asked. In spite of herself, she laughed. “I don’t think
+it’s decent, exactly, to cheat Robert. If we’re being honest....”
+
+He interrupted: “Lilah, have you stopped to think about me?”
+
+“Why, yes.”
+
+“Aren’t you thinking about yourself?”
+
+She shook her head.
+
+He insisted: “Do you know what I want? What I dream of? Hours of
+sunshine. Hours of perfectly imbecile happiness, lying on a green
+hill with my head in your lap, watching the clouds go over. Must we
+wait? It isn’t so far to Spring. Can’t we go somewhere--I know a town
+in Connecticut, off the tourist track, where we’d be let alone. In
+April, the frogs sing at dusk, and the air is moist, cool, full of
+little gnats that dance as the sun goes down. I used to go there, years
+ago, to watch things grow. A marvelous season, Lilah. There’s a stir,
+actual, in the soil, and those prying, green fingers come through....
+Suppose you and I were there to watch it together? I stayed at a
+farmhouse. We could go there. The apple orchard--if it hasn’t changed,
+and God forbid!--is deep with grass. And our room would be under the
+eaves....”
+
+“You mustn’t talk like this!”
+
+“Why not?”
+
+“You mustn’t.”
+
+“Does it hurt you? Tell me!”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“Then I know I’m right. You’ve got to come to me as soon as you’ve
+told your husband. It isn’t fair to take from him what you don’t
+deserve--that house, and these clothes and all your ease and luxury!
+It doesn’t belong to you! After to-day, I’ll hate every hour you spend
+there. I want you to give back everything he’s given you. I’m not
+jealous, only I believe in value received.”
+
+Lilah felt like a runner. Breathlessly, she dodged this obstacle. “You
+wouldn’t expect Robert to bargain?”
+
+“I’m not thinking of Robert. I’m thinking of you. What I want you to
+be. If you love me, you’ll come to me, free, not all tangled up in
+another man’s possessions.”
+
+She pushed him away.
+
+“I’ve got to go.”
+
+“Not yet. It’s only six o’clock.”
+
+“But it’s dark. What will that nurse think?”
+
+“I’m all right. I only want you.”
+
+“I know. But some day you may have too much of me.”
+
+“Stay.”
+
+She got up and he stood close, pleading. Lilah was afraid, with that
+same delicious fear. Now, she wanted to hide her trembling from him,
+to ward off what must happen if he guessed the extent, the danger, of
+her surrender. She began to fasten her veil, her arms, in tight, black
+sleeves, upraised; Putnam Flagg watched her, and, characteristically,
+avoided, at that moment, any caress. When she glanced up, he said:
+“Very charming. What a minx you are! An artist. I admire you
+inordinately, if for nothing more than your gift of putting me off!”
+
+Suddenly she clung to him. “Tell me the truth. Are you going to get
+well?”
+
+“I don’t know.”
+
+“Is it terrible--the pain?”
+
+“Bad enough. As if a hand squeezed, here, harder and harder. I could
+die, if I’d let myself. Only I won’t.”
+
+“What does the doctor say?”
+
+“Nothing. He’s used to bad hearts.”
+
+“I hate doctors. They’re beasts! I hate suffering. I hate bodies.”
+She beat with her palms against his breast. “It’s terrible. Terrible!
+That you should suffer so! And we stand here, talking about houses and
+clothes and my owing something to Robert. When I only owe myself to
+you, now and forever.”
+
+They kissed. They trembled against each other. And Lilah had never
+known such giving. He said: “The world’s full of ugliness. It needn’t
+be, perhaps. But it is. We’ll have to face this pain of mine along with
+the rest.... Now I’ll let you go.”
+
+She went out into the street again. No one she knew was, at the moment,
+passing. She turned East, facing a cold wind. Her figure passed in and
+out of the squares and rounds of light cast by shop windows and street
+lamps, hurrying, bent a little forward. Her thoughts were hurrying,
+hurrying, ahead of her, toward the Spring, a dusk when frogs would sing
+and gnats dance, and she would lie against Flagg, holding the pain away
+with her two arms, her lips, her love....
+
+
+
+
+VIII
+
+
+Lilah woke again to that certainty....
+
+She opened her eyes. Familiar things came into focus, were,
+inexplicably, unreal. She had the impression of waking in a strange
+room. Circumstance had changed the very outlines of accepted facts.
+At once her mind began the chase interrupted by sleep; unleashed, her
+thoughts darted down confused paths, circled, doubled, stopped aghast.
+
+She leaned on her elbow and examined her arms, her hands. She could
+not associate her hands with herself. They might have belonged to
+another body. This certainty had in some mysterious way deprived her of
+herself. Her consciousness was separate; it was pain and fear.
+
+She fell back on the pillows and pressed her fingers against her
+eyes. She must get hold of herself. Do something. Other women had had
+children. She wouldn’t die. In a year it would be over and she could
+go back.... The acceptance of that thought was like a trickle of ice
+through her veins.
+
+If she had loved Robert....
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Back again! Her thoughts were mad, erratic, feverish. She could not
+control them, or bring order out of chaos.
+
+Sitting up with a violent gesture, she saw that it was past nine
+o’clock. She had, then, slept. Extraordinary! That she could sleep,
+that the tired body was stronger than the will! She had not wanted to
+sleep or to lose for an instant her watchfulness. Now, she felt, she
+had surrendered to this fact. In sleep, she had been stamped by nature
+with acquiescence.
+
+She had been running away from herself. For a week, in crowded
+theaters, restaurants and drawing-rooms dedicated to forgetfulness, she
+had let herself be swept forward on the current. For hours at a time,
+she had forgotten, had postponed remembering. As if there were no reef
+ahead, no shattering of the frail craft that had carried her so far
+toward disaster. In moments of waiting, it had returned, always like a
+thin, icy trickle, down through her brain to her heart.
+
+She must do something.
+
+She half rose, but before she could disguise her dishevelment,
+the scars left by tears, the door opened and the mulatto came in,
+moving furtively as if to cover her curiosity. Lilah, for the first
+time, had the feeling that she was trapped, humiliated, her pride
+leveled by a tragedy shared by all women--this yellow girl, herself!
+She felt contempt. Some women sacrificed themselves with a smile
+to the inevitable, or concealed their wretchedness beneath an air
+of superiority, as if a thing so usual, so inexorable, so outside
+themselves, were a matter for congratulation. Other women seemed to be
+ordained--an order of motherhood; but they were never lovers, wives;
+they tended the flame of race, kept it burning. God knew why any
+one should willingly add a soul to a world where there were already
+too many souls, too much suffering. Better to let humanity dwindle,
+thousand by thousand, until the last man staggered to his knees and
+died and the earth was left once more to the forests, to animals, to
+storm and sunlight, unrecorded, eternal.
+
+The maid, lifting the blinds, remarked that Miss Fuller had been
+waiting for half an hour.
+
+“Ask her to come up. And I shall want breakfast here.”
+
+“Yes, m’am.”
+
+Grace Fuller came, bringing, as always, the morning’s mail. Her fringe
+was curled, not a hair out of place. And across the pallor of her
+cheeks, rouge showed like veining on a leaf.
+
+From the bed, Lilah asked: “Anything amusing? I overslept.”
+
+Grace Fuller put the letters within reach of Lilah’s hand, on the
+coverlet. Without preface, she said: “I’m sorry, Lilah. I can’t stay,
+go on--I thought I ought to tell you. I’ve registered and to-morrow I
+take a case.” A faint smile twisted her lips as she added: “A hopeless
+case.”
+
+Lilah glanced at the letters. Suddenly she tossed them aside. “You
+needn’t leave, unless you want to. I’m going to have a baby.”
+
+She sat up, pushing the hair back from her forehead, straining it back
+violently. Her eyes were heavy. There was no trace of beauty in her
+face; she was, for the moment, old. “I’m going to have a baby,” she
+repeated in a dull voice.
+
+Her head went down between her knees. She heard Grace Fuller saying:
+“Lilah. Lilah! I’m glad for you! This will change everything. Wait
+until your heart accepts--I know what it does to women. I’ve watched.
+You’ll forget the other, come back to Robert, in gratitude.”
+
+Lilah held her breath. Her revolt and her hate were ponderable; she
+felt the weight of them across her back; her body huddled; she tried to
+flatten herself out, to escape. Her hair fell forward and she caught at
+the thick strands with her teeth. Now, she knew, it was inevitable. She
+jerked away from Grace’s hands, flung herself aside.
+
+“I’ll never change,” she cried. “Never. This won’t make me different.
+I’m myself. I will be. It’s something I’ve got to stand. But I’ll keep
+myself away from it. I’ve always resented being a woman. Gross. Ugly.
+Unfair....”
+
+She sat up again. “Tell that girl to see that the cook doesn’t ruin the
+eggs. I want a decent breakfast.”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+At eleven o’clock Lilah was seated in the outer office of a physician
+who was secure in the possession of a fashionable patronage.
+
+The room was quiet, almost bare, and in chairs ranged against the wall,
+ten or twelve women were waiting. Now and then a door opened and a
+woman in white, with eyeglasses and a cap elaborately starched and
+folded, beckoned to one or the other. These patients, Lilah noticed,
+never reëntered the anteroom, but were ushered out another way, perhaps
+to keep the tide of despair from meeting the tide of hope. Other women,
+arriving, took the vacated chairs. A table covered with neat stacks of
+magazines offered an escape from curious eyes; there was a discreet,
+a constant turning of pages. Behind them, expressions were guarded,
+indefinable. Lilah sought duplication of her own sensations. Her face,
+she decided, must be as expressionless as the others. It was as if, at
+a prearranged signal, these women had become anonymous, featureless.
+Only when the door opened and the capped woman beckoned, there was a
+flash of excitement, of dread, of something forced and desperately
+unwilling.... Time and again the door opened and closed.
+
+When Lilah heard her name, repeated three times because she had
+withdrawn so far into herself, she followed the nurse with a sort of
+arrogance, an indifference to the outcome. Inwardly, she felt again
+that sense of acquiescence, of surrender to a ruthless inquisitor.
+
+The inner office was large, paneled. At a desk between two tall windows
+draped with brown velvet, the doctor allowed himself the advantage of
+turning his back to the light. Lilah saw him in silhouette--not the
+traditional physician, bearded and purposefully benign; a business man
+clipped, concise, scientific. To him she was no more than a name, a
+number. His manner had in it a trace of the impatience of the normal
+man who has had to deal with the delicate and unstable emotional
+balance of sick women. He was not jovial; he was not even polite. His
+dry questions, spoken with an accent of amusement, irritated Lilah. She
+snapped back at him. She had always been healthy; she had had a healthy
+contempt for illness; people were sick because they were stupid, or
+victims, like Flagg, of accident. She had thought of herself as immune,
+outside suffering and the ugly, wearisome details of suffering.... She
+had time, while he questioned her, to notice the elaborate simplicity
+of his settings; he received his patients in a room reminiscent of
+little drawing-rooms at Fontainebleau. A pretty, red-haired girl took
+Lilah’s answers in short-hand. Lilah resented this girl’s presence. The
+whole proceeding was degrading, like a public scandal.
+
+Lilah fixed the physician with an unwavering gaze. She had expected
+him, for a large fee, to rid her of this tormenting suspicion. But she
+had not expected him to uncover her fear, subject it to Hogarthian
+records in short-hand.... Marriage à la Mode filed away in a card-index
+cabinet....
+
+She wished, now, that she had stayed away.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In her motor, still quivering under that professional irony, a
+confirmation which had stripped her of arrogance, she looked out at the
+city with, again, that tormenting sense of the unreality of familiar
+things. People hurrying, laughing, meeting, waiting on the curbs for
+the tide of traffic to pass--Lilah was hurt by their indifference to
+her tragedy. There was no such thing as a common, a shared, suffering.
+No one, not even Flagg, could comprehend. She saw a group of people
+familiar to her, Chivers Chew with three women, standing before a
+florist’s window in animated conversation. Their security, their
+pleasure, seemed as remote as dumb-show within a lighted proscenium.
+And Lilah’s melancholy was shot across by a pang of jealousy.
+
+The mulatto met her with the announcement that Major Flagg had
+telephoned repeatedly.
+
+Lilah said in an indifferent voice: “Pack my things. I’m going to
+Maine to-night. Ask Elliott to wire Mr. Peabody. And tell him to get
+a stateroom. If Major Flagg calls again, you may say that I have left
+town.”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+March came in, blustering, with a buoyant race of large, white clouds
+and a wind that ruffled the swollen streams and spread steel-colored
+fans across the purple-blue of the sea. The air was sweet with the odor
+of wet earth. Willow sprouts showed silver-gray in the ditches. In the
+woods and hollows patches of brown snow melted in the sun. Trailing
+sprays of waxen arbutus lifted the pine-needles and fallen leaves,
+thrust them up and aside. And always the wind billowed and tumbled over
+the brown hills, the soaked fields, the noisy, awakened forests.
+
+There was a stir in the earth, after the long stillness of winter.
+
+In a short skirt, a jacket of fur, hatless, Lilah turned away from
+the sea and walked inland. A cane Robert had given her, of Malacca,
+mounted in amber, swung from her hand. She could not abide the sea, the
+dunes, the beach brushed with swift eddies of blown sand. A boisterous
+sea was strong medicine for the spirit. It was too bright, too alive;
+it had a ruthless virility that frightened her. If only she had been
+free enough, brave enough, to brace herself in the shifting, stinging
+sands, to breast the wind, to take great swallows of it into her lungs,
+to fill her body with it, to laugh at it! Because she was a coward,
+she preferred the woods, where, in a chill shadow, in a sort of calm
+beneath the brittle crackle of bending boughs above, she was safe from
+nature itself. She walked in a void, her thoughts held in abeyance,
+like hounds on a leash.
+
+She had told Robert immediately of his good fortune. Something warned
+her not to express, just then, her own dissatisfaction. She noticed
+a difference in him; his desire for her was no longer humble; it had
+become definitely material and possessive, concrete. His happiness only
+added to her own inner tumult. He guessed nothing of what went on in
+her mind, her heart. He was happy. So must she be! He had never heard
+Flagg’s name. He did not guess what had happened, what she had felt.
+She was infinitely removed from him; she could even be sorry for him.
+
+Robert behaved as she supposed all men behaved under the circumstances.
+He became both dictatorial and tender. She was shielded from draughts,
+assisted up and down stairs; he ran after her with shawls and wraps;
+she became the object of his unwavering, worshipful attention; his
+blue eyes, round, expressionless and innocent, followed every move
+she made. “For heaven’s sake, Robert, leave me alone. I’m quite all
+right. I won’t break.” And he would say absent-mindedly: “I’m sorry.”
+The next instant his arm would be around her waist. It was clear that
+he realized nothing.... Some day he must know that he had been making
+a fool of himself. Her physical presence, this child, were his. Her
+feeling, all that made her desirable, belonged to Flagg. Without Flagg,
+she was valueless, like a counterfeit coin. Robert was insufferable
+because he could not see.
+
+To escape him, the barrier of protective, almost primitive tenderness
+he had built around her, she followed the bridle paths through the
+woods. She wanted to ride but Robert objected. There were two saddle
+horses in the stable, a roan and a chestnut, good English horses full
+of mettle that turned rakish eyes on Lilah whenever she went to their
+stalls. “They’ve been boxed up all winter,” Robert said. “They’re mad
+to run. But the ground’s soft. They won’t feel a saddle until the end
+of April.” He added: “We may have more snow. This is a false Spring.”
+
+Whenever Robert touched her, Lilah had an impression of herself tamed
+and savage, a dangerous restraint, a hanging on beyond the powers of
+endurance.
+
+She had not written Flagg. That soft St. Kitt’s voice with its accent
+of mockery had told him that Mrs. Peabody was “out of town.” No more.
+She had not seen him since that day in his rooms, when she had
+promised him.... Now she was gone. He would believe that she had lost
+courage, had fled from facts. So she had.... She could not face such
+facts as had assailed her, beaten her down, overwhelmed her. He would
+despise her. Or else he would follow and question her.... She dreaded
+every day that held this possibility. It would be like Flagg to get at
+the truth, whether or not he hurt her or hurt himself.
+
+Men were selfish. Flagg, like the rest. She was being destroyed by the
+selfish love of these three men, Junius, Robert, Flagg.
+
+Junius had said simply, at Robert’s announcement: “I’m glad. There will
+be some one, a Peabody, to appreciate the Moselle.” Later, to Lilah,
+he had added: “I wish you were happy, Lilah.” Irritated, she moved
+away, and he followed, put his thin, withered hand on her arm. “I don’t
+pretend to understand your generation. But I can read certain human
+sign-posts. If you can’t talk to me, to whom can you talk?”
+
+She faced him with a stony expression. “If Robert could read
+sign-posts,” she said, “I wouldn’t be here. He wouldn’t want me.”
+
+Junius Peabody’s look changed and Lilah realized that she had touched
+his pride. After a moment, during which he brushed his mustache with
+that large, cambric handkerchief scented faintly with Cologne water,
+he said: “I won’t argue. Your remark was in bad taste.... I don’t give
+a snap of my finger for Robert. He hasn’t the qualities I admire; the
+things I began he seems unable to finish. Or else he doesn’t care,
+which is the disease at the core of society to-day. You don’t care, any
+of you, about anything outside yourselves.... I believe I warned you,
+in the beginning, of what might happen?”
+
+Lilah ignored the implied question. “I’m here,” she said briefly.
+
+“Is duty, too, out of fashion?” he asked with an ironic smile.
+
+“Yes,” she answered. “When it is discharged unwillingly. When it gets
+in the way of--”
+
+“Of what?”
+
+“Being yourself.”
+
+Junius Peabody shrugged his shoulders. “What will the world be like
+when each one of us looks out for himself? We will be at the mercy of
+such disciplined creatures as the army ant. I can’t see that you gain
+by being what you term ‘yourself.’ You aren’t happier than the women of
+my day, who were what their husbands expected of them.... I am willing,
+however, to be instructed....”
+
+He broke off and stared through the window at the flashing sea. “The
+Forsythe’s girl, Marian, spent the holidays at home. She used to come
+over here quite often. At first, because she came on skis across the
+hills and arrived as rosy as a snow apple, I enjoyed her visits. Later,
+I dreaded them. At seventeen, she has the knowledge and the vocabulary
+of a roué. She had learned more badness at a girls’ school in New York
+than I knew at thirty, or forty. She smoked, of course. She would
+sit where you are sitting and light one cigarette from another. And
+she tossed the ends away with the gesture of a longshoreman. She was
+an excellent shot.... Externals.... So I thought. But the thing went
+deeper. She was clever. She had reasoned herself out of responsibility
+and I could find no flaw in her arguments.... When she had gone I would
+sit for hours, depressed, frightened. That she used a lipstick, not
+skillfully, is certainly a symbol--of what, I am not certain. I would
+have said that she was going to the devil.... She had a sort of brusque
+contempt for love, as I understand it; yet her whole appeal was to sex.
+Her attitudes--initiated, purposeful--were inviting. Love would fail.
+Marriage would fail. She not only expected to have a lover, she behaved
+as if such experiments were inevitable. She liked me, at eighty-four,
+because, she said, I was a ‘sport.’ What she meant was that I gave her
+cigarettes and whisky whenever she came here. She was bored, and, I am
+certain, not happy. Something has been damaged in these young people;
+their imagination....”
+
+Lilah said: “I wouldn’t be too complacent about the past, if I were
+you. There were girls like Marian Forsythe in Victoria’s day--they
+fainted for the same reason the modern flapper shows her legs.”
+
+He laughed and Lilah, stooping quickly, kissed the top of his head,
+where the hair, snow white, showed a pink parting. “I love to
+quarrel with you.... You aren’t to worry about me. I’m twenty-seven,
+twenty-eight, almost. I love some one Robert doesn’t know, has never
+heard of. You said I would. I do. It happened the way that wind out
+there comes up in the Spring, scattering everything, waking things up,
+changing the face of the world. I don’t know what I’m going to do. Take
+him, of course. But not now.”
+
+Junius Peabody’s face had gone a little gray; beneath the sweep of
+white mustaches, his lips trembled. Lilah saw that he was too old, too
+worn, to stand the shock of violent circumstances. He said nothing. His
+unsteady hands groped for hers, patting them, stroking them. Suddenly
+Lilah loved him, because he seemed to understand her.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Robert wanted her to see his spaniels. “It’s a small thing to do for
+me, Lilah.” It was, invariably, either too cold or too windy or too
+damp to cross the “greenery” to the kennels. Lilah found excuses,
+because to subscribe to an enthusiasm of Robert’s was to encourage
+him, and it was more stimulating to test his devotion by inventing
+subtle rebuffs. The question of the spaniels came up repeatedly; their
+antagonism swung to it like a weather vane; it became the focus of
+his desire to subjugate her and of her desire to torment him. There
+was no other vengeance; Lilah found comfort in blaming Robert for her
+loss. “I don’t like spaniels.” Robert winced and said desperately: “But
+they’re fine little chaps! You can’t help liking them.” Lilah knew
+that Robert’s pups fetched extravagant prices and that a glass case in
+the kennels contained a dozen blue rosettes dear to Robert’s heart.
+She finally inspected the trophies and the dogs. It would not do to
+be surly. But she managed, by an expression, a smile, a reservation,
+to make Robert feel that the whole business was childish, useless and
+absurd.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+April came, and still there was no snow.
+
+It was customary at the Point to send one of the stable men to the
+postoffice, ten miles distant, every day at noon. The mail was brought
+in a leather pouch and emptied upon a table in the hall. Lilah was
+conscious of this rite no matter where she happened to be. A month had
+passed without word from Flagg. She dreaded any sign from him, yet
+expected, longed for even the most scornful message. She waited with a
+peculiar, tormented shrinking for that letter she knew must come.
+
+One day, as she passed the table, she caught sight of her name written
+in a small, black, unfamiliar hand upon a square envelope.
+
+She opened it before she realized that Flagg had, at last, written.
+Thrusting the letter into her pocket, she went outdoors, and, this
+time, to the beach. No matter what he had said, he had written; she
+could bear the brightness of the sea! The beach was packed smooth by
+the receding tide, and ribbons of kelp lay at high-water mark like
+garlands strung from dune to dune. There was no wind. A mackerel sky,
+translucent shells of vapor, clouded the sun. It was such a vast sky,
+so tall, so immovable, so luminous! Lilah saw herself, very small,
+walking between sky and earth, walking in a great crystal globe, with
+her letter.
+
+She read it at last, expecting a burning accusation. But Flagg said
+simply that he was waiting for word from her. He was remarkably better,
+and her absence, prolonged unreasonably, was the only thing that stood
+between him and happiness, recovery.
+
+Lilah turned back to the envelope. The address, Peabody’s Point, proved
+that he knew where she was. If she did not write to him, he would come.
+And that, for every one, for herself most of all, would mean disaster.
+
+She went through the deep, dry sand to the dunes and lay full length,
+her arms under her head, staring up at the sky. The earth receded,
+seemed to drop away, and she was floating in a void. The sand was warm
+on the surface, cool if you dug your fingers in. And the hum of the sea
+was lazy, detached, like the hum in a conch shell. Patches of cloud
+moved, and the sky was gentian blue.... It hurt, a physical hurt, to be
+alone....
+
+What could she tell him? The truth? And drive him away! Nothing?
+
+Suddenly, for the first time, she saw herself as a failure. She had
+missed everything.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The following morning she spoke to Robert about the necessary closing
+of the Thirty-eighth Street house. She thought that he ought to attend
+to it. Servants were always careless and she herself did not feel equal
+to details. Robert, in riding breeches and puttees, was polishing
+a saddle. He had the rich man’s fondness for doing himself what he
+paid other men to do. “Let Grace attend to it,” he said. “She’s a
+crackerjack at that sort of thing.” Lilah said tersely that Grace had
+gone back to nursing; she was not in New York. Robert looked up. “Well,
+I’ll be damned! Why didn’t you tell me so?” Lilah answered that she
+had not supposed he cared one way or the other. This Robert took to be
+a twinge of jealousy. His spirits rose and he caught Lilah and kissed
+her. “You care, don’t you? I mean, for me? Sometimes, I wonder. You’re
+a deep one.... I’m crazy about you, Lilah! I wonder if you know how
+happy I am?”
+
+“Are you? Then you’ll go to town and close the house. There’s a good
+Bobsie.”
+
+When he had gone, she felt relief. It was good to be alone with Junius.
+He pottered about at small, fussy undertakings which had the dignity
+of rites religiously performed. The old relish details which impede
+the young--the exact measure of a cup of coffee, the arrival of the
+mail carriage promptly at noon, the aroma of a cigar, a meticulous and
+rigidly adhered to change of garments at seven o’clock, the rise and
+fall of the barometer, the flavor of a chop. Life was given a false but
+comforting air of permanence and dignity by the importance of little
+things. There was no headlong rush.
+
+Lilah had allowed herself to be careless; she had not, since her
+arrival, dressed for dinner. Now, with Robert gone, that eager,
+propitiating, sympathetic presence out of the way, she flattered
+Junius by appearing for dinner in negligeés with floating sleeves, in
+odd headdresses made of twisted silk, her fingers a frosty, excessive
+sparkle of jewels. A sort of flirtation, rather, an appreciation of
+one another, candid and humorous, could not have gone on in Robert’s
+presence. They could not be themselves where there was a likelihood
+of criticism. Lilah said: “We are very alike.” And Junius agreed.
+Changeable, intolerant, vain, impulsive. Delightful! But dangerous to
+other people. Together, they could play--act, shift like the winds,
+speak of beauty, or sit in silence, conscious of their pride and their
+perfection. Robert had a way, heavy, uncomprehending, of taking them
+for granted. “She is happier without Robert,” Junius thought. “I’ll
+keep him away a while longer. There is work to be done in Georgia--I’m
+buying cypress. I’ll send him there, make it imperative. The color’s
+coming back to her cheeks. Too bad! Too bad!... But I stuck, where
+she won’t.” He could pity her, for she was so like himself, with all
+that indefinable search for perfection, that restless desire never
+satisfied. He was sorry for such people. Far better to be commonplace
+and to find, in acceptance of dullness, content he and she could
+never find. There was something wrong, unbalanced, in such insatiable
+natures, and yet their very discontent and arrogance set them aside
+from the common run of people, made them, he felt certain, immeasurably
+superior. He was sorry for her. He took to watching her furtively as he
+smoked his single after-dinner cigar.
+
+She had absolutely no interest in small domestic matters; however,
+when she was in the house things ran better than they ever did under
+Aunt Whiteside’s fussy management. She would spend a whole evening
+staring into the fire, wanting to talk to him about the man she loved,
+but keeping still because she had a sense of proportion--after all,
+he was Robert’s grandfather! Junius was curious to know about the man
+who had won her, what sort of fellow he was--some one unusual, of
+course, as different from Robert as possible. And Junius had a twinge
+of remote envy, an almost romantic sensation; he knew what rapture
+she was capable of if a man once touched her imagination. Some one
+mysterious, a little cruel--otherwise, she would have had nothing to
+do with him.... As for himself, he enjoyed her presence; he would have
+prolonged the moment, stretched it out indefinitely, for it contained,
+in its essence, the illusion of youth. He could dream, without being
+ashamed of dreaming. Detached, sympathetic, he watched her. She would
+play for him if he asked it; he liked the modern composers; the more
+modern the better! Old songs were wistful, reminiscent. But these
+strange, exciting modernists gave you a sense of to-morrow, innovation,
+audacity, as if anything were possible, save when, as in the Clair de
+Lune, there was pity and tenderness for the despised and forgotten
+posturings of lovers and poets....
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Robert went reluctantly to Georgia, and Lilah was left to make her
+decision. Another letter came from Flagg, impatient, this time, with
+a touch of anger and rebellion. She answered that things were not as
+simple as she had expected; he must wait. A wire was brought to her two
+days later. He was coming!
+
+Lilah went at once to Junius. She gave him the telegram and stood
+waiting. “You see. I can’t stop him. He’ll be here to-morrow.”
+
+Junius said: “Flagg.... You didn’t tell me his name.... Does he
+know....”
+
+“No!” Lilah spoke sharply. “No! I love him. I want him. What shall I
+do?”
+
+“I’ll send him away. He mustn’t bother you. He’s got to be made to
+understand that you are here, with us, temporarily.... You see, in this
+I am old-fashioned. His following you shocks me. Robert is away. And as
+sorry as I am for you, if he insists, I’ll take my cane to him!”
+
+He stroked her hand. “There. There. These things aren’t irrevocable.”
+
+Lilah said: “I intend to see him.”
+
+“I intend to prevent you.”
+
+“You can’t.”
+
+Their eyes met and Junius rose. “I won’t have you cheapen yourself.
+Sell yourself for a song! I love you, too.”
+
+“You don’t!” she retorted. “You couldn’t, and expect me to go on living
+this way. Quivering, inside, when Robert comes near me. I deny him
+everything. I torment him. His goodness makes a devil of me. I don’t
+want this child. I’m drugged, now, by this place--a sort of lull, when
+I sleep because it is easier to sleep. But now that I know Flagg is
+coming, I come alive, body and soul. Perhaps I have ruined Robert’s
+life, but my own will be ruined unless I have Flagg.”
+
+With a feeling of futility, of confusion and fatigue Junius said: “If
+this man’s a gentleman, I won’t need to send him off; he’ll go. And
+stay!”
+
+With a gesture of contempt, Lilah left him. But she was more concerned
+than she cared to let Junius know.
+
+She went to her room and dressed for riding. The windows were open and
+she could hear the excited barking of dogs in the kennel. A gardener
+was turning sod on the lawn, spreading manure. Lilacs were in bud.
+Nearly a year had passed since that marriage before an altar of syringa
+bloom. Another year, and what would have happened to her?
+
+She stared at herself in the mirror; then, dissatisfied, studied her
+face in a hand-glass, scrutinizing her skin. The struggle to preserve
+a balance, to keep some sort of hold on security, had aged her; her
+mouth drooped. In two years she would be thirty. In ten, forty. And
+she was going to be a withered, embittered little old woman; perhaps,
+after all, beauty was a disadvantage. If Flagg lived, she would have
+to hold him with beauty, where another woman might hold him with
+easy sensuality, laughter and indifference to externals--a lazy,
+affectionate, humorous, slovenly woman....
+
+Lilah put the mirror down. She passed her hands over her face,
+shivered, laughed unsteadily. She was slim as a boy in riding clothes.
+
+She went out without speaking again to Junius. Their friendship had
+been shattered in that clash of wills; pride, in him, was intensified
+by senility. He was going to be difficult; he might even send for
+Robert because the Peabody integrity was threatened....
+
+One of the stablemen was rollicking with the spaniel in the yard.
+He touched his cap and when Lilah asked him to saddle the roan, he
+remarked doubtfully: “He’s awful fresh, ma’am.” Lilah stooped over the
+dog and said tersely: “Bring him out. I can manage him.”
+
+In the saddle, she had a moment of panic. The big horse wheeled
+sideways in the gravel, but Lilah mounted, with a spring from the
+stableman’s palm. She felt very small and light and free.
+
+She rode directly to the woods, where, in softer ground, the roan was
+impatient. It was late afternoon. A sudden darkness, clouds pushing
+up from the western horizon, was followed by a rush of cold wind, and
+a whirl of leaves blew against the horse’s legs, startling him. Lilah
+controlled him with difficulty. Her hand on his neck, she urged him
+forward.
+
+The wood was bleak, gray, silent again after that brief rush of wind,
+and Lilah heard a shrill, treble pipe of frogs in a pool. But where was
+Flagg’s dance of gnats at sundown? Spring was here and she could not
+watch it with him. She would have to send him away. Truth or pretext,
+she would have to send him away.... She thought of the child as a
+tide, rising, rising, uncontrollable. This life was within her. She
+contained it and was contained within it. Neither in body or soul was
+there escape. She was no longer herself; she was implicated, bound up
+in, adhered to, responsible for, another self, a self unrecognized,
+featureless, without volition, yet powerful, terrible. She was a body
+bound by body. Irrevocable....
+
+The world had changed. The sun was gone, and with it the warmth of the
+earth. The roan was chilly, nervous. His ears flicked back, and with a
+whinny he began to run. Lilah thought: “I’ll give him his head and let
+him run it out--he’ll come to himself when he’s tired.” Already her
+hands were numb, her arms stiff.
+
+The bridle path doubled through the woods, crossed and recrossed
+itself, gaining ten miles by this duplicity. The dark, wet earth,
+broken by pools of melted snow, made a tunnel through tangled growth
+of trees, very old and tall. A blurred twilight seemed to bar the way.
+Lilah bent forward. She could no longer guide the horse. Sensing her
+surrender, her fear, he lost his head.
+
+He left the road. The branch of a tree tore Lilah’s hat off. She
+shrieked at him. “Whoa! Whoa! Stop! You brute! Stop! For God’s sake,
+stop!”
+
+She was struck on the back, between her shoulders. A tearing, a blow.
+She was pulled, thrown, dragged, face down, in a thicket. She thought,
+twisting over on her side: “This is death.”
+
+A dark pain, like blood, flowed over her breast, and she fell back
+again.
+
+
+
+
+IX
+
+
+There was nothing to do but for Lilah to go.
+
+Robert came into her room again, pale, with that new look of a man who
+has found himself in suffering.
+
+“I’m going, Robert.”
+
+Robert sat down by the bed. He avoided looking at her. It was a pain to
+look at her; Lilah, with that ghost whiteness, the blue veins showing
+at her temples, her hair in two childish braids over her shoulders. She
+was like a little girl. At the same time, there was a mystery about
+her. She had suffered so. She had had to pass, alone, through a dark,
+terrible suffering where no one could follow or help her. Robert felt
+ashamed, because his own suffering was so unimportant in comparison to
+hers. And yet his own cried out for speech. He wanted her to know that
+she had killed something in him; he would never tell her. Never.
+
+“You can go, if you want to,” he said stiffly.
+
+Lilah turned her head on the pillow. “You don’t want me to stay, do
+you?”
+
+“Not if you love Flagg.”
+
+“I do.”
+
+After a moment, Robert said, “I’ve seen Flagg. He’s staying at
+Biddeford. Did you know?”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“I suppose my grandfather told you.”
+
+“Your grandfather is decent enough to pity me.”
+
+Suddenly Robert went down on his knees and put his face on her hand.
+“God knows I pity you. Stay with me, Lilah. Tell me where I’ve failed.”
+
+“It’s no good,” she said, “to try. To stay. Don’t blame me too much. I
+didn’t know what love was.”
+
+Her hand stirred beneath his lips, and he got up again stiffly.
+
+“You must stay until you’re well.”
+
+“They’ll let me walk to-morrow,” she said eagerly.
+
+“Flagg wants me to divorce you.... Well, I won’t.”
+
+“Why?”
+
+He had not intended to tell her. But the answer was torn out of him,
+a physical wrench, as if he had pulled a leech from off his heart.
+“You’ve hurt me enough between you! I’ll be damned if I’ll let you
+humiliate me. A man who divorces his wife is a coward. You may do what
+you like. But I won’t divorce you.”
+
+Lilah turned on her side, away from him. She could see the sky, a deep,
+warm blue, with thin clouds passing over. And a quick flight of birds.
+She had intended to tell Robert that she was sorry. Now she couldn’t.
+
+After a moment, he went out.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+She left the Point one morning in June. Her trunks and boxes had
+gone off the night before. Robert’s motor, driven by the stable man,
+Edmonton, was to take her to the station. Robert had flung away up the
+beach, followed by the spaniel. Junius kissed her good-by. He permitted
+himself only one reproach. “I’m not sure that this is going to be any
+better. You won’t like poverty. And happiness at the expense of another
+is likely to go stale.”
+
+“You had Venice,” she reminded him.
+
+“But I came back.”
+
+He took her hand. “Are you sure?”
+
+“Quite.”
+
+A wave of faintness, something almost hysterical, caused her to lean
+against him. “We have to be true to ourselves. Sacrifice is out of
+date.... If Robert is wise, he’ll let me go and not care.”
+
+“Good-by, my dear.”
+
+She kissed him quickly.
+
+The motor turned out of the drive, sped smoothly through the forest,
+now richly green, and she saw the place where she had been thrown,
+where Flagg, late that night, had found her. It was like him to have
+arrived sooner than he was expected. Like him, once there, to have
+faced his responsibility. Through her illness, he had stayed at
+Biddeford, within call. They had not let him see her, but Junius had
+played the part, not unwillingly, of messenger; he enjoyed, Lilah knew,
+the disloyal intrigue. Any man of spirit, Junius probably argued--any
+man of his own day--would have driven to Biddeford to thrash Flagg on
+general principles; but Robert had mooned about the house, had sat for
+hours with his head in his hands! Junius Peabody’s sympathies were
+with Lilah. Lilah, who lay rigid, her figure outlined beneath the
+bed covers, her face drawn with the peculiar tension of her will to
+conquer. Even death.... He had brought Flagg’s messages with a grim
+tenderness and had murmured them to her often when she seemed unable
+to hear. Only her lips had quivered, or there had been a faint smile.
+Whenever Junius wavered, ashamed of his own part in the affair, he
+reminded himself that in no other way could she be kept alive....
+
+Lilah shuddered. The motor left the woods, turned sharply into the
+paved highroad.... What did Edmonton know?
+
+It occurred to her that Edmonton was no longer her servant. In the
+performance of his duty, he was driving her, as he would have driven a
+guest, to the station.
+
+She straightened herself sharply. Her look became at once indifferent
+and haughty. But something was unsteady, out of balance, threatening.
+Her hold on life was precarious; she was drifting away from safety,
+from her established self. The new self she would have to create
+to meet the situation she found herself in was still shadowy; she
+must wear a different face.... Love in exile.... The future had no
+significance. Nor was there reality in the image of herself, reckless,
+dedicated, indifferent, somehow romantic....
+
+At the station, Edmonton, swinging her hand-luggage to the platform,
+showed an impassive face and asked: “New York, madam?”
+
+She thought of tipping him and changed her mind. After all, she wasn’t
+a guest.... She could not resist saying, as the long train slipped down
+the track toward them: “Don’t let Mr. Robert saddle the roan while I’m
+away, Edmonton.”
+
+He flushed and touched his cap. He had heard something! Servants found
+out everything. “No, ma’am. Indeed, no, ma’am. I won’t. Be sure of
+that.” An astonished, gratified, sly look passed across his eyes. He
+handed Lilah aboard with a return of deference, an unmistakable relish.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Lilah met Flagg in New York. She went to a hotel, and Flagg stayed at
+the borrowed flat in the ’Fifties. She had a few hundred dollars, and
+she had brought every rag and stitch of clothing and all of her jewels.
+It was, she argued, no affair of Flagg’s. Robert had given her these
+things; they belonged to her. She owned a distinguished string of small
+pearls, well-matched and unusually brilliant, and, for the more formal
+occasions of the season, Junius had given her a small crown of emeralds
+which had belonged to Minnie; this, with an emerald bracelet, too
+heavy and ornate for wear, had about them the innocent elegance of the
+’Eighties.... Lilah discovered her wedding ring among the diamonds and
+square-cut sapphires she preferred. She decided to wear it....
+
+She met Flagg in the lobby of the hotel and they talked in the
+comparative isolation of a taxicab throbbing up and down Fifth Avenue
+in a complicated, nervous stream of traffic.
+
+Their first excitement gave way to a hurried planning. They must, Lilah
+argued, leave New York. “I’ve made such a ‘noise’ here,” she said. “I’m
+more of a personage than you realize.”
+
+Lilah expected to follow Flagg to his middle-west university town and
+to become an anonymous figure in the background of his life. But Flagg
+shook his head. “We’d be better off in New York.”
+
+Lilah suppressed a sharp anxiety. “You won’t lecture, then?”
+
+He assured her again that he wanted only to lie on a green hill with
+his head in her lap!
+
+“I can get my hands on three hundred a month. Not much; but we needn’t
+starve! If you say, we’ll go abroad. Three hundred a month isn’t to be
+sneezed at in Italy.”
+
+“But you wanted to go on with your work!”
+
+His interest in teaching, he explained, had lessened as his knowledge
+increased. He was beginning to believe that he could do little more
+than “shove his pupils off the high road into the wilderness of
+personal experience, speculation”; besides, he was beginning to doubt
+the value of his own contribution. “When I found you there, crumpled,
+covered with blood, apparently dead, I was staggered by my ignorance.
+Death, for myself, has always seemed a sort of translation. But
+you--flesh I love--There is no solace for what I felt! I want to spend
+the rest of my days with my arms around a concrete loveliness, warmth,
+life.... Lilah, I’m afraid to go on alone!”
+
+His desire persisted. They must go abroad, at once. Every day spent
+in the city, crowded, humid, was wasted. Lilah had the impression
+that Flagg was hurrying to a happiness which might, with delay, be
+lost. Impatient, often irritable, he was upset by small details; he
+wanted Lilah, enjoyment, fulfillment, immediately. The matter of
+passports proved to be embarrassing. Flagg’s honesty would permit of no
+compromise and Lilah refused to allow their names to appear on the same
+passenger list. They agreed, finally, to sail on different ships and to
+meet in Genoa or Naples.
+
+Flagg left Lilah at her hotel and, alone, went about the complicated
+business of steamer reservations.
+
+If only there had not been this hiatus; the outlines of the adventure
+were already blurred; in his arms, secure, the past definitely
+discarded, her pleasure in her own audacity would return....
+
+She glanced out over the city. From her bedroom, twenty-two stories
+above the street, she could see the rivers, metallic, laced with
+bridges. She was impressed by her lack of superiority, save only the
+elevation granted her by this wall of granite and steel.... Flagg was
+somewhere down in that swarm of people, that tossing and scurrying of
+humanity....
+
+Here, society was out of focus. Her rightness or wrongness was lost
+in a conglomerate jumble of right and wrong. She could not comprehend
+adultery--a cruel word--betrayal. These things counted only as they
+affected a few individuals. Her right to happiness was paramount.
+That crowd down there cared nothing, knew nothing, of what she did or
+was, what she felt, her success, her failure.... She was struck by the
+indifference of the mob, the savage concentration of the individual.
+No tragedy, not even national disaster, not even war, could touch
+them all! What, then, was she, was any one afraid of? To break a
+commandment, to do good, was like throwing a pebble into a pool--a
+little hoop of ripples....
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Flagg did not come back at once. He telephoned that he was standing
+in line at the Customs House. “Have a photograph taken.” “Must I?”
+It struck her that it was not going to be simple, this flight. They
+might have gone to California, to Cuba! “But we can’t buy _lire_ in
+California,” Flagg reminded her. With a hint of impatience, he rang
+off. And Lilah, alone again, thought: “I’ll go to Thirty-eighth Street.
+There may be an old photograph--”
+
+She dressed with an odd sense of excitement, of daring. She remembered
+the Waterford glass chandeliers; she had never seen them in place.
+After all, the house was her creation; she had evoked it. Flagg could
+have no possible objection to her going there. For the rendezvous
+with that self she was discarding, she wore a gown Elmer Shawhan had
+approved of, longer than the fashion of the moment, made of dark
+blue and sulphur yellow; her stockings, sheer; her feet, in strapped
+slippers, might have been bare. A small hat and a heavy veil, the
+perfume she affected, gave her an exclusive, an unmistakable elegance.
+
+The caretaker admitted her, after a delay, while the taxicab she had
+hired waited at the curb. “Mrs. Peabody!”
+
+Again that look of surprise! Lilah brushed her way in, across the hall,
+upstairs. The shades were not drawn and a flood of sunlight illuminated
+Elmer Shawhan’s riotous panels. Lilah thought: “I told Robert to darken
+this room!” She stood on the threshold in a sort of trance of delight.
+She had forgotten how lovely it was; even now, with the furniture
+covered, the rugs rolled back, it was a room worthy of respect.... Her
+dreams of a little renaissance had come to nothing; her next step was
+even less promising. Italy, with a man she could not marry, an invalid
+who had abandoned his career for her sake....
+
+She crossed the room and became suddenly conscious of voices. Before
+she could draw back, or hide, Robert and Grace Fuller came in from the
+hall. Grace Fuller was in gray, her natural distinction accentuated
+by a clever hat. Lilah saw Robert’s face, flushed and angry. For the
+first time in her knowledge of him he was beside himself. She said
+breathlessly: “I didn’t know you were in New York! I wouldn’t have come
+here, naturally....”
+
+“I intend to sell the house,” he interrupted. “I haven’t spent a happy
+day here.... If there is anything you want, you are welcome to it.”
+
+Grace Fuller looked from one to the other. In her expression, amusement
+and pity conquered embarrassment. “Aren’t you two going to be sensible?”
+
+“No!” Lilah wanted to run, to fly ignominiously from this humiliation.
+She saw how the wind blew; what Robert intended to do; where he had
+turned, already, for solace, “understanding.” The whole incident made
+life and love seem disgusting, trivial. Flagg could do nothing to erase
+the fact of her marriage to Robert. All of their best moments together
+were ugly in the light of their present situation. They who had been
+intimate were bitter strangers, abashed by the memory of their intimacy.
+
+She cried desperately: “Let me go. This is abominable.”
+
+Robert said nothing and she ran downstairs. The astonished caretaker
+opened the door and shut it again, with a bang.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In the taxi, Lilah conquered her panic. “Drive around the park slowly.”
+She needed people, movement, color, to restore her faith in herself....
+
+No matter what the world thought, now, later she would be forgiven
+if she failed magnificently. New York was charitable to picturesque
+sinners. Florence, a villa, herself, wistful but triumphant.... She
+wondered whether she could do without the things she had, in a year,
+come to regard as necessary. On three hundred a month she would have
+to wear made-over clothes; she would have to curb her extravagant
+desire for amusing, expensive accessories. She was one of those women
+who sense every variation in style, each new subtle trick of elegance,
+the sleight-of-hand of the mode. To be inconspicuous and astonishing
+had become paramount. Until she met Flagg, she had thought of little
+else. Her charm and her pert wit had carried her. She had forgotten
+how to think, what to think, since she had long ago discovered that a
+worthless opinion spoken decisively passes for cleverness in a hurried
+world.
+
+Flagg would not like her friends, vivacious log-rollers who had
+peddled their superficial accomplishments successfully and now called
+themselves the Young Generation of American writers, painters, actors,
+critics and editors. Lilah enjoyed their ostentatious sophistry, their
+good humor and their irreverence. They stimulated her and never bored
+her; like them, she was fundamentally restless, unstable, impatient.
+Perhaps she was incapable of constancy.... She could never follow
+Flagg’s thought, painstaking, honest, uncompromising....
+
+The cab turned into the park. On wide, dusty greens children in bright
+dresses romped with colored balloons. A procession of motors in a blue
+reek of gasoline clogged the drives.
+
+To be victorious, she must dominate Flagg. He might turn poet or
+mystic, or he might be content with sunlight and _fritto misto_.
+
+She had seen many such couples--lovers who had surrendered
+respectability without a struggle, who had relinquished position, who
+no longer cared what was said or thought about their affair and who
+fought like cats and dogs. She must see that this didn’t happen. After
+all, every love, no matter how exalted in the beginning, inevitably
+resolved into a struggle against the loss of illusion. So fragile the
+threads from heart to heart, so impermanent affection.... Junius had
+once said to her that the only happy love relationships were illicit
+because marriage harnessed the imagination. He believed in the European
+marriage of convenience, a business arrangement, something outside
+the emotions. If this were so, Lilah thought, she had a chance of
+happiness....
+
+The telephone bell was ringing fretfully when she opened the door of
+her room at the hotel. She ran, lifted the receiver with a sudden,
+passionate recklessness.
+
+Flagg’s voice, purposefully tranquil, tightened her heart. He began to
+say that there would be difficulty, when she interrupted him: “No! No!
+I was wrong. Forgive me. There’s nothing to be ashamed of. The slate’s
+clean. We’ll go together.”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Florence was all a golden yellow in August, dusted with the pollen
+of hot sunlight. Flagg and Lilah climbed over the hills or drove in
+a rickety cab, house-hunting. They chose, finally, a small villa,
+ironically enough named “Villino Sans-Souci,” near the Ponte a Mensola.
+It was dirty, but there was a grape arbor at the back, and two very old
+cypresses, black, tipped with gold, traced invisible slow spirals upon
+a purple sky. Vincigliata rose behind them and in the cypress groves at
+sunset there was a constant call of cuckoos. “Legendary,” Flagg said.
+“Mournful, and beautiful. We’ll take this. What do you say, Lilah?”
+
+They could afford it, just. Flagg figured hurriedly on the back of an
+envelope. “Rent. Cook. Food and light. Fuel. Not much left for cabs,
+Lilah! Or the opera. But we have the view! Turn around, my dear, and
+look--”
+
+Through the arbor, framed in the dusty arch of grape-leaves, they could
+see the Dome, those delicate stone shafts, remote, miraculous, the
+Tower, the Bargello, and that great black lily, the Signoria, thrusting
+through the tumbled roofs of the city.
+
+“It hasn’t changed,” Lilah said. “What immortal loveliness!” She leaned
+against Flagg and let herself sink into her appreciation of him. Robert
+would have been more concerned with the plumbing than with the view.
+Flagg cared for nothing so long as he could fill his senses with this
+old, secretive, sardonic city, this city with bold cheek-bones, short
+shining hair, the smile of Gioconda and the eyes of a hired warrior.
+Flagg belonged in Florence; there was nothing modern about him; he was
+like Leonardo, was perhaps, Leonardo, sent back to question, to advance
+a little way, to recede again, like a comet flying down space.... She
+turned her head and kissed his shoulder.
+
+“Perhaps you won’t miss the other things--”
+
+“What other things?”
+
+“Your work. Those guinea pigs and test tubes, those farmer boys looking
+to you for the word.”
+
+His eyes, for the first time in many weeks, shut her out. But he smiled
+and his arm tightened about her waist. “If no one ever comes here--if
+we’re left alone to grow old in our arbor--will you mind, Lilah?”
+
+“No!”
+
+They went into the house, and Lilah, with wide gestures, refurnished
+it. “We’ll have to get rid of all the furniture. All of it! And those
+fearful pictures. Except that one--that’s so bad it’s--positively good!
+This room needs Venetian brocade, claret-against-the-light color, with
+Sixteenth Century chairs--”
+
+“But we can’t afford such things,” Flagg interrupted.
+
+“I’d go mad if I had to live in the same house with a gilded
+waste-paper basket,” Lilah answered.
+
+The agent, sensing criticism, rattled the keys. “The villino belongs to
+a celebrated poet,” he said eagerly. He showed his teeth and repeated:
+“Most celebrated!”
+
+“It was here,” he assured them with dignity, “he wrote ‘_Belle Mani_.’
+You know this book?”
+
+They had come out into the arbor again. And, licking herself in a patch
+of sunlight, a little black cat had made herself at home. “Does the cat
+go with the house?” Flagg demanded.
+
+The agent made a violent gesture. “I have him killed! At once! This
+poet liked the cats--_everywhere cats_!” He made a terrible face and
+waved his arms. “_Shoo!_ Get out!”
+
+The cat rose, arched her back, yawned and with her tail in the air,
+slightly crooked at the tip--a sign of pleasure--went straight to
+Flagg. He picked her up. “If your poet liked cats, he has my permission
+to use gilded waste-paper baskets.”
+
+Lilah was seized with a perverse mirth.
+
+“Spaniels and cats,” she said. But, to Flagg, she refused to explain.
+Holding the little black cat in the crook of his arm, he was tickling
+her under the chin where a patch of white fur was worn, daintily, like
+a bib.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In the blazing stillness of an August mid-afternoon, their drowsy
+isolation was broken into by a friend of Flagg’s who came out from
+Florence on a bicycle and arrived at the gate of “Sans-Souci,” dusty,
+jovial and eager, with a quizzical look for Lilah and a shout for Flagg.
+
+Lilah had been painting kitchen chairs an artless apple green. She
+looked up, saw a strange man staring at her and stood, the paintbrush
+at arm’s length. This, she saw at once, was to be her first social
+encounter.
+
+She said quickly: “Mr. Flagg is asleep. I’ll call him!”
+
+“Don’t. Please....”
+
+She hurried indoors, angry, rather stimulated. Flagg was lying
+uncomfortably on the poet’s divan. He was not asleep and his eyes
+looked up at her, mischievous, black, bright, more alive than any eyes
+she had ever seen.
+
+“Some one--” she began breathlessly. “Tall, dusty man on a bicycle--”
+
+“McNair!” Flagg shouted.
+
+He ran outside and Lilah heard their noisy greeting. She did not quite
+dare to follow, but waited for Flagg to call her. Presently he did.
+“Lilah! Oh, Lilah!”
+
+She flew to a mirror.... How pretty she was getting to be! The color
+of happiness was over her, warm, golden.... What a pity that all women
+couldn’t be happy; so many of them were pinched and gray, shadowy,
+unrecognized, unreal. She had never existed until Flagg loved her,
+until, she corrected herself, she had loved Flagg. She had had no other
+consciousness, since coming to this place, but this.... She went out,
+smiling.
+
+“Lilah,” Flagg said, “this is Gil McNair. Can you manage tea?”
+
+Lilah gave her hand, sticky with paint, into a large, warm clasp, and
+it was then she caught that quizzical look. It was not a question, it
+was, rather, a brief investigation. With an upward rush of spirits, the
+challenge accepted, Lilah said: “Tea? Of course!” But she threw into
+her glance what she would have preferred to say: “Yes! Here we are.
+Quite irregular. But quite charming!”
+
+She made tea on a spirit lamp because she had not conquered the
+mysteries of an Italian stove and, so far, she had been unable to
+lure a cook as far out of town as the Ponte a Mensola. It was not the
+Florence of before the war; Tuscan maid-servants had become aware of
+their potentiality in commerce.... The poet’s cups were eccentric;
+apparently _il the_ had not been popular at the “Villino Sans-Souci.”
+There wasn’t any cut sugar and Lilah had to use cream from a can.
+“Aren’t there any cows in Italy?” she wondered. She could hear Flagg
+laughing in the arbor, and she felt a pang of jealousy because he could
+laugh at something she did not share. To love, she had discovered,
+is to be jealous--jealous of everything, each unconsidered, careless
+gesture not directly to do with her; when Flagg slept, she was jealous
+of his dreams.
+
+She was glad, hearing him laugh, that he had accepted their situation,
+not as if he were making the best of a bad bargain, but with the
+positively gorgeous indifference of a man superior to his audacities.
+She had not once considered right or wrong--she had thrust aside the
+shadow of presentiment, had drawn the warmth of sunlight over the dark
+depths of possibility. She had rested for hours with her head against
+Flagg’s breast, listening to the beating, rapid, unstable, of his
+heart, his enemy, her enemy; she had lost the reality of death in the
+living body....
+
+The arbor was patterned with the cool, blue shadows of grape leaves;
+the sun struck through, white, hot, and lay in flakes on the table, on
+the smoothly brushed earth.
+
+The black cat had wandered in and sat on Flagg’s knee in that peculiar,
+feline trance he liked because, he said, it was so “damned superior.”
+He stroked the shining black fur as he talked and Lilah, in spite of
+herself, watched the caressing fingers.
+
+McNair took the tray from Lilah. His gestures were quick, nervous.
+Lilah discovered that he had done something astonishing, if not
+conspicuous, in the war, what, she could not quite make out; it had to
+do with “listening gear.”
+
+“He can hear celestial ragtime,” Flagg said. “He ‘listens in’ on the
+Beyond--michrophonic miracle man.”
+
+McNair laughed. He had big, square white teeth, like tombstones, and
+dusty hair worn in a bang. Lilah wanted him to notice her. She felt
+that she must look very pretty in her chintz apron, the little turban
+of twisted green silk, her feet in buckled slippers.
+
+McNair accepted tea and drank it greedily, his eyes on Flagg; their
+talk was experimentary, the talk of men widely different yet gifted
+with an identical passion for the world, the adventure offered by life
+to eager men; they liked it well enough to want, honestly, to better
+it. Words, names she had never heard, at first baffled, then bored her.
+She yawned, but Flagg was not stricken, as she had hoped he would be,
+as Robert would have been, with an immediate concern. So she moved to
+the bench beside him, slipped her arm through his and let her head fall
+against his shoulder.
+
+McNair, putting his tea-cup aside with a clatter, as if he had only
+just become aware of her, said: “You’re going back in October, Flagg?”
+
+Flagg answered: “No! I’m through. For a while.... I have what every man
+secretly desires at one time or another, leisure for contemplation.
+I’ve never had time to think. Since the war smashed man’s favorite
+image of himself, wearing the laurels of progress, I want to sit
+alone with the fragments and make of them what I can, for my own
+satisfaction.”
+
+“For your own satisfaction?” McNair repeated. “You used to believe, or
+claimed you did, that man owes his wisdom to man. You once said that
+you despised ascetics and hermits.” He glanced around. “Delightful!
+Your arbor! But you won’t stay here!”
+
+Lilah interrupted: “Why?”
+
+“Ask Flagg!”
+
+Flagg said: “I claim the right to the one certain beauty--life itself!
+I’ve been through the five cycles of psychic hell. I’ve questioned
+until I’m sick and tired of questioning. I’ve come to a sort of
+acceptance that isn’t surrender--it’s seeing! And if I should tell you,
+any one, what I see, know--I’d be damned as a dreamer or an idiot.
+I see that science and religion, both, have failed. We still suffer
+plague. We still arm ourselves. We still distrust our brother.... But
+we go forward. Imperceptibly, forward.... Here, at peace, I want first
+to think, later, if possible, to write. It depends on whether or not I
+have anything to say.”
+
+“You won’t stay,” McNair repeated. His face was flushed, and he said
+good-by abruptly, almost angrily.
+
+When he had gone, Lilah said: “Did you really mean what you said?”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“What did McNair think--about--us?”
+
+“I don’t know. Nothing, I dare say.”
+
+Lilah insisted: “But he must have wondered--”
+
+Flagg lifted her face and said gravely: “For God’s sake, let’s be
+decent sinners! I thought we had decided to pay our debt in the coin of
+the realm.”
+
+“I don’t know what you mean.”
+
+“I mean that it doesn’t matter a tinker’s damn what McNair or any
+one else thinks of us! The only thing that matters is what we think
+of ourselves. If you’re ashamed, you ought not to be here. If you’re
+sorry, you’re only hurting me.”
+
+She answered: “We’re happy when we’re alone. But when people come,
+we begin to blame each other.” She kissed him, quick, light kisses.
+Then her head sank again on his shoulder, and they sat there, clasped
+together, staring through the arch of the arbor at Florence, the
+towers, the brazen Arno climbing across the plain toward Pisa. It was
+very still. A cart went down the road beyond the wall with a tinkle of
+bells. The little black cat sat on the table, licking, her tail in a
+plate of cakes.
+
+
+
+
+X
+
+
+The lazy enchantment of their exile lasted through the summer. In
+September, Lilah complained to Flagg that all of New York seemed to
+have moved to Florence. Whenever she went to town she met some one
+she had known during her brief appearance as Mrs. Robert Peabody. She
+encountered curiosity but, from the younger generation, at least, no
+hostility; she was not certain whether this was an indication of social
+emancipation or due, rather, to her own remoteness from the lives,
+the activities of these people--she was, perhaps, not worth snubbing!
+The older generation was unaware of her; their standards resisted,
+obdurately, the pressure of modern opinion. Lilah could dismiss
+them because they were “old-fashioned.” But she resented the casual
+indifference of her contemporaries; it was selfish, even vulgar; she
+had, it seemed, nothing material to offer them! She was bitterly aware
+that most of them could have been hooked had she baited her line with
+millions. Money, enough of it, meant pleasure, diversion, a sop for the
+martyrdom of satiety. She could have lured the fashionable world to one
+of the veritable _ville_ in the hills near Florence--jazz on a Medicean
+terrace, swimming parties in a marble basin by Mino da Fiesole, a
+liberal supply of sporting Italians of the upper class.... Her scandal
+would be an asset under such glamorous circumstances. The “Villino
+Sans-Souci” was another story.
+
+McNair came again, bringing a young Englishman, a pianist, a pupil of
+Busoni, who played on the poet’s upright. He soothed Lilah because,
+without hesitation, he fell in love with her; she called him “silly
+boy,” but he was, if anything, older than Lilah; he “adored” women,
+professed to have been badly treated by them, to have thrown himself
+away, whereas he was quite unscrupulous, lazy and irresponsible. He
+played with facility and refused to practice because he seemed to have
+been born with a technique. Tall, heavy, he had the typical thespian’s
+skull, the profile of a Shakesperian actor.
+
+He made love to Lilah whenever Flagg’s back was turned. He played “for”
+her, he said. Lilah began to believe that she was responsible for the
+seductive music he somehow got from that long-toothed piano; she saw
+herself in the waltzes of Kreisler, the moon-smitten nuances of Ravel,
+the songs of Rachmaninoff. And she was filled with a vague melancholy,
+almost a pity for herself, inexplicable, delicious, like the
+forebodings of adolescence. She would sit on the terrace with Flagg,
+her hand in his, and seeing the “silly boy’s” ardent profile swaying
+against the glow of the piano-lamp, she would think tenderly of Robert,
+of Junius, and of herself.... She could only relent, apparently, when
+she had had her own way.... She squeezed Flagg’s hand.
+
+Lilah began to know the sort of people she would, in New York, have
+ignored. A thin, hawk-nosed, Pittsburgh-born American _contessa_ who
+lived nearby called repeatedly, bringing with her a shifting retinue
+of cavalry officers; the _contessa_ conducted a sort of matrimonial
+agency; she had, she boasted, introduced many “dear, sweet, rich
+American girls” to young Italians of title. Lilah suspected that she
+lived upon the precarious fruits of gratitude.
+
+Flagg’s reputation attracted scientists from France, from Germany,
+from Rome--he was at the mercy of men who coveted his knowledge. He
+was always generous, but Lilah saw him in moods of savage contempt and
+rebellion. “You waste yourself on these people,” she said.
+
+“I know! I wish they’d leave me alone!” But he never seemed to be able
+to resist them; she would rescue him from arguments carried on in half
+a dozen languages, lead him indoors and make him lie down. He would
+look up at her, his face pinched, his lips pale, and with a gesture of
+hopelessness, say: “I’ll have to go back, some day, and work! I don’t
+know a damn thing!” And once he added, with a querulous bitterness:
+“There’s so little time.”
+
+“But you’re going to get well.”
+
+“Yes,” he said. “Perhaps. It’s a new idea.... If I do, it will be
+because of you.” He smiled. “I’m not used to you, Lilah! I find myself
+looking at you, wondering who you are and how you came to be here....
+You’re not sorry, are you?”
+
+“Not if you aren’t.”
+
+So they reassured each other.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Flagg was not a man who enjoyed idleness. McNair left for Edinburgh.
+Save only Don Orlando, a priest who came down from Siena occasionally
+to spend an hour in the arbor, and an eccentric Florentine, a sort of
+inventor-alchemist, there was no one he enjoyed. He took to wandering
+away into the country, on foot. Lilah was left to her own devices.
+She tried to convince herself that she was happy. This was what she
+had made for herself; she could not question his love; her own was
+deeper than she had thought possible--her feeling consumed her. But her
+character was unchanged. She resisted, despised discipline; denial made
+her intractable. She wanted pleasure, excitement, admiration. There was
+danger in the heartless and unstable passion of such men as the English
+pianist. She hated herself because this was so. But she told herself
+that had Flagg been different, she would have been contented to sit in
+the arbor at the Ponte a Mensola, secure in the possession of love.
+
+Something instinctive in Flagg, out of reach, resisted accepted
+social standards. He stood aloof from close personal bonds, even,
+fundamentally, from Lilah. He was solitary, but not morose. She never
+really knew his failings or his ambitions; his confidences were always
+touched with self-scorn, yet he refused sympathy--it was as if he
+preferred to find his own way. His feeling for her was identical; he
+realized, perhaps, that sex would entangle him, hold him back from
+that mysterious pursuit of his. He was not easily stirred by her mere
+physical presence; she never felt that he had gone into the adventure
+through a desire for gratification. And she was flattered by his most
+casual caress because she realized that he was not demonstrative; his
+emotions were deep, strong and, when aroused, ruthless.
+
+But there were moments when Lilah was baffled by his reserve; she felt
+inadequate. Her own human, reprehensible sufferings, longings and
+jealousies fell back before his impartiality. He had believed in their
+right to live together. The fact that she did not love her husband,
+Flagg insisted, absolved her. But he had not stopped to consider what
+the affair might mean to Lilah; it was demoralizing, she decided, to
+ignore the world’s opinion. If Flagg should die, she would have no
+resistance.
+
+Thoughts like these threaded her consciousness; for the most part, she
+was lulled by the fact of his presence. Whenever he touched her, she
+sensed the immortality of happiness.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Coming out of Doney’s confectionery shop one afternoon, with a box of
+French pastry, she met Mrs. Sinclair, a willowy figure in gray crêpe,
+with enveloping veils, descending from an open touring-car painted
+royal blue.
+
+“My precious darling.”
+
+She enfolded Lilah briefly.
+
+“I heard that you’d run off with Putnam Flagg. The Wagners crossed
+with you. That witty Wagner girl was too absurd--she said you’d been
+flagged. Was that vulgar? How are you?”
+
+“Awfully well,” Lilah answered. She was sorry that she had worn her
+most unbecoming hat and a dress that was much too short for the mode.
+
+“Of course you came to Florence. Extraordinary, how they all do--people
+who break away--irresponsible, brave people! Sinclair and I are so
+desperately conventional. We’ve been married fifteen years and neither
+of us has ever cast the eye--well, not seriously! Sinclair’s in the
+car. Don’t speak to him, Lilah darling--he’d be shocked. Flagg hasn’t a
+cent, has he? I don’t see, frankly, why you did it, or what you gained.
+You had everything on earth you could ask for, and New York at your
+feet. Sympathy is with Robert, of course. He’s enormously popular, and
+any number of women are applying.... You aren’t divorced?”
+
+“No.”
+
+Mrs. Sinclair turned with a swirl, positively oriental, of draperies.
+
+“Are the chocolates good here? We’re on our way to Bologna--then on up,
+to Paris. They say Doucet’s clothes are inimitable, and I’m in rags.”
+
+She went into the shop and Lilah, lifting her head, crossed the
+sidewalk to the royal blue car. Behind a pair of smoked goggles she
+found Sinclair’s eyes staring at her with a sort of panic. “How do you
+do?” He gasped, leaned forward, offered a limp hand. “How do you do?
+Beastly weather, isn’t it? Where are you stopping?”
+
+“At the Ponte a Mensola,” Lilah said sweetly.
+
+“Well, I must say, you’re looking fit.”
+
+“I am.”
+
+“What’s May doing? Tell her to hurry!”
+
+Lilah turned away. The encounter had left her trembling. She crossed
+the Tornabuoni, signaled a cab and drove all the way back to the Ponte
+a Mensola. Somehow this extravagance comforted her.
+
+The ride was long and dusty. A stream of cars and trucks, carts and
+trolleys, blocked the narrow road between endless villa walls. The
+cabman, a disreputable Tuscan in a frock coat and a patent-leather hat,
+gurgled and hiccoughed at the horse. She could imagine the progress
+of the Sinclair’s motor, climbing the tortuous streets of sun-smitten
+hilltowns, rushing across the Lombardian plain, climbing Alpine
+passes, on again through France to Paris--in its wake a servile host
+with well-silvered palms bent in an attitude of obeisance to American
+millions. Lilah knew how Mrs. Sinclair would spend her time in Paris--a
+round of the _couturières_, perhaps in the company of a Frenchman,
+a rarefied sycophant, dancer, flatterer and debased wit who would
+criticize _mannequins_ and gowns, choose May Sinclair’s wardrobe and
+profit by her vanity to the extent of a cruise in the Sinclair yacht or
+a trip to the South of France in the Sinclair’s private car.
+
+Lilah’s imagination, like a shutter, opened and closed upon visions of
+fashionable America, the people she had known and might eventually
+have dominated, moving from Paris to London, from Biarritz to San
+Moritz, from New York to Palm Beach. Their houses, jewels, clothes,
+pleasures, were rare and exclusive enough to permit them any latitude
+of behavior; now that she was not a part of their life, Lilah could be
+contemptuous. Except for chance, she would in all probability have been
+in Paris, buying the best of Doucet’s collection ... or ... no; at the
+Point, waiting for her child to be born....
+
+She put her hands up to her face.
+
+Women like May Sinclair had escaped. Lilah suffered because she had not
+been content to use the material at hand--the fabric for the fashioning
+of her dreams had always been just beyond reach.
+
+She decided to say nothing to Flagg of her encounter. She went up the
+steep path from the gate to the house. Flagg was leaning on the terrace
+wall. The late sun gilded him, so that he was like a figure in bronze.
+Lilah called: “You old pagan! I want ten _lire_. I’ve been extravagant.”
+
+“Ten _lire_?”
+
+“To pay the cabman.”
+
+“Lilah,” Flagg said seriously, “you haven’t changed.”
+
+“But I have!”
+
+She paid the cabman and ran back to Flagg. “But I _have_ changed! I
+needed gloves and bought pastry instead for your tea--black, sticky
+cakes with cherries on top. Look!”
+
+Flagg looked. “Lilah, do you know, I think that cat’s going to have
+kittens!”
+
+They went to the arbor. Lilah admitted that Flagg’s suspicions were
+justified; the little black cat _was_ going to have kittens. And Flagg
+said: “Damn! I hate having dumb things suffer. We’ll have to make a bed
+for her.”
+
+He went into the house and came back with a clothesbasket and a
+blanket. “But she’s not going to have them to-day!” Lilah cried. Flagg
+answered seriously that it was just as well to be prepared. These
+things upset him; birth was terrifying. “I hope you’ll never have a
+child. I’d probably die. Go mad. Knock my brains out.”
+
+Lilah stroked the cat. Her heart tightened. After a moment she said: “I
+won’t have a child.”
+
+“What do you mean?”
+
+“That time when I was thrown--”
+
+Their eyes met. Something flashed across Flagg’s eyes, a fugitive
+anger. “Oh. That was it. Why didn’t you tell me?”
+
+“I couldn’t.”
+
+“You can tell me anything.”
+
+After a pause, he added: “You weren’t quite honest, Lilah. I wouldn’t
+have gone to Maine if I had known what you’ve just told me. Your
+husband has every reason to believe that I’m a cad.”
+
+“Must we talk about these things? Can’t we forget them?”
+
+He stooped again over the basket. His expression was not guarded and
+Lilah cried: “If you think I wanted to be hurt--if you think I tried
+deliberately--”
+
+Flagg turned away. “We can’t forget these things. But you’re right; we
+needn’t talk about them.”
+
+When he had gone, Lilah wept a little. The warm, sinewy body of the
+stray cat comforted her; she held it close, as she would never have
+held one of Robert’s spaniels, letting her tears fall on the glossy
+fur like drops of quicksilver. If she sat there long enough, she knew,
+Flagg would come back, repentant. And presently he came, drawn by her
+silence. “I’m sorry, Lilah.”
+
+She burst out: “You’re thinking of yourself when you ask me not to
+divorce Robert! I could, easily, in Paris.” The accusation was turned
+adroitly against Flagg. “Am I selfish? Isn’t it, rather, a question
+of honesty? Must we go over that again?” Lilah turned her head away.
+“I’m unhappy.” Flagg gazed at her with a curious detachment, as if he
+were seeing her for the first time. Presently he said deliberately: “If
+divorce will make you happy, by all means go to Paris. I don’t know
+what the process is, how long you’d have to live there or whether, in
+the end, we could afford the necessary expense. But you must, at all
+costs, be happy.”
+
+Later in the day, still smarting under the memory of Sinclair’s
+dismissal, she wrote to Junius: “I am going to divorce Robert. Will you
+find out from him, for my sake, whether he would be willing to come to
+Paris and make the necessary arrangements?” She added, with a flourish
+of defiance: “I am gloriously happy.”
+
+With the letter safely in the post, Lilah felt a return of security.
+It was only a matter of time before she could demand recognition. She
+dreamed of subjugating Florence; there was opportunity for a clever,
+pretty and accomplished woman to have a distinguished “drawing-room.”
+She hadn’t money, but she had everything else.
+
+With this possibility in mind she looked with new eyes at the “Villino
+Sans-Souci.” The poet had furnished it with lavish bad taste. He had
+had a morbid turn of mind, and perhaps to stimulate his imagination or
+in the interests of publicity had slept in a bed built like a gondola,
+black, funereal, uncomfortable, and had placed a wooden statue of
+Aphrodite in a niche, a sort of shrine before which he had burned
+tapers “to love and sorrow.” His drawing-room was a museum of amorous
+mementoes, signed photographs of pretty actresses--_Á mon cher! Tua,
+Maria. Sempre, Nina_--abominable porcelains, first editions, cushions
+and ecclesiastical velvets. His desk, where he had probably written
+“_Belle Mani_,” was the largest piece of furniture Lilah had ever seen,
+an affair of ebony inlaid with mother-of-pearl, “a battleground for
+literature,” Flagg said. “The whole place is like an embalmed scandal.”
+
+The house itself was old; it had been a _podesta’s_ and bore the patina
+of several centuries. “I believe we could buy it for a song,” Lilah
+said. She kissed the tips of her fingers. “And I could make it into one
+of the loveliest houses in Florence.”
+
+Her desire for beauty had never got her anywhere. Now she was restless
+and dissatisfied because there were too many footstools and majolica
+vases in the “Villino Sans-Souci.” A few thousand dollars--only a
+few--would transform this wilderness into a setting worthy of her
+ambition. She began to haunt the shops along the Borgognissanti, where,
+for ridiculous prices, she was offered the treasures of palaces;
+Sixteenth Century tables, dim Venetian mirrors, flamboyant chairs,
+chests, silver, brocades stiff with tarnished gold threads, faded,
+“like sunlight through claret.” Her desire for possession--she was a
+victim of her love of these things--was a sort of drunkenness; she made
+promises, broke them, had furniture sent to the “Villino Sans-Souci”
+on approval and sent back again; she was at once the despair and the
+victim of the antiquaries.
+
+Flagg had no idea that she had in her possession the pearls Robert had
+given her. They were hidden away in a hat-box together with the emerald
+crown and bracelet.
+
+One day she took them to a dealer whose shop was on the Ponte Vecchio,
+an unpretentious, shadowy room ten feet square. Across a modern counter
+upholstered in black velvet, Lilah faced a man who was positively
+medieval, lean, dark and clever; he had the delicate hands of an
+expert, flexible wrists and pointed, sensitive, critical fingers. The
+pearls, a long string, lay coiled on a small cushion, an opalescent
+serpent. Lilah had no idea how much they were worth. “I want to sell
+them,” she explained. The dealer considered, his hands clasped under
+his chin. His offer, in lire, astonished her, but she covered her
+surprise with an emphatic shake of her head.
+
+“Too little?” The dealer’s face became enigmatic. “I recognize
+these pearls, Madame. They belong to the Peabody collection. I sold
+them--this clasp--to Mr. Junius Peabody, thirty years ago. I never
+forget a really important purchase; sooner or later, the most valuable
+pearls in the world pass through my hands. I have, besides, a record.”
+
+Suppressing a feeling of guilt, Lilah said: “The pearls are mine. I am
+Mrs. Robert Peabody.”
+
+“I see. Exactly.... I can sell the string, immediately, to an American
+lady who is now in Rome. My offer stands.”
+
+Realizing that this man was superior to the sort of bargaining usual on
+the Rialto, Lilah accepted the offer. The pearls were whisked away by a
+clerk. The dealer remarked upon the weather. And the clerk, returning,
+paid into Lilah’s hands the sum of seventy-five thousand lire. She
+signed her name--once, twice--the dealer bowed without a trace of
+animation, and she went out again into the street, a street, a world
+transformed, no longer inimical, but hers. A duck of a world!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A duck of a world!
+
+With seventy-five thousand lire hidden away beneath the tissue paper in
+an “Annette” hat-box, happiness flowed back over Lilah’s spirit. Her
+worldly surface, that inimitable appearance of security, reappeared.
+Her manner became decisive, her bearing assured. She found it possible
+to smoke a cigarette with her old manner of casual indifference. She
+could be Russian without an inward shiver of self-ridicule and distrust.
+
+She postponed buying what she coveted because, in possession of
+seventy-five thousand lire, she could afford to be particular. The
+“Villino Sans-Souci” was inadequate. She must have one of the smaller
+Medicean houses--she could imagine Mrs. Sinclair saying: “Lilah,
+darling! What a delicious garden!”
+
+With the _contessa_, in a hired carriage driven by a respectable
+coachman in livery, Lilah inspected the available houses. Flagg
+knew nothing of these excursions. The gates of imposing, crumbling
+_ville_ were thrown open and Lilah glimpsed some of the most coveted
+interiors in Italy. The demoralizing simplicity and perfection of these
+rooms--spacious, exquisite in proportion, frescoed--went to her head.
+She found herself living in imagination in a setting contrived by the
+most cunning artists of Lorenzo’s day for a corrupt and fastidious
+court. Terraces of stone worn smooth, grass-grown, crumbling; basins
+reflecting the complicated foliage of live oaks; cypress alleys and
+balustrades, the warm, ochre walls of Tuscan palaces, unbroken, without
+ornamentation, sharp against the dazzling purple of the sky....
+
+The _contessa_ was garrulous; her enthusiasm, her bad and fluent
+Italian embarrassed Lilah. She was greedy, over-inquisitive. And with a
+sort of officious generosity she wanted to establish Lilah at once in a
+_villa_ at Montughi. “But, _cara mia_, it’s perfect! I don’t see what
+you expect. You’d better snap it up at once or some American vulgarian
+will lease it.”
+
+It was easy to imagine herself established, with Flagg, in that
+ingenuous, expensive little palace. The seventy-five thousand _lire_,
+her treasure horde, were an open sesame to the most extravagant dreams.
+
+But she did not dare to confide in Flagg; something warned her that he
+would not approve, understand, forgive.
+
+The December rains drenched Florence. Valambrosa was powdered with
+snow. The Arno, amber, swollen, poured through the city, covered the
+mud flats, became all at once a veritable river.
+
+Flagg was driven indoors. He began, tentatively, to write. The
+effort exhausted him. He would wrestle with his enemy, breathless,
+contemptuous, until he collapsed.
+
+And suddenly, for no reason, out of her security, the idea came and
+persisted that her happiness was threatened.
+
+Flagg was ill again.
+
+Lilah never knew the precise moment when she was first aware that he
+might not be going to live. His eyes were frightened most of the time,
+although he kept on smiling at her. Noises irritated him. He wanted
+silence. He would sit at his desk, writing, into the night, obstinate.
+And when she spoke to him, he would shake his head and ask her to go
+away. There was something he wanted to do, to finish, before he called
+quits. It was absurd to say that he couldn’t work. He could.
+
+On fine days he sat in the arbor, holding the cat and smiling a queer,
+fixed smile that terrified Lilah. When it rained, he moved indoors and
+sat, bent, in an attitude which was belligerent and pathetic, at his
+desk--that “battle-ground of literature” inlaid with mother-of-pearl.
+
+At night he would come into her room and lie with his face pressed
+against her shoulder, like a child that is afraid of what he might see
+in the dark.
+
+When she questioned him, he was perfectly still.
+
+And now, she knew, she loved him more than anything in the world.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Love, complete love, came because she knew she could not have it. Flagg
+was going to die. She had let herself off from feeling, because there
+was always time to give way to an emotion that would be so great that
+something of herself would have to perish. Now, because there was so
+little time, she surrendered to it. She could not dodge facts any more;
+she must face them and make of her life what she could with what she
+had. Her nature was terrible to her because she was in the grip of a
+genuine passion; she wanted to make herself over in time to conquer
+Flagg’s reticence, to have him for herself. She had been selfish. She
+had taken whatever she wanted, without caring. But she had cared.... It
+hadn’t been easy to give up everything and come to Flagg. She wasn’t
+superior, as Flagg was superior, to humiliation.
+
+But now she saw what she had come for.
+
+She saw herself, little, defeated, having to start all over again. She
+was humble, frightened. She saw that she could have nothing without
+earning it. And this revelation was like an unendurable light beating
+against her consciousness. There was no escape. Because the future held
+no happiness, the present was terrible, since it contained the essence
+of the thing she would go on wanting all the rest of her life. It was
+so precious, so elusive, so beautiful, and so inevitable.
+
+She could not bear to watch Flagg’s suffering. She sent for a physician
+who came out from Florence and was alone with Flagg for two hours.
+Lilah waited, her heart fluttering as if she, not Flagg, were going to
+die.
+
+When the two men finally opened the door and came out, Flagg was still
+smiling, but it was not that fixed, self-conscious smile Lilah had come
+to fear. He seemed relieved. The physician nodded casually to Lilah and
+drove away again, in a rickety cab, toward the city. Lilah thought: “He
+can’t be a great specialist and come in a _carozza_. I won’t believe
+anything....”
+
+Flagg said: “It’s all right, Lilah. I’m sorry you worried. I’ve got a
+chance. Only I’ll have to stop writing.”
+
+Lilah thought: “He’s not telling me the truth. He’s going to die and
+he’s glad of it.”
+
+After that she felt that everything was against her, even Flagg’s will
+to die. If he had really loved her, he would have wanted to live.
+
+She heard from Junius Peabody toward the end of December. The familiar,
+heavily embossed stationery post-marked Peabody’s Point bore her name
+and the frivolous address: “Villino Sans-Souci” in Junius’ spidery
+hand. Lilah tore the envelope open with a feeling of impending crisis.
+
+She read:
+
+“DEAR LILAH:
+
+ “Your letter, the first from you in over six months, contained no
+ news of yourself. I wanted to know whether or not you had made a
+ success of your experiment. Society has never been charitable to
+ women who take happiness they are not entitled to. A few celebrated
+ women of genius have escaped criticism because their contribution was
+ superior to their ‘transgression.’ I am not preaching to you. In this
+ day and generation there are no fixed standards of behavior. I am
+ only complaining because there is something shoddy, to me, offensive,
+ in a woman of your quality ‘taking’ life in a rented villa--one of
+ that pathetic band of outlaws who play at respectability in the
+ smaller cities of Europe. I admit my part in the affair. But I
+ somehow had faith that you would send that fellow packing when you
+ were well enough to recognize his peculiar selfishness. I cannot
+ resist begging you to consider seriously returning with Robert. He
+ will, as you request, meet you in Paris on the first day of January.
+ I am enclosing the name and address of his lawyer there. I will see
+ that your position, in America, is secured.”
+
+He signed himself, characteristically: “Junius.”
+
+Lilah thought angrily: “Hypocrite! He wants me there, because I amuse
+him.”
+
+His own indiscretions had been made palatable, sugar-coated with
+secrecy. She was happier than he had ever been in his selfish enjoyment
+of women who had had to leave him because he was respectable. He had
+spared Minnie’s Victorian sensibilities by carrying on an elaborate, an
+“artistic” deception....
+
+“I despise men,” Lilah said aloud.
+
+Flagg glanced up. “Why?”
+
+“Read this!”
+
+She tossed Junius’ letter across the breakfast table.
+
+Flagg’s expression was both contemptuous and embarrassed. When he
+spoke, his voice was unsteady. “It seems that your husband is, after
+all, going to let himself be divorced.”
+
+The question of money came up immediately. Lilah couldn’t go to Paris
+because there wasn’t enough money. They had spent their month’s
+allowance already and the January draft, which wouldn’t come until the
+tenth of the month, would have to be used to settle the December bills.
+“I could wire for a few hundred. I’ve never told you. This money is
+mine during my life-time. It comes from an estate held in trust for my
+younger brother who’s out in India. When I die, it goes to him. I could
+borrow on the future, but I don’t want to. I never have.”
+
+“But I’ve got to go. Think, darling, what it means! Surely, you aren’t
+jealous of Robert--now.”
+
+“No.”
+
+“I’ll have to see him. But it will be formal, embarrassing. The lawyer
+will explain things. And before you know it, I’ll be free.”
+
+Flagg turned to Junius’ letter. “I’m not sure. I hardly think it will
+be as simple as that. They’ll urge you to go back. They’ll put up all
+sorts of arguments. They’ll make it hard for you. I’d prefer that you
+didn’t go.... Later, will be time enough.”
+
+He got up and came around the table, touching her hair, a caress that
+always stirred her to the heart, it was so unconsidered and gentle, the
+caress of a friend; it made her precious to herself. But now, in her
+eagerness, she drew away.
+
+“I must go! I want to marry you! Then, you can return to America, to
+the work you like. Or we can live here--properly. Be the sort of people
+you despise, upright, tipping-over-backward people! But we can always
+laugh at ourselves. We needn’t lose our sense of humor simply because
+we happen to be respectable....”
+
+She paused, scared by his look, aware of her failure, but sustained by
+a conviction that she was misunderstood.
+
+Flagg reminded her again that there was no money. “Only a few _lire_,
+unless I cable for more.”
+
+Lilah cried: “But I have some money! Lots of it. I meant to tell you. I
+sold my pearls.” She laughed: “Like the lady in the melodrama....”
+
+“I didn’t know you had any pearls.”
+
+“They weren’t becoming,” she said carelessly. “I prefer jade, or
+ivory--”
+
+“Were they valuable?”
+
+“I got seventy-five thousand _lire_.”
+
+“Good God.”
+
+Flagg turned abruptly and went to the window. He stood there looking
+out into a downpour of rain, at Florence, sodden and drenched.
+
+“The pearls were mine,” Lilah remarked. She felt herself growing
+angry. She felt that she would lose her temper if he pressed her; say
+things she would regret. The old self wasn’t conquered. She despised
+criticism. She wanted to be thought right.
+
+Flagg turned. His face was dark again, but his feeling had driven the
+look of fear out of his eyes. He had forgotten himself. “You left the
+Peabody’s under circumstances that required the most absolute honesty.
+You should have come to me with the clothes you stood in. I forgave you
+the eight trunks full of finery--after all, your husband had no use
+for it, and you, apparently, did. It doesn’t matter, to you, who pays
+for the things you want, or whether you are giving value received. To
+me, it does matter.... What we did might have been splendid. It isn’t!
+I’m as ashamed as you are. Because of these damned, petty things--this
+letter, for instance! And what you’ve just told me. The stinking
+ugliness of desire and compromise....”
+
+He got control of himself with a wrenching effort. “You’d better go to
+Paris. I’d rather compromise than be ashamed.”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Flagg went out and did not come back. She watched him hurry down the
+path to the gate, bending his head against a downpour of rain. She said
+bitterly: “You shouldn’t have spoken to me like that.” But he couldn’t
+hear, of course--the window was closed, and the rain beat against the
+ground with a harsh, rhythmic clatter, the noisy rain of southern
+countries.
+
+Flagg disappeared up the road to Vincigliata, into the forest of young
+cypress trees.
+
+Lilah thought: “I ought to feel more than I do.”
+
+What had happened was too important for concrete, recognizable
+feelings. She couldn’t grasp it all at once. She was numb with
+misery. She went about the house doing unimportant things with great
+seriousness, an exaggerated attention. She put a book-shelf in order
+and cleaned Flagg’s study. The dust flew out of the window as she would
+have liked to shake out her thoughts, scatter them, get rid of them.
+
+At ten o’clock the casual servant who came in from a near-by farm
+appeared under a _contadino’s_ green umbrella, like a big, wet
+lettuce-leaf on legs.... Lilah was explicit, much more so than usual.
+She set the table herself, humming, “as if nothing had happened,” she
+reminded herself. She had the feeling that if she ignored what had
+happened it couldn’t be serious. But everything she touched seemed to
+be impermanent; knives and forks and plates had a sort of unreality.
+
+She went upstairs, frightened by the dread that clutched at her throat.
+But she must put off remembering. She would count the money--try to
+understand what Flagg had meant about her selling the pearls.
+
+She counted the bills, laid them in little piles, was relieved by their
+ordinary appearance. Surely Flagg hadn’t stopped loving her because
+of these little green notes.... She put them away, confident that she
+could make him understand as soon as he came in.... It was absurd
+for a man and woman in love with each other to quarrel over something
+petty....
+
+But she mustn’t think of that.
+
+Flagg did not come in for lunch. The sky was leaden, yellow, and the
+rain came down in solid sheets. She couldn’t bear to be alone in the
+house. That wet lettuce leaf stumbled down the hill. There was no one
+but Aphrodite in her niche, a painted goddess with gilded ringlets and
+heavy lids, the smile of a courtesan, the little hands of a child....
+No wonder the poet had turned to warfare for sensation. Things. Things.
+Things. And nothing got you anywhere. First, you thought it was this
+and then that. And nothing satisfied the you that was personal and
+aching. Not even love. For then things like this happened....
+
+She thought: “I’ll go out. I’ll feel better if I go out.”
+
+She splashed down the road and stood, holding her umbrella against the
+rain, waiting for a tram.
+
+Twenty-five centesimi. Cheaper than a cab.... She sat with the dripping
+umbrella pressed against her knees and stared at the people. An old
+man. His trousers were baggy at the knee and the skin of his hands was
+like brown corduroy. A young girl with bold, unwavering eyes stared
+back at Lilah; there was an imitation diamond ring on the first finger
+of one plump, red hand.
+
+The city closed around the street; great, drenched walls thrust up,
+cornices leaned over; people surged along the narrow sidewalks under
+a tossing and writhing of umbrellas; priests, fascisti with curled
+forelocks like young game-cocks, like frizzed savages ... girls....
+
+Here and there a shop-window was lighted.
+
+Lilah walked through the square and across to the Tornabuoni.
+
+She went into a hairdresser’s establishment. A warm, sickish odor,
+perfumed, assailed her. She explained to a pale woman in pearl earrings
+and clinging black satin that she wanted a “wave.” Madame could be
+accommodated because, on a rainy day, there were many cancelations.
+Right here.... In this booth. _Subito!_
+
+A small, blackish man removed Lilah’s hat. Her hair fell down on her
+shoulders and she thought with a stab of pain, acute, physical, of
+Flagg’s fingers, caressing, caressing....
+
+The marcel irons twirled. Did Madame want pompadour or straight back?
+It was becoming fashionable to clip the hair at the nape of the neck,
+close, like a boy’s.... It would be very becoming to Madame.
+
+Did this man love? Every one did, sooner or later. Why was it that the
+world wasn’t smitten with madness; would she ever be sane again.... She
+fingered the bottles on the dressing-table. Brilliantine. Rouge. Skin
+tonic. Pomade. _Mettre cette poudre avec la houppe, s’essuyer avec un
+linge...._
+
+Sooner or later, she would have to question not only her reflection,
+that face, unchanged by dread and bewilderment, but Lilah, the woman.
+It wasn’t possible longer to avoid that encounter. She, herself, had
+failed.... _Not yet!_
+
+“Madame has pretty hair. In French, we say _cendrè_--the colour of
+ashes.”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+She found the English pianist in the drawing-room when she got back to
+the “Villino Sans-Souci.”
+
+“Hallo! I thought you’d give me tea. Beastly day. Where’s Flagg?”
+
+“He’s not here,” she said coldly. Suddenly she wanted to hurt Flagg. “I
+don’t know where he is.”
+
+The Englishman’s eyes grew round. He made a sound like a whistle. “I
+_see_! You’ve quarreled.”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+Let him know it. It didn’t matter. Flagg was trying to frighten her....
+She took off her hat and sank down on the divan. “I don’t want to talk.
+I want you to play for me. Something strange, ugly. I see now why
+modern art is out of balance and discordant and crooked--the world is
+sick at its soul. When you’re sick at your soul you don’t want beauty.
+You want something clever and horrible, like the evil in yourself.”
+
+The Englishman’s eyes, always flickering, as if there were little
+flames in them, blazed up. His lips parted. He was like a smooth,
+too fat faun smoking a cigarette. His eyes appraised her. And, for a
+terrible reason, Lilah was glad that she was beautiful. She tipped her
+head back so that he could see her throat.
+
+This man understood women; he pitied them and desired them; but they
+never loved him unless they had lost love; he had never known, never
+would know, the best of love, because he expected the worst of it.
+
+Suddenly he jumped up and went to the piano. “I’ll play you the
+Saint-Sebastien; I know your real mood is religious, not evil at all! A
+woman of your experience buries each amour with a _Te Deum_.”
+
+Lilah wanted to tell him that she had had no experience, but she knew
+that he wouldn’t believe her. Her life with Robert, with Flagg, had
+never really changed her; she hadn’t loved Robert, and Flagg hadn’t
+loved her; when people spoke of experience she supposed they meant that
+dedication of self which is spontaneous, mutual, irrevocable....
+
+“Stop! I can’t bear that sort of music.”
+
+He spun around, seized another cigarette. “Then we’ll talk. I’ll cheer
+you up. Poor, lonely, adorable Lilah.” He sat, too close, on the divan.
+“What on earth possessed you to fall in love with a man whose mind is
+fixed on the primeval atom?”
+
+Lilah shrugged her shoulders. It was easy to say: “I don’t know! Why do
+we?”
+
+“You ran off, didn’t you? Cut loose? I’ve heard rumors--I beg your
+pardon, but things get about a small place like this. Infernal curious,
+most people. They like to eat a pretty woman up; crunch her bones.
+Now, if you were ugly as mud and fat and forty, they’d call you
+‘emancipated.’ Waving the banner of personal freedom and all that sort
+of thing.... They’d make you out a martyr to unholy matrimony, meaning
+matrimony which is no go. But since you’re young and lovely--very
+lovely--they’re tearing you to bits down there.”
+
+“Are they?”
+
+“I’m no end sorry for you. Really.” His eyes said more. “Doing all this
+for a man who doesn’t appreciate--well, you--” his eyes said. But he
+was too clever, too wary, to put the thought into words.
+
+A bitterness surged up in Lilah’s heart. Six o’clock. And Flagg hadn’t
+come in. He might have taken a train to Rome. She saw him in Rome
+walking up a street in the rain, wearing that fixed smile, alone. Or
+Milan. Another picture. Only this time, she saw him sitting in a hotel
+bed-room in his shirt-sleeves.... He might have died, up there in the
+cypress grove. He might, even now, be lying on the soaked ground, his
+face pressed into the sodden leaves.
+
+She got up. “I think you’d better go,” she said. “I want to be alone.
+If you don’t mind.”
+
+The Englishman rose. She was too miserable to sense the danger. He
+stayed, looking down at her. And then he caught her shoulders, pressed
+her against him and kissed her. She could feel the softness of his
+body. She shivered, gasped and pushed him away. She hated him.
+
+“Abominable!” she said.
+
+“Oh, very well.”
+
+With a gesture of contempt, as if it really mattered very little, he
+got his hat and went out, slamming the door.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+She went upstairs, followed by the black cat and the only one of the
+kittens they had saved. It, too, was black, with eyes like jewels and
+an incredibly thin, flexible tail. The cats did not seem to know or to
+care whether Lilah suffered, and she wanted them to know; she said:
+“You little brutes! Don’t frisk! I can’t bear it!” But they frisked on
+the gondola-bed, over it and under it, scratching and leaping, as if
+nothing had happened.
+
+Lilah undressed. Then, in a warm negligée, banded with fur, her hair
+under a sort of gypsy cap made of purple chiffon, she went into Flagg’s
+room and peered at his things, his brushes, his coats, on hangers, his
+handkerchiefs, in neat piles. She touched everything, sensing his dear
+person.... She would wait until eight o’clock, and then, if he hadn’t
+returned, she would go out, alone, and look for him in those dark woods.
+
+Eight o’clock came, but she didn’t dare to go out. She got into bed,
+instead, and lay in the dark, listening to the rain. She was terribly
+afraid. Life was inimical again, and she had lost faith in herself, in
+her ability to be pert and to win success with the misty quality of her
+loveliness. Accepted things, long-established ideas, convictions, had
+failed. There was nothing to go on.... She began, reluctantly, almost
+with terror, to look herself straight in the face. She saw an image of
+herself, silly, vain, rushing in pursuit of unimportant things. Always
+things! And where had they gotten her?
+
+A motor, turning into the Vincigliata road, cast a swinging light
+through the windows, across the walls, across Aphrodite, imponderable
+and secretive in her niche....
+
+Flagg!
+
+Her heart stopped.
+
+They might have come to tell her....
+
+No. The downstairs door opened, closed again, and she heard his
+footsteps, coming, coming....
+
+She thought: “He’s been cruel. I ought to punish him.” But she called
+him.
+
+She saw him in the doorway and summoned her half-glimpsed self with a
+passionate and peremptory cry. Flagg hesitated, a dim figure, silent,
+remote. Then he moved forward and, quivering, her nerves unsteady, she
+felt him leaning down over her. She could not see his face. She could
+smell the cloth of his coat, wet.... And with a sudden lifting of her
+arms, she dragged him down to her. He had to kneel. His face pressed
+into her throat. Again she felt his hair, the shape of his head. He
+was warm and alive; he was all of life. How could she have doubted,
+questioned, hesitated, when this, this was the answer to everything--to
+be near him.
+
+“I thought you’d never come. I wanted to tell you that I’ll give the
+money to Robert, all of it. I understand.”
+
+Flagg said nothing. He sighed. His body relaxed. He pressed his face
+closer against her. His arms went around her.... Lilah could feel the
+two cats frisking over her feet, and she thought: “They know. I’m
+happy. I’m happy.”
+
+They clasped each other, for the first time, with that love which is
+pity and forgiving and ecstasy.
+
+
+
+
+XI
+
+
+Lilah went to Paris.
+
+In a compartment on the Rome-Lausanne express, she sat with her chin
+in her hand, staring out of the window at the slow unrolling of the
+landscape, fields, towns, mountains, fields, towns and mountains. But
+she was conscious of being stared at from the corridor, and it was
+pleasant, even exciting, to attract attention, after six months of life
+in the country.
+
+Flagg had not been well, but he had reassured her: “I’m all right. Only
+hurry back. I’m going to miss you.”
+
+How strained and white his face had been when, at the station in
+Florence, he had followed the moving train for a way, looking up at her
+with a curious, unreadable expression.
+
+She thought: “He’ll be all right. I mustn’t worry.”
+
+And the further the train was from Florence--Bologna, Milan,
+Brigue--the more certain she became that Flagg was quite well. She
+could see him walking up the Vincigliata hill, whistling, swinging
+along with the gait of a man who had no enemy. She was comforted by
+this vision. The more she thought about it the more she believed in
+it. And the memory of his face at the train in Florence faded, was at
+length forgotten, since she preferred not to remember. Later, she
+promised herself, she would remember.
+
+But now. Paris.
+
+Again she was at that crowded, noisy gateway to Paris, that sordid,
+ringing, clashing place full of people with bundles, porters with
+luggage, soldiers, nuns, tourists, a mad jumble of dingy, dusty,
+worried-looking, crumpled people all going somewhere and in a terrible
+hurry. Florence, everything to do with her life there, seemed unreal.
+How could she have let herself suffer so? How stupid of her! It was a
+mistake, dangerous, to concentrate oneself too much; it would do her
+good, do Flagg good, to break the thread of their intimacy; both of
+them had been overanxious to prove their right to each other. After
+all, who knew or cared whether they succeeded? Lilah hurried through
+the crowd, refreshed, as if bathed in that cool, manifold impersonality.
+
+She leaned forward in the taxi, staring at Paris, searching for some
+indication of recent wounds. None. None! The streets, shining in a
+thin, cold drizzle; a swirl of umbrellas; lights and kiosks; vistas
+converging; and that air of brittle gayety, that something precise,
+insouciant, perverse--the same! Lilah tapped on the window. “I’ve
+changed my mind. The Ritz.” For two days! Why not? But now she could
+laugh at herself. She knew that she was ridiculous; a _pension_ would
+have done just as well! Only that she longed for warmth and color, the
+pageant, not without meaning, of the worldlings. This would be her last
+bow before the curtain. And that precarious few hundred dollars cabled
+to Flagg after an interval of doubt, of suspense ... her last fling at
+luxury. Make-believe.... At least, Robert wouldn’t think that she had
+come down in the world! She could confront him clothed in the accepted
+garments of his kind, on common ground.... She would wire Flagg at
+once: “Ritz. Paris. Love. Lilah.”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+When she saw Robert crossing the lobby of the Ritz with that vague,
+amiable, short-sighted manner, she was not surprised. This was the sort
+of thing that was bound to have happened, what, perhaps, she had hoped
+would happen.
+
+“Lilah! Well, I’ll be damned!”
+
+They confronted each other. Robert flushed. He laughed, offered his
+hand, remembered, and said miserably: “I suppose this is shocking.
+I’m awfully sorry.” But his question, immediate, with an accent of
+surprise, irritated her: “You’re staying here?”
+
+“Yes,” she snapped. “Are you?”
+
+“I’m at the Meurice. I’m dining here with the Gaylords, but I can shift
+’em, if you say. That lawyer needn’t know, and I want to talk to you.”
+He added: “I need to talk to you, Lilah.”
+
+Lilah considered. “I’ve only just come. I haven’t unpacked. I’m
+fearfully dusty.”
+
+“I’ll wait.”
+
+Something reminiscent twisted Robert’s face into a sort of grimace.
+“Oh, Lord, Lilah--Here we are! There’s no precedent--What am I supposed
+to say?”
+
+And, out of the past, Lilah flung back at him: “Something honest! I’ll
+dine with you, of course.”
+
+An admiring look came into Robert’s eyes. “Here, then, in an hour,” he
+said simply. “I’ll wait.”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Lilah was prompt. She found Robert, characteristically, exactly where
+she had left him. She thought, before he caught sight of her: “This
+is my husband.” And she gave him a quick, appraising look, trying
+to realize what he had been. She failed. He was some one she hadn’t
+known.... He turned, and in the meeting of their eyes there was an
+immediate recognition, a searching, reproachful, profoundly intimate
+encounter. Both of them trembled and pity ran through them. Lilah felt
+as if she could not, under any circumstances, speak to him.
+
+“Let’s go where we’ll be alone,” he said. “I know a place across the
+river--decent food, French--we won’t see any one we know.” He flushed
+again. “Oh, my lord--don’t misunderstand me. I’m not ashamed! Only I
+hate advertising my emotions.”
+
+In the taxi, drawn away from him, huddled in her furs, Lilah shivered.
+Life had never seemed more of a picture-puzzle; all the pieces lay
+about her, and she could not put them together again. The piece that
+was missing, the necessary piece--Freedom. It was the answer to
+everything. If she could find the meaning of freedom.... Every one
+to-day, old and young, cried out for freedom, to put their scattered
+picture-puzzle together with, to make it whole and reasonable and
+recognizable, something to enjoy. Every one searching, picking up now
+this, now that, expedient and finding that nothing fitted, nothing
+matched.... Freedom for oneself had been the cry of the generation.
+But was there such a thing? Weren’t people, lives, inextricably woven
+together, so that one experience involved another, one giving another,
+one selfishness another? She could never be free again because of this
+man at her side.
+
+She stole a look at his face. There was something pathetic in his
+expression, as if, he too, were groping for the missing fragment,
+baffled by the confusion of ideas and morals; pitying her, loving her,
+despising her, yet, in spite of himself, understanding her.
+
+They were afraid to say anything; afraid and miserable.
+
+The restaurant, Robert’s choice of a place where they’d not see any
+one, was half-way down a short, dark street. He had engaged a private
+room; before a coal fire burning in a shallow grate a table had been
+set for two. The room was small, of the eighteenth century, faded,
+crackled and mellow. And an old waiter in an enveloping apron took
+Lilah’s cloak with that paternal gesture which is the gift of inspired
+waiters, waiters of a certain persuasion, a genius, a _flair_. His
+exit was discreet, but promising, and when he returned, with _bisque_
+of crayfish, he offered it as an artist turns a canvas from the wall:
+“_Voila!_”
+
+Robert’s glance was beseeching. You couldn’t disappoint such a fellow
+as this waiter; he expected them to be jolly! Lilah felt this, too. A
+room so exquisite. The festive air imparted by the _bisque_, steaming
+in real Sèvres bowls. Her gown, the last of the trousseau, a slip
+of metal cloth, girdled with flat emerald stones set in silver....
+Suddenly, she felt smooth, like the _bisque_, exclusive and desirable.
+The walls of the little room seemed to shut her away from confusion in
+a world made secure by the tradition of elegance, by the permanence
+of all rare and lovely things. She felt again the conviction that she
+belonged peculiarly in this world; it was stimulating, just for an hour
+or two, to pretend that she had never left it. It was stimulating,
+also, to discover that Robert could still look at her as if he found
+her the most mysterious and delightful woman in the world. Perhaps he
+wanted her back, at any cost--She looked at him with that half-smile
+which means: “Do you forgive me?” But she waited for him to speak, to
+commit himself, because there was always the memory of Grace Fuller, in
+a gray dress and a clever hat....
+
+“Lilah,” he said suddenly. He stopped, as if appalled by his audacity.
+He stretched out his hand and she took it. They clasped hands solemnly,
+with scared looks. And the waiter, lowering his eyes, whisked the
+crayfish away and disappeared behind a silk screen decorated in the
+Fragonard manner.
+
+“Lilah,” Robert began again. He couldn’t go on. He squeezed her hand,
+held fast to it as if he would never let it go. “Isn’t this a nice
+place? Chew told me about it. The _filet_ of sole’s famous--better’n
+Marguery.... Lilah....”
+
+Lilah wanted to laugh. She shook her head, instead, and tears came into
+her eyes; it was easy to cry nowadays. She wiped them away with the
+tips of her fingers. Then Robert said the one thing he should not have
+said: “It was all my fault, Lilah.”
+
+The waiter came in again, bearing a silver platter with a great dome
+of a cover. “_Filet Esterhazy_,” he announced. He looked as if he had
+presented them with an heir.
+
+Robert said: “Ah!” He loved good food. Lilah remembered how she had
+grown to wince inwardly whenever he leaned forward at the table with
+that look of dedication and rapture, that sort of hovering, like a
+gull over a floating morsel. She remembered the way he had of flapping
+his elbows, as if he were skimming down, close, to snatch the tid-bit;
+only, he never snatched; he ate slowly, with the peculiar relish, the
+rapt appreciation of the gourmet. “_Bon!_” he said in a loud voice.
+“_Tres bon!_”
+
+“_Merci, m’sieur!_”
+
+“You’ll want wine, of course, Lilah--champagne; what d’you say to
+champagne?”
+
+Lilah thought: “Just this once.” She nodded. In Florence they had red
+wine, thin and sour, if they had wine at all, wine that puckered her
+mouth, the strong, sharp wine of Dionysius. But this--a pale amber
+bubble, an eternal spring of levity and carelessness, of love and
+daring, of wit and dreaming.... She lifted the glass and a little
+light danced on her bare arm, leaped to the table-cloth, frisked and
+quivered, a drunken little light....
+
+“I remember....” Robert began. He stopped.
+
+The waiter hurried away, as if he were saying: “One moment! One little
+moment! I’ll leave you alone as soon as I can.”
+
+A perverse notion caused Lilah to say: “How is dear old Grace?”
+
+She could see the slow, inevitable flush, self-conscious, painful, the
+sudden mistiness of his eyes. Elaborately careless, he said: “She’s
+awfully well.”
+
+“Where is she?”
+
+“Now?”
+
+Robert drained his glass, set it down again. “At the Point.”
+
+“Your grandfather isn’t ill?”
+
+“No.”
+
+Lilah thought: “I see. He’s going to marry her.” And she felt a
+tightness around her heart.
+
+“Grace is awfully fond of you, Lilah.”
+
+“Is she?” Lilah smiled. “Are you going to marry her?”
+
+“Damn it all,” Robert cried. He pushed his plate away with a violent
+gesture. “No!”
+
+“Meaning you are,” Lilah said sweetly. “Meaning, it’s none of my
+business. But it is! After all, I’m your wife, my dear.”
+
+“Don’t be too modern, Lilah.” But in spite of himself, he smiled.
+Lilah couldn’t be sure. She smiled back at him while the waiter filled
+her glass again.... They were all three playing a game. What if they
+should speak what was in their minds? The waiter would probably say:
+“It’s late. I’m tired. I want to be at home with my family, reading the
+newspaper by the lamp, with my tired feet in slippers.” Robert would
+probably say: “I want you, and I want Grace, too. I don’t respect you.
+I love you and I want my freedom.” And she would say: “I love Flagg.
+But I’m afraid.” Because, it was true, she was afraid; she was at the
+mercy of her fear. She could not remember the wonderful self she had
+been a week ago, three days ago; it seemed far away, unreal, the self
+that had loved Flagg, that had promised to give seventy-five thousand
+lire to Robert, the self that had feared nothing, nothing. That self
+had fluttered away out of this warm, bright room, away from her body
+into the darkness outside and there it was waiting, mournful and alone,
+for Lilah. Which was Lilah? This, or that other?
+
+“_Salade, madame._”
+
+A plate. A deep bowl. A wooden spoon. Lettuce. String beans, very
+green. How did the French do it? And a dressing flavored faintly with
+garlic.
+
+“I’m going into my grandfather’s business,” Robert said. He mixed the
+salad thoroughly, tossing and stirring it, his face intent. “Seriously.
+I had to do something. I found that sitting in the shade wasn’t enough;
+I had to plant some trees of my own. You remember what Dave Harum said
+about a dog and his fleas....” He paused to stare at the salad. Then he
+said suddenly: “It was a good thing you left me. Good for me, I mean.”
+
+“Oh.”
+
+“I was counting on you to make something of me. It’s a damn sight more
+fun to make something of myself. A rum world, Lilah. We’re put here for
+some reason. I didn’t used to think so. Now I know! I’m not inquiring
+the reason. It’s enough to be sure that the lessons we learn aren’t
+wasted.”
+
+“_Fromage, madame?_”
+
+Lilah looked at the creamy pie-shaped wedge of Camembert.... Robert was
+reminding her that she had failed. “_Oui_,” she said to the waiter. She
+must not let him sense her humiliation. She must make him see that she,
+too, was triumphant. And the image of Flagg, walking by the train as it
+pulled out of the station, assailed her. She said: “Mmm! Good cheese!
+Try it. Delicious.”
+
+“I prefer American cheese. They make a cheese in California--I’ve
+forgotten what they call it--a rich orange color, finely flavored....”
+
+“Then you’re glad I left?”
+
+He looked up. His eyes were startled. “No. I loved you.”
+
+“Don’t you love me now?”
+
+The waiter disappeared at the word love. The verb _aimer_ ... _to love,
+I love, you love_ ... these people were _amants_, after all.
+
+Robert got up. He came around the table. Lilah said nothing, did
+nothing to stop him. He came slowly, but his intention was in his
+deliberate gesture. And Lilah thought: “This is my worst self.” A
+wave of pity engulfed her; she closed her eyes. She wanted, wanted
+everything Robert could offer her; her mind flew back to the “Villino
+Sans-Souci”; she did not see herself in Flagg’s arms, submerged in that
+deep rapture; she saw herself, alone. She waited.... But Robert did
+not touch her. With a feeling of faintness, she opened her eyes again.
+Robert was standing just there, his napkin in his hand, as if he had
+been frozen. “You didn’t mean that, Lilah.”
+
+“Sit down! The waiter--”
+
+The waiter appeared, very sorry, with downcast eyes, just as Robert
+hurriedly regained his place. This time, the talented one bore a silver
+tray full of pastries, fat chocolate ones and long, snaky green ones
+and twisted ones full of cream, and pink ones upon which a devilish
+clever pastry-cook had painted flowers and bow-knots of sugar.
+
+“You haven’t told me about your grandfather,” Lilah said, in her
+special voice, eyeing the pastries as if she hated them. “The green
+one--that one--please.”
+
+“_Oui, madame._”
+
+Robert answered that Junius was well. “Wonderful old chap! You can’t
+imagine how gratified he is that I’ve taken hold. He’d about given me
+up.”
+
+“I suppose Grace Fuller’s responsible?”
+
+Robert flushed again. He said nothing. Lilah smiled and stretched out
+her hand. “Cigarette, please. And don’t frown like that! Why shouldn’t
+you marry Grace Fuller if you want to? That’s why you’ve come to Paris,
+isn’t it? For her sake. Not for mine! One of the last things you said
+was that you’d never divorce me....”
+
+“Lilah....”
+
+At last the waiter was gone. They were alone in the room.
+
+Lilah put the cigarette between her lips and tilted her head: “Light,
+please.” And while Robert struck the match she watched him, her eyes
+enigmatic. A quiver passed over his face. His hand trembled. “Lilah.
+Don’t.”
+
+“Don’t what?”
+
+“You’re trying to get at me. God knows why.” He tossed the match away.
+“After all, we have things to say that aren’t easy to say. It’s all
+very well to pretend that what we’re doing to-night is usual--it’s
+wrong, terrible, and I’m sorry we tried it. We’re married. That’s my
+ring, isn’t it? You left another man to come here with me and make
+believe before a waiter that we’re friends. Friends! Let’s be honest.
+We’ve failed at a great undertaking. We ought to be down on our knees
+praying for a chance to make good! I’ll take my half of the blame.
+Neither of us tried. I loved you. I still love you. I thought I didn’t.
+I told Grace Fuller that I didn’t. But she’d be the first to welcome
+us, if we were to go back together.”
+
+He paused, his hands, with the fingers interlocked, pressed violently
+together. “There’s such a thing as moral insensibility.... You’ve had
+your fling. What has it proven?”
+
+Before she could answer he went on: “What does that sort of thing prove
+to any one? No one will profit by our separation, not even Grace,
+because I love you, and she’ll know it.”
+
+“Happiness--”
+
+“A chimera of childhood! I’d like to blot the word out of the
+language. You were after something for yourself--something ready-made,
+something you didn’t have to work for. What you had--me-- Well--I want
+you to come back. Try again.”
+
+“Did Grace Fuller know that you intended to invite me, after what has
+happened, to go back where I will always be on suffrance--an object of
+suspicion, perhaps of amusement?”
+
+“I don’t understand,” Robert said impatiently, “why you harp on Grace
+Fuller. The issue is between you and me.”
+
+“But if you promised her--”
+
+“I sometimes wonder whether you have forgotten that you are married to
+me--you behave as if you considered the whole thing an episode, both of
+us absolved--I haven’t promised anything.”
+
+Lilah got up. There was a divan near the fire, upholstered in shabby
+yellow sateen. Lilah’s cloak lay across the end, Robert’s overcoat,
+his muffler and gloves beside it. She thought: “How domesticated.
+Like Robert’s imagination. How can I make him understand when I don’t
+understand myself? She felt suddenly tired. The bubble of gayety had
+burst, was gone. She had a passing, a poignant regret at the inevitable
+bursting of all such pretty bubbles....
+
+“If I fail with you,” Robert was saying, “the whole past has been
+wasted. You can’t erase marriage by simply running away from it. Or,
+like the magician, by exchanging one marriage for another ... a sort of
+social legerdemain ... dangerous, because I believe once married always
+married.... I may be old-fashioned. I dare say I am making myself
+ridiculous.... These things go deeper than words. If I could make you
+see what I’ve seen....”
+
+Lilah wanted to say: “But I don’t love you.” She didn’t dare say it
+because there was something she wanted to hold to, a thread, a fragile
+link between herself and security. She recognized the ugly need of
+security; her own weakness made it imperative that she should hold
+Robert off until her own future was certain, until she had found the
+strength to admit that other self or to close that self out forever. A
+little time. If life only didn’t press you so....
+
+Robert followed; he, too, seemed to press close, although he stood
+some distance away, his hands still tightly pressed together in a
+curious attitude of supplication and misery. “You’re afraid of public
+opinion.... At the Point, you have nothing to fear. We can prove, by
+the dignity”--he hesitated--“the decency of our lives that there is
+such a thing as courage. Both of us will need it, but not because of
+criticism; we were both born into a reckless society. You can’t tell
+black from white, nowadays! And yet--we’re like ships without rudders,
+drifting, drifting in the open sea, all pretending that we’re getting
+somewhere. We call it revolt; we call it breaking chains; we call it by
+a dozen high-sounding names, ‘reality’ among them. But none of us is
+satisfied.” He suddenly pointed at her and raised his voice. “You’re
+not!”
+
+“I am,” she said. “I have love.”
+
+Robert turned away. His face was drawn. He looked old. He went back to
+the table and poured out another glass of champagne. The rattle of ice
+in the bucket, the clink of glass against glass, summoned the waiter
+who re-appeared, blinking, as if he had dozed off behind the screen.
+“_M’sieur?_” At once he began to clear the table, his sleepy look
+giving way to a half-smile, as if he were thinking of the embrace he
+had probably interrupted. But he wanted to go home. It was ten o’clock
+and his feet were tired.
+
+“Let’s go somewhere,” Robert said angrily. “We can’t talk here. And
+I’ve got to convince you--”
+
+He did not glance at the bill but paid it with the indifference to
+other people’s honesty which characterized him.
+
+“I have convictions,” he said in the cab. “I’m not the flaccid fish
+I appear to be. There was a time when I approved of men, and women,
+too, smashing down every door that kept them from experience. It was
+exciting to watch the new generation kicking convention in the face.
+It cleared things up, for a while. I foresaw a new race of straight
+thinkers, purged of fear. What you did didn’t shock me. It seemed
+necessary--”
+
+He turned to her, trying to read her face in the uneven flow of light.
+“Where’ll we go? We can’t ride around Paris all night.”
+
+“Let’s dance,” she said.
+
+“Dance?”
+
+After a hesitation, a silence she could not read, he rapped on the
+window and ordered the driver to take them to a club in the Bois. Lilah
+thought: “This will give me time.”
+
+At the club, a smart restaurant given over to a jazz orchestra and
+a dancing floor, food had taken second place. Lilah was stimulated
+by the rush of waiters, the whirl of dancers, the cascading crystal
+chandeliers, the monotonous and passionate rhythm of the music.
+Florence, the “Villino Sans-Souci” were part of a dream. She had
+dreamed of the melancholy weeks of rain, the somber, suggestive call of
+birds in the cypress groves. This was being awake. Her body came alive.
+She felt herself swaying to the provocative melody as Robert frowned at
+a card. “What’ll you have, Lilah?” “Anything!” While he ordered, she
+let her cloak slip away from her bare shoulders; instinctively, she
+fell into the attitude of fashionable unconcern. “Anything.” The rite
+of dining was lost in the need to dance. People came here to indulge
+their senses in the barbaric measures of a simple people unknown to
+them; the negroes, perspiring, hysterical, carried beyond themselves by
+their success, swayed, jerked, stamped, shouted. Their leader, holding
+a violin at arm’s length, played a melody; the voice of the instrument,
+thin, sweet and penetrating, rose above the relentless tom-toming of
+the drums, the frantic unceasing blare of horns, an accompaniment
+soulless and exciting.... In a pool of light, revolving, the dancers
+seemed beyond themselves. Other dancers, revolving, moved in the
+mirrors, silent, remote, like a company of ghosts....
+
+Robert said politely: “Will you?”
+
+They rose. He clasped her with a sort of shiver, almost a reluctance,
+and they were caught by the tide, whirled and buffeted. Lilah’s face
+was pressed against Robert’s shoulder. He noticed again the faint and
+seductive odor of sandalwood; he sensed the peculiar flexibility of
+her body--she had always seemed to be both fragile and powerful. He
+saw her eyes, wide with excitement, lifted to his face, scrutinizing
+him--did she love or hate him, or was she only trying to decide whether
+she could, after all, live with him again? “Wonderful music.” Robert’s
+clasp tightened. And he felt a deep pity, for her, for himself, for all
+these foolish, fatuous, bewildered people twirling around a polished
+floor in each other’s arms. “Yes, wonderful,” he said.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+At their table again, confronted by a chafing dish in which chicken
+and cream and mushrooms bubbled energetically, Robert remarked that he
+hadn’t any appetite. But Lilah had. “I haven’t been anywhere; I haven’t
+seen any one, or done anything, for six months.... I’m really enjoying
+myself. Am I wicked?” And she held out her plate. “I’m starved.
+Wolfish! What’s that they’re playing? We never hear anything in Italy
+except Neapolitan love songs and the ‘Merry Widow’ waltz. Jazz ...
+after all ... it’s my native music. It goes to my head.... You dance
+better than you used to, Robert....”
+
+She glanced up. Her expression changed; a look of panic flashed across
+her eyes. “People I know--”
+
+A flurry of women, slim, bare-armed, in the simple gowns of the
+period.... Aureoles of hair, short, frizzed.... Make-up.... The
+fashionable drawl of the young New Yorker....
+
+“Lilah! Robert! Of all the cool ones! Honeymooning in Paris.... What’s
+the plot? We thought you two had parted forever! Lilah, where’s the
+villain? Did you park him in Florence? What a lovely dress.... Poiret?”
+
+Chairs were brought. Three amiable and vivacious Frenchmen were
+presented to Lilah, to Robert. Bare shoulders, long white arms,
+manicured finger tips, a medley of perfumes, cigarette smoke.... “Have
+you been to--” “Have you seen--?” Talk crossed talk. Lilah, on her
+guard, but eager, eager, as if she were again drinking champagne,
+tasting the little golden bubbles of gayety. Poor Lilah! Robert pitied
+her and understood her; but more than ever he wanted her, because he
+divined, beneath the fixed and purposeful animation of her face, her
+profound confusion.
+
+The music began again after a pause no longer than a heart beat, and
+Lilah whirled away in the arms of one of the Frenchmen. Robert rose
+politely and claimed the girl at his right, a slim, arrogant young
+thing with sharp shoulder-blades and shingled hair; she had the misty,
+brushed-in eyes of an Oriental, the lips of an odalisque. “You don’t
+remember me, do you? I’m Marian Forsythe--I live near the inlet; we can
+see your house on clear days. I know your grandfather. Wonderful music,
+isn’t it? I’m over here with the Careys. Isn’t Paris awful in winter?
+We’re going to Algiers next week. I like to run away from things, don’t
+you? I get bored so easily.” She twisted a little in his arms. He felt
+her hand, sharp, nervous, against his shoulder. “I must say I think
+Lilah’s a sport. She tried it out, anyway. I suppose she liked you
+best, after all. If more people were sensible about such things....”
+
+Robert interrupted sharply: “You don’t know anything about it.”
+
+He had an hysterical desire to shake her. If men didn’t protect girls
+like this against their own ignorance, the world would be better off.
+“I’m getting to be a damned reactionary,” he thought. “It may be
+progress, it may be transition--whatever it is, I’m out of it.”
+
+He was too angry to dance, but Marian Forsythe was inexhaustible.
+“Don’t be a grouch,” she advised him sweetly. “Lilah’s perfectly happy
+with Captain Romain. Let’s waltz.”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was past three o’clock when he succeeded in getting Lilah away. The
+little group waited beneath the glass and bronze porte-cochère of the
+restaurant while a carriage-man in a white rubber overcoat pursued
+taxicabs, shrieking upon a tin whistle, vanishing and reappearing like
+an energetic ghost. A thin drizzle fell aslant the somber shadows of
+massed chestnut trees, tiny, broken splinters, glass-like, shivering
+out of a black sky. The women huddled in their wraps, their faces
+covered, their feet, in delicate slippers, exposed to the rain, to the
+sharp wind that whipped their floating chiffons about their ankles.
+The men were still fresh. Only Robert was tired, tired and childishly
+disappointed. Everything--Lilah’s eight months away from him, his rage,
+his love, his idealism, all of it was stupid, futile, because of these
+people and their casual worldliness; as if suffering and loneliness and
+pride and longing were inconsiderable, as if nothing were real but the
+things he had grown to despise. How on earth could he make it clear to
+her that there could be no satisfaction for either of them until they
+had discharged their duty.... And, suddenly, he was too tired to try....
+
+That ghost of a carriage-man came panting back with a taxicab, and
+Robert selfishly took it for himself and Lilah. The others would have
+to wait. He hated them.... Lilah leaned against him. “I’ve had such a
+good time, Bobsie. I didn’t realize how starved I’ve been.”
+
+“You forget--you haven’t told me anything about yourself.”
+
+“Must I? Now? It’s so late.” She yawned. “I’m so sleepy!”
+
+Away down the boulevard, like a pale new moon, Robert saw the Arc du
+Triomphe. An irrelevant thought came to him. Even heroism was futile.
+Great gestures. Wasted. That soldier, unknown, who was buried there,
+wouldn’t he have been better off in his orchard, his shop, his palace?
+But this had nothing to do with Lilah, with himself. He pulled himself
+together. “What do you want me to do? I’ve got to know.”
+
+“Can’t we talk to-morrow?”
+
+“One thing I promise: If you decide to come back, I’ll never question
+you. I’m not magnanimous. I realize that you would hate me if I made
+you feel that I had forgiven you.... We’ll consider the past eight
+months erased.”
+
+“Not erased! Mine!”
+
+“As you please.”
+
+They sat very stiffly, scarcely breathing, not looking at each other.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+“Telegram for you, madam.”
+
+“For me?”
+
+Lilah took the thin envelope. Yes. “Mrs. Robert Peabody.” She got into
+the elevator. Two men and a woman stood there, laughing, while the car
+soared up--one, two, three--_Troisième_!
+
+“Madame.”
+
+She did not open the telegram until she had lighted the light by the
+bed and had thrown aside her wrap. She kept assuring herself that Flagg
+had answered her wire. Some such message as: “All well.” Or: “I miss
+you.”
+
+ “Advise your immediate return. Major Flagg seriously ill.
+
+ “BACCI.”
+
+Bacci! Who on earth was Bacci? Her heart contracted, expanded again.
+The doctor. That man who had come out to the Ponte a Mensola in a hired
+cab.... She sat down, trembling. Her hands shook so that the thin paper
+envelope rattled.
+
+“Seriously ill.”
+
+Dying. “Immediate return.”
+
+She thought: “While I was dancing.”
+
+She began to undress. She tore the fragile tissue because she hated it.
+She wanted to destroy the fact, to blot out the visible evidence, strip
+naked. She heard herself sobbing.... A curious, unfamiliar sound, as if
+some one else were sobbing in another room. Her eyes were dry. She took
+her hair down and placed the pins in a neat pile. She must start at
+once; she must get to him. “Because,” she said aloud to her reflection,
+“I love him.” Now, she knew, Flagg wouldn’t believe her. If she got
+there; if she was in time--something about her would show him that she
+had forgotten, that she had betrayed herself, and he would say: “I
+never believed.” And he would go away, without her. That seemed the
+most terrible possibility of all--that at the end his eyes might shut
+her out....
+
+She glanced at her watch, wound it carefully. “I’ll bathe, dress. By
+that time it will be daylight and I can make arrangements.”
+
+But when she was dressed, her veil adjusted, everything packed, it was
+still dark. She threw the window wide open and leaned on the sill,
+conscious of a cool current of air, a dampness rising from the wet
+pavements. A single pedestrian down there crossed the street at an
+angle, wavering, as if uncertain of a destination, and she thought: “I
+am like that.” The night is so intimate. She was alone with the night.
+Paris seemed a little place, all the lives gathered under that roof
+of darkness, all the lives helpless, pathetic in sleep, their defenses
+down. “I am alone.” Not since her father died had she been so alone.
+And she was afraid, afraid of death, of what she might be going to see,
+of the way that doctor would look at her, of Flagg, struggling with his
+enemy, alone. Every one was alone. Alone and afraid. She felt suddenly
+that she could not go to Florence. She would tear up the telegram,
+pretend she hadn’t heard, and they would wire her that it was over,
+Flagg was dead....
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But even then the sky seemed to deepen, to become more dense, blacker.
+And a shaft of light sprang to the apex, opened, like a fan. Dawn.
+
+Immediately there was a stir in the city. A stir of sparrows in the
+eaves. A stir of little, skulking people in the alleys. A stir of smoke
+from innumerable chimneys.
+
+Lilah got to her feet. She was shivering. Because she saw that if she
+kept Robert off, prevaricated, perhaps promised him that she would
+return, there would be a way back, out of that other darkness, later....
+
+But Flagg was in Florence, alone. She saw him, lying on his right side,
+with his arm under his head, struggling silently, not saying a word--as
+if he and his heart crashed together, like two dark, insane men on
+horses, tilting, splintering against each other, again and again.
+
+She ought to go to Flagg, because she loved him. Why had God made her
+afraid of ugliness? Flagg was ugly because he was suffering. If she
+could only be spared! If only she didn’t have to go!
+
+She went to the telephone. “What time is it?”
+
+She had meant to ask about trains. “_Cinq heures et demie, madame._”
+
+She put the instrument down again and sat on the bed, rocking back and
+forth with her arms folded, as if she were trying to put her thoughts
+to sleep. The room was still dark. The windows were gray. A hum rose
+from the streets, a silvery clink of chains along the wet asphalt....
+She was envious of any one going anywhere.... Only not to be herself.
+
+For an instant she was in Florence; she could smell the damp plastered
+walls of the house; the odor of wet stone and moss and verbena from the
+garden; Flagg’s pipe. A pang of memory. Herself, dragging Flagg down to
+her. The feel of his hair, furry, cool.
+
+“I love him so!” she said again, aloud.
+
+But to be poor. To be back where she had started, only weaker. A woman
+who couldn’t do anything, a fool, a pretty fool.
+
+If Flagg died, he would never know that she had promised Robert....
+
+Then why not lie?
+
+Because she couldn’t.
+
+She was afraid of life itself. She wanted to hide behind pretenses,
+behind beauty, behind her own charm, behind what Robert offered her.
+But she would have to go to Florence and watch Flagg die. Something new
+and wonderful was being born in her--that other self was thrusting
+up, like a plant, like the beginnings of a great tree, through the
+frightened Lilah that crouched on the bed.
+
+There was no use in going back to the Point, to the warmth of that
+fireside, because she had never believed in it; it had never, from the
+beginning, been hers.
+
+The only thing that had ever happened to her that belonged wholly to
+her was that moment in the dark when Flagg had sighed against her
+breast and the cats had frisked over her feet. That moment was hers.
+She had made it. She had created it out of pain and longing and honesty.
+
+It was time that she stopped pretending.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+She wrote hurriedly to Robert:
+
+“MY DEAR ROBERT:
+
+ “Thank you. But I must go back to Florence. You have been very kind.
+ Later, if you want a divorce, I will do everything to help you. I am
+ leaving your grandmother’s emerald crown, the bracelet and some money
+ in the care of the hotel management, with the understanding that you
+ will call for them and identify yourself. The money I got for the
+ pearls. I was foolish and wrong. But I can’t buy them back for you.
+ I’m sorry.
+
+ “LILAH.”
+
+She addressed the envelope and sealed it. She felt very small and
+unimportant, burned out, dry; she must look, at last, definitely old.
+She went to the telephone again, and, this time, she asked about trains.
+
+The compartment was crowded. People kept popping in and out, asking
+questions, shouting, losing their heads, kissing noisily. “_Au ’voir!
+Au ’voir maman!” “Mignon!_” “Here’s your bag. And the fruit. I’ll
+put them here.” “Take care of yourself.” Anxious faces, detached,
+drifting along the platform, looking in or looking ahead, eagerly,
+as if everything counted on their getting somewhere. Here was life
+again--so terribly important and silly! Lilah sat by the window, her
+veil thrown back, staring out. She half expected to see Robert, pale,
+distraught, determined, searching for her in the crowd. “Here you are!”
+And it would be taken out of her hands. He would make her turn back; he
+would make her see that what she had intended to do was wrong. Robert
+didn’t come. An Englishman in a trench coat with shabby shoes searched
+and searched for some one. His eyes were like a dog’s and his pinched,
+brown face was puckered with longing. At last he saw whoever it was.
+“_There you are! Hallo! Just in time!_” And he leaped into one of the
+compartments with a bound.... Life was such fun for the living, for
+those who believed in it....
+
+The train was moving. A telegraph boy rushed past, shouting: “_Madame
+de Lattre!_” But no one paid any attention to him. The Englishman
+leaped down again, his face very red, his eyes afire, and snatched off
+his hat. “_Good-by! Good-by!_” Steam. A flood of sunlight. Darkness
+again.
+
+“Would madame object?”
+
+And the little Frenchman in the corner of the compartment got up,
+stepped politely but firmly over every body and closed the window.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was raining when the train drew into the Santa Maria Novella Station
+at Florence. Dusk was shutting down, blotting out the towers, as if
+snuffing lighted candles; one by one they disappeared. Lilah had been
+closed in a compartment with four soldiers, noisy, self-conscious
+_bersaglieri_ who had angled for her attention all the way down from
+Bologna. She had sat like a stone, with her eyes lowered. One of the
+soldiers had kept looking at himself in a little mirror; he combed his
+hair with a small, steel comb and smoothed his eyebrows. He wanted her
+to admire him. Whenever he said anything, his black, polished eyes
+rolled in her direction....
+
+The train seemed to disgorge its passengers; it was like a long, spiney
+dragon vomiting people. People spilled from the open doors, mingled
+on the platform, crashed together--and through it all porters bawled
+“_facchino_!” One of them snatched at Lilah’s bag, her coat, her
+umbrella, angrily, with determination, and rushed toward the cab-stand,
+shoving his way through the crowd. Lilah cried, “Don’t hurry!” But
+he paid no attention, because, if he hurried, he knew he could get
+other customers and more pennies. A row of cabbies had backed into the
+square; they snapped their whips and shrieked at Lilah as she hurried
+after the implacable porter through the rain. Everyone was conspiring
+to get her to the Ponte a Mensola ... if only there hadn’t been any
+cabs, a delay, somehow....
+
+She tipped the angry porter and the cab jerked forward, bouncing over
+the cobbles, bouncing, bouncing. The cabman’s umbrella dripped on
+Lilah’s feet. Had it been raining for five days? The rain frightened
+her; it was sullen and unkind, a purposeful torment. Puddles bubbled,
+the sidewalks were covered with tiny silver explosions and the great
+eaves poured out amber floods that gurgled in the gutters. And now it
+was dark.
+
+“Seriously ill.”
+
+Was Bacci with him? Who was with him? What should she do? She asked
+herself suddenly and sharply what she should do if she found him dying?
+And at the thought, she wanted the cabman to say that he couldn’t go
+on. She wanted some one to keep her from what she must see and do. But
+the cab jolted forward, turning corners recklessly, clattering over
+car-tracks, rolling smoothly, unexpectedly, on stretches of asphalt.
+Lilah stared out at the people and the lights, at faces caught and
+fixed in a brief immobility. She tried not to remember what was so
+precious and terrible. Yet her thoughts were unconquerable, rapacious;
+they fastened on her consciousness, and at last she sank back, defeated.
+
+Love.
+
+The word challenged her. She struck it away. She beat it back. It
+seemed to her that from the beginning she had been a prisoner, a woman
+too conscious of herself, tormented by herself, fascinated by herself,
+like that coxcomb of a _bersagliere_. If she could escape from herself,
+she might find what she craved, the freedom she must have or--But when
+you needed to know these things, you were too selfish, too happy to
+know them! When you were happy, the debt piled up and you were asked to
+pay it when you no longer cared.
+
+The rain, incessant, indifferent, slanted out of a black sky.... A
+tram, brilliantly lighted, passed with a rumble, and Lilah glimpsed
+a row of people, unconscious of her, laughing and talking. A baby
+pressed its nose against the window spangled with big, white drops,
+like quicksilver, and the baby’s nose was flattened, pressed out of
+shape ... the tram passed, and Lilah was alone again in the darkness of
+the cab. She began to listen, attentively, to the clop of the horse’s
+hoofs on the wet pavement, as if, absorbed in that rhythmic, hollow
+sound, time would stretch out, and she would never, never arrive at her
+destination....
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The cab lurched. They were on the dirt road, turning across the bridge,
+beginning the sharp climb ... a light in the window!
+
+“Hurry!” she cried out.
+
+She stood in the rain, her hands shaking, to pay the cab man. He swung
+himself down, grunting. It was a long drive out from the city on such
+a night, and his horse was tired.... He struck a match and scrutinized
+the coins Lilah gave him. What on earth was one supposed to tip;
+he looked disgusted--she gave him an extra five lire and he thanked
+her, as if he had been cheated and taken advantage of by a foreigner.
+“Good-night.”
+
+Lilah opened the gate and stumbled up the path between the cypresses.
+The great pointed trees, so old, so quiet, so superior to the brief and
+unimportant tragedies of men, shook down a heavy splattering of rain....
+
+The door opened. A strange silhouette against the light....
+
+“I have been expecting you.”
+
+“Can I see him?”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+She searched this man’s face. Behind glasses, his eyes were curious
+and tender. “I’ll take off my things. I’m wet and cold.” He seemed
+to be bowing, standing aside to let her pass. She went upstairs and
+the doctor followed, quietly, as if there were no hurry. No hurry at
+all. This struck her as ominous. But she did not dare to ask how Flagg
+was. Something prevented her from questioning the doctor, from, even,
+looking at him. At the top of the stairs she paused, stricken with
+fear. “Which--which room?”
+
+He pointed. “In there.”
+
+In his own room! She turned to her door, opened it, went in and faced
+her mirror. It seemed necessary to remove her hat, to go in to Flagg
+hatless....
+
+She powdered, rouged, touched her lips with a perfumed stick of carmine
+paste.
+
+In the hall, the doctor was waiting, his hands in his pockets.
+
+“_Signora_,” he began.
+
+Lilah threw out her hands. “No. Don’t tell me. I can’t bear any more. I
+want to see him.”
+
+She pushed him aside and went in.
+
+How tall he was. She had forgotten, in five days, how tall he was. His
+head, dark, round, rumpled, was deep in the pillow. Some one had put a
+newspaper over the light.
+
+For no reason, with a rush of feeling, she was proud to be coming back
+to him. It was all right. She was safe. She had been decent. She had
+done what he expected of her. Now, perhaps, he would let her into his
+eyes....
+
+She tiptoed. She stood over him.... Asleep.
+
+She touched his hand.
+
+He was mischievous in sleep, a satyr again, smiling....
+
+“Signora.”
+
+Suddenly she turned and ran back, away from the bed. Her legs moved
+strangely; her arms jerked. “I can’t bear it.” Yet he was beautiful,
+beautiful in death....
+
+“He died an hour ago, _Signora_. I am terribly sorry. I did
+everything--possible.”
+
+Through a burst of tears, uncontrollable, humiliating, an agony of
+tears, Lilah cried: “I’ll go back to-morrow and look at him.... Not
+now! Don’t ask me to, now! Is he dead?”
+
+The doctor nodded. “An hour ago,” he repeated.
+
+Lilah went downstairs. The doctor had been sitting in Flagg’s chair
+by the desk and a cigarette still burned in an ash-tray. He had been
+reading some of those scattered sheets of manuscript, Flagg’s last
+work. Now he stooped and gathered them up, without self-consciousness
+or apology. “A remarkable mind,” he said.
+
+Lilah huddled in a corner of the divan, dabbing at her eyes with a
+handkerchief. She shivered. Her teeth knocked together. Yet behind the
+atrocious confusion of her thoughts she was grateful that she had not
+arrived two hours sooner. Another idea fought to the surface, seemed
+to explode in her brain, to shatter her--she was alone. She had lost
+love.... And she saw herself, night after night, endless, identical
+nights, lying in her bed, her body rigid beneath the bed-covers.
+She had so little to remember and so much time to remember in--her
+experience reduced itself to that one victorious moment when Flagg had
+loved her without question--and there was no comfort in remembering....
+
+“I cannot offer my sympathy,” the doctor was saying, “in the usual
+terms. I understand so well what it means to find oneself alone, the
+physical self cheated of the comforting reality, the spiritual self
+unaccustomed.... Later, a week, a month, a year, it will be more
+difficult for you. Then, suddenly, you will find relief--in work, new
+interests, another love.”
+
+“Don’t!”
+
+He spread out his hands. “Inevitable! This man has gone. But you
+remain. You must progress. Your education, if you will permit me to
+say so, is not complete. His, I dare say, was....”
+
+He put the typewritten pages back on the desk. “Tell me about him.”
+
+He leaned forward, offering a curious, leather cigarette case. “You
+smoke?”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+She saw his hand as he held the match for her, a hand at once sensitive
+and acquisitive; there was a large ring on one of the fingers, and
+Lilah thought: “How Italian!”
+
+“You’re shivering. Give me your hands. Steady now! You mustn’t let go,
+_signora_. It’s devilish hard to pull oneself back.”
+
+“You speak English very well.”
+
+“My mother was English. But I was born in Persia and educated in
+Germany. Ah. Your pulse is better. Breath. Deep. Deeper! That’s it.
+Now, smoke? Later, I’ll get some coffee for you. I let the servant
+go. But I have made myself very much at home here.... I used to know
+your poet. Before his exile, he was an extravagant host. A charming,
+innocent fellow who enjoys his evil reputation. He is, actually,
+religious, but he is ashamed of his inclination and attempts to deceive
+us with abominable clap-trap.... You’re all right. All right.”
+
+“You’ll stay here to-night?”
+
+“Of course.”
+
+“It is very kind of you. I can’t help shivering. Something in me is
+whirring--like a wheel--”
+
+She had to try, at least. She was ashamed to shake and chatter before
+this stranger. He drew up a chair and sat before her, with his elbows
+on his knees. Then, for the first time, she looked at him. He was short
+and had ginger-colored hair and a ginger-colored beard streaked with
+gray. His face was lean; the skin was dry and tight, drawn over the
+bones so that you saw the structure, the modeling, extraordinarily
+precise and fine. His eyes were the color of moss agates, small,
+brilliant and inquisitive.
+
+“I think I can sleep,” she said abruptly.
+
+Her lids were heavy. She stopped trembling and yawned. Her head fell
+back against the cushions. She felt the doctor’s eyes, appraising her,
+but she could not meet the attack. Nothing was left of her audacity.
+This drowsiness was like a drug. And little by little consciousness
+of what had happened slipped away. She would start, gasp, reach out
+for that certainty, only to have it evade her, to have it submerged
+in great waves of sleep.... She struggled to recall what it was that
+needed remembering, what it was that was gone.... Nothing remained but
+the face of the doctor, thrust forward, still and absorbed. Suddenly it
+was jerked away and she sank down, down, into sleep ... for hours.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+She woke again. It was dark. The windows showed, black squares, save
+one, where the lamp was reflected, seeming to burn steadily and
+brightly both within the house and without. The doctor had not moved.
+“How long have I slept?”
+
+“About three minutes.”
+
+“Oh.”
+
+Then she remembered. Flagg was gone. She would never again feel his arm
+beneath her head, the tightening of the muscles in his shoulder, the
+weight of his sleeping body against hers.
+
+She sat up. And instantly the doctor got to his feet. “I’ll make
+coffee. Wait. Don’t move.”
+
+He was gone. What a strange man. What did he think of her? Whom did he
+imagine her to be? Would he question her? What would happen, now?
+
+She went to a mirror and stared at herself, surprised to discover that
+she was the identical Lilah; again, she sensed a peculiar, penetrating
+delight in the witty outlines of her nose....
+
+Strange, that in moments of tremendous meaning, meaningless things
+demanded attention. She was more aware of the things in the
+room--chairs, tables, ornaments--than of the body upstairs. The
+chairs were somehow strange and terrible at that hour--they were like
+listening people, spying people, ready to say in sharp, unnatural
+voices that it was late--turn out the lights ... let us sleep, let us
+dream in the shadows, our dark, mysterious dreams....
+
+
+
+
+XII
+
+
+The days that followed were too crowded to hurt very much. A procession
+of strangers came to the “Villino Sans-Souci”; Lilah was questioned,
+with respect, with pity, with impudence, with disdain. She discovered
+that she knew nothing of Flagg’s family, his affairs. Cables were
+dispatched to his bank and, after a delay, a dry, unemotional and
+explicit reply was received, not by Lilah, but by the Florentine bank
+which had handled the small matter of Flagg’s account. Lilah was
+visited by an Anglo-Italian who wore a white Imperial in the flamboyant
+manner of Maximilian and who gesticulated with small, self-conscious
+hands in black kid gloves. She was, he informed her, to leave Flagg in
+Italy, since there was no one to receive him in America.
+
+“Then I am not to be consulted?” she demanded with a smile that should
+have humiliated him.
+
+He shrugged his shoulders. “Those were our instructions, _signora_.”
+He rose and bowed, his eyes veiling their curiosity, his attitude a
+discreet expression of admiration. “We are also instructed to meet any
+expense--any necessary expense.”
+
+“I suppose you mean that I am to get back to America any way I can.”
+
+“I suggest that you wire your own bank, _signora_.”
+
+“Oh, yes,” she said crisply. “Of course! I was not referring to money
+but to the indifference of Mr. Flagg’s family.”
+
+Those little, initiated, trained hands made a gesture disposing of
+families. “The world is cruel, _signora_. If there is anything I can do
+for you, call upon me. I am not indifferent to distress. Permit me to
+say that I am more than sorry--”
+
+When he was gone, she wandered from room to room, from window to
+window, peering out at the black sky, at the drenched cypresses, the
+bedraggled arbor. The little cat asked to be let in. “I must find a
+home for you,” Lilah said. Because, like Lilah, the little cat loved
+soft and beautiful things, she was forever crying at closed doors,
+begging to be let in to warmth and light. But no one cared, because it
+is not enough to love soft things, beauty--
+
+The house-agent, rattling his keys, interrupted her. He had an air of
+relishing the situation and there was, at the same time, something sly
+and insinuating in his manner. He stared, immediately, at everything
+as if he expected to find that some of the furniture had been removed.
+He asked whether Lilah intended to remain at the “Villino Sans-Souci,”
+which had been leased by the “poor gentleman” for a year.
+
+Lilah realized, with a shock of positive terror, that she must leave
+the house at once.
+
+“An English gentleman is most anxious to take the house. Perhaps,
+next week--to be precise, Wednesday--the _signora_ will surrender the
+property?”
+
+Afraid of his eyes, Lilah said: “I cannot move before the first of the
+month. The rent is paid until then.”
+
+This was a mistake. The agent repeated that his English client must
+take possession at once--or find another, suitable house. It was
+not a simple matter to find tenants for houses in the country, the
+_forestieri_ preferred, as a rule, the life and gayety of the city. “As
+for me, _signora_, I would die of the melancholy in this place.”
+
+“Wednesday, then,” Lilah said. She shut him out with a weary gesture.
+
+Where on earth should she go? Now, of course, she could not ask Robert,
+or Junius, for money. She had burned her bridges.
+
+She packed Flagg’s things, vaguely intending to give them to some one
+who might need them--the farmer next door or that tall idiot boy who
+lived over the hill, the one who could imitate the birds and sat all
+day calling them, delighted by his own cleverness. Lilah could not
+kiss Flagg’s things, or caress them. Some women might have, but they
+would not have been the kind of women who love deeply. Lilah shook his
+clothes out, folded them, with a sort of frozen indifference, as if
+they had belonged to some one else. She had had her hour of bravery,
+alone with him. She had sat with death. No one, not even David Brenner,
+could call her a coward now.... But at the end, Flagg’s eyes shut her
+out. He had gone away without her, still cherishing his secrets....
+Selfish.... The word rang in her ears.
+
+She got up, went quickly downstairs and to his desk where that little
+heap of manuscript lay untouched. She began to read eagerly, hearing
+his voice in every word.... How long would it be before she would
+forget his voice? How long must she suffer like this?
+
+She could not understand what he had written.... No wonder that he had
+never confided in her. He had either gone infinitely further along the
+paths she feared and shrank from, or else he had been deluded, blinded
+by glimpses of the infinite. His phrases had no meaning for her. How
+far must she go, she wondered, before she could judge, appraise him?
+She would know, some day, whether he had been selfish, or beyond the
+proscribed, essential personality of the unenlightened being--Robert,
+Junius, herself.
+
+She had deceived him, in the beginning; he had thought that he saw
+in her what, eventually, he found she did not have. He had little
+by little uncovered her artifice, her ignorance, her evasions, her
+frivolity, her fear, until in the end, he clasped, perhaps with shame,
+a naked little body.... That was why, in the end, he smiled at her and
+shut her out....
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Hearing a carriage, she thrust the papers under a blotter, out of
+sight, as if they had been a proclamation of her failure. The servant
+came in, announcing the _contessa_.
+
+“_Cara mia_, I have just heard.”
+
+She offered both her hands to Lilah. She was dressed in the extreme of
+fashion, and Lilah thought: “She must have made a match.”
+
+The _contessa’s_ sharp, initiated eyes studied Lilah’s face through
+a lorgnon. She wore, always, too many ornaments, chains, bracelets,
+medallions and pins; her flat breast was hung with brilliants. “My poor
+child. I hear that you were in Paris. What a terrible thing. What will
+you do? Go back to your husband?”
+
+“No.”
+
+“Perhaps you will remarry.”
+
+“My dear _contessa_,” Lilah said impatiently, “I am not yet divorced.
+And I loved the man who is dead.”
+
+“But you’ll have to do something with your life. You can’t live here,
+alone, in this treasure-house of sweet memories! You’ll have to do
+something! You’re young. I don’t believe in women sitting desolate
+among the ruins, willfully mourning the irrevocable. Life is so
+terribly short and cruel, so--so avaricious. I have always believed
+in snapping my fingers in the face of destiny. You couldn’t imagine
+the number of times I’ve been knocked down. I always get up again. I’m
+clever. A woman alone has to be. You’ve got to understand men. If I
+were beautiful, with my knowledge of men, I could achieve anything....
+As it is--sixty, and a bag of bones--I manage--” Her voice trailed off.
+A look of weariness and fright crossed her eyes. “I manage. Now, if I
+were you--”
+
+“I haven’t a cent,” Lilah cried suddenly. “I don’t know what to do. Can
+you lend me a few hundred dollars?”
+
+The _contessa_ closed her lorgnon with a snap. Her expression became
+sly, sweet, and guarded. She stared down at her large, awkward
+hands, at the glitter of small, inexpensive but ostentatious rings
+which ornamented her fingers. She shook her head. “Impossible. Just
+at the moment, I am what we Americans call flush. But you never can
+tell.... You never can tell! It’s a precarious world. And the Italians
+aren’t gifted with a sense of gratitude. I did wonderful things for a
+_borghese_, a store-keeper, who wanted to enlarge his establishment....”
+
+She broke off. “You might live with me for a while. I would enjoy your
+companionship. Your presence would brighten my _salon_. I am quite in
+earnest. I would not expect compensation. Gayety. Vivacity. Elegance.
+And in return the advantage of my large acquaintance....”
+
+“Thank you,” Lilah said. “No.”
+
+She shivered. “No. You are very kind. But I am going back to America.”
+
+She stood, and the _contessa_, her chains and bangles clinking
+together, took her leave. “You are very foolish,” she said at the
+door. “Perhaps you will reconsider. You are intelligent enough to know
+that I am respectable. If you are afraid of facts....” She got into
+her carriage, crossed one leg over the other, displaying an elaborate
+slipper, and waved. “_Au ’voir!_”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Lilah thought: “Who knows? Some day.”
+
+She sat before the fire, smoking and stroking the cat, that kept up
+a remote humming, a sort of tea-kettle purring. She thought of the
+simple existence of a cat. Either you were hungry and hunted, or you
+weren’t, and purred, with no thought of the next day or the next. If
+she were to leave the little black cat to the mercy of the agent, the
+birds in the cypress groves would have to watch out--a lean, famished
+little cat with lashing tail would creep through the under-brush,
+stalking.... “I’ll give you to the doctor,” Lilah said aloud. The
+little cat blinked and fell asleep.
+
+Life wasn’t so simple for a woman whose only talent was knowing how
+to dress well. To live. Just to live, and not be hungry! Suppose she
+were to accept the _contessa’s_ invitation. She knew quite well what
+it meant--a married woman, in Italy--even a divorcee would find it
+almost impossible to remarry. She would become the mistress of one of
+the _contessa’s_ friends, for a compensation. He would, of necessity,
+be a wealthy _borghese_, since men of title were seeking dowries,
+not adventures. She let the projected image of herself pass across
+her imagination, an image of Lilah accentuated, for the moment more
+brilliant, her mystery understored, her charm deepened by necessity to
+a certain vulgarity--an actress pretending to be a lady.... She would
+seek satisfaction in the possession of concrete adornments, tributes
+to her first, untarnished success. She might, even, take her situation
+seriously....
+
+She threw her cigarette into the fire with a gesture that was both
+violent and contemptuous. First her father, now Flagg, had left her to
+shift for herself. Her mouth drooped. Her eyes, angry, dull with pain,
+brooded. “I can’t bear this. What, in God’s name, am I going to do?”
+
+It was not yet dark. Twilight was gathering, and the ugly, incongruous
+objects in the room retreated into shadow. She thought of the
+Thirty-eighth Street house, Shawhan’s flamboyant ladies, the dull
+gold of shaded lights, the discreet, remote murmur of traffic in that
+brazen, that fearless, that challenging city.... She went to the
+window. The valley, Florence, was dark beneath a dark sky; there were
+no lights; it might have been a city forgotten and deserted, a place
+given over to the ghosts of a reckless, fearless, challenging yesterday.
+
+“I must go back,” she thought.
+
+She straightened herself, as if she were facing an antagonist. Across
+the valley, beneath that dark sky, Flagg was alone with the secret
+he had withheld from her. It seemed to Lilah that she must, somehow,
+get to him, hear his voice, listen again to the beating of his heart,
+caress his hair. But there was something she must do first. She must
+bring him the Lilah he wanted.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Doctor Bacci lived across the river in an old house, narrow, tall,
+toppling, in the Via dei Bardi. There was a garden at the rear, where,
+he assured her, the little black cat and her kitten would be free to
+caper or to bask in the sun. He opened the hat-box Lilah had brought
+from the Ponte a Mensola, from which emerged a continuous scratching
+and mewing. Damp and disheveled, the two cats jumped out and began
+at once to investigate, under tables, behind doors, into cupboards,
+everywhere.
+
+“You’re sure you don’t mind?”
+
+The doctor smiled. “I am, on the contrary, flattered.”
+
+He touched a bell and a man servant came in. The doctor said in
+Italian: “These are my two children. The little, black female is called
+Simonetta. The other, Moro. Will you ask Tata to feed them?”
+
+“_Si, signore._”
+
+He turned to find Lilah in tears. “Now, there is nothing,” she said.
+
+“You have forgotten the future.”
+
+With a flash of scorn, she answered: “What cold comfort!”
+
+“I have nothing better to offer.” The doctor looked away from her,
+through the French door to the patch of garden. Lilah wondered whether
+pity embarrassed him. “What are you going to do?” he asked.
+
+She told him, at once, her situation. “There is no one else I can go
+to. I’m alone. I don’t want my husband or his grandfather to know
+anything about me. I am afraid that if I should see them I might
+weaken. I might go back. I have told you enough about myself to make it
+plain to you that if I should go back it would be--”
+
+“Unthinkable,” the doctor interrupted.
+
+He rose politely. “There are a few patients--When I have seen them, I
+will join you in the garden.”
+
+He opened the door and Lilah passed him, conscious of his glance, both
+curious and eager. Before the door closed again, he watched her cross
+the garden and seat herself on a stone bench beneath the polished
+foliage of a camelia tree. There, in that square pool of green, at the
+bottom of a well formed by the walls of houses, beneath another square
+of cloudless sky, Lilah felt a pervading loneliness. An emotional
+courage had carried her so far. Could she go farther? Everything,
+literally everything, depended on this man. If he should open the door
+and come toward her with a certain expression, she would know that she
+was to be forever the victim of her negative philosophy; her vision
+could not outlast the attack of a calculated and intelligent cynicism.
+Her balance was too precarious. If he came toward her with another
+expression--and she could tell, when he had no more than opened the
+door--she would be forever under obligation to her new self. There
+could be no backsliding.
+
+She relaxed suddenly. The sunlight, after so many weeks of rain, had
+about it an almost personal warmth; it lay across her hands, her cheek,
+her shoulders. The walls dripped moisture and a shallow fountain kept
+up a thin tinkle as a jet rose and fell. A door opened, some one said
+“_Via!_” and the two cats scampered out, their tails very stiff. They
+sat down in a patch of sunlight and began to lick themselves, first
+their haunches, then their stomachs, and at last their heads, over
+and over with their paws. Finished, one of them fell asleep, his paws
+tucked under so that he was heart-shaped. The other, Simonetta,
+explored the garden, daintily, stepping over everything lightly, her
+tail twitching....
+
+“She has forgotten him already,” Lilah thought. And she remembered
+Flagg’s fingers caressing the black fur.... Her own hair.... A wild
+sweetness possessed her. She closed her eyes, abandoned to it. It
+flowed over her like light, this remembering. It was bitter and
+wonderful and exquisite. If she could remember like this, she would
+never be altogether alone; she could summon the recollection of his
+touch....
+
+The sensation passed. She was cold. She opened her eyes to the bright
+immobility of the garden.
+
+The French doors of the doctor’s office opened. He came toward her
+quickly, but she did not look at his face.
+
+He said without preface: “I will see that you get back to New York
+and that you are provided for until you can find something to do.
+Florence isn’t the place for you. Here you would never reach the final
+step--purification. It is too old, too settled a beauty. You need the
+struggle America offers--competition, enthusiasm. I could show you an
+Italy you don’t dream of, but it is mine, not yours! You would never
+understand it and, in the end, it would destroy you, since you are
+weakened by perfection. You will have to cut your way out of ugliness.”
+He paused. Then in a different, casual voice he said: “Simonetta has
+come to stay. She is asleep on the kitchen step.” And he called:
+“_Vieni! Gattinino!_”
+
+Lilah returned to New York. It was Spring of the year. She mingled in
+the restless stream flowing up one side of the Avenue, down the other,
+broken by cross-currents, flowing on again, resistlessly, to no purpose.
+
+The doctor’s generosity had been limited by his resources; he was not,
+in the American sense, well-to-do. When Lilah counted her pennies and
+considered her debt, she realized that he had spoken the truth; she
+must cut her way out of ugliness. Poverty in a cottage might be, at
+least, picturesque, immaterial; in New York it was ponderable, a sordid
+weight of petty obstacles; so much for so much and never quite enough.
+
+Lilah established herself in a room not far from Astor Place.
+
+New York was a desert. She was alone in a crowded wilderness. She
+was shabby, in debt and desperate. But if Robert had reappeared and
+had asked her to return to the Thirty-eighth Street house, to the
+sumptuous, familiar extravagances of her life there, she would have
+lacked the courage to accept.
+
+She had a new thirst for power, a new eagerness to escape. She wanted
+the power that comes with personal success. She wanted to escape from
+the curse of materialism. She had lived in a sham world; the shabby,
+dark room, the dingy window-panes, the worn carpet were reality.
+
+Lilah’s daily search for work took her through streets where there
+was not even a remote chance of being recognized by old friends; she
+threaded the crowded mazes of commerce, anonymous and frightened.
+
+It did not occur to her to go back to the fashionable couturier in the
+’Fifties who had “built” her trousseau. She remembered his first curt
+dismissal, the card tossed to her across his desk. “Learn to put hats
+together; then, perhaps, you can design them.”
+
+She avoided those up-town streets given over to fashionable shops and
+hotels, establishments haunted by women of her acquaintance whose whims
+carried them from one dressmaker to another, from one antiquarian to
+another. She wanted to lose herself, to be immersed in an unfamiliar
+atmosphere, to be alone with this strange, new Lilah. Now that Flagg
+was dead, he was more than ever real. He had never been so insistently
+near her, more insistently a part of her. But their life together had
+lost all reality. It seemed, now, to have happened in a half-forgotten
+dream. She had dreamed and had wakened to the commonplace business of
+living. The actual became confused with the vision; she experienced a
+new, strong sense of distaste, almost fear, at the proximity of people
+who might break the comforting nostalgia.
+
+She saw no one but David Brenner. The young Jew fitted her mood. He was
+not, now, in love with her but with some scheme of his own. He called
+her his “little sardine” but he did not accuse her of being a humbug.
+
+She lunched with him at the identical restaurant of their last meeting,
+and Lilah traced with her finger recent signatures scratched in the
+pine table by unknowns craving an easy notoriety.
+
+David Brenner’s talk was of people, things, she knew nothing about.
+A dozen personalities had flashed across the American intellectual
+firmament trailing sparks and shedding inhibitions--rockets, most of
+them, that shot up with a tremendous dazzle and were destined soon
+to snuff out, to zig-zag to earth. David Brenner spoke of them with
+immense seriousness. He was like most Americans, she decided, in his
+facile enthusiasms, his sudden, scornful shifts of opinion.
+
+“I’m broke, David,” she said.
+
+He did not take her seriously. He knew nothing about her. And behind
+his bantering admiration there was always distrust. When she told him
+that she could not find work, he shrugged his shoulders. “You’ll never
+get the sort of job you’re looking for, Lilah. Try Fifth Avenue and
+your own particular brand of bluff.”
+
+There it was again. Her own particular brand of bluff.
+
+It was lonely, living by herself. She left David Brenner and went back
+to the room just off Astor Place. Day after day at five o’clock she
+went there because there was nowhere else to go. She had lost her sense
+of the pageantry of the streets and of her part in it. No one turned
+to look at her, because she no longer had the assurance, the air of
+victory, which attracts attention.
+
+She took David Brenner’s advice. After all, what did it matter if
+Robert’s friends should happen to see her? She had been stupid.
+She was not the type of woman they wanted in East Side shirtwaist
+factories. Over and over again she had failed because she had had no
+“experience,” that vague attribute of anemic, gum-chewing, bobbed girls
+who always “got the job” Lilah failed to get. Her manner, her charm
+counted for nothing. She discovered that she was too old to serve the
+necessary apprenticeship. Girls of fifteen were doing, efficiently,
+what she could not do. Others, thousands of them, were trained, ready
+to take the succeeding steps toward the few high-salaried positions
+available to women in business. At eight o’clock, at five o’clock, the
+streets were choked with women, all of them initiated--
+
+Lilah sat before her mirror and took stock of herself.
+
+“Twenty-nine,” she said aloud.
+
+In the fashionable world she had left, twenty-nine was at the beginning
+of experience. At thirty, a woman tried her wings; if she were clever
+and ambitious, it was the age of marital re-adjustment, of social
+expansion, of thrilling experiment, leadership. But to be a lonely
+little nobody at thirty! To climb endless iron stairs to innumerable
+glazed doors marked: _Private_. To answer advertisements a day too
+late. To be told to leave her name and address, to come again, to
+telephone, to write. To thread the crowded streets, pretending
+eagerness. To try and fail....
+
+It would be easier to write Robert something evasive, something
+pathetic ... she could always touch his heart ... and, to-morrow, she
+would be at the Point, laughing with Junius, everything forgotten....
+
+She actually went to the table and took up a pen, dipping it several
+times in the ink. She wrote: _March 30_. But she could not write: _Dear
+Robert_. Could not. The letters would not go down.
+
+She put her head on the paper and cried. She cried until she fell
+asleep. She was very tired and she was beginning to be hungry. The
+doctor’s loan would not carry her another week and she could not ask
+him for more. It was enough that he was caring for Simonetta and
+Moro.... It was enough that he had seen Flagg die....
+
+In the morning she went up town. Someone, very optimistic, had set out
+English daisies in window boxes. It was warm on the sunny side of the
+street. And what shops! What clothes! Lilah, drunk, paused to stare
+at a chinchilla wrap, a Leghorn hat, a pair of brocaded sandals, a
+fan made of pheasants’ feathers set in onyx sticks.... She felt the
+old hunger for possession. She shook her head and straightened her
+shoulders. She groped for her dim, new faith, what it was that drove
+her on, why it was that she must win this obscure, personal game....
+
+She went into the employee’s entrance of a department store. A
+doorman, who was sitting on a stool, directed her to the office of
+“Miss Craig--she sees everybody.” Miss Craig was young, and a lady.
+From behind spectacles with tortoise-shell rims her eyes investigated
+Lilah’s unmistakable elegance. Maurice’s black gown was a miracle of
+simplicity; it had outlasted two seasons. Miss Craig wrote something
+on a pad. Her expression was purposefully enigmatic, but the corners
+of her mouth twitched. “There isn’t much chance just at present....
+I could try you in the cotton good’s department. It’s quite hard.
+You’d have to learn the stock. The material isn’t heavy, but the bolts
+are--it means lifting all day and standing on your feet. Our employees
+are expected to go to school in the beginning. We have to be sure that
+they are reasonably good mathematicians--honest--intelligent--” She
+paused, flushing.
+
+“Anything,” Lilah said. “I’ll do anything. I’m at the end.”
+
+After a moment, Miss Craig said: “I’m terribly sorry. I guessed as
+much. Would twenty-five dollars a week help any? I can’t offer you
+more. For a novice, you know--”
+
+“Yes. Yes. Anything.”
+
+Lilah went to school. Fractions terrified her. Graduated, she pasted
+labels, and, for a week, wrote undecipherable, meaningless numbers and
+letters on pasteboard tickets. She did not see Miss Craig again. She
+learned of the men “higher up”; the floor-walkers, department managers,
+buyers and sales managers who dominated this world of workers. She
+encountered the “politics” of a big store. She heard gossip, the
+bitter, querulous backbiting of tired women.
+
+The day came when, with a sense of dread and excitement, she was put
+“on the floor.” All day she lifted heavy rolls of gingham, muslin,
+cotton, crêpe, twisted them, measured them, rolled them up again.
+Pink. Yellow. Hideous checks and nauseating plaids. Pretty, crisp
+organdies, like the starched skirts of little girls at a picnic....
+
+All day she was questioned, bullied, scolded. She passed close to
+the other clerks, brushed them with her own body and yet never saw
+them. This was not Lilah. This was a common, clever, indifferent girl
+who was rolling and unrolling cotton goods. “How many yards, madam?”
+That was not Lilah’s voice; it was too high and sharp; the accent too
+clipped.... Once she thrust her pencil through her hair, and something
+apart from Lilah laughed. Junius had said that she was an actress....
+“Two sixty-four. At one thirty-two a yard. Anything else?”
+
+A young girl with a broad face and gray eyes said: “Say, you can’t wear
+that dress. Mr. Mansfield will get after you. It has to be plain black,
+and no frills.”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Twenty-five a week was not enough. Lilah left the room near Astor Place
+and moved to Tenth Street. An old house, the house of a merchant of the
+’Eighties, had resisted the tide of factories and sweatshops. It stood,
+peeling, cracked and damp, between two towering buildings occupied by
+fur manufacturers and printers. A smell of hides dominated, indoors
+and out of doors. Packing cases littered the sidewalks and trucks
+stood wheel to wheel for blocks. Spring, a hint of sunlight, brought
+out an army of workers. Before the aquiline façade of the old house a
+polyglot crowd lock-stepped, making wide gestures and speaking the dim
+languages of southeastern Europe. At night, the street was deserted.
+
+Lilah’s room, three flights up, faced a courtyard which must have been,
+in the old days, a formal garden. Now, in a litter of boxes, cans and
+barrels, a lilac tree fought to live. Lilah recalled the cypresses of
+Vincigliata.
+
+She had lost the last vestiges of her hard brightness, her security.
+
+She lunched every day with the young girl who had warned her not to
+wear the Maurice dress, that conspicuous miracle of simplicity. And
+painstakingly, as if everything depended on it, Lilah acquired from
+this girl a new standard of judgment based on the unpalatable facts
+of life. She was surprised at her own flexibility. But something
+unalterable, fixed, in her nature demanded achievement, justification.
+There would be, must be, a way out....
+
+Summer was stifling; the city seemed closed beneath a dome of steel,
+its reverberations intensified, the air was thick and hot.
+
+In the store, a few limp and wilted shoppers wandered aimlessly
+about, but there was so little business that, it was rumored, some of
+the sales force would be dropped. Lilah knew the daily panic which
+comes of uncertainty. Her record was not good; she had never reached
+the average sales required to justify her presence in the shop, her
+salary, which was, after all, percentage on an investment. The other
+clerks were sharper; they had the tenacity of women born in poverty.
+Her instinctive mental attitudes, beyond their comprehension, made
+competition, playing the game on their terms, impossible.
+
+She was not surprised when Miss Craig sent for her.
+
+“I’m sorry. We’re letting fifty people go. There’s no business.”
+
+“And I’m one of the fifty?”
+
+“Yes.” Miss Craig looked away, as if Lilah’s expression hurt her. “It
+isn’t _me_, Mrs. Peabody. _I_ don’t decide these things. I’m told that
+fifty must go. I look through the averages--”
+
+“Like the massacre at Dinard,” Lilah said. She felt cold and stiff and
+her fingers tingled.
+
+“Don’t you know any one--” Miss Craig suggested.
+
+Lilah shook her head. “Don’t worry about me. I’ll manage.”
+
+“I’m _sure_ you will.” Miss Craig was evidently relieved. She said
+brightly: “Why not try the uptown shops? You don’t belong here. I’ll
+give you a letter to ‘Emilie.’ He’s Irish. He’ll like you.”
+
+“You are very kind.”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Lilah knew, now, that there were two phases of life--life with illusion
+and life without it. To exist, to reconcile living with life, something
+must take the place of the lost beliefs. There must be faith in the
+abstract promise, the idea, withheld, mysterious and penetrating, of
+immortality.... She did what she always did, in moments of questioning.
+Facing herself in a mirror she thought: “Flagg would have told me
+this, only I wouldn’t have understood. I wasn’t ready.”
+
+She was conscious, too, of an apathy that was new to her, an
+indifference, a shadow of the lassitude which comes with a surrender
+of personality. She shrugged the feeling away. She must live. She must
+take, while there was still time, the advantage offered by her youth,
+her charm. “Humbug! Humbug!” she said to her reflection.
+
+She glanced at Miss Craig’s letter addressed to the firm of “Emilie.”
+“Dear Reilly: Mrs. Peabody is the rustle of silk in our cotton goods
+department. Have a heart. Edna.”
+
+Lilah smiled. This letter was so sharp and bright and cold, so
+cocksure. It might mean everything or nothing. She wondered how any
+one--a woman--could scratch off a letter like that and give it to
+another woman who was desperate and friendless. “Have a heart!”
+
+She found “Emilie” on Park Avenue. A small, ornate, Venetian house with
+grilled windows and a loggia beneath a tiled roof had been converted
+into an “establishment.” A man in livery opened the heavy door and
+scrutinized the letter. “Mr. Reilly’s busy. Come Wednesday at four
+o’clock.”
+
+Lilah pushed her way in. “I’ll wait. I’ve got to see him. Tell him the
+letter is from Miss Craig. He’ll see me.”
+
+The man hesitated, turning the letter over and over between
+cotton-gloved fingers. “I’m sorry, but Mr. Reilly gave particular
+orders--”
+
+Lilah glanced beyond him. A thin, spry man in a cutaway coat was
+running down a flight of carpeted stairs, yards of purple chiffon
+hanging across his arm and trailing behind him like the robes of a
+Pharaoh. Lilah’s heart contracted. She was amazed to hear herself
+saying: “Oh, Mr. Reilly!” in a loud, confident voice. Inwardly she
+quaked. She had never done such a thing. She had no idea whether or not
+this was the dressmaker.
+
+He bounded toward her, gathering up the chiffon, all the time staring
+at her as if he intended to take a bite out of her. He looked like a
+very angry fox-terrier.
+
+“Mr. Reilly--”
+
+“Oh, God.”
+
+He tripped over the chiffon and threw it on the ground. He snatched at
+the letter, read it, showed his teeth and almost growled. “Can’t you
+wait? I’m busy. No. Come upstairs. I’ll let you help. Bring this stuff,
+Fred.”
+
+While they mounted the stairs, Reilly running just ahead, his patent
+shoes and white gaiters twinkling, he carried on an irritable
+monologue. “Everyone’s sick. Mrs. Mason went to Lake George this
+morning. I’m short-handed. Twenty-five models came on the _Olympic_
+yesterday and they’ve got to be photographed. If you can wear hats you
+can go over to the studio with Duncan and he’ll get the collection.”
+
+“I’m not a model,” Lilah interrupted.
+
+He turned sharply and surveyed her. She felt that he could see more
+than it was decent for any stranger to see--he could see her crouching
+within herself, afraid of hunger. “We’ll try.” He kicked open a door
+and she followed him into a room paneled from floor to ceiling with
+mirrors. She encountered herself, little, with scared eyes, profile,
+three-quarters, her back turned, face to face. She raised her hand and
+a dozen images of herself all raised their hands in a sort of salute.
+
+The floor was littered with packing cases from which spilled tissue
+paper and hats. “We’ll try,” Reilly repeated. He swooped down, growled,
+came up with a bonnet. Lilah understood that she was to remove her
+own hat and assume this fashionable coal-scuttle, this modern, French
+adaptation of a mode seventy-five years old. “My dress is wrong,” she
+said. The challenge excited her. She felt, suddenly, re-animated,
+alive, after a period of stillness.
+
+Reilly said: “Never mind. You have a charming head.”
+
+She bent her head quickly and looked up at herself.
+
+“Very good. Now, this one.” He swooped again. Lilah had never seen such
+a flexible human being; he seemed not to have any bones. “Don’t wear it
+too far forward. These hats need eyes.... Too violent for you. You’re
+pale....” He made a vague gesture. “Paisley. Amber. Blonde lace. Pink
+net and camelias.... _Ah!_” He emerged from a heap of tissue-paper with
+a small _cloche_. “Try this.”
+
+A dozen Lilahs adjusted the expensive trifle of straw, a hat
+magnificently disdainful, unornamented, copyrighted by an astute and
+talented milliner.
+
+“I’ll call Duncan.”
+
+Reilly disappeared and Lilah was left alone with the manifold
+reflection of herself.
+
+Well, it was over, now. She had known from the beginning that she could
+not escape--
+
+Reilly returned with a stout, breathless man in an alpaca coat who wore
+a straw hat pushed back.
+
+After a brief inspection, wholly impersonal, he said: “Too blonde.
+She’d photygraph like a white mouse.”
+
+Reilly waved him out again. The sense, the implication of the
+photographer’s remark was clear. Lilah removed the _cloche_ and tossed
+it aside. She groped for her own hat. “Don’t go,” Reilly interrupted
+sharply. “Wait. You can take Katherine’s place--”
+
+He beckoned to her.
+
+The front of the house, from basement to loggia, was given over to
+salesrooms, luxurious, miniature shops designed to attract and hold
+devotees at the shrine of that elusive deity, the mode. Reilly was an
+astute priest. He had capitalized his serious interest in women; he
+was unaware of his own incongruity. Sharp, alert, inexhaustible, he
+worshipped women and exacted payment from them--he “burned incense and
+passed the plate” he told Lilah. Something effeminate in his gesture,
+the use of his hands, was contradicted by the shrewdness of his eyes.
+
+He preceded Lilah into a room furnished in the Venetian manner, dimly
+lighted, opening upon the loggia. Through the delicate, turned columns,
+a prismatic confusion of vertical stone shafts picketed the smoky
+sky--the city. A girl rose from a bench, approached with the languid
+gait of the trained _mannequin_. “Duncan wants you. This is Mrs.
+Peabody. She’ll take your place.”
+
+Reilly turned. “There’s no business at this time of year. But if any
+one should come in, sell! The hats are in these cases. Use your own
+judgment and get as much as you can for them. Nothing under thirty-five
+dollars. Poor models, more. Good models, less. That’s excellent
+psychology. A woman who pays fifty dollars for an ugly hat will wear it
+to spite the devil, and she’ll like it, in spite of herself. A woman
+who gets a beautiful hat for thirty-five dollars will advertise it--and
+us!”
+
+He sat down, clasped his knees and asked abruptly: “Who are you? Not
+Mrs. Robert Peabody?”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“Don’t tell any one! Call yourself Mrs. Isaac Peabody--anything! If
+you stay here, you are not likely to meet your friends. I cater to
+actresses, rich middle-westerners and fashionable demi-mondaines.
+They’ll like your looks and your manners. Women are always fascinated
+by the unattainable.”
+
+“Thank you.”
+
+“We’ll say thirty to start with. If you make good, I’ll give you this
+department, at seventy-five. Katherine is a beautiful bonehead....”
+
+He leaped up. “I’ll send a stock-girl. For God’s sake don’t ask any
+questions. Use your common sense and sell hats.”
+
+He stepped forward and with no softening of his expression, touched her
+hair. “That’s a good girl.”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Lilah discovered before long that Reilly was withholding the reward,
+the promise of that first day. Summer melted into the stifling heat of
+September and beneath a metallic, dark blue sky the city shimmered,
+quivered as if licked by the minute flames of an infernal fire. “My
+God, it’s hot,” the stately Katherine remarked. She stood by the open
+window, in silhouette, her attitude reminiscent of Francesca, the
+disdainful melancholy of Duse. “My God, it’s hot. Why don’t Reilly
+close on Saturday?”
+
+“I don’t know.”
+
+“I do. He might lose a dollar.”
+
+Lilah had changed her opinion of Reilly; he paid very little attention
+to her; she had never again had to endure that brief, impersonal
+caress. He had called her, without preface of any sort: “Lilah.” And he
+had left her to her own devices.
+
+She came to the conclusion that Reilly was either a fraud or an artist.
+The room in which he received his clients had only one window and three
+doors, one leading into the workroom, one into his bath and the other
+into the “Salotto d’Oro.” His desk bore, in addition to an alabaster
+lamp, stacked copies of _La Vie Parisienne_: a copy, in French of _Le
+Mariage de Loti_; a box made of lacquered leather heavily embossed;
+and a small colored bust in terra-cotta that at first glance might
+have been Florentine but was, actually, Egyptian. Behind him, in an
+angle of the wall, a secretary of inlaid wood towered almost to the
+ceiling. There were three Venetian chairs, ornate and faded. And hung
+together above a small cabinet, signed photographs of Ibanez, Poiret,
+Chaliapin and Nora Bayes.
+
+Lilah found that Reilly was a man of violent enthusiasms. His interest
+in her had been immediate, sharp; he had, perhaps, been studying her.
+There was a certain zest in competing for his attention, since he
+had indicated in the beginning, a definite award. Lilah held aloof
+from the other women of the establishment, because Reilly had warned
+her that she could expect jealousy, and that she must avoid conflict
+if she expected to advance. Her ambition was trivial. But faith in
+herself, her potentiality, returned slowly. She was humble and, in her
+recollection of Flagg, disciplined. As the actuality of that experience
+receded, its meaning became more clear.
+
+Katherine, stretching her long arms above her head, yawned. “I could
+stand the present if it wasn’t for the future,” she said. “Waiting’s
+hell when nothing happens.”
+
+She caught herself as the mirror-paneled door of the elevator slid
+back and two women stepped into the room. “_B’ jour, mesdames_,” she
+murmured; her body undulated; she swam toward them.
+
+Lilah’s expression of polite concern deepened into surprise, dismay.
+She recognized Grace Whiteside, fat, over-ornamented, placid in the
+secure possession of family and position, and, behind her, Miss Fuller,
+as always, in gray with a little pan-cake hat made of leaves.
+
+Lilah held up her hand to ward off their recognition. Grace Whiteside
+came to a full stop; she seemed to spread, to puff out, like an angry
+turkey.
+
+“Don’t,” Lilah said faintly. She turned and ran out of the room.
+
+She waited, leaning against the closed door. She heard a murmur of
+voices, Katherine’s suave and insinuating: “Very _chic, madame_. Very
+new. Reboux. Just try this one, _madame_.”
+
+Presently they were gone. The elevator came up; the door rattled; it
+descended again, making a hollow, reverberating sound in the wall.
+
+Lilah wondered at her own fear; it was not a moral cowardice, of that
+she was certain; she was not ashamed. She had a different sense of
+responsibility toward herself and the opinion people had of her. She
+was unwilling to face Miss Whiteside and Grace Fuller because she had
+not, as far as they could see, progressed; the change that had taken
+place within her was beyond their comprehension. The new self had
+always been there, dormant; but it had been disclosed by Flagg’s death,
+by the questioning which had followed.
+
+Katherine emerged from the “Salotto d’Oro” suddenly. Her expression was
+sly and gratified, as if she had caught Lilah in an indiscretion. She
+passed, without a word, going toward Reilly’s office, the black satin
+drapery of her skirt slipping over the carpet like a smooth serpent.
+
+Lilah went back to the salesroom. Grace Whiteside had been trying on
+bonnets, Reilly’s rare confections of lace and spangles designed for
+grandmothers of the stage. It had been, apparently, a perfunctory
+inspection.
+
+As Lilah put the hats back in their place, she pictured Miss Whiteside
+rushing to the nearest telegraph office to wire Junius Peabody....
+Grace Fuller would probably try to prevent what, in the end, would mean
+her own happiness. But nothing could turn aside the fanatical thrusts
+of the outraged spinster; she would plant her vengeance sooner or
+later. Now, Lilah must let herself be divorced; an eventuality which
+would deprive her of her position with Reilly, since the inevitable
+scandal would affect her usefulness. Reilly was beginning to cast in
+social waters, and he was baiting his hook cautiously. He was shrewd
+but he was not sophisticated. His knowledge of society had been derived
+at second hand. Into his vocabulary the word “form” had appeared. He
+had subjugated the theatrical world and now, longing for other, more
+difficult attainment, he was angling for what he termed, in a whisper,
+“Newport and Bar Harbor....”
+
+Lilah’s mind went off at a tangent; she caught herself wondering
+whether Grace Fuller had been chaperoning Robert’s aunt through another
+attack of gallstones, or whether--
+
+Reilly came in, shutting the door with an irritable bang. “What’s
+this? What’s Katherine trying to put over?” Lilah did not answer and
+snatching the bonnet away from her, Reilly tossed it aside. “I hate
+tittle-tattle! She came down stairs, gloating, as if she had caught you
+picking the safe. What happened?”
+
+With a sense of the futility of any explanation, Lilah said: “I lost my
+head and Katherine lost a sale....”
+
+“Damn the sale!”
+
+Reilly stood, wrapped in a sort of angry contemplation, his hands in
+his pockets, his small, gaitered feet spread. “You’d better let me go,”
+Lilah said. “It might happen again.” She added, with a curious smile:
+“I’m sorry, more so than I can say.”
+
+He fixed his eyes on her face.
+
+“I’ll let you know,” he answered sharply and left the room.
+
+A week later, he sent for her.
+
+“I’m going to put you in the workroom. I think you have the makings of
+a designer. Later, perhaps, I’ll send you to Paris, Vienna.... It won’t
+do to have you upstairs.”
+
+He hesitated and then said sharply: “I’ve heard from your family.”
+
+Lilah had not expected this. She leaned against the desk with a feeling
+of faintness.
+
+“They’ve written me. One of them--a Mr. Junius Peabody--wants to see
+you.”
+
+“I can’t! No.... For heaven’s sake, no! I don’t want to see him.”
+
+Reilly considered her. “I thought I’d warn you. He’s downstairs.
+There’s his card.” He tossed it across the desk. “You’d better see
+him.” Reilly rose and came around to her; his hand fell on her
+shoulder. “You’re not a coward, are you?”
+
+“No.”
+
+“Then face things! If you don’t, they steal up behind you and knock you
+down. Always keep your eye on your fears.” His clasp tightened. “Do
+you know why I hired you? I was afraid of you! I’m not familiar with
+your sort. You made me ashamed of what I am.... Now, it seems, you are
+ashamed of what you are.... Either you’re stubborn or you’re guilty. I
+don’t pretend to understand. I’d like to put across to you--well, don’t
+make a mistake.”
+
+Lilah smiled, made a gesture of surrender. “I’ll see him.”
+
+“That’s a good girl.” Reilly paused on the threshold. “And listen.
+Don’t hold out against him because of any resentment ... don’t be a
+damn fool. There is more than one way of making good.”
+
+A moment later, rigid, consciously and painfully correct, he bowed
+Junius Peabody into the room and closed the door again, softly, as if
+he were closing it upon the sacred essence of good form.
+
+Lilah faced Junius with a trace of confusion; her lips trembled; she
+smiled unsteadily, because he was so unfalteringly Junius in spite
+of everything. He carried his overcoat on his arm; his head, bared,
+was held erect, the white, thick hair brushed carefully back from the
+veined forehead. Immaculate, even exquisite, at eighty-seven he still
+gave the impression of vigorous and aristocratic possession. He said:
+“Lilah,” and, leaning forward, she kissed him, clung to him suddenly
+with a passionate eagerness to be understood. Forgiveness was not
+required, looked for, since she had had to do what she had done.
+
+She felt his hand, patting, patting her back. “_There, there_,” he said.
+
+She made an effort and controlled herself, remembering that at Junius’
+age emotion is painful and perhaps ugly.
+
+He sat down; disposed of his coat, his hat and the heavy, goldmounted
+cane, and glanced about him. “My first visit to a dressmaker’s since
+’Eighty-six,” he said. “They’ve changed. No ribbons here!” He made a
+gesture of dislike. “That fellow--that popinjay--”
+
+“Emilie,” Lilah said, wiping her eyes. A flash of her old self came
+through, evoked by Junius’ presence. But she could not, now, laugh at
+Reilly. He was her destiny. She was forced to admit that without Reilly
+she might be caught in the tide and carried out to sea.
+
+“He’s really very clever.”
+
+“A man dressmaker,” Junius stated dryly, “puts me on edge. I will never
+be reconciled--”
+
+He broke off and scrutinized her. “Well, Lilah.”
+
+With sudden violence she burst out: “I know! You can’t understand why
+I’ve hidden myself away. I had to. You and I are alike, but you’ve
+never had to remake yourself. You still look down on people you
+consider inferior, and I’ve had to learn to respect them. I’ve had to
+kill my old self--or starve.”
+
+“I have always admired you inordinately,” he remarked.
+
+“But you have never cared--how could you--whether I was being cowardly
+and selfish, so long as I was superior, like you, a snob. We’re both
+materialists, you, because you could afford to be and I because I
+wanted to be. I haven’t changed. I want finished, rare, superlative
+things as much as ever. But I hate myself because I am a materialist.
+And that’s as good as changing.”
+
+“You’ve been unhappy.”
+
+She turned away. And Junius continued: “You are coming back, of course?”
+
+She shook her head.
+
+With a trace of impatience, Junius Peabody demanded: “Why not? There
+isn’t any one else--another attachment--” Rebuked by her quick glance,
+he apologized: “I know. What you felt was genuine. But since it is
+over, done with--”
+
+She interrupted: “I wonder if you can understand. What happened is as
+immaterial as a dream. I can’t repent. Atone. Do any of the expected
+things.... I’m not sorry or ashamed. I am not even, in the accepted
+sense, chastened. As you say, it is over. But I am different, deep
+down, out of sight, beyond my knowledge....”
+
+She smiled at him. “It’s a mixed-up world. I know, now, that it isn’t
+nasty.... We, ourselves, are nasty.”
+
+“Robert needs you.”
+
+With a flash of scorn she demanded: “Did he expect you to tell me so?”
+
+Junius shook his head. “Don’t misunderstand. Robert hasn’t any
+illusions. They are all gone. He is burned out, Lilah. But I like him
+better than I ever did when he was moon-struck. I think, at times, he
+hates you because you took away his belief in that moon of his. I could
+have told him that he was worshipping, not a moon but a glow-worm,
+because, as you say, we are very much alike, you and I.”
+
+“We give a lovely light,” Lilah said.
+
+The memory of an old appreciation warmed them both. The door of the
+workroom opened suddenly, and violently a head was thrust in. “Mr.
+Reilly, here’s that fitting--_Oh, excuse me!_” The door slammed again,
+shutting out the noisy clatter of machines, the snip-snip of scissors,
+the staccato treble of women’s voices.
+
+Junius rose.
+
+“We are living very quietly at the Point,” he said. “I came down on
+purpose to see you, talk to you. I won’t urge you. After all, what more
+can I say than that you are needed?”
+
+Lilah cried desperately. “But I don’t love Robert, Junius.”
+
+Junius Peabody faced her, a moment, in silence. She noticed that every
+detail of his dress was correct, meticulous; he displayed the interest
+of a young man in the outward semblance of superiority, of pride.
+Something unfamiliar in her nature caused her to recoil, almost to
+resent this deliberate conforming to prejudice.... Then, as suddenly,
+she admired him for this very tenacity, this unswerving adherence to an
+ideal of behavior, of appearance. He took her hand. “There is such a
+thing as being beyond personal happiness. I hoped that you had learned
+to do without it. There is no other serenity.... You’ll come back?”
+
+“Perhaps.”
+
+She covered her face with her hands.
+
+She saw herself, not in the garden, not in the forest, but on the green
+before the kennels, where Robert’s spaniels romped and barked. She saw
+herself kneeling in the grass, fondling a wriggling puppy, stroking and
+kissing the soft fur. She heard herself saying: “Oh, Robert, aren’t
+they darlings!”
+
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES
+
+
+Typos corrected: “saxaphone” to “saxophone” (page 114); “skiis” to
+“skis” (page 191); “Troisieme” to “Troisième” (page 272);
+“spinister” to “spinster” (page 315).
+
+Extraneous/missing punctuation corrected on pages 30, 177, 191, 269,
+and 277.
+
+Author’s spelling of “Nietzschan” (page 14) retained.
+
+Inconsistencies in hyphenation have been left unchanged.
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 78615 ***
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+
+<body>
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 78615 ***</div>
+
+
+
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowp100" id="i_cover" style="max-width: 24em;">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_cover.jpg" alt="">
+</figure>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+<h1 class="right">
+THE TIDE
+</h1>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+ <p class="ph2" id="RECENT_BORZOI_NOVELS" style="letter-spacing: 0.05em;">
+ RECENT BORZOI NOVELS
+ </p>
+</div>
+
+
+<div style="letter-spacing: 0.05em;">
+<p class="center">THREE PILGRIMS AND A TINKER<br>
+<span style="font-size: small;">MARY BORDEN</span></p>
+
+<p class="center">THE TATTOOED COUNTESS<br>
+<span style="font-size: small;">CARL VAN VECHTEN</span></p>
+
+<p class="center">THE ETERNAL HUNTRESS<br>
+<span style="font-size: small;">RAYNER SEELIG</span></p>
+
+<p class="center">THE FIRE IN THE FLINT<br>
+<span style="font-size: small;">WALTER F. WHITE</span></p>
+
+<p class="center">THE LORD OF THE SEA<br>
+<span style="font-size: small;">M. P. SHIEL</span></p>
+
+<p class="center">BALISAND<br>
+<span style="font-size: small;">JOSEPH HERGESHEIMER</span></p>
+
+<p class="center">SOUND AND FURY<br>
+<span style="font-size: small;">JAMES HENLE</span></p>
+
+<p class="center">TREASURE TRAIL<br>
+<span style="font-size: small;">ROLAND PERTWEE</span></p>
+
+<p class="center">WINGS<br>
+<span style="font-size: small;">ETHEL M. KELLEY</span></p>
+
+<p class="center">ORDEAL<br>
+<span style="font-size: small;">DALE COLLINS</span></p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<div class="frame-wrapper" style="max-width: 600px;">
+<div id="title-page">
+<img src="images/title_frame.png" alt="" class="border-image x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="content">
+<p class="center">MILDRED CRAM</p>
+
+<p class="ph1"><i>The Tide</i></p>
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowp20" id="i_title1" style="max-width: 3em;">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_title1.png" alt="" data-role="presentation">
+</figure>
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowp20" id="i_title2" style="margin-top: 8em; max-width: 4em;">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i_title2.png" alt="" data-role="presentation">
+</figure>
+
+<p class="center"><i>New York</i> · 1924</p>
+
+<p class="center">ALFRED · A · KNOPF</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p class="center" style="word-spacing: 0.05em;">
+ COPYRIGHT, 1923, 1924, BY MILDRED CRAM · PUBLISHED,<br>
+ OCTOBER, 1924. · SET UP, ELECTROTYPED<br>
+ AND PRINTED BY THE QUINN &amp; BODEN COMPANY,<br>
+ RAHWAY, N. J. · ESPARTO PAPER MANUFACTURED<br>
+ IN SCOTLAND AND FURNISHED BY W. F. ETHERINGTON<br>
+ &amp; CO., NEW YORK. · BOUND BY THE H. WOLFF<br>
+ ESTATE, NEW YORK, N. Y.<br>
+</p>
+<p class="center p6">
+ MANUFACTURED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
+</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+ <p class="ph2">
+ TO MY HUSBAND
+ </p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</span></p>
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="I">
+ I
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="dropcap"><span class="upper-case">Lilah</span> closed the door of the apartment and
+walked slowly across the living-room to the
+window, removing her black hat and the chiffon
+veil which had about it an unpleasant and penetrating
+odor of mourning. The silence was good. To be rid
+of all those people, those eyes, trying to gauge her
+grief, to measure it, as if it were soluble! Tears!
+Suppose she hadn’t shed enough? Then they would
+have said that she had not loved her father....</p>
+
+<p>Well, she had.</p>
+
+<p>Now she could do as she pleased about everything.
+She turned her back to the window and with quick,
+critical eyes appraised the room her father had liked
+to call the “library.” He had brought his books and
+possessions from Ohio to New York when he accepted
+the professorship at Columbia. “No, my dear, we
+mustn’t leave this, or this—these things are very precious
+to me. They are—sanctified.”</p>
+
+<p>Sanctified! A little burst of laughter shook Lilah.
+She wanted to sweep everything into a great heap and
+set a match to it; to make a bonfire of sanctified ugliness.</p>
+
+<p>She felt very young and invincible as she stood there
+with her back to the window. She had asked to be
+alone because she was afraid of the exuberance that
+had taken possession of her on the way back from
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</span>the cemetery. Everything had looked so fresh, so gay,
+so desirable—streets, houses, little flocks of sparrows,
+people passing with disinterested glances at the long
+procession of funeral hacks. She had wanted to jump
+out and walk. But she had kept her handkerchief over
+her face to hide the upward curving of her lips, the look
+she knew must be there of eagerness. She had gone
+through the business of burying her father famously,
+had made all the conventional gestures. Something
+within her had said: “I am free. This is the beginning
+for me.”</p>
+
+<p>She was sorry that she had pitied her father. She
+would have preferred to admire him. He had never
+understood, as she understood, life or men. A failure,
+he had capitalized his defeat. She had seen through
+him—his artful gentleness, his calculated patience, his
+martyrdom. He never complained, but his eyes looked
+out at you like a startled deer; you had a feeling that
+you had hurt him in some way. He was forever turning
+the other cheek, accepting reverses and disappointments
+with enthusiasm, as saints have worn and rejoiced
+in hair shirts.</p>
+
+<p>Lilah thought: “Did I love him? Of course I did.
+Old hypocrite! I shouldn’t. He lived his own life
+and never gave a thought to mine. And he has left me
+penniless. He made me love beautiful things and I’ve
+got to shift for myself in order to get them. But I
+loved him.”</p>
+
+<p>She remembered his hands, large, hairy hands with
+freckles, that had groped for hers in those last, terrified
+moments of wavering. And her heart contracted
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</span>with a deep pity, a shame, a pervading loneliness. She
+began to cry....</p>
+
+<p>She would save the books, of course. They were
+valuable. Her father, who had been a gluttonous
+reader, had had excellent taste. Most of his salary
+had gone into first editions—that rare Aretino, the
+Baudelaire, the exquisite copy of Vasari’s “Vita di
+Leonardo da Vinci.” All the book clerks in the city
+had gone to the funeral. He had belonged to that
+rare genus, the veritable connoisseur.</p>
+
+<p>“Your father was a wonderful man, Miss Norris.
+Wonderful. I’ll always remember him prowling up
+and down between the shelves, peering and questioning.
+He knew how to handle books! <i>He</i> never
+broke their backs!”</p>
+
+<p>Wiping the tears away, Lilah went into her bedroom.
+She hated herself in black; she was too blonde
+and too slender. She decided, leaning forward to
+stare at herself in the dressing-table mirror, that she
+was positively plain.... And she made a little face
+at herself. She undressed slowly, slipping out of the
+black dress she had bought for the funeral. Then,
+sitting on the edge of the bed in her underthings, she
+took stock of herself. She could still see herself in
+the mirror, rather blurred by the dim light, but charming,
+not plain now that the black was gone and her
+eyes were free of tears. She was one of those women
+who take a serious pleasure in regarding themselves;
+she was never unconscious of her cleverly modeled
+face, the misty quality of her loveliness. And because
+of this preoccupation, her expression was watchful,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</span>with something petulant in the droop of her mouth.
+She was small and compact; she had the broad shoulders
+and meager hips of a boy. Her hands were too
+large but she had inherited her mother’s pointed and
+lustrous nails and a certain fineness, almost an elegance
+of gesture. She was strong but indolent; she
+disliked fussy, unsteady people.</p>
+
+<p>She turned her head and gravely studied another
+angle of her face; she had always taken a peculiar
+delight in the possession of her own nose; its blunt,
+deft outlines were modern, audacious, “funny.” How
+lucky not to be aquiline, or worse, Roman! It was
+part of her good fortune to have been born in physical
+key with her period. She would have been considered
+ugly in the sixteenth, the eighteenth centuries;
+in the twentieth, she was delightful because
+her features were irregular and provocative.</p>
+
+<p>She thought again: “I am alone.”</p>
+
+<p>All young lives, she reflected, must begin, be founded
+upon, the death of some one already old. From the
+stale and disillusioned, such soaring as hers! For
+she meant to soar. Change, decline, a difference in
+her delicious outline, were remote and unimaginable
+calamities. She remembered, with a shudder, her
+father’s last year. He had seemed to surrender too
+easily to the little habits of senility—he had not been
+always—quite nice. Why were old people so pathetic,
+so remote, so unaware of their lack of grace?</p>
+
+<p>Now, she knew, she was glad that it was over. She
+could be free of that breathless pity, that impatience
+which had bordered on disgust and had hurt her so—</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</span></p>
+
+<p>She jumped up and went back to the library.</p>
+
+<p>Her father’s chair was drawn up beside the table,
+so that the light from the lamp might fall across his
+open book. He had been reading Emerson. Not
+Nietzsche, at the end. He had said, with one of his
+smiles, that as he drew nearer to the devil he sought
+a better acquaintance with God.</p>
+
+<p>Lilah wondered whether he had found God;
+whether, after that frantic struggle not to die, he had
+come upon green hills and clouds white as snow. She
+smiled at the thought of him, reading “Essays in
+Pessimism” and neglecting his harp, or his pitch
+fork. Perhaps he had sought acquaintance with God
+too late, as she herself was sure to.</p>
+
+<p>She sat down in the old chair and contemplated
+her slippers, her ankles, her legs. Pretty enough
+legs. She might try the stage. It was an amusing
+thought, and while it lasted, she saw herself, very
+much blonder, wearing one of those soubrette costumes
+with a bouffant skirt and a “plate” hat tied
+under her chin....</p>
+
+<p>The idea trailed off.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>When the telephone rang, she hesitated. It might
+be Aunt Jo—one of the relatives, who had made this
+pilgrimage to New York with the gusto of the confirmed
+funeral enthusiast. Or it might be David,
+who had made her grief an excuse for offering his
+shoulder again.</p>
+
+<p>On the chance that it might be Robert Peabody,
+she answered.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</span></p>
+
+<p>His voice, with that peculiar hesitation, said: “Miss
+Norris?”</p>
+
+<p>He wanted to see her. He had only just heard.
+Might he come? Of course! To-night.... She
+was alone and unhappy, depressed. He could
+imagine....</p>
+
+<p>“Eight o’clock, then.”</p>
+
+<p>She put the instrument down and ran into her bedroom,
+her spirits flying again, like a whir of swift
+birds across a sunset sky. The window was open,
+and, bare-armed, she leaned on the sill, watching the
+tide in the street, people hurrying home, with bundles,
+with newspapers, with twisted cornucopias full of
+flowers. The sky was slate blue and the street a
+deep cañon full of purple shadows. All the ugliness
+was erased; the cornices had a sort of beauty. A
+tall apartment house over on the Avenue rose like a
+tower, a shaft of white stone set with lights and
+crowned with wisps of steam, purple-blue plumes in a
+giant’s cap. The murmur of the city rose, confused,
+a vast grumble. She thought again of her father,
+lying out there beneath a heap of flowers, and of herself,
+here, alive, with everything unfolding....</p>
+
+<p>He had always said that he had given his life to her.
+What he had really given her was a dubious inheritance.
+She had all of his impatience, his detestation
+of the crude or the banal.</p>
+
+<p>He had taken her with him on his annual vacations
+in Europe, meager excursions to Switzerland and Italy.
+Lilah summered in innumerable, obscure <i>pensions</i>.
+She wore crêpe waists that “did up” without ironing
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</span>and comfortable German-Swiss shoes with hob-nails,
+and tramped through the Alpine valleys carrying a
+stick and a knapsack. Her quick eyes saw everything,
+took things in, assorted, rejected, accepted. She spoke
+French and Italian with a pert accent, and while her
+father sought out and worried his intellectual bones
+she absorbed the European Blue Book.</p>
+
+<p>Beyond the redolent <i>pensions</i> with their grottoed
+gardens and dingy dining-rooms, there were the Grands
+Hôtels d’Europe, emblazoned <i>concièrges</i> and <i>parcs</i>
+equipped with statuary and pavilions. And beyond
+the hotels, a sacred circle of <i>chateâux</i> and <i>villine</i> sheltering
+the lives of people whose very names stirred in
+her a melancholy envy. She had never thought herself
+socially inferior; she had the peculiar pride of the
+pedagogical aristocracy; she was, moreover, American
+in her assumption of equality. But she could not be
+patient, she could not accept what she knew to be a
+surrender to mediocrity.</p>
+
+<p>In the meantime, several men fell in love with her—a
+Swedish pianist with a bang and long finger-nails,
+an Italian cavalry officer and an English engineer who
+wanted her to go with him to South Africa. She knew,
+before she was twenty, the depth and the danger of
+passion. A man had groveled at her feet, begging
+for something she could not feel. She had known
+disgust and terror; afterwards, an exultation. She
+seemed to have a certain persuasion. Realizing it,
+she cultivated her charm, what men called her “mystery.”
+Part artifice, part instinct, this charm of hers
+was deepened, made permanent, during those summers
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</span>in Europe. She was feminine and adroit. She knew
+that, given the right soil, she might cultivate a very
+rare garden indeed.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>Now this....</p>
+
+<p>She closed the window and began to dress. Black
+again, she supposed. Robert Peabody was conventional
+enough to question grief in orchid chiffon; he
+would expect pallor—and pearls. Her own string was
+imitation and she threw it down again. The telephone
+was ringing ... David.... She crinkled
+her nose at herself in the mirror. Let him ring! He
+was one of those dumb, worshipful creatures made
+more ardent by rebuffs. He would ring to-morrow,
+and the next day, and the next, until she answered.
+Nothing must interfere with her seeing Robert Peabody
+alone.</p>
+
+<p>The bell stopped with a querulous note of surrender,
+and she went about the library, straightening
+the chairs, pushing the ugliest ornaments out of sight.
+She moved quickly, conscious of an unpleasant sensation
+of fear. Her father seemed to be there, watching
+her, mournful and beseeching, with those eyes of
+a dog or a wounded deer. She felt that she had done
+something unfair; that she might, she might have held
+him on this side a little longer—if she had resisted
+whatever it was that was pulling him down and away!
+How horrible! Death should never come near the
+living. It was unkind. Even to know—</p>
+
+<p>She had put a silk scarf over her shoulders. The
+fringed ends touched the floor; with one hand she
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</span>held the heavy folds across her hips so that the grace
+of her figure was visible.</p>
+
+<p>When the door bell rang—it was one of the push-button
+variety—she waited a moment before answering,
+an artistic interval intended to stir a doubt in
+Peabody’s mind and then to reassure him so that he
+would mount the four flights of carpeted stairs with
+a sense of victory, of security.</p>
+
+<p>While he climbed, she leaned over the banister.
+She could see his blond head with the neat parting,
+his black and white muffler, a gloved hand on the railing....
+The ghost in the room behind her drifted
+out of the window, back to the pyramid of flowers.</p>
+
+<p>She thought: “He has never been here before. He’ll
+hate the room.”</p>
+
+<p>But Robert Peabody seemed only to see her. His
+light eyes, not quick like her own, but steady and
+almost expressionless, stared at her as he took her
+hand: “I was so sorry to hear—so awfully sorry for
+you.”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah’s lips trembled. She led him back to the
+library and took from him the heavy overcoat, the
+silk muffler, his hat and gloves. The feel of them
+pleased her; they were so exactly right in texture.</p>
+
+<p>“I’ve been at the Point,” he said, taking her father’s
+chair. “I never see a paper there. Gillow told me
+when I got back this morning.” He hesitated. “I
+liked your father.”</p>
+
+<p>“Every one did,” Lilah said.</p>
+
+<p>“I know. I dare say he was better than most
+of us.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</span></p>
+
+<p>“He was.”</p>
+
+<p>“See here. I wish you wouldn’t cry! When people
+die, it’s a confounded shame to talk about their good
+qualities. I’m a fool. I didn’t mean to do what
+every one else does. I meant to cheer you up a bit....
+Are you alone?”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah wiped her eyes. “Yes. I sent the relatives
+away. They enjoyed it too much.”</p>
+
+<p>He laughed. “Sensible of you! What can I talk
+to you about? Dogs? People? Gardens?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yourself,” Lilah answered. “I’m curious about
+you.”</p>
+
+<p>This was obvious, but he was not the sort to be
+alarmed.</p>
+
+<p>“Your father must have told you,” he said. And
+to her surprise he flushed. “I was his worst pupil.
+I flunked everything. I’m terribly stupid.”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t believe that.”</p>
+
+<p>“But I am. I wouldn’t be anywhere to-day if it
+weren’t for my grandfather. He created the family,
+and he still runs it. Funny thing—he had all the
+creative instinct. He saw the possibilities in lumber
+sixty years ago. He saw, and, he dared. Magnificent
+old chap! He outlived my father. I dare say
+he’ll outlive me.”</p>
+
+<p>“Hardly.”</p>
+
+<p>“Eighty-four. Thin as a leaf and hard as steel!
+I’m third generation. And drinkin’.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why?”</p>
+
+<p>“What else is there to do? My grandfather had
+all the fun. He broke the ground and planted the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</span>seed. Now the trees are up—if I can put it that way—and
+there’s nothing for me to do but sit in the
+shade.... Sometimes I envy him.”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah glanced down at her slippers. “You shouldn’t.
+He gives you everything.”</p>
+
+<p>“And laughs at me! Because I’m soft. And thick-pated.
+He couldn’t hate me any more than I hate
+myself. My God, Miss Norris, to be as rich as I am
+and to look like an English governess.... Now,
+don’t I? Honest? You ought to see my knees—they’re
+as pink as a baby’s! Look at my hands!
+And this hair—it parts like that, neat, in the middle!
+Great God!” He stared at her. “So I’m drinkin’.”</p>
+
+<p>“You don’t blame your grandfather for your knees,
+do you?”</p>
+
+<p>“Of course I do.” He slid forward and offered his
+cigarette case. “Smoke?”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah thought quickly: “Do I, or don’t I?”</p>
+
+<p>She decided: “Yes.”</p>
+
+<p>And leaning to the match he lighted, she puffed
+delicately, with quick little intakes of breath. The
+smoke came through her nostrils. She tipped her
+head back and let Peabody see the firm line of her
+throat, her chin, round and feminine.</p>
+
+<p>“I made you laugh, didn’t I? I wanted to.” His
+expression changed, and she saw again that bland,
+sympathetic look, an intensification, as if he were
+trying to focus on his emotion. He had no complexities
+of feeling; he seemed to grope for the most simple
+reaction. It was, Lilah thought, like one of those
+“slowed-up” pictures in the movies. You saw his
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</span>mood change as you watched him. She could anticipate
+the conclusion before he was aware of it himself.
+Was he going to bore her too much? Her mind was
+not always accurate but it was quick as lightning.
+She saw—pounced—judged. She lay back in her
+chair watching this man whose path had crossed hers
+only twice, once in Europe, and again at a dinner given
+in honor of her father. He was the only rich man
+she knew. The satellites that had revolved about her
+in her <i>pension</i> days had been on the lookout for the
+traditional American heiress; she had no <i>dot</i>, and
+therefore no claim to their serious attention. She
+knew this. And her attitude toward men had been
+unconsciously established; she believed that she could
+not advance without a compromise. She took it for
+granted that she would have to forego love. She was
+too ironical to consider the possibility of a lovable
+Robert Peabody.</p>
+
+<p>“See here,” he said. The match burned out between
+his fingers and he tossed it into the grate. “I
+have a suggestion.... You ought not to stay here
+alone. Suppose you let me take you back to the
+Point? My grandfather’s there. He’d love you.
+And there’s my Aunt Whiteside, who’s a sort of housekeeper.
+It would do you good. What do you say?”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah shook her head. “No.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why not?”</p>
+
+<p>She stood up, flicking the ashes into the hearth,
+with a gesture she had perhaps copied from some one—it
+was not insolent, but it was very “Russian.” She
+was picturesque, standing there, the lamplight on the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</span>curious silver-gold of her hair, which she wore straight
+back from her forehead. She had about her that peculiar
+and elusive element of elegance which is usually
+the patina, unmistakable, of wealth. There was no
+trace of her rather shoddy experience in either her
+carriage or her attitude. She was not arrogant. She
+was assured. And this was her most valuable asset.</p>
+
+<p>She shook her head again. “I can’t. I’m penniless.
+I’ve got to do something.”</p>
+
+<p>Robert Peabody stared at his hands as if they offended
+him. “I’m sorry. Terribly sorry. That’s
+rotten luck.”</p>
+
+<p>The rich can be magnificently casual about money.
+It was rotten luck! But to people like the Peabodys,
+financial calamity is too remote to be classed among
+the realities of life.</p>
+
+<p>Lilah, glancing down at the neat part in Robert
+Peabody’s hair, knew that she had made a misstep.</p>
+
+<p>“It’s all right,” she said lightly. “I’ll manage.”</p>
+
+<p>“Of course you will! Only I’d hoped that you’d
+come. It would be jolly for my grandfather. And
+for me.”</p>
+
+<p>It would have been jolly for her, if she could have
+afforded it. How could she tell Robert Peabody that
+she had only the one dress, and nothing for evening?
+If she had been a personality, some one established,
+a woman of importance, it would not have mattered.
+A great woman needs only her wits and her name.
+But Lilah was nobody. Twenty-seven years old, and
+nobody. She felt that her potentiality had been
+walled in. Her father had had a streak of something
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</span>common in his nature; he had preferred mediocre
+people. He was always giving money to blatant,
+down-at-the-heel sycophants whom he suspected of
+talent or spiritual loveliness. He lent a sympathetic
+ear to tales of degradation. There was something
+coarse in him—a streak aslant the pure crystal of his
+intellect. His friends had called him a humanitarian;
+to Lilah, his passion for derelicts meant a lack of fastidiousness.
+She wanted him to be an epicurean; he
+had ended by being a pathetic Nietzschan bleating
+for God....</p>
+
+<p>Oh, to get away ... to forget, in the freshness of
+the country in May, the stale odor of crêpe and wilted
+carnations....</p>
+
+<p>“You ought to see the Point, Miss Norris. Some
+day, you must. I was brought up there. I’m pretty
+much of a country chap. I’d like to show you the
+kennels. D’you like spaniels?”</p>
+
+<p>“Rather.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’ve got a new litter. Four of the prettiest little
+chaps. Smooth as silk with perfectly gorgeous ears.”</p>
+
+<p>He went on, talking about spaniels, leaning back in
+her father’s chair.</p>
+
+<p>She smiled. But her mind was busy making pictures
+of the Point; she was walking down a garden
+path paved with brick between rose hedges. The sun
+was warm on her back; she could feel it through the
+lace of her gown, and on her neck, where her leghorn
+hat turned up and you saw her hair twisted so
+smoothly, honey-colored. She was not with Robert
+but with his grandfather. There was a look between
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</span>them of perfect understanding, something warm, mutual,
+delicious. And the sky was like a Canaletto,
+flecked with “mackerel,” gentian and crystal. She
+saw the chimneys of a house, and a sort of terrace
+where a cow grazed under some trees....</p>
+
+<p>“The little chaps hadn’t opened their eyes.”</p>
+
+<p>“No?” she said. She came back out of the dream
+with a shiver of pleasure. Then one by one the details
+of the room assailed her. This was hers.</p>
+
+<p>She twisted her shoulders and smiled. “Aren’t
+you hungry? I’ll make a rarebit.”</p>
+
+<p>Robert Peabody flushed again. “Will you?”</p>
+
+<p>She led the way to the kitchen, and, letting the silk
+scarf fall into Robert’s hands, she put on an apron.
+She was very expert and swift, lighting the gas stove,
+opening and shutting the ice-box, grating cheese,
+toasting crackers, stirring and measuring. She put
+Robert in a corner, where he sat with her scarf between
+his hands, caressing the stuff, not as some men
+would have caressed it, with luxury, but with a sort
+of unconscious pleasure, as one strokes the silky ears
+of a dog. All the while he watched her. She had
+decided not to be ashamed of the way she lived; there
+was little or no use in pretending luxury. A medley
+of sounds rose from the court outside, and she closed
+the window. They were more alone in the silence.
+Their intimacy and their strangeness demanded words,
+but he said nothing, only watched, with emotions making
+their slow and obvious passage across his eyes.
+He found her fascinating and she puzzled him. She
+was practical, and pretty, a lady; you couldn’t be
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</span>quite sure, these days; he might have a shot at a
+flirtation; he pitied her; he was a little afraid of her—but
+fascinating, by George. Damned attractive!
+Something foreign about her.... And then the idea
+of love crossed his mind. While she was stirring the
+rarebit, she watched the beginning of that idea. His
+eyes were fixed on her hands and arms, from which
+the black sleeves fell back. His eyes clouded with
+the poignant onslaught of his conception—to love her,
+to be loved by her. Tremendous. A responsibility.
+His mouth betrayed, by a droop at the corners, his
+humility and discouragement. And his hands, touching
+the silk fringes, began suddenly to caress them,
+gently.</p>
+
+<p>When she leaned across the table to pour the rarebit,
+he bent quickly and kissed her arm.</p>
+
+<p>Lilah said: “Oh.”</p>
+
+<p>“Forgive me, there’s a dear! I didn’t mean to. I
+swear I didn’t.”</p>
+
+<p>“And you pretend to be stupid?”</p>
+
+<p>“But I am. That’s just it.”</p>
+
+<p>She shrugged. Her reaction was immediate and
+would have startled him had he known how swift
+and inexorable her judgments were. She had decided
+to make him suffer, and to land him full and fair in
+her net. This one, and no other! You will see that
+she was romantic; only a very sentimental woman enjoys
+making a man suffer. As a gauge of love the
+process is primitive, even savage. It meant simply
+that in that moment, so light, so brief, when he had
+put his lips to her arm, he had attracted her.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</span></p>
+
+<p>“It’s a good rarebit,” he said. “And it seems to
+me you’re awfully cozy here. Nice little flat. Everything
+comfortable.”</p>
+
+<p>“But I haven’t any money.”</p>
+
+<p>“Not literally?”</p>
+
+<p>“Quite. When the nurses and doctors are paid, I
+shan’t have anything.”</p>
+
+<p>She stifled a sudden depression. “I’ll do something.
+I can make hats!”</p>
+
+<p>He looked up from the rarebit. “I bet you can!
+I’ll tell Aunt Whiteside and the James girls. I know
+mobs of women....”</p>
+
+<p>He branched off into the eccentricities of his Aunt
+Whiteside’s hats. “Awful little bonnets with trees and
+crystal dew-dabs and strings—everything shakes and
+shivers—all of her hats have the palsy. But she pays
+like thunder for ’em. And the bills go to my grandfather.
+He always says: ‘The price of virtue’ when
+he writes the check. She’s sort of a mother superior
+in sequins. One day my grandfather said: ‘Robert,
+have you ever noticed Grace Whiteside’s legs?’ I’d
+never thought of such a thing! But the next
+day I looked, and by George, they were magnificent!
+Something terrible about it.... An old lady with
+legs....”</p>
+
+<p>“Go on,” Lilah said.</p>
+
+<p>But Robert shook his head. “I’m shockin’ you.”</p>
+
+<p>“No. I’ve known Italian men. They all talk like
+that, only, in Italian, it sounds like d’Annunzio: <i>Le
+gambe belle di una vecchia donna</i>....”</p>
+
+<p>They laughed.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</span></p>
+
+<p>He had forgotten about her poverty again.</p>
+
+<p>Before he left, standing in the darkened hallway
+with his muffler on and eyes sympathetic again, he
+said: “I’m going to ask Grace Fuller to come around
+and see you. She’s looking for a room-mate. Splendid
+girl. I’m rather sweet on her. You’d like her.”</p>
+
+<p>“Grace Fuller?”</p>
+
+<p>“She’s a nurse. Took care of me when I had my
+appendix. And she always sees Aunt Whiteside
+through the gall-stones.”</p>
+
+<p>He offered his hand.</p>
+
+<p>Lilah felt that, behind her, the ghost had drifted
+in again. “I’d be very glad,” she said faintly.</p>
+
+<p>“Now you cheer up.” His voice deepened a note.
+He was genuinely sorry for her. “Good night.”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah leaned against the closed door.... Tired....
+Tired.... Grace Fuller.... Sweet on her....
+What a damned fool of a man! What a bore!
+Stupid! Stupid! To have had him here at all! To
+have tried....</p>
+
+<p>She ran to the window and leaned out. A motor
+moved away with a silvery clink of chains. It had
+been raining.... He was gone.... The street
+lights were like balloons on sticks and an odor of wet
+dust rose, pungent, acrid.</p>
+
+<p>For a long time she leaned there, with dry eyes,
+her breath shallow. The day flowed back over her
+spirit and she saw herself, little, heartless, unsuccessful.
+She had better make up her mind to do with
+what she had. To accustom herself to such ugliness
+as this.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="II">
+ II
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="dropcap"><span class="upper-case">She</span> had hoped for a little life-insurance; her
+father’s wail had been, whenever she wanted a
+new hat: “I can’t, my dear. I’ve got to pay
+the life-insurance—twenty dollars.” She had never
+questioned him; it had seemed unkind, but she knew
+that there was some sort of a policy. She went
+through his papers, vaguely excited. There were a few
+letters from some one who signed herself “Darling,”
+written in a spidery hand on blue paper. Lilah threw
+the package into the waste basket, unread.... His
+knife. His precious letter of recommendation from
+Hadley.... A note, long overdue, forgotten, outlawed,
+hardly decipherable.... A long envelope containing
+snap-shots of his dog, Nellie, the old setter.
+Lilah felt a penetrating pity—her father, laughing, in
+a corduroy coat, with Nellie tugging at a leash. Her
+father, on a jig-saw veranda, with his pipe, and
+Nellie scratching fleas behind him.... Nellie....
+Nellie....</p>
+
+<p>The policy was not there. She emptied the drawers
+of an accumulation of cherished trash, all faded, incomprehensible.</p>
+
+<p>She was interrupted by a caller, a thin, waspish man
+who tried to be amiable, as if he expected, before the
+interview was over, to be thoroughly disagreeable.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Miss Norris? I represent Bilton and Chiswick,
+agents for this apartment. We have heard of your
+misfortune. We would like to know whether you intend
+to occupy the premises now that you are—alone—or
+whether you prefer to sub-lease.”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah said impatiently: “I’ll let you know.”</p>
+
+<p>He consulted a black book, very much thumbed.
+“Your lease expires in twenty days. Shall I prepare
+a new lease for the coming year? The rent, in all
+these apartments, has been raised. We are asking
+sixty-five a month for three rooms and bath.”</p>
+
+<p>“How on earth does he know,” Lilah wondered,
+“that I’m broke?”</p>
+
+<p>To shock him, she lighted a cigarette.</p>
+
+<p>He jumped up. “We expect an answer in the morning.
+There’s a great demand for these apartments.”</p>
+
+<p>“Is there?”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah went with him to the door and shut him out
+with a bang. These agents had a mysterious money
+instinct—they could smell out poverty. Beasts!</p>
+
+<p>She went back to the library, suddenly conscious
+of the inestimable blessing of a roof. She had sixty
+dollars. The doctor could be put off. Doctors never
+expected to be paid at once.... The nurse, no.
+Then, where would she be? Why hadn’t her father
+taught her to do something.... She had forgotten
+the grocer’s bill, the milk, ice, gas, newspaper....</p>
+
+<p>She would have to borrow. From whom? Not
+Aunt Jo. Nor her father’s cronies, the book clerks.
+Nor from any of the professors and assistants. Every
+one she knew was poor, struggling, limited.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</span></p>
+
+<p>She signed a new lease. The waspish man was suspicious.
+He made a sucking sound with his tongue
+and snatched his fountain-pen back before Lilah had
+added the line and the two dots which usually ornamented
+her large, flourishing signature. She had no
+idea how she was going to thwart his obvious intention;
+he meant to evict her, bag and baggage, at the
+first opportunity. When he had gone, sucking his
+teeth all the way down stairs, Lilah telephoned David
+Brenner. He, at least, would know that coupons don’t
+grow in geranium pots.</p>
+
+<p>He came, smiling in that way he had of cherishing
+a secret.</p>
+
+<p>“David, I’m frightened.”</p>
+
+<p>“Broke?”</p>
+
+<p>She emptied her purse on the table. “Forty-one,
+seventy-seven.”</p>
+
+<p>He shook his head. “I’m not sorry for you, Lilah.
+You’re looking into a mirror at what you think is life.
+And the mirror is a trick mirror—it enlarges, distorts
+everything. You see your poverty—colossal! You
+see your limitations—gigantic! You see your fear—enormous!
+And look here—look! The Truth!
+You’re a pretty little humbug. You can earn your
+living, only you’re afraid to.”</p>
+
+<p>“David, I thought you loved me.”</p>
+
+<p>“I do.”</p>
+
+<p>The young Jew had eyes that went around her.
+“I do. Only—between the sublime and the ridiculous
+there is the breadth of a hair.”</p>
+
+<p>“Am I ridiculous?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</span></p>
+
+<p>“You are a little humbug,” he said stubbornly.</p>
+
+<p>“What can I do? I won’t cook. I won’t take care
+of babies. I won’t be a chorus girl.”</p>
+
+<p>“You’re too old.”</p>
+
+<p>“Old?”</p>
+
+<p>“Certainly. What else can you do?”</p>
+
+<p>“I can make hats.”</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly she raised her voice. “I hate poverty!
+It’s positively immoral.”</p>
+
+<p>“What a pretty speech! Wait until you know real
+poverty, as I have known it! Did I ever tell you—I
+escaped from Russia when I was sixteen? I stowed
+away from Vladivostok to San Francisco and lived
+like a rat for three years. Only then my name wasn’t
+Brenner—it was a mouthful! I don’t hate poverty.
+I hate the system which permits poverty....”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah interrupted. “I shan’t fail! I can get four
+with one and one-half. I’m quick. But I don’t like
+having to be quick. I prefer to wear chiffon and to
+walk in a garden....”</p>
+
+<p>His eyes softened “Poor Lilah.”</p>
+
+<p>“What shall I do?”</p>
+
+<p>“Work.”</p>
+
+<p>“<i>You</i> don’t,” she said sharply.</p>
+
+<p>But he would not part with his secret. Spreading
+out his hands, he shrugged, and let her believe anything.
+Suspected of having dodged the draft, David
+Brenner kept strange company, maintained an enigmatic
+silence and, like all morose and discontented intellectuals,
+appeared to be more important than he
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</span>was. He wore a cloak of vague disapproval. It was
+more an atmosphere than a militant conviction. He
+was not a fighter. There was something adolescent
+in his moody distraction, his hauteur, his indifference.</p>
+
+<p>“Lilah, I am an alley cat, pawing over garbage. I
+have come upon a glittering little fish, a fresh sardine—and
+that’s Lilah! I shall never be the same cat
+again.... I shall always be looking for sardines....
+Will you lunch with me?”</p>
+
+<p>She would.</p>
+
+<p>They went to a Greenwich Village restaurant. In
+certain moods, Lilah enjoyed such places. She liked
+to sit aloof and peep between her fingers at these
+pathological bohemians. She smoked, veiled her eyes,
+and let David Brenner hold her hand. The table was
+a patch-work of initials and dates, egoistic trademarks.
+Lilah thought of Dante’s Tomb and the
+names scratched on the face of the Sphinx—little
+names, here and there, seen, gone ... nothing....</p>
+
+<p>David Brenner was no better than Robert Peabody.
+Men only wanted to kiss her.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>She left him and walked uptown, seeking the sacred
+pavements of upper Fifth Avenue with a deep breath
+of relief. Here, she could be herself. She drifted
+from one shop-window to another, absorbed, with
+something in her expression of the devotee. She
+might have been a woman of elegance, whereas she
+happened to be a little nobody with forty-one dollars
+and seventy-seven cents in the world.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</span></p>
+
+<p>Characteristically, she postponed thinking about
+the future. She enjoyed the great symphony of the
+streets. The crowds gave her a feeling of security.</p>
+
+<p>She studied the hats. One, in particular, delighted
+her. It was <i>chinoiserie</i>, a poem in colored silks with
+a funny, pointed crown—no one but Lilah could wear
+such a hat.</p>
+
+<p>She went on; came back to stare.... Delightful....
+Her father had not wanted her to wear mourning.
+And this little hat would give her some sort of
+glow....</p>
+
+<p>She went into the shop.</p>
+
+<p>It was a gray, padded, mirrored place. And a
+woman in a black dress, too short, with long, square
+sleeves, came forward.</p>
+
+<p>“The little hat in the window,” Lilah said in her
+best manner. “The Chinese one.” She made a gesture.</p>
+
+<p>“Ah, yes.”</p>
+
+<p>The hat was produced, twirled, tipped, turned upside
+down.</p>
+
+<p>“Let me see.”</p>
+
+<p>“Certainly.”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah sat down before a mirror and removed the
+black hat and veil. She ran her fingers through her
+hair and gave a downward and upward thrust of her
+head to receive this crown of bright, twisted silks.</p>
+
+<p>“Lanvin,” the saleswoman remarked.</p>
+
+<p>“Really?”</p>
+
+<p>“A copy.”</p>
+
+<p>“I thought so.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</span></p>
+
+<p>“But, Madam, it is exact. In everything. The
+silk; the ornament—you won’t see another.”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah studied her profile. She was indeed a quaint
+and delightful little person....</p>
+
+<p>“Do you like it?”</p>
+
+<p>“Very becoming, Madam.”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah felt a rush of excitement and pleasure.</p>
+
+<p>“How much is it?”</p>
+
+<p>“Thirty-five, Madam.”</p>
+
+<p>“That seems—”</p>
+
+<p>She broke off. It was really not expensive.</p>
+
+<p>“You look very well indeed, Madam. You wear
+that type of hat wonderfully. So few can!”</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll take it.”</p>
+
+<p>The woman’s manner changed. “May I show you
+others? We have a few models—it is rather early....
+One very beautiful straw, from Molineux. This
+one ... a little more to one side.... You wear hats
+so well.”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah wanted to say: “I make them, too.”</p>
+
+<p>Instead, she wrinkled up her nose and became very
+contemptuous. “I don’t like it.”</p>
+
+<p>“No?”</p>
+
+<p>She went out of the shop wearing the little silk
+turban, and carrying the black hat in a striped box
+inscribed: <i>La Mode Chez Annette</i>.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>Beneath a slate-blue sky the light stone palaces of
+trade were curiously luminous. The Avenue itself, in
+shadow, was a revolving chain of motors; the great
+procession of glittering vehicles moved forward,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</span>stopped, was pierced by cross-town traffic, moved
+forward again. The Towers built about the Plaza
+rose into sunlight and were gilded at the tip. Lilah
+found the city very suave, mellow—there was none of
+the brazen clamor of Chicago, the sullen roar of London....
+A woman approaching with a dog on a leash
+and wearing a long black cape and a plush tricorn,
+was like a figure by Longhi....</p>
+
+<p>Lilah was conscious of a keen esthetic pleasure.
+The hat had restored her self-confidence, the certainty
+of success.</p>
+
+<p>She was always alive to this pageant; its deeper
+meanings, its trend, escaped her. But she saw every
+face that passed—she could label them, put them in
+their niche. Old people touched her heart, if they
+were brave and jaunty; she could be infinitely sorry
+for some suffering and haughty face glimpsed in passing.
+The audacious, bow-legged, and blatant girl of
+the people, aping fashion, irritated her; vulgarity excluded
+the picturesque; there was nothing wistful
+about gum and lop-sided French heels. Lilah was not
+pitiless, but her pity was aroused by things in themselves
+not tragic—she was sorry only for the strong
+who are defeated by time or disease. The weak and
+helpless annoyed her because they made demands on
+her sympathy. She preferred to give, unsolicited.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>She turned aside at Fifty-seventh Street, eager to
+wear the hat into all the high-roads of fashion.</p>
+
+<p>Then, superior to fatigue, borne along on the crest
+of that little personal success, she walked downtown
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</span>again, with her quick, short steps and the imperious
+carriage of her head, threading the impersonal crowds,
+stimulated, eager, warming herself against that pressure
+of life.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>She climbed the four flights of carpeted stairs
+slowly. All the zest was gone. If her father were
+only there—some one—</p>
+
+<p>A woman, rather tall, with a curious, ugly face and
+a bang of lightish hair under a queer hat, was leaning
+against the wall in the half-shadow at the top of the
+stairs.</p>
+
+<p>“Miss Norris? I’m Miss Fuller. I rang and you
+didn’t answer. But I came up anyway. Robert Peabody
+sent me.”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah said, in a voice she kept for strangers: “I’m
+so glad. Won’t you come in?”</p>
+
+<p>Miss Fuller followed and looked carefully at everything
+before she sat down.</p>
+
+<p>“This isn’t my taste,” Lilah said instantly.</p>
+
+<p>“It wouldn’t be. Robert raved about it and about
+you. He liked both the room and yourself. He has
+no discrimination, but he is a darling.”</p>
+
+<p>“What, exactly, do you mean by that?”</p>
+
+<p>“I mean that frills are wasted on him. He doesn’t
+see them. From what he told me, I did not expect—you.”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah laughed. Her good humor returned. She
+glanced at herself in the mirror.... Reassuring,
+that hat....</p>
+
+<p>“What did he tell you?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Oh.... Pretty.... Sweet.... You’re not
+sweet. I hate the word. Why do men use it? Men
+are so stupid. When they think they’re in love with
+you they call you ‘sweet’ and they always muss up
+your hair. I hate being made love to. They never
+do it right. They either choke you or they scratch
+you. It makes me irritable, and they never try it
+again.”</p>
+
+<p>“Does Robert scratch you?” Lilah asked sweetly.</p>
+
+<p>“No. He chokes.”</p>
+
+<p>“He would,” Lilah said. “Do you let him?”</p>
+
+<p>“I compromise. I insist on vacations. Then we
+are platonic and he is pathetic. He is a child. He
+cries for a lollypop. So I say: ‘Go ahead. Kiss me.’
+And he does. And, afterwards, I use liniment to limber
+up my neck.”</p>
+
+<p>“You look like a Vanderbilt,” Lilah remarked. “All
+that wooly hair. And that long neck. And those eyebrows.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m Middle West. My grandfather was a Carlsen,
+a farmer. But my mother took a trip to Chicago before
+I was born and saw some wealth and fashion and
+marked me. I love luxury. I can achieve it with
+cheese cloth, safety pins and a little rouge. But now
+I’m bored. I want a French maid.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why don’t you marry Robert?”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m going to. If you don’t.”</p>
+
+<p>“I?”</p>
+
+<p>“He has called you sweet.” Miss Fuller lighted a
+cigarette. She did it in a characteristic way, a methodical,
+unhurried movement of her cool, thin hands.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</span>“I won’t fight. I can’t. You have all the weapons.
+And I have none. I’d be kind to him and you’d
+ruin his life. But you would keep him dancing and
+I would see to it that he sat by the fire. I understand
+him. You never will.” She tossed the match
+away. “And he’ll take you.”</p>
+
+<p>“Nonsense.” Lilah was pleased. She thought:
+“I’ll take <i>him</i>, rather. She’d better watch out.”</p>
+
+<p>Aloud, she said: “Robert says you’re a nurse.”</p>
+
+<p>“I met him six years ago, when I was the starchiest
+graduate you’ve ever seen—pink and white, with a
+cap pinned on a blonde pompadour. It used to be
+fashionable to fall in love with your nurse, and I had
+a bed-side technique. He asked me to marry him,
+but I wouldn’t, because that was always part of an
+appendix convalescence. Afterwards, he forgot. Of
+course! But later they sent me to the Point to nurse
+his Aunt Whiteside—”</p>
+
+<p>“I know! The gallstones!”</p>
+
+<p>“He told you?”</p>
+
+<p>Miss Fuller quenched her cigarette with the same,
+deliberate, unhurried gesture. She had a strange
+smile, sensitive, in contrast to the clipped irony of
+her conversational style. Lilah saw that this woman
+had been grievously hurt, shockingly buffeted. There
+was something about her calm which suggested the
+heroic self-control of the victim of a hurricane or an
+earthquake. She was afraid, but she was hanging on.</p>
+
+<p>“So I went. Starch, blonde bang, wrist-watch.
+Very cool.... That house.... The grandfather’s
+house. About Eighteen-Seventy. Carpets. Lots of
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</span>silver. Walnut and ebony. Gongs for dinner. Velvet.
+You know the sort of thing.... I don’t like
+the grandfather.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why?”</p>
+
+<p>“He doesn’t like me. He likes pert women, who
+hiss like cats and scratch and then purr on his knee.
+My starch irritated him. But Robert liked it.”</p>
+
+<p>“Did he kiss you, then?”</p>
+
+<p>“No. Not for years.”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah said gently: “You love him.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes. I do.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well—”</p>
+
+<p>“Something I see, that you get to see when you
+know him! A gentleness. He is kind to people and
+doesn’t make any fuss. There’s no mystery about
+him. I’m sick of mysteries.... Doctors.... You
+don’t know what those hospitals are! They make a
+cynic or a huntress out of you, unless you happen to
+be a Florence Nightingale. I’m not. I don’t believe
+in anything.”</p>
+
+<p>She broke off and Lilah said: “Tell me about yourself.
+More! Aren’t you happy?”</p>
+
+<p>“Sometimes. When I’m alone. And I’m never
+alone.”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah laughed. “Robert said you might live with
+me.”</p>
+
+<p>“I <i>could</i> live with you! You’re not the sort of
+woman who talks, or fusses. You make me think of
+a feminine cat, licked, sitting on a cushion. Indifferent
+and mysterious, but cozy.”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah enjoyed this admiration; she knew that she
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</span>possessed in an unusual degree the qualities which
+Grace Fuller lacked; she could be seductive because
+she had no particular sense of humor. Grace Fuller
+was the sort of woman who keeps her emotions under
+lock and key because she knows that she is ridiculous,
+that all emotion is ridiculous. She waited for some
+one to smash in her defenses and rescue her hidden
+self. In the meantime, she leaned on the door, fearful.
+But Lilah was a naked heart behind a grill.</p>
+
+<p>With a sudden impulse, Lilah said: “Come, then!
+There are two bedrooms.... I pay sixty-five a
+month.... I’ve got to do something ... make
+hats ... dance.... We’ll manage.”</p>
+
+<p>They lighted cigarettes and sat, talking, watching
+each other, until midnight.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>Grace Fuller moved in—her two trunks and a neat
+bag were put in the room which had been Mr. Norris’.
+At once, an array of toilet articles appeared on
+the bureau—cosmetics and perfumes of very good
+make in crystal bottles, small, opaque boxes of rouge
+and lip sticks in metal cases. Miss Fuller had a passion
+for cosmetics, but she did not look like a woman
+who painted; her skin was her only claim to seduction,
+and the faint odor of perfume was an indication
+of her restraint. She was virginal, and, in her exaggerated
+loneliness, abnormal. She shut the door of
+her room against Lilah, and only emerged, fully
+dressed and curled, for formal conversation.</p>
+
+<p>She left the apartment early in the morning and returned,
+often, late at night, dog-tired, but unflinching.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</span></p>
+
+<p>Lilah made one attempt to get work to do. She
+had heard that one of the fashionable men dressmakers
+wanted a designer. His shop, an entire house
+in the East Fifties, was furnished in the exotic manner
+of Poiret’s establishment in Paris. His mannequins
+inevitably graduated to the stage, or to society.
+Diana, Kitty, Carmencita ... opulent, tall girls with
+the hands and arms of goddesses.... Something
+about this man’s manner had always attracted Lilah.
+He made the exploitation of feminine vanity an enormously
+profitable business. She went to see him, relying
+on the poetic little hat and her manner to carry
+her past the guardians of his privacy to the inner sanctum,
+his office, a room decorated by Chanler.</p>
+
+<p>She found the approach unexpectedly easy. He
+was seated behind a desk. She was surprised, upset,
+by his youth and his concise greeting:</p>
+
+<p>“Won’t you sit down?”</p>
+
+<p>“Thank you.”</p>
+
+<p>“You are interested in a wardrobe? It is not the
+season. But there are a few models....”</p>
+
+<p>“No. I am a designer. Hats. I want a position
+with you.”</p>
+
+<p>“There is no opening.”</p>
+
+<p>“I thought....</p>
+
+<p>“Your experience?”</p>
+
+<p>“None. I have good taste....”</p>
+
+<p>“I see! That hat?”</p>
+
+<p>“Lanvin.”</p>
+
+<p>“Ah.”</p>
+
+<p>“But I am talented, myself.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</span></p>
+
+<p>“You know Paris?”</p>
+
+<p>“Very well.”</p>
+
+<p>“You are hard up?”</p>
+
+<p>With a flash of anger, Lilah said: “Yes. I am. I
+want a job.”</p>
+
+<p>“You shouldn’t have come to me. I am a busy
+man. Why didn’t you see Mr. O’Connor or Mrs.
+Frazer, at the work-rooms?” He wrote something on
+a card and tossed it across the desk. “There! If
+there’s room in the shop, they’ll give you a chance....
+First, you must learn to put hats together.
+Later, perhaps, you can design them.”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah rose. She did not take the card. She felt
+his eyes, shrewd, appraising, absolutely without illusion,
+slide over her—it was a physical, a nauseating
+attachment.</p>
+
+<p>“Thank you,” she said.</p>
+
+<p>“Not at all.” He waved his hand. His expression
+changed. He dismissed her. “Good morning.”</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>She postponed reality. There seemed to be no incentive,
+no immediate need; she was strangely lulled.
+She had, for years, searched for something vital, something
+with which to satisfy her restless longing for
+perfection. She had failed. There was nothing ahead
+that she could not, now, recognize as dull, inevitable,
+beyond her capacity for patient endurance.</p>
+
+<p>She was afraid of death, but she believed that, once
+dead, she would be thoroughly dead. As a child, she
+had had an overdose of religion; her mother had fed
+her all the gloomy details of the orthodox legend; on
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</span>the other hand, she had been conscious that her father,
+secretly, knew better. It was the old tragedy of
+credulity, Santa Claus and the cotton beard.</p>
+
+<p>Her dreams were deeper, more hidden than is usual
+with women. She wanted love but not what she called
+suburban love. She secretly desired a man who would
+be indifferent to her contempt and beyond the reach
+of her irony. She could imagine herself in love, but
+the co-protagonist was always featureless; she invariably
+built her romance about her own personality.
+She was forever clothing herself in the garments of
+romance and falling in love with herself.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>Robert Peabody reëntered her life a week after the
+relation with Grace Fuller had been established.</p>
+
+<p>He came one evening when the two women were
+together, Lilah sewing at some impractical square of
+brocade, Grace Fuller, her narrow feet elevated, smoking
+a cigarette in an amber holder. She had watched
+a man die that afternoon—an old man whose pet particular
+nurse and slave she had been for six months.
+Yet there was no sign of relaxation, of discouragement.
+Her pessimism was too deep, established, like
+some physical disease—slowly, she was hardening in
+the mold fate had made for her.</p>
+
+<p>Robert Peabody was embarrassed and jovial. Lilah
+found him amusing because, for the first time, she
+saw that another woman really wanted him.</p>
+
+<p>While he talked, as usual, about his dogs, Grace
+Fuller watched him. Her scrutiny, deep, unswerving,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</span>made Lilah conscious that he was, in a way, handsome.
+Always well-dressed, he had the deft outlines
+of a man accustomed to luxury; and his bland good
+humor was the result of an existence devoid of anxiety.
+His appendix had been the outstanding complication,
+so far. Something of his grandfather’s looks had
+passed to him; he had the high nose with flaring nostrils.
+But his eyes were his mother’s and hers the
+rather sensitive and melancholy mouth.</p>
+
+<p>He liked these two women. They were outside his
+sphere. He “played about” with the women who lived
+near Peabody’s Point, women he had watched grow
+up from spoiled little girls into a casual maturity;
+he had flirted with all of them, had seen them married
+and had settled into the bantering familiarity of
+the cherished bachelor in a “young married” community.</p>
+
+<p>Whatever he felt, inwardly, he was outwardly an
+inflexible optimist. Lilah wondered whether he saw
+Grace Fuller’s eyes, whether, if he saw, he could appreciate
+the extent, the danger, of that dedication.
+And she remembered, with an unexpected excitement,
+how he had kissed her arm.</p>
+
+<p>She went on sewing, bending her head so that the
+light from the lamp would fall on her hair. Her soft
+abstraction, her air of modesty and domestic content,
+drew him away from Grace Fuller. He leaned forward
+to finger the stuff she was making into a useless
+and ornamental bag, and she explained that the
+brocade came from a shop in Florence where the copying
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</span>of ancient materials was a specialty. This was
+the robe of Boticelli’s Primavera, a delicate scattering
+of small flowers on a background of cream silk.</p>
+
+<p>Grace Fuller rose suddenly and went into her bedroom.</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t flirt with me,” Lilah said. “Miss Fuller
+won’t like it.”</p>
+
+<p>He flushed. “You’re quite mistaken.”</p>
+
+<p>“You told me you were ‘sweet’ on her.”</p>
+
+<p>“I am. But I can flirt with you all the same.”</p>
+
+<p>Already, they had the manner of conspirators.
+Robert lowered his voice and said: “Will you dine
+with me? To-morrow? Say ‘yes.’ I’m going back
+to the Point on Friday. We’ll take a hansom to
+the Park and eat there. What do you say?”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah whispered: “Yes. I’ll be ready at five. Not
+later.”</p>
+
+<p>The door opened and Grace Fuller came in again.
+She caught the quick lifting of Robert’s head, his
+smile, at once embarrassed and triumphant. She
+knew him so well that her heart ached for this duplicity;
+she could even pity him for having had to
+hurt her. But she said nothing.</p>
+
+<p>When he had gone, she spoke from the doorway
+to Lilah, who was winding rough, colored threads
+about cardboard spools.</p>
+
+<p>“I wonder if you know what love is? Oh, you
+can imagine it! You think about it a lot! But do
+you know? The pain.... Exhausting.... Of
+trying to pour yourself into a man’s consciousness....
+And then being stupid. Hurting him—pushing
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</span>him off.... Pretending.... Because you’re
+ashamed of wanting.... Killing what you want.
+Not wanting what you want until you’ve lost it....”</p>
+
+<p>“That’s a bit excessive,” Lilah said. “You’re morbid,
+aren’t you? I could make any man happy by
+learning to understand him. If he liked mystery, I’d
+be mysterious. If he wanted a pal, I’d pal. To the
+limit.”</p>
+
+<p>“Could you be domestic?”</p>
+
+<p>“Certainly.”</p>
+
+<p>Miss Fuller laughed that short, dry and brittle
+laugh. “What we all say! Pretend to be clay for
+the molding. Other women nag. We wouldn’t!
+Other women suffer jealousy. We wouldn’t! Other
+women fail in the little illusions and go about in curl-papers
+and a mask of cold cream, without their mental
+corsets. We wouldn’t! But married.... Well,
+it’s positively thrilling to observe the similitude of
+women.... Marriage is a sort of antiphlogistine—it
+brings out all the lurking devils.”</p>
+
+<p>“How do you know?”</p>
+
+<p>“I’ve observed ... remember, I am a nurse. The
+shades up and the light of day on the domestic
+drama....”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah said suddenly: “I may take your Robert away
+from you.”</p>
+
+<p>Miss Fuller seemed to consider. “I see what you
+mean. I’m jealous!” She shook her head. “Robert
+isn’t the man for you. He isn’t a snob. And you
+are. I mean, you care a great deal about things
+Robert never notices. At the Point he goes about
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</span>like a hired man in a pair of corduroy trousers and
+an old green sweater. He’s lazy. And sometimes he
+says stupid things....”</p>
+
+<p>“What?” Lilah asked sharply.</p>
+
+<p>She felt a sharp pang of irritability slip into her
+consciousness, edged. Her eyes were lowered; her
+fingers flew around the cardboard spools.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, he’s full of platitudes. He collects stamps.
+He reads the wrong books, and he wants children.”</p>
+
+<p>“Does he?” Lilah’s voice was cool. The inflection
+was iced.</p>
+
+<p>The thought crossed her mind that perhaps Grace
+Fuller had lived with Robert. This was at once a
+revelation and a weapon. She glanced up. With a
+look both appraising and sympathetic, she studied
+that worn, disillusioned face, in which the charm of
+a blonde freshness had given way to a shadow, a
+premonition of old age. Vaguely distinguished, aloof,
+sharp and bitter, she had a tender mental surface.
+Lilah knew that she herself could control Grace
+Fuller’s opinions; she was not afraid of her tongue;
+the woman was quivering under the skin.</p>
+
+<p>“I see what you’re thinking,” Grace Fuller said.
+“It isn’t true. I’ve loved, but not Robert—that way.
+You won’t believe me. He’s decent, as men have forgotten
+how to be decent.... Lilah, let me have
+him!”</p>
+
+<p>She crossed the room suddenly and stood before
+Lilah with her hands clenched at her sides, her face
+strained. “I love him!” she cried.</p>
+
+<p>Lilah tossed the silks upon the table. “Nonsense,”
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</span>she said crisply. “I don’t want your Robert! He’s
+a fearful bore. He’s flat. He moves about on the
+face of the earth like a wet beetle. Grace, you’re
+biased. You’re lop-sided. You’re hypnotized by his
+morality—or his money! You’re making yourself
+ridiculous and Robert is flattered. He doesn’t intend
+to marry you. It’s too comfortable to know that he
+can make you suffer. Why not make him suffer?
+Men don’t appreciate martyrdom. You look like an
+old woman, at thirty. Am I unkind? I don’t mean
+to be. I’m awfully fond of you.... I tell you, I
+don’t want your Robert.... But I can’t help it if
+he should happen to fall in love with me.... Men
+do those things. They love the wrong woman....
+If you didn’t care.... If you could....”</p>
+
+<p>She broke off.</p>
+
+<p>“Let’s go to bed. I’m tired. He tires me. I tell
+you he bores me. Let’s not talk about him.”</p>
+
+<p>Without a word, Grace Fuller went into her room
+and shut the door.</p>
+
+<p>In a few minutes she came out again. She had
+brushed her hair back from her forehead, and had
+a startled, innocent look. She kept rubbing cold
+cream into her face and neck with little upward, crawling
+motions of her finger-tips. She wore a corduroy
+wrapper and felt slippers. Lilah noticed that her feet
+were narrow and bony, like a priest’s. Her elbows
+were sharp. Her shoulders were too narrow....
+Lilah felt round and cozy and soft. She felt warm;
+her flesh delighted her. She thought how delicious she
+must look, sitting there with her feet in high-heeled
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</span>slippers tucked under her. She was sorry, in a comfortable
+sort of way, for Grace Fuller. She wanted,
+at that moment, to help her, to give her some of her
+own warmth and brilliance, to bring her into the circle
+of her inevitable success.... She saw herself making
+it very delightful for Grace Fuller at Peabody’s
+Point. “My dear Grace, Robert loves to have you....
+He is so fond of you. You must stay as long
+as you can!” Perhaps giving her some decent clothes....
+She would be quite smart in simple things, with
+eccentric hats and bizarre ornaments....</p>
+
+<p>Grace Fuller rubbed the cream into her finger-nails
+with the absorption she put into doing all unimportant
+things, as if performing a rite. As Lilah had
+never seen her out of the formality of curled hair
+and rouge, she felt a vague embarrassment.</p>
+
+<p>“I wanted to say,” Grace Fuller remarked presently,
+“that we mustn’t have a misunderstanding.
+You’re more important to me than Robert.”</p>
+
+<p>“I tell you, I don’t want him,” Lilah repeated.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>She dressed carefully for her meeting with Robert.
+The Chinese hat had lost some of its novelty, but she
+had added a French veil.... She was almost, literally,
+penniless.</p>
+
+<p>At five o’clock Robert Peabody arrived. He was
+eager, flushed.</p>
+
+<p>A shiny hansom-cab, deliciously out of balance, precarious,
+waited at the curb. A group of curious small
+boys gaped at this contrivance, and, as Lilah and
+Robert crossed the sidewalk, a window was thrown
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</span>up and a burst of laughter floated down to them.
+Lilah was acutely conscious; Robert unaware. He
+had the fine indifference of the wealthy to other people’s
+little humiliations. She had a momentary feeling
+of defeat. He was infinitely removed. He intended,
+probably, to treat her as he had treated Grace
+Fuller....</p>
+
+<p>Then, abruptly, her mood changed.</p>
+
+<p>The cab turned uptown; the rhythmic clop of hoofs,
+the remote and cushioned cabin, like a sedan on
+wheels, her own youth.... Suddenly everything was
+desirable, delightful. This was what she wanted,
+deserved....</p>
+
+<p>She began to sparkle. She was so intimate, so gay,
+that Robert Peabody’s rather stolid expression changed
+to one of amazed delight in her. He turned around;
+their eyes met. She noticed that his eyes were not
+blue, but hazel, very clear and wide open. She
+pressed her shoulder against him, and he became
+aware of a delicate odor of sandalwood. They
+laughed a good deal. Because she thought that he
+would not be interested in her European experiences,
+she talked about the rare summers she had spent in
+American resorts. She spoke of her “good tennis
+arm” and how an Indian had taught her to handle a
+paddle. As a matter of fact, she was an indifferent
+sport. But she could imagine herself doing all these
+things. She believed she had done them.</p>
+
+<p>Robert Peabody discovered a new eloquence. He
+had an admirable passion for the out-of-doors. It
+kept him, he said, from drinkin’. In New York, he
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</span>gave way in that point. Prohibition was a good thing—he’d
+be the last person to interfere with such a
+colossal experiment. But any one who could afford
+to drink, drank. He did. He supposed he wasn’t a
+good American. He never had been, in a literal sense.
+Politics didn’t exactly get under his skin; the country
+muddled through without him. He had his property,
+his dogs, his friendships, his conviction of an inalienable
+right to these possessions. If there should be
+social changes, upheavals, revolutions, he would accept
+whatever came. He believed in going with the
+times, never bucking the trend, whatever it was.</p>
+
+<p>The war hadn’t interfered with this facile philosophy;
+he had accepted the fact that the world was
+fighting mad, stark crazy, gibbering. A phase. It
+had happened before; it would happen again. He
+couldn’t stop it by stating a preference for open fields
+and dogs. So, he had gone to the first officers’ camp,
+and had agreed cheerfully to whatever “authority”
+said. A knack for details, hitherto undiscovered, had
+landed him in the ordnance and he had worn silver
+chevrons in cheerful glory at Rochester, New York.
+Captain Peabody!</p>
+
+<p>“Now it’s over, I am back where I want to be. The
+world hasn’t changed much. I don’t understand all
+this talk about a new consciousness. Men won’t
+change, either. We had our chance when Wilson
+went to Paris. But the recoil didn’t surprise me. We
+aren’t ready for practical idealism. You and I—people
+who see what might be—aren’t a drop in the
+bucket of public feeling. We’re swamped by millions
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</span>of frightened ignoramuses. They’ll swing back to
+the doddering conservatives, bleating for normalcy.
+They’ll get it! We’re in for another Dark Age.”</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t you care?”</p>
+
+<p>“No. I never believed in the pet illusions we
+fought for, anyway. Civilization has always tickled
+my sense of humor. There are certain unchangeable,
+satisfactory things—well, dogs! And days when you
+can smell the sea, sweet, like flowers, blowing in over
+the fields. September days! I’d stack ’em up
+against every bloody war for supremacy, the confounded
+conceit of man—I’m talking like a poet. I’m
+not a poet. I’m lazy. I like peace, and plenty to
+eat.”</p>
+
+<p>He laughed. “And you. I like you. You’re cute
+as the devil.”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah turned to him again and let him see the curve
+of her lips. She had never been more vivacious. The
+city flowed by the cab windows with a dignity impossible
+in a motor, taking place, not as kaleidoscopic
+flashes in a cubistic ensemble, but as buildings, towers,
+parks and people. In the wide brilliance of Madison
+Square there was time to value the great campanile
+soaring out of the feathery green of the park into a
+bland sky.... Then, more slowly, up the long incline
+to the Library, where the lions seemed to gaze
+down their noses over invisible spectacles; they had,
+Lilah remarked, a sort of haughty senility—Grand
+Army of the Republic lions about to recite the “Battle
+of Gettysburg.” One of them had worn a rakish
+snow hat during a February blizzard, the other a
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</span>white blanket about his middle, like a pet poodle in
+a wooly-wooly....</p>
+
+<p>Lilah found the city astonishingly beautiful—but
+something held her from telling Robert Peabody so.
+He would not have shared her delight in the unfinished
+masterpiece. New York, to him, was simply
+New York; like so many New Yorkers, he suffered
+from a familiarity with marvels. Lilah found it both
+monstrous and audacious. She had always tasted
+cities as a connoisseur tastes wine. Now, in this slate-blue
+twilight, she shivered with pleasure. The lava-stream
+of motors filled the air with a sort of luxurious
+purring; it seemed to Lilah that the hidden springs
+of vitality within herself had begun to vibrate, to
+hum, like harp strings; she was vibrant. If some
+one would write a grand opera, not in the manner of
+“Louise,” not lyric, amorous, but metallic, about New
+York! The leit-motif, a theme of feverish, restless
+striving. The minor melodies, machines, riveters,
+steam jets, whistles, sirens, bells, six million human
+voices—unceasing, beating against the human heart
+like the tom-tom of African drums. The sets ...
+from a window, streets like Sienese back-alleys enormously
+exaggerated. Vast, tilting walls. A few
+lights on the face of the cañon. Weight of stone and
+steel and swaying towers. Or, a bloodless avenue of
+square monoliths, imposing, imponderable, significant....</p>
+
+<p>The cab turned into the Plaza, so long an upheaval
+of derricks, mud, French Gothic and erratic statuary,
+now settled into a beauty of its own, and Robert Peabody
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</span>said: “Shall we stop here? Or do you prefer
+the Park?”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah preferred the Park.</p>
+
+<p>They dined out-of-doors, their faces close together
+over a narrow table. She found him more attractive
+here. He had a genial yet vigorous manner of dealing
+with waiters and hat-boys, an almost aristocratic
+indifference to publicity and he did not, after calling
+her “cute as the devil,” come back to the attack. He
+let her see that he was aware of the privilege of her
+company. There were other women in the restaurant;
+a startlingly brunette girl in black satin which made
+her look, Lilah thought, like a wet cod-fish, sat almost
+at his elbow, yet he disposed of her, and her seduction,
+with a glance. He ordered planked shad and
+regretted that there was no white wine; at the Point,
+he had over a thousand bottles of Sauterne....</p>
+
+<p>“I want to meet your grandfather,” Lilah interrupted.</p>
+
+<p>“He would like you. He doesn’t like Grace
+Fuller.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why?”</p>
+
+<p>Robert’s face puckered. “I don’t know.”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah said quickly, in a way she had of disposing
+of things: “She’s not quite sane. She will never be
+contented. She’s such a darling ... but she takes
+life too seriously. She depresses me. She’s like white
+grass growing in a dark place.... I don’t know....
+Yes, I do know. She’s a celibate. I hope she’ll never
+marry. For her own sake. But more for the man’s.
+I’d pity a man who found that instead of a woman
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</span>he had an obstinate, distorted idea in his arms. Not
+love at all, but a misconception of love. She wants
+experience but runs away from it—she curls her hair
+and rouges and then hides.”</p>
+
+<p>“I like her,” Peabody said. “But I don’t pretend
+to understand her. Perhaps you are right.”</p>
+
+<p>“I know I’m right.”</p>
+
+<p>She dismissed Grace Fuller and set about captivating
+this rather ponderous intelligence. Again, she relied
+on her quickness, her intuition, her adroit penetration.
+He had been, evidently, upset by mention
+of Grace Fuller; either he had a sense of responsibility
+or he was annoyed by Lilah’s analysis. His
+was a basic honesty and loyalty. She changed the
+subject to herself. She could see that she excited
+him; he was, she had heard from Grace Fuller, accustomed
+to women who preferred sport clothes and
+who rode to hounds; he had been brought up in a
+society which imitated, on a smaller, more restricted
+scale, the life of the English counties. He had had no
+intellectual companionship. He could not juggle with
+the stock phrases of the <i>cognoscenti</i>; he was too simple,
+or too indifferent, to acquire a modern vocabulary
+of names and cults, movements and personalities.
+But she could stir his imagination with herself, her
+decisive manner, her melting eyes, the little upward
+turn of her mouth, as if, always, she wanted to be
+kissed. She felt him leaning toward her, absorbed.
+She knew how to make what she said audacious, and,
+by a subtle turn, to leave the implication in doubt.
+She suggested desire without feeling it. This was a
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</span>part of what other people called her “technique.”
+She was not unaware of it, but she did not consider
+that it was something she ought to be ashamed of.
+Rather, it gave her an inestimable advantage.</p>
+
+<p>After dinner they walked through the park, their
+arms and shoulders touching in the darkness. There
+was everywhere a subdued gurgle of water in shallow
+basins or lipping the banks of the lake. Couples
+passed, drifting, close together, with a murmur of
+voices. The blatant artificiality of the landscape was
+blurred, softened, gathered into somber walls of vegetation,
+threaded with globes of light. Groups of
+people passed in and out of the shadows, made mysterious,
+dignified by an unreality that had about it
+something of the theater. Faces glimpsed in passing
+were indefinite; the sound of feet on the asphalt paths,
+the murmur of voices were Venetian, melancholy....</p>
+
+<p>Robert Peabody drew her arm through his. At
+Eighty-fifth Street, as they crossed the road, he raised
+his cane and signalled for a cab. Lilah sank back
+with a little sigh.</p>
+
+<p>“This is comfortable! Let’s drive.”</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly his arm went about her shoulders. She
+was surprised at the strength, the violence of his
+grasp.</p>
+
+<p>“You’re adorable. Let me kiss you.”</p>
+
+<p>She shook her head. “No.”</p>
+
+<p>But he bent down, kissed her, once, twice, a dozen
+times. She was breathless, angry, frightened, but
+helpless in the circle of his arm. “Don’t! Don’t!”
+she said. “Please. Here....”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</span></p>
+
+<p>She heard him say: “I love you. I want you to
+marry me.”</p>
+
+<p>Her heart contracted. How on earth had this happened?
+What would the driver think of such a scene?
+This was what, all along, she had wanted. He had
+everything ... everything.... Something in his
+eyes, his voice, husky, shaken, made her know that
+he loved her. It would be easy to manage him....
+Love.... She couldn’t expect to kiss him like that
+at once. As always, she shrank from contact. But
+if she....</p>
+
+<p>“Answer. Open your eyes.”</p>
+
+<p>She made a struggle to throw into her expression
+something ardent, convincing. And lifting her face,
+she kissed him. She need not say, at once, the words
+he expected. She was not as dishonest as that....
+A wave of feeling, relief, excitement, went over her.
+His head fell back, down again, on her shoulder. He
+was, suddenly, weak, surrendered to his emotion. She
+saw the back of his neck, his close, blonde hair. The
+intimacy of their attitude assailed her and she pushed
+him away.</p>
+
+<p>“Not here. Later....”</p>
+
+<p>“You’ll marry me?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes. Yes.”</p>
+
+<p>She lifted her arms and straightened her hat. Then
+she felt her hand seized and his lips fastened on her
+fingers, hungry, insatiable....</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="III">
+ III
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="dropcap"><span class="upper-case">Lilah</span> was afraid to tell Grace Fuller that she
+had promised to marry Robert Peabody. Her
+conscience, an inconsistent element in her nature,
+disturbed her to the extent of making her irritable.
+She went to her room without saying good
+night.</p>
+
+<p>She was trembling with excitement and could not
+sleep. Instead, wrapped in a kimono, she paced the
+floor, seeing her white face at intervals in the oval
+mirror of her dressing-table.</p>
+
+<p>What would her life be with Robert Peabody? Not
+what she had dreamed, certainly. She would have
+the scope money affords. But not the pride of love;
+she would always be a little ashamed of Robert. She
+did not know why, exactly. To justify her acceptance
+of him, she assured herself that she could change
+him, pour him out of his mold into hers. Yet she shivered
+with apprehension. He might guess her lack of
+feeling and grow cold himself. Men wanted love, the
+gestures and jealousies, the unconsidered, delicious
+abandonments, passion. She could never give him
+this. And she would miss the wild sweetness, the
+danger, the pain of love that is mutual, acknowledged.
+But she wanted ease....</p>
+
+<p>She paused to stare at herself. Perhaps she was
+wrong. There might not be love of that sort. Perhaps
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</span>she was giving Robert all that he, or any man,
+expected—her prettiness, her charm, her youth. He
+must be forty. He had had experience—but, good
+heavens, she couldn’t be jealous! Only he mustn’t
+go on; if she married him, he must be loyal....</p>
+
+<p>Pacing the room again, she pictured herself in possession,
+at last, of security. It was humiliating to
+battle with poverty when you had no wits with which
+to pull yourself out; if she had been one of those
+clever girls who stalk success, on the stage, in studios,
+newspaper offices, shops.... She hadn’t their courage
+or their audacity; she despised struggle.</p>
+
+<p>Persistently, the idea returned, that she was cheating.
+She recalled, with a shudder, an instinctive recoil,
+his attitude as he bent over her hands—it had
+been both supplicating and possessive.</p>
+
+<p>What she was doing was immoral, wrong. She had
+been brought up to believe that such a step leads to
+good, old-fashioned perdition, hell, damnation and
+brim-stone. Experience had taught her that in all
+probability she would suffer, but that if she were clever
+she could balance the advantage against the price;
+wealth against Robert, love against comfort; she threw
+her charm in, to square the account. She could be
+generous on that score. She would dress remarkably
+well; she would create an interesting atmosphere, and
+if Robert did not know the most entertaining personalities
+in New York, she would get them together;
+before long, she would be a famous hostess. In just
+that, her ability to attract people, lay her genius. She
+could, given the means, make living an art, create,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</span>out of places and people, something unique and memorable,
+as Lorenzo of the Medici had made his pages,
+his poets, his ladies and his gardens into an immortal
+legend. Why not? American literature had recently
+exploited the soda-water clerk and the corner
+groceryman, the farmer, the traveling salesman, the
+immigrant and the crook. No one was interested in
+the spiritual reactions of that almost extinct dodo,
+the gentleman. Nothing was art that did not deal
+with a profane ape groping for the stars and missing
+them! The more interesting and complex society was
+overlooked in this effort to capture the soul of what
+Lilah called the proletariat; it proved, this soul, as
+elusive as a flea. One was left with the conviction
+that the country was populated by illiterate sensualists—a
+vast, imponderable mediocrity. There was no
+one else. The fine flower had withered in the clutches
+of this overwhelming parasite. An inchoate fumbling
+at the foundations ... a wail of protest ... ignorance
+and braggadocio....</p>
+
+<p>Or else, they advertised the flapper, the country-club
+habitué, the pathological spinster and the cad.
+Society was constantly being reminded that it was
+rotten. Novelists were what David Brenner had called
+himself, alley-cats pawing over garbage. Apparently,
+the brave and the witty, the poetic, the exquisite were,
+for artistic purposes, fresh sardines. The cry was for
+Truth, and the whole pack ignored any truth that
+was not putrefied, or, at least, stale....</p>
+
+<p>Lilah thought: “I can do something to change this.”</p>
+
+<p>The idea trailed off into a vision, a spectacle, a kind
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</span>of entertainment in which she played the leading rôle.
+She saw the house she would have in New York. Herself,
+in gray brocade trimmed at the neck and hem
+with fur, her feet in brocaded slippers, advancing
+across an immense, glowing room, her hand outstretched....</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>She did not want to hurt Grace Fuller. At breakfast
+she shivered with dread. It would be like putting
+poison in a cat’s milk. She expected to see Grace
+Fuller actually foam and shriek and stiffen and then
+stretch out dead on the kitchen floor, her bang in curl
+and the pallor of her cheeks brushed faintly with expensive
+rouge.</p>
+
+<p>Lilah was very tender. She made pop-overs and
+cooked the hominy in a double boiler. She hovered
+over Grace Fuller, who ate with precision, as if she
+were afraid of exuberance, as if, Lilah thought, she
+were guarding herself against some strain of hysteria.</p>
+
+<p>Lilah said suddenly: “Robert asked me to marry
+him last night. I said I would. I know you’ll think
+I’m a liar. I didn’t really want him yesterday morning!
+When he kissed me—I did.”</p>
+
+<p>Miss Fuller went on buttering a slice of toast. She
+did it thoroughly. Then she said in an absolutely
+unchanged voice: “What are you going to do for a
+trousseau?”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah flushed crimson. To cover her relief, she
+opened the oven door. She had expected something
+more—more feminine. She said: “I thought you
+cared.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</span></p>
+
+<p>“I do.... I learned certain things in France.
+One of them was not to care too much.”</p>
+
+<p>“I didn’t know you went to France, Grace.”</p>
+
+<p>“Three years.... And things like this happened....
+At Soissons there was a French boy, about
+twenty-two years old. He looked nineteen. They
+brought him in with a wound in his abdomen—he told
+me, that first day, that he had looked down at himself
+and had seen his own intestine. He was going
+to die. They all said so. We were being shelled, and
+every night we had to carry the wounded into the
+cellar. He couldn’t be moved. And while all the
+rest of them cried out and groaned or made a joke
+of it, he said nothing. The wards were dark. They
+let me have a baby flash which I held under my apron,
+and I used to run back to him. Sometimes the racket
+was fearful—that long howl and screech of shells
+passing over. Sometimes it was quiet as the tomb.
+I was never sure whether that boy was alive until I
+saw his eyes, blue, steady, patient, asking me to pull
+him through.... Well, I did! He was my case.
+He got well. The day came when he was out in the
+garden in a chair, and then he was in uniform again,
+going home....”</p>
+
+<p>Grace Fuller shrugged her shoulders. “I cared.
+Terribly. It was my own little victory. He was a
+brave boy. I used to gloat over the fact that I had
+cheated death.... Then, one night, a year later,
+they brought him in again. I was standing in the
+hall when the ambulances came. There had been a
+drive and we had our hands full. Suddenly I saw
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</span>him. His stretcher was sopping with blood. He had
+gone back as an observer and his plane had been shot
+down ... he was riddled. But he knew me. And
+again he asked me to see him through. <i>I couldn’t!</i>
+He died there, in the hall ... my victory! And I
+had to see those patient eyes fill up with distrust, with
+protest, with a sort of mocking challenge, as he felt
+himself slipping out of my arms into that red tide....”</p>
+
+<p>She rose, folding her napkin into a neat square.</p>
+
+<p>“Since then, I haven’t let myself care.”</p>
+
+<p>“How did you stand it?”</p>
+
+<p>“What?”</p>
+
+<p>“The war.”</p>
+
+<p>“I didn’t stand it. I changed my nature.”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah said: “I wanted to do something—help....
+But the women over here acted so badly I was
+ashamed.... They seemed to enjoy, some of them,
+all the risk and death. You’d see them rushing down
+the library steps, their faces red, clutching at men,
+trying to drag them into it: ‘You’re going to fight,
+aren’t you? Why aren’t <i>you</i> in khaki?’ And then
+the Liberty drives ... a sort of circus parade of
+ambulances, stretchers, posters smeared with blood,
+pictures of atrocities—that terrible one by George
+Bellows, of a massacre at Dinard.... People were
+excited. They took a sort of morbid pleasure. I
+wanted to stay out of it and hold on to sanity, if I
+could. It never ‘got’ me. And when the wounded
+began to arrive, it was worse. One of the doctors at
+Greenhut’s told me that they had to force the women
+out. They weren’t all of them sympathetic; they
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</span>wanted to look at the wounded. The way a crowd
+rushes to an accident.... Morbid. Even the women
+who danced with the soldiers and sailors and knitted
+in the theaters struck me as ridiculous.... I hated
+it.”</p>
+
+<p>“It was better in France.”</p>
+
+<p>A silence fell and Lilah’s cheeks burned again. She
+rolled the sleeves of her dress above her elbows and
+began to clear the table. Miss Fuller stood, rigid
+and uncompromising. Presently, in her usual precise
+voice, she said: “If you are going to marry Robert,
+you’ll have to have some clothes. Have you any
+money?”</p>
+
+<p>“No.”</p>
+
+<p>“How much would you need to see you through?
+I have saved a little. I’ll let you have it.”</p>
+
+<p>“I can’t allow you to do that.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why not?”</p>
+
+<p>“I’ve hurt you——”</p>
+
+<p>“No, you haven’t.” Unexpectedly, she put her
+arms around Lilah. “I want you to be happy. I admire
+you enormously.”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah hugged her. “Darling Grace! After all, it’s
+better that I should have him. You’ve got strength,
+and I haven’t. Left alone, I’d sink.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, I’ll swim,” Grace Fuller admitted. “Women
+like me always do! We give the impression of
+strength because we have our imaginations under control.
+I’m as helpless as you are, but I won’t admit it.
+The men of my family were all farmers. From them,
+perhaps, I got my tolerance. I can’t blame you. I
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</span>wish I could! I can’t blame Robert. I have none
+of the usual feminine eagerness to blame men for
+everything that goes wrong. You probably think I
+have no standards. I haven’t. I understand too
+well.”</p>
+
+<p>She went into the other room and came back wearing
+her hat, with a rather dog-eared fur neck-piece
+clasped under her chin; in high, tight collars she had
+the swan-like look of Consuela. Lilah was deeply
+sorry for her. For the moment she felt herself inferior.</p>
+
+<p>“I can let you have five hundred dollars, Lilah.
+Don’t tell Robert.”</p>
+
+<p>The telephone rang. They looked at each other
+with a glance stripped naked of pretense.</p>
+
+<p>“Go. It’s Robert.”</p>
+
+<p>“No! No!”</p>
+
+<p>“Hurry! Please.”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah went. She put the receiver to her ear with
+a certain dread, a reluctance.</p>
+
+<p>And she heard Robert’s voice, vibrant, saying:
+“Lilah? Sweetheart! I want you to meet me for
+lunch. We’ll buy that ring. What d’you say?” He
+broke off. “Is Grace there?”</p>
+
+<p>“No,” Lilah said distinctly.</p>
+
+<p>She turned her head and saw the door closing.</p>
+
+<p>“No,” she repeated. “I’m alone.”</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>Lilah was married a month later, in Junius Peabody’s
+house at the Point.</p>
+
+<p>She had had an overwhelming four weeks. Grace
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</span>Fuller’s five hundred dollars had no more than cleared
+the first hurdle. When Robert Peabody asked her
+whether she wanted pearls or a bandeau of diamonds,
+she had replied: “I prefer the money. I don’t care
+for jewels, and there are all sorts of things I want,
+and need; foolish things I can’t afford.”</p>
+
+<p>He had given her a check for five thousand dollars.</p>
+
+<p>With this sum deposited and in possession of a
+book of blanks smartly bound in leather, Lilah reversed
+her mask of poverty. She wore, instead, her
+most devastating sophistication, a fetching air of patronage
+and sweetness. Her first pilgrimage was to
+the gray stone house in the Fifties occupied by the
+esthetic and sharp couturière who had refused her a
+chance to work. She sent word to him that she was
+interested, this time, in a “wardrobe.” She was
+wearing a slim and expensive frock of red crêpe and
+a Paisley turban. She was positively beautiful; her
+slimness, her arched feet in delicate shoes, her gloves,
+were dominating.</p>
+
+<p>The dressmaker (his name was Maurice) pretended
+not to recognize her. With a bow, he led her to his
+show rooms and, summoning a saleswoman, entered,
+in French, into a passionate discussion of Lilah’s
+height, her coloring, her possibilities. One of the
+deep-skinned models trailed upon the scene in a sheath
+of gold cloth, dragging behind her a tail of emerald
+green chiffon. She met Lilah’s stare with an expression
+totally blank, as if she were walking in her sleep.
+Maurice sent for materials, yards and yards of brocade,
+metallic cloth, crêpe de Chine; jade, orange,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</span>violet and dull red mingled on the floor, the backs of
+chairs, across lacquered screens and tables. This
+profligate heap of stuffs went to Lilah’s head, but she
+preserved her air of polite indifference, sitting with
+crossed knees, her feet, in the elaborate, strapped
+shoes, displayed.... The model, she decided, had
+ugly ankles.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>At lunch that day she told Robert of her purchases.</p>
+
+<p>He shook his head. “Where shall you wear them?
+Peabody’s Point is a wilderness—the three houses, my
+own, my father’s and my grandfather’s, a deep forest
+of maples, pines and birch, and the sea! We seldom
+see any one, but when we do, they come on horse-back
+or by motor. It is astonishing when the women
+wear evening clothes. On great occasions, a house
+warming or a birthday or a dance—once, or twice, a
+year—there is some show of ceremony.... You will
+find us very rural.”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah stifled her disappointment. “Shan’t we live
+in town in the winter?”</p>
+
+<p>“If you like. We have a house in Thirty-eighth
+Street. It is closed now.”</p>
+
+<p>“Take me there!”</p>
+
+<p>The rooms were dark, and when, admitted by a caretaker,
+Lilah and Robert explored the first two floors,
+they found the furniture swaddled in linen, the chandeliers
+wearing net veils, like Bluebeard’s brides, and
+the rugs rolled back. The house was an exact example
+of the New York residence of the early Eighties.
+The marble mantels were surmounted by elaborate,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</span>wooden fret-work, an intricacy of shelves and pilasters,
+screens and grills, roosting place for those useless,
+ugly and enormously expensive vases of the period.
+Mirrors divided the windows and curtains of
+dark red velvet were looped up, held clear of the floor
+by chenille ropes. There was a multiplicity of cushions,
+tables, tabourettes; paintings, in deep frames, by
+Rosa Bonheur, Henner and Corot, and one luminous
+and arresting Inness, a landscape with elms and a
+river, sunlight and haze, russet, gold, and blue. Lilah
+seized upon this as a reason for enthusiasm.</p>
+
+<p>“My grandfather understands pictures,” Robert explained.
+“Even the modern fellows! I don’t. No
+one has ever taken the trouble to explain what they’re
+all about.”</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t you like this?”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, yes. But Inness wasn’t a modern exactly.”</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly he put his arm through Lilah’s and said:
+“You’re so clever. If I didn’t know what a darling
+you are, I’d be afraid of you. I want you to teach
+me all these things—what I should like, and why. I
+don’t want you to be ashamed of me.”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah, with a pretty bend of her head, put her face
+against his shoulder. She was feeling mellow, generous.
+This house, a valuable property in Murray
+Hill, was soon to be hers. Going from room to room,
+she mentally refurnished it.</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t like the house,” she said frankly. “It’s
+hideous—all this Victorian velvet and ebony. Horrible!”</p>
+
+<p>“Lilah!”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</span></p>
+
+<p>His expression warned her. “You sweet old stupid!
+Of course it’s horrible.”</p>
+
+<p>He stammered: “It’s a sort of—of monument to
+my grandmother.”</p>
+
+<p>“A mausoleum,” she corrected. “We’ll change it.”</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>Miss Fuller would not go to the Point for the wedding.
+She had, she insisted, an important case out
+of town. And, with her neat traveling bag and the
+fur neck-piece, she started off the day before Lilah
+left town. She had agreed to keep the apartment
+and to pay the astonished agent on the first of every
+month.</p>
+
+<p>Lilah went alone. Robert had engaged a compartment
+for her; she found flowers, candy, books there;
+<i>Lilah Norris</i>, written on Robert’s cards, thrust hastily
+into envelopes stamped with the names of shops internationally
+famous. The porter, judging from his
+eagerness, had been tipped. When he closed her into
+this walnut and green plush cell, he reminded her
+that he would call her at five. She would be “put off”
+at Peabody’s Point at five forty-five....</p>
+
+<p>The train moved out of the city, boring its way
+through the tunnel into a twilight studded with red
+and green, white and topaz-yellow flashes. A glimpse
+of the river. Tall stacks. Then darkness, broken by
+suburban stations, where, for an instant, people and
+motors were glimpsed in a strange immobility, as if
+painted on the car windows.</p>
+
+<p>Lilah undressed. She enjoyed the unaccustomed
+luxury of her traveling things, so unlike the pack she
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</span>had slung across her shoulder in Switzerland. Her
+night-gown was sheer batiste, scalloped, threaded with
+white ribbon. She braided her hair, switched off the
+light and lay on her side, staring out of the window.
+The silence was clamorous, yet she could hear the
+beating of her own heart. She pressed her hands
+there, frightened.</p>
+
+<p>She was going to marriage, in which, supposedly,
+she would never again be alone, like this.... Never
+again alone.... She ran her hands over her body,
+jealous of herself. Life, the crude fact, was unimaginable;
+she was aloof; somehow, she would gain
+time, hold herself for herself a little longer.... Outside
+a late moon had pierced the usual smokiness of
+a city sky. Trees brushed by. The odor of the
+flowers sent by Robert was sickish in the close room....
+Lilah felt suddenly the weight of his affection,
+his conquest. She burned with anger, with a sort of
+resentment. How could he think, expect.... She
+thought of running away, giving him the slip....
+They would find the compartment, the roses, his fatuous
+cards, but no Lilah. No woman. She pressed
+her face into the pillow and cried. She was infinitely
+sorry for herself, desolate. If only she were simple!
+If only she could love, accept, like other women!</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>In the morning she was happier, sustained by excitement.</p>
+
+<p>While she dressed, she glanced out of the window
+at a northern landscape of carelessly cleared fields
+now white with daisies, patches of pine and maple,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</span>and, beyond, a range of hills, sharply outlined against
+a clear, white sky. Puffs of air came through the
+screen infinitely fresh and cool; country air. Lilah
+took deep breaths.</p>
+
+<p>At the station, where the train stopped only long
+enough to let down a grinning porter and a step,
+Robert was waiting. He lifted her down, kissed her.
+She was instantly conscious of a difference in him;
+his coat was rough and cold; his face was red, sun-burned.
+And his hair, always so smooth and well-brushed,
+had blown askew, over his forehead. It got
+in his eyes and he smoothed it back with an impatience,
+a carelessness, new to her.</p>
+
+<p>“Grandfather is waiting. The early morning air
+isn’t awfully good for him. He sent apologies.”</p>
+
+<p>He hurried her into an open motor and the robe
+was adjusted about her knees. Robert drove. And
+again she noticed that he was in some sense more free.
+His hands on the wheel were casual but in control;
+with a quick turn of his head he scanned the road
+and turned north with a burst of speed startling in
+a man usually so hesitant and cautious.</p>
+
+<p>“Five miles,” he shouted. “We live at the end of
+nowhere. Our property already—all these fields.
+Wait until you see the woods!”</p>
+
+<p>The woods were somber in the morning light, green
+as trees are in stage-settings, immensely tall and close
+and straight, upon a carpet of moss and fern, wintergreen
+and arbutus. The road at intervals crossed a
+bridle-path, now and then emerging into cleared spaces
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</span>where a tangle of clover, buttercups and daisies grew
+lush, knee-deep.</p>
+
+<p>Robert brought the car to a standstill and turned
+to Lilah. His face was older in an unexpected seriousness.
+“This is all yours, Lilah. I am yours.
+Does it mean anything to you that I love you so?
+Your coming here has made me terribly happy—a
+queer sort of happiness, for I can’t sleep or eat. I
+ache for you. I want you to kiss me of your own
+accord....”</p>
+
+<p>“Haven’t I, ever?”</p>
+
+<p>“No.”</p>
+
+<p>She lifted her face, but at the first light contact of
+her lips, he could not have told whether she loved
+him or not. He gave to the embrace all the feeling
+he craved from her. She was overwhelmed, relieved.
+Nothing was required of her; she need not show herself,
+give herself up. Not yet.... She smiled, with
+closed eyes....</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly he let her go. Almost violently he relaxed
+his hold, so that she fell back and away from
+him.</p>
+
+<p>“If you don’t love me, Lilah,” he said, in a dry
+voice, “say so.”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah protested: “I do! What on earth makes you
+ask?”</p>
+
+<p>Robert Peabody did not answer, but sat bent forward
+over the wheel, as if, at a signal from her, he
+would start the car and drive back to the station. His
+expression was terrible; somehow, she knew that he
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</span>had sensed her relief in the moment just passed. She
+had hurt him. It wasn’t going to be altogether
+easy.</p>
+
+<p>In a silence made poignant by a stir of branches
+and the early morning clamor of birds, she fought for
+the right words, the gesture that would reassure him.
+Her hand touched his sleeve, crept down to his hand
+clenched on the wheel. “It is all new,” she began,
+“strange.... It isn’t love so much that I feel, but
+recognition ... of you, and this place ... mine
+... you might be a little patient....”</p>
+
+<p>He bent swiftly and kissed her fingers. The car
+sprang forward into the forest again.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>She did not glimpse the sea until they were fairly
+out of the wood and making a wide turn in a sort of
+park, where moss and fern gave way to an incredibly
+deep sward, smooth, emerald-green. She saw a
+house, another, and a sparkle of water beyond. At
+once she could smell the sea, kelp, sweet and sickish,
+salty. Robert had not spoken, but now he turned
+and said: “Here we are! Lilah! Home!”</p>
+
+<p>He swept into a gravel driveway and under a porte-cochère....
+She was getting out, rather faint, frightened
+now that she had committed herself.... A
+servant spoke to her and Robert said: “Miss Norris,
+Maisie.”</p>
+
+<p>“How do you do, Miss Norris? I’m sure we’re all
+very glad.”</p>
+
+<p>The hall, within, was dark—too much wood-work,
+and a huge, stone mantel, top-heavy. Lilah put her
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</span>hand up to her hat, and, turning instinctively in search
+of a mirror, found herself confronting an old man.</p>
+
+<p>“My grandfather,” Robert said. “This is Lilah.”</p>
+
+<p>Junius Peabody was tall and very handsome, at
+eighty-four. He offered his hand, and Lilah, giving
+her own into that dry, rather bony clasp, met his
+eyes. They were black, deep-set, with something
+ironic, quizzical, in their depths, like a spark of light
+at the bottom of a well. He wore a heavy mustache,
+perhaps to hide the leanness of his cheeks. He had
+what Robert had missed, a flame of some sort, a feeling
+for things, for life, for women, for beauty.</p>
+
+<p>“Lilah? May I?”</p>
+
+<p>She felt his lips on her cheek, and noticed a faint
+odor of Cologne.</p>
+
+<p>“You must be tired. Will you breakfast with us?
+Or, perhaps, later—”</p>
+
+<p>“Breakfast, by all means,” Lilah said. “I’m not
+tired. I’m very excited and happy.”</p>
+
+<p>She was, inexplicably, exhilarated again. The old
+man’s look had been appraising, and satisfied. He
+found her delightful. She knew this, and because she
+was certain that he was not easily pleased, she could
+afford to be flattered. He moved at her side through
+the house, across a large, cluttered room to a veranda,
+where Venetian shades were half-drawn against the
+brilliance of the sea in full sunlight; a table had been
+set for breakfast. Geraniums in boxes hedged the
+veranda on three sides. Beyond, a narrow garden
+separated the house from a pebbly beach and rocks
+covered with brown kelp.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Low tide,” Junius Peabody remarked.</p>
+
+<p>It was not the house she had pictured. There were
+no Italian gardens. But there was something substantial
+and vigorously assertive in the ugly width
+and spread of the wings, the turrets and verandas
+and useless, expensive ornamentation. In the Eighties
+this would have been a “place.” Meadows of wet
+kelp mingled with the fragrant spiciness of geraniums.
+A man servant in an apron, very old, with a crumpled
+mouth in a pink face, brought coffee. And Robert
+said: “Miss Norris, Edwin.” Lilah put just the right
+shade of interest into the pronouncement of the word
+“Edwin” with a rising inflection. She loved Edwin.
+She loved Junius. She loved Robert. She was conscious
+of being more charming, more herself, than
+she had ever been in a life given over to being, always,
+some one unlike the real Lilah. The real Lilah
+was a delightful, amusing, affecting little person.</p>
+
+<p>Once over that moment of appraisal, Junius Peabody
+made it plain that he approved of her.</p>
+
+<p>And after breakfast, brushing his mustache with
+a large cambric handkerchief, he walked with her into
+what he called the “greenery,” a park-like place at
+the back of the house away from the sea where a gardener
+worked among formal beds of Spring flowers.
+“No, Robert, you stay back—I want Lilah to myself.”</p>
+
+<p>Robert disappeared and Lilah threw a kiss, very
+prettily, at his back.</p>
+
+<p>“Robert would like to show you the kennels, but
+that can wait.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</span></p>
+
+<p>Lilah said impulsively: “It was good of you to let
+me come here to be married. I am very alone....
+The few relatives I have are in the West, and I don’t
+like any of them. They will not approve of my
+marrying so soon. But my father wouldn’t care, so
+why should I?”</p>
+
+<p>They crossed the greenery and, without comment,
+Junius Peabody pointed out another house. “My
+son’s. He died ten years ago. We have closed the
+place. Robert didn’t like it. I’ll show you his house,
+later. Although I dare say you will want to change it,
+it is modern enough. This, you see, is what I call
+the East Aurora period; it was built in nineteen-four,
+when America was beginning to absorb the Morris
+a b c’s. Inside it is worse.... Hand-tooled by Fra
+Bunco....” He broke off. “What perfume is
+that? Sandalwood? Delicious. My dear, we are
+delighted to welcome you.” And before she could
+thank him, he began again: “I am really astonished.
+I didn’t expect you to be—what you are. You are
+very clever; I can see that. Robert won’t understand
+you, but that won’t matter if you see to it that
+he isn’t humiliated. A woman must never be conspicuously
+superior to her husband. I dare say you
+know just what you are doing.”</p>
+
+<p>With a flash of anger, she said: “I am very fond
+of him!”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m glad of that.”</p>
+
+<p>They came into a small grove of pines, young trees
+near the sea, and on the shore, built upon the dunes,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</span>she saw another, smaller house, gray-shingled with
+gray blinds and stone chimneys. This, she realized,
+was to be her home. At first glance, it seemed a desolate
+place; there was no garden, only the white sand
+blown into little hills, and glistening, thick blades of
+dune grass and, beyond, the sea. Always keen to
+beauty, she resented the uncompromising grayness of
+the house. “The blinds should be blue,” she said
+quickly, “and there should be yellow and blue awnings
+and a brick terrace at the back with hydrangeas
+in pots. Why not a wall on this side and turf and
+some poplars?”</p>
+
+<p>Junius Peabody laughed. “You must ask Robert.
+He will do anything you suggest. He is very much in
+love with you.... I think you two will make a go
+of it if you won’t be impatient. Robert will be stubborn
+if you criticize him. He isn’t as simple or as
+pliable as he seems, on the surface, to be. His father,
+not I, was responsible for his career. My son had
+no more sense of the beautiful than his house indicates;
+he lived only to serve my creation, Peabody
+and Sons. He never loved or needed to love. He
+quite literally worked himself to death and collapsed
+in harness. But he wanted Robert to do the same
+thing, and, to prepare him, sent him to a boys’ school
+at Territet and then to Columbia! And then, by way
+of hardening him, a trip around the world! For one
+year before his father died, Robert sat in an office in
+the Peabody Building in Boston, staring out of the
+window.... It might have been, in the end, a
+tragedy.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</span></p>
+
+<p>He took her arm. “Let’s go back. Robert will
+want you, and I don’t like the sun.”</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>That night she talked to him again. A mist had
+come up, opaque, chilly, and at intervals a buoy beyond
+the reef tolled like a ship’s bell. A fire was
+lighted in the drawing-room, and Lilah, in a gown of
+disturbing simplicity, very short, faced Junius Peabody.
+He had the outlines she most admired, a distinguished
+thinness; his wrists and ankles were characteristic,
+slender. His elegance was stressed; he had
+not Robert’s unawareness; the details of Junius Peabody’s
+dress were, to the least fold of a tie, considered,
+epicurean. And this ceremony somehow detracted
+from his age, gave him an appearance not in the least
+jaunty, but vivacious. When Lilah dressed for dinner,
+she chose her gown for him, not for Robert; she
+had found, in Junius, an audience appreciative of
+those things Robert overlooked. She thought: “While
+he’s alive, I shall be happy here. I like him because
+he won’t give in to being old. He never apologizes.”
+She had, she knew, brought him something he longed
+for and was too proud to seek, youth and the little
+drama of furbelows and perfumes, ribbons and silk
+stockings. She was pert enough to amuse him. He
+would have despised a sentimental woman.</p>
+
+<p>Robert left them again. One of his favorite dogs
+had developed a distemper and he went away, wrapped
+in a great coat, to spend a watchful night beside a box
+full of straw where the silver gray bitch lay on her
+side, panting. Robert’s face was puckered with regret
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</span>and humiliation. “I know you’ll think I’m a
+fool! But that dog’s damned sick, Lilah.”</p>
+
+<p>When he had gone, Junius Peabody said: “In my
+day, Edwin would have sat up with the dog. Love
+isn’t what it used to be.”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t mind,” Lilah said. “Grace Fuller warned
+me.”</p>
+
+<p>“She did, did she?” The old man jerked in his
+chair. “Unpleasant female. I never liked her. She
+made me feel that my illusions were hocus-pocus, rubbish.
+As if she had spotted all my weaknesses and
+could put her finger on them, the way those osteopath
+chaps pick out sore spots on your spine. Here, vanity.
+There, arrogance. And down the line.”</p>
+
+<p>He chose a cigar from a silver box at his elbow.</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t want the truth. At my age, it’s dangerous.
+I am like a twist of paper that has gone up in flames;
+the shape remains, but at a touch will crumble away....
+Excuse me, my dear. I do not often mention
+my age. After all, I may live twenty years, and I
+must not shrink from the dust too soon.”</p>
+
+<p>He reflected, with a curious gratification, that he
+was at last very safe from life, because he no longer
+cared what happened to him—nothing <i>could</i> happen.
+He was free from his old restless curiosity, his desire
+to be always in contact with experience.</p>
+
+<p>“You, my dear, are still seeking the unattainable.
+Immeasurably superior—old age! You want big
+happenings; I am content with little happenings.
+Thank God, I’m not a dyspeptic ... men who understand
+food never are. I’ve never bolted, like these
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</span>modern business men. To be appreciated, done justice,
+breakfast must be given half an hour, luncheon
+an hour, dinner two hours. There’s something vulgar
+in this dishing up and gobbling down.... Robert
+says you’re a good cook.”</p>
+
+<p>“I am,” Lilah admitted.</p>
+
+<p>“You must make something for me. Even a potato—boiled
+with art—Consider the slow, the exquisite
+processes of its growth! The earth must be
+turned, the seed planted. Then the feathery stalks,
+the white blossoms, the root upturned, the gathering....
+Some conception of the potato must be in the
+seed, an immortal thought contained within the physical
+means of realization. Very comforting, that idea!
+It gives one at least the security of divine attention.
+Could there have been, before I was at all, a picture
+of me, dry as dust, tall and gaunt, with this mustache?
+Perhaps! The finished product must be contained
+in the germ, irrevocable, bound to materialize.”</p>
+
+<p>“Fatalist!” Lilah cried.</p>
+
+<p>“Otherwise, wouldn’t an onion grow into an oak
+tree, a toad into an eagle, a mushroom into a man?
+The intention must be there along with the cell structure!
+Stay as you are, my dear—you are a lovely
+celestial mistake, an orchid grown into a woman!”</p>
+
+<p>He was very particular about his cigar—a mild
+panetela with an easy pull. He sliced off the tip
+with a pen-knife, squeezed slowly between thumb and
+forefinger, held the cigar against the light, took it between
+his lips, sucked, closed his eyes, and, opening
+them suddenly, applied the match.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Havana,” he said. “I smoked my first cigar in
+Hergesheimerland.... But I mustn’t go back! Old
+men are always doing that, perhaps because youth
+takes on a patina with years.”</p>
+
+<p>“Were you happy?” Lilah asked.</p>
+
+<p>“Never! Avid. Insatiable. Restless. Always
+goaded by desire—but not happy. Now, at eighty-four,
+I know how to live. I know that familiarity
+is more precious than novelty, and that relaxation is
+sweeter than distraction.”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah shook her head. “I don’t believe you. You
+are as eager as I am, perhaps more so.”</p>
+
+<p>“The world of men is behind—the world of spirit
+opens up. You don’t believe that, either. Wait until
+you are alone with yourself—if you out-live your family,
+as I have. My wife, Minnie, my two brothers,
+my son. Robert doesn’t count. He is a remote descendant.”</p>
+
+<p>“You won’t die,” Lilah said.</p>
+
+<p>“I may,” he admitted, with a smile faintly ironic.
+“Although I have always believed that I neither would
+nor could! The earth is too sweet and I have loved
+... everything. Other men don’t. They die complaining
+of a lack, where I have found a surfeit of
+beauty. For twenty years I’ve been burying people
+who didn’t love enough, little disappointed people,
+jealous, enraged, all of them! Because youth had
+gone! Youth!”</p>
+
+<p>He stood up. And with that quick, faintly unsteady
+gait, he went to the mantel, staring up at the
+portrait of a young man in a black coat, a white waist-coat
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</span>and tie who sat, stiff and somehow violent, in
+a red velvet chair. The thick, black brows almost
+met above the bridge of the nose; the lips were full,
+both sensual and ironic; the eyes small and dark. A
+dark skin stained with red—</p>
+
+<p>“They used to say I was ‘foreign’ looking. And I
+was proud of it. My wife rather disapproved.”</p>
+
+<p>He sat down again, stroking his chin. “Poor
+Minnie! Poor girl! To be foreign wasn’t quite respectable
+in the ’Sixties. But there you have me—young!
+And miserable.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why miserable?”</p>
+
+<p>“What do you know about love?” he demanded
+suddenly. “Pretty minx, sitting there with your cigarette,
+talking to me when you should be out in the
+fog with your lover. You modern women are as cold
+as ice. You’re not normal. Nothing about you is
+rational except your love of finery. I have a streak
+of it in myself. I can remember my wife’s night
+gowns where I have forgotten her opinions. You
+haven’t changed in <i>that</i>. So many scents and sachets,
+little scissors, sticks, powders, essences, curls, bandoline
+and brilliantine, creams and rouges. Precious
+things put away in drawers, wrapped in tissue-paper,
+hidden in boxes! Rites of beauty! For men? For
+love? Instinct? Nothing else is left—”</p>
+
+<p>He broke off. Lilah watched the fire-light strike
+flashes in the buckles of her slippers. What an amusing
+old sensualist! What was he trying to prove?
+That he hadn’t loved his wife or that she didn’t love
+Robert?</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</span></p>
+
+<p>“I won’t argue,” she said. “Women <i>are</i> different.
+Why not? They are no longer deceived about
+love....”</p>
+
+<p>“Ah.” He stared at her down his nose.</p>
+
+<p>“There isn’t time for loving nowadays.” Lilah insisted.
+“Not your sort.”</p>
+
+<p>“My sort?”</p>
+
+<p>“I realize—”</p>
+
+<p>“What you youngsters <i>don’t</i> realize,” he interrupted,
+with a touch of anger, “is that the old are
+unchanged, within. The casing is rusty, but the
+springs and wheels are as good as ever. What makes
+us different is our nearness to death. We don’t
+change, otherwise.”</p>
+
+<p>He rose again and beckoned to her. “Come into
+the library; I want to show you something.”</p>
+
+<p>As she followed him, he said: “This isn’t my taste.
+My wife controlled the furnishing of our houses—a
+Victorian feminine prerogative.”</p>
+
+<p>“I know. I have seen the house in Murray
+Hill.”</p>
+
+<p>“I never live there. It is cruelly innocent.”</p>
+
+<p>“May I change it?”</p>
+
+<p>“Of course.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then you aren’t sentimental.”</p>
+
+<p>He stroked his chin, again Lilah saw that look of
+rather Hogarthian humor.</p>
+
+<p>“My wife was a dear little soul. She loved me;
+she disapproved of me; she died for me, not guessing,
+thank God, that she had never entered my imagination....
+This tobacco jar was my grand-uncle
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</span>Stephen’s. He brought it from England, a hundred
+years ago.”</p>
+
+<p>He paused in the hall. “A few of these things are
+mine. If I could count on twenty years, I’d build the
+sort of house I like. These Chippendale chairs—gratifying,
+aren’t they? That ship’s model over the
+door—a full-rigged whaler! And this jade; milky,
+like moonlight.... The Chinese are real craftsmen.
+‘White plates and cups, clean-gleaming, ringed with
+blue lines—’ Eh? Why not? Better than hymns
+and prayers and incantations. Now you know how
+spiritual I am! If love of this sort of thing is pagan,
+then I am pagan, and proud of it. I would rather
+carve a piece of jade into such loveliness than save
+a soul....”</p>
+
+<p>He opened a door and Lilah preceded him into a
+room smaller than the others. A coal-fire had burned
+low in a shallow grate. There were several lamps,
+easy chairs and many shelves of books.</p>
+
+<p>Lilah put her pointed slipper on the fender and
+glanced up at him. “Your room?”</p>
+
+<p>He said: “It’s quiet, and everything is mine. That
+picture up there is by Kent.”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t like it. It’s too frosty.”</p>
+
+<p>“How about this Shinn?”</p>
+
+<p>“Naughty!” Lilah exclaimed, rather shocked by the
+naked little woman in a garden hat who was reading
+a French novel. “Do you like it?”</p>
+
+<p>“Very much.”</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly he tossed the unfinished cigar into the
+grate. “Sit down. I want to tell you something.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</span>Something very personal. About myself. I’ve never
+told any one. It needn’t embarrass you. But it
+might help you.”</p>
+
+<p>He went to a writing desk that was closed, and,
+producing a key from his watch-chain, he unlocked
+the top and opened it. It seemed to Lilah that he
+was a bit unsteady. Perhaps so much talk wasn’t
+good for him. He turned, holding a small package
+of letters, the envelopes, inscribed to Junius Peabody
+in a big, square hand, bearing the stamp of Italy like
+a seal. “I can recapture,” he said, “the old magic,
+just by touching these letters.... They are letters
+from a woman.... They have nothing to do with
+my wife, or my son, or Robert. But they have everything
+to do with people like ourselves.”</p>
+
+<p>He sat down in the chair facing hers; sank back,
+still holding the slender packet of letters. He seemed,
+in an odd way, to be conjuring up some memory, summoning
+back a great happening that had grown dim
+in outline. For a moment, she thought he had ceased
+to breathe. Then, in a rather broken voice, he began
+to tell her what he saw:</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>He was in Venice, Venice still under the shadow of
+the Austrian eagle, yet, as always, incomparable; a
+city of bizarre façades reflected in salty lagoons; nothing
+classical—he despised neo-classicism—but cupids,
+garlands, fore-shortened goddesses, golden! He had
+sensed the Venice of Longhi, thank God! Of Titian.
+Of Veronese. These catapulting Venuses and rampant
+Mars, these lions and gilt domes and love-songs!
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</span>Nothing mattered save his own recognition of beauty.
+And for a while it bowled him over.</p>
+
+<p>A woman was part of it, touched by the same unreality,
+removed from all experience.</p>
+
+<p>He had left Minnie, his wife, that summer, in this
+very house, while he went off to Europe chasing rainbows.</p>
+
+<p>The quest had been much deeper than that, only
+he had been afraid to acknowledge it. Rainbows were
+no part of his need; he was in pursuit of the intangible
+justification, something Minnie could not give him.
+Minnie was life. He wanted, as he supposed all such
+men sooner or later want, the illusion of life.</p>
+
+<p>In Venice, he had met the woman. No need to
+tell Lilah her name; that would be beyond the point.
+She had put him right again, reaching delicately, expertly,
+into his spirit, setting his psychic house in
+order.</p>
+
+<p>How? He didn’t know. She was a woman of
+women, sane, fearless, magnificent.</p>
+
+<p>A week only. Out of a lifetime, he reflected, this
+seemed meager compensation. Yet he supposed that
+few men had had as much. A week in Longhi’s
+Venice with a woman in whom purity wore a lace
+mask; a woman strangely aloof, strangely seductive,
+possessed of a miraculous and unbroken mystery. She
+had loved him and had told him nothing of herself.</p>
+
+<p>He remembered her, wearing white; he could not
+recall the style, but people stared at her. She was
+a tawny woman, dark-skinned, tall, with topaz eyes,
+and she moved with a sort of slow grace—every pose
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</span>an immortal loveliness. A foreigner. That something
+“foreign” in him had leaped to the encounter. So, at
+least, he justified his passion. They seldom spoke. It
+had been, nevertheless, communion. Everything about
+her delighted him—her jewels, her parasols, her perfumes.
+She was distinguished.</p>
+
+<p>Yet she could play her part in their brief personal
+drama like an artist, delighting in him, in their climaxes,
+their interludes, their sure approach to the inevitable
+finale, savoring each detail. What a woman!
+He had had no twinge of conscience; almost, he had
+forgotten Minnie. He had had his week. No vulgarity.
+No reproaches. No questioning. Beauty.</p>
+
+<p>Well....</p>
+
+<p>She had gone.</p>
+
+<p>These three letters, written from Belaggio. Then,
+no more, as it should have been!</p>
+
+<p>“There must be some reason, my dear, for these
+glimpses. A divine tantalization, perhaps. Souls led
+to heaven as a donkey follows a carrot to the crest
+of a hill.... Some day you will love this way.
+Wouldn’t it be wiser to wait? You are very like me.”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah stood up with a quick, almost violent gesture
+of rebellion. “No! How can you?”</p>
+
+<p>A door opened out from the library to the veranda.
+Lilah threw it back and ran outside.</p>
+
+<p>The veranda was wet, and a heavy mist poured
+in from the sea. Lilah crossed the garden and hurried
+toward the kennels along a narrow gravel path.
+The mist stung her bare arms, drenched her hair,
+soaked through the thin soles of her slippers.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</span></p>
+
+<p>Some one loomed out of the shadows and she recognized
+Robert, still in his great-coat, bare-headed.</p>
+
+<p>He cried: “Lilah!” And, startled, blocked the
+path.</p>
+
+<p>Lilah caught his arm. “Robert. Kiss me again.
+Again. Make me kiss you.... I want to! I want
+to! Your grandfather’s wrong. I’ll love you. Kiss
+me.”</p>
+
+<p>They clung together. Her emotion, her fear, became
+desire. She could not see Robert’s face; his
+restless hands slipped down her arms to her waist,
+back again to her shoulders. She cried, pressing herself
+against him: “Robert!”</p>
+
+<p>“Poor little girl. Poor little Lilah. It’s all
+right....”</p>
+
+<p>Her lips against his, her arms pinioned, she thought:
+“I love him. That detestable old man.... This is
+love—<i>this</i>.”</p>
+
+<p>Aloud, she asked again: “Do you love me?”</p>
+
+<p>For answer, he lifted her clear of the ground and
+held her, so that she could hear his heart and her own,
+beating together.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="IV">
+ IV
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="dropcap"><span class="upper-case">There</span> was no going back now, and Lilah
+went forward swiftly, forgetting, in the excitement
+of the wedding, her hours of doubt.
+She clung to the memory of that moment in the fog;
+it was at once a disguise and a justification. To
+Junius Peabody she had said simply: “I promise you;
+it will be all right.”</p>
+
+<p>She was married one morning, out-of-doors, before
+an altar made of syringa bloom. For this occasion,
+Robert’s Aunt Whiteside came from some Virginia
+spa, caparisoned, as Junius Peabody put it, like a
+Christmas tree. She found Lilah a “useless ornament.”
+And said so in an astonishing bass voice.</p>
+
+<p>There was nothing fashionable about this wedding.
+A few friendly, rather shy and inarticulate people,
+appeared for the ceremony, were introduced, and disappeared
+immediately.</p>
+
+<p>Lilah kissed Junius, noticed again the odor of
+Cologne, and was hurried away toward the traditional
+honeymoon in Robert’s motor ... Portland ...
+Bath ... Bar Harbor.... It would soon be over
+and she could be herself....</p>
+
+<p>Six months later she was established in Thirty-eighth
+Street.</p>
+
+<p>A small army of decorators occupied the doorstep
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</span>and besieged Lilah by letter and telephone. And Mrs.
+Junius Peabody’s Victorianism was pulled up, literally,
+by the roots. Gilt-framed mirrors went headlong
+down the “stoop” into moving vans. Chinese porcelains
+and top-heavy vases disappeared into barrels.
+Mantels were ripped out, parquet floors became, in
+some instances, black and white tiles, in others smooth
+painted surfaces. Tabourettes, gilded what-nots, ponderous
+buffets vanished on the backs of moving men,
+and the discreet marbles and pedestaled bronzes were
+banished to heaven knows what storage vault.</p>
+
+<p>“No one would <i>buy</i> these things,” Lilah explained.
+“You couldn’t <i>give</i> them away! The Ladies’ Home
+Journal has changed all that. I’m not sure whether
+what they’ve got is any better, but at least it’s no
+worse.”</p>
+
+<p>“I liked it,” Robert said. “It was cozy.”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah sniffed.</p>
+
+<p>During the reconstruction they lived on the top
+floor, in rooms occupied in Mrs. Junius Peabody’s
+era by servants. Lilah had painted the furniture herself
+and had hung at the windows curtains of glazed
+chintz—parrots, cabbage roses and gay Kundry-blooms.
+Robert slept in a cottage bed beneath a
+quilted spread and shaved peering into a crackled
+mirror. He was vaguely uncomfortable and dubious.
+Beneath him, the familiar house of his childhood was
+disintegrating, falling to pieces. One by one the
+precious familiarities disappeared. But if it pleased
+Lilah, why, for God’s sake, on with the game!</p>
+
+<p>What it all meant was beyond Robert’s comprehension.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</span>His mother had been content to spend half
+a lifetime with walnut and plush.... And why
+all the fuss about the front door, the brownstone
+steps?</p>
+
+<p>“But they’re <i>hideous</i>,” Lilah cried. “<i>No one</i> has
+them! Every house on the block, except ours, has
+an English front.”</p>
+
+<p>Robert shrugged his shoulders, and a month later
+the stone façade became a brick façade; the steps
+gave way to a white doorway with a fan grill, and
+window boxes planted with evergreens added that
+touch of a Mayfair dwelling. It was all very discreet,
+and, to Robert, very startling. He could not believe
+his eyes. He wrote to his grandfather that Thirty-eighth
+Street was “jolly giddy.”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah was supremely happy. She wore chintz
+aprons and bound her hair in silk, as if she were gardening.
+Her eyes had a critical, appraising look.
+Robert never saw her unless he pursued her to the
+top of a step-ladder or forced his way through the
+ranks of decorators. These people frightened him;
+they had such an air—as if they thought and spoke
+in symbols. It was a secret order to which, apparently,
+Lilah had been initiated, for she tossed off the
+phraseology with a reckless, and sometimes condescending,
+carelessness.</p>
+
+<p>“Isn’t it too delicious? This needle-point? Miss
+de Blauvelt wants brocade, but I insisted....”</p>
+
+<p>“It’s rather—pale,” Robert said lamely.</p>
+
+<p>“Nonsense. It’s exquisite.... The panels are to
+be painted all the way to the ceiling. Ships and cliffs
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</span>and trees and great folds of silk, like Claude Lorraine,
+with steps, you know”—she made a gesture—“and
+funny clouds.”</p>
+
+<p>She pulled him by the hand. “Come into the
+dining-room—I want you to see something. It’s here!
+The Venetian glass.... Look! Look!”</p>
+
+<p>Robert said guardedly: “Purple glass? What for?”</p>
+
+<p>“For use, silly.”</p>
+
+<p>“And what are these—vegetables?”</p>
+
+<p>“For the console—they’re merely decorative.”</p>
+
+<p>“But I don’t like them!”</p>
+
+<p>“Never mind. You will, when everything is finished!
+An Aubusson rug. Gray walls. A great mirror,
+cut in squares, here. An enameled table with
+strips of old lace or brocade. Your grandfather’s
+Boucher here. A screen, there. And crystal—”</p>
+
+<p>“Lilah! Lilah!”</p>
+
+<p>Robert picked his way through plaster, lathes,
+packing-cases and excelsior whenever he left the house
+to go to the dubious comfort of his Club. He wanted
+the country, his dogs, his old green sweater. But if
+Lilah was happy....</p>
+
+<p>And Lilah happy was less difficult than Lilah unhappy.
+At the Point, during the summer, there had
+been days when she was too restive to be quite comfortable.
+He was to blame for something; eventually
+he discovered that he was to blame for liking the
+out-of-doors. The implication was vague. Whenever
+Robert let himself go, Lilah would say: “Beautiful?
+Yes?” As if there were some reason for resentment.
+When Robert discovered that she wanted New York,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</span>and Thirty-eighth Street, he capitulated at once. But
+he had faced mysterious rebuffs, inexplicable moods,
+hurts that were more damnable for being beyond
+analysis. He had wondered. He had questioned
+himself. He had, more than once, blamed himself.
+For what? Why, for failing her somehow! He hated
+to see that look of resentful discontent. He was
+ashamed of being happy! And this was a new sensation.
+He had always been happy. But he encountered
+the feminine rebellion against a mood which
+does not exactly match her own; and at last depressed
+by the atmosphere of blame, he gave way to temper,
+flung himself down and hid his head in his arms.
+Then, Lilah had been repentant; he felt her hand
+on his hair. “Robert, what’s the matter?” He had
+not answered. And Lilah had kissed the back of his
+neck and had called him “cross old Bobsie.”</p>
+
+<p>With New York an accomplished fact, and the
+woods, the rocks, exchanged for a sultry October in
+town, she was gracious, delightful.</p>
+
+<p>Robert promised himself that he would never again
+deprive Lilah of anything. She was worthy of the
+most unselfish behavior.... He adored her....
+He would do anything to hear her call him “cross old
+Bobsie.”</p>
+
+<p>He made the mistake of becoming his most cheerful,
+his most optimistic self.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>The panels were to be done by an American artist,
+a man famous for the facility of his execution; he
+painted like a fury. One day you had the cartoons,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</span>in red chalk—a swirl of draperies, figures of long-limbed,
+rather sheep-like women and top-heavy columns
+in the Tiepolo manner. The next, a finished
+canvas.</p>
+
+<p>Robert began to stumble over this Elmer Shawhan
+in his comings and goings. He had none of the trappings
+Robert expected of painters, but worked in a
+disreputable coat, collarless. He was small and agile,
+Irish, with the head of a vaudeville actor and the feet
+of a Brazilian dancer.</p>
+
+<p>Lilah found him violent and amusing.</p>
+
+<p>“I despise women,” he told her, “but I can’t keep
+away from ’em. It’s their drawing—ankles and
+knees and long arms and necks. They’re so damned
+graceful.”</p>
+
+<p>He was sitting on a scaffold ten feet above her head,
+dangling a pair of patent pumps and ankles encased
+in sheer silk socks. Lilah’s walls were already transformed.
+Shawhan painted the panels in his studio
+and mounted them himself.</p>
+
+<p>Lilah could not rest until she found out whether he
+considered her pretty. He made her feel dumpy and
+too blonde, because the women he painted were like
+fresh strawberries mounted on long silk legs. No
+woman had legs like that....</p>
+
+<p>“I know,” he said. “I paint legs plus the universal
+male exaggeration of their importance. That’s why
+my stuff sells. I got seventy-five thousand dollars
+for covering a millionaire’s home with silk stockings
+and frillies. He thinks he likes it because it’s art.”</p>
+
+<p>“Isn’t it?” Lilah demanded.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</span></p>
+
+<p>“My stuff? Of course not. Mister Tiepolo of
+New York! No, I’m clever. I have a certain facility,
+that’s all. I learned to draw when I was a cub
+reporter on a southern daily—I had to make quick
+sketches of murders, suicides, hangings and celebrities;
+President Cleveland in the morning and Lulu the
+opium-queen in the afternoon. I <i>had</i> to draw! Then
+I came to New York and drew New York. Slums
+and ‘L’ stations and bums in the park and snow and
+fire-engines and horse ’buses. In those days New
+York was a <i>place</i>. Twenty years ago....”</p>
+
+<p>“I was seven,” Lilah interrupted.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, I wasn’t! I was twenty-three. And what I
+had you’ll never have.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why?”</p>
+
+<p>“It doesn’t exist any more. You’ll never see Ethel
+Barrymore in ‘Captain Jinks’ with those eyes of hers
+and that bass voice and that Barrymore bend. Davis
+was on the crest of the wave and Gibson was immortalizing
+the shirtwaist. It meant something in those
+days to be tailored in England and to wear the kind
+of shoes I wear—look at ’em—no tips—soft as a
+glove! Davis and I wore wing collars when it was
+considered degenerate, and we carried canes in the
+face of public ridicule and private envy. Stanford
+White was building glorious houses. Most of us were
+in love with Minnie Ashley. Talk about the age of
+innocence! Clyde Fitch, Maxine Elliot, Elsie de
+Wolfe and Clara Bloodgood.... I could name a
+dozen. We were the American aristocracy of wit.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</span>What we said and did was shocking and unique. It
+was worth while being clever because almost no one
+was. To live in Gramercy Park, to eat at the old
+Café Martin and <i>not</i> to wear pads in your shoulders—”</p>
+
+<p>He went back to his canvas with a sort of violence.</p>
+
+<p>“I object to to-day because every one is superficially
+clever! And there are ten geniuses to one,
+twenty years ago, men who can write colossal novels
+about the war; men you’ve never heard of, like Dos
+Passos, producing a sort of heroic poem, every verse
+beginning and ending with Goddam! Gorgeous!
+And chaps like Manship and Simonson. And Bellows.
+And God knows who—there are thousands of
+’em.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well?” Lilah said, being very Russian with her
+cigarette.</p>
+
+<p>Shawhan came down the ladder. He had a most
+engaging and roguish smile. With the neck of his
+shirt turned in, he was more Byronesque than vaudevillian;
+he would have been romantic if he had not
+looked out at you through eyes so initiated and so
+skeptical.</p>
+
+<p>“And there you are! Genius is a drug on the
+market.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then you’re asking too much for these panels,”
+Lilah said sweetly.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m a specialist,” was his shrewd reply, “not a
+genius. I have cashed in on my facility. You’re
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</span>paying, not for my work, but for my name. When
+people come into this room, they will know who decorated
+your walls and your stock will jump!”</p>
+
+<p>“How did you manage it?” Lilah asked.</p>
+
+<p>He smiled. “The New York way. A very exotic
+house and studio. Two marriages with famous and
+temperamental women both of whom divorced me,
+quite amicably. A dash of scandal. Parties every
+one wanted to get to because they were both beautiful
+and risquè and the guests were limited....
+Thirty, no less, no more! An impassioned, and
+anonymous, press agent. Kissing the finger-tips of
+such women as you. Getting the reputation of being
+a misogynist. <i>And legs!</i>”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah laughed. “And now?”</p>
+
+<p>“You pay for it.”</p>
+
+<p>“And you?”</p>
+
+<p>“It doesn’t leave much to believe in, does it? That’s
+why I sneeze when people drag in art. Art! Oh, my
+God. The whole thing is an elaborate hoax. You
+want these walls—these lovely empty spaces—filled
+with something gracious, pretty, to harmonize with
+your furniture and your lamp-shades.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, no—” Lilah interrupted.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, yes! I beg pardon. Yes! Your husband
+wouldn’t live with a wall by Michelangelo—big, fat
+torsos and bumpy females and snakes. And how
+would you look, in that gown, against a Gaugin
+jungle? Be honest.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well—”</p>
+
+<p>“You go to Miss de Blauvelt. She wants to sell
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</span>you some Louis Quatre chairs and one of those French
+sofas, an escritoire and a five hundred dollar footstool.
+So she looks through her mental card-index
+and says: ‘French. Shawhan.’ Then she phones me.
+I get the specifications and the limitations and the
+architects’ blue-prints. I go to the Palais Royal and
+make sketches on the back of the menu-card. Mrs.
+Robert Peabody’s Louis Quatre drawing-room for November
+twenty-eighth. Lots of pink. A swing, with
+four Watteau ladies and satin garters, a poodle on a
+yellow cushion, some fuzzy trees, a cupid on a pedestal
+and five hundred yards of Alice Blue silk looped
+back with Fragonard tassels. One Tiepolo column,
+one Boucher bosom and a knot of flowers.”</p>
+
+<p>“You’re disgusting,” Lilah said.</p>
+
+<p>“This is the Twentieth Century,” he reminded her,
+“and you are living in New York.”</p>
+
+<p>He backed away from his work, twisting the ladder
+aside. “What do you think of it?”</p>
+
+<p>“I like it. I believe you do. Isn’t your contempt
+a part of your business manner?”</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t you see—all this is very sad?” he remarked.
+“What I’ve told you—what I am and what you are,
+and our buying and selling this way—” He broke
+off. “Yes, I like it,” he admitted.</p>
+
+<p>He stood, his hands on his hips, his head tilted,
+staring at the exquisite thing he had somehow summoned
+out of his staleness and disillusionment. Into
+his expression something mocking appeared to contradict
+his absorption.</p>
+
+<p>“Some day,” he said, “I shall decorate a pork-packer’s
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</span>ballroom. Two hundred thousand down and
+no interference! I shall paint what I like—a series
+of cartoons—sky-scrapers, flappers, head-waiters, taxicabs,
+chorus girls, Jews and fashionable women,
+cabarets, streets, theaters and—the whole mess!
+Wouldn’t it be gorgeous? A parade, all the way
+around the ballroom, where my pork-packer had expected
+nymphs in panniers?”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah tossed her cigarette away and yawned. “I
+see. You’re an artist, after all. And a humbug.”</p>
+
+<p>He laughed, and their eyes met with appreciation.</p>
+
+<p>“Perhaps,” Lilah suggested, “you’ll put me into
+that cartoon.”</p>
+
+<p>His glance deepened; his expression changed; as
+if he sensed the trap laid down by her, he said dryly:
+“Perhaps.”</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>Lilah told Robert that Elmer Shawhan was an
+egoist.</p>
+
+<p>“Probably,” Robert said. “He looks it.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why? Because he is spectacular?”</p>
+
+<p>Robert sensed opposition. “Why, yes. His hair—”</p>
+
+<p>“Externals!” Lilah cried.</p>
+
+<p>“That’s one of your phrases, Lilah. Don’t trip me
+unfairly. Hair <i>is</i> an external, but the way a man cuts
+it is indicative of something internal. I suspect your
+artist of being what you call him, an egoist, because
+he has patiently cultivated a pompadour. Now,
+whiskers—”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah put her fingers in her ears.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</span></p>
+
+<p>As the house began to take form and to emerge
+from the chaos of reconstruction into a very harmonious
+and comfortable air of permanence, Lilah discovered
+that she was being too extravagant. The bills
+for all this mannered luxury began to appear, statements
+that had a matter-of-fact coldness, a finality.
+She must face, placate Robert, make him see, as always,
+in smaller things, her rightness.</p>
+
+<p>Miss de Blauvelt had an exaggerated and flattering
+conception of the wealth of her clients. She was
+accustomed to magnificence and munificence. She
+spent other people’s money, Lilah discovered, with
+the largest possible gesture, and then added her own
+fee, a compensation out of all proportion to her services;
+she was “cheeky” in a way too subtle for rebuff.</p>
+
+<p>With a graceful sweep of her hands, she would say:
+“I can do a delightful boudoir for ten thousand. Not
+perfect, of course—for <i>that</i>—but modern and witty,
+a perverse little room. Leave it to me. You don’t
+mind?”</p>
+
+<p>The names of social celebrities flowed in and out
+of the stream of her talk like minnows. She knew
+every one. Lilah gathered that at her own house at
+Dinard she gathered together the froth of fashionable
+and artistic Europe—skimmed off the cream for her
+own amusement. With this woman, business seemed
+to be an excuse for indulging in extravagances. The
+account, rendered before the workmen were out of the
+house, staggered Lilah. She had, she realized, spent
+a fortune. Her heart contracted and the blood rushed
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</span>to her face, receding to leave her trembling, frightened,
+sick. She had no idea how she was going to
+face Robert with this fact—it was done; there was
+no going back. She should have consulted him. The
+whole thing suggested a sort of vulgar eagerness on
+her part, a head-long impatience. And she had made
+it only too evident that Robert bored her. She must
+go back, patiently, and try to understand herself and
+him, prepare him, somehow, for this preposterous bill
+headed simply De Blauvelt, Interiors, Paris, New
+York.</p>
+
+<p>Miss de Blauvelt appeared on the following day to
+make what proved to be a final inspection of her handiwork.
+Lilah, caught unawares, felt at a disadvantage
+in the presence of this compact little cosmopolitan.
+There was something decidedly challenging in the
+frivolity of her beautiful feet and ankles and the whiteness
+of her hair. She was an old woman sustained
+by the success and color of her life. Everything had
+been done that could be done by science and art to
+preserve, make permanent, her famous slimness, her
+provocative and ugly features, her <i>chic</i>. The result
+was not quite human; there were no wrinkles, no
+visible signs of age; in the transparent mask of her
+face, only her eyes seemed to be alive, black, intelligent
+and cruel. She never smiled and Lilah decided
+that she couldn’t; plastic surgery had deprived her
+of animation. She wore a tube-like dress, short in the
+fashion of the moment, a turban of dyed metallic
+cloth and the curious square-toed, clumsy, strapped
+slippers affected by the Parisian <i>mondaine</i>.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Well? You like it?” she demanded.</p>
+
+<p>“Very much.”</p>
+
+<p>“You had better let me do your country place before
+I go back to France.”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah said decidedly: “Thanks. No.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why not?”</p>
+
+<p>“Your bill was exorbitant.”</p>
+
+<p>Miss de Blauvelt’s eyes came around with a pounce.
+“Nonsense. I was more than charitable! If you expected
+department store economies—”</p>
+
+<p>She broke off. “Surely, you understood—”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, yes,” Lilah said hurriedly. “But I shan’t undertake
+another—not now.”</p>
+
+<p>“You must come to Dinard,” Miss de Blauvelt said
+in an even voice; “I live there with two amusing and
+talented women, a sculptress and a pianiste. It’s very
+simple and very beautiful.”</p>
+
+<p>She made an expressive gesture. “This is my last
+house in America. You may tell every one so. It
+will give your interior a peculiar luster and perhaps
+reconcile you to the expense.”</p>
+
+<p>And with a nod, she walked quickly out, and across
+the pavement to her motor.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>Lilah spent the rest of the afternoon at her desk
+adding up a list of bills, De Blauvelt, Shawhan,
+plumbers, painters, masons, upholsterers, warehouses,
+rugs, electricians, florists, contractors....</p>
+
+<p>She was interrupted by a servant, a new acquisition
+like everything else, who said: “Miss Fuller” in a
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</span>dubious voice as if he were weary of ushering in
+tradespeople and nobodies.</p>
+
+<p>Lilah turned with relief. She hated details. She
+almost ran forward to meet Grace Fuller, who came
+into the room unruffled and casual, as she had entered
+the flat in Ninth Street.</p>
+
+<p>Lilah forgot the bills in the excitement of displaying
+her possessions. And as Grace Fuller followed
+her from room to room she felt her enthusiasm mounting.
+For the first time her dreams seemed to be concrete,
+her security certain. Her feet slipped along
+the rugs with a luxurious appreciation of their softness.
+Grace Fuller followed, saying very little. But
+then she never did have any enthusiasm. She might
+be regretting—poor soul! This warmth and glow,
+after the room in Ninth Street, the gas-log, the oak
+table, the green lamp and her father’s chair, worn
+hollow.</p>
+
+<p>“It’s quite like you,” Grace Fuller said. “Purry.
+I feel stroked myself. Tea? By all means. I’m
+dog-tired.... New York all summer—heat that
+withered the geraniums on the fire escape! I had to
+open the dumb-waiter door for ventilation....”</p>
+
+<p>She lighted a cigarette. “How’s Robert?”</p>
+
+<p>“Awfully well.”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah busied herself with cups and saucers. She
+did not care to discuss Robert. But Grace Fuller
+said: “He hates New York at this time of year.”</p>
+
+<p>“He has his club.”</p>
+
+<p>“Has he?”</p>
+
+<p>“Are you being disagreeable?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</span></p>
+
+<p>“I don’t think so. I want you to be happy, and it
+seems to me that you are doing figure eights around
+the danger sign.... In November, the Maine natives
+go down East for deer. Robert always hunts
+with his gang of Perkins and Littlefields and Brewsters.
+Hasn’t he told you?”</p>
+
+<p>“We have been married less than six months. He
+wouldn’t leave me,” Lilah said concisely.</p>
+
+<p>“He would, if you gave him the least little push!
+He wanted a moose this year.”</p>
+
+<p>Abruptly, she changed the subject. She told Lilah
+that she was very nearly worn out. It seemed to be
+her fortune to get nothing but “hopeless cases,” invalids
+engaged in the long-drawn-out process of dying
+by inches. She had had to witness so much poor,
+human suffering, to face the mute or the querulous
+questions of people who “had to know.” “The ones
+who suffer most are the ones who want to stay. They
+seem to love life. They’re so futile, so pathetic! I’ve
+listened for hours to women who could remember
+every detail of their girlhood—how pretty they were,
+and the number of tucks on their graduation dress,
+and all about their wedding day: what he said and
+the cinders on the honeymoon journey, and how he
+took the littlest, weeniest bite out of the lobe of her
+ear.... They want it all back again! I’m dog-tired,
+trying to get it for them. When they die, they
+give me just the funny, accusing look that boy in
+France gave me.”</p>
+
+<p>“Poor Grace.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’d like to nurse an alcoholic case or a pretty
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</span>actress with the mumps. Something to amuse me. I
+don’t understand death. I wish I did. To put us
+here, to inform us that our stay is limited, to offer
+no proof of immortality—it’s damnable! Animals
+don’t know, do they? They’re afraid of being hurt,
+but do they know, when they’re old enough to know
+anything, that some day, no matter how brave and
+quick they are, they’ve got to give it all up?”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah twisted her shoulders. “For heaven’s sake,
+Grace, be cheerful.”</p>
+
+<p>“I can’t. I live in an atmosphere of dread and
+tip-toeing. Doctors tip-toeing in and out. Relatives
+tip-toeing in and out. And the poor creature on the
+bed yearning for life! I’m no good any more. A
+rebellious nurse had better stop nursing. I’m going
+to stop, and come back again when I have found something
+to offer them.”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah had been turning a new idea over in her mind.
+Sparring for time, she said: “You can’t justify death,
+Grace.”</p>
+
+<p>“I might. I sometimes think it is more justifiable
+than life.”</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t be bitter.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m not.” Grace Fuller put her tea-cup down.
+Her expression was excited, she flushed and clasped
+her hands together as she always did when she felt
+anything deeply. “It seems such a waste of power.
+Youth, with all that energy. A wave of youth rising
+up in every generation and spending itself against the
+facts of life. Why must it be? I remember, when
+I was a child, how wonderful it all seemed, fields and
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</span>clouds, and wind. Even the seasons were exciting;
+when the first snow came, I was in ecstasy, watching
+the landscape change. Something was always waiting
+for me. I never knew, or cared to know what—but
+if I were to open my eyes wide or stretch out my
+hand, there it would be—shining and glorious, mine!”</p>
+
+<p>She relaxed and sank back, the old cynical look reappearing,
+as if she had lost hope again.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m a fool. It happens to everybody.”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah turned quickly and asked: “Would you have
+been happier with Robert?”</p>
+
+<p>That slow flush remounted. “No.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then I want you to do something for me. I’m
+swamped with details, correspondence, bills, people I
+don’t want to see and people I must see. I need some
+one to help me. Some one, like you, who has a good
+telephone voice and decent manners. Will you try
+it? Please don’t say no! I hate talking business,
+but I assure you you won’t lose anything. You can
+rent the flat in Ninth Street and come here. Now
+that the second floor is finished, you can have our
+quarters on the third. The servants are on the
+fourth.”</p>
+
+<p>Seeing Robert in the doorway, Lilah called to him:
+“Hello! Just in time for tea! Grace is going to be
+my secretary. Isn’t it wonderful?”</p>
+
+<p>Robert took Grace Fuller’s hand and bent down a
+little to smile at her. “I’m glad,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>“Then I’ll come,” Grace Fuller answered.</p>
+
+<p>Robert sat down beside Lilah on the narrow French
+sofa that bulked so conspicuously as an item in the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</span>De Blauvelt account. He seemed heavier than usual,
+very pink from his walk across town in a sharp November
+wind. His eyes had that untroubled expression
+which particularly irritated Lilah because it was
+an indication of profound inner content. She did not
+want him to be contented, to take for granted her
+love, as if a gift so inestimable could be accepted
+easily. Something warned her to keep her temper;
+if Grace Fuller were watching for a rift in the lute
+she would be disappointed.</p>
+
+<p>She may have made a mistake in asking this waspish
+woman to live under the same roof. Strangely
+enough, the prospect excited her. Without Grace
+Fuller, there would be no rebound to life. She could
+fling her challenge: “See what I am, what I have become,”
+at this surface, and catch, in the deepening
+irony of the other, her own particular shimmer and
+brilliance. Lacking Junius Peabody, who was desirable
+because he enjoyed watching Lilah wrestle with
+destiny, Grace Fuller would be the necessary audience.
+To know that she had loved Robert would
+make Robert more endurable. Grace would pore
+over his stamp-albums and condone his canine complex
+and perhaps read aloud to him the terrible books
+he preferred, murder mysteries and western melodramas:
+“Nothing like a crackerjack mystery, Lilah!
+Now this chap, Jenkins, was locked up in a house on
+the Hudson and there was a sort of secret passage
+leading down to the river—”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah came back with a start to the unfamiliar outlines
+of her drawing-room. Robert was being very
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</span>genial and talkative. His enameled boots caught the
+fire-light. Lilah’s eyes rested on his hands; she noticed
+for the first time the breadth and strength of
+his fingers, the blond hair on the backs of his hands.
+Whenever she came in contact with the physical, she
+felt revulsion. She would have preferred a disembodied
+Robert, or no Robert at all. She turned her
+eyes away with a little shiver of apprehension....</p>
+
+<p>When Grace Fuller had gone, Lilah sat for a long
+time in silence. Robert lighted a cigarette mounted
+in a long tortoise-shell holder with a gold mouth-piece.
+One hand rested over hers. She wondered what he
+was thinking, whether he liked the room, the house,
+this brand-new air of expensive perfection. The
+sound of his breathing, heavy and regular, was audible
+above the muffled rumble of traffic in the street. A
+servant removed the tea things and drew the shades,
+kindling lights here and there on tables and against
+the paneled walls.</p>
+
+<p>“Do you like it?” she said at last.</p>
+
+<p>Robert moved. His answer came with the usual
+slow marshaling of facts and words: “Shall I tell you
+the truth? I prefer the old house at the Point.” His
+hand tightened over hers; she tried to draw her fingers
+away, but he held them within his. “I’ve hurt you!
+But you don’t want me to be a lap-dog, do you? Must
+I bark every time you say: ‘Speak, Fido’?”</p>
+
+<p>“Why didn’t you tell me so in the beginning?
+did you let me spend all this money?”</p>
+
+<p>“Because I love you,” he said simply.</p>
+
+<p>“Do you?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Very much.”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah hurried to the issue. “I’ve spent thousands
+and thousands. For something you hate—”</p>
+
+<p>“I know very little about such matters,” he said.
+“I left it to you to re-furnish the house. I expected
+a certain expense. Ten or twenty thousand—”</p>
+
+<p>“I’ve spent forty thousand,” Lilah said, trying to
+keep her voice steady.</p>
+
+<p>There was a short silence. Robert’s grasp relaxed
+and she drew her hand away. Presently he said:
+“That is a great deal of money, my dear.”</p>
+
+<p>With a flash of temper she answered sharply: “Why
+didn’t you stop me, then? Instead of letting me go
+blindly on, believing that I had your consent? Was
+it a trick to trip me up?”</p>
+
+<p>“Lilah!”</p>
+
+<p>“Both you and your grandfather think I married
+you because I was hard up and frightened! You’ve
+made me feel your suspicion. Suppose I had really
+loved you—and I tried to make you see that I did—wouldn’t
+your doubting me make me self-conscious?”</p>
+
+<p>“Now you’re being nasty.”</p>
+
+<p>She closed her eyes. Shivers of feeling ran through
+her like currents of poison. “Nasty! What a primitive
+word! I’m being frank, if that’s what you mean.”</p>
+
+<p>“I thought you <i>did</i> love me,” Robert said. “I’m
+probably old-fashioned, but I admit that I had an entirely
+different idea of love. I’ve read a lot of trash
+and believed a lot of sentimental idiocy, perhaps....”</p>
+
+<p>“What, exactly, did you expect?”</p>
+
+<p>He turned. “Lilah! We mustn’t talk like this!”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</span></p>
+
+<p>She insisted: “What did you expect that I haven’t
+given you?”</p>
+
+<p>He made a gesture of surrender. “If I told you,
+you’d laugh at me.”</p>
+
+<p>“Do I laugh at you? How unfair you are! You
+are trying to make me out a cheat.”</p>
+
+<p>“No. I love you. Only don’t you see—I wanted,
+and still want, companionship. You rather took this
+house out of my hands, didn’t you? As far as I’m
+concerned, it might be a hotel. Even if I have rotten
+taste, I like a little of it around—in my own room, for
+instance. Why not? Am I irrational?” He unclasped
+his hands and clasped them again with a slow
+pressure that whitened his knuckles. “I wanted to
+plan things—go over things with you. I didn’t want
+this woman to buy my bed—it’s none of her business!
+I’ve always dreamed of building a home with
+the woman I loved and married.... I suppose you’re
+laughing at me.”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah said nothing. She could not trust her voice.</p>
+
+<p>She felt that her power over him had been shattered.
+None of the old tricks would do. She must
+find new magic, and quickly, if she wanted him.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m not laughing at you,” she said at last. “If
+I’ve done wrong, I’ll do the only thing I can do, under
+the circumstances; I’ll go.”</p>
+
+<p>“You mean, leave me? Lilah, you’re joking!
+We’re a grown man and woman trying to understand
+each other. I don’t care a damn about that forty
+thousand. It’s you I’ve got to get at—and I can’t
+buy your heart. I’m not rich enough....”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</span></p>
+
+<p>“That was a very pretty speech, Robert.”</p>
+
+<p>“I didn’t mean it to be. I’m in deadly earnest.
+I’m not contented with myself as I am. No one is,
+perhaps. But my case is extreme. I’m pretty much
+of a waster. I waste myself on harmless amusements,
+but I waste myself. I thought—I just imagined—it
+was a damn foolish notion—but I wanted you
+to stir me up, get me started at something, make me
+want to serve, somewhere, somehow. And when you
+married me, you dropped me out entirely—” he
+spread his hands, “for this.”</p>
+
+<p>He turned to her, his face white and strained.
+“There shouldn’t be much of a toss-up between a
+house and a human being.”</p>
+
+<p>She did not answer, but sat with her body drawn
+away, her shoulders hunched, her breath quick and
+shallow. Her expression was guarded but she permitted
+herself a half-smile that was both patient and
+contemptuous.</p>
+
+<p>“You’re so damned feminine,” he said. “My
+mother was like that. She’d bang doors and sulk.
+And my father would rap and beg her to come out,
+and she wouldn’t. Not for hours, while the rest of
+us went around with lead in our hearts, feeling
+ashamed! When she did open the door, she’d sort
+of smile. She was my mother, but I hated her when
+she did that....”</p>
+
+<p>“What do you want me to say?” Lilah demanded.</p>
+
+<p>“Something honest,” was his surprising answer.</p>
+
+<p>She stood up suddenly. “I won’t stand this any
+longer. I won’t!”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</span></p>
+
+<p>She did not cry easily, but now she burst suddenly
+into a storm of tears. The flood gates of fear and
+questioning broke; she was swept away. Through it
+all, she was aware of the room, of her own attitude
+and of Robert, frightened, aghast, repentant, trying
+to tear her hands away from her face.</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t cry. Lilah, don’t cry.”</p>
+
+<p>She collapsed against him and he drew her down
+on his knees. His unsteady hands caressed her hair.
+She felt his lips on her neck. She drew in her breath
+sharply and the tears stopped; with shut eyes she remained
+against his shoulder, motionless. The storm
+of feeling had passed, leaving again that curious unreality.
+Robert was not a part of experience; he was
+in her life for some purpose, to carry her forward a
+little way. Without discontent there could be no advance.
+From him, she would go on, perhaps to love....
+But he already felt what she could not feel, and
+this involved her because she had given herself. She
+shivered and a deep sigh cut through her immobility.
+His arms tightened. He kept on whispering, with his
+lips against her ear, but she heard nothing.</p>
+
+<p>She became conscious again of the large expanse
+of Aubusson and of pools of light in which hot-house
+flowers seemed made of wax, and of sleek surfaces,
+smooth contours. Her own slippers, the chiffon across
+her knees, were a part of the vision.</p>
+
+<p>Robert was saying: “We mustn’t quarrel. It’s
+childish. I’ll do any earthly thing for you.”</p>
+
+<p>With a quick, almost feline motion, she turned in
+his arms. “Here goes,” she said to herself.</p>
+
+<p>And very deliberately, purposefully, she kissed him.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="V">
+ V
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="dropcap"><span class="upper-case">With</span> that perilous moment bridged, Robert
+given again his unquestioning security in
+her, Lilah began her search for experience,
+for satisfaction, for a vague, undetermined happiness.
+She had for so many years peered over the wall at
+the social garden-party, at women in light dresses and
+men in polished hats, marionettes, voiceless, yet animated,
+infinitely removed—she had imagined so
+much, given these people a wholly romantic and unnatural
+luster—Now she found herself about to
+drop into the garden, among them, and her eagerness
+took Robert’s breath away. He told himself that
+he must be patient; when the novelty had worn off,
+when Lilah had rubbed elbows with a world already
+familiar to him, she, too, would discard it. In the
+meantime, he tried to content himself with her rare
+impulses of affection, hasty caresses, light kisses that
+stung his flesh and penetrated to his heart like thin,
+precise knife-thrusts. For the most part she met him
+with banter and postponement, as if she were skimming
+over the dark depths of life, a vivid and elusive
+skater on silver skates....</p>
+
+<p>He found himself, suddenly, a slave to hope. Some
+day she would skim back to him, into the circle made
+by his love, his arms, and remain there, safe. But
+she must first dart here and there, fearless and foolish,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</span>enjoying herself. It became his dubious pleasure to
+watch, ready to pull her out if the ice should crack.</p>
+
+<p>Robert was not exactly a fool, although he took no
+pains to appear otherwise. What he had seen of the
+world had landed him back at the Point again, where,
+he argued, all the facts of life and death, of love and
+hate, were uncomplicated and recognizable. He
+could not see, he told Lilah, why experience should
+acquire anything by multiplication. You were born,
+you loved, hated and died. You could do all these
+things, and get out of it what there was in it, as well
+in one place as in another; nothing was gained by
+chasing down the horizon—once you got there, it was
+the same, love and life, hate and death. He preferred
+a limited existence to the accumulated sensations offered
+by such cities as New York and Paris. Crowds
+gave him a mental indigestion. Ideas, unless they
+were based on truths, caused him to suffer an intellectual
+heart-burn. He was not swift enough to chase
+the casual and elusive theories of most modernists,
+who were content with the haphazard because no one
+could pause long enough to argue or to prove.</p>
+
+<p>But he was willing, after that sharp quarrel with
+Lilah, to experiment.</p>
+
+<p>He made a hurried trip to Maine and shamefacedly
+kissed his spaniels, turning back to New York with
+an assumed eagerness that deceived even himself. In
+the train, he left the sleeper for the smoking-car and
+sat up all night trying, as he put it, to reduce Lilah to
+a common denominator. The secret of her fascination
+lay in her swift and inexplicable changes of mood;
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</span>he waited for favors with a feverish sort of excitement.
+It was probably unhealthy, bad for him to
+be so buffeted about by feeling, alternately exalted to
+heaven and left flat, with a sense of humiliation and
+shame.</p>
+
+<p>Another type of man might spare himself indignity
+by letting her see a certain brutality. But Robert
+was not so gifted. He could only be himself.</p>
+
+<p>For her he had abandoned his “drinkin’” and had
+tried desperately to part his hair on the side. The
+green sweater had gone down before her contempt.
+In a hundred little ways he tried to re-make, improve,
+the outward man; he knew when he bored
+her, although he was never certain why he bored her.
+His enthusiasms were as authentic as hers. But Lilah
+was Lilah, and for such a woman he, any man, would
+attempt the impossible.</p>
+
+<p>He had wanted a strong, sweet, fearless love, ecstasy
+and pride and recognition.</p>
+
+<p>What he had was different, but he could not be
+sure that he had not wanted too much. Perhaps all
+women were like Lilah, and tormented you, where
+they should offer their breasts for you to put your
+head against and rest, and rest, from life.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>When Grace Fuller moved in, Robert felt more
+comfortable. She was a familiar, understanding sort
+of woman.</p>
+
+<p>He wondered whether Lilah were justified in calling
+Grace a deliberate celibate. He began to study
+her face, to question his knowledge of her. She had
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</span>never enjoyed kissing him, but had always pushed
+him away, with an expression almost of fear in her
+eyes. He couldn’t say that he had enjoyed it, either;
+it was too much like forcing her to his will....
+There were times, at night, when Lilah was strange
+and emotional, when she pressed against him and ran
+her fingers up and down the back of his neck with
+the caress he liked, and kissed him, quick, almost
+furtive kisses; when she relaxed in his arms, suddenly,
+as if she were about to surrender, and then was tense
+again, pushing him away, turning her face aside....</p>
+
+<p>He couldn’t understand.</p>
+
+<p>Grace left him alone, left his senses alone. She
+was a good companion in spite of her sharp tongue.
+He supposed that all nurses had that same air of
+watching out for you, mothering you, seeing that
+things were comfortable and orderly. There was no
+trace in her manner or her look, of remembering;
+she let him off, magnificently. He would say that
+for her; she was a sport! They began again, as
+people who have only just met. And all those meaningless
+kisses and casual, artificial embraces were forgotten
+in their common passion for Lilah.</p>
+
+<p>Lilah became a bond between them. When Robert
+came in and Lilah was not at home, he sought Grace
+and questioned her.</p>
+
+<p>Lilah was fascinating, reckless, just a little terrible
+and they never tired of discussing her. She had done
+this, or that. This one and that one had telephoned.
+She had bought a new dress or a new book. Everything
+she did startled them, because, once certain of
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</span>Robert, Lilah had become more startling, more reckless
+and more insatiable than ever.</p>
+
+<p>It was as if she had come into full possession of
+life without questioning her right to it. She was not,
+as far as Robert could see, happy, but she was, on
+the other hand, arrogant with fulfillment. Because
+she herself had succeeded, she could not help having
+contempt for people who had failed.</p>
+
+<p>This amused Robert, but it was also cause for a
+certain amount of chagrin, since he saw that his position
+had been the lever she needed to lift her out of
+obscurity. She could never have done it alone.</p>
+
+<p>But because he loved her, he did for her everything
+she seemed to require. Before long, she knew every
+one of importance in Robert’s world. It was a world
+limited by necessity to a few hundred souls. Lilah
+called them Murray Hill blackbirds. They were, in
+fact, the old guard, a thinned-out company of so-called
+Knickerbockers, New Yorkers long enough to cherish
+their few square blocks of sacred soil with a tenacity
+that was almost aristocratic.</p>
+
+<p>They gave Lilah critical inspection; her house was
+less important and could, in its severe restraint and
+exact emphasis, be taken for granted.</p>
+
+<p>Flushed, beautiful, excited, Lilah received them.
+The sleek Aubusson became the arena of her first social
+struggle. These people were fashionable but not
+modish. For them, sensing their prejudices, Lilah
+wore black and was over-careful of her accent. Her
+Russian atmosphere was discarded for the occasion,
+and Robert and Grace were amazed, embarrassed, by
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</span>a totally different Lilah, a châtelaine, wistful, eager
+and disarming.</p>
+
+<p>Robert was rather proud of the gathering; people
+like this made him feel safer about the future; they
+cemented the cracks in society. He adored dowdy
+wealth because it was an indication of permanence,
+a stand against the upstart, ’Change. There was
+something plucky about foulard, sensible shoes and
+elaborate whiskers in the Jazz age. While these
+people lived, the last cable held. Their names were
+less impressive now that their city had become unaware
+of them. But Lilah seemed to enjoy juggling
+these rather musty titles. Robert didn’t know it, but
+she was, consciously, laying a foundation down. She
+would stand, eventually, not upon the quicksand of
+new, untried, if glamorous names, but upon the veritable,
+bed-rock Manhattanese.</p>
+
+<p>Afterwards, to Grace and Robert, she was explicit:
+“What fearful bores! All of them, except Mrs.
+Humphrey-hyphen-whatever-her-name-is.... The red-headed
+one.”</p>
+
+<p>“She goes everywhere,” Robert explained, “and is
+invited nowhere. She <i>was</i> glorious, thirty years ago.”</p>
+
+<p>“She is now.”</p>
+
+<p>“She’s a bad egg,” Robert said.</p>
+
+<p>“What do you mean, exactly?”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, she left her husband, and lived with a chap—some
+one—I’ve forgotten.... She’s quite purple.”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah laughed. “I’d die if I had to know these
+people.... I liked your purple one. She was human.
+The rest ... <i>blackbirds</i>!”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</span></p>
+
+<p>She was being Russian again.... While the new
+servant, placated by the announcement of so many
+celebrated blackbirds, removed the tea tables and
+gathered up cups and saucers, Lilah disposed of
+Robert’s friends with a tirade of pointed witticisms.
+She could afford to laugh at them because now, she
+knew, she could subjugate them. All she had to do
+was to snub the purple lady, entertain discreetly,
+grow old, and die. In ten years she would look just
+like the rest of them—ground-grippers and a pince-nez,
+a maribou boa, a bit of real lace, amethysts and rheumatism
+in her finger-joints.... She preferred more
+difficult attainment....</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly she went to the piano and, still smoking,
+played a rakish accompaniment to a French song.</p>
+
+<p>“<i>Je sais que c’est une folie!</i>”</p>
+
+<p>Robert and Grace Fuller turned about in their
+chairs and listened. She seemed to be unaware of
+them. With her head thrown back, the cigarette
+aslant, she sang in a light, high voice, a little song
+about madness and youth and <i>la tendresse</i> and, meltingly,
+<i>l’amour</i>.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>From this little occasion, Lilah stepped off into New
+York. There were, she discovered, no barriers raised
+against a pretty, witty and wealthy woman. She had
+all the ingredients to make a very potent brew.</p>
+
+<p>In the beginning, Robert was always at her elbow,
+puzzled, but stimulated in exact proportion to her
+own pleasure. New York was not “dry” and before
+long Robert was drinking again with that boastful
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</span>abandonment characteristic of prohibition. Everywhere
+there was gin, and according to the social scale,
+it was either genuine, or frankly synthetic. Lilah
+drank for the first time in her life, steadily, carelessly.
+She explained to Robert that there was no other way
+to “fizz” at dinner or to hold off fatigue. And, happening
+to discover a substantial supply of good wines
+and whisky in the cellar of the Murray Hill house,
+she wrote to Junius Peabody and obtained his somewhat
+satirical permission to uncork all but the rarest
+vintages. Those, he explained, belonged to his “heirs”
+and were to be handed down as historical evidence.
+Lilah must consider, take pity on the parched palates
+of her sons....</p>
+
+<p>Lilah tossed the letter into the fire. She did not
+intend that there should be sons. She was infected
+by the casuistry of the age, a total lack of interest
+in the coming generation. Behind men’s lives there
+was no longer any sustaining idealism, any heroic
+faith in an unbroken purpose. The war had severed
+a link in the chain of passions, spiritual, national and
+racial. The day, the needs and fulfillments of the
+day, sufficed.</p>
+
+<p>Robert could find nothing to refute her claim that
+the war had made morality ridiculous and had stripped
+adolescent humanity of its illusions. Everywhere, in
+both men and women, he encountered the cynicism
+that goes, usually, with embittered old age, with failure
+and disappointment. People were reckless because
+the moral skids were off; there was a gay determination,
+everywhere evident, to meet disaster as
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</span>gayly as possible. But this was not heroic; it was
+cowardly, and Robert found himself despising the
+times he lived in.</p>
+
+<p>As usual, he was not expressive. Something about
+his physical pinkness and blondness, his air of being
+extremely well-fed and well-brushed, held him back
+from complaining. Lilah might be right. Certainly,
+there was no evidence of spirituality, of change.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>New York was dancing-mad, in a mood essentially
+unlike the madness of Nineteen-Fourteen, when blind
+satiety had twirled on the lid of a seething volcano.
+This madness was sophisticated and purposeful. The
+Argentine tango had given way to the primitive
+rhythms of Africa and Maylasia, a brutal tom-toming,
+savagery stalking progress through a maze of the
+senses. There were very few private dances. Robert
+could remember the day of the cotillion leader, Ward
+McAllister’s reign. Now, society patronized the commercial
+dance-halls or the exclusive “clubs” given
+over to all-night dancing, in defiance of a closing law
+which arbitrarily separated jazzing couples at one in
+the morning. There were few formal occasions;
+hostesses relied upon haphazard dinner-parties, a box
+at the theater or the opera, and the confused, prismatic,
+exciting contact afterwards.</p>
+
+<p>Lilah danced beautifully, without a trace of vulgarity,
+but Robert objected to the frank enticement
+of her gowns that displayed her flesh to the casual
+observer. She answered that he belonged in the Dark
+Ages; no one paid any attention to backs and arms;
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</span>the sight was too usual. Fashion had freed women
+because women had first freed themselves. They were
+too frankly undressed to be alluring, and men ought
+to be grateful; nudity rid them of obscene imaginings.</p>
+
+<p>Robert was not certain that women’s clothes were
+a symbol of masculine indifference. Lilah might be
+right; she was infinitely more clever than he, and besides
+she said things with a conviction, a finality, that
+floored him. It is hard to contradict a woman you
+love. He had his reservations.</p>
+
+<p>They rarely dined at home. As the winter progressed,
+their program of pleasure became more complicated.
+The details were left to Grace Fuller, who
+sat at a desk the better part of every day, answering
+the telephone and attending to Lilah’s correspondence.
+An avalanche of people had swept Robert’s handful
+of Murray Hill blackbirds out of the picture. It had
+been but a step from these conservatives to their children,
+the reckless generation that had outlived but
+had not out-thought the war; and from them to the
+professionals, a little world of hard, bright, amazingly
+talented modernists, racially nondescript, intellectually
+polyglot, artistically indeterminate.</p>
+
+<p>Robert encountered too many enthusiasms to have
+much faith in a standard of taste. A sort of united
+press-agentry conspired to prove that there was an
+American art. Painstakingly, Robert sought what
+Lilah declared already existed, and he failed to find
+it. He found, instead, a horde of facile, astonishing
+copyists. The extremists irritated him because they
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</span>struck him as being too lazy to study. Further than
+that, he refused to express himself.</p>
+
+<p>For several months he followed wherever Lilah led.
+Then it became an easy matter to excuse himself.
+He did not dance, and the rôle of caryatid to the
+striped awning at the Palais Royal was proving irksome.
+Conversation, he insisted, had been annihilated
+by those jungle noises produced by the saxophone, the
+oboe, the violin, the piano and the bass-drum. He
+was not capable of feeling the necessary emotion; he
+preferred staying at home to holding a half-dozen
+strange and hectic women in his arms.</p>
+
+<p>“By all means, stay,” Lilah said agreeably. She
+kissed him on the top of his head and went out,
+wrapped in a voluminous coat of gold cloth, from
+which her face emerged, powdered, delicately rouged,
+like the face of a bisque figurine.</p>
+
+<p>Her mistiness had taken on a certain sharp and defined
+quality; she was more accentuated, less shadowy.
+The petulant droop of her lips was pronounced; her
+eyes were larger and more brilliant—they sought admiration
+frankly, if disdainfully, and gave nothing in
+return.</p>
+
+<p>Robert went to his easy chair with a sense of having
+been left flat. He expected at least a show of
+protest, of regret.</p>
+
+<p>Grace Fuller was at work, in the library; he heard
+the click of her typewriter. He might go to her.
+Damn it, why not? She might be able to tell him
+what Lilah had meant when she said, “By all means,
+stay.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</span></p>
+
+<p>He climbed the stairs slowly, puffing his cigar. He
+was, he realized, very tired. Pleasure exhausted him
+because he didn’t believe in it. To Lilah, it had all
+the luster of a Cause.</p>
+
+<p>Grace Fuller glanced up.</p>
+
+<p>“Not going?”</p>
+
+<p>“Not going.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why?”</p>
+
+<p>Robert said lightly: “I’m fagged. Old age, I
+suppose.”</p>
+
+<p>She pushed the machine away and sat staring at
+him with an expression which made him vaguely uncomfortable.</p>
+
+<p>“What did Lilah say?”</p>
+
+<p>Robert laughed: “She invited me by all means to
+suit myself.”</p>
+
+<p>“You made a mistake. Why didn’t you tell her
+how tired you are and make her stay at home?”</p>
+
+<p>“I can’t <i>make</i> Lilah do anything.”</p>
+
+<p>“I wouldn’t admit it, if I were you.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why not? She is undisciplined, but I would be
+the last one to try to curb her.”</p>
+
+<p>“It’s too late, Robert. Lilah has taken the bit.
+She’s running away from you.”</p>
+
+<p>With a pang of irritable fear, Robert said sharply:
+“Nonsense.”</p>
+
+<p>Grace Fuller jerked the typewriter forward again and
+struck at the keys with her long, cool fingers. Her
+mouth had hardened; her eyes were obstinate. “Very
+well,” she said.</p>
+
+<p>“See here, Grace. Don’t exaggerate! Lilah’s excited.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</span>She has never seen life. She isn’t stale. And
+you and I are.... She’ll get over it. There’s good
+in her.”</p>
+
+<p>“It isn’t ‘bad’ to love life,” Grace answered. “I am
+only suggesting that it is bad for you.”</p>
+
+<p>“I can stand it.”</p>
+
+<p>Grace Fuller gathered together her day’s work with
+deliberate gestures, sheaves of gray note-paper heavily
+embossed with the Thirty-eighth Street address in the
+English fashion, square envelopes, checks and receipted
+bills. Then she rose and stood for a moment looking
+down at Robert.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m really very happy, Grace,” he said, on his guard
+against something in her expression.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m awfully glad,” she said finally, “to hear that.”</p>
+
+<p>She turned to leave the room, but Robert spoke
+quickly: “Don’t go. I want to talk to you....”
+He hesitated, and then said awkwardly, “about yourself.”</p>
+
+<p>“Myself?” Grace Fuller hesitated, flushing. “Please
+don’t.”</p>
+
+<p>But she came back, and sank with a deep sigh, a
+sudden, almost pathetic relaxation, into a chair before
+the fire. Robert had never seen her looking so positively
+ugly; the guards were down; her distinction had
+given way to the essential woman, a creature defeated
+by her own disbelief. It was shocking, and to Robert,
+humiliating. He turned his eyes away.</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t talk about me,” Grace said. “I prefer to
+be left in my own Nirvana of self-forgetfulness. I
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</span>have conquered ambition and regret, and you’re sorry
+for me! You ought to congratulate me....”</p>
+
+<p>She caught her breath sharply. “How well that
+sounded! I almost convinced myself....” She
+smiled crookedly at him, with a funny little grimace.
+“You can’t get Nirvana without surrendering. I suppose
+there’s some primal bug of hope in my system;
+I still cherish the unattainable. I wish I had had the
+courage to fling myself away, as nuns do. What
+peace! To believe ... I can’t.... Here I am,
+talking about myself....”</p>
+
+<p>“There ought to be some way,” Robert said, “to
+live in the world and like it. I used to. At one time
+I had things reduced to pretty simple terms. Lilah
+has shaken me out of my security. She is like a
+humming-bird, or something swift and alive. You’re
+right—she has left me behind! My own world is
+stale, and hers is beyond my comprehension. Those
+darts and flights and quick stabs at things.... When
+a man gets to be my age, he wants to stand on a sort
+of hill and look off at his future. I’m too old to be
+puffing up the nether side. Frankly, I don’t know
+where Lilah is leading me, or whether, if I ever over-take
+her, I shall see anything beyond. Have I said
+too much? This isn’t in the nature of a confession.
+I’m not disgruntled. Only I thought that you
+might....”</p>
+
+<p>Grace interrupted: “I can’t analyze her. She
+dazzles me. For all I know she is shallow water, but
+I am more inclined to think that she is beyond our
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</span>depth, yours and mine. We’re making rather fools
+of ourselves trying to reach her and drag her up to
+our level into the common light of day. I adore her.
+She is the only human being I’ve ever known I could
+believe in, because she is absolutely honest.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then why—” Robert began.</p>
+
+<p>“Because you’ll never understand her! Dear old
+Robert. You’re a brownstone-front and Lilah is an
+English basement. You’ve inherited all the prejudices
+and social quaverings of the ’Eighties. Lilah is—I
+wish there were a superlative for the word modern;
+would it be futurist? She has bolted into a new generation,
+with all its recklessness and daring and passion
+for facts. She likes things as they are, raw and
+naked. And that makes her saner than you and me,
+and safer.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m not sure that you’re right,” Robert said after
+a moment. “I think Lilah dodges reality. And what
+I’m afraid of is that the facts will spring out from
+ambush and hurt her terribly. I don’t want her hurt!
+There’s something ... at times ... like a willful
+child....” His expression changed. He became unaware
+of Grace Fuller’s watchfulness. “I have failed
+to show her anything.”</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>When Lilah came in at two o’clock, she found them
+still together, in the library filmed with the smoke of
+cigars and cigarettes and before a fire that had burned
+out.</p>
+
+<p>She crossed the room swiftly, letting her gold cloak
+slip away from her as the petals of a flower fold back
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</span>from a slender stamen. She was dressed in pollen
+yellow with amber ornaments; barbaric ear-rings
+brushed her shoulders. She wore no rings, not liking
+them; her wedding ring had been discarded an hour
+after her wedding.</p>
+
+<p>“Hello! Still awake? I thought you were sleepy,
+Robert! Who has a cigarette? I came back before
+I wanted to because I had twinges of conscience. I
+thought afterwards, that you might be ill. It was
+foolish of me. I made apologies to the Sinclairs and
+painted a terrible picture—Robert with a fever.
+They wanted me to go on to the Club, so I went. Reluctantly!
+Now don’t you both feel silly? I danced
+with Heifetz. He has eyes like agates set in satin
+cushions. He dances divinely, but I was afraid he
+might scratch one of his famous hands on this girdle
+of mine—the beads are so sharp. He thought me
+quite Austrian, not French. He is coming here with
+that American violinist who made such a hit in Rome
+and has married a pretty American girl when he had
+a choice of titles and millions. It was really awfully
+amusing. Poiret was there, looking us over. He is
+rather like a Bedouin—Barker’s Constantine Madras.
+He thinks American women potential; but they lack
+something the French have. Now you know, both of
+you, that we don’t know how to wear hats; if we’re
+picturesque, we’re not <i>chic</i>, and if we’re <i>chic</i>, we’re
+not picturesque. I’m sick and tired of hearing about
+Cécile Sorel. Poiret raved, too, and there was a little
+Roumanian attaché from Washington who declared
+that she is the most beautiful woman in the world.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</span>I can’t see it. She has a wonderful neck, but that
+mouth! And there’s nothing subtle about flamingo-pink
+ostrich feathers in a Roman helmet made out of
+rhinestones. Bordoni is lovelier; she has the most
+provocative feet in the world. Heifetz likes olive
+women with eyebrows ... at least, I think so—he
+danced with one and his expression was like the last
+movement of Debussy’s <i>L’Après-Midi d’un Faune</i>....
+Another cigarette, Robert. Aren’t you two being
+rather glum? What have you been talking about?
+Me, of course! I suppose you dished me up from
+soup to nuts. Is there anything left of me? Do you
+like me? I’m a trusting soul, to leave you together!
+Not a servant in sight and you two marooned in the
+library, picking my mortal bones....”</p>
+
+<p>She perched on the arm of Robert’s chair and the
+cloak fell to the floor. She was as alive, as vivacious,
+as if the night were only begun. She had an imperishable
+luster, a surface brilliance that was beginning
+to harden, like the skin of a pearl....</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>Lilah dreaded the approach of Spring. Summer
+meant the Point, where she had no one to stand between
+Robert and herself except Junius. There had
+been no appreciable abatement of the New York season;
+very few people had gone South, since all eyes
+were turning again toward Europe. Lilah suggested
+Paris to Robert, but he was, for once, determined.
+He expected her to go with him, in June, to Maine.</p>
+
+<p>Lilah had been launched with a certain momentum;
+now she could not stop. She ran from one important
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</span>pleasure to another. Her time was taken up by the
+meaningless activities of the young married set, the
+débutantes of an immediate yesterday who were now
+tasting freedom and a characteristic dissipation; marriage
+seemed to be not a bondage but an excuse for
+license; the manners, and the casual morality of these
+matrons were the result, they said, of the War. Most
+of them had married in a hurry, but there were no
+signs of leisurely repentance; rather, divorce was
+spoken of across the dinner-table and accomplished
+after breakfast. Speech was reckless, profane and
+satirical; there was nothing left to be shocked at because
+everything had been said. Love was always
+possible, but never probable unless tinged, at least,
+with the illicit. Concessions were made to any one
+who had “a line,” and lapses from social grace were
+condoned and even glorified.</p>
+
+<p>There was, Lilah discovered, a code, astonishing
+to the older generation. But this had always been
+so. The difference lay, not in the code itself, but
+in the mental condition that had produced it. This
+generation had been hurled against the bayonets, into
+the mud-pits and stench holes, the heroisms and pitiless
+defeats of war. Brought up to believe in progress,
+in their own infallibility and triumph, they had,
+in adolescence, been stripped of their most inestimable
+faith. It was natural that they should scorn both their
+teachers and the untruth they had been fed, as with
+a spoon. They made their own deductions; impatient,
+ironic, and without sentiment, they raced forward.</p>
+
+<p>The men were more balanced than the women; a
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</span>preponderance of serious-minded men were intent on
+finding out something, no matter what. Lilah listened
+to much bitter speculation. While they speculated,
+they either drank or danced or, without emotion, experimented
+in the flesh.</p>
+
+<p>Lilah met some strange fish. There were times
+when her over-stimulated mind refused to accept impressions
+and she saw faces swimming, floating,
+snatched away, reappearing, like the fantastic denizens
+of an aquarium. The city required that a woman
+should appear impervious to fatigue; Lilah fell into
+the luxurious habit of having her tired face “patted”
+into lines of animation at so much an hour. Tilted
+back in a combination barber-chair and operating
+table, she gave herself up to the fingers of a beauty
+specialist. Lilah submitted to hours of manipulation;
+her face was smothered in clay masks, packed in ice,
+slapped, pinched, and stroked. These were her only
+moments of relaxation. At the mercy of the expert,
+her body rested, her mind swam in and out of the
+mazes. At her side, upon a highly antiseptic glass
+table, bottles and jars contained the supposedly mysterious
+ingredients of youth; Lilah believed in their
+advertised potency. Lulled by the touch of soothing
+fingers and the odor of creams, lotions, tonics, herbs,
+sachets, rouges and powders, Lilah spent hours in
+these brocaded salons. Other hours, fixed appointments
+rigorously kept, were spent at the hairdressers’,
+where, before a triple mirror, beneath a cluster of
+lights, her vanity was fed by a mannered Frenchman
+who wielded the Marcel irons with a sort of tenderness.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</span>Her hands, surrendered to a pale girl in black,
+became smooth and pointed, tinted, polished. She
+enjoyed the odor of this establishment—a combination
+of violet brilliantine, singed hair and a Gallic
+thrift.</p>
+
+<p>Early in February her life took a strange turn. She
+went around a corner into a new street.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>She had been invited, significantly, without Robert.
+May Sinclair thought Robert a wet-blanket and had
+said: “Come alone. It’s going to be a bit wild.
+Robert wouldn’t understand. Give him his slippers
+and leave him at home.”</p>
+
+<p>The Sinclairs lived in a Park Avenue apartment,
+fifteen stories above ground. A columbarium maze of
+small rooms had been transformed, by a judicious
+knocking out of walls, into a stately salon. Upon
+this lofty shelf Mrs. Sinclair lived and entertained, in
+the fashion of modern New York, any one who amused
+her.</p>
+
+<p>Lilah found the company already there. A man
+sat at the piano, improvising. She recognized Montague
+Wilder and his inevitable tumbler of whisky.
+He couldn’t play, he said, unless he was thoroughly
+drunk. Then he played divinely. He looked up as
+Lilah came in and, not pausing, called: “Lilah!
+Lovely Lilah! Dance for us! This is a waltz on a
+poem by von Hofmanstahl. Listen! Isn’t it lovely?
+Dance. Something Viennese! Cupids and garlands,
+hoops and little waists....”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah lifted her arms. Suddenly she felt very gay
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</span>and triumphant. She was conscious of people sitting
+in the shadowy corners of the room, watching her.
+She began to waltz. The little square of cloth that
+did for a train got between her feet and she caught
+it up, exposing her ankles to the frank admiration of
+her audience. No one said anything. This was the
+lazy after-dinner hour before vivacity had worked its
+way to the surface. Later, every one would talk at
+once.</p>
+
+<p>Lilah said breathlessly: “Mrs. Vernon Castle!”
+And waltzed into the arms of Chivers Chew, who was
+the only man in the room on his feet. They whirled
+for a minute (Chew danced abominably) and then
+Lilah sat down beside Wilder. “That was wonderful,
+Montague. But play something serious. Chopin.”</p>
+
+<p>“For God’s sake, Montague, cut it out,” Chew complained.
+“I’m blue enough.”</p>
+
+<p>“Use your mind,” some one advised. “You can do
+anything with your mind.”</p>
+
+<p>Montague Wilder improvised on the theme “Kalua.”
+Glittering scales ornamented the melody; he took it
+by the hand and led it into the Debussy half-tones,
+so that the South Sea ragtime tune became a wistful
+French song, a thing of strangeness and nuance. His
+left hand reached for the whisky glass without seeming
+to know what his right hand did, but there was no
+break in the invention of technical feats. Through
+this dissonance and unexpected harmony the familiar
+melody seemed classical, important. “You’re wickedly
+clever,” Lilah said.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Wait until I’ve had a quart,” he answered. “I’ll
+play the D-flat waltz in thirds. Rosenthal could do
+it, but no one else ever has.”</p>
+
+<p>“Who’s here?” Lilah asked.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, the Heywoods. Pound, the shipbuilder. He’s
+middle-class English. ‘The wife’ is with him and she’s
+worse. Carey; the Hawaiian Carey. Miss Wagner—pronounced
+with a wag. Putnam Flagg and a girl
+from San Diego who writes. May has never drawn
+such a hand—aces and eights! Why are <i>we</i> here?”</p>
+
+<p>“Who is Putnam Flagg?” Lilah interrupted.</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know.”</p>
+
+<p>“What is May going to do with us?”</p>
+
+<p>“The opera. Then back here. And then talk, until
+morning.”</p>
+
+<p>“Talk?”</p>
+
+<p>May Sinclair unfolded and rose from a long sofa
+upholstered in taupe velvet. “Come on! ‘Butterfly’!”</p>
+
+<p>“‘Butterfly’! Good God,” Wilder groaned.</p>
+
+<p>“Let’s stay here and play, you and I,” Lilah whispered.</p>
+
+<p>“No, you don’t!” May Sinclair’s clear, high voice
+came between them. “Drink that whisky, Montague,
+and bring Lilah! Farrar’s singing.”</p>
+
+<p>“Worse and worse,” Montague Wilder said. But
+he rose, and Lilah found her wrap.</p>
+
+<p>In the elevator she brushed shoulders with a tall
+man who stared at her down his nose. May Sinclair
+never introduced any one. This, Lilah supposed, was
+Putnam Flagg. Afterwards, long afterwards, it used
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</span>to amuse her to think of their meeting in a stuffy little
+elevator that slid down fifteen stories while they stared
+at each other.</p>
+
+<p>He had a curious, rather flat nose, eyes like an animal
+and the beautifully modeled full mouth of a satyr.</p>
+
+<p>They did not speak, but Lilah thought: “I hope
+May will let him come with me.”</p>
+
+<p>The Sinclair motor waited at the curb, and Lilah
+hung back, pretending to adjust the collar of her wrap.
+She heard Mrs. Sinclair call: “Lilah! Lilah!” With
+a flurry, the writer from San Diego and the elder
+Carey embarked, the Englishman and his wife followed
+and the attendant, closing the door of the limousine,
+signaled for Lilah’s little brougham.... She
+was to have the tall man and Montague Wilder to herself.</p>
+
+<p>She beckoned to them; the car slipped into the
+stream of downtown traffic upon the heels of May
+Sinclair’s crowded chariot, and again she became conscious
+of the pressure of her shoulder against his.</p>
+
+<p>“I am Mrs. Peabody,” she explained.</p>
+
+<p>“Major Flagg,” he answered briefly.</p>
+
+<p>They did not speak again until a skillful and precarious
+landing had been made before the Opera. It
+was Montague Wilder’s monologue. He complained
+on the way across town that opera in New York was
+debased, a commercial side-show. There were no
+voices worth mentioning. No one below the peanut
+heaven knew anything about music; tradition was lost
+on the balance of the house, and therefore the singers
+played fast and loose with the scores. He had heard
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</span>a distinguished prima donna cheat three times in one
+evening, substituting a b flat for a high c to the rage
+and mortification of Moranzoni; but the audience was
+unaware, so why bother to sing? Galli flatted to her
+heart’s content. Now that Caruso was gone, there
+was no one. No one, that is, save Diaz, who was permitted
+to sing once or twice a season—it was worth
+going a thousand miles to hear him do the prologue
+of the “Coq d’Or” and the rag-picker in “Louise.”</p>
+
+<p>But who could sing “Depuis le Jour” since Mary
+had gone to Chicago? Jeritza would snuff out like a
+rocket, in two years, or less. She was too damned
+Teutonic....</p>
+
+<p>In the lobby, May Sinclair gathered her aces and
+eights and led them around the red velvet corridors
+to her box. She was a tall, blonde, long-waisted
+woman who had reduced from two hundred to one
+hundred and thirty-five pounds in less than a year
+and had had a sort of personal renaissance, a rebirth.
+From a fat placidity, a dowdy gentleness, she had entered
+upon a willowy emotionalism; she was enormously
+interested in what she had, for years, surrendered
+because of her sense of the fitness of things.
+She was experimenting; it was no longer ridiculous
+to experiment. She was forty but she was not fat.</p>
+
+<p>Butterfly’s relatives were retreating before a matter-of-fact
+Pinkerton, sung by Martinelli. Farrar, in a
+nasturtium-red kimono with a metallic obi, her blue-black
+hair a pinwheel of lacquered ornaments,
+crouched before an artificial cherry tree in the fullness
+of unnatural blossoming. Lilah saw the stage, a pool
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</span>of light, and the two small gesticulating figures, across
+the shoulders of Mrs. Sinclair and the writer from
+San Diego. That music, melting, propitiating, assailed
+her, like a personal appeal. <i>Bimba, dagli occhi
+pieni di malia—</i></p>
+
+<p>If Martinelli would only cut his hair....</p>
+
+<p>The house was not crowded, but, as always, the
+boxes made a show—poor relatives of the holders, or
+relatives of the poor relatives, or music teachers, or
+God knows who.... Lilah had not heard “Butterfly”
+often enough to be bored. But Montague Wilder
+had curled up in the ante-room and had gone sound
+asleep.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly Lilah’s eyes turned to Major Flagg. She
+had wanted him to be watching her, and he was.
+Their eyes held. It was a game. His eyes were unwavering
+and yet something kept flickering in them;
+it was as if a shutter opened and closed. Whenever
+she was about to leap into his eyes, he shut her out.
+More than anything she had ever wanted, she wanted
+to get by that barrier, whatever it was, into his eyes.
+Once inside, she could conquer him, but never so long
+as he kept her out.</p>
+
+<p>She had not spoken to him except to say that she
+was Mrs. Peabody and to receive his polite but noncommittal
+answer.</p>
+
+<p>He was winning the game....</p>
+
+<p>Lilah shrugged her shoulders and turned back to
+the stage, where Pinkerton, feeling carefully behind
+him for the steps, drew Butterfly into the <i>dolce dimora</i>.
+Farrar, abandoned, Carmen in a kimono, swayed forward,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</span>lost in ecstasy; her feet, in gold lacquer sandals,
+mounted the steps, slowly, slowly, as her head
+tilted back to that kiss on the threshold....</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, God,” Montague Wilder said, sitting up,
+disheveled and sleepy. “Puccini! Lilah—let’s go
+back and drink more of May’s Scotch.”</p>
+
+<p>She shook her head.</p>
+
+<p>It was no use pretending they had not looked at
+each other like that.</p>
+
+<p>In the corridor, pacing up and down with Mrs.
+Sinclair, who couldn’t find any one to smile at because
+it was a parade of “loans,” Lilah heard in snatches
+that Putnam Flagg was “queer,” that he had “ideas.”
+He had been gassed and had a bad heart. It made
+Mrs. Sinclair jumpy because at any moment he might
+faint.</p>
+
+<p>“Talk to him, Lilah, I can’t.” Mrs. Sinclair caught
+sight of old “Rosie” Jackson and shed Lilah.</p>
+
+<p>Lilah found herself at Flagg’s side. He was too
+tall. She felt little and silly. But more than that
+she was excited, a dangerous, unfamiliar excitement.
+She could not explain it, then, or later. He spoke of
+the opera. He liked it. He liked Farrar. “Because
+she is alive. A woman like that....”</p>
+
+<p>“Well?”</p>
+
+<p>“Magnificent! Not quite feminine.”</p>
+
+<p>“Do you know her?”</p>
+
+<p>“No. I shouldn’t want to.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why?”</p>
+
+<p>“I hate finding sawdust in dolls.”</p>
+
+<p>“Perhaps you wouldn’t.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</span></p>
+
+<p>“I might.” He smiled down at her. “And then
+I’d have one less enthusiasm. I can’t do with too
+few! It’s lonely enough as it is. Rows of ’em, prone,
+with the sawdust spilling out of their heads! Leave
+me Farrar, please.”</p>
+
+<p>After a moment he said: “This is the first opera
+I’ve heard in five years. I’ve been in New Mexico
+for two years. Before that, in France, I didn’t care
+to go. I hope Mrs. Sinclair won’t leave early. I
+want to be in at the death.”</p>
+
+<p>“Montague Wilder would consider you very unsophisticated.
+He laughs at Puccini, or, as you know,
+he goes to sleep.”</p>
+
+<p>Flagg seemed for a moment to consider. “I don’t
+dare to laugh at things,” he said presently. “It’s
+dangerous. You begin by laughing at your pet little
+detestations and you wind up by losing your big
+faiths. It doesn’t pay to be too fastidious.”</p>
+
+<p>“Doesn’t it?” Lilah said lightly.</p>
+
+<p>He shut her out again. As if embarrassed by having
+made a confidence, he turned his head away.
+People were staring at them and Lilah wondered
+whether she had been recognized. Her photograph,
+taken by a flattering man of title against a background
+of Florentine brocade, had been published broadcast
+in those magazines whose business it is to foster the
+idea that an American society really exists. Lilah
+had discovered that it is not altogether easy to get
+yourself advertised, even though you happened to be
+Mrs. Robert Peabody. But she had taken this hurdle,
+as she took all of them, with alacrity, and it was therefore
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</span>not improbable that this strolling crowd stared
+at her for the reason that the American crowd loves
+its celebrity as the Englishman loves his duke. Ordinarily,
+she would have been content to enjoy the flattery
+implied by this attention alone, but to-night her
+pleasure was doubled because she particularly wanted
+this man to be aware of her. He could scarcely be
+unaware that she was attracting attention.</p>
+
+<p>At the box door, Mrs. Sinclair waited with the air
+of being about to sweep them into a net. “We’re
+going on to the Rendezvous after the second act.
+Montague’s fearfully bored and Carey has a Gilda
+Gray complex. I hope you won’t mind, you two.”</p>
+
+<p>Flagg made a polite if not enthusiastic gesture and
+Lilah, catching his eyes deliberately, permitted her
+own to say: “I’m sorry, for your sake.”</p>
+
+<p>As they entered the box, he remarked simply: “I
+have a rotten heart and can’t dance.... Who is
+Gilda Gray?”</p>
+
+<p>“She is a lovely, initiated, transplanted savage,”
+Lilah explained, “who dances the hula-hula on Forty-fourth
+Street.”</p>
+
+<p>Again their eyes held. The lights dimmed; with a
+sigh, a rustle, the great audience faced again the glowing
+proscenium. Lilah had a curious sensation of
+being isolated, alone, in a crowded emptiness, with
+this man. Life, for the moment, was immeasurably
+suspended. There was a dignity, a beauty about the
+impending, the imminent disaster. She would love
+this man. She could not help herself. She paused,
+amazed, before the strangeness and the splendor of
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</span>that recognition. The moment prolonged itself, until,
+in the fixed and intense meeting of their eyes there
+was mutual declaration. It seemed that they must
+sit thus, strangers, in a shadowy balcony above a pool
+of music, forever....</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="VI">
+ VI
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="dropcap"><span class="upper-case">When</span> Lilah returned to the Thirty-eighth
+Street house, late that night, it was her inclination
+to avoid any encounter with
+Robert. She hoped that he had fallen asleep. Dismissing
+the servant, Lilah entered the electric elevator,
+another of De Blauvelt’s innovations, and got out on
+the second floor. The door was noisy and as she
+turned toward her room she saw a light flash on in
+Robert’s room across the hall. He called: “Lilah?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” she said, and paused, holding her breath.
+She ought to go in. But she could not. She felt that
+her excitement had written itself on her face and she
+hated to invent reasons for that animation. She
+wanted most of all to be alone and to see herself,
+clearly, before she went further. Robert might surprise
+her into saying something before she was ready.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m tired,” she called out. “Good night!”</p>
+
+<p>She locked herself into her room, suddenly determined
+to have her way. She must deal with this new
+feeling before anything happened to diminish it, to
+mar its shining beauty. Robert expected to be kissed;
+it was a part of the utterly stupid and peremptory
+rite of marriage, devoid of spontaneous affection or
+of that emotion which is led up to, prepared, by word
+and touch. Why did he insist, when he knew that
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</span>it was a conventional gesture and could lead to nothing,
+create nothing, change nothing? She heard his
+hand sliding over the panels of the door, and again he
+called: “Lilah?”</p>
+
+<p>She saw herself reflected in all the mirrors in an
+attitude of disgust and rebellion and she was struck
+by her loneliness. No one could help her. This was
+a primitive feeling, so powerful that it was all she
+could do not to hurl her dismissal at the closed door.
+What, in a man she loved, would have been lovable,
+in Robert was revolting.</p>
+
+<p>“Go away,” she said in a low voice.</p>
+
+<p>At once he was silent, as if she had struck him
+dead. She listened for the sound of his retreating
+footsteps, but she could hear nothing. He must have
+gone swiftly, silently; or else was still standing there,
+his hand suspended, his gesture arrested by something
+final in her voice.</p>
+
+<p>She spoke again: “I’m very tired.”</p>
+
+<p>There was no answer. And slowly she undressed,
+trembling as if there had been an actual disaster.</p>
+
+<p>She slipped into bed and switched off the light. The
+silence of the room was permeated by a low and continuous
+sound, a distant mingling of voices, victorious,
+hopeless, a vast, removed dissonance.... The
+city.</p>
+
+<p>She got up again and kneeled by an open window.
+There, the sound took form, was less terrifying. The
+street, beneath a moon at the full, was empty, like a
+street in a nightmare. Office buildings were like pyramids
+in a forest of pyramids, inscrutable, lifeless.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</span>And one tower, higher than the rest, was pierced by
+a loggia, rimmed with moonlight, romantic.</p>
+
+<p>She tried to piece together the fragmentary happenings
+of that evening. The idea came to her that perhaps
+she had over-estimated Flagg’s interest; her own
+had been immediate, sharp, an emotion more penetrating
+than anything she had experienced. The
+meeting had upset her whole philosophy of conduct;
+she had thought herself safe within the defined circle
+of her material desires; her inner self, what idealists
+were pleased to call her soul, she had believed secure
+against temptation; beauty, in things, was to have
+been enough. And now she saw, dimly, that she had
+stepped outside the circle into a strange territory
+where beauty, to be beauty at all, must be of the
+spirit.</p>
+
+<p>She recalled their silence in the motor, the brief
+contact of shoulders, an ostentatious indifference
+when, seated at the Rendezvous, their interest had
+either to disguise itself or be subjected to remark.
+Flagg had not danced, but Lilah did, because it was
+expected of her. The writer from San Diego claimed
+Flagg. She was witty and tangibly human, a woman,
+Lilah decided, in daylight. Broad of feature, with a
+tanned skin and careless braids of thick brown hair,
+she had an enviable indifference to what men thought
+of her which assured her their instant, delighted attention.
+Whenever Flagg laughed Lilah’s heart contracted
+with something like hate. She had thought
+herself incapable of jealousy. What she felt was
+worse than jealousy; it was a primitive, an atrocious
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</span>suffering. She had gone on dancing, smiling, but her
+eyes had sought Flagg again and again, had sought,
+across the crowded room blue with smoke and dust,
+confirmation of something she had only glimpsed and
+might have imagined—his head, the short, smooth
+hair, his features, his expression of humorous, sensitive
+understanding. He leaned a little sideways, to
+catch the ironic comments of the sun-burned lady
+from San Diego, but his eyes never failed to meet
+Lilah’s, to let her in a little way and then, abruptly,
+to shut her out....</p>
+
+<p>Once, she had found herself alone at the table with
+him.</p>
+
+<p>“You have shown yourself to me,” he said abruptly
+in a lowered voice, staring away from her at the
+crowd. “Perhaps because of something in me or because
+of something that has happened to make you
+careless. No. Don’t interrupt. You are right. We
+are not alike but we are different enough to be dangerous
+to each other. I am going to be frank with
+you. Nothing could have flattered me more than
+your being aware of me, for now I know that something
+I thought had died in me is still alive. But I
+can’t be what you might want me to be. I can’t play
+any game but my own. You see, I have chosen to
+stay alive at the expense of my old enthusiasms—and
+failings. I have only a margin of life. Like that
+chap of Conrad’s, I have an enemy in my breast. I
+must be watchful and I must feel nothing. And here
+you are, commanding me to feel. I haven’t any existence
+of my own. I am dedicated to my unstable
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</span>heart, fending off reality to spare myself a damnable
+pain that makes me red in the face, sick, unconscious....
+I haven’t any life of my own. I am as dead as
+dust. I am a man who buys life, day by day, simply
+by sparing his heart.... Love is selfish.... If I
+love you, it will be selfishly. I warn you. I have no
+desire to play the game of hide-and-seek, to dodge
+jealous husbands. I haven’t anything to offer you—either
+money or feeling or security.”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah had said quickly: “Thank you! You are
+very explicit.”</p>
+
+<p>A momentary fear passed to leave her trembling.
+She realized that while he was speaking she had lost
+all sense of the crowding dancers, the barbaric throb
+of the music, their publicity. She put up her hand
+to hide what she knew must be an expression of utter
+rage.</p>
+
+<p>“Even to-day,” she began, in an unsteady voice,
+“when anything is permitted—you dare—I don’t understand—”</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly he turned and looked at her. “Even to-day
+preliminary skirmishes are ridiculous. I beg
+your pardon. I took it for granted that you were
+experienced enough to hear the truth.”</p>
+
+<p>They were interrupted by Chivers Chew who bore
+Lilah away without the formality of an apology to
+Flagg; he rose and let Lilah go with the conventional
+reluctance. In Chew’s arms, held too close, Lilah suffered
+panic. She had no idea what Flagg had meant;
+whether he had laughed at her or whether, without
+question, he wanted her. Whatever he had intended,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</span>one thing was certain, the feeling she had wanted to
+avoid was being thrust upon her. The immediate
+future held a great selfishness or a great daring. This
+feeling was bound to assert itself or destroy her. She
+could not be certain that it was, in the romantic sense,
+love.</p>
+
+<p>She could not, even now, be certain; kneeling in
+the open window with her blank gaze on the city, she
+wondered....</p>
+
+<p>They had not spoken again. She might not see
+him, ever. But that was impossible! She had left
+the party, at one o’clock, to come home alone. Her
+coming had been in the nature of a flight, an escape
+from an intangible danger, a fatal, desirable, disastrous
+happiness....</p>
+
+<p>She rose, with a sudden impulse to go back....
+They would be at May Sinclair’s apartment, talking,
+drinking, until dawn....</p>
+
+<p>She switched on the electric light again. Her cloak
+lay across a chair. She threw it over her shoulders,
+thrust her bare feet into the slippers that lay where
+she had kicked them off and opened the door.</p>
+
+<p>Robert was standing outside, his face curiously
+puckered. “Where on earth are you going?” he demanded.</p>
+
+<p>Lilah said furiously: “Why on earth are you listening
+at my door?”</p>
+
+<p>“I wasn’t listening.”</p>
+
+<p>He lifted his arms. “I forgot. You spoke to me....
+I was waiting.... Well, by God, I was a fool!”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah closed the door. Her teeth were chattering.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</span>She flung the wrap aside. “Go away. Go away,” she
+said. “Go away.”</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>It seemed of sudden, vital importance that she
+should be happy. Since there was no certain immortality,
+temporal happiness was necessary at any cost.
+She had been cheated because she did not love; but
+Robert had loved her, still loved her. He had failed
+because he had not fulfilled the promise of that moment
+in the fog. He was like all prosaic lovers; he
+had thought of nothing better to say than: “Poor
+Lilah! Poor little girl.” She had always despised
+pity. She denied all the feminine attributes other
+women used as defensive weapons. She preferred admiration
+to sympathy; and in this she was unusual;
+most women like to cry against a masculine shoulder.
+Lilah wanted the fullness of success, recognition of
+her strength.</p>
+
+<p>She went to the telephone and in a cautious voice
+gave Mrs. Sinclair’s number.</p>
+
+<p>“Lilah!” The high, clear tones came into the receiver
+against a confused background of music and
+voices. “I thought you found us dull!”</p>
+
+<p>“May I come back?”</p>
+
+<p>“Now?” Then, with a burst of amused laughter:
+“Of course! Come.”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah called a taxi and dressed hurriedly. From
+her window she saw the car slip down the hill from
+Madison Avenue and the driver, jumping out, glanced
+up.... He mustn’t ring! Mustn’t!</p>
+
+<p>She flew downstairs. Robert’s door was closed.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</span>If he heard, he made no attempt, this time, to stop
+her. The house was dimly lighted, muffled, close;
+there was an unreality about the formal arrangement
+of chairs, the stiff, precise folds of curtains and
+draperies, as if no one had ever lived in these rooms
+or passed up and down the stairs.... The thought
+crossed Lilah’s mind that she had, after all, failed to
+create a livable home. Her heart hadn’t been in
+it....</p>
+
+<p>She made violent signals to the chauffeur of the
+taxi: “<i>Don’t ring!</i> Here I am! Take me to four-seventy
+Park.”</p>
+
+<p>The man gave her a curious look as he shut the
+door. Then she realized that it was three o’clock.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>Mrs. Sinclair’s party was still in progress. The
+formal luxury of the room had been put askew.
+Wilder was at the piano. Carey sat cross-legged on
+a table, singing Hawaiian ditties in a soft, saccharine
+voice. With shut eyes and upcurling lips, he was
+like an elderly Buddha in a dinner-jacket.</p>
+
+<p>Lilah saw immediately that Flagg was there and
+her heart leaped, but she said, smiling at him: “I’m
+not a bit of a coward. I came back to apologize.”</p>
+
+<p>They sat down together, unexpectedly embarrassed.
+It was not possible to fence effectively before a roomful
+of people. But Lilah felt that she had committed
+herself. She studied his face, his well-modeled hands.
+He was harder, more mature than Robert; the nature
+of his aloofness was not clear to her. Either he was
+cruel, or he was removed, by the nature of his experience,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</span>from ordinary behavior. He said nothing but
+sat with his eyes on the fire which had burned low
+in a shallow hearth of yellow and black marble. May
+Sinclair was flirting, in her intense, experimental fashion,
+with Chivers Chew. The shipbuilding Englishman
+and his wife had disappeared. Nearby, stretched
+at full length with her head in Heywood’s lap, the
+writer from San Diego was explaining the hows and
+the whys of the short-story game:</p>
+
+<p>“It’s perfectly easy. Any boob can do it. All you
+have to know is human nature and God knows human
+nature doesn’t cringe from publicity, these days! All
+of us skin our souls in public. I’m successful because
+I skin mine a little closer. I give the public
+naked hearts, as you hand around olives at a picnic—on
+a pickle fork! People are sick and tired of
+flappers. They want ‘strong stuff,’ be it pseudo or
+not; heroic love and sacrifice. Divorce has lost its
+novelty. I’ve been writing the most exalted morality-tales....
+You’ll see—in another year skirts will go
+down and manners will go up. It isn’t going to be
+fashionable to lie with your head on a strange gentleman’s
+bony knee—”</p>
+
+<p>“Then why do you do it?” Heywood demanded,
+not stirring.</p>
+
+<p>“Because it’s quite roguish in San Diego.”</p>
+
+<p>“San Diego—where on earth is San Diego?”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah turned to Flagg. He smiled. “What a lot
+of rubbish! Why do people generalize about taste
+and morals? To-day, when propriety is a vice in
+New York, a cigarette is immoral in San Diego. And
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</span>if skirts go down in New York, they’ll go up in San
+Diego, because San Diego is always two years behind—and
+what does that prove?”</p>
+
+<p>He leaned forward, lowered his voice: “Is it decided,
+then? Are we to go on?”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah said simply: “Yes.”</p>
+
+<p>She rose, tossing her cigarette away. She was languid
+again; her eyes drooped. She brushed against
+him, but he sat, immovable, his expression guarded.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>“May,” she said, “I don’t like your party. I’m
+going home.”</p>
+
+<p>“Have a drink,” was the succinct reply.</p>
+
+<p>Lilah’s hostess did not trouble to rise. And Chivers
+Chew, peering over the back of the sofa with a blurred
+expression said: “Don’t be a grouch, Lilah! We’re
+all danced out. Listen to Carey. He’s on the fiftieth
+verse of the Hawaiian poem in praise of the first Missionary
+Carey, who had fifteen wives and sixty-two
+sons. Tune in—there’s a good girl.”</p>
+
+<p>Flagg followed Lilah into the corridor. His offer
+to accompany her was, in its tempered formality, old-fashioned.
+She could not understand just wherein he
+differed from the men she knew; he was more bold,
+more direct than they, but he seemed devoid of the
+fashionable carelessness which made them, very often,
+insulting. The women were responsible for most of
+it—they let themselves be slapped on the back and
+addressed as “old girl.”</p>
+
+<p>As they stepped into the elevator they heard Montague
+Wilder entering upon the D-flat waltz, in thirds.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</span></p>
+
+<p>“The stale hour,” Flagg remarked, as they waited
+on the curb for a night-prowler. With his cane he
+signalled a skulking vehicle that turned out of a side-street.
+A sharp, cool wind whipped Lilah’s cloak;
+the sky was already pale with dawn. But the streets
+were deserted; in pools of light cast by the tall, globed
+arcs, an occasional figure was visible, unreal, moving
+upon strange errands; cars passed, rarely, with a
+smooth purring of tires, bearing shadowy, drooping
+women, and men in the attitude of relaxed satiety.</p>
+
+<p>Flagg did not speak, and Lilah became conscious of
+his unswerving regard.</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t understand what’s happened,” she said unsteadily.
+“I am not willing—I want happiness. But
+I can’t hurt, too much, some one who has been kind
+to me. I’m selfish. You’ll see. I want—things.
+But this is new. I don’t know. I’m frightened.”</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t be,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>He continued to stare at her. He seemed to be
+dreaming, sunk in a reverie. Lilah’s fear deepened.
+If he had touched her, or had spoken, she would have
+thrust him aside with all of her accustomed scorn
+and impatience. But there was something in his silence
+that was devotional, innocent, almost immaterial.
+She recognized that he was above self, absorbed in
+her.... With a shiver, she recalled Robert, at her
+door....</p>
+
+<p>The taxi swerved and stopped before the Thirty-eighth
+Street house.</p>
+
+<p>Lilah gave her hand into Flagg’s clasp and as they
+looked again at each other her lips trembled. She
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</span>heard herself asking him to come, as soon as possible;
+then, conscious of a too apparent eagerness, she
+added: “Thursday. I’m fearfully busy.”</p>
+
+<p>“To-morrow.”</p>
+
+<p>“No. No. I can’t. Give me a day or two.
+Thursday, at four.”</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>At breakfast, Lilah said sweetly: “Was I cross last
+night? I’m sorry.”</p>
+
+<p>Robert lowered the newspaper. His answer surprised
+her, but she did not alter her smile that had
+in it a touch of malice. “Cross? No. Why?”</p>
+
+<p>“I thought perhaps—”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m going to the Point,” he interrupted. “My
+grandfather isn’t well.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, Robert—”</p>
+
+<p>“It’s not serious,” he said. And added, with no apparent
+irony: “I’ll come back!”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah lowered her eyes to hide her expression. This
+little circumstance, unlooked for, outside her volition
+or her intention, was a part of her unfailing luck. In
+every circumstance, she was triumphant.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m terribly sorry,” she began.</p>
+
+<p>“He has a cold. Damned nuisance! Old men
+shouldn’t have colds. He might die. I’m fond of
+him. And besides, he holds the business together.
+An enormous amount of correspondence goes to the
+Point. In the end, he makes all the important decisions,
+defines policies—his preferences are respected.
+If he should die, I would have to take his place. But
+there are other reasons why I don’t want him to die.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Shall I go?” Lilah asked. “I will. But wouldn’t
+Grace be more useful?”</p>
+
+<p>“He doesn’t need a nurse. He’s lonely. If you
+will come with me, and wear your prettiest dresses
+and perhaps play poker with him—he will get well.
+Old people sometimes die because they are ignored.
+They live alone until they lose the sense of their own
+reality; they sort of—vanish.”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah said briefly: “Let me see his letter.”</p>
+
+<p>Junius Peabody’s fine, careful writing with the curious,
+looped s’s covered half a sheet of stationery. He
+said simply that he would be glad of company since
+he was confined to his bed and feverish. “They won’t
+let me up, confound them!”</p>
+
+<p>“He’s not very ill,” Lilah remarked. “You go, and
+if I’m really needed, wire me.” She added: “You’ll
+be happy, because you love the country. And I have
+a great deal to do. Oh, unimportant things! But if
+I’m to go away in June, I won’t have more than just
+enough time to get ready.”</p>
+
+<p>When Robert said: “Very well,” she had the feeling
+that she was safe. The immediate future held,
+not the necessity for speaking a dangerous truth, but
+an adventure, delectable, mysterious, exciting.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly gracious, she gave her hand to Robert.
+“I’ll miss you, cross old Bobsie,” she said sweetly.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>The next two weeks were as exciting as she could
+have wished.</p>
+
+<p>She heard from Robert that his grandfather was
+better but that the spaniel had canker of the ear.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</span>“It’s terrible. She moans like a human being and
+shakes her head and tries to get her hind foot into
+her ear. The vet came—that old fellow from Biddeford—and
+operated. Last night I sat up until four
+o’clock putting ice on her nose and pouring stuff into
+her ear. She wouldn’t sleep and kept looking at me.
+I’ve been away too long. Edwin shut her head in a
+door because she wanted to get into the warm kitchen
+and lie under the stove. My God, why can’t people
+understand that animals are human? I’ll never like
+Edwin again. It makes me sick to look at him. If
+I had a son, I’d act this way, only worse. The silver
+bitch is the only son I’ve ever had.... I’ve been
+thinking over you and me. I have failed with you
+and I don’t know why. No one could love you more
+than I do. But I suffer in my love, and that isn’t
+right—love ought not to betray, but it seems to. Will
+you help me? Perhaps you know what I mean. If
+we had a son, there would be no complications. Last
+night when I sat there giving that pup pieces of ice
+that melted as if I’d put them on a red-hot stove, I
+saw a good many things clearly. The ice ran over
+my hand and up my arm and ruined my shirt, and
+at the risk of your hating me I’ll tell you that I cried
+like a baby and my tears ruined my tie. When I
+got through I looked like the sole survivor of the
+Flood. (You write Biblical words with capitals, don’t
+you?) And, as I was saying, certain things were sort
+of washed clean or clear, or both. If I could only
+put my thoughts down on paper so that you would
+understand! I know that if I could explain myself
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</span>to you, you’d come, quick! Love shouldn’t be a sacrifice;
+it should be a service. That goes down easily
+on paper, but it took hours to bubble up out of my
+unconscious. And another thing, it doesn’t pay to
+go running around looking for new material to work
+with. What you have at hand is usually workable,
+if you are patient enough. Success is, after all, making
+what you have into a decent sort of achievement.
+The people who fail are the ones who kick about never
+having had a chance. We all have a chance. I could
+be specific, only I won’t. I am offering myself to
+you as a lump of clay for your fashioning. You might
+make something of me—the life-size statue of a happy
+man. Isn’t it worth trying?”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah did not know what to answer; she postponed
+answering, and, after a while, forgot. The issue was
+not pressing. To placate Robert, she sent a wire:
+“Love to you both. Lilah.”</p>
+
+<p>These two weeks were exclusively her own. She
+did not want to serve love or to use the material at
+hand. She hated smug, decent, stereotyped domesticity.
+Other women could spend year after year with
+the details of a home and children; it was unthinkable
+that she should surrender to monotony. She
+must live to the full; she was willing, she assured
+herself, to take both the reward and the punishment.
+The penalty, however, was too remote to be considered.</p>
+
+<p>Putnam Flagg had been a professor before he became
+a major. He preferred the first title to the
+second, since he declared that he was not, by nature,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</span>a soldier. He disapproved of the advantage offered
+by rank and insignia to men who might be disposed
+to bully their inferiors, but he approved of awards
+that carried with them nothing but recognition of
+work well done. As a teacher and a scientist, he had
+known abstract adventure; no war could equal the
+hazards of research. Yet his ability had forced him
+into the most terrible branch of warfare and, as an
+expert in the use of poison-gas, he had had a dose of
+his own medicine. This struck him as an altogether
+exquisite justice; he had been an unwilling but an
+intelligent servant of his country—once convinced of
+his duty he had used all of his knowledge, and had,
+temporarily, laid aside his scruples. He despised war,
+but he also despised despotism. He was one of the
+few thinkers whose faith had not been shaken by the
+tragedy; rather, he emerged from it with an even
+deeper belief in man’s progress. Flagg was convinced
+that society had gone too far to turn back; surrender,
+discouragement, meant annihilation; the battle must
+be fought to the end.</p>
+
+<p>He did not shrink from facts; he believed that the
+esthetic imagination would be supplanted by the
+scientific imagination. There was no limit to the audacity
+of man; no limit to what he might dare, what
+he might do....</p>
+
+<p>Flagg was to go back to his university in the Autumn.
+Lilah got a very definite picture of a small
+city, a group of Gothic buildings unhallowed by age,
+the plain, a wide river, brown polished, slow and resistless....
+Flagg would have a house “on the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</span>campus” and a small laboratory of his own. Three
+times a week, in a Gothic room, before an un-Gothic
+audience of farmers’ sons and business men in embryo,
+he would lecture. His “subject” he told her,
+was zoölogy. Lilah shuddered. She could not understand
+Mendelian heredity, but she had understood
+what Junius Peabody said about the adult being in
+some manner contained within the germ. She could
+not see what was gained, exactly, by knowing.... In
+the end, you always stumbled upon God, and the inscrutable
+beginnings.</p>
+
+<p>“We must make certain,” Flagg said, “that there
+is not a God beyond God. Perhaps our conception is
+childish.”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah put her hand over his mouth. “Let’s not
+talk about it. I’m more interested in your college,
+your guinea pigs and rabbits and test tubes.”</p>
+
+<p>His smile was mocking. “Guinea pigs and God,”
+he remarked. Suddenly he caught her hands. “I
+think I love you because you are beautiful. There’s
+nothing else to love! Yet I love you! Do you care?
+Or are you playing with me?”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah had not, so far, committed herself. They
+were spending an hour before her fire, sharing the
+French sofa that had been too small for Robert.
+Flagg’s touch frightened her.</p>
+
+<p>She had been so happy. A week had passed like a
+day; it had contained the essence of experience. If
+she let herself love, she must face exile in a western
+university town—but that was impossible; Flagg
+would not be spared because he happened to be an
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</span>unusual and valuable man. She would have to wait,
+and divorce Robert. She saw a year, two years, of
+postponement, poverty again, criticism, ugliness, the
+battle to justify passion. If she did not love, there
+was Robert, and this, and this—A house! Or
+Flagg might die....</p>
+
+<p>Her hands trembled in his, but she was obstinately
+silent. Outside, a heavy rain fell, obliterating, for
+the moment, the rumble of traffic in Madison Avenue.
+A servant, or Grace Fuller, might come in and find
+her hands in this man’s hands, her face, with a look
+of lost desire, turned up to his.... If she kissed
+him, she knew, she would be powerless to turn back
+to the facile little enthusiasms of her life. If she
+didn’t kiss him, she would be safe, forever, in her
+rooms frescoed by Shawhan and decorated by De
+Blauvelt, in her chosen interests, in the perfunctory
+embraces of her marriage.</p>
+
+<p>On the other hand, there was happiness. Happiness,
+at that moment, seemed terrible, a dark undertaking,
+something forbidden and murderous. It involved
+Robert. The intensity of that moment in the
+fog, when she had promised Robert love, was nothing
+more than a betrayal. She must not promise again,
+and fail.</p>
+
+<p>Somehow this feeling was different. She was
+swayed by more than her own part in the drama; for
+once she turned out from herself toward another human
+being. Pity had no part in her love for Flagg;
+his affliction was not evident; she had learned to accept
+his guarded manner as part of his personality.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</span>His appearance—that length and leanness and the
+pagan outlines of his face—stirred her. His eyes were
+brown, without sparkle, lifted, under heavy lids, like
+the eyes of a cat. “You belong in mythology,” she
+said. He was not ready to her hand; she felt always
+that he might turn suddenly, with a feline indifference,
+and walk away from her. He seemed always to
+be amused by her artificialities, yet delighted, as if
+he had come upon an unusually winning little mouse.</p>
+
+<p>She wanted to hate him, because it would be more
+comfortable to hate than to love him. Without quite
+knowing what she did, but staring straight into his
+eyes with a look full of questioning, she leaned forward
+until their lips met.</p>
+
+<p>He whispered: “Lilah!” and caught her close to
+him. When she heard his heart beating, she realized
+what she had done. She could not draw away....
+This was the reality of giving. She must keep it....
+How beautiful! How final! She could not turn
+back, undo what she had done, or cease to feel what
+she was feeling.... Helpless, she leaned against
+him, hardly conscious of his lips on her forehead, her
+hair. He kept on whispering: “Lilah! Lilah!” She
+had not expected him to be so gentle. When finally
+she opened her eyes and pushed him away, she saw
+that he was suffering. His face was flushed, transformed,
+made ugly and pathetic by pain. The feeling
+of death was there, tangible, sickening.... His
+eyes were wide open, and in them an expression of
+surprise deepened into horror.</p>
+
+<p>Lilah cried: “Your heart!”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</span></p>
+
+<p>He nodded and, loosening the grasp of her hands,
+tried to stand up.</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t! Stay where you are. I’ll get help....”</p>
+
+<p>He said in a surprisingly loud voice: “No! I’ll be
+all right. Wait....”</p>
+
+<p>His struggle was short and sharp. He seemed to
+be trying, over and over again, to start the interrupted
+action of his heart. With every failure, fear and
+amazement made more horrible the expression of his
+wide-open eyes. Lilah watched. Once she cried out:
+“You mustn’t! For my sake!” Flagg tried to smile,
+to reassure her. He seemed to be listening. And the
+blood left his face, drained out, like a tide. His flesh
+was blue-white, livid. The physical agony seemed to
+waste him. Soon, Lilah thought, he would fall out of
+her arms. But he held himself upright with an effort,
+meeting the enemy again and again, and it was as if
+he held himself precariously on the rim of space.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly, for no appreciable reason, it was over.
+He slipped sideways, back upon the sofa, and his eyes
+closed. “I’m all right.... Only sorry.... Perhaps
+you know, now, how I love you....”</p>
+
+<p>A servant was coming into the room. With a
+wrenching effort, Lilah steadied her voice and said:
+“What time is it?”</p>
+
+<p>“Six o’clock, madam.”</p>
+
+<p>“Is Miss Fuller in the library?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, madam.”</p>
+
+<p>“Ask her to come here.”</p>
+
+<p>Grace Fuller came at once. Between them, they
+made Flagg comfortable; he lay with his arm under
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</span>his head, apparently asleep. With deft, impersonal
+touches, Grace Fuller ascertained his pulse, wiped off
+his forehead, which was drenched with sweat, gave
+him water. She said nothing. Lilah did not meet
+her eyes. Her own feelings were confused; now that
+Flagg was safe, she could sense to the full her triumph;
+but how fragile a thing happiness had become—it depended
+on this man’s living! And it was doubtful
+whether he could resist the fatal pressure of the inevitable
+emotion. He lay exhausted, pallid, one
+hand hanging limply with fingers that brushed the
+floor.</p>
+
+<p>Lilah turned her face away, afraid that Grace
+Fuller might see her expression, the mingling of pity
+and glory, of fear and expectancy.</p>
+
+<p>“Is he all right? Will he die?”</p>
+
+<p>“No,” Grace Fuller said.</p>
+
+<p>At that, Flagg opened his eyes. “Die? Of course
+not! This happens very often. I shall be all right in
+half a second. I’m sorry and ashamed. Your kindness....”</p>
+
+<p>He sat up.</p>
+
+<p>Lilah’s gesture toward him was immediate; before
+she tempered its meaning, Grace Fuller had seen.
+But the nurse remained with her cool fingers on
+Flagg’s wrist. Only her lips twisted as if, before that
+revelation, she wanted to laugh. She helped Flagg
+to his feet.</p>
+
+<p>“Good of you,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>He bowed, apologized again and with a glance at
+Lilah, unreadable, went out and quickly downstairs.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</span></p>
+
+<p>“That’s war,” Grace Fuller remarked dryly.
+“Thousands like him, trying to....”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah brushed her aside. “I’m going with him!
+He’s ill.... Let me go, I tell you....”</p>
+
+<p>Grace Fuller caught Lilah’s arm, held her. “Lilah,
+don’t be a fool.”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah cried wildly: “Let me go! I must.... He’s
+ill.... Oh, damn you!”</p>
+
+<p>In a white fury she struck, clawed, but Grace
+Fuller pinioned her arms, shook her, twisted her back,
+away from the door.</p>
+
+<p>“I love him! I love him! I’m not ashamed. Tell
+Robert! Tell every one! I want it over.”</p>
+
+<p>“You’re hysterical,” Grace Fuller said.</p>
+
+<p>Lilah ceased struggling. For an appalling moment
+she thought her own heart had stopped. She sagged
+against Grace Fuller’s shoulder; while a dark tide of
+feeling rose, submerged her, receded again.</p>
+
+<p>“I love him,” she repeated in a dull voice. “That’s
+all. What can I say, or do?”</p>
+
+<p>She straightened and pushed Grace Fuller away.
+“Now, you two can dance on my grave.”</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="VII">
+ VII
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="dropcap"><span class="upper-case">In her</span> own room again, Lilah went to the telephone
+and called Flagg at his apartment. A
+man’s voice answered that Major Flagg was not
+well.</p>
+
+<p>“I know,” Lilah said impatiently. “I am Mrs. Peabody.
+I must speak to him.”</p>
+
+<p>“I am Major Flagg’s physician,” was the reply, in
+a tone Lilah thought a shade too dry. “He cannot
+speak to any one.” He went on to explain that Major
+Flagg was not seriously ill, but that he must, for a
+fortnight, be absolutely quiet.</p>
+
+<p>“I saw him less than an hour ago,” Lilah insisted.
+“He seemed quite all right.”</p>
+
+<p>The physician, with some acerbity, added that Major
+Flagg had had another attack on his way home.
+He was in bed and must stay there, undisturbed....</p>
+
+<p>“Thank you,” Lilah said.</p>
+
+<p>She turned away from the instrument with a frightened
+gesture. She couldn’t see him! That meant
+she must meet disaster alone; she had, irrevocably,
+committed herself to Grace Fuller. No matter what
+happened to Flagg, whether he lived or died, she had
+lost Robert....</p>
+
+<p>She began, unsteadily, to dress for dinner. The
+Sinclairs, the lissome May and her husband, were
+coming, and, as a balance to their unimportant millions,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</span>Lilah had invited the American violinist and his
+curtly intelligent bride, a woman who might amuse the
+Sinclairs because she belonged to one of the richest
+families in the country. In the Sinclairs, two fortunes
+had come together, and the only enthusiasm
+they had in common was money. Their interest was
+not vulgar, it was, rather, fraternal. They enjoyed
+communion with the rare, kindred blessed.</p>
+
+<p>Lilah thought: “I’ve got to pretend. But none of
+this is mine—”</p>
+
+<p>In her chemise, with her hair tumbled on her shoulders,
+she realized that she had not called her maid.
+When she did, it was with a certain humility that she
+said: “I am very late.”</p>
+
+<p>The maid said: “Yes, m’am,” and went into the
+bathroom to start the tub. She was a pretty mulatto,
+a soft, slight creature with the gait of an enchantress.
+Lilah had never liked her because she had the air of
+knowing everything, and the suave, the velvet quality
+of her St. Kitt’s English gave her a certain distinction.</p>
+
+<p>Lilah wondered: “Could she have heard that row
+with Grace?”</p>
+
+<p>She studied the girl’s back, her unhurried, expert
+gestures, and when she straightened suddenly, and
+turned, Lilah was embarrassed.</p>
+
+<p>“The bath’s ready, m’am.”</p>
+
+<p>A shower of violet crystals sparkled in the tub, and
+as Lilah stirred them, testing the scented water with
+the tips of her fingers, she had a sharp memory of
+tin tubs and basins in Swiss <i>pensions</i>.... And, willfully,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</span>she recalled the lovers of Lorelay.... She
+glanced down at herself, silver-white, with little
+bubbles, like quicksilver, climbing over her skin,
+bursting on the surface of the water. How lovely her
+thighs were, indented, slim, young.... And her
+knees, her feet.... She could go to Lorelay with
+Flagg and send for that famous, that notorious, tin
+tub without shame. She was like Manet’s Olympe,
+not classical but adorable. Flagg would understand
+if she mentioned Lorelay and Olympe. Robert would
+not; or, if he did, he would be shocked....</p>
+
+<p>“Seven o’clock, m’am.”</p>
+
+<p>“Coming!”</p>
+
+<p>In a robe of dark blue silk, thrown over a shift of
+cream chiffon, she faced her mirror, while the mulatto
+girl dressed her hair. Her panic had been replaced
+by exuberance. She felt certain that she could handle
+Grace. Flagg would say, do, nothing. She was safe
+for a fortnight, with both love and beauty....</p>
+
+<p>“Draw it back, away from my ears. Not fluffy!
+Here, give me the comb! I’ve told you so many
+times.”</p>
+
+<p>“Sorry, m’am.”</p>
+
+<p>That pretty, petulant face, honey-colored, was reflected
+in the triple mirror in an unguarded moment
+and Lilah caught a flash of dislike and contempt from
+eyes that were usually turned aside.</p>
+
+<p>“Have you a sweetheart?” Lilah asked, twisting her
+hair into the Second Empire contour she affected.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, m’am.”</p>
+
+<p>“Does he love you?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</span></p>
+
+<p>The mulatto shrugged her shoulders. “I don’t
+know. Men are funny. He’s a pretty man, but he
+gambles. He spends all my money. He’s a sailor.”</p>
+
+<p>“Get me the black dress. I’ll want the white cameo
+ear-rings. No! Not there! In the leather box.
+Stupid! Stupid! I’m late.”</p>
+
+<p>On her way downstairs, where the financial rating
+of the violinist’s wife was just dawning on the Sinclairs,
+Lilah stopped to speak to Grace Fuller.</p>
+
+<p>“Grace?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes.” Grace Fuller was having her own dinner,
+in the fashion of nursery governesses, on a card-table
+before the fire.</p>
+
+<p>“You’ve had dinner?”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m having it—just.”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah came into the room. She was very lovely.
+She wore no jewelry, save the heavy white cameos,
+set in gold, that dangled from her ears. She gave
+no hint of her actual years; Grace Fuller thought, in
+a moment of judgment, that she was like the city, a
+creation of that energy which is all nerves. There
+was something ageless in the slim, provocative, sexless
+body, thrust a little forward, the carriage of her
+head, with its dense weight of hair coiled under,
+her lips, painted like an Oriental’s, not scarlet, but
+magenta. She said lightly: “Am I all right? Will
+I do?”</p>
+
+<p>“Beautifully,” Grace said, flushing.</p>
+
+<p>Lilah bent down, and Grace became conscious of the
+odor of sandalwood. “Dear old Grace; I’m absolutely
+in your hands.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</span></p>
+
+<p>“If you mean that I am not to say anything to
+Robert,” Grace replied, “I won’t. Things like this
+are too personal, too terrible, for an outsider—”</p>
+
+<p>“I will know what to say when I see Robert,” Lilah
+interrupted. Her manner became, abruptly, sharp
+and decisive. “Or whether to say anything at all.”
+She added, almost carelessly: “My feeling may have
+been pity.”</p>
+
+<p>Grace said nothing. The flush had mounted until
+her face burned, as if the shame of Lilah’s confession
+were hers. For the first time she had had a glimpse
+of Lilah’s weakness—she saw her exposed to defeat;
+the revelation was, somehow, humiliating. Grace
+Fuller turned her eyes away.</p>
+
+<p>“I think you can trust me,” she said. And, instantly,
+she hated herself for not having struck. Now
+it was too late.</p>
+
+<p>Lilah went downstairs.</p>
+
+<p>Her guests were already launched. Fred Sinclair
+was staring at the violinist’s wife with the satisfaction
+of an entomologist who has happened upon a singularly
+rare insect. Mrs. Sinclair was testing her charm
+upon an unyielding surface; the violinist was more
+a priest than an artist. Lilah found him parrying
+Mrs. Sinclair’s sentimental thrusts with his own peculiar
+irony. He despised any one who wasted his
+time. Lilah trembled for the success of her dinner.
+She said deftly that in Robert’s absence she depended
+perhaps too much on her friends; she suggested loneliness
+and a peculiar sensitiveness to “atmospheres.”
+The violinist promptly pocketed his ill-temper and his
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</span>bride surrendered to Mr. Sinclair’s butterfly-on-a-pin
+manner. On the way in to dinner, she graciously
+stated the size of her fortune, Mr. Sinclair’s collection
+thereby gaining a precious specimen.</p>
+
+<p>Lilah had counted on Flagg as a sixth at the table.
+In her failure to warn the servants, a place had been
+set and she had to explain. Immediately, the silver
+and glass were removed, the chair taken away, but
+Flagg’s name had interested the violinist.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m sorry. I’ve always wanted to know him.
+What a thundering crime—a man like that, gassed!
+There could be no survival of the fittest in such warfare.”</p>
+
+<p>He spoke with bitterness of the destruction of the
+world’s best brains and of the inevitable hiatus—there
+would be a wide break in both science and art. As
+it was, the few who were left carried a double burden;
+their responsibility to the past and to the generation
+that had had no expression save in death.
+Flagg was one of the men the world could not spare.
+The indignity of his suffering now—</p>
+
+<p>The violinist broke off: “I know it isn’t considered
+polite to talk about the war. In Europe, people
+aren’t so squeamish. It happened. It may happen
+again.”</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Sinclair thought not.</p>
+
+<p>Lilah smiled at the violence of his retort; he had
+served on the Russian front, had seen the Kolchak
+debacle, and, before that, had flown over Triest and
+Pola, Villach and Wien, with d’Annunzio. Mrs. Sinclair
+listened to his tirade with a pained expression,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</span>as if he were being intentionally disagreeable. Why
+on earth talk about war when you could talk about
+the theaters, reducing and prohibition—there were
+enough interesting things....</p>
+
+<p>Lilah pictured Mrs. Sinclair in her Long Island
+house, a Tudor mansion set down in a vast wilderness
+of new rose-gardens upon a featureless plain, not
+unadorned but unhallowed. Her security, established
+when she was a child, had been deepened by the possession
+of this enormous stone house, a fortress against
+chance or change; in rooms as cold, as cheerless, as
+echoing as a series of railway terminals, she seemed
+removed from those things which happen to all of us;
+the walls were too thick and too new to admit defeat.
+Lilah wondered what Mrs. Sinclair would do
+if the armies the violinist invoked should trample the
+Sinclair flower-beds and pepper the Tudor walls with
+machine-gun bullets.... Send for the Swiss butler,
+probably, and die, game and unconvinced, sipping a
+dry Martini.... Lilah could not decide which
+counted for more—the indifference of the Sinclairs or
+the awareness of the violinist; they believed that the
+future was negligible, the present amusing, which sufficed;
+he believed that the world could be saved only
+by incredible effort, a supreme, unending, unified intention....</p>
+
+<p>He complained that there was no flame in humanity—too
+much water had been thrown on it, perhaps.
+Life was drab unless kept at an artificial, stimulated
+pitch; pleasure, purchased, had taken the place of
+faith....</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</span></p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Sinclair, bending her willowy body from the
+waist, whispered to Lilah: “My dear—what’s this I
+hear about you and Putnam Flagg? It wouldn’t do
+for you—it wouldn’t do at all! He’s penniless. Now,
+don’t look innocent. A dozen people have seen you
+together, lunching at <i>tea rooms</i> and meeting in <i>art
+galleries</i> ... it’s awfully touching, but no one believes
+these naïve—”</p>
+
+<p>“May,” her husband said.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, yes.” She turned again to the violinist.
+“Faith. You were saying—?”</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>In the morning Flagg telephoned. “Did you think
+that I would pay any attention to a doctor’s orders?
+I want to see you.”</p>
+
+<p>His voice unnerved Lilah. Every time it was like
+the first time—a breathless recognition, a summons,
+alarming and unavoidable, to a self beyond self. “He
+was very severe—” Suddenly her voice broke.
+Through a flood of frightened tears, she stammered:
+“Oh, my darling! My darling!”</p>
+
+<p>Flagg said gravely: “Lilah—if I could comfort
+you.... Will you get your hat and come over here?
+It’s quite respectable. There’s a nurse, who will, if
+I ask her, leave us alone. Or, if you prefer, she will
+stay in the room.”</p>
+
+<p>“I can’t. It isn’t possible! I might be seen.”</p>
+
+<p>“And what if you are? Before long every one who
+knows you will know that you love me. Things like
+this can’t be gone at politely. When you break up a
+marriage, it’s war. It’s got to be war. And neither
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</span>of us can afford to be afraid, now, or later. You understand,
+don’t you?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then come!”</p>
+
+<p>“But—”</p>
+
+<p>He was silent, and Lilah knew that the issue was
+important. If she refused, she would in all probability
+never see Flagg again.</p>
+
+<p>“You’re better?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes.... Take a taxi. You know the number.
+These are bachelor quarters, but I’ve prepared the
+elevator man—he’ll bring you up.... I’ll be a lot
+better when I see you.”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah thought: “Don’t be squeamish. All the
+women you know do this sort of thing.”</p>
+
+<p>Aloud, she said: “I’ll come at once.”</p>
+
+<p>She dressed with a romantic attention to detail.
+She chose a small black hat with an air of intrigue
+and sophistication; a veil that seemed to shut her
+beauty away so that her eyes were remote, enticing
+beneath the rakish brim of the tricorn.</p>
+
+<p>A streak of conventionality, a dislike of criticism,
+warred with her eagerness to see Flagg. She sent
+her motor away and walked westward to the Avenue,
+then uptown. Lilah wanted to have her own way but
+to be considered above reproach. The possibility of
+scandal frightened her; she thought: “I’m not a
+coward! Only, to be torn to bits and thrown to the
+yellow journals to make a middle-class holiday! A
+Sunday supplement martyr! It’s so stupid.... So
+ugly.... Robert and Junius, all of us—” With a
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</span>shock of relief, she thought: “I’m glad I haven’t a
+child.”</p>
+
+<p>Still, she might have. Even now, she might have!
+Robert’s child. Even now, as she went to Flagg. But
+that would be a loathsome trick of destiny; it couldn’t
+be! Couldn’t.... She didn’t deserve punishment;
+not such a punishment! God thought of people—there
+must be some sort of divine justice. Now that
+she had love—But suppose, as Flagg had said, that
+there were a God beyond God, and no one watching,
+no one caring....</p>
+
+<p>She found herself standing before a shop window,
+and was conscious of the blurred reflection of herself,
+the fashionable outline of a woman of the world.
+There was security, insurance against a detestable, a
+repugnant reality, in the fact of her worldliness. Like
+Mrs. Sinclair, she was a product of civilization, a
+vital, representative image of society, removed, by
+her unquestioned right to her position, from the blind
+attacks of destiny. She was powerful because she
+was instructed. She was indomitable because she was
+intelligent. If there was a God beyond a God she
+could reach Him. She would not take punishment—need
+not—</p>
+
+<p>She shook herself, tried to stare at the things in
+the window—a Florentine chair, more graceful than
+most of them; a Persian bowl; a Flemish chest; a
+Luini; a strip of ecclesiastical velvet; a pair of Waterford
+glass chandeliers....</p>
+
+<p>Her thoughts flew back to the house she had just
+left. She had wanted glass chandeliers for her bedroom—one
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</span>on either side of the narrow mantel, to
+balance the <i>trumeau</i>. These were delightful—a
+shower of crystals, delicate as cobwebs after a rain.
+They were, probably, expensive....</p>
+
+<p>Lilah hesitated. Her room was lifeless, almost
+gloomy; it needed such a sparkle as these little chandeliers
+would give.... She saw herself, moving
+about in a bland, crystal light....</p>
+
+<p>She went into the shop, conscious, as always, nowadays,
+of her ability to reach out and take what she
+wanted. The chandeliers were displayed by a collector
+who flattered her by making no comments.
+That they were genuine, and rare, was beyond
+question.</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll take them.”</p>
+
+<p>“Very well.”</p>
+
+<p>“Mrs. Robert Peabody.”</p>
+
+<p>“I know. We had the pleasure of importing some
+Venetian glass—”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah interrupted: “Be sure to send a man to hang
+the chandeliers.”</p>
+
+<p>“Certainly. To-morrow.”</p>
+
+<p>She went out again, somehow relieved, as if she had
+come unscathed through a hurricane. Buying things
+always gave her a sense of security. Silly of her, to
+have been afraid of something that could never happen
+to her ... never....</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>Flagg lived in the West Fifties, not far from the
+noisy “L” track where trains passed like steel comets,
+clattering, insistent.... An old man in an alpaca
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</span>jacket admitted her to a narrow hallway and to a slow,
+dingy elevator operated by a cable. His face was
+scarlet; there seemed to have been an explosion of
+veins beneath the surface of the skin.... Without
+glancing at Lilah, he let the cable slip through his
+hands, as if, in his dejection and ennui, there could
+be no end to this ascent. Lilah thought: “How easy,
+after all.” He let her out and indicated a door “to
+the left. Push the button.”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah saw the name “Flagg.” There was a rustle
+behind the door and it opened sharply. A woman in
+starched linen said: “Mrs. Peabody? Major Flagg
+is waiting. This way, please.”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah had expected him to be in bed. But he rose
+from an arm-chair and smiled down at her.</p>
+
+<p>“You’re better?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes.... Now! You were a long time getting
+here.”</p>
+
+<p>“I walked.”</p>
+
+<p>“Miss Peterson—Mrs. Peabody.”</p>
+
+<p>The starched woman, who was, to Lilah, as featureless
+as an egg, bowed, murmured something and went
+out, closing the door.</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t be afraid,” Flagg said. “I won’t keel over
+again. I’ll give you tea presently. But now I want
+to talk to you. You lovely thing! She can’t hear—there’s
+a corridor, and then my bedroom, where she’s
+sitting. Shall I send her away?”</p>
+
+<p>“No. No.” Lilah shook her head. “It’s bad
+enough—my being here.”</p>
+
+<p>He leaned forward and caught her hands, smiling.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</span>He drew off her gloves, turned her palms over and
+kissed them. His gestures were slow but there was
+nothing of Robert’s hesitancy about him; his eyes
+flew over her. She felt again that penetrating delight
+in him, and because he did not expect pity, her pity
+made her tremble; there was a maternal, a brooding
+pain in her heart. Without speaking, she went back
+to her eager search for the things she loved, enumerated
+them—the line of his cheek, the peculiar,
+sharp modelling of his lips, his lids, a way his hair
+had of growing, like a sort of fur, short, thick, lusterless—she
+wanted to stroke it, but she didn’t. Somehow,
+he was still a stranger whose presence excited
+and embarrassed her. She wondered if any one had
+ever known him; whether she would ever know him.
+Robert was like a plant that recoils at the touch of a
+prying finger. But Flagg was like an animal; he had
+the grace, the aloofness of an animal, the eyes of an
+animal. She was almost afraid to touch him. His
+absorption flattered her, as if a creature of the woods
+had strayed close to rub against her and purr—a big
+cat. Without stirring, she let him kiss her fingers,
+one after the other. And she felt again that sense
+of a moment prolonged, suspended, until she lost
+reality.</p>
+
+<p>Her glance went beyond him to the room. She had
+never thought of him as living anywhere.... A
+shabby, slovenly room. Rows of white shelves were
+weighted with books. There were no photographs.
+Only a small bronze of a woman and a jar filled with
+pipes....</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</span></p>
+
+<p>“This isn’t my place,” he said, glancing up quickly.
+“It belongs to a man I knew in France, who’s broke.
+He loves books, and I’ve had a feast....”</p>
+
+<p>His eyes deepened and there came into them that
+look of a satyr, mischievous and sensual. She wanted
+to kiss him, but she held herself away. Something
+told her that there would be no going back after to-day;
+he would not grant her a reprieve.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m sorry,” he began, “for what I said yesterday.
+In time, you’ll love love—not the idea, but the thing
+itself. That’s what I’m waiting for. When it comes
+to you, so that you understand it—its beauty and its
+penalty—you will lose yourself. And then you will
+be exquisite.”</p>
+
+<p>“I love you,” she insisted, “now.”</p>
+
+<p>He shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>He relinquished her hands and, crossing the room,
+filled and lighted a pipe. Then he asked abruptly:
+“What are you going to tell your husband?”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know.” Catching her breath, she evaded
+him: “Must I tell him anything?”</p>
+
+<p>He did not answer. His expression was mocking.
+And angrily Lilah cried: “It isn’t easy! For you,
+yes! But for me—to break with a man who loves
+me and who doesn’t suspect—”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh. He loves you. I didn’t know that. I had
+hoped that he didn’t. Are you sure he does?”</p>
+
+<p>“Of course! It will kill him. He trusts me.”</p>
+
+<p>“You haven’t betrayed him!” Flagg said sharply.</p>
+
+<p>“What do you mean?”</p>
+
+<p>“Love is never a betrayal. It’s the truth! I am
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</span>convinced that it is a sin to deny love, under any circumstances,
+for any reason—to live with one man and
+love another is unmoral, ugly, inexcusable. To live
+with one woman and love another is to betray them
+both. I am not arguing on the side of promiscuousness.
+I despise filth. But there is, after all, a definite
+standard. A responsibility—to the emotion itself.
+There’s your obligation! Only, the world won’t
+recognize it.... You’ve got to be sure—dead certain—that
+what you feel justifies what you do.”</p>
+
+<p>“You’re putting it up to me, then?”</p>
+
+<p>He came over and kneeled beside her. He was
+asking something. His body pressed against her
+knees. His hands were supplicating. For the first
+time he was humble, but more than ever insistent;
+life itself, demanding that she say yes or no, that she
+take or leave, give or refuse. In spite of herself, she
+touched his hair, and with a terrifying sense of being
+lost, slipped forward into his arms.</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll tell him, simply, that I love you.”</p>
+
+<p>“When?”</p>
+
+<p>She struggled back, away from him again. But
+Flagg remained on his knees, no longer a suppliant;
+stubbornly, he repeated: “When?”</p>
+
+<p>“When he comes back—next week.”</p>
+
+<p>She added, with a flash of disdain: “You might at
+least be sorry for him!” She put out her hand quickly
+and caught his. “I didn’t mean that! I hurt everybody.
+Don’t let me hurt you!”</p>
+
+<p>Flagg laughed. “I don’t let myself be hurt.”</p>
+
+<p>What he thought was: “If she cares for me, I can
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</span>hurt her—that’s my weapon, and she knows it.” He
+got up and went to the window, stood there, smoking,
+his back turned. He waited with admirable restraint
+for Lilah to speak again. Behind him, she was absolutely
+silent. The sun had gone. The room was
+fading into the gray shadows of late afternoon, retreating,
+dimming, like a blurred photograph. Flagg
+kept his eyes on the street; his senses were aware of
+her; he had no comfort in her presence, but he wanted
+her there. Suddenly, she was close to him, soft,
+propitiating. She put her arms around him, pressed
+her face against his back and they stood, in silence,
+for a long time. Flagg no longer saw the city; that
+slate-gray twilight seemed to envelope them both, to
+isolate them. And he had a deep pity for himself and
+for her. What should be so simple, so natural, so
+uncomplicated, would be raveled and frayed and tarnished....
+Between this moment and anything like
+the realization of happiness, there would be a struggle
+of egos—rebellion, shocked pride, jealousy, in conflict.
+Before he could show himself to her and lose
+himself in her loveliness, both of them would suffer.
+And for what? Because life was so confounded complicated—no
+passion could be single, perfect, but must
+be linked up to other passions, an endless tangle of
+little, petty feelings—like lichens on a tree. The
+growth was hindered, the sap cut off so that the blossoms
+withered and the whole plant, tree and parasite,
+came down into the dust, choked to death....</p>
+
+<p>“Are you sure we’re right?” Lilah asked. “I’ve
+got to be sure! Isn’t it selfish to be happy?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</span></p>
+
+<p>Flagg answered that to be unhappy was the worst
+sort of selfishness. For centuries the world had been
+in the grip of a superstitious fear of acknowledged
+happiness, as if being contented with one’s lot were
+an indication of alliance with the devil. If you sang,
+in old Salem, you were hanged for a witch. “But to-day,
+if you sing, you are selfish! And it amounts
+to the same thing—the world has its fingers
+crossed....”</p>
+
+<p>Flagg asked, without turning: “Have you ever loved
+your husband, Lilah?”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah pressed against him. “Don’t ask me, now,
+to say.... A moment.... Perhaps, yes. But not
+like this! I am perfectly willing to divorce him.”</p>
+
+<p>Flagg wanted to know what reasons she would give.
+She said impatiently: “Why—I <i>want</i> a divorce!
+Isn’t that enough? Such things are arranged. Nowadays,
+you don’t have to give reasons, do you?”</p>
+
+<p>Flagg answered that he would prefer that she allow
+Robert to bring suit; the defection, such as it was,
+was hers; she had tired of her bargain; she had broken
+her word; she had found compensation. If any one
+was to blame, she was.... Lilah interrupted:
+“You’re mad! It would ruin me! It is accepted,
+usual, for men to take the public blame for these
+things—every one understands. It isn’t serious.
+Don’t you know—you silly—idealist—that in New
+York a man can arrange an adulterous affair by simply
+hiring a woman, a room and a witness? I know
+decent men, respectable men, who have done it, not
+once, but several times. Like vaccination, it doesn’t
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</span>always take. My darling, you don’t want me talked
+about.... And it would be so funny.... Robert,
+in silk pajamas, entertaining a chorus girl.”</p>
+
+<p>“You and I, in love—and your husband, caught with
+a hired adulteress in a rotten hotel, for your sake!
+What cheap irony! Such things are damned ugly.
+You and I will take our medicine, Lilah. Or we’ll
+renounce, now, what might be so fine. If you’re afraid,
+say so.”</p>
+
+<p>After a moment, Lilah said, “I’m not afraid.”</p>
+
+<p>She drew away. A knock at the door was followed,
+discreetly, by a professional inquiry: “You are feeling
+better, Major Flagg?” And that starched,
+rustling presence entered, carrying a glass. With a
+gesture of rebellion, funny because it was unconscious,
+Flagg took the mixture and drank it.</p>
+
+<p>“You’re talking too much,” the nurse said. With
+another crackle of starched skirts, she moved from
+lamp to lamp and the room came into sharp outline.
+The slovenly carpet and worn chairs, a frayed scarf
+on the table....</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll go,” Lilah said quickly.</p>
+
+<p>“Hang the doctor!” Flagg exploded. “I beg your
+pardon, Miss Peterson—but doctors don’t always understand.”</p>
+
+<p>She took the empty glass from him, shrugging her
+shoulders. And the door closed upon her with a disapproving
+bang.</p>
+
+<p>“I must go,” Lilah said again. “I must. If anything
+should happen to you—”</p>
+
+<p>Flagg made her sit down. He made her remove
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</span>the concealing veil and the little black hat. He began
+to take the pins out of her hair, but, laughing, she
+stopped him. She could not, now, imagine that he
+had ever been ill; a mood of playfulness had followed
+his rebellion; he was curiously like a young animal
+again, lost in his delight in her. He was lovable, willful;
+she stayed because he wanted it. It was hard
+to refuse him anything. And she couldn’t see that
+her being there hurt him—he had forgotten his enemy
+in his discovery of Lilah. Sitting on the floor with
+his arm thrown across her knees, he talked about himself.
+Himself, as a little boy. As an almost grown
+boy. As a young man. It was as if he wanted her
+to share everything, all in a moment; as if he could
+make her see the whole pattern of his life, so that he
+would never be alone again. Lilah could feel herself
+change, relent, bend down to him with a lovely tenderness.
+It was what she had always wanted to be, the
+way she had wanted to feel, only that no one had let
+her be herself. People had allowed her to be hard
+and bright and dominating! Now she was the woman
+she might have been. The simplest things he said
+touched her. She had no desire to ridicule, to hurt
+him. She wanted him to want her, to need her, to
+get closer and closer to her heart.</p>
+
+<p>“I wish I had seen you when you were a little boy,”
+she said.</p>
+
+<p>“I was a sort of flat face and terribly earnest.
+From the beginning, before I could reason, I wanted
+to know about God. I couldn’t believe. And the
+harder they tried to make me believe, the more stubborn
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</span>I was. God was unimaginable. They sent me
+to Sunday school, where I sat with my underlip sticking
+out, denying God with my muscular system—braced
+against acceptance. I remember that this refusal
+made me, in my own eyes, an outcast. I thought
+of myself as the loneliest and wickedest child on the
+crust of the globe. But I believed only what I could
+see, touch or smell.” He shook his head. “And I
+never got a whiff of God! I remember that one day
+a sort of evangelist came to the Sunday school. He
+asked all the little boys and girls who believed in God
+to stand up. I sat where I was, burning with shame.
+He leveled at me a shouting and frothing, invective,
+hate and threats of damnation—eternal. And how I
+loathed God! When he got through he asked all the
+little boys and girls who didn’t believe in God to stand
+up, and I stood up, alone....</p>
+
+<p>“Aren’t kids everlastingly funny? I hadn’t an
+ounce of prevarication in me; I told the truth, always,
+until I was a grown man, when I learned that there
+are times when the truth hurts. Then I drew in my
+claws. I make velvet paws nowadays. But that
+doesn’t affect my honesty—I am deadly honest with
+myself.”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah wondered whether he could feel her shivering
+with delight in being near him, whether he saw how
+her eyes looked at him. She could never go back to
+Robert. She could never again pretend. It was going
+to be hard. It was going to hurt her to strip herself
+naked of pretense and fight for this new, this
+strange and wonderful raiment.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Did you ever change,” she asked unsteadily, “about
+God?”</p>
+
+<p>He was launched again. He told her about his
+student days in Germany—how he had gone back,
+patiently, to the sources. His days of pessimism.
+His romantic year. A period of mysticism. A frightened,
+at first tentative groping through the mazes of
+science. Then, something like a personal conviction,
+emerging.... He began to shake off support and to
+stand alone, almost against his will, for to stand alone
+was a responsibility. It forever removed him from
+the sensuous, happy, careless self he had wanted to be
+and demanded that he face facts, cold, brutal, unadorned
+and make of them what he could. God came
+to him out of these facts—not the God he had refused
+to believe in—a vastly different—</p>
+
+<p>He made her see, somehow, why he was not afraid
+of pain or death, and why he was reconciled. He
+hadn’t much longer—but why should he have longer?
+Only to love her. To make her happy, if that was
+what she wanted.</p>
+
+<p>“I didn’t know you could care like this. But since
+you do—”</p>
+
+<p>She still trembled; he could not help but see what
+she was feeling. The thing that hurt her now was
+that he would have to know how little and selfish she
+had been. The self she had to offer him was inadequate.
+Her magic was tawdry, like cheap spangles
+on a dancer’s skirt. Her beauty was painted on. The
+reality, the real Lilah had nothing to give him. And
+some day, when he had stopped loving her technique,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</span>he would look for her art, and find nothing, only fear
+and an ugly desire to keep him, at all costs. She saw
+herself, in a sort of contorted and nightmarish vision,
+pleading with him; she saw his indifference—no, his
+recognition—crushing her down. It wasn’t Robert
+and Junius, scandal, that she was afraid of; it was
+not having Flagg. That was the most terrible thing—to
+be alone again, inventing enthusiasms, because
+the reason for being was not there.</p>
+
+<p>This was what Robert had meant.</p>
+
+<p>“You’re not listening,” Flagg said.</p>
+
+<p>“I am. I am.”</p>
+
+<p>“I changed,” he went on, from what beginning
+Lilah could not guess, “as every one changed. And
+like every one else, I saw freedom as the most desirable
+end, gaining it all important. Only that I differed
+from most in that I didn’t want freedom for
+personal reasons. I’ve always been singularly free
+of the crooked, inherited notions that hold men back.
+But a freedom that releases the mental power of humanity—I
+can’t make you understand; I’ve only the
+vaguest notion myself! But I see that if we don’t
+adapt ourselves, we’ll disappear from the earth. We
+don’t need web feet or fluffy little wings or snouts, yet
+we do need an entirely new sort of mind. And the
+old way of thinking has got to be pitched out, forgotten.”</p>
+
+<p>He clasped her hands, tight, between both of his.
+“But we can’t pitch it out all at once! The social
+wheel is still revolving, although the engine has been
+smashed—it is carried forward by its own momentum,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</span>down-hill—a few hundred years of coasting! The
+survivors will look back at us as we look back at the
+Neanderthal ape—that’s how fast we’re going....
+In the meantime, here we are, you and I, trying to
+conform to the decencies.”</p>
+
+<p>“Are we?” Lilah asked. In spite of herself, she
+laughed. “I don’t think it’s decent, exactly, to cheat
+Robert. If we’re being honest....”</p>
+
+<p>He interrupted: “Lilah, have you stopped to think
+about me?”</p>
+
+<p>“Why, yes.”</p>
+
+<p>“Aren’t you thinking about yourself?”</p>
+
+<p>She shook her head.</p>
+
+<p>He insisted: “Do you know what I want? What
+I dream of? Hours of sunshine. Hours of perfectly
+imbecile happiness, lying on a green hill with my head
+in your lap, watching the clouds go over. Must we
+wait? It isn’t so far to Spring. Can’t we go somewhere—I
+know a town in Connecticut, off the tourist
+track, where we’d be let alone. In April, the frogs
+sing at dusk, and the air is moist, cool, full of little
+gnats that dance as the sun goes down. I used to go
+there, years ago, to watch things grow. A marvelous
+season, Lilah. There’s a stir, actual, in the soil, and
+those prying, green fingers come through.... Suppose
+you and I were there to watch it together? I
+stayed at a farmhouse. We could go there. The
+apple orchard—if it hasn’t changed, and God forbid!—is
+deep with grass. And our room would be under
+the eaves....”</p>
+
+<p>“You mustn’t talk like this!”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Why not?”</p>
+
+<p>“You mustn’t.”</p>
+
+<p>“Does it hurt you? Tell me!”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then I know I’m right. You’ve got to come to
+me as soon as you’ve told your husband. It isn’t fair
+to take from him what you don’t deserve—that house,
+and these clothes and all your ease and luxury! It
+doesn’t belong to you! After to-day, I’ll hate every
+hour you spend there. I want you to give back
+everything he’s given you. I’m not jealous, only I
+believe in value received.”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah felt like a runner. Breathlessly, she dodged
+this obstacle. “You wouldn’t expect Robert to bargain?”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m not thinking of Robert. I’m thinking of you.
+What I want you to be. If you love me, you’ll come
+to me, free, not all tangled up in another man’s possessions.”</p>
+
+<p>She pushed him away.</p>
+
+<p>“I’ve got to go.”</p>
+
+<p>“Not yet. It’s only six o’clock.”</p>
+
+<p>“But it’s dark. What will that nurse think?”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m all right. I only want you.”</p>
+
+<p>“I know. But some day you may have too much
+of me.”</p>
+
+<p>“Stay.”</p>
+
+<p>She got up and he stood close, pleading. Lilah
+was afraid, with that same delicious fear. Now, she
+wanted to hide her trembling from him, to ward off
+what must happen if he guessed the extent, the danger,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</span>of her surrender. She began to fasten her veil, her
+arms, in tight, black sleeves, upraised; Putnam Flagg
+watched her, and, characteristically, avoided, at that
+moment, any caress. When she glanced up, he said:
+“Very charming. What a minx you are! An artist.
+I admire you inordinately, if for nothing more than
+your gift of putting me off!”</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly she clung to him. “Tell me the truth.
+Are you going to get well?”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know.”</p>
+
+<p>“Is it terrible—the pain?”</p>
+
+<p>“Bad enough. As if a hand squeezed, here, harder
+and harder. I could die, if I’d let myself. Only I
+won’t.”</p>
+
+<p>“What does the doctor say?”</p>
+
+<p>“Nothing. He’s used to bad hearts.”</p>
+
+<p>“I hate doctors. They’re beasts! I hate suffering.
+I hate bodies.” She beat with her palms against his
+breast. “It’s terrible. Terrible! That you should
+suffer so! And we stand here, talking about houses
+and clothes and my owing something to Robert.
+When I only owe myself to you, now and forever.”</p>
+
+<p>They kissed. They trembled against each other.
+And Lilah had never known such giving. He said:
+“The world’s full of ugliness. It needn’t be, perhaps.
+But it is. We’ll have to face this pain of mine along
+with the rest.... Now I’ll let you go.”</p>
+
+<p>She went out into the street again. No one she
+knew was, at the moment, passing. She turned East,
+facing a cold wind. Her figure passed in and out of
+the squares and rounds of light cast by shop windows
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</span>and street lamps, hurrying, bent a little forward. Her
+thoughts were hurrying, hurrying, ahead of her, toward
+the Spring, a dusk when frogs would sing and gnats
+dance, and she would lie against Flagg, holding the
+pain away with her two arms, her lips, her love....</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_181">[Pg 181]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="VIII">
+ VIII
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="dropcap"><span class="upper-case">Lilah</span> woke again to that certainty....</p>
+
+<p>She opened her eyes. Familiar things came
+into focus, were, inexplicably, unreal. She had
+the impression of waking in a strange room. Circumstance
+had changed the very outlines of accepted
+facts. At once her mind began the chase interrupted
+by sleep; unleashed, her thoughts darted down confused
+paths, circled, doubled, stopped aghast.</p>
+
+<p>She leaned on her elbow and examined her arms,
+her hands. She could not associate her hands with
+herself. They might have belonged to another body.
+This certainty had in some mysterious way deprived
+her of herself. Her consciousness was separate; it
+was pain and fear.</p>
+
+<p>She fell back on the pillows and pressed her fingers
+against her eyes. She must get hold of herself. Do
+something. Other women had had children. She
+wouldn’t die. In a year it would be over and she
+could go back.... The acceptance of that thought
+was like a trickle of ice through her veins.</p>
+
+<p>If she had loved Robert....</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>Back again! Her thoughts were mad, erratic,
+feverish. She could not control them, or bring order
+out of chaos.</p>
+
+<p>Sitting up with a violent gesture, she saw that it
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_182">[Pg 182]</span>was past nine o’clock. She had, then, slept. Extraordinary!
+That she could sleep, that the tired
+body was stronger than the will! She had not wanted
+to sleep or to lose for an instant her watchfulness.
+Now, she felt, she had surrendered to this fact. In
+sleep, she had been stamped by nature with acquiescence.</p>
+
+<p>She had been running away from herself. For a
+week, in crowded theaters, restaurants and drawing-rooms
+dedicated to forgetfulness, she had let herself
+be swept forward on the current. For hours at a
+time, she had forgotten, had postponed remembering.
+As if there were no reef ahead, no shattering of the
+frail craft that had carried her so far toward disaster.
+In moments of waiting, it had returned, always like
+a thin, icy trickle, down through her brain to her
+heart.</p>
+
+<p>She must do something.</p>
+
+<p>She half rose, but before she could disguise her
+dishevelment, the scars left by tears, the door opened
+and the mulatto came in, moving furtively as if to
+cover her curiosity. Lilah, for the first time, had the
+feeling that she was trapped, humiliated, her pride
+leveled by a tragedy shared by all women—this yellow
+girl, herself! She felt contempt. Some women
+sacrificed themselves with a smile to the inevitable,
+or concealed their wretchedness beneath an air of superiority,
+as if a thing so usual, so inexorable, so outside
+themselves, were a matter for congratulation.
+Other women seemed to be ordained—an order of
+motherhood; but they were never lovers, wives; they
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_183">[Pg 183]</span>tended the flame of race, kept it burning. God knew
+why any one should willingly add a soul to a world
+where there were already too many souls, too much
+suffering. Better to let humanity dwindle, thousand
+by thousand, until the last man staggered to his knees
+and died and the earth was left once more to the
+forests, to animals, to storm and sunlight, unrecorded,
+eternal.</p>
+
+<p>The maid, lifting the blinds, remarked that Miss
+Fuller had been waiting for half an hour.</p>
+
+<p>“Ask her to come up. And I shall want breakfast
+here.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, m’am.”</p>
+
+<p>Grace Fuller came, bringing, as always, the morning’s
+mail. Her fringe was curled, not a hair out of
+place. And across the pallor of her cheeks, rouge
+showed like veining on a leaf.</p>
+
+<p>From the bed, Lilah asked: “Anything amusing?
+I overslept.”</p>
+
+<p>Grace Fuller put the letters within reach of Lilah’s
+hand, on the coverlet. Without preface, she said:
+“I’m sorry, Lilah. I can’t stay, go on—I thought I
+ought to tell you. I’ve registered and to-morrow I
+take a case.” A faint smile twisted her lips as she
+added: “A hopeless case.”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah glanced at the letters. Suddenly she tossed
+them aside. “You needn’t leave, unless you want to.
+I’m going to have a baby.”</p>
+
+<p>She sat up, pushing the hair back from her forehead,
+straining it back violently. Her eyes were
+heavy. There was no trace of beauty in her face;
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_184">[Pg 184]</span>she was, for the moment, old. “I’m going to have a
+baby,” she repeated in a dull voice.</p>
+
+<p>Her head went down between her knees. She heard
+Grace Fuller saying: “Lilah. Lilah! I’m glad for
+you! This will change everything. Wait until your
+heart accepts—I know what it does to women. I’ve
+watched. You’ll forget the other, come back to
+Robert, in gratitude.”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah held her breath. Her revolt and her hate
+were ponderable; she felt the weight of them across
+her back; her body huddled; she tried to flatten herself
+out, to escape. Her hair fell forward and she
+caught at the thick strands with her teeth. Now, she
+knew, it was inevitable. She jerked away from
+Grace’s hands, flung herself aside.</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll never change,” she cried. “Never. This
+won’t make me different. I’m myself. I will be.
+It’s something I’ve got to stand. But I’ll keep myself
+away from it. I’ve always resented being a
+woman. Gross. Ugly. Unfair....”</p>
+
+<p>She sat up again. “Tell that girl to see that the
+cook doesn’t ruin the eggs. I want a decent breakfast.”</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>At eleven o’clock Lilah was seated in the outer
+office of a physician who was secure in the possession
+of a fashionable patronage.</p>
+
+<p>The room was quiet, almost bare, and in chairs
+ranged against the wall, ten or twelve women were
+waiting. Now and then a door opened and a woman
+in white, with eyeglasses and a cap elaborately
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_185">[Pg 185]</span>starched and folded, beckoned to one or the other.
+These patients, Lilah noticed, never reëntered the anteroom,
+but were ushered out another way, perhaps to
+keep the tide of despair from meeting the tide of hope.
+Other women, arriving, took the vacated chairs. A
+table covered with neat stacks of magazines offered
+an escape from curious eyes; there was a discreet, a
+constant turning of pages. Behind them, expressions
+were guarded, indefinable. Lilah sought duplication
+of her own sensations. Her face, she decided, must
+be as expressionless as the others. It was as if, at
+a prearranged signal, these women had become anonymous,
+featureless. Only when the door opened and
+the capped woman beckoned, there was a flash of excitement,
+of dread, of something forced and desperately
+unwilling.... Time and again the door opened
+and closed.</p>
+
+<p>When Lilah heard her name, repeated three times
+because she had withdrawn so far into herself, she
+followed the nurse with a sort of arrogance, an indifference
+to the outcome. Inwardly, she felt again that
+sense of acquiescence, of surrender to a ruthless inquisitor.</p>
+
+<p>The inner office was large, paneled. At a desk between
+two tall windows draped with brown velvet, the
+doctor allowed himself the advantage of turning his
+back to the light. Lilah saw him in silhouette—not
+the traditional physician, bearded and purposefully
+benign; a business man clipped, concise, scientific.
+To him she was no more than a name, a number. His
+manner had in it a trace of the impatience of the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_186">[Pg 186]</span>normal man who has had to deal with the delicate
+and unstable emotional balance of sick women. He
+was not jovial; he was not even polite. His dry questions,
+spoken with an accent of amusement, irritated
+Lilah. She snapped back at him. She had always
+been healthy; she had had a healthy contempt for
+illness; people were sick because they were stupid,
+or victims, like Flagg, of accident. She had thought
+of herself as immune, outside suffering and the ugly,
+wearisome details of suffering.... She had time,
+while he questioned her, to notice the elaborate simplicity
+of his settings; he received his patients in a
+room reminiscent of little drawing-rooms at Fontainebleau.
+A pretty, red-haired girl took Lilah’s answers
+in short-hand. Lilah resented this girl’s presence.
+The whole proceeding was degrading, like a public
+scandal.</p>
+
+<p>Lilah fixed the physician with an unwavering gaze.
+She had expected him, for a large fee, to rid her of
+this tormenting suspicion. But she had not expected
+him to uncover her fear, subject it to Hogarthian records
+in short-hand.... Marriage à la Mode filed
+away in a card-index cabinet....</p>
+
+<p>She wished, now, that she had stayed away.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>In her motor, still quivering under that professional
+irony, a confirmation which had stripped her of arrogance,
+she looked out at the city with, again, that
+tormenting sense of the unreality of familiar things.
+People hurrying, laughing, meeting, waiting on the
+curbs for the tide of traffic to pass—Lilah was hurt
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_187">[Pg 187]</span>by their indifference to her tragedy. There was no
+such thing as a common, a shared, suffering. No one,
+not even Flagg, could comprehend. She saw a group
+of people familiar to her, Chivers Chew with three
+women, standing before a florist’s window in animated
+conversation. Their security, their pleasure, seemed
+as remote as dumb-show within a lighted proscenium.
+And Lilah’s melancholy was shot across by a pang of
+jealousy.</p>
+
+<p>The mulatto met her with the announcement that
+Major Flagg had telephoned repeatedly.</p>
+
+<p>Lilah said in an indifferent voice: “Pack my things.
+I’m going to Maine to-night. Ask Elliott to wire Mr.
+Peabody. And tell him to get a stateroom. If Major
+Flagg calls again, you may say that I have left
+town.”</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>March came in, blustering, with a buoyant race
+of large, white clouds and a wind that ruffled the
+swollen streams and spread steel-colored fans across
+the purple-blue of the sea. The air was sweet with
+the odor of wet earth. Willow sprouts showed silver-gray
+in the ditches. In the woods and hollows patches
+of brown snow melted in the sun. Trailing sprays of
+waxen arbutus lifted the pine-needles and fallen leaves,
+thrust them up and aside. And always the wind billowed
+and tumbled over the brown hills, the soaked
+fields, the noisy, awakened forests.</p>
+
+<p>There was a stir in the earth, after the long stillness
+of winter.</p>
+
+<p>In a short skirt, a jacket of fur, hatless, Lilah turned
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_188">[Pg 188]</span>away from the sea and walked inland. A cane Robert
+had given her, of Malacca, mounted in amber, swung
+from her hand. She could not abide the sea, the
+dunes, the beach brushed with swift eddies of blown
+sand. A boisterous sea was strong medicine for the
+spirit. It was too bright, too alive; it had a ruthless
+virility that frightened her. If only she had been
+free enough, brave enough, to brace herself in the
+shifting, stinging sands, to breast the wind, to take
+great swallows of it into her lungs, to fill her body
+with it, to laugh at it! Because she was a coward,
+she preferred the woods, where, in a chill shadow, in
+a sort of calm beneath the brittle crackle of bending
+boughs above, she was safe from nature itself. She
+walked in a void, her thoughts held in abeyance, like
+hounds on a leash.</p>
+
+<p>She had told Robert immediately of his good fortune.
+Something warned her not to express, just then,
+her own dissatisfaction. She noticed a difference in
+him; his desire for her was no longer humble; it had
+become definitely material and possessive, concrete.
+His happiness only added to her own inner tumult.
+He guessed nothing of what went on in her mind, her
+heart. He was happy. So must she be! He had
+never heard Flagg’s name. He did not guess what
+had happened, what she had felt. She was infinitely
+removed from him; she could even be sorry for him.</p>
+
+<p>Robert behaved as she supposed all men behaved
+under the circumstances. He became both dictatorial
+and tender. She was shielded from draughts, assisted
+up and down stairs; he ran after her with shawls
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_189">[Pg 189]</span>and wraps; she became the object of his unwavering,
+worshipful attention; his blue eyes, round, expressionless
+and innocent, followed every move she made.
+“For heaven’s sake, Robert, leave me alone. I’m
+quite all right. I won’t break.” And he would say
+absent-mindedly: “I’m sorry.” The next instant his
+arm would be around her waist. It was clear that he
+realized nothing.... Some day he must know that
+he had been making a fool of himself. Her physical
+presence, this child, were his. Her feeling, all that
+made her desirable, belonged to Flagg. Without
+Flagg, she was valueless, like a counterfeit coin.
+Robert was insufferable because he could not see.</p>
+
+<p>To escape him, the barrier of protective, almost
+primitive tenderness he had built around her, she followed
+the bridle paths through the woods. She
+wanted to ride but Robert objected. There were two
+saddle horses in the stable, a roan and a chestnut,
+good English horses full of mettle that turned rakish
+eyes on Lilah whenever she went to their stalls.
+“They’ve been boxed up all winter,” Robert said.
+“They’re mad to run. But the ground’s soft. They
+won’t feel a saddle until the end of April.” He added:
+“We may have more snow. This is a false Spring.”</p>
+
+<p>Whenever Robert touched her, Lilah had an impression
+of herself tamed and savage, a dangerous
+restraint, a hanging on beyond the powers of endurance.</p>
+
+<p>She had not written Flagg. That soft St. Kitt’s
+voice with its accent of mockery had told him that
+Mrs. Peabody was “out of town.” No more. She
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_190">[Pg 190]</span>had not seen him since that day in his rooms, when
+she had promised him.... Now she was gone. He
+would believe that she had lost courage, had fled from
+facts. So she had.... She could not face such facts
+as had assailed her, beaten her down, overwhelmed
+her. He would despise her. Or else he would follow
+and question her.... She dreaded every day
+that held this possibility. It would be like Flagg to
+get at the truth, whether or not he hurt her or hurt
+himself.</p>
+
+<p>Men were selfish. Flagg, like the rest. She was
+being destroyed by the selfish love of these three men,
+Junius, Robert, Flagg.</p>
+
+<p>Junius had said simply, at Robert’s announcement:
+“I’m glad. There will be some one, a Peabody, to
+appreciate the Moselle.” Later, to Lilah, he had
+added: “I wish you were happy, Lilah.” Irritated,
+she moved away, and he followed, put his thin,
+withered hand on her arm. “I don’t pretend to understand
+your generation. But I can read certain
+human sign-posts. If you can’t talk to me, to whom
+can you talk?”</p>
+
+<p>She faced him with a stony expression. “If Robert
+could read sign-posts,” she said, “I wouldn’t be here.
+He wouldn’t want me.”</p>
+
+<p>Junius Peabody’s look changed and Lilah realized
+that she had touched his pride. After a moment, during
+which he brushed his mustache with that large,
+cambric handkerchief scented faintly with Cologne
+water, he said: “I won’t argue. Your remark was in
+bad taste.... I don’t give a snap of my finger for
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</span>Robert. He hasn’t the qualities I admire; the things
+I began he seems unable to finish. Or else he doesn’t
+care, which is the disease at the core of society to-day.
+You don’t care, any of you, about anything outside
+yourselves.... I believe I warned you, in the
+beginning, of what might happen?”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah ignored the implied question. “I’m here,”
+she said briefly.</p>
+
+<p>“Is duty, too, out of fashion?” he asked with an
+ironic smile.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” she answered. “When it is discharged unwillingly.
+When it gets in the way of—”</p>
+
+<p>“Of what?”</p>
+
+<p>“Being yourself.”</p>
+
+<p>Junius Peabody shrugged his shoulders. “What
+will the world be like when each one of us looks out
+for himself? We will be at the mercy of such disciplined
+creatures as the army ant. I can’t see that
+you gain by being what you term ‘yourself.’ You
+aren’t happier than the women of my day, who were
+what their husbands expected of them.... I am
+willing, however, to be instructed....”</p>
+
+<p>He broke off and stared through the window at the
+flashing sea. “The Forsythe’s girl, Marian, spent the
+holidays at home. She used to come over here quite
+often. At first, because she came on skis across the
+hills and arrived as rosy as a snow apple, I enjoyed
+her visits. Later, I dreaded them. At seventeen, she
+has the knowledge and the vocabulary of a roué. She
+had learned more badness at a girls’ school in New
+York than I knew at thirty, or forty. She smoked,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</span>of course. She would sit where you are sitting and
+light one cigarette from another. And she tossed the
+ends away with the gesture of a longshoreman. She
+was an excellent shot.... Externals.... So I
+thought. But the thing went deeper. She was
+clever. She had reasoned herself out of responsibility
+and I could find no flaw in her arguments....
+When she had gone I would sit for hours, depressed,
+frightened. That she used a lipstick, not skillfully,
+is certainly a symbol—of what, I am not certain. I
+would have said that she was going to the devil....
+She had a sort of brusque contempt for love, as I understand
+it; yet her whole appeal was to sex. Her
+attitudes—initiated, purposeful—were inviting. Love
+would fail. Marriage would fail. She not only expected
+to have a lover, she behaved as if such experiments
+were inevitable. She liked me, at eighty-four,
+because, she said, I was a ‘sport.’ What she meant
+was that I gave her cigarettes and whisky whenever
+she came here. She was bored, and, I am certain,
+not happy. Something has been damaged in these
+young people; their imagination....”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah said: “I wouldn’t be too complacent about
+the past, if I were you. There were girls like Marian
+Forsythe in Victoria’s day—they fainted for the same
+reason the modern flapper shows her legs.”</p>
+
+<p>He laughed and Lilah, stooping quickly, kissed the
+top of his head, where the hair, snow white, showed
+a pink parting. “I love to quarrel with you....
+You aren’t to worry about me. I’m twenty-seven,
+twenty-eight, almost. I love some one Robert doesn’t
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_193">[Pg 193]</span>know, has never heard of. You said I would. I do.
+It happened the way that wind out there comes up in
+the Spring, scattering everything, waking things up,
+changing the face of the world. I don’t know what
+I’m going to do. Take him, of course. But not
+now.”</p>
+
+<p>Junius Peabody’s face had gone a little gray; beneath
+the sweep of white mustaches, his lips trembled.
+Lilah saw that he was too old, too worn, to stand the
+shock of violent circumstances. He said nothing.
+His unsteady hands groped for hers, patting them,
+stroking them. Suddenly Lilah loved him, because
+he seemed to understand her.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>Robert wanted her to see his spaniels. “It’s a
+small thing to do for me, Lilah.” It was, invariably,
+either too cold or too windy or too damp to cross the
+“greenery” to the kennels. Lilah found excuses, because
+to subscribe to an enthusiasm of Robert’s was
+to encourage him, and it was more stimulating to test
+his devotion by inventing subtle rebuffs. The question
+of the spaniels came up repeatedly; their antagonism
+swung to it like a weather vane; it became
+the focus of his desire to subjugate her and of her
+desire to torment him. There was no other vengeance;
+Lilah found comfort in blaming Robert for
+her loss. “I don’t like spaniels.” Robert winced and
+said desperately: “But they’re fine little chaps! You
+can’t help liking them.” Lilah knew that Robert’s
+pups fetched extravagant prices and that a glass case
+in the kennels contained a dozen blue rosettes dear
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_194">[Pg 194]</span>to Robert’s heart. She finally inspected the trophies
+and the dogs. It would not do to be surly. But she
+managed, by an expression, a smile, a reservation, to
+make Robert feel that the whole business was childish,
+useless and absurd.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>April came, and still there was no snow.</p>
+
+<p>It was customary at the Point to send one of the
+stable men to the postoffice, ten miles distant, every
+day at noon. The mail was brought in a leather
+pouch and emptied upon a table in the hall. Lilah
+was conscious of this rite no matter where she happened
+to be. A month had passed without word from
+Flagg. She dreaded any sign from him, yet expected,
+longed for even the most scornful message. She
+waited with a peculiar, tormented shrinking for that
+letter she knew must come.</p>
+
+<p>One day, as she passed the table, she caught sight
+of her name written in a small, black, unfamiliar hand
+upon a square envelope.</p>
+
+<p>She opened it before she realized that Flagg had,
+at last, written. Thrusting the letter into her pocket,
+she went outdoors, and, this time, to the beach. No
+matter what he had said, he had written; she could
+bear the brightness of the sea! The beach was packed
+smooth by the receding tide, and ribbons of kelp lay
+at high-water mark like garlands strung from dune
+to dune. There was no wind. A mackerel sky,
+translucent shells of vapor, clouded the sun. It was
+such a vast sky, so tall, so immovable, so luminous!
+Lilah saw herself, very small, walking between sky
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</span>and earth, walking in a great crystal globe, with her
+letter.</p>
+
+<p>She read it at last, expecting a burning accusation.
+But Flagg said simply that he was waiting for word
+from her. He was remarkably better, and her absence,
+prolonged unreasonably, was the only thing
+that stood between him and happiness, recovery.</p>
+
+<p>Lilah turned back to the envelope. The address,
+Peabody’s Point, proved that he knew where she was.
+If she did not write to him, he would come. And
+that, for every one, for herself most of all, would
+mean disaster.</p>
+
+<p>She went through the deep, dry sand to the dunes
+and lay full length, her arms under her head, staring
+up at the sky. The earth receded, seemed to drop
+away, and she was floating in a void. The sand was
+warm on the surface, cool if you dug your fingers in.
+And the hum of the sea was lazy, detached, like the
+hum in a conch shell. Patches of cloud moved, and
+the sky was gentian blue.... It hurt, a physical
+hurt, to be alone....</p>
+
+<p>What could she tell him? The truth? And drive
+him away! Nothing?</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly, for the first time, she saw herself as a
+failure. She had missed everything.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>The following morning she spoke to Robert about
+the necessary closing of the Thirty-eighth Street
+house. She thought that he ought to attend to it.
+Servants were always careless and she herself did not
+feel equal to details. Robert, in riding breeches and
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</span>puttees, was polishing a saddle. He had the rich
+man’s fondness for doing himself what he paid other
+men to do. “Let Grace attend to it,” he said. “She’s
+a crackerjack at that sort of thing.” Lilah said
+tersely that Grace had gone back to nursing; she was
+not in New York. Robert looked up. “Well, I’ll be
+damned! Why didn’t you tell me so?” Lilah answered
+that she had not supposed he cared one way
+or the other. This Robert took to be a twinge of
+jealousy. His spirits rose and he caught Lilah and
+kissed her. “You care, don’t you? I mean, for me?
+Sometimes, I wonder. You’re a deep one.... I’m
+crazy about you, Lilah! I wonder if you know how
+happy I am?”</p>
+
+<p>“Are you? Then you’ll go to town and close the
+house. There’s a good Bobsie.”</p>
+
+<p>When he had gone, she felt relief. It was good to
+be alone with Junius. He pottered about at small,
+fussy undertakings which had the dignity of rites religiously
+performed. The old relish details which impede
+the young—the exact measure of a cup of coffee,
+the arrival of the mail carriage promptly at noon,
+the aroma of a cigar, a meticulous and rigidly adhered
+to change of garments at seven o’clock, the rise and
+fall of the barometer, the flavor of a chop. Life was
+given a false but comforting air of permanence and
+dignity by the importance of little things. There was
+no headlong rush.</p>
+
+<p>Lilah had allowed herself to be careless; she had
+not, since her arrival, dressed for dinner. Now, with
+Robert gone, that eager, propitiating, sympathetic
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_197">[Pg 197]</span>presence out of the way, she flattered Junius by appearing
+for dinner in negligeés with floating sleeves,
+in odd headdresses made of twisted silk, her fingers a
+frosty, excessive sparkle of jewels. A sort of flirtation,
+rather, an appreciation of one another, candid
+and humorous, could not have gone on in Robert’s
+presence. They could not be themselves where there
+was a likelihood of criticism. Lilah said: “We are
+very alike.” And Junius agreed. Changeable, intolerant,
+vain, impulsive. Delightful! But dangerous
+to other people. Together, they could play—act, shift
+like the winds, speak of beauty, or sit in silence, conscious
+of their pride and their perfection. Robert
+had a way, heavy, uncomprehending, of taking them
+for granted. “She is happier without Robert,” Junius
+thought. “I’ll keep him away a while longer. There
+is work to be done in Georgia—I’m buying cypress.
+I’ll send him there, make it imperative. The color’s
+coming back to her cheeks. Too bad! Too bad!...
+But I stuck, where she won’t.” He could pity
+her, for she was so like himself, with all that indefinable
+search for perfection, that restless desire never
+satisfied. He was sorry for such people. Far better
+to be commonplace and to find, in acceptance of dullness,
+content he and she could never find. There was
+something wrong, unbalanced, in such insatiable natures,
+and yet their very discontent and arrogance set
+them aside from the common run of people, made
+them, he felt certain, immeasurably superior. He was
+sorry for her. He took to watching her furtively as
+he smoked his single after-dinner cigar.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</span></p>
+
+<p>She had absolutely no interest in small domestic
+matters; however, when she was in the house things
+ran better than they ever did under Aunt Whiteside’s
+fussy management. She would spend a whole evening
+staring into the fire, wanting to talk to him about
+the man she loved, but keeping still because she had
+a sense of proportion—after all, he was Robert’s
+grandfather! Junius was curious to know about the
+man who had won her, what sort of fellow he was—some
+one unusual, of course, as different from Robert
+as possible. And Junius had a twinge of remote envy,
+an almost romantic sensation; he knew what rapture
+she was capable of if a man once touched her imagination.
+Some one mysterious, a little cruel—otherwise,
+she would have had nothing to do with him.... As
+for himself, he enjoyed her presence; he would have
+prolonged the moment, stretched it out indefinitely,
+for it contained, in its essence, the illusion of youth.
+He could dream, without being ashamed of dreaming.
+Detached, sympathetic, he watched her. She would
+play for him if he asked it; he liked the modern composers;
+the more modern the better! Old songs were
+wistful, reminiscent. But these strange, exciting modernists
+gave you a sense of to-morrow, innovation, audacity,
+as if anything were possible, save when, as in
+the Clair de Lune, there was pity and tenderness for
+the despised and forgotten posturings of lovers and
+poets....</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>Robert went reluctantly to Georgia, and Lilah was
+left to make her decision. Another letter came from
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</span>Flagg, impatient, this time, with a touch of anger
+and rebellion. She answered that things were not as
+simple as she had expected; he must wait. A wire
+was brought to her two days later. He was coming!</p>
+
+<p>Lilah went at once to Junius. She gave him the
+telegram and stood waiting. “You see. I can’t stop
+him. He’ll be here to-morrow.”</p>
+
+<p>Junius said: “Flagg.... You didn’t tell me his
+name.... Does he know....”</p>
+
+<p>“No!” Lilah spoke sharply. “No! I love him.
+I want him. What shall I do?”</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll send him away. He mustn’t bother you.
+He’s got to be made to understand that you are here,
+with us, temporarily.... You see, in this I am old-fashioned.
+His following you shocks me. Robert is
+away. And as sorry as I am for you, if he insists,
+I’ll take my cane to him!”</p>
+
+<p>He stroked her hand. “There. There. These
+things aren’t irrevocable.”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah said: “I intend to see him.”</p>
+
+<p>“I intend to prevent you.”</p>
+
+<p>“You can’t.”</p>
+
+<p>Their eyes met and Junius rose. “I won’t have
+you cheapen yourself. Sell yourself for a song! I
+love you, too.”</p>
+
+<p>“You don’t!” she retorted. “You couldn’t, and expect
+me to go on living this way. Quivering, inside,
+when Robert comes near me. I deny him everything.
+I torment him. His goodness makes a devil of me.
+I don’t want this child. I’m drugged, now, by this
+place—a sort of lull, when I sleep because it is easier
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</span>to sleep. But now that I know Flagg is coming, I
+come alive, body and soul. Perhaps I have ruined
+Robert’s life, but my own will be ruined unless I have
+Flagg.”</p>
+
+<p>With a feeling of futility, of confusion and fatigue
+Junius said: “If this man’s a gentleman, I won’t need
+to send him off; he’ll go. And stay!”</p>
+
+<p>With a gesture of contempt, Lilah left him. But
+she was more concerned than she cared to let Junius
+know.</p>
+
+<p>She went to her room and dressed for riding. The
+windows were open and she could hear the excited
+barking of dogs in the kennel. A gardener was turning
+sod on the lawn, spreading manure. Lilacs were
+in bud. Nearly a year had passed since that marriage
+before an altar of syringa bloom. Another year, and
+what would have happened to her?</p>
+
+<p>She stared at herself in the mirror; then, dissatisfied,
+studied her face in a hand-glass, scrutinizing her skin.
+The struggle to preserve a balance, to keep some sort
+of hold on security, had aged her; her mouth drooped.
+In two years she would be thirty. In ten, forty. And
+she was going to be a withered, embittered little old
+woman; perhaps, after all, beauty was a disadvantage.
+If Flagg lived, she would have to hold him with beauty,
+where another woman might hold him with easy sensuality,
+laughter and indifference to externals—a lazy,
+affectionate, humorous, slovenly woman....</p>
+
+<p>Lilah put the mirror down. She passed her hands
+over her face, shivered, laughed unsteadily. She was
+slim as a boy in riding clothes.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_201">[Pg 201]</span></p>
+
+<p>She went out without speaking again to Junius.
+Their friendship had been shattered in that clash of
+wills; pride, in him, was intensified by senility. He
+was going to be difficult; he might even send for
+Robert because the Peabody integrity was threatened....</p>
+
+<p>One of the stablemen was rollicking with the spaniel
+in the yard. He touched his cap and when Lilah asked
+him to saddle the roan, he remarked doubtfully: “He’s
+awful fresh, ma’am.” Lilah stooped over the dog and
+said tersely: “Bring him out. I can manage him.”</p>
+
+<p>In the saddle, she had a moment of panic. The
+big horse wheeled sideways in the gravel, but Lilah
+mounted, with a spring from the stableman’s palm.
+She felt very small and light and free.</p>
+
+<p>She rode directly to the woods, where, in softer
+ground, the roan was impatient. It was late afternoon.
+A sudden darkness, clouds pushing up from
+the western horizon, was followed by a rush of cold
+wind, and a whirl of leaves blew against the horse’s
+legs, startling him. Lilah controlled him with difficulty.
+Her hand on his neck, she urged him forward.</p>
+
+<p>The wood was bleak, gray, silent again after that
+brief rush of wind, and Lilah heard a shrill, treble
+pipe of frogs in a pool. But where was Flagg’s dance
+of gnats at sundown? Spring was here and she could
+not watch it with him. She would have to send him
+away. Truth or pretext, she would have to send him
+away.... She thought of the child as a tide, rising,
+rising, uncontrollable. This life was within her. She
+contained it and was contained within it. Neither in
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_202">[Pg 202]</span>body or soul was there escape. She was no longer
+herself; she was implicated, bound up in, adhered
+to, responsible for, another self, a self unrecognized,
+featureless, without volition, yet powerful, terrible.
+She was a body bound by body. Irrevocable....</p>
+
+<p>The world had changed. The sun was gone, and
+with it the warmth of the earth. The roan was chilly,
+nervous. His ears flicked back, and with a whinny
+he began to run. Lilah thought: “I’ll give him his
+head and let him run it out—he’ll come to himself
+when he’s tired.” Already her hands were numb, her
+arms stiff.</p>
+
+<p>The bridle path doubled through the woods, crossed
+and recrossed itself, gaining ten miles by this duplicity.
+The dark, wet earth, broken by pools of melted
+snow, made a tunnel through tangled growth of trees,
+very old and tall. A blurred twilight seemed to bar
+the way. Lilah bent forward. She could no longer
+guide the horse. Sensing her surrender, her fear, he
+lost his head.</p>
+
+<p>He left the road. The branch of a tree tore Lilah’s
+hat off. She shrieked at him. “Whoa! Whoa!
+Stop! You brute! Stop! For God’s sake, stop!”</p>
+
+<p>She was struck on the back, between her shoulders.
+A tearing, a blow. She was pulled, thrown, dragged,
+face down, in a thicket. She thought, twisting over
+on her side: “This is death.”</p>
+
+<p>A dark pain, like blood, flowed over her breast,
+and she fell back again.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_203">[Pg 203]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="IX">
+ IX
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="dropcap"><span class="upper-case">There</span> was nothing to do but for Lilah to go.</p>
+
+<p>Robert came into her room again, pale,
+with that new look of a man who has found
+himself in suffering.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m going, Robert.”</p>
+
+<p>Robert sat down by the bed. He avoided looking
+at her. It was a pain to look at her; Lilah, with
+that ghost whiteness, the blue veins showing at her
+temples, her hair in two childish braids over her shoulders.
+She was like a little girl. At the same time,
+there was a mystery about her. She had suffered
+so. She had had to pass, alone, through a dark, terrible
+suffering where no one could follow or help her.
+Robert felt ashamed, because his own suffering was
+so unimportant in comparison to hers. And yet his
+own cried out for speech. He wanted her to know
+that she had killed something in him; he would never
+tell her. Never.</p>
+
+<p>“You can go, if you want to,” he said stiffly.</p>
+
+<p>Lilah turned her head on the pillow. “You don’t
+want me to stay, do you?”</p>
+
+<p>“Not if you love Flagg.”</p>
+
+<p>“I do.”</p>
+
+<p>After a moment, Robert said, “I’ve seen Flagg.
+He’s staying at Biddeford. Did you know?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_204">[Pg 204]</span></p>
+
+<p>“I suppose my grandfather told you.”</p>
+
+<p>“Your grandfather is decent enough to pity me.”</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly Robert went down on his knees and put
+his face on her hand. “God knows I pity you. Stay
+with me, Lilah. Tell me where I’ve failed.”</p>
+
+<p>“It’s no good,” she said, “to try. To stay. Don’t
+blame me too much. I didn’t know what love was.”</p>
+
+<p>Her hand stirred beneath his lips, and he got up
+again stiffly.</p>
+
+<p>“You must stay until you’re well.”</p>
+
+<p>“They’ll let me walk to-morrow,” she said eagerly.</p>
+
+<p>“Flagg wants me to divorce you.... Well, I
+won’t.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why?”</p>
+
+<p>He had not intended to tell her. But the answer
+was torn out of him, a physical wrench, as if he had
+pulled a leech from off his heart. “You’ve hurt me
+enough between you! I’ll be damned if I’ll let you
+humiliate me. A man who divorces his wife is a
+coward. You may do what you like. But I won’t
+divorce you.”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah turned on her side, away from him. She
+could see the sky, a deep, warm blue, with thin clouds
+passing over. And a quick flight of birds. She had
+intended to tell Robert that she was sorry. Now she
+couldn’t.</p>
+
+<p>After a moment, he went out.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>She left the Point one morning in June. Her trunks
+and boxes had gone off the night before. Robert’s
+motor, driven by the stable man, Edmonton, was to
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_205">[Pg 205]</span>take her to the station. Robert had flung away up
+the beach, followed by the spaniel. Junius kissed
+her good-by. He permitted himself only one reproach.
+“I’m not sure that this is going to be any
+better. You won’t like poverty. And happiness at
+the expense of another is likely to go stale.”</p>
+
+<p>“You had Venice,” she reminded him.</p>
+
+<p>“But I came back.”</p>
+
+<p>He took her hand. “Are you sure?”</p>
+
+<p>“Quite.”</p>
+
+<p>A wave of faintness, something almost hysterical,
+caused her to lean against him. “We have to be true
+to ourselves. Sacrifice is out of date.... If Robert
+is wise, he’ll let me go and not care.”</p>
+
+<p>“Good-by, my dear.”</p>
+
+<p>She kissed him quickly.</p>
+
+<p>The motor turned out of the drive, sped smoothly
+through the forest, now richly green, and she saw
+the place where she had been thrown, where Flagg,
+late that night, had found her. It was like him to
+have arrived sooner than he was expected. Like him,
+once there, to have faced his responsibility. Through
+her illness, he had stayed at Biddeford, within call.
+They had not let him see her, but Junius had played
+the part, not unwillingly, of messenger; he enjoyed,
+Lilah knew, the disloyal intrigue. Any man of spirit,
+Junius probably argued—any man of his own day—would
+have driven to Biddeford to thrash Flagg on
+general principles; but Robert had mooned about the
+house, had sat for hours with his head in his hands!
+Junius Peabody’s sympathies were with Lilah. Lilah,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_206">[Pg 206]</span>who lay rigid, her figure outlined beneath the bed
+covers, her face drawn with the peculiar tension of
+her will to conquer. Even death.... He had
+brought Flagg’s messages with a grim tenderness and
+had murmured them to her often when she seemed
+unable to hear. Only her lips had quivered, or there
+had been a faint smile. Whenever Junius wavered,
+ashamed of his own part in the affair, he reminded
+himself that in no other way could she be kept
+alive....</p>
+
+<p>Lilah shuddered. The motor left the woods, turned
+sharply into the paved highroad.... What did Edmonton
+know?</p>
+
+<p>It occurred to her that Edmonton was no longer
+her servant. In the performance of his duty, he was
+driving her, as he would have driven a guest, to the
+station.</p>
+
+<p>She straightened herself sharply. Her look became
+at once indifferent and haughty. But something was
+unsteady, out of balance, threatening. Her hold on
+life was precarious; she was drifting away from safety,
+from her established self. The new self she would
+have to create to meet the situation she found herself
+in was still shadowy; she must wear a different face....
+Love in exile.... The future had no significance.
+Nor was there reality in the image of herself,
+reckless, dedicated, indifferent, somehow romantic....</p>
+
+<p>At the station, Edmonton, swinging her hand-luggage
+to the platform, showed an impassive face and
+asked: “New York, madam?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_207">[Pg 207]</span></p>
+
+<p>She thought of tipping him and changed her mind.
+After all, she wasn’t a guest.... She could not resist
+saying, as the long train slipped down the track
+toward them: “Don’t let Mr. Robert saddle the roan
+while I’m away, Edmonton.”</p>
+
+<p>He flushed and touched his cap. He had heard
+something! Servants found out everything. “No,
+ma’am. Indeed, no, ma’am. I won’t. Be sure of that.”
+An astonished, gratified, sly look passed across his
+eyes. He handed Lilah aboard with a return of deference,
+an unmistakable relish.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>Lilah met Flagg in New York. She went to a hotel,
+and Flagg stayed at the borrowed flat in the ’Fifties.
+She had a few hundred dollars, and she had brought
+every rag and stitch of clothing and all of her jewels.
+It was, she argued, no affair of Flagg’s. Robert had
+given her these things; they belonged to her. She
+owned a distinguished string of small pearls, well-matched
+and unusually brilliant, and, for the more
+formal occasions of the season, Junius had given her
+a small crown of emeralds which had belonged to
+Minnie; this, with an emerald bracelet, too heavy and
+ornate for wear, had about them the innocent elegance
+of the ’Eighties.... Lilah discovered her wedding
+ring among the diamonds and square-cut sapphires she
+preferred. She decided to wear it....</p>
+
+<p>She met Flagg in the lobby of the hotel and they
+talked in the comparative isolation of a taxicab throbbing
+up and down Fifth Avenue in a complicated,
+nervous stream of traffic.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_208">[Pg 208]</span></p>
+
+<p>Their first excitement gave way to a hurried planning.
+They must, Lilah argued, leave New York.
+“I’ve made such a ‘noise’ here,” she said. “I’m more
+of a personage than you realize.”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah expected to follow Flagg to his middle-west
+university town and to become an anonymous figure
+in the background of his life. But Flagg shook his
+head. “We’d be better off in New York.”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah suppressed a sharp anxiety. “You won’t lecture,
+then?”</p>
+
+<p>He assured her again that he wanted only to lie
+on a green hill with his head in her lap!</p>
+
+<p>“I can get my hands on three hundred a month.
+Not much; but we needn’t starve! If you say, we’ll
+go abroad. Three hundred a month isn’t to be sneezed
+at in Italy.”</p>
+
+<p>“But you wanted to go on with your work!”</p>
+
+<p>His interest in teaching, he explained, had lessened
+as his knowledge increased. He was beginning to believe
+that he could do little more than “shove his pupils
+off the high road into the wilderness of personal experience,
+speculation”; besides, he was beginning to
+doubt the value of his own contribution. “When I
+found you there, crumpled, covered with blood, apparently
+dead, I was staggered by my ignorance.
+Death, for myself, has always seemed a sort of translation.
+But you—flesh I love—There is no solace
+for what I felt! I want to spend the rest of my days
+with my arms around a concrete loveliness, warmth,
+life.... Lilah, I’m afraid to go on alone!”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_209">[Pg 209]</span></p>
+
+<p>His desire persisted. They must go abroad, at
+once. Every day spent in the city, crowded, humid,
+was wasted. Lilah had the impression that Flagg was
+hurrying to a happiness which might, with delay, be
+lost. Impatient, often irritable, he was upset by small
+details; he wanted Lilah, enjoyment, fulfillment, immediately.
+The matter of passports proved to be embarrassing.
+Flagg’s honesty would permit of no compromise
+and Lilah refused to allow their names to
+appear on the same passenger list. They agreed,
+finally, to sail on different ships and to meet in Genoa
+or Naples.</p>
+
+<p>Flagg left Lilah at her hotel and, alone, went about
+the complicated business of steamer reservations.</p>
+
+<p>If only there had not been this hiatus; the outlines
+of the adventure were already blurred; in his arms,
+secure, the past definitely discarded, her pleasure in
+her own audacity would return....</p>
+
+<p>She glanced out over the city. From her bedroom,
+twenty-two stories above the street, she could see the
+rivers, metallic, laced with bridges. She was impressed
+by her lack of superiority, save only the elevation
+granted her by this wall of granite and steel....
+Flagg was somewhere down in that swarm of
+people, that tossing and scurrying of humanity....</p>
+
+<p>Here, society was out of focus. Her rightness or
+wrongness was lost in a conglomerate jumble of right
+and wrong. She could not comprehend adultery—a
+cruel word—betrayal. These things counted only as
+they affected a few individuals. Her right to happiness
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_210">[Pg 210]</span>was paramount. That crowd down there cared
+nothing, knew nothing, of what she did or was, what
+she felt, her success, her failure.... She was struck
+by the indifference of the mob, the savage concentration
+of the individual. No tragedy, not even national
+disaster, not even war, could touch them all! What,
+then, was she, was any one afraid of? To break a
+commandment, to do good, was like throwing a pebble
+into a pool—a little hoop of ripples....</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>Flagg did not come back at once. He telephoned
+that he was standing in line at the Customs House.
+“Have a photograph taken.” “Must I?” It struck
+her that it was not going to be simple, this flight.
+They might have gone to California, to Cuba! “But
+we can’t buy <i>lire</i> in California,” Flagg reminded her.
+With a hint of impatience, he rang off. And Lilah,
+alone again, thought: “I’ll go to Thirty-eighth Street.
+There may be an old photograph—”</p>
+
+<p>She dressed with an odd sense of excitement, of
+daring. She remembered the Waterford glass chandeliers;
+she had never seen them in place. After all,
+the house was her creation; she had evoked it. Flagg
+could have no possible objection to her going there.
+For the rendezvous with that self she was discarding,
+she wore a gown Elmer Shawhan had approved of,
+longer than the fashion of the moment, made of dark
+blue and sulphur yellow; her stockings, sheer; her
+feet, in strapped slippers, might have been bare. A
+small hat and a heavy veil, the perfume she affected,
+gave her an exclusive, an unmistakable elegance.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_211">[Pg 211]</span></p>
+
+<p>The caretaker admitted her, after a delay, while the
+taxicab she had hired waited at the curb. “Mrs. Peabody!”</p>
+
+<p>Again that look of surprise! Lilah brushed her
+way in, across the hall, upstairs. The shades were
+not drawn and a flood of sunlight illuminated Elmer
+Shawhan’s riotous panels. Lilah thought: “I told
+Robert to darken this room!” She stood on the
+threshold in a sort of trance of delight. She had forgotten
+how lovely it was; even now, with the furniture
+covered, the rugs rolled back, it was a room
+worthy of respect.... Her dreams of a little renaissance
+had come to nothing; her next step was even
+less promising. Italy, with a man she could not
+marry, an invalid who had abandoned his career for
+her sake....</p>
+
+<p>She crossed the room and became suddenly conscious
+of voices. Before she could draw back, or
+hide, Robert and Grace Fuller came in from the hall.
+Grace Fuller was in gray, her natural distinction accentuated
+by a clever hat. Lilah saw Robert’s face,
+flushed and angry. For the first time in her knowledge
+of him he was beside himself. She said breathlessly:
+“I didn’t know you were in New York! I
+wouldn’t have come here, naturally....”</p>
+
+<p>“I intend to sell the house,” he interrupted. “I
+haven’t spent a happy day here.... If there is anything
+you want, you are welcome to it.”</p>
+
+<p>Grace Fuller looked from one to the other. In her
+expression, amusement and pity conquered embarrassment.
+“Aren’t you two going to be sensible?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_212">[Pg 212]</span></p>
+
+<p>“No!” Lilah wanted to run, to fly ignominiously
+from this humiliation. She saw how the wind blew;
+what Robert intended to do; where he had turned,
+already, for solace, “understanding.” The whole incident
+made life and love seem disgusting, trivial.
+Flagg could do nothing to erase the fact of her marriage
+to Robert. All of their best moments together
+were ugly in the light of their present situation. They
+who had been intimate were bitter strangers, abashed
+by the memory of their intimacy.</p>
+
+<p>She cried desperately: “Let me go. This is abominable.”</p>
+
+<p>Robert said nothing and she ran downstairs. The
+astonished caretaker opened the door and shut it again,
+with a bang.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>In the taxi, Lilah conquered her panic. “Drive
+around the park slowly.” She needed people, movement,
+color, to restore her faith in herself....</p>
+
+<p>No matter what the world thought, now, later she
+would be forgiven if she failed magnificently. New
+York was charitable to picturesque sinners. Florence,
+a villa, herself, wistful but triumphant.... She
+wondered whether she could do without the things she
+had, in a year, come to regard as necessary. On three
+hundred a month she would have to wear made-over
+clothes; she would have to curb her extravagant desire
+for amusing, expensive accessories. She was one
+of those women who sense every variation in style,
+each new subtle trick of elegance, the sleight-of-hand
+of the mode. To be inconspicuous and astonishing
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_213">[Pg 213]</span>had become paramount. Until she met Flagg, she
+had thought of little else. Her charm and her pert
+wit had carried her. She had forgotten how to think,
+what to think, since she had long ago discovered that
+a worthless opinion spoken decisively passes for cleverness
+in a hurried world.</p>
+
+<p>Flagg would not like her friends, vivacious log-rollers
+who had peddled their superficial accomplishments
+successfully and now called themselves the
+Young Generation of American writers, painters,
+actors, critics and editors. Lilah enjoyed their ostentatious
+sophistry, their good humor and their irreverence.
+They stimulated her and never bored her; like
+them, she was fundamentally restless, unstable, impatient.
+Perhaps she was incapable of constancy....
+She could never follow Flagg’s thought, painstaking,
+honest, uncompromising....</p>
+
+<p>The cab turned into the park. On wide, dusty
+greens children in bright dresses romped with colored
+balloons. A procession of motors in a blue reek of
+gasoline clogged the drives.</p>
+
+<p>To be victorious, she must dominate Flagg. He
+might turn poet or mystic, or he might be content
+with sunlight and <i>fritto misto</i>.</p>
+
+<p>She had seen many such couples—lovers who had
+surrendered respectability without a struggle, who
+had relinquished position, who no longer cared what
+was said or thought about their affair and who fought
+like cats and dogs. She must see that this didn’t
+happen. After all, every love, no matter how exalted
+in the beginning, inevitably resolved into a struggle
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_214">[Pg 214]</span>against the loss of illusion. So fragile the threads
+from heart to heart, so impermanent affection....
+Junius had once said to her that the only happy love
+relationships were illicit because marriage harnessed
+the imagination. He believed in the European marriage
+of convenience, a business arrangement, something
+outside the emotions. If this were so, Lilah
+thought, she had a chance of happiness....</p>
+
+<p>The telephone bell was ringing fretfully when she
+opened the door of her room at the hotel. She ran,
+lifted the receiver with a sudden, passionate recklessness.</p>
+
+<p>Flagg’s voice, purposefully tranquil, tightened her
+heart. He began to say that there would be difficulty,
+when she interrupted him: “No! No! I was
+wrong. Forgive me. There’s nothing to be ashamed
+of. The slate’s clean. We’ll go together.”</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>Florence was all a golden yellow in August, dusted
+with the pollen of hot sunlight. Flagg and Lilah
+climbed over the hills or drove in a rickety cab, house-hunting.
+They chose, finally, a small villa, ironically
+enough named “Villino Sans-Souci,” near the Ponte
+a Mensola. It was dirty, but there was a grape arbor
+at the back, and two very old cypresses, black, tipped
+with gold, traced invisible slow spirals upon a purple
+sky. Vincigliata rose behind them and in the cypress
+groves at sunset there was a constant call of cuckoos.
+“Legendary,” Flagg said. “Mournful, and beautiful.
+We’ll take this. What do you say, Lilah?”</p>
+
+<p>They could afford it, just. Flagg figured hurriedly
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_215">[Pg 215]</span>on the back of an envelope. “Rent. Cook. Food
+and light. Fuel. Not much left for cabs, Lilah!
+Or the opera. But we have the view! Turn around,
+my dear, and look—”</p>
+
+<p>Through the arbor, framed in the dusty arch of
+grape-leaves, they could see the Dome, those delicate
+stone shafts, remote, miraculous, the Tower, the Bargello,
+and that great black lily, the Signoria, thrusting
+through the tumbled roofs of the city.</p>
+
+<p>“It hasn’t changed,” Lilah said. “What immortal
+loveliness!” She leaned against Flagg and let herself
+sink into her appreciation of him. Robert would
+have been more concerned with the plumbing than
+with the view. Flagg cared for nothing so long as
+he could fill his senses with this old, secretive, sardonic
+city, this city with bold cheek-bones, short shining
+hair, the smile of Gioconda and the eyes of a
+hired warrior. Flagg belonged in Florence; there was
+nothing modern about him; he was like Leonardo,
+was perhaps, Leonardo, sent back to question, to advance
+a little way, to recede again, like a comet flying
+down space.... She turned her head and kissed
+his shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>“Perhaps you won’t miss the other things—”</p>
+
+<p>“What other things?”</p>
+
+<p>“Your work. Those guinea pigs and test tubes,
+those farmer boys looking to you for the word.”</p>
+
+<p>His eyes, for the first time in many weeks, shut her
+out. But he smiled and his arm tightened about her
+waist. “If no one ever comes here—if we’re left alone
+to grow old in our arbor—will you mind, Lilah?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_216">[Pg 216]</span></p>
+
+<p>“No!”</p>
+
+<p>They went into the house, and Lilah, with wide gestures,
+refurnished it. “We’ll have to get rid of all
+the furniture. All of it! And those fearful pictures.
+Except that one—that’s so bad it’s—positively good!
+This room needs Venetian brocade, claret-against-the-light
+color, with Sixteenth Century chairs—”</p>
+
+<p>“But we can’t afford such things,” Flagg interrupted.</p>
+
+<p>“I’d go mad if I had to live in the same house with
+a gilded waste-paper basket,” Lilah answered.</p>
+
+<p>The agent, sensing criticism, rattled the keys. “The
+villino belongs to a celebrated poet,” he said eagerly.
+He showed his teeth and repeated: “Most celebrated!”</p>
+
+<p>“It was here,” he assured them with dignity, “he
+wrote ‘<i>Belle Mani</i>.’ You know this book?”</p>
+
+<p>They had come out into the arbor again. And,
+licking herself in a patch of sunlight, a little black
+cat had made herself at home. “Does the cat go
+with the house?” Flagg demanded.</p>
+
+<p>The agent made a violent gesture. “I have him
+killed! At once! This poet liked the cats—<i>everywhere
+cats</i>!” He made a terrible face and waved his
+arms. “<i>Shoo!</i> Get out!”</p>
+
+<p>The cat rose, arched her back, yawned and with
+her tail in the air, slightly crooked at the tip—a sign
+of pleasure—went straight to Flagg. He picked her
+up. “If your poet liked cats, he has my permission
+to use gilded waste-paper baskets.”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah was seized with a perverse mirth.</p>
+
+<p>“Spaniels and cats,” she said. But, to Flagg, she
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_217">[Pg 217]</span>refused to explain. Holding the little black cat in
+the crook of his arm, he was tickling her under the
+chin where a patch of white fur was worn, daintily,
+like a bib.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>In the blazing stillness of an August mid-afternoon,
+their drowsy isolation was broken into by a friend
+of Flagg’s who came out from Florence on a bicycle
+and arrived at the gate of “Sans-Souci,” dusty, jovial
+and eager, with a quizzical look for Lilah and a shout
+for Flagg.</p>
+
+<p>Lilah had been painting kitchen chairs an artless
+apple green. She looked up, saw a strange man staring
+at her and stood, the paintbrush at arm’s length.
+This, she saw at once, was to be her first social encounter.</p>
+
+<p>She said quickly: “Mr. Flagg is asleep. I’ll call
+him!”</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t. Please....”</p>
+
+<p>She hurried indoors, angry, rather stimulated.
+Flagg was lying uncomfortably on the poet’s divan.
+He was not asleep and his eyes looked up at her, mischievous,
+black, bright, more alive than any eyes she
+had ever seen.</p>
+
+<p>“Some one—” she began breathlessly. “Tall, dusty
+man on a bicycle—”</p>
+
+<p>“McNair!” Flagg shouted.</p>
+
+<p>He ran outside and Lilah heard their noisy greeting.
+She did not quite dare to follow, but waited
+for Flagg to call her. Presently he did. “Lilah!
+Oh, Lilah!”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_218">[Pg 218]</span></p>
+
+<p>She flew to a mirror.... How pretty she was getting
+to be! The color of happiness was over her,
+warm, golden.... What a pity that all women
+couldn’t be happy; so many of them were pinched and
+gray, shadowy, unrecognized, unreal. She had never
+existed until Flagg loved her, until, she corrected herself,
+she had loved Flagg. She had had no other
+consciousness, since coming to this place, but this....
+She went out, smiling.</p>
+
+<p>“Lilah,” Flagg said, “this is Gil McNair. Can you
+manage tea?”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah gave her hand, sticky with paint, into a large,
+warm clasp, and it was then she caught that quizzical
+look. It was not a question, it was, rather, a brief
+investigation. With an upward rush of spirits, the
+challenge accepted, Lilah said: “Tea? Of course!”
+But she threw into her glance what she would have
+preferred to say: “Yes! Here we are. Quite irregular.
+But quite charming!”</p>
+
+<p>She made tea on a spirit lamp because she had not
+conquered the mysteries of an Italian stove and, so
+far, she had been unable to lure a cook as far out of
+town as the Ponte a Mensola. It was not the Florence
+of before the war; Tuscan maid-servants had become
+aware of their potentiality in commerce....
+The poet’s cups were eccentric; apparently <i>il the</i> had
+not been popular at the “Villino Sans-Souci.” There
+wasn’t any cut sugar and Lilah had to use cream from
+a can. “Aren’t there any cows in Italy?” she wondered.
+She could hear Flagg laughing in the arbor,
+and she felt a pang of jealousy because he could laugh
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_219">[Pg 219]</span>at something she did not share. To love, she had
+discovered, is to be jealous—jealous of everything,
+each unconsidered, careless gesture not directly to do
+with her; when Flagg slept, she was jealous of his
+dreams.</p>
+
+<p>She was glad, hearing him laugh, that he had accepted
+their situation, not as if he were making the
+best of a bad bargain, but with the positively gorgeous
+indifference of a man superior to his audacities. She
+had not once considered right or wrong—she had
+thrust aside the shadow of presentiment, had drawn
+the warmth of sunlight over the dark depths of possibility.
+She had rested for hours with her head
+against Flagg’s breast, listening to the beating, rapid,
+unstable, of his heart, his enemy, her enemy; she had
+lost the reality of death in the living body....</p>
+
+<p>The arbor was patterned with the cool, blue shadows
+of grape leaves; the sun struck through, white, hot,
+and lay in flakes on the table, on the smoothly brushed
+earth.</p>
+
+<p>The black cat had wandered in and sat on Flagg’s
+knee in that peculiar, feline trance he liked because,
+he said, it was so “damned superior.” He stroked the
+shining black fur as he talked and Lilah, in spite of
+herself, watched the caressing fingers.</p>
+
+<p>McNair took the tray from Lilah. His gestures
+were quick, nervous. Lilah discovered that he had
+done something astonishing, if not conspicuous, in the
+war, what, she could not quite make out; it had to
+do with “listening gear.”</p>
+
+<p>“He can hear celestial ragtime,” Flagg said. “He
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_220">[Pg 220]</span>‘listens in’ on the Beyond—michrophonic miracle
+man.”</p>
+
+<p>McNair laughed. He had big, square white teeth,
+like tombstones, and dusty hair worn in a bang. Lilah
+wanted him to notice her. She felt that she must look
+very pretty in her chintz apron, the little turban of
+twisted green silk, her feet in buckled slippers.</p>
+
+<p>McNair accepted tea and drank it greedily, his
+eyes on Flagg; their talk was experimentary, the talk
+of men widely different yet gifted with an identical
+passion for the world, the adventure offered by life to
+eager men; they liked it well enough to want, honestly,
+to better it. Words, names she had never heard,
+at first baffled, then bored her. She yawned, but
+Flagg was not stricken, as she had hoped he would
+be, as Robert would have been, with an immediate
+concern. So she moved to the bench beside him,
+slipped her arm through his and let her head fall
+against his shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>McNair, putting his tea-cup aside with a clatter,
+as if he had only just become aware of her, said:
+“You’re going back in October, Flagg?”</p>
+
+<p>Flagg answered: “No! I’m through. For a while....
+I have what every man secretly desires at one
+time or another, leisure for contemplation. I’ve never
+had time to think. Since the war smashed man’s favorite
+image of himself, wearing the laurels of progress,
+I want to sit alone with the fragments and make
+of them what I can, for my own satisfaction.”</p>
+
+<p>“For your own satisfaction?” McNair repeated.
+“You used to believe, or claimed you did, that man
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_221">[Pg 221]</span>owes his wisdom to man. You once said that you
+despised ascetics and hermits.” He glanced around.
+“Delightful! Your arbor! But you won’t stay
+here!”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah interrupted: “Why?”</p>
+
+<p>“Ask Flagg!”</p>
+
+<p>Flagg said: “I claim the right to the one certain
+beauty—life itself! I’ve been through the five cycles
+of psychic hell. I’ve questioned until I’m sick and
+tired of questioning. I’ve come to a sort of acceptance
+that isn’t surrender—it’s seeing! And if I should
+tell you, any one, what I see, know—I’d be damned
+as a dreamer or an idiot. I see that science and religion,
+both, have failed. We still suffer plague. We
+still arm ourselves. We still distrust our brother....
+But we go forward. Imperceptibly, forward....
+Here, at peace, I want first to think, later, if possible,
+to write. It depends on whether or not I have anything
+to say.”</p>
+
+<p>“You won’t stay,” McNair repeated. His face was
+flushed, and he said good-by abruptly, almost angrily.</p>
+
+<p>When he had gone, Lilah said: “Did you really
+mean what you said?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes.”</p>
+
+<p>“What did McNair think—about—us?”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know. Nothing, I dare say.”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah insisted: “But he must have wondered—”</p>
+
+<p>Flagg lifted her face and said gravely: “For God’s
+sake, let’s be decent sinners! I thought we had decided
+to pay our debt in the coin of the realm.”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know what you mean.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_222">[Pg 222]</span></p>
+
+<p>“I mean that it doesn’t matter a tinker’s damn what
+McNair or any one else thinks of us! The only
+thing that matters is what we think of ourselves. If
+you’re ashamed, you ought not to be here. If you’re
+sorry, you’re only hurting me.”</p>
+
+<p>She answered: “We’re happy when we’re alone.
+But when people come, we begin to blame each other.”
+She kissed him, quick, light kisses. Then her head
+sank again on his shoulder, and they sat there, clasped
+together, staring through the arch of the arbor at
+Florence, the towers, the brazen Arno climbing across
+the plain toward Pisa. It was very still. A cart
+went down the road beyond the wall with a tinkle
+of bells. The little black cat sat on the table, licking,
+her tail in a plate of cakes.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_223">[Pg 223]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="X">
+ X
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="dropcap"><span class="upper-case">The</span> lazy enchantment of their exile lasted
+through the summer. In September, Lilah
+complained to Flagg that all of New York
+seemed to have moved to Florence. Whenever she
+went to town she met some one she had known during
+her brief appearance as Mrs. Robert Peabody. She
+encountered curiosity but, from the younger generation,
+at least, no hostility; she was not certain whether
+this was an indication of social emancipation or due,
+rather, to her own remoteness from the lives, the activities
+of these people—she was, perhaps, not worth
+snubbing! The older generation was unaware of
+her; their standards resisted, obdurately, the pressure
+of modern opinion. Lilah could dismiss them because
+they were “old-fashioned.” But she resented
+the casual indifference of her contemporaries; it was
+selfish, even vulgar; she had, it seemed, nothing material
+to offer them! She was bitterly aware that most
+of them could have been hooked had she baited her
+line with millions. Money, enough of it, meant pleasure,
+diversion, a sop for the martyrdom of satiety.
+She could have lured the fashionable world to one of
+the veritable <i>ville</i> in the hills near Florence—jazz
+on a Medicean terrace, swimming parties in a marble
+basin by Mino da Fiesole, a liberal supply of sporting
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_224">[Pg 224]</span>Italians of the upper class.... Her scandal
+would be an asset under such glamorous circumstances.
+The “Villino Sans-Souci” was another story.</p>
+
+<p>McNair came again, bringing a young Englishman,
+a pianist, a pupil of Busoni, who played on the poet’s
+upright. He soothed Lilah because, without hesitation,
+he fell in love with her; she called him “silly
+boy,” but he was, if anything, older than Lilah; he
+“adored” women, professed to have been badly treated
+by them, to have thrown himself away, whereas he
+was quite unscrupulous, lazy and irresponsible. He
+played with facility and refused to practice because he
+seemed to have been born with a technique. Tall,
+heavy, he had the typical thespian’s skull, the profile
+of a Shakesperian actor.</p>
+
+<p>He made love to Lilah whenever Flagg’s back was
+turned. He played “for” her, he said. Lilah began
+to believe that she was responsible for the seductive
+music he somehow got from that long-toothed piano;
+she saw herself in the waltzes of Kreisler, the moon-smitten
+nuances of Ravel, the songs of Rachmaninoff.
+And she was filled with a vague melancholy, almost a
+pity for herself, inexplicable, delicious, like the forebodings
+of adolescence. She would sit on the terrace
+with Flagg, her hand in his, and seeing the “silly
+boy’s” ardent profile swaying against the glow of the
+piano-lamp, she would think tenderly of Robert, of
+Junius, and of herself.... She could only relent, apparently,
+when she had had her own way.... She
+squeezed Flagg’s hand.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_225">[Pg 225]</span></p>
+
+<p>Lilah began to know the sort of people she would,
+in New York, have ignored. A thin, hawk-nosed,
+Pittsburgh-born American <i>contessa</i> who lived nearby
+called repeatedly, bringing with her a shifting retinue
+of cavalry officers; the <i>contessa</i> conducted a sort of
+matrimonial agency; she had, she boasted, introduced
+many “dear, sweet, rich American girls” to young
+Italians of title. Lilah suspected that she lived upon
+the precarious fruits of gratitude.</p>
+
+<p>Flagg’s reputation attracted scientists from France,
+from Germany, from Rome—he was at the mercy of
+men who coveted his knowledge. He was always generous,
+but Lilah saw him in moods of savage contempt
+and rebellion. “You waste yourself on these people,”
+she said.</p>
+
+<p>“I know! I wish they’d leave me alone!” But
+he never seemed to be able to resist them; she
+would rescue him from arguments carried on in half
+a dozen languages, lead him indoors and make him
+lie down. He would look up at her, his face pinched,
+his lips pale, and with a gesture of hopelessness, say:
+“I’ll have to go back, some day, and work! I don’t
+know a damn thing!” And once he added, with a
+querulous bitterness: “There’s so little time.”</p>
+
+<p>“But you’re going to get well.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” he said. “Perhaps. It’s a new idea....
+If I do, it will be because of you.” He smiled. “I’m
+not used to you, Lilah! I find myself looking at you,
+wondering who you are and how you came to be here....
+You’re not sorry, are you?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_226">[Pg 226]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Not if you aren’t.”</p>
+
+<p>So they reassured each other.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>Flagg was not a man who enjoyed idleness. McNair
+left for Edinburgh. Save only Don Orlando, a
+priest who came down from Siena occasionally to spend
+an hour in the arbor, and an eccentric Florentine, a
+sort of inventor-alchemist, there was no one he enjoyed.
+He took to wandering away into the country,
+on foot. Lilah was left to her own devices. She tried
+to convince herself that she was happy. This was
+what she had made for herself; she could not question
+his love; her own was deeper than she had thought
+possible—her feeling consumed her. But her character
+was unchanged. She resisted, despised discipline;
+denial made her intractable. She wanted pleasure,
+excitement, admiration. There was danger in
+the heartless and unstable passion of such men as the
+English pianist. She hated herself because this was
+so. But she told herself that had Flagg been different,
+she would have been contented to sit in the arbor
+at the Ponte a Mensola, secure in the possession of
+love.</p>
+
+<p>Something instinctive in Flagg, out of reach, resisted
+accepted social standards. He stood aloof from
+close personal bonds, even, fundamentally, from Lilah.
+He was solitary, but not morose. She never really
+knew his failings or his ambitions; his confidences
+were always touched with self-scorn, yet he refused
+sympathy—it was as if he preferred to find his own
+way. His feeling for her was identical; he realized,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_227">[Pg 227]</span>perhaps, that sex would entangle him, hold him back
+from that mysterious pursuit of his. He was not
+easily stirred by her mere physical presence; she
+never felt that he had gone into the adventure through
+a desire for gratification. And she was flattered by
+his most casual caress because she realized that he
+was not demonstrative; his emotions were deep, strong
+and, when aroused, ruthless.</p>
+
+<p>But there were moments when Lilah was baffled by
+his reserve; she felt inadequate. Her own human,
+reprehensible sufferings, longings and jealousies fell
+back before his impartiality. He had believed in their
+right to live together. The fact that she did not love
+her husband, Flagg insisted, absolved her. But he
+had not stopped to consider what the affair might mean
+to Lilah; it was demoralizing, she decided, to ignore
+the world’s opinion. If Flagg should die, she would
+have no resistance.</p>
+
+<p>Thoughts like these threaded her consciousness; for
+the most part, she was lulled by the fact of his presence.
+Whenever he touched her, she sensed the immortality
+of happiness.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>Coming out of Doney’s confectionery shop one afternoon,
+with a box of French pastry, she met Mrs.
+Sinclair, a willowy figure in gray crêpe, with enveloping
+veils, descending from an open touring-car painted
+royal blue.</p>
+
+<p>“My precious darling.”</p>
+
+<p>She enfolded Lilah briefly.</p>
+
+<p>“I heard that you’d run off with Putnam Flagg.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_228">[Pg 228]</span>The Wagners crossed with you. That witty Wagner
+girl was too absurd—she said you’d been flagged.
+Was that vulgar? How are you?”</p>
+
+<p>“Awfully well,” Lilah answered. She was sorry
+that she had worn her most unbecoming hat and a
+dress that was much too short for the mode.</p>
+
+<p>“Of course you came to Florence. Extraordinary,
+how they all do—people who break away—irresponsible,
+brave people! Sinclair and I are so desperately
+conventional. We’ve been married fifteen years and
+neither of us has ever cast the eye—well, not seriously!
+Sinclair’s in the car. Don’t speak to him,
+Lilah darling—he’d be shocked. Flagg hasn’t a cent,
+has he? I don’t see, frankly, why you did it, or what
+you gained. You had everything on earth you could
+ask for, and New York at your feet. Sympathy is
+with Robert, of course. He’s enormously popular,
+and any number of women are applying.... You
+aren’t divorced?”</p>
+
+<p>“No.”</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Sinclair turned with a swirl, positively oriental,
+of draperies.</p>
+
+<p>“Are the chocolates good here? We’re on our way
+to Bologna—then on up, to Paris. They say Doucet’s
+clothes are inimitable, and I’m in rags.”</p>
+
+<p>She went into the shop and Lilah, lifting her head,
+crossed the sidewalk to the royal blue car. Behind a
+pair of smoked goggles she found Sinclair’s eyes staring
+at her with a sort of panic. “How do you do?”
+He gasped, leaned forward, offered a limp hand.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_229">[Pg 229]</span>“How do you do? Beastly weather, isn’t it? Where
+are you stopping?”</p>
+
+<p>“At the Ponte a Mensola,” Lilah said sweetly.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, I must say, you’re looking fit.”</p>
+
+<p>“I am.”</p>
+
+<p>“What’s May doing? Tell her to hurry!”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah turned away. The encounter had left her
+trembling. She crossed the Tornabuoni, signaled a
+cab and drove all the way back to the Ponte a Mensola.
+Somehow this extravagance comforted her.</p>
+
+<p>The ride was long and dusty. A stream of cars
+and trucks, carts and trolleys, blocked the narrow road
+between endless villa walls. The cabman, a disreputable
+Tuscan in a frock coat and a patent-leather hat,
+gurgled and hiccoughed at the horse. She could
+imagine the progress of the Sinclair’s motor, climbing
+the tortuous streets of sun-smitten hilltowns, rushing
+across the Lombardian plain, climbing Alpine passes,
+on again through France to Paris—in its wake a
+servile host with well-silvered palms bent in an attitude
+of obeisance to American millions. Lilah knew
+how Mrs. Sinclair would spend her time in Paris—a
+round of the <i>couturières</i>, perhaps in the company of
+a Frenchman, a rarefied sycophant, dancer, flatterer
+and debased wit who would criticize <i>mannequins</i> and
+gowns, choose May Sinclair’s wardrobe and profit by
+her vanity to the extent of a cruise in the Sinclair
+yacht or a trip to the South of France in the Sinclair’s
+private car.</p>
+
+<p>Lilah’s imagination, like a shutter, opened and
+closed upon visions of fashionable America, the people
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_230">[Pg 230]</span>she had known and might eventually have dominated,
+moving from Paris to London, from Biarritz to San
+Moritz, from New York to Palm Beach. Their
+houses, jewels, clothes, pleasures, were rare and exclusive
+enough to permit them any latitude of behavior;
+now that she was not a part of their life,
+Lilah could be contemptuous. Except for chance,
+she would in all probability have been in Paris, buying
+the best of Doucet’s collection ... or ... no;
+at the Point, waiting for her child to be born....</p>
+
+<p>She put her hands up to her face.</p>
+
+<p>Women like May Sinclair had escaped. Lilah suffered
+because she had not been content to use the material
+at hand—the fabric for the fashioning of her
+dreams had always been just beyond reach.</p>
+
+<p>She decided to say nothing to Flagg of her encounter.
+She went up the steep path from the gate to the
+house. Flagg was leaning on the terrace wall. The
+late sun gilded him, so that he was like a figure in
+bronze. Lilah called: “You old pagan! I want ten
+<i>lire</i>. I’ve been extravagant.”</p>
+
+<p>“Ten <i>lire</i>?”</p>
+
+<p>“To pay the cabman.”</p>
+
+<p>“Lilah,” Flagg said seriously, “you haven’t changed.”</p>
+
+<p>“But I have!”</p>
+
+<p>She paid the cabman and ran back to Flagg. “But
+I <i>have</i> changed! I needed gloves and bought pastry
+instead for your tea—black, sticky cakes with cherries
+on top. Look!”</p>
+
+<p>Flagg looked. “Lilah, do you know, I think that
+cat’s going to have kittens!”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_231">[Pg 231]</span></p>
+
+<p>They went to the arbor. Lilah admitted that
+Flagg’s suspicions were justified; the little black cat
+<i>was</i> going to have kittens. And Flagg said: “Damn!
+I hate having dumb things suffer. We’ll have to make
+a bed for her.”</p>
+
+<p>He went into the house and came back with a
+clothesbasket and a blanket. “But she’s not going
+to have them to-day!” Lilah cried. Flagg answered
+seriously that it was just as well to be prepared.
+These things upset him; birth was terrifying. “I
+hope you’ll never have a child. I’d probably die. Go
+mad. Knock my brains out.”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah stroked the cat. Her heart tightened. After
+a moment she said: “I won’t have a child.”</p>
+
+<p>“What do you mean?”</p>
+
+<p>“That time when I was thrown—”</p>
+
+<p>Their eyes met. Something flashed across Flagg’s
+eyes, a fugitive anger. “Oh. That was it. Why
+didn’t you tell me?”</p>
+
+<p>“I couldn’t.”</p>
+
+<p>“You can tell me anything.”</p>
+
+<p>After a pause, he added: “You weren’t quite honest,
+Lilah. I wouldn’t have gone to Maine if I had known
+what you’ve just told me. Your husband has every
+reason to believe that I’m a cad.”</p>
+
+<p>“Must we talk about these things? Can’t we forget
+them?”</p>
+
+<p>He stooped again over the basket. His expression
+was not guarded and Lilah cried: “If you think I
+wanted to be hurt—if you think I tried deliberately—”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_232">[Pg 232]</span></p>
+
+<p>Flagg turned away. “We can’t forget these things.
+But you’re right; we needn’t talk about them.”</p>
+
+<p>When he had gone, Lilah wept a little. The warm,
+sinewy body of the stray cat comforted her; she held
+it close, as she would never have held one of Robert’s
+spaniels, letting her tears fall on the glossy fur like
+drops of quicksilver. If she sat there long enough,
+she knew, Flagg would come back, repentant. And
+presently he came, drawn by her silence. “I’m sorry,
+Lilah.”</p>
+
+<p>She burst out: “You’re thinking of yourself when
+you ask me not to divorce Robert! I could, easily,
+in Paris.” The accusation was turned adroitly against
+Flagg. “Am I selfish? Isn’t it, rather, a question
+of honesty? Must we go over that again?” Lilah
+turned her head away. “I’m unhappy.” Flagg gazed
+at her with a curious detachment, as if he were seeing
+her for the first time. Presently he said deliberately:
+“If divorce will make you happy, by all means go to
+Paris. I don’t know what the process is, how long
+you’d have to live there or whether, in the end, we
+could afford the necessary expense. But you must,
+at all costs, be happy.”</p>
+
+<p>Later in the day, still smarting under the memory
+of Sinclair’s dismissal, she wrote to Junius: “I am
+going to divorce Robert. Will you find out from him,
+for my sake, whether he would be willing to come to
+Paris and make the necessary arrangements?” She
+added, with a flourish of defiance: “I am gloriously
+happy.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_233">[Pg 233]</span></p>
+
+<p>With the letter safely in the post, Lilah felt a return
+of security. It was only a matter of time before
+she could demand recognition. She dreamed of subjugating
+Florence; there was opportunity for a clever,
+pretty and accomplished woman to have a distinguished
+“drawing-room.” She hadn’t money, but she
+had everything else.</p>
+
+<p>With this possibility in mind she looked with new
+eyes at the “Villino Sans-Souci.” The poet had furnished
+it with lavish bad taste. He had had a morbid
+turn of mind, and perhaps to stimulate his imagination
+or in the interests of publicity had slept in a
+bed built like a gondola, black, funereal, uncomfortable,
+and had placed a wooden statue of Aphrodite
+in a niche, a sort of shrine before which he had burned
+tapers “to love and sorrow.” His drawing-room was
+a museum of amorous mementoes, signed photographs
+of pretty actresses—<i>Á mon cher! Tua, Maria.
+Sempre, Nina</i>—abominable porcelains, first editions,
+cushions and ecclesiastical velvets. His desk, where
+he had probably written “<i>Belle Mani</i>,” was the largest
+piece of furniture Lilah had ever seen, an affair of
+ebony inlaid with mother-of-pearl, “a battleground for
+literature,” Flagg said. “The whole place is like an
+embalmed scandal.”</p>
+
+<p>The house itself was old; it had been a <i>podesta’s</i>
+and bore the patina of several centuries. “I believe
+we could buy it for a song,” Lilah said. She kissed
+the tips of her fingers. “And I could make it into
+one of the loveliest houses in Florence.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_234">[Pg 234]</span></p>
+
+<p>Her desire for beauty had never got her anywhere.
+Now she was restless and dissatisfied because there
+were too many footstools and majolica vases in the
+“Villino Sans-Souci.” A few thousand dollars—only
+a few—would transform this wilderness into a setting
+worthy of her ambition. She began to haunt the shops
+along the Borgognissanti, where, for ridiculous prices,
+she was offered the treasures of palaces; Sixteenth
+Century tables, dim Venetian mirrors, flamboyant
+chairs, chests, silver, brocades stiff with tarnished gold
+threads, faded, “like sunlight through claret.” Her
+desire for possession—she was a victim of her love
+of these things—was a sort of drunkenness; she made
+promises, broke them, had furniture sent to the “Villino
+Sans-Souci” on approval and sent back again;
+she was at once the despair and the victim of the
+antiquaries.</p>
+
+<p>Flagg had no idea that she had in her possession
+the pearls Robert had given her. They were hidden
+away in a hat-box together with the emerald crown
+and bracelet.</p>
+
+<p>One day she took them to a dealer whose shop was
+on the Ponte Vecchio, an unpretentious, shadowy room
+ten feet square. Across a modern counter upholstered
+in black velvet, Lilah faced a man who was positively
+medieval, lean, dark and clever; he had the delicate
+hands of an expert, flexible wrists and pointed, sensitive,
+critical fingers. The pearls, a long string, lay
+coiled on a small cushion, an opalescent serpent.
+Lilah had no idea how much they were worth. “I
+want to sell them,” she explained. The dealer considered,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_235">[Pg 235]</span>his hands clasped under his chin. His offer,
+in lire, astonished her, but she covered her surprise
+with an emphatic shake of her head.</p>
+
+<p>“Too little?” The dealer’s face became enigmatic.
+“I recognize these pearls, Madame. They belong to
+the Peabody collection. I sold them—this clasp—to
+Mr. Junius Peabody, thirty years ago. I never forget
+a really important purchase; sooner or later, the
+most valuable pearls in the world pass through my
+hands. I have, besides, a record.”</p>
+
+<p>Suppressing a feeling of guilt, Lilah said: “The
+pearls are mine. I am Mrs. Robert Peabody.”</p>
+
+<p>“I see. Exactly.... I can sell the string, immediately,
+to an American lady who is now in Rome. My
+offer stands.”</p>
+
+<p>Realizing that this man was superior to the sort of
+bargaining usual on the Rialto, Lilah accepted the offer.
+The pearls were whisked away by a clerk. The dealer
+remarked upon the weather. And the clerk, returning,
+paid into Lilah’s hands the sum of seventy-five thousand
+lire. She signed her name—once, twice—the
+dealer bowed without a trace of animation, and she
+went out again into the street, a street, a world transformed,
+no longer inimical, but hers. A duck of a
+world!</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>A duck of a world!</p>
+
+<p>With seventy-five thousand lire hidden away beneath
+the tissue paper in an “Annette” hat-box, happiness
+flowed back over Lilah’s spirit. Her worldly surface,
+that inimitable appearance of security, reappeared.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_236">[Pg 236]</span>Her manner became decisive, her bearing assured. She
+found it possible to smoke a cigarette with her old
+manner of casual indifference. She could be Russian
+without an inward shiver of self-ridicule and distrust.</p>
+
+<p>She postponed buying what she coveted because, in
+possession of seventy-five thousand lire, she could afford
+to be particular. The “Villino Sans-Souci” was
+inadequate. She must have one of the smaller Medicean
+houses—she could imagine Mrs. Sinclair saying: “Lilah,
+darling! What a delicious garden!”</p>
+
+<p>With the <i>contessa</i>, in a hired carriage driven by a
+respectable coachman in livery, Lilah inspected the
+available houses. Flagg knew nothing of these excursions.
+The gates of imposing, crumbling <i>ville</i> were
+thrown open and Lilah glimpsed some of the most
+coveted interiors in Italy. The demoralizing simplicity
+and perfection of these rooms—spacious, exquisite
+in proportion, frescoed—went to her head. She
+found herself living in imagination in a setting contrived
+by the most cunning artists of Lorenzo’s day for
+a corrupt and fastidious court. Terraces of stone worn
+smooth, grass-grown, crumbling; basins reflecting the
+complicated foliage of live oaks; cypress alleys and
+balustrades, the warm, ochre walls of Tuscan palaces,
+unbroken, without ornamentation, sharp against the
+dazzling purple of the sky....</p>
+
+<p>The <i>contessa</i> was garrulous; her enthusiasm, her
+bad and fluent Italian embarrassed Lilah. She was
+greedy, over-inquisitive. And with a sort of officious
+generosity she wanted to establish Lilah at once in a
+<i>villa</i> at Montughi. “But, <i>cara mia</i>, it’s perfect! I
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_237">[Pg 237]</span>don’t see what you expect. You’d better snap it up
+at once or some American vulgarian will lease it.”</p>
+
+<p>It was easy to imagine herself established, with
+Flagg, in that ingenuous, expensive little palace. The
+seventy-five thousand <i>lire</i>, her treasure horde, were an
+open sesame to the most extravagant dreams.</p>
+
+<p>But she did not dare to confide in Flagg; something
+warned her that he would not approve, understand,
+forgive.</p>
+
+<p>The December rains drenched Florence. Valambrosa
+was powdered with snow. The Arno, amber,
+swollen, poured through the city, covered the mud
+flats, became all at once a veritable river.</p>
+
+<p>Flagg was driven indoors. He began, tentatively,
+to write. The effort exhausted him. He would wrestle
+with his enemy, breathless, contemptuous, until he
+collapsed.</p>
+
+<p>And suddenly, for no reason, out of her security, the
+idea came and persisted that her happiness was threatened.</p>
+
+<p>Flagg was ill again.</p>
+
+<p>Lilah never knew the precise moment when she was
+first aware that he might not be going to live. His
+eyes were frightened most of the time, although he
+kept on smiling at her. Noises irritated him. He
+wanted silence. He would sit at his desk, writing, into
+the night, obstinate. And when she spoke to him, he
+would shake his head and ask her to go away. There
+was something he wanted to do, to finish, before he
+called quits. It was absurd to say that he couldn’t
+work. He could.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_238">[Pg 238]</span></p>
+
+<p>On fine days he sat in the arbor, holding the cat
+and smiling a queer, fixed smile that terrified Lilah.
+When it rained, he moved indoors and sat, bent, in an
+attitude which was belligerent and pathetic, at his
+desk—that “battle-ground of literature” inlaid with
+mother-of-pearl.</p>
+
+<p>At night he would come into her room and lie with
+his face pressed against her shoulder, like a child that
+is afraid of what he might see in the dark.</p>
+
+<p>When she questioned him, he was perfectly still.</p>
+
+<p>And now, she knew, she loved him more than anything
+in the world.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>Love, complete love, came because she knew she
+could not have it. Flagg was going to die. She
+had let herself off from feeling, because there was
+always time to give way to an emotion that would be
+so great that something of herself would have to perish.
+Now, because there was so little time, she surrendered
+to it. She could not dodge facts any more; she must
+face them and make of her life what she could with
+what she had. Her nature was terrible to her because
+she was in the grip of a genuine passion; she wanted
+to make herself over in time to conquer Flagg’s reticence,
+to have him for herself. She had been selfish.
+She had taken whatever she wanted, without caring.
+But she had cared.... It hadn’t been easy to give up
+everything and come to Flagg. She wasn’t superior,
+as Flagg was superior, to humiliation.</p>
+
+<p>But now she saw what she had come for.</p>
+
+<p>She saw herself, little, defeated, having to start all
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_239">[Pg 239]</span>over again. She was humble, frightened. She saw
+that she could have nothing without earning it. And
+this revelation was like an unendurable light beating
+against her consciousness. There was no escape. Because
+the future held no happiness, the present was
+terrible, since it contained the essence of the thing she
+would go on wanting all the rest of her life. It was so
+precious, so elusive, so beautiful, and so inevitable.</p>
+
+<p>She could not bear to watch Flagg’s suffering. She
+sent for a physician who came out from Florence and
+was alone with Flagg for two hours. Lilah waited,
+her heart fluttering as if she, not Flagg, were going to
+die.</p>
+
+<p>When the two men finally opened the door and
+came out, Flagg was still smiling, but it was not that
+fixed, self-conscious smile Lilah had come to fear.
+He seemed relieved. The physician nodded casually
+to Lilah and drove away again, in a rickety cab, toward
+the city. Lilah thought: “He can’t be a great specialist
+and come in a <i>carozza</i>. I won’t believe anything....”</p>
+
+<p>Flagg said: “It’s all right, Lilah. I’m sorry you
+worried. I’ve got a chance. Only I’ll have to stop
+writing.”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah thought: “He’s not telling me the truth. He’s
+going to die and he’s glad of it.”</p>
+
+<p>After that she felt that everything was against her,
+even Flagg’s will to die. If he had really loved her,
+he would have wanted to live.</p>
+
+<p>She heard from Junius Peabody toward the end of
+December. The familiar, heavily embossed stationery
+post-marked Peabody’s Point bore her name and the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_240">[Pg 240]</span>frivolous address: “Villino Sans-Souci” in Junius’
+spidery hand. Lilah tore the envelope open with a
+feeling of impending crisis.</p>
+
+<p>She read:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>
+ “<span class="smcap">Dear Lilah</span>:
+</p>
+
+<p style="text-indent: 1em;">“Your letter, the first from you in over six months, contained
+no news of yourself. I wanted to know whether or
+not you had made a success of your experiment. Society
+has never been charitable to women who take happiness
+they are not entitled to. A few celebrated women of
+genius have escaped criticism because their contribution
+was superior to their ‘transgression.’ I am not preaching
+to you. In this day and generation there are no fixed
+standards of behavior. I am only complaining because
+there is something shoddy, to me, offensive, in a woman
+of your quality ‘taking’ life in a rented villa—one of that
+pathetic band of outlaws who play at respectability in the
+smaller cities of Europe. I admit my part in the affair.
+But I somehow had faith that you would send that fellow
+packing when you were well enough to recognize his peculiar
+selfishness. I cannot resist begging you to consider seriously
+returning with Robert. He will, as you request,
+meet you in Paris on the first day of January. I am enclosing
+the name and address of his lawyer there. I will
+see that your position, in America, is secured.”</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>He signed himself, characteristically: “Junius.”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah thought angrily: “Hypocrite! He wants me
+there, because I amuse him.”</p>
+
+<p>His own indiscretions had been made palatable,
+sugar-coated with secrecy. She was happier than he
+had ever been in his selfish enjoyment of women who
+had had to leave him because he was respectable. He
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_241">[Pg 241]</span>had spared Minnie’s Victorian sensibilities by carrying
+on an elaborate, an “artistic” deception....</p>
+
+<p>“I despise men,” Lilah said aloud.</p>
+
+<p>Flagg glanced up. “Why?”</p>
+
+<p>“Read this!”</p>
+
+<p>She tossed Junius’ letter across the breakfast table.</p>
+
+<p>Flagg’s expression was both contemptuous and embarrassed.
+When he spoke, his voice was unsteady.
+“It seems that your husband is, after all, going to let
+himself be divorced.”</p>
+
+<p>The question of money came up immediately. Lilah
+couldn’t go to Paris because there wasn’t enough
+money. They had spent their month’s allowance already
+and the January draft, which wouldn’t come
+until the tenth of the month, would have to be used
+to settle the December bills. “I could wire for a
+few hundred. I’ve never told you. This money is
+mine during my life-time. It comes from an estate
+held in trust for my younger brother who’s out in
+India. When I die, it goes to him. I could borrow
+on the future, but I don’t want to. I never have.”</p>
+
+<p>“But I’ve got to go. Think, darling, what it means!
+Surely, you aren’t jealous of Robert—now.”</p>
+
+<p>“No.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll have to see him. But it will be formal, embarrassing.
+The lawyer will explain things. And before
+you know it, I’ll be free.”</p>
+
+<p>Flagg turned to Junius’ letter. “I’m not sure. I
+hardly think it will be as simple as that. They’ll urge
+you to go back. They’ll put up all sorts of arguments.
+They’ll make it hard for you. I’d prefer that
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_242">[Pg 242]</span>you didn’t go.... Later, will be time enough.”</p>
+
+<p>He got up and came around the table, touching her
+hair, a caress that always stirred her to the heart, it
+was so unconsidered and gentle, the caress of a friend;
+it made her precious to herself. But now, in her
+eagerness, she drew away.</p>
+
+<p>“I must go! I want to marry you! Then, you can
+return to America, to the work you like. Or we can
+live here—properly. Be the sort of people you despise,
+upright, tipping-over-backward people! But
+we can always laugh at ourselves. We needn’t lose our
+sense of humor simply because we happen to be respectable....”</p>
+
+<p>She paused, scared by his look, aware of her failure,
+but sustained by a conviction that she was misunderstood.</p>
+
+<p>Flagg reminded her again that there was no money.
+“Only a few <i>lire</i>, unless I cable for more.”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah cried: “But I have some money! Lots of it.
+I meant to tell you. I sold my pearls.” She laughed:
+“Like the lady in the melodrama....”</p>
+
+<p>“I didn’t know you had any pearls.”</p>
+
+<p>“They weren’t becoming,” she said carelessly. “I
+prefer jade, or ivory—”</p>
+
+<p>“Were they valuable?”</p>
+
+<p>“I got seventy-five thousand <i>lire</i>.”</p>
+
+<p>“Good God.”</p>
+
+<p>Flagg turned abruptly and went to the window.
+He stood there looking out into a downpour of rain,
+at Florence, sodden and drenched.</p>
+
+<p>“The pearls were mine,” Lilah remarked. She felt
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_243">[Pg 243]</span>herself growing angry. She felt that she would lose
+her temper if he pressed her; say things she would
+regret. The old self wasn’t conquered. She despised
+criticism. She wanted to be thought right.</p>
+
+<p>Flagg turned. His face was dark again, but his
+feeling had driven the look of fear out of his eyes.
+He had forgotten himself. “You left the Peabody’s
+under circumstances that required the most absolute
+honesty. You should have come to me with the clothes
+you stood in. I forgave you the eight trunks full of
+finery—after all, your husband had no use for it, and
+you, apparently, did. It doesn’t matter, to you, who
+pays for the things you want, or whether you are
+giving value received. To me, it does matter....
+What we did might have been splendid. It isn’t! I’m
+as ashamed as you are. Because of these damned,
+petty things—this letter, for instance! And what
+you’ve just told me. The stinking ugliness of desire
+and compromise....”</p>
+
+<p>He got control of himself with a wrenching effort.
+“You’d better go to Paris. I’d rather compromise
+than be ashamed.”</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>Flagg went out and did not come back. She
+watched him hurry down the path to the gate, bending
+his head against a downpour of rain. She said
+bitterly: “You shouldn’t have spoken to me like that.”
+But he couldn’t hear, of course—the window was
+closed, and the rain beat against the ground with a
+harsh, rhythmic clatter, the noisy rain of southern
+countries.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_244">[Pg 244]</span></p>
+
+<p>Flagg disappeared up the road to Vincigliata, into
+the forest of young cypress trees.</p>
+
+<p>Lilah thought: “I ought to feel more than I do.”</p>
+
+<p>What had happened was too important for concrete,
+recognizable feelings. She couldn’t grasp it all at
+once. She was numb with misery. She went about
+the house doing unimportant things with great seriousness,
+an exaggerated attention. She put a book-shelf
+in order and cleaned Flagg’s study. The dust flew
+out of the window as she would have liked to shake
+out her thoughts, scatter them, get rid of them.</p>
+
+<p>At ten o’clock the casual servant who came in from
+a near-by farm appeared under a <i>contadino’s</i> green
+umbrella, like a big, wet lettuce-leaf on legs....
+Lilah was explicit, much more so than usual. She set
+the table herself, humming, “as if nothing had happened,”
+she reminded herself. She had the feeling
+that if she ignored what had happened it couldn’t be
+serious. But everything she touched seemed to be
+impermanent; knives and forks and plates had a sort
+of unreality.</p>
+
+<p>She went upstairs, frightened by the dread that
+clutched at her throat. But she must put off remembering.
+She would count the money—try to understand
+what Flagg had meant about her selling the
+pearls.</p>
+
+<p>She counted the bills, laid them in little piles, was
+relieved by their ordinary appearance. Surely Flagg
+hadn’t stopped loving her because of these little green
+notes.... She put them away, confident that she
+could make him understand as soon as he came in....
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_245">[Pg 245]</span>It was absurd for a man and woman in love
+with each other to quarrel over something petty....</p>
+
+<p>But she mustn’t think of that.</p>
+
+<p>Flagg did not come in for lunch. The sky was
+leaden, yellow, and the rain came down in solid sheets.
+She couldn’t bear to be alone in the house. That wet
+lettuce leaf stumbled down the hill. There was no
+one but Aphrodite in her niche, a painted goddess with
+gilded ringlets and heavy lids, the smile of a courtesan,
+the little hands of a child.... No wonder the poet
+had turned to warfare for sensation. Things. Things.
+Things. And nothing got you anywhere. First, you
+thought it was this and then that. And nothing satisfied
+the you that was personal and aching. Not even
+love. For then things like this happened....</p>
+
+<p>She thought: “I’ll go out. I’ll feel better if I go
+out.”</p>
+
+<p>She splashed down the road and stood, holding her
+umbrella against the rain, waiting for a tram.</p>
+
+<p>Twenty-five centesimi. Cheaper than a cab....
+She sat with the dripping umbrella pressed against her
+knees and stared at the people. An old man. His
+trousers were baggy at the knee and the skin of his
+hands was like brown corduroy. A young girl with
+bold, unwavering eyes stared back at Lilah; there was
+an imitation diamond ring on the first finger of one
+plump, red hand.</p>
+
+<p>The city closed around the street; great, drenched
+walls thrust up, cornices leaned over; people surged
+along the narrow sidewalks under a tossing and writhing
+of umbrellas; priests, fascisti with curled forelocks
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_246">[Pg 246]</span>like young game-cocks, like frizzed savages ...
+girls....</p>
+
+<p>Here and there a shop-window was lighted.</p>
+
+<p>Lilah walked through the square and across to the
+Tornabuoni.</p>
+
+<p>She went into a hairdresser’s establishment. A
+warm, sickish odor, perfumed, assailed her. She explained
+to a pale woman in pearl earrings and clinging
+black satin that she wanted a “wave.” Madame could
+be accommodated because, on a rainy day, there were
+many cancelations. Right here.... In this booth.
+<i>Subito!</i></p>
+
+<p>A small, blackish man removed Lilah’s hat. Her
+hair fell down on her shoulders and she thought with a
+stab of pain, acute, physical, of Flagg’s fingers, caressing,
+caressing....</p>
+
+<p>The marcel irons twirled. Did Madame want
+pompadour or straight back? It was becoming fashionable
+to clip the hair at the nape of the neck, close,
+like a boy’s.... It would be very becoming to
+Madame.</p>
+
+<p>Did this man love? Every one did, sooner or later.
+Why was it that the world wasn’t smitten with madness;
+would she ever be sane again.... She fingered
+the bottles on the dressing-table. Brilliantine. Rouge.
+Skin tonic. Pomade. <i>Mettre cette poudre avec la
+houppe, s’essuyer avec un linge....</i></p>
+
+<p>Sooner or later, she would have to question not only
+her reflection, that face, unchanged by dread and bewilderment,
+but Lilah, the woman. It wasn’t possible
+longer to avoid that encounter. She, herself, had
+failed.... <i>Not yet!</i></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_247">[Pg 247]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Madame has pretty hair. In French, we say
+<i>cendrè</i>—the colour of ashes.”</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>She found the English pianist in the drawing-room
+when she got back to the “Villino Sans-Souci.”</p>
+
+<p>“Hallo! I thought you’d give me tea. Beastly day.
+Where’s Flagg?”</p>
+
+<p>“He’s not here,” she said coldly. Suddenly she
+wanted to hurt Flagg. “I don’t know where he is.”</p>
+
+<p>The Englishman’s eyes grew round. He made a
+sound like a whistle. “I <i>see</i>! You’ve quarreled.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes.”</p>
+
+<p>Let him know it. It didn’t matter. Flagg was trying
+to frighten her.... She took off her hat and sank
+down on the divan. “I don’t want to talk. I want
+you to play for me. Something strange, ugly. I see
+now why modern art is out of balance and discordant
+and crooked—the world is sick at its soul. When
+you’re sick at your soul you don’t want beauty. You
+want something clever and horrible, like the evil in
+yourself.”</p>
+
+<p>The Englishman’s eyes, always flickering, as if there
+were little flames in them, blazed up. His lips parted.
+He was like a smooth, too fat faun smoking a cigarette.
+His eyes appraised her. And, for a terrible
+reason, Lilah was glad that she was beautiful. She
+tipped her head back so that he could see her throat.</p>
+
+<p>This man understood women; he pitied them and
+desired them; but they never loved him unless they
+had lost love; he had never known, never would know,
+the best of love, because he expected the worst of it.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_248">[Pg 248]</span></p>
+
+<p>Suddenly he jumped up and went to the piano. “I’ll
+play you the Saint-Sebastien; I know your real mood
+is religious, not evil at all! A woman of your experience
+buries each amour with a <i>Te Deum</i>.”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah wanted to tell him that she had had no experience,
+but she knew that he wouldn’t believe her.
+Her life with Robert, with Flagg, had never really
+changed her; she hadn’t loved Robert, and Flagg
+hadn’t loved her; when people spoke of experience
+she supposed they meant that dedication of self which
+is spontaneous, mutual, irrevocable....</p>
+
+<p>“Stop! I can’t bear that sort of music.”</p>
+
+<p>He spun around, seized another cigarette. “Then
+we’ll talk. I’ll cheer you up. Poor, lonely, adorable
+Lilah.” He sat, too close, on the divan. “What on
+earth possessed you to fall in love with a man whose
+mind is fixed on the primeval atom?”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah shrugged her shoulders. It was easy to say:
+“I don’t know! Why do we?”</p>
+
+<p>“You ran off, didn’t you? Cut loose? I’ve heard
+rumors—I beg your pardon, but things get about a
+small place like this. Infernal curious, most people.
+They like to eat a pretty woman up; crunch her bones.
+Now, if you were ugly as mud and fat and forty, they’d
+call you ‘emancipated.’ Waving the banner of personal
+freedom and all that sort of thing.... They’d
+make you out a martyr to unholy matrimony, meaning
+matrimony which is no go. But since you’re young
+and lovely—very lovely—they’re tearing you to bits
+down there.”</p>
+
+<p>“Are they?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_249">[Pg 249]</span></p>
+
+<p>“I’m no end sorry for you. Really.” His eyes said
+more. “Doing all this for a man who doesn’t appreciate—well,
+you—” his eyes said. But he was too clever,
+too wary, to put the thought into words.</p>
+
+<p>A bitterness surged up in Lilah’s heart. Six o’clock.
+And Flagg hadn’t come in. He might have taken a
+train to Rome. She saw him in Rome walking up a
+street in the rain, wearing that fixed smile, alone. Or
+Milan. Another picture. Only this time, she saw him
+sitting in a hotel bed-room in his shirt-sleeves....
+He might have died, up there in the cypress grove.
+He might, even now, be lying on the soaked ground,
+his face pressed into the sodden leaves.</p>
+
+<p>She got up. “I think you’d better go,” she said.
+“I want to be alone. If you don’t mind.”</p>
+
+<p>The Englishman rose. She was too miserable to
+sense the danger. He stayed, looking down at her.
+And then he caught her shoulders, pressed her against
+him and kissed her. She could feel the softness of
+his body. She shivered, gasped and pushed him away.
+She hated him.</p>
+
+<p>“Abominable!” she said.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, very well.”</p>
+
+<p>With a gesture of contempt, as if it really mattered
+very little, he got his hat and went out, slamming the
+door.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>She went upstairs, followed by the black cat and
+the only one of the kittens they had saved. It, too,
+was black, with eyes like jewels and an incredibly
+thin, flexible tail. The cats did not seem to know or
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_250">[Pg 250]</span>to care whether Lilah suffered, and she wanted them
+to know; she said: “You little brutes! Don’t frisk!
+I can’t bear it!” But they frisked on the gondola-bed,
+over it and under it, scratching and leaping, as if nothing
+had happened.</p>
+
+<p>Lilah undressed. Then, in a warm negligée, banded
+with fur, her hair under a sort of gypsy cap made of
+purple chiffon, she went into Flagg’s room and peered
+at his things, his brushes, his coats, on hangers, his
+handkerchiefs, in neat piles. She touched everything,
+sensing his dear person.... She would wait until
+eight o’clock, and then, if he hadn’t returned, she
+would go out, alone, and look for him in those dark
+woods.</p>
+
+<p>Eight o’clock came, but she didn’t dare to go out.
+She got into bed, instead, and lay in the dark, listening
+to the rain. She was terribly afraid. Life was
+inimical again, and she had lost faith in herself, in her
+ability to be pert and to win success with the misty
+quality of her loveliness. Accepted things, long-established
+ideas, convictions, had failed. There was nothing
+to go on.... She began, reluctantly, almost with
+terror, to look herself straight in the face. She saw
+an image of herself, silly, vain, rushing in pursuit of
+unimportant things. Always things! And where
+had they gotten her?</p>
+
+<p>A motor, turning into the Vincigliata road, cast a
+swinging light through the windows, across the walls,
+across Aphrodite, imponderable and secretive in her
+niche....</p>
+
+<p>Flagg!</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_251">[Pg 251]</span></p>
+
+<p>Her heart stopped.</p>
+
+<p>They might have come to tell her....</p>
+
+<p>No. The downstairs door opened, closed again, and
+she heard his footsteps, coming, coming....</p>
+
+<p>She thought: “He’s been cruel. I ought to punish
+him.” But she called him.</p>
+
+<p>She saw him in the doorway and summoned her
+half-glimpsed self with a passionate and peremptory
+cry. Flagg hesitated, a dim figure, silent, remote. Then
+he moved forward and, quivering, her nerves unsteady,
+she felt him leaning down over her. She could not see
+his face. She could smell the cloth of his coat, wet....
+And with a sudden lifting of her arms, she dragged
+him down to her. He had to kneel. His face pressed
+into her throat. Again she felt his hair, the shape of
+his head. He was warm and alive; he was all of life.
+How could she have doubted, questioned, hesitated,
+when this, this was the answer to everything—to be
+near him.</p>
+
+<p>“I thought you’d never come. I wanted to tell you
+that I’ll give the money to Robert, all of it. I understand.”</p>
+
+<p>Flagg said nothing. He sighed. His body relaxed.
+He pressed his face closer against her. His arms went
+around her.... Lilah could feel the two cats frisking
+over her feet, and she thought: “They know. I’m
+happy. I’m happy.”</p>
+
+<p>They clasped each other, for the first time, with
+that love which is pity and forgiving and ecstasy.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_252">[Pg 252]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="XI">
+ XI
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="dropcap"><span class="upper-case">Lilah</span> went to Paris.</p>
+
+<p>In a compartment on the Rome-Lausanne express,
+she sat with her chin in her hand, staring
+out of the window at the slow unrolling of the landscape,
+fields, towns, mountains, fields, towns and
+mountains. But she was conscious of being stared at
+from the corridor, and it was pleasant, even exciting,
+to attract attention, after six months of life in the
+country.</p>
+
+<p>Flagg had not been well, but he had reassured her:
+“I’m all right. Only hurry back. I’m going to miss
+you.”</p>
+
+<p>How strained and white his face had been when,
+at the station in Florence, he had followed the moving
+train for a way, looking up at her with a curious,
+unreadable expression.</p>
+
+<p>She thought: “He’ll be all right. I mustn’t worry.”</p>
+
+<p>And the further the train was from Florence—Bologna,
+Milan, Brigue—the more certain she became
+that Flagg was quite well. She could see him walking
+up the Vincigliata hill, whistling, swinging along with
+the gait of a man who had no enemy. She was comforted
+by this vision. The more she thought about
+it the more she believed in it. And the memory of his
+face at the train in Florence faded, was at length
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_253">[Pg 253]</span>forgotten, since she preferred not to remember. Later,
+she promised herself, she would remember.</p>
+
+<p>But now. Paris.</p>
+
+<p>Again she was at that crowded, noisy gateway to
+Paris, that sordid, ringing, clashing place full of people
+with bundles, porters with luggage, soldiers, nuns,
+tourists, a mad jumble of dingy, dusty, worried-looking,
+crumpled people all going somewhere and in a
+terrible hurry. Florence, everything to do with her
+life there, seemed unreal. How could she have let
+herself suffer so? How stupid of her! It was a mistake,
+dangerous, to concentrate oneself too much; it
+would do her good, do Flagg good, to break the thread
+of their intimacy; both of them had been overanxious
+to prove their right to each other. After all, who knew
+or cared whether they succeeded? Lilah hurried
+through the crowd, refreshed, as if bathed in that cool,
+manifold impersonality.</p>
+
+<p>She leaned forward in the taxi, staring at Paris,
+searching for some indication of recent wounds.
+None. None! The streets, shining in a thin, cold
+drizzle; a swirl of umbrellas; lights and kiosks; vistas
+converging; and that air of brittle gayety, that something
+precise, insouciant, perverse—the same! Lilah
+tapped on the window. “I’ve changed my mind. The
+Ritz.” For two days! Why not? But now she could
+laugh at herself. She knew that she was ridiculous; a
+<i>pension</i> would have done just as well! Only that she
+longed for warmth and color, the pageant, not without
+meaning, of the worldlings. This would be her
+last bow before the curtain. And that precarious few
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_254">[Pg 254]</span>hundred dollars cabled to Flagg after an interval of
+doubt, of suspense ... her last fling at luxury.
+Make-believe.... At least, Robert wouldn’t think
+that she had come down in the world! She could
+confront him clothed in the accepted garments of his
+kind, on common ground.... She would wire Flagg
+at once: “Ritz. Paris. Love. Lilah.”</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>When she saw Robert crossing the lobby of the Ritz
+with that vague, amiable, short-sighted manner, she
+was not surprised. This was the sort of thing that
+was bound to have happened, what, perhaps, she had
+hoped would happen.</p>
+
+<p>“Lilah! Well, I’ll be damned!”</p>
+
+<p>They confronted each other. Robert flushed. He
+laughed, offered his hand, remembered, and said miserably:
+“I suppose this is shocking. I’m awfully
+sorry.” But his question, immediate, with an accent
+of surprise, irritated her: “You’re staying here?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” she snapped. “Are you?”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m at the Meurice. I’m dining here with the Gaylords,
+but I can shift ’em, if you say. That lawyer
+needn’t know, and I want to talk to you.” He added:
+“I need to talk to you, Lilah.”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah considered. “I’ve only just come. I haven’t
+unpacked. I’m fearfully dusty.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll wait.”</p>
+
+<p>Something reminiscent twisted Robert’s face into a
+sort of grimace. “Oh, Lord, Lilah—Here we are!
+There’s no precedent—What am I supposed to
+say?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_255">[Pg 255]</span></p>
+
+<p>And, out of the past, Lilah flung back at him:
+“Something honest! I’ll dine with you, of course.”</p>
+
+<p>An admiring look came into Robert’s eyes. “Here,
+then, in an hour,” he said simply. “I’ll wait.”</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>Lilah was prompt. She found Robert, characteristically,
+exactly where she had left him. She thought,
+before he caught sight of her: “This is my husband.”
+And she gave him a quick, appraising look, trying to
+realize what he had been. She failed. He was some
+one she hadn’t known.... He turned, and in the
+meeting of their eyes there was an immediate recognition,
+a searching, reproachful, profoundly intimate
+encounter. Both of them trembled and pity ran
+through them. Lilah felt as if she could not, under
+any circumstances, speak to him.</p>
+
+<p>“Let’s go where we’ll be alone,” he said. “I know
+a place across the river—decent food, French—we
+won’t see any one we know.” He flushed again. “Oh,
+my lord—don’t misunderstand me. I’m not ashamed!
+Only I hate advertising my emotions.”</p>
+
+<p>In the taxi, drawn away from him, huddled in her
+furs, Lilah shivered. Life had never seemed more of
+a picture-puzzle; all the pieces lay about her, and she
+could not put them together again. The piece that
+was missing, the necessary piece—Freedom. It was
+the answer to everything. If she could find the meaning
+of freedom.... Every one to-day, old and young,
+cried out for freedom, to put their scattered picture-puzzle
+together with, to make it whole and reasonable
+and recognizable, something to enjoy. Every one
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_256">[Pg 256]</span>searching, picking up now this, now that, expedient
+and finding that nothing fitted, nothing matched....
+Freedom for oneself had been the cry of the generation.
+But was there such a thing? Weren’t people,
+lives, inextricably woven together, so that one experience
+involved another, one giving another, one selfishness
+another? She could never be free again because
+of this man at her side.</p>
+
+<p>She stole a look at his face. There was something
+pathetic in his expression, as if, he too, were groping
+for the missing fragment, baffled by the confusion of
+ideas and morals; pitying her, loving her, despising
+her, yet, in spite of himself, understanding her.</p>
+
+<p>They were afraid to say anything; afraid and miserable.</p>
+
+<p>The restaurant, Robert’s choice of a place where
+they’d not see any one, was half-way down a short,
+dark street. He had engaged a private room; before
+a coal fire burning in a shallow grate a table had been
+set for two. The room was small, of the eighteenth
+century, faded, crackled and mellow. And an old
+waiter in an enveloping apron took Lilah’s cloak with
+that paternal gesture which is the gift of inspired
+waiters, waiters of a certain persuasion, a genius, a
+<i>flair</i>. His exit was discreet, but promising, and when
+he returned, with <i>bisque</i> of crayfish, he offered it as an
+artist turns a canvas from the wall: “<i>Voila!</i>”</p>
+
+<p>Robert’s glance was beseeching. You couldn’t disappoint
+such a fellow as this waiter; he expected them
+to be jolly! Lilah felt this, too. A room so exquisite.
+The festive air imparted by the <i>bisque</i>, steaming in
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_257">[Pg 257]</span>real Sèvres bowls. Her gown, the last of the trousseau,
+a slip of metal cloth, girdled with flat emerald stones
+set in silver.... Suddenly, she felt smooth, like the
+<i>bisque</i>, exclusive and desirable. The walls of the little
+room seemed to shut her away from confusion in
+a world made secure by the tradition of elegance, by
+the permanence of all rare and lovely things. She felt
+again the conviction that she belonged peculiarly in
+this world; it was stimulating, just for an hour or two,
+to pretend that she had never left it. It was stimulating,
+also, to discover that Robert could still look
+at her as if he found her the most mysterious and delightful
+woman in the world. Perhaps he wanted her
+back, at any cost—She looked at him with that half-smile
+which means: “Do you forgive me?” But she
+waited for him to speak, to commit himself, because
+there was always the memory of Grace Fuller, in a
+gray dress and a clever hat....</p>
+
+<p>“Lilah,” he said suddenly. He stopped, as if appalled
+by his audacity. He stretched out his hand and
+she took it. They clasped hands solemnly, with scared
+looks. And the waiter, lowering his eyes, whisked the
+crayfish away and disappeared behind a silk screen
+decorated in the Fragonard manner.</p>
+
+<p>“Lilah,” Robert began again. He couldn’t go on.
+He squeezed her hand, held fast to it as if he would
+never let it go. “Isn’t this a nice place? Chew told
+me about it. The <i>filet</i> of sole’s famous—better’n
+Marguery.... Lilah....”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah wanted to laugh. She shook her head, instead,
+and tears came into her eyes; it was easy to cry nowadays.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_258">[Pg 258]</span>She wiped them away with the tips of her
+fingers. Then Robert said the one thing he should not
+have said: “It was all my fault, Lilah.”</p>
+
+<p>The waiter came in again, bearing a silver platter
+with a great dome of a cover. “<i>Filet Esterhazy</i>,” he
+announced. He looked as if he had presented them
+with an heir.</p>
+
+<p>Robert said: “Ah!” He loved good food. Lilah
+remembered how she had grown to wince inwardly
+whenever he leaned forward at the table with that
+look of dedication and rapture, that sort of hovering,
+like a gull over a floating morsel. She remembered
+the way he had of flapping his elbows, as if he were
+skimming down, close, to snatch the tid-bit; only, he
+never snatched; he ate slowly, with the peculiar relish,
+the rapt appreciation of the gourmet. “<i>Bon!</i>” he said
+in a loud voice. “<i>Tres bon!</i>”</p>
+
+<p>“<i>Merci, m’sieur!</i>”</p>
+
+<p>“You’ll want wine, of course, Lilah—champagne;
+what d’you say to champagne?”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah thought: “Just this once.” She nodded. In
+Florence they had red wine, thin and sour, if they
+had wine at all, wine that puckered her mouth, the
+strong, sharp wine of Dionysius. But this—a pale
+amber bubble, an eternal spring of levity and carelessness,
+of love and daring, of wit and dreaming....
+She lifted the glass and a little light danced on her
+bare arm, leaped to the table-cloth, frisked and quivered,
+a drunken little light....</p>
+
+<p>“I remember....” Robert began. He stopped.</p>
+
+<p>The waiter hurried away, as if he were saying: “One
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_259">[Pg 259]</span>moment! One little moment! I’ll leave you alone as
+soon as I can.”</p>
+
+<p>A perverse notion caused Lilah to say: “How is dear
+old Grace?”</p>
+
+<p>She could see the slow, inevitable flush, self-conscious,
+painful, the sudden mistiness of his eyes.
+Elaborately careless, he said: “She’s awfully well.”</p>
+
+<p>“Where is she?”</p>
+
+<p>“Now?”</p>
+
+<p>Robert drained his glass, set it down again. “At
+the Point.”</p>
+
+<p>“Your grandfather isn’t ill?”</p>
+
+<p>“No.”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah thought: “I see. He’s going to marry her.”
+And she felt a tightness around her heart.</p>
+
+<p>“Grace is awfully fond of you, Lilah.”</p>
+
+<p>“Is she?” Lilah smiled. “Are you going to marry
+her?”</p>
+
+<p>“Damn it all,” Robert cried. He pushed his plate
+away with a violent gesture. “No!”</p>
+
+<p>“Meaning you are,” Lilah said sweetly. “Meaning,
+it’s none of my business. But it is! After all,
+I’m your wife, my dear.”</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t be too modern, Lilah.” But in spite of himself,
+he smiled. Lilah couldn’t be sure. She smiled
+back at him while the waiter filled her glass again....
+They were all three playing a game. What if they
+should speak what was in their minds? The waiter
+would probably say: “It’s late. I’m tired. I want to
+be at home with my family, reading the newspaper by
+the lamp, with my tired feet in slippers.” Robert
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_260">[Pg 260]</span>would probably say: “I want you, and I want Grace,
+too. I don’t respect you. I love you and I want my
+freedom.” And she would say: “I love Flagg. But
+I’m afraid.” Because, it was true, she was afraid;
+she was at the mercy of her fear. She could not remember
+the wonderful self she had been a week ago,
+three days ago; it seemed far away, unreal, the self
+that had loved Flagg, that had promised to give seventy-five
+thousand lire to Robert, the self that had
+feared nothing, nothing. That self had fluttered away
+out of this warm, bright room, away from her body
+into the darkness outside and there it was waiting,
+mournful and alone, for Lilah. Which was Lilah?
+This, or that other?</p>
+
+<p>“<i>Salade, madame.</i>”</p>
+
+<p>A plate. A deep bowl. A wooden spoon. Lettuce.
+String beans, very green. How did the French do it?
+And a dressing flavored faintly with garlic.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m going into my grandfather’s business,” Robert
+said. He mixed the salad thoroughly, tossing and stirring
+it, his face intent. “Seriously. I had to do something.
+I found that sitting in the shade wasn’t
+enough; I had to plant some trees of my own. You
+remember what Dave Harum said about a dog and his
+fleas....” He paused to stare at the salad. Then
+he said suddenly: “It was a good thing you left me.
+Good for me, I mean.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh.”</p>
+
+<p>“I was counting on you to make something of me.
+It’s a damn sight more fun to make something of myself.
+A rum world, Lilah. We’re put here for some
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_261">[Pg 261]</span>reason. I didn’t used to think so. Now I know! I’m
+not inquiring the reason. It’s enough to be sure that
+the lessons we learn aren’t wasted.”</p>
+
+<p>“<i>Fromage, madame?</i>”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah looked at the creamy pie-shaped wedge of
+Camembert.... Robert was reminding her that she
+had failed. “<i>Oui</i>,” she said to the waiter. She must
+not let him sense her humiliation. She must make him
+see that she, too, was triumphant. And the image of
+Flagg, walking by the train as it pulled out of the station,
+assailed her. She said: “Mmm! Good cheese!
+Try it. Delicious.”</p>
+
+<p>“I prefer American cheese. They make a cheese
+in California—I’ve forgotten what they call it—a rich
+orange color, finely flavored....”</p>
+
+<p>“Then you’re glad I left?”</p>
+
+<p>He looked up. His eyes were startled. “No. I
+loved you.”</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t you love me now?”</p>
+
+<p>The waiter disappeared at the word love. The verb
+<i>aimer</i> ... <i>to love, I love, you love</i> ... these people
+were <i>amants</i>, after all.</p>
+
+<p>Robert got up. He came around the table. Lilah
+said nothing, did nothing to stop him. He came
+slowly, but his intention was in his deliberate gesture.
+And Lilah thought: “This is my worst self.” A wave
+of pity engulfed her; she closed her eyes. She
+wanted, wanted everything Robert could offer her;
+her mind flew back to the “Villino Sans-Souci”; she
+did not see herself in Flagg’s arms, submerged in that
+deep rapture; she saw herself, alone. She waited....
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_262">[Pg 262]</span>But Robert did not touch her. With a feeling
+of faintness, she opened her eyes again. Robert was
+standing just there, his napkin in his hand, as if he
+had been frozen. “You didn’t mean that, Lilah.”</p>
+
+<p>“Sit down! The waiter—”</p>
+
+<p>The waiter appeared, very sorry, with downcast
+eyes, just as Robert hurriedly regained his place. This
+time, the talented one bore a silver tray full of pastries,
+fat chocolate ones and long, snaky green ones
+and twisted ones full of cream, and pink ones upon
+which a devilish clever pastry-cook had painted
+flowers and bow-knots of sugar.</p>
+
+<p>“You haven’t told me about your grandfather,”
+Lilah said, in her special voice, eyeing the pastries as
+if she hated them. “The green one—that one—please.”</p>
+
+<p>“<i>Oui, madame.</i>”</p>
+
+<p>Robert answered that Junius was well. “Wonderful
+old chap! You can’t imagine how gratified he is
+that I’ve taken hold. He’d about given me up.”</p>
+
+<p>“I suppose Grace Fuller’s responsible?”</p>
+
+<p>Robert flushed again. He said nothing. Lilah
+smiled and stretched out her hand. “Cigarette, please.
+And don’t frown like that! Why shouldn’t you marry
+Grace Fuller if you want to? That’s why you’ve
+come to Paris, isn’t it? For her sake. Not for mine!
+One of the last things you said was that you’d never
+divorce me....”</p>
+
+<p>“Lilah....”</p>
+
+<p>At last the waiter was gone. They were alone in
+the room.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_263">[Pg 263]</span></p>
+
+<p>Lilah put the cigarette between her lips and tilted
+her head: “Light, please.” And while Robert struck
+the match she watched him, her eyes enigmatic. A
+quiver passed over his face. His hand trembled.
+“Lilah. Don’t.”</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t what?”</p>
+
+<p>“You’re trying to get at me. God knows why.”
+He tossed the match away. “After all, we have things
+to say that aren’t easy to say. It’s all very well to
+pretend that what we’re doing to-night is usual—it’s
+wrong, terrible, and I’m sorry we tried it. We’re
+married. That’s my ring, isn’t it? You left another
+man to come here with me and make believe before a
+waiter that we’re friends. Friends! Let’s be honest.
+We’ve failed at a great undertaking. We ought to be
+down on our knees praying for a chance to make
+good! I’ll take my half of the blame. Neither of
+us tried. I loved you. I still love you. I thought I
+didn’t. I told Grace Fuller that I didn’t. But she’d
+be the first to welcome us, if we were to go back together.”</p>
+
+<p>He paused, his hands, with the fingers interlocked,
+pressed violently together. “There’s such a thing as
+moral insensibility.... You’ve had your fling.
+What has it proven?”</p>
+
+<p>Before she could answer he went on: “What does
+that sort of thing prove to any one? No one will
+profit by our separation, not even Grace, because I
+love you, and she’ll know it.”</p>
+
+<p>“Happiness—”</p>
+
+<p>“A chimera of childhood! I’d like to blot the word
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_264">[Pg 264]</span>out of the language. You were after something for
+yourself—something ready-made, something you
+didn’t have to work for. What you had—me— Well—I
+want you to come back. Try again.”</p>
+
+<p>“Did Grace Fuller know that you intended to invite
+me, after what has happened, to go back where I
+will always be on suffrance—an object of suspicion,
+perhaps of amusement?”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t understand,” Robert said impatiently,
+“why you harp on Grace Fuller. The issue is between
+you and me.”</p>
+
+<p>“But if you promised her—”</p>
+
+<p>“I sometimes wonder whether you have forgotten
+that you are married to me—you behave as if you considered
+the whole thing an episode, both of us absolved—I
+haven’t promised anything.”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah got up. There was a divan near the fire, upholstered
+in shabby yellow sateen. Lilah’s cloak lay
+across the end, Robert’s overcoat, his muffler and
+gloves beside it. She thought: “How domesticated.
+Like Robert’s imagination. How can I make him
+understand when I don’t understand myself? She
+felt suddenly tired. The bubble of gayety had burst,
+was gone. She had a passing, a poignant regret at the
+inevitable bursting of all such pretty bubbles....</p>
+
+<p>“If I fail with you,” Robert was saying, “the whole
+past has been wasted. You can’t erase marriage by
+simply running away from it. Or, like the magician,
+by exchanging one marriage for another ... a sort
+of social legerdemain ... dangerous, because I believe
+once married always married.... I may be
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_265">[Pg 265]</span>old-fashioned. I dare say I am making myself ridiculous....
+These things go deeper than words. If I
+could make you see what I’ve seen....”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah wanted to say: “But I don’t love you.” She
+didn’t dare say it because there was something she
+wanted to hold to, a thread, a fragile link between
+herself and security. She recognized the ugly need of
+security; her own weakness made it imperative that
+she should hold Robert off until her own future was
+certain, until she had found the strength to admit that
+other self or to close that self out forever. A little
+time. If life only didn’t press you so....</p>
+
+<p>Robert followed; he, too, seemed to press close,
+although he stood some distance away, his hands still
+tightly pressed together in a curious attitude of supplication
+and misery. “You’re afraid of public opinion....
+At the Point, you have nothing to fear. We can
+prove, by the dignity”—he hesitated—“the decency
+of our lives that there is such a thing as courage. Both
+of us will need it, but not because of criticism; we
+were both born into a reckless society. You can’t tell
+black from white, nowadays! And yet—we’re like
+ships without rudders, drifting, drifting in the open
+sea, all pretending that we’re getting somewhere. We
+call it revolt; we call it breaking chains; we call it by
+a dozen high-sounding names, ‘reality’ among them.
+But none of us is satisfied.” He suddenly pointed at
+her and raised his voice. “You’re not!”</p>
+
+<p>“I am,” she said. “I have love.”</p>
+
+<p>Robert turned away. His face was drawn. He
+looked old. He went back to the table and poured out
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_266">[Pg 266]</span>another glass of champagne. The rattle of ice in the
+bucket, the clink of glass against glass, summoned the
+waiter who re-appeared, blinking, as if he had dozed
+off behind the screen. “<i>M’sieur?</i>” At once he began
+to clear the table, his sleepy look giving way to a half-smile,
+as if he were thinking of the embrace he had
+probably interrupted. But he wanted to go home.
+It was ten o’clock and his feet were tired.</p>
+
+<p>“Let’s go somewhere,” Robert said angrily. “We
+can’t talk here. And I’ve got to convince you—”</p>
+
+<p>He did not glance at the bill but paid it with the
+indifference to other people’s honesty which characterized
+him.</p>
+
+<p>“I have convictions,” he said in the cab. “I’m not
+the flaccid fish I appear to be. There was a time
+when I approved of men, and women, too, smashing
+down every door that kept them from experience. It
+was exciting to watch the new generation kicking convention
+in the face. It cleared things up, for a while.
+I foresaw a new race of straight thinkers, purged of
+fear. What you did didn’t shock me. It seemed
+necessary—”</p>
+
+<p>He turned to her, trying to read her face in the uneven
+flow of light. “Where’ll we go? We can’t ride
+around Paris all night.”</p>
+
+<p>“Let’s dance,” she said.</p>
+
+<p>“Dance?”</p>
+
+<p>After a hesitation, a silence she could not read, he
+rapped on the window and ordered the driver to take
+them to a club in the Bois. Lilah thought: “This will
+give me time.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_267">[Pg 267]</span></p>
+
+<p>At the club, a smart restaurant given over to a jazz
+orchestra and a dancing floor, food had taken second
+place. Lilah was stimulated by the rush of waiters,
+the whirl of dancers, the cascading crystal chandeliers,
+the monotonous and passionate rhythm of the music.
+Florence, the “Villino Sans-Souci” were part of a
+dream. She had dreamed of the melancholy weeks of
+rain, the somber, suggestive call of birds in the cypress
+groves. This was being awake. Her body came alive.
+She felt herself swaying to the provocative melody as
+Robert frowned at a card. “What’ll you have, Lilah?”
+“Anything!” While he ordered, she let her cloak slip
+away from her bare shoulders; instinctively, she fell
+into the attitude of fashionable unconcern. “Anything.”
+The rite of dining was lost in the need to
+dance. People came here to indulge their senses in
+the barbaric measures of a simple people unknown to
+them; the negroes, perspiring, hysterical, carried beyond
+themselves by their success, swayed, jerked,
+stamped, shouted. Their leader, holding a violin at
+arm’s length, played a melody; the voice of the instrument,
+thin, sweet and penetrating, rose above the
+relentless tom-toming of the drums, the frantic unceasing
+blare of horns, an accompaniment soulless and
+exciting.... In a pool of light, revolving, the dancers
+seemed beyond themselves. Other dancers, revolving,
+moved in the mirrors, silent, remote, like a company
+of ghosts....</p>
+
+<p>Robert said politely: “Will you?”</p>
+
+<p>They rose. He clasped her with a sort of shiver,
+almost a reluctance, and they were caught by the tide,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_268">[Pg 268]</span>whirled and buffeted. Lilah’s face was pressed against
+Robert’s shoulder. He noticed again the faint and
+seductive odor of sandalwood; he sensed the peculiar
+flexibility of her body—she had always seemed to be
+both fragile and powerful. He saw her eyes, wide
+with excitement, lifted to his face, scrutinizing him—did
+she love or hate him, or was she only trying to
+decide whether she could, after all, live with him
+again? “Wonderful music.” Robert’s clasp tightened.
+And he felt a deep pity, for her, for himself,
+for all these foolish, fatuous, bewildered people twirling
+around a polished floor in each other’s arms. “Yes,
+wonderful,” he said.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>At their table again, confronted by a chafing dish in
+which chicken and cream and mushrooms bubbled
+energetically, Robert remarked that he hadn’t any
+appetite. But Lilah had. “I haven’t been anywhere;
+I haven’t seen any one, or done anything, for six
+months.... I’m really enjoying myself. Am I
+wicked?” And she held out her plate. “I’m starved.
+Wolfish! What’s that they’re playing? We never
+hear anything in Italy except Neapolitan love
+songs and the ‘Merry Widow’ waltz. Jazz ...
+after all ... it’s my native music. It goes to my
+head.... You dance better than you used to, Robert....”</p>
+
+<p>She glanced up. Her expression changed; a look of
+panic flashed across her eyes. “People I know—”</p>
+
+<p>A flurry of women, slim, bare-armed, in the simple
+gowns of the period.... Aureoles of hair, short,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_269">[Pg 269]</span>frizzed.... Make-up.... The fashionable drawl
+of the young New Yorker....</p>
+
+<p>“Lilah! Robert! Of all the cool ones! Honeymooning
+in Paris.... What’s the plot? We thought
+you two had parted forever! Lilah, where’s the villain?
+Did you park him in Florence? What a lovely
+dress.... Poiret?”</p>
+
+<p>Chairs were brought. Three amiable and vivacious
+Frenchmen were presented to Lilah, to Robert. Bare
+shoulders, long white arms, manicured finger tips, a
+medley of perfumes, cigarette smoke.... “Have you
+been to—” “Have you seen—?” Talk crossed talk.
+Lilah, on her guard, but eager, eager, as if she were
+again drinking champagne, tasting the little golden
+bubbles of gayety. Poor Lilah! Robert pitied her and
+understood her; but more than ever he wanted her,
+because he divined, beneath the fixed and purposeful
+animation of her face, her profound confusion.</p>
+
+<p>The music began again after a pause no longer than
+a heart beat, and Lilah whirled away in the arms of
+one of the Frenchmen. Robert rose politely and
+claimed the girl at his right, a slim, arrogant young
+thing with sharp shoulder-blades and shingled hair;
+she had the misty, brushed-in eyes of an Oriental, the
+lips of an odalisque. “You don’t remember me, do
+you? I’m Marian Forsythe—I live near the inlet; we
+can see your house on clear days. I know your grandfather.
+Wonderful music, isn’t it? I’m over here
+with the Careys. Isn’t Paris awful in winter? We’re
+going to Algiers next week. I like to run away from
+things, don’t you? I get bored so easily.” She twisted
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_270">[Pg 270]</span>a little in his arms. He felt her hand, sharp, nervous,
+against his shoulder. “I must say I think Lilah’s a
+sport. She tried it out, anyway. I suppose she liked
+you best, after all. If more people were sensible about
+such things....”</p>
+
+<p>Robert interrupted sharply: “You don’t know anything
+about it.”</p>
+
+<p>He had an hysterical desire to shake her. If men
+didn’t protect girls like this against their own ignorance,
+the world would be better off. “I’m getting to
+be a damned reactionary,” he thought. “It may be
+progress, it may be transition—whatever it is, I’m out
+of it.”</p>
+
+<p>He was too angry to dance, but Marian Forsythe
+was inexhaustible. “Don’t be a grouch,” she advised
+him sweetly. “Lilah’s perfectly happy with Captain
+Romain. Let’s waltz.”</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>It was past three o’clock when he succeeded in getting
+Lilah away. The little group waited beneath the
+glass and bronze porte-cochère of the restaurant while
+a carriage-man in a white rubber overcoat pursued
+taxicabs, shrieking upon a tin whistle, vanishing and
+reappearing like an energetic ghost. A thin drizzle
+fell aslant the somber shadows of massed chestnut
+trees, tiny, broken splinters, glass-like, shivering out
+of a black sky. The women huddled in their wraps,
+their faces covered, their feet, in delicate slippers, exposed
+to the rain, to the sharp wind that whipped
+their floating chiffons about their ankles. The men
+were still fresh. Only Robert was tired, tired and
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_271">[Pg 271]</span>childishly disappointed. Everything—Lilah’s eight
+months away from him, his rage, his love, his idealism,
+all of it was stupid, futile, because of these people and
+their casual worldliness; as if suffering and loneliness
+and pride and longing were inconsiderable, as if nothing
+were real but the things he had grown to despise.
+How on earth could he make it clear to her that there
+could be no satisfaction for either of them until they
+had discharged their duty.... And, suddenly, he
+was too tired to try....</p>
+
+<p>That ghost of a carriage-man came panting back
+with a taxicab, and Robert selfishly took it for himself
+and Lilah. The others would have to wait. He
+hated them.... Lilah leaned against him. “I’ve
+had such a good time, Bobsie. I didn’t realize how
+starved I’ve been.”</p>
+
+<p>“You forget—you haven’t told me anything about
+yourself.”</p>
+
+<p>“Must I? Now? It’s so late.” She yawned. “I’m
+so sleepy!”</p>
+
+<p>Away down the boulevard, like a pale new moon,
+Robert saw the Arc du Triomphe. An irrelevant
+thought came to him. Even heroism was futile. Great
+gestures. Wasted. That soldier, unknown, who was
+buried there, wouldn’t he have been better off in his
+orchard, his shop, his palace? But this had nothing
+to do with Lilah, with himself. He pulled himself together.
+“What do you want me to do? I’ve got to
+know.”</p>
+
+<p>“Can’t we talk to-morrow?”</p>
+
+<p>“One thing I promise: If you decide to come back,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_272">[Pg 272]</span>I’ll never question you. I’m not magnanimous. I
+realize that you would hate me if I made you feel that
+I had forgiven you.... We’ll consider the past eight
+months erased.”</p>
+
+<p>“Not erased! Mine!”</p>
+
+<p>“As you please.”</p>
+
+<p>They sat very stiffly, scarcely breathing, not looking
+at each other.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>“Telegram for you, madam.”</p>
+
+<p>“For me?”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah took the thin envelope. Yes. “Mrs. Robert
+Peabody.” She got into the elevator. Two men and
+a woman stood there, laughing, while the car soared
+up—one, two, three—<i>Troisième</i>!</p>
+
+<p>“Madame.”</p>
+
+<p>She did not open the telegram until she had lighted
+the light by the bed and had thrown aside her wrap.
+She kept assuring herself that Flagg had answered her
+wire. Some such message as: “All well.” Or: “I
+miss you.”</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p style="text-indent: 1em;">“Advise your immediate return. Major Flagg seriously
+ill.</p>
+
+<p class="right">
+ “<span class="smcap">Bacci.</span>”
+</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Bacci! Who on earth was Bacci? Her heart contracted,
+expanded again. The doctor. That man who
+had come out to the Ponte a Mensola in a hired cab....
+She sat down, trembling. Her hands shook so
+that the thin paper envelope rattled.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_273">[Pg 273]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Seriously ill.”</p>
+
+<p>Dying. “Immediate return.”</p>
+
+<p>She thought: “While I was dancing.”</p>
+
+<p>She began to undress. She tore the fragile tissue
+because she hated it. She wanted to destroy the fact,
+to blot out the visible evidence, strip naked. She heard
+herself sobbing.... A curious, unfamiliar sound, as
+if some one else were sobbing in another room. Her
+eyes were dry. She took her hair down and placed
+the pins in a neat pile. She must start at once; she
+must get to him. “Because,” she said aloud to her
+reflection, “I love him.” Now, she knew, Flagg
+wouldn’t believe her. If she got there; if she was in
+time—something about her would show him that she
+had forgotten, that she had betrayed herself, and he
+would say: “I never believed.” And he would go
+away, without her. That seemed the most terrible
+possibility of all—that at the end his eyes might shut
+her out....</p>
+
+<p>She glanced at her watch, wound it carefully. “I’ll
+bathe, dress. By that time it will be daylight and I
+can make arrangements.”</p>
+
+<p>But when she was dressed, her veil adjusted, everything
+packed, it was still dark. She threw the window
+wide open and leaned on the sill, conscious of a cool
+current of air, a dampness rising from the wet pavements.
+A single pedestrian down there crossed the
+street at an angle, wavering, as if uncertain of a destination,
+and she thought: “I am like that.” The
+night is so intimate. She was alone with the night.
+Paris seemed a little place, all the lives gathered under
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_274">[Pg 274]</span>that roof of darkness, all the lives helpless, pathetic
+in sleep, their defenses down. “I am alone.” Not
+since her father died had she been so alone. And she
+was afraid, afraid of death, of what she might be
+going to see, of the way that doctor would look at her,
+of Flagg, struggling with his enemy, alone. Every
+one was alone. Alone and afraid. She felt suddenly
+that she could not go to Florence. She would tear
+up the telegram, pretend she hadn’t heard, and they
+would wire her that it was over, Flagg was dead....</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>But even then the sky seemed to deepen, to become
+more dense, blacker. And a shaft of light sprang to
+the apex, opened, like a fan. Dawn.</p>
+
+<p>Immediately there was a stir in the city. A stir of
+sparrows in the eaves. A stir of little, skulking people
+in the alleys. A stir of smoke from innumerable
+chimneys.</p>
+
+<p>Lilah got to her feet. She was shivering. Because
+she saw that if she kept Robert off, prevaricated, perhaps
+promised him that she would return, there would
+be a way back, out of that other darkness, later....</p>
+
+<p>But Flagg was in Florence, alone. She saw him,
+lying on his right side, with his arm under his head,
+struggling silently, not saying a word—as if he and
+his heart crashed together, like two dark, insane men
+on horses, tilting, splintering against each other, again
+and again.</p>
+
+<p>She ought to go to Flagg, because she loved him.
+Why had God made her afraid of ugliness? Flagg
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_275">[Pg 275]</span>was ugly because he was suffering. If she could only
+be spared! If only she didn’t have to go!</p>
+
+<p>She went to the telephone. “What time is it?”</p>
+
+<p>She had meant to ask about trains. “<i>Cinq heures
+et demie, madame.</i>”</p>
+
+<p>She put the instrument down again and sat on the
+bed, rocking back and forth with her arms folded, as
+if she were trying to put her thoughts to sleep. The
+room was still dark. The windows were gray. A
+hum rose from the streets, a silvery clink of chains
+along the wet asphalt.... She was envious of any
+one going anywhere.... Only not to be herself.</p>
+
+<p>For an instant she was in Florence; she could smell
+the damp plastered walls of the house; the odor of
+wet stone and moss and verbena from the garden;
+Flagg’s pipe. A pang of memory. Herself, dragging
+Flagg down to her. The feel of his hair, furry, cool.</p>
+
+<p>“I love him so!” she said again, aloud.</p>
+
+<p>But to be poor. To be back where she had started,
+only weaker. A woman who couldn’t do anything, a
+fool, a pretty fool.</p>
+
+<p>If Flagg died, he would never know that she had
+promised Robert....</p>
+
+<p>Then why not lie?</p>
+
+<p>Because she couldn’t.</p>
+
+<p>She was afraid of life itself. She wanted to hide
+behind pretenses, behind beauty, behind her own charm,
+behind what Robert offered her. But she would have
+to go to Florence and watch Flagg die. Something new
+and wonderful was being born in her—that other self
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_276">[Pg 276]</span>was thrusting up, like a plant, like the beginnings of a
+great tree, through the frightened Lilah that crouched
+on the bed.</p>
+
+<p>There was no use in going back to the Point, to the
+warmth of that fireside, because she had never believed
+in it; it had never, from the beginning, been
+hers.</p>
+
+<p>The only thing that had ever happened to her that
+belonged wholly to her was that moment in the dark
+when Flagg had sighed against her breast and the cats
+had frisked over her feet. That moment was hers.
+She had made it. She had created it out of pain
+and longing and honesty.</p>
+
+<p>It was time that she stopped pretending.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>She wrote hurriedly to Robert:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>
+ “<span class="smcap">My dear Robert</span>:
+</p>
+
+<p style="text-indent: 1em;">“Thank you. But I must go back to Florence. You
+have been very kind. Later, if you want a divorce, I will
+do everything to help you. I am leaving your grandmother’s
+emerald crown, the bracelet and some money in
+the care of the hotel management, with the understanding
+that you will call for them and identify yourself. The
+money I got for the pearls. I was foolish and wrong. But
+I can’t buy them back for you. I’m sorry.</p>
+
+<p class="right">
+ “<span class="smcap">Lilah.</span>”
+</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>She addressed the envelope and sealed it. She felt
+very small and unimportant, burned out, dry; she
+must look, at last, definitely old. She went to the
+telephone again, and, this time, she asked about trains.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_277">[Pg 277]</span></p>
+
+<p>The compartment was crowded. People kept popping
+in and out, asking questions, shouting, losing
+their heads, kissing noisily. “<i>Au ’voir! Au ’voir
+maman!” “Mignon!</i>” “Here’s your bag. And the
+fruit. I’ll put them here.” “Take care of yourself.”
+Anxious faces, detached, drifting along the platform,
+looking in or looking ahead, eagerly, as if everything
+counted on their getting somewhere. Here was life
+again—so terribly important and silly! Lilah sat by
+the window, her veil thrown back, staring out. She
+half expected to see Robert, pale, distraught, determined,
+searching for her in the crowd. “Here you
+are!” And it would be taken out of her hands. He
+would make her turn back; he would make her see
+that what she had intended to do was wrong. Robert
+didn’t come. An Englishman in a trench coat
+with shabby shoes searched and searched for some
+one. His eyes were like a dog’s and his pinched,
+brown face was puckered with longing. At last he
+saw whoever it was. “<i>There you are! Hallo! Just
+in time!</i>” And he leaped into one of the compartments
+with a bound.... Life was such fun for the
+living, for those who believed in it....</p>
+
+<p>The train was moving. A telegraph boy rushed
+past, shouting: “<i>Madame de Lattre!</i>” But no one
+paid any attention to him. The Englishman leaped
+down again, his face very red, his eyes afire, and
+snatched off his hat. “<i>Good-by! Good-by!</i>” Steam.
+A flood of sunlight. Darkness again.</p>
+
+<p>“Would madame object?”</p>
+
+<p>And the little Frenchman in the corner of the compartment
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_278">[Pg 278]</span>got up, stepped politely but firmly over every
+body and closed the window.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>It was raining when the train drew into the Santa
+Maria Novella Station at Florence. Dusk was shutting
+down, blotting out the towers, as if snuffing lighted
+candles; one by one they disappeared. Lilah had been
+closed in a compartment with four soldiers, noisy,
+self-conscious <i>bersaglieri</i> who had angled for her attention
+all the way down from Bologna. She had
+sat like a stone, with her eyes lowered. One of the
+soldiers had kept looking at himself in a little mirror;
+he combed his hair with a small, steel comb and
+smoothed his eyebrows. He wanted her to admire
+him. Whenever he said anything, his black, polished
+eyes rolled in her direction....</p>
+
+<p>The train seemed to disgorge its passengers; it was
+like a long, spiney dragon vomiting people. People
+spilled from the open doors, mingled on the platform,
+crashed together—and through it all porters bawled
+“<i>facchino</i>!” One of them snatched at Lilah’s bag,
+her coat, her umbrella, angrily, with determination,
+and rushed toward the cab-stand, shoving his way
+through the crowd. Lilah cried, “Don’t hurry!” But
+he paid no attention, because, if he hurried, he knew
+he could get other customers and more pennies. A
+row of cabbies had backed into the square; they
+snapped their whips and shrieked at Lilah as she hurried
+after the implacable porter through the rain.
+Everyone was conspiring to get her to the Ponte a
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_279">[Pg 279]</span>Mensola ... if only there hadn’t been any cabs, a
+delay, somehow....</p>
+
+<p>She tipped the angry porter and the cab jerked
+forward, bouncing over the cobbles, bouncing, bouncing.
+The cabman’s umbrella dripped on Lilah’s feet.
+Had it been raining for five days? The rain frightened
+her; it was sullen and unkind, a purposeful torment.
+Puddles bubbled, the sidewalks were covered
+with tiny silver explosions and the great eaves poured
+out amber floods that gurgled in the gutters. And
+now it was dark.</p>
+
+<p>“Seriously ill.”</p>
+
+<p>Was Bacci with him? Who was with him? What
+should she do? She asked herself suddenly and
+sharply what she should do if she found him dying?
+And at the thought, she wanted the cabman to say
+that he couldn’t go on. She wanted some one to keep
+her from what she must see and do. But the cab
+jolted forward, turning corners recklessly, clattering
+over car-tracks, rolling smoothly, unexpectedly, on
+stretches of asphalt. Lilah stared out at the people
+and the lights, at faces caught and fixed in a brief
+immobility. She tried not to remember what was
+so precious and terrible. Yet her thoughts were unconquerable,
+rapacious; they fastened on her consciousness,
+and at last she sank back, defeated.</p>
+
+<p>Love.</p>
+
+<p>The word challenged her. She struck it away. She
+beat it back. It seemed to her that from the beginning
+she had been a prisoner, a woman too conscious
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_280">[Pg 280]</span>of herself, tormented by herself, fascinated by herself,
+like that coxcomb of a <i>bersagliere</i>. If she could
+escape from herself, she might find what she craved,
+the freedom she must have or—But when you needed
+to know these things, you were too selfish, too happy to
+know them! When you were happy, the debt piled
+up and you were asked to pay it when you no longer
+cared.</p>
+
+<p>The rain, incessant, indifferent, slanted out of a
+black sky.... A tram, brilliantly lighted, passed
+with a rumble, and Lilah glimpsed a row of people,
+unconscious of her, laughing and talking. A baby
+pressed its nose against the window spangled with
+big, white drops, like quicksilver, and the baby’s
+nose was flattened, pressed out of shape ... the tram
+passed, and Lilah was alone again in the darkness of
+the cab. She began to listen, attentively, to the clop
+of the horse’s hoofs on the wet pavement, as if, absorbed
+in that rhythmic, hollow sound, time would
+stretch out, and she would never, never arrive at her
+destination....</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>The cab lurched. They were on the dirt road,
+turning across the bridge, beginning the sharp climb
+... a light in the window!</p>
+
+<p>“Hurry!” she cried out.</p>
+
+<p>She stood in the rain, her hands shaking, to pay
+the cab man. He swung himself down, grunting. It
+was a long drive out from the city on such a night,
+and his horse was tired.... He struck a match
+and scrutinized the coins Lilah gave him. What on
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_281">[Pg 281]</span>earth was one supposed to tip; he looked disgusted—she
+gave him an extra five lire and he thanked her,
+as if he had been cheated and taken advantage of
+by a foreigner. “Good-night.”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah opened the gate and stumbled up the path
+between the cypresses. The great pointed trees, so
+old, so quiet, so superior to the brief and unimportant
+tragedies of men, shook down a heavy splattering
+of rain....</p>
+
+<p>The door opened. A strange silhouette against the
+light....</p>
+
+<p>“I have been expecting you.”</p>
+
+<p>“Can I see him?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes.”</p>
+
+<p>She searched this man’s face. Behind glasses, his
+eyes were curious and tender. “I’ll take off my things.
+I’m wet and cold.” He seemed to be bowing, standing
+aside to let her pass. She went upstairs and the doctor
+followed, quietly, as if there were no hurry. No
+hurry at all. This struck her as ominous. But she
+did not dare to ask how Flagg was. Something prevented
+her from questioning the doctor, from, even,
+looking at him. At the top of the stairs she paused,
+stricken with fear. “Which—which room?”</p>
+
+<p>He pointed. “In there.”</p>
+
+<p>In his own room! She turned to her door, opened
+it, went in and faced her mirror. It seemed necessary
+to remove her hat, to go in to Flagg hatless....</p>
+
+<p>She powdered, rouged, touched her lips with a perfumed
+stick of carmine paste.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_282">[Pg 282]</span></p>
+
+<p>In the hall, the doctor was waiting, his hands in
+his pockets.</p>
+
+<p>“<i>Signora</i>,” he began.</p>
+
+<p>Lilah threw out her hands. “No. Don’t tell me.
+I can’t bear any more. I want to see him.”</p>
+
+<p>She pushed him aside and went in.</p>
+
+<p>How tall he was. She had forgotten, in five days,
+how tall he was. His head, dark, round, rumpled,
+was deep in the pillow. Some one had put a newspaper
+over the light.</p>
+
+<p>For no reason, with a rush of feeling, she was proud
+to be coming back to him. It was all right. She
+was safe. She had been decent. She had done what
+he expected of her. Now, perhaps, he would let her
+into his eyes....</p>
+
+<p>She tiptoed. She stood over him.... Asleep.</p>
+
+<p>She touched his hand.</p>
+
+<p>He was mischievous in sleep, a satyr again, smiling....</p>
+
+<p>“Signora.”</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly she turned and ran back, away from the
+bed. Her legs moved strangely; her arms jerked.
+“I can’t bear it.” Yet he was beautiful, beautiful
+in death....</p>
+
+<p>“He died an hour ago, <i>Signora</i>. I am terribly sorry.
+I did everything—possible.”</p>
+
+<p>Through a burst of tears, uncontrollable, humiliating,
+an agony of tears, Lilah cried: “I’ll go back to-morrow
+and look at him.... Not now! Don’t ask
+me to, now! Is he dead?”</p>
+
+<p>The doctor nodded. “An hour ago,” he repeated.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_283">[Pg 283]</span></p>
+
+<p>Lilah went downstairs. The doctor had been sitting
+in Flagg’s chair by the desk and a cigarette still
+burned in an ash-tray. He had been reading some
+of those scattered sheets of manuscript, Flagg’s last
+work. Now he stooped and gathered them up, without
+self-consciousness or apology. “A remarkable
+mind,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>Lilah huddled in a corner of the divan, dabbing
+at her eyes with a handkerchief. She shivered. Her
+teeth knocked together. Yet behind the atrocious confusion
+of her thoughts she was grateful that she had
+not arrived two hours sooner. Another idea fought
+to the surface, seemed to explode in her brain, to
+shatter her—she was alone. She had lost love....
+And she saw herself, night after night, endless, identical
+nights, lying in her bed, her body rigid beneath
+the bed-covers. She had so little to remember and
+so much time to remember in—her experience reduced
+itself to that one victorious moment when Flagg had
+loved her without question—and there was no comfort
+in remembering....</p>
+
+<p>“I cannot offer my sympathy,” the doctor was saying,
+“in the usual terms. I understand so well what it
+means to find oneself alone, the physical self cheated
+of the comforting reality, the spiritual self unaccustomed....
+Later, a week, a month, a year, it will
+be more difficult for you. Then, suddenly, you will
+find relief—in work, new interests, another love.”</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t!”</p>
+
+<p>He spread out his hands. “Inevitable! This man
+has gone. But you remain. You must progress. Your
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_284">[Pg 284]</span>education, if you will permit me to say so, is not
+complete. His, I dare say, was....”</p>
+
+<p>He put the typewritten pages back on the desk.
+“Tell me about him.”</p>
+
+<p>He leaned forward, offering a curious, leather cigarette
+case. “You smoke?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes.”</p>
+
+<p>She saw his hand as he held the match for her,
+a hand at once sensitive and acquisitive; there was a
+large ring on one of the fingers, and Lilah thought:
+“How Italian!”</p>
+
+<p>“You’re shivering. Give me your hands. Steady
+now! You mustn’t let go, <i>signora</i>. It’s devilish hard
+to pull oneself back.”</p>
+
+<p>“You speak English very well.”</p>
+
+<p>“My mother was English. But I was born in Persia
+and educated in Germany. Ah. Your pulse is better.
+Breath. Deep. Deeper! That’s it. Now,
+smoke? Later, I’ll get some coffee for you. I let
+the servant go. But I have made myself very much at
+home here.... I used to know your poet. Before
+his exile, he was an extravagant host. A charming, innocent
+fellow who enjoys his evil reputation. He is,
+actually, religious, but he is ashamed of his inclination
+and attempts to deceive us with abominable clap-trap....
+You’re all right. All right.”</p>
+
+<p>“You’ll stay here to-night?”</p>
+
+<p>“Of course.”</p>
+
+<p>“It is very kind of you. I can’t help shivering.
+Something in me is whirring—like a wheel—”</p>
+
+<p>She had to try, at least. She was ashamed to shake
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_285">[Pg 285]</span>and chatter before this stranger. He drew up a chair
+and sat before her, with his elbows on his knees. Then,
+for the first time, she looked at him. He was short
+and had ginger-colored hair and a ginger-colored beard
+streaked with gray. His face was lean; the skin
+was dry and tight, drawn over the bones so that you
+saw the structure, the modeling, extraordinarily precise
+and fine. His eyes were the color of moss agates,
+small, brilliant and inquisitive.</p>
+
+<p>“I think I can sleep,” she said abruptly.</p>
+
+<p>Her lids were heavy. She stopped trembling and
+yawned. Her head fell back against the cushions.
+She felt the doctor’s eyes, appraising her, but she
+could not meet the attack. Nothing was left of her
+audacity. This drowsiness was like a drug. And
+little by little consciousness of what had happened
+slipped away. She would start, gasp, reach out for
+that certainty, only to have it evade her, to have it
+submerged in great waves of sleep.... She struggled
+to recall what it was that needed remembering,
+what it was that was gone.... Nothing remained
+but the face of the doctor, thrust forward, still and
+absorbed. Suddenly it was jerked away and she
+sank down, down, into sleep ... for hours.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>She woke again. It was dark. The windows
+showed, black squares, save one, where the lamp was
+reflected, seeming to burn steadily and brightly both
+within the house and without. The doctor had not
+moved. “How long have I slept?”</p>
+
+<p>“About three minutes.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_286">[Pg 286]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Oh.”</p>
+
+<p>Then she remembered. Flagg was gone. She would
+never again feel his arm beneath her head, the tightening
+of the muscles in his shoulder, the weight of his
+sleeping body against hers.</p>
+
+<p>She sat up. And instantly the doctor got to his feet.
+“I’ll make coffee. Wait. Don’t move.”</p>
+
+<p>He was gone. What a strange man. What did
+he think of her? Whom did he imagine her to be?
+Would he question her? What would happen, now?</p>
+
+<p>She went to a mirror and stared at herself, surprised
+to discover that she was the identical Lilah;
+again, she sensed a peculiar, penetrating delight in
+the witty outlines of her nose....</p>
+
+<p>Strange, that in moments of tremendous meaning,
+meaningless things demanded attention. She was
+more aware of the things in the room—chairs, tables,
+ornaments—than of the body upstairs. The chairs
+were somehow strange and terrible at that hour—they
+were like listening people, spying people, ready
+to say in sharp, unnatural voices that it was late—turn
+out the lights ... let us sleep, let us dream
+in the shadows, our dark, mysterious dreams....</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_287">[Pg 287]</span></p>
+
+
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="XII">
+ XII
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="dropcap"><span class="upper-case">The</span> days that followed were too crowded to
+hurt very much. A procession of strangers
+came to the “Villino Sans-Souci”; Lilah was
+questioned, with respect, with pity, with impudence,
+with disdain. She discovered that she knew nothing
+of Flagg’s family, his affairs. Cables were dispatched
+to his bank and, after a delay, a dry, unemotional
+and explicit reply was received, not by Lilah, but by
+the Florentine bank which had handled the small
+matter of Flagg’s account. Lilah was visited by an
+Anglo-Italian who wore a white Imperial in the flamboyant
+manner of Maximilian and who gesticulated
+with small, self-conscious hands in black kid gloves.
+She was, he informed her, to leave Flagg in Italy,
+since there was no one to receive him in America.</p>
+
+<p>“Then I am not to be consulted?” she demanded
+with a smile that should have humiliated him.</p>
+
+<p>He shrugged his shoulders. “Those were our instructions,
+<i>signora</i>.” He rose and bowed, his eyes
+veiling their curiosity, his attitude a discreet expression
+of admiration. “We are also instructed to meet
+any expense—any necessary expense.”</p>
+
+<p>“I suppose you mean that I am to get back to
+America any way I can.”</p>
+
+<p>“I suggest that you wire your own bank, <i>signora</i>.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_288">[Pg 288]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Oh, yes,” she said crisply. “Of course! I was
+not referring to money but to the indifference of Mr.
+Flagg’s family.”</p>
+
+<p>Those little, initiated, trained hands made a gesture
+disposing of families. “The world is cruel, <i>signora</i>.
+If there is anything I can do for you, call upon me.
+I am not indifferent to distress. Permit me to say
+that I am more than sorry—”</p>
+
+<p>When he was gone, she wandered from room to
+room, from window to window, peering out at the
+black sky, at the drenched cypresses, the bedraggled
+arbor. The little cat asked to be let in. “I must find
+a home for you,” Lilah said. Because, like Lilah,
+the little cat loved soft and beautiful things, she was
+forever crying at closed doors, begging to be let in
+to warmth and light. But no one cared, because it
+is not enough to love soft things, beauty—</p>
+
+<p>The house-agent, rattling his keys, interrupted her.
+He had an air of relishing the situation and there was,
+at the same time, something sly and insinuating in his
+manner. He stared, immediately, at everything as
+if he expected to find that some of the furniture had
+been removed. He asked whether Lilah intended to
+remain at the “Villino Sans-Souci,” which had been
+leased by the “poor gentleman” for a year.</p>
+
+<p>Lilah realized, with a shock of positive terror, that
+she must leave the house at once.</p>
+
+<p>“An English gentleman is most anxious to take the
+house. Perhaps, next week—to be precise, Wednesday—the
+<i>signora</i> will surrender the property?”</p>
+
+<p>Afraid of his eyes, Lilah said: “I cannot move before
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_289">[Pg 289]</span>the first of the month. The rent is paid until
+then.”</p>
+
+<p>This was a mistake. The agent repeated that his
+English client must take possession at once—or find
+another, suitable house. It was not a simple matter
+to find tenants for houses in the country, the <i>forestieri</i>
+preferred, as a rule, the life and gayety of the city.
+“As for me, <i>signora</i>, I would die of the melancholy
+in this place.”</p>
+
+<p>“Wednesday, then,” Lilah said. She shut him out
+with a weary gesture.</p>
+
+<p>Where on earth should she go? Now, of course,
+she could not ask Robert, or Junius, for money. She
+had burned her bridges.</p>
+
+<p>She packed Flagg’s things, vaguely intending to
+give them to some one who might need them—the
+farmer next door or that tall idiot boy who lived over
+the hill, the one who could imitate the birds and sat
+all day calling them, delighted by his own cleverness.
+Lilah could not kiss Flagg’s things, or caress them.
+Some women might have, but they would not have
+been the kind of women who love deeply. Lilah shook
+his clothes out, folded them, with a sort of frozen
+indifference, as if they had belonged to some one else.
+She had had her hour of bravery, alone with him.
+She had sat with death. No one, not even David Brenner,
+could call her a coward now.... But at the
+end, Flagg’s eyes shut her out. He had gone away
+without her, still cherishing his secrets.... Selfish....
+The word rang in her ears.</p>
+
+<p>She got up, went quickly downstairs and to his
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_290">[Pg 290]</span>desk where that little heap of manuscript lay untouched.
+She began to read eagerly, hearing his
+voice in every word.... How long would it be
+before she would forget his voice? How long must
+she suffer like this?</p>
+
+<p>She could not understand what he had written....
+No wonder that he had never confided in her. He
+had either gone infinitely further along the paths she
+feared and shrank from, or else he had been deluded,
+blinded by glimpses of the infinite. His phrases had
+no meaning for her. How far must she go, she wondered,
+before she could judge, appraise him? She
+would know, some day, whether he had been selfish,
+or beyond the proscribed, essential personality of the
+unenlightened being—Robert, Junius, herself.</p>
+
+<p>She had deceived him, in the beginning; he had
+thought that he saw in her what, eventually, he found
+she did not have. He had little by little uncovered
+her artifice, her ignorance, her evasions, her frivolity,
+her fear, until in the end, he clasped, perhaps with
+shame, a naked little body.... That was why, in
+the end, he smiled at her and shut her out....</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>Hearing a carriage, she thrust the papers under a
+blotter, out of sight, as if they had been a proclamation
+of her failure. The servant came in, announcing
+the <i>contessa</i>.</p>
+
+<p>“<i>Cara mia</i>, I have just heard.”</p>
+
+<p>She offered both her hands to Lilah. She was dressed
+in the extreme of fashion, and Lilah thought: “She
+must have made a match.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_291">[Pg 291]</span></p>
+
+<p>The <i>contessa’s</i> sharp, initiated eyes studied Lilah’s
+face through a lorgnon. She wore, always, too many
+ornaments, chains, bracelets, medallions and pins; her
+flat breast was hung with brilliants. “My poor child.
+I hear that you were in Paris. What a terrible thing.
+What will you do? Go back to your husband?”</p>
+
+<p>“No.”</p>
+
+<p>“Perhaps you will remarry.”</p>
+
+<p>“My dear <i>contessa</i>,” Lilah said impatiently, “I am
+not yet divorced. And I loved the man who is dead.”</p>
+
+<p>“But you’ll have to do something with your life.
+You can’t live here, alone, in this treasure-house of
+sweet memories! You’ll have to do something!
+You’re young. I don’t believe in women sitting desolate
+among the ruins, willfully mourning the irrevocable.
+Life is so terribly short and cruel, so—so
+avaricious. I have always believed in snapping my
+fingers in the face of destiny. You couldn’t imagine
+the number of times I’ve been knocked down. I
+always get up again. I’m clever. A woman alone
+has to be. You’ve got to understand men. If I were
+beautiful, with my knowledge of men, I could achieve
+anything.... As it is—sixty, and a bag of bones—I
+manage—” Her voice trailed off. A look of weariness
+and fright crossed her eyes. “I manage. Now,
+if I were you—”</p>
+
+<p>“I haven’t a cent,” Lilah cried suddenly. “I don’t
+know what to do. Can you lend me a few hundred
+dollars?”</p>
+
+<p>The <i>contessa</i> closed her lorgnon with a snap. Her
+expression became sly, sweet, and guarded. She stared
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_292">[Pg 292]</span>down at her large, awkward hands, at the glitter of
+small, inexpensive but ostentatious rings which ornamented
+her fingers. She shook her head. “Impossible.
+Just at the moment, I am what we Americans call
+flush. But you never can tell.... You never can
+tell! It’s a precarious world. And the Italians aren’t
+gifted with a sense of gratitude. I did wonderful
+things for a <i>borghese</i>, a store-keeper, who wanted to
+enlarge his establishment....”</p>
+
+<p>She broke off. “You might live with me for a
+while. I would enjoy your companionship. Your presence
+would brighten my <i>salon</i>. I am quite in earnest.
+I would not expect compensation. Gayety. Vivacity.
+Elegance. And in return the advantage of my large
+acquaintance....”</p>
+
+<p>“Thank you,” Lilah said. “No.”</p>
+
+<p>She shivered. “No. You are very kind. But I am
+going back to America.”</p>
+
+<p>She stood, and the <i>contessa</i>, her chains and bangles
+clinking together, took her leave. “You are very foolish,”
+she said at the door. “Perhaps you will reconsider.
+You are intelligent enough to know that I am
+respectable. If you are afraid of facts....” She
+got into her carriage, crossed one leg over the other,
+displaying an elaborate slipper, and waved. “<i>Au
+’voir!</i>”</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>Lilah thought: “Who knows? Some day.”</p>
+
+<p>She sat before the fire, smoking and stroking the
+cat, that kept up a remote humming, a sort of tea-kettle
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_293">[Pg 293]</span>purring. She thought of the simple existence
+of a cat. Either you were hungry and hunted, or
+you weren’t, and purred, with no thought of the next
+day or the next. If she were to leave the little black
+cat to the mercy of the agent, the birds in the cypress
+groves would have to watch out—a lean, famished little
+cat with lashing tail would creep through the under-brush,
+stalking.... “I’ll give you to the doctor,”
+Lilah said aloud. The little cat blinked and fell asleep.</p>
+
+<p>Life wasn’t so simple for a woman whose only talent
+was knowing how to dress well. To live. Just to
+live, and not be hungry! Suppose she were to accept
+the <i>contessa’s</i> invitation. She knew quite well what
+it meant—a married woman, in Italy—even a divorcee
+would find it almost impossible to remarry. She
+would become the mistress of one of the <i>contessa’s</i>
+friends, for a compensation. He would, of necessity,
+be a wealthy <i>borghese</i>, since men of title were seeking
+dowries, not adventures. She let the projected
+image of herself pass across her imagination, an image
+of Lilah accentuated, for the moment more brilliant,
+her mystery understored, her charm deepened by necessity
+to a certain vulgarity—an actress pretending
+to be a lady.... She would seek satisfaction in
+the possession of concrete adornments, tributes to her
+first, untarnished success. She might, even, take her
+situation seriously....</p>
+
+<p>She threw her cigarette into the fire with a gesture
+that was both violent and contemptuous. First her
+father, now Flagg, had left her to shift for herself.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_294">[Pg 294]</span>Her mouth drooped. Her eyes, angry, dull with pain,
+brooded. “I can’t bear this. What, in God’s name,
+am I going to do?”</p>
+
+<p>It was not yet dark. Twilight was gathering, and
+the ugly, incongruous objects in the room retreated
+into shadow. She thought of the Thirty-eighth Street
+house, Shawhan’s flamboyant ladies, the dull gold of
+shaded lights, the discreet, remote murmur of traffic
+in that brazen, that fearless, that challenging city....
+She went to the window. The valley, Florence, was
+dark beneath a dark sky; there were no lights; it
+might have been a city forgotten and deserted, a place
+given over to the ghosts of a reckless, fearless, challenging
+yesterday.</p>
+
+<p>“I must go back,” she thought.</p>
+
+<p>She straightened herself, as if she were facing an
+antagonist. Across the valley, beneath that dark sky,
+Flagg was alone with the secret he had withheld from
+her. It seemed to Lilah that she must, somehow, get
+to him, hear his voice, listen again to the beating of
+his heart, caress his hair. But there was something
+she must do first. She must bring him the Lilah he
+wanted.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>Doctor Bacci lived across the river in an old house,
+narrow, tall, toppling, in the Via dei Bardi. There
+was a garden at the rear, where, he assured her, the
+little black cat and her kitten would be free to caper
+or to bask in the sun. He opened the hat-box Lilah
+had brought from the Ponte a Mensola, from which
+emerged a continuous scratching and mewing. Damp
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_295">[Pg 295]</span>and disheveled, the two cats jumped out and began
+at once to investigate, under tables, behind doors,
+into cupboards, everywhere.</p>
+
+<p>“You’re sure you don’t mind?”</p>
+
+<p>The doctor smiled. “I am, on the contrary, flattered.”</p>
+
+<p>He touched a bell and a man servant came in.
+The doctor said in Italian: “These are my two children.
+The little, black female is called Simonetta.
+The other, Moro. Will you ask Tata to feed them?”</p>
+
+<p>“<i>Si, signore.</i>”</p>
+
+<p>He turned to find Lilah in tears. “Now, there is
+nothing,” she said.</p>
+
+<p>“You have forgotten the future.”</p>
+
+<p>With a flash of scorn, she answered: “What cold
+comfort!”</p>
+
+<p>“I have nothing better to offer.” The doctor looked
+away from her, through the French door to the patch
+of garden. Lilah wondered whether pity embarrassed
+him. “What are you going to do?” he asked.</p>
+
+<p>She told him, at once, her situation. “There is
+no one else I can go to. I’m alone. I don’t want my
+husband or his grandfather to know anything about
+me. I am afraid that if I should see them I might
+weaken. I might go back. I have told you enough
+about myself to make it plain to you that if I should
+go back it would be—”</p>
+
+<p>“Unthinkable,” the doctor interrupted.</p>
+
+<p>He rose politely. “There are a few patients—When
+I have seen them, I will join you in the garden.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_296">[Pg 296]</span></p>
+
+<p>He opened the door and Lilah passed him, conscious
+of his glance, both curious and eager. Before
+the door closed again, he watched her cross the garden
+and seat herself on a stone bench beneath the
+polished foliage of a camelia tree. There, in that
+square pool of green, at the bottom of a well formed
+by the walls of houses, beneath another square of
+cloudless sky, Lilah felt a pervading loneliness. An
+emotional courage had carried her so far. Could
+she go farther? Everything, literally everything, depended
+on this man. If he should open the door and
+come toward her with a certain expression, she would
+know that she was to be forever the victim of her
+negative philosophy; her vision could not outlast the
+attack of a calculated and intelligent cynicism. Her
+balance was too precarious. If he came toward her
+with another expression—and she could tell, when he
+had no more than opened the door—she would be
+forever under obligation to her new self. There could
+be no backsliding.</p>
+
+<p>She relaxed suddenly. The sunlight, after so many
+weeks of rain, had about it an almost personal warmth;
+it lay across her hands, her cheek, her shoulders. The
+walls dripped moisture and a shallow fountain kept up
+a thin tinkle as a jet rose and fell. A door opened,
+some one said “<i>Via!</i>” and the two cats scampered
+out, their tails very stiff. They sat down in a patch
+of sunlight and began to lick themselves, first their
+haunches, then their stomachs, and at last their heads,
+over and over with their paws. Finished, one of them
+fell asleep, his paws tucked under so that he was
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_297">[Pg 297]</span>heart-shaped. The other, Simonetta, explored the garden,
+daintily, stepping over everything lightly, her
+tail twitching....</p>
+
+<p>“She has forgotten him already,” Lilah thought.
+And she remembered Flagg’s fingers caressing the
+black fur.... Her own hair.... A wild sweetness
+possessed her. She closed her eyes, abandoned
+to it. It flowed over her like light, this remembering.
+It was bitter and wonderful and exquisite. If
+she could remember like this, she would never be
+altogether alone; she could summon the recollection
+of his touch....</p>
+
+<p>The sensation passed. She was cold. She opened
+her eyes to the bright immobility of the garden.</p>
+
+<p>The French doors of the doctor’s office opened.
+He came toward her quickly, but she did not look at
+his face.</p>
+
+<p>He said without preface: “I will see that you get
+back to New York and that you are provided for
+until you can find something to do. Florence isn’t
+the place for you. Here you would never reach the
+final step—purification. It is too old, too settled a
+beauty. You need the struggle America offers—competition,
+enthusiasm. I could show you an Italy
+you don’t dream of, but it is mine, not yours! You
+would never understand it and, in the end, it would
+destroy you, since you are weakened by perfection.
+You will have to cut your way out of ugliness.” He
+paused. Then in a different, casual voice he said:
+“Simonetta has come to stay. She is asleep on the
+kitchen step.” And he called: “<i>Vieni! Gattinino!</i>”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_298">[Pg 298]</span></p>
+
+<p>Lilah returned to New York. It was Spring of
+the year. She mingled in the restless stream flowing
+up one side of the Avenue, down the other, broken by
+cross-currents, flowing on again, resistlessly, to no
+purpose.</p>
+
+<p>The doctor’s generosity had been limited by his
+resources; he was not, in the American sense, well-to-do.
+When Lilah counted her pennies and considered
+her debt, she realized that he had spoken the
+truth; she must cut her way out of ugliness. Poverty
+in a cottage might be, at least, picturesque, immaterial;
+in New York it was ponderable, a sordid weight
+of petty obstacles; so much for so much and never
+quite enough.</p>
+
+<p>Lilah established herself in a room not far from
+Astor Place.</p>
+
+<p>New York was a desert. She was alone in a crowded
+wilderness. She was shabby, in debt and desperate.
+But if Robert had reappeared and had asked her to
+return to the Thirty-eighth Street house, to the sumptuous,
+familiar extravagances of her life there, she
+would have lacked the courage to accept.</p>
+
+<p>She had a new thirst for power, a new eagerness
+to escape. She wanted the power that comes with
+personal success. She wanted to escape from the curse
+of materialism. She had lived in a sham world; the
+shabby, dark room, the dingy window-panes, the worn
+carpet were reality.</p>
+
+<p>Lilah’s daily search for work took her through
+streets where there was not even a remote chance
+of being recognized by old friends; she threaded the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_299">[Pg 299]</span>crowded mazes of commerce, anonymous and frightened.</p>
+
+<p>It did not occur to her to go back to the fashionable
+couturier in the ’Fifties who had “built” her
+trousseau. She remembered his first curt dismissal,
+the card tossed to her across his desk. “Learn to
+put hats together; then, perhaps, you can design
+them.”</p>
+
+<p>She avoided those up-town streets given over to
+fashionable shops and hotels, establishments haunted
+by women of her acquaintance whose whims carried
+them from one dressmaker to another, from one antiquarian
+to another. She wanted to lose herself, to
+be immersed in an unfamiliar atmosphere, to be alone
+with this strange, new Lilah. Now that Flagg was
+dead, he was more than ever real. He had never
+been so insistently near her, more insistently a part of
+her. But their life together had lost all reality. It
+seemed, now, to have happened in a half-forgotten
+dream. She had dreamed and had wakened to the
+commonplace business of living. The actual became
+confused with the vision; she experienced a new, strong
+sense of distaste, almost fear, at the proximity of
+people who might break the comforting nostalgia.</p>
+
+<p>She saw no one but David Brenner. The young
+Jew fitted her mood. He was not, now, in love with
+her but with some scheme of his own. He called her
+his “little sardine” but he did not accuse her of
+being a humbug.</p>
+
+<p>She lunched with him at the identical restaurant of
+their last meeting, and Lilah traced with her finger
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_300">[Pg 300]</span>recent signatures scratched in the pine table by unknowns
+craving an easy notoriety.</p>
+
+<p>David Brenner’s talk was of people, things, she
+knew nothing about. A dozen personalities had flashed
+across the American intellectual firmament trailing
+sparks and shedding inhibitions—rockets, most of
+them, that shot up with a tremendous dazzle and were
+destined soon to snuff out, to zig-zag to earth. David
+Brenner spoke of them with immense seriousness. He
+was like most Americans, she decided, in his facile
+enthusiasms, his sudden, scornful shifts of opinion.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m broke, David,” she said.</p>
+
+<p>He did not take her seriously. He knew nothing
+about her. And behind his bantering admiration there
+was always distrust. When she told him that she
+could not find work, he shrugged his shoulders.
+“You’ll never get the sort of job you’re looking for,
+Lilah. Try Fifth Avenue and your own particular
+brand of bluff.”</p>
+
+<p>There it was again. Her own particular brand of
+bluff.</p>
+
+<p>It was lonely, living by herself. She left David
+Brenner and went back to the room just off Astor
+Place. Day after day at five o’clock she went there
+because there was nowhere else to go. She had lost
+her sense of the pageantry of the streets and of her
+part in it. No one turned to look at her, because
+she no longer had the assurance, the air of victory,
+which attracts attention.</p>
+
+<p>She took David Brenner’s advice. After all, what
+did it matter if Robert’s friends should happen to
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_301">[Pg 301]</span>see her? She had been stupid. She was not the
+type of woman they wanted in East Side shirtwaist
+factories. Over and over again she had failed because
+she had had no “experience,” that vague attribute of
+anemic, gum-chewing, bobbed girls who always “got
+the job” Lilah failed to get. Her manner, her charm
+counted for nothing. She discovered that she was too
+old to serve the necessary apprenticeship. Girls of
+fifteen were doing, efficiently, what she could not do.
+Others, thousands of them, were trained, ready to
+take the succeeding steps toward the few high-salaried
+positions available to women in business. At eight
+o’clock, at five o’clock, the streets were choked with
+women, all of them initiated—</p>
+
+<p>Lilah sat before her mirror and took stock of herself.</p>
+
+<p>“Twenty-nine,” she said aloud.</p>
+
+<p>In the fashionable world she had left, twenty-nine
+was at the beginning of experience. At thirty, a
+woman tried her wings; if she were clever and ambitious,
+it was the age of marital re-adjustment, of
+social expansion, of thrilling experiment, leadership.
+But to be a lonely little nobody at thirty! To climb
+endless iron stairs to innumerable glazed doors
+marked: <i>Private</i>. To answer advertisements a day
+too late. To be told to leave her name and address,
+to come again, to telephone, to write. To thread the
+crowded streets, pretending eagerness. To try and
+fail....</p>
+
+<p>It would be easier to write Robert something evasive,
+something pathetic ... she could always touch
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_302">[Pg 302]</span>his heart ... and, to-morrow, she would be at the
+Point, laughing with Junius, everything forgotten....</p>
+
+<p>She actually went to the table and took up a pen,
+dipping it several times in the ink. She wrote: <i>March
+30</i>. But she could not write: <i>Dear Robert</i>. Could
+not. The letters would not go down.</p>
+
+<p>She put her head on the paper and cried. She
+cried until she fell asleep. She was very tired and
+she was beginning to be hungry. The doctor’s loan
+would not carry her another week and she could not
+ask him for more. It was enough that he was caring
+for Simonetta and Moro.... It was enough that
+he had seen Flagg die....</p>
+
+<p>In the morning she went up town. Someone, very
+optimistic, had set out English daisies in window boxes.
+It was warm on the sunny side of the street. And
+what shops! What clothes! Lilah, drunk, paused to
+stare at a chinchilla wrap, a Leghorn hat, a pair of
+brocaded sandals, a fan made of pheasants’ feathers
+set in onyx sticks.... She felt the old hunger for
+possession. She shook her head and straightened her
+shoulders. She groped for her dim, new faith, what
+it was that drove her on, why it was that she must
+win this obscure, personal game....</p>
+
+<p>She went into the employee’s entrance of a department
+store. A doorman, who was sitting on a stool,
+directed her to the office of “Miss Craig—she sees
+everybody.” Miss Craig was young, and a lady.
+From behind spectacles with tortoise-shell rims
+her eyes investigated Lilah’s unmistakable elegance.
+Maurice’s black gown was a miracle of simplicity;
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_303">[Pg 303]</span>it had outlasted two seasons. Miss Craig wrote something
+on a pad. Her expression was purposefully
+enigmatic, but the corners of her mouth twitched.
+“There isn’t much chance just at present.... I
+could try you in the cotton good’s department. It’s
+quite hard. You’d have to learn the stock. The
+material isn’t heavy, but the bolts are—it means lifting
+all day and standing on your feet. Our employees
+are expected to go to school in the beginning. We
+have to be sure that they are reasonably good mathematicians—honest—intelligent—”
+She paused, flushing.</p>
+
+<p>“Anything,” Lilah said. “I’ll do anything. I’m
+at the end.”</p>
+
+<p>After a moment, Miss Craig said: “I’m terribly
+sorry. I guessed as much. Would twenty-five dollars
+a week help any? I can’t offer you more. For
+a novice, you know—”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes. Yes. Anything.”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah went to school. Fractions terrified her.
+Graduated, she pasted labels, and, for a week, wrote
+undecipherable, meaningless numbers and letters on
+pasteboard tickets. She did not see Miss Craig again.
+She learned of the men “higher up”; the floor-walkers,
+department managers, buyers and sales managers who
+dominated this world of workers. She encountered
+the “politics” of a big store. She heard gossip, the
+bitter, querulous backbiting of tired women.</p>
+
+<p>The day came when, with a sense of dread and
+excitement, she was put “on the floor.” All day she
+lifted heavy rolls of gingham, muslin, cotton, crêpe,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_304">[Pg 304]</span>twisted them, measured them, rolled them up again.
+Pink. Yellow. Hideous checks and nauseating plaids.
+Pretty, crisp organdies, like the starched skirts of little
+girls at a picnic....</p>
+
+<p>All day she was questioned, bullied, scolded. She
+passed close to the other clerks, brushed them with
+her own body and yet never saw them. This was not
+Lilah. This was a common, clever, indifferent girl
+who was rolling and unrolling cotton goods. “How
+many yards, madam?” That was not Lilah’s voice;
+it was too high and sharp; the accent too clipped....
+Once she thrust her pencil through her hair, and something
+apart from Lilah laughed. Junius had said that
+she was an actress.... “Two sixty-four. At one
+thirty-two a yard. Anything else?”</p>
+
+<p>A young girl with a broad face and gray eyes said:
+“Say, you can’t wear that dress. Mr. Mansfield will
+get after you. It has to be plain black, and no
+frills.”</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>Twenty-five a week was not enough. Lilah left the
+room near Astor Place and moved to Tenth Street.
+An old house, the house of a merchant of the ’Eighties,
+had resisted the tide of factories and sweatshops. It
+stood, peeling, cracked and damp, between two towering
+buildings occupied by fur manufacturers and
+printers. A smell of hides dominated, indoors and
+out of doors. Packing cases littered the sidewalks
+and trucks stood wheel to wheel for blocks. Spring,
+a hint of sunlight, brought out an army of workers.
+Before the aquiline façade of the old house a polyglot
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_305">[Pg 305]</span>crowd lock-stepped, making wide gestures and
+speaking the dim languages of southeastern Europe.
+At night, the street was deserted.</p>
+
+<p>Lilah’s room, three flights up, faced a courtyard
+which must have been, in the old days, a formal garden.
+Now, in a litter of boxes, cans and barrels, a
+lilac tree fought to live. Lilah recalled the cypresses
+of Vincigliata.</p>
+
+<p>She had lost the last vestiges of her hard brightness,
+her security.</p>
+
+<p>She lunched every day with the young girl who
+had warned her not to wear the Maurice dress, that
+conspicuous miracle of simplicity. And painstakingly,
+as if everything depended on it, Lilah acquired from
+this girl a new standard of judgment based on the unpalatable
+facts of life. She was surprised at her own
+flexibility. But something unalterable, fixed, in her
+nature demanded achievement, justification. There
+would be, must be, a way out....</p>
+
+<p>Summer was stifling; the city seemed closed beneath
+a dome of steel, its reverberations intensified,
+the air was thick and hot.</p>
+
+<p>In the store, a few limp and wilted shoppers wandered
+aimlessly about, but there was so little business
+that, it was rumored, some of the sales force would
+be dropped. Lilah knew the daily panic which comes
+of uncertainty. Her record was not good; she had
+never reached the average sales required to justify
+her presence in the shop, her salary, which was, after
+all, percentage on an investment. The other clerks
+were sharper; they had the tenacity of women born
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_306">[Pg 306]</span>in poverty. Her instinctive mental attitudes, beyond
+their comprehension, made competition, playing the
+game on their terms, impossible.</p>
+
+<p>She was not surprised when Miss Craig sent for
+her.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m sorry. We’re letting fifty people go. There’s
+no business.”</p>
+
+<p>“And I’m one of the fifty?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes.” Miss Craig looked away, as if Lilah’s expression
+hurt her. “It isn’t <i>me</i>, Mrs. Peabody. <i>I</i>
+don’t decide these things. I’m told that fifty must
+go. I look through the averages—”</p>
+
+<p>“Like the massacre at Dinard,” Lilah said. She
+felt cold and stiff and her fingers tingled.</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t you know any one—” Miss Craig suggested.</p>
+
+<p>Lilah shook her head. “Don’t worry about me.
+I’ll manage.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m <i>sure</i> you will.” Miss Craig was evidently
+relieved. She said brightly: “Why not try the uptown
+shops? You don’t belong here. I’ll give you a
+letter to ‘Emilie.’ He’s Irish. He’ll like you.”</p>
+
+<p>“You are very kind.”</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>Lilah knew, now, that there were two phases of
+life—life with illusion and life without it. To exist,
+to reconcile living with life, something must take the
+place of the lost beliefs. There must be faith in the
+abstract promise, the idea, withheld, mysterious and
+penetrating, of immortality.... She did what she
+always did, in moments of questioning. Facing herself
+in a mirror she thought: “Flagg would have told
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_307">[Pg 307]</span>me this, only I wouldn’t have understood. I wasn’t
+ready.”</p>
+
+<p>She was conscious, too, of an apathy that was new
+to her, an indifference, a shadow of the lassitude which
+comes with a surrender of personality. She shrugged
+the feeling away. She must live. She must take,
+while there was still time, the advantage offered by
+her youth, her charm. “Humbug! Humbug!” she
+said to her reflection.</p>
+
+<p>She glanced at Miss Craig’s letter addressed to
+the firm of “Emilie.” “Dear Reilly: Mrs. Peabody is
+the rustle of silk in our cotton goods department.
+Have a heart. Edna.”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah smiled. This letter was so sharp and bright
+and cold, so cocksure. It might mean everything or
+nothing. She wondered how any one—a woman—could
+scratch off a letter like that and give it to another
+woman who was desperate and friendless.
+“Have a heart!”</p>
+
+<p>She found “Emilie” on Park Avenue. A small,
+ornate, Venetian house with grilled windows and a
+loggia beneath a tiled roof had been converted into
+an “establishment.” A man in livery opened the heavy
+door and scrutinized the letter. “Mr. Reilly’s busy.
+Come Wednesday at four o’clock.”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah pushed her way in. “I’ll wait. I’ve got to
+see him. Tell him the letter is from Miss Craig.
+He’ll see me.”</p>
+
+<p>The man hesitated, turning the letter over and over
+between cotton-gloved fingers. “I’m sorry, but Mr.
+Reilly gave particular orders—”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_308">[Pg 308]</span></p>
+
+<p>Lilah glanced beyond him. A thin, spry man in
+a cutaway coat was running down a flight of carpeted
+stairs, yards of purple chiffon hanging across
+his arm and trailing behind him like the robes of a
+Pharaoh. Lilah’s heart contracted. She was amazed
+to hear herself saying: “Oh, Mr. Reilly!” in a loud,
+confident voice. Inwardly she quaked. She had never
+done such a thing. She had no idea whether or not
+this was the dressmaker.</p>
+
+<p>He bounded toward her, gathering up the chiffon,
+all the time staring at her as if he intended to take
+a bite out of her. He looked like a very angry fox-terrier.</p>
+
+<p>“Mr. Reilly—”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, God.”</p>
+
+<p>He tripped over the chiffon and threw it on the
+ground. He snatched at the letter, read it, showed
+his teeth and almost growled. “Can’t you wait? I’m
+busy. No. Come upstairs. I’ll let you help. Bring
+this stuff, Fred.”</p>
+
+<p>While they mounted the stairs, Reilly running just
+ahead, his patent shoes and white gaiters twinkling, he
+carried on an irritable monologue. “Everyone’s sick.
+Mrs. Mason went to Lake George this morning.
+I’m short-handed. Twenty-five models came on the
+<i>Olympic</i> yesterday and they’ve got to be photographed.
+If you can wear hats you can go over to the studio
+with Duncan and he’ll get the collection.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m not a model,” Lilah interrupted.</p>
+
+<p>He turned sharply and surveyed her. She felt that
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_309">[Pg 309]</span>he could see more than it was decent for any stranger
+to see—he could see her crouching within herself,
+afraid of hunger. “We’ll try.” He kicked open a
+door and she followed him into a room paneled from
+floor to ceiling with mirrors. She encountered herself,
+little, with scared eyes, profile, three-quarters, her
+back turned, face to face. She raised her hand and
+a dozen images of herself all raised their hands in
+a sort of salute.</p>
+
+<p>The floor was littered with packing cases from
+which spilled tissue paper and hats. “We’ll try,”
+Reilly repeated. He swooped down, growled, came
+up with a bonnet. Lilah understood that she was
+to remove her own hat and assume this fashionable
+coal-scuttle, this modern, French adaptation of a mode
+seventy-five years old. “My dress is wrong,” she
+said. The challenge excited her. She felt, suddenly,
+re-animated, alive, after a period of stillness.</p>
+
+<p>Reilly said: “Never mind. You have a charming
+head.”</p>
+
+<p>She bent her head quickly and looked up at herself.</p>
+
+<p>“Very good. Now, this one.” He swooped again.
+Lilah had never seen such a flexible human being;
+he seemed not to have any bones. “Don’t wear it too
+far forward. These hats need eyes.... Too violent
+for you. You’re pale....” He made a vague gesture.
+“Paisley. Amber. Blonde lace. Pink net and
+camelias.... <i>Ah!</i>” He emerged from a heap of
+tissue-paper with a small <i>cloche</i>. “Try this.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_310">[Pg 310]</span></p>
+
+<p>A dozen Lilahs adjusted the expensive trifle of straw,
+a hat magnificently disdainful, unornamented, copyrighted
+by an astute and talented milliner.</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll call Duncan.”</p>
+
+<p>Reilly disappeared and Lilah was left alone with
+the manifold reflection of herself.</p>
+
+<p>Well, it was over, now. She had known from the
+beginning that she could not escape—</p>
+
+<p>Reilly returned with a stout, breathless man in an
+alpaca coat who wore a straw hat pushed back.</p>
+
+<p>After a brief inspection, wholly impersonal, he
+said: “Too blonde. She’d photygraph like a white
+mouse.”</p>
+
+<p>Reilly waved him out again. The sense, the implication
+of the photographer’s remark was clear.
+Lilah removed the <i>cloche</i> and tossed it aside. She
+groped for her own hat. “Don’t go,” Reilly interrupted
+sharply. “Wait. You can take Katherine’s
+place—”</p>
+
+<p>He beckoned to her.</p>
+
+<p>The front of the house, from basement to loggia, was
+given over to salesrooms, luxurious, miniature shops
+designed to attract and hold devotees at the shrine of
+that elusive deity, the mode. Reilly was an astute
+priest. He had capitalized his serious interest in
+women; he was unaware of his own incongruity.
+Sharp, alert, inexhaustible, he worshipped women and
+exacted payment from them—he “burned incense and
+passed the plate” he told Lilah. Something effeminate
+in his gesture, the use of his hands, was contradicted
+by the shrewdness of his eyes.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_311">[Pg 311]</span></p>
+
+<p>He preceded Lilah into a room furnished in the
+Venetian manner, dimly lighted, opening upon the
+loggia. Through the delicate, turned columns, a prismatic
+confusion of vertical stone shafts picketed the
+smoky sky—the city. A girl rose from a bench, approached
+with the languid gait of the trained <i>mannequin</i>.
+“Duncan wants you. This is Mrs. Peabody.
+She’ll take your place.”</p>
+
+<p>Reilly turned. “There’s no business at this time
+of year. But if any one should come in, sell! The
+hats are in these cases. Use your own judgment and
+get as much as you can for them. Nothing under
+thirty-five dollars. Poor models, more. Good models,
+less. That’s excellent psychology. A woman who
+pays fifty dollars for an ugly hat will wear it to spite
+the devil, and she’ll like it, in spite of herself. A
+woman who gets a beautiful hat for thirty-five dollars
+will advertise it—and us!”</p>
+
+<p>He sat down, clasped his knees and asked abruptly:
+“Who are you? Not Mrs. Robert Peabody?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes.”</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t tell any one! Call yourself Mrs. Isaac
+Peabody—anything! If you stay here, you are not
+likely to meet your friends. I cater to actresses, rich
+middle-westerners and fashionable demi-mondaines.
+They’ll like your looks and your manners. Women
+are always fascinated by the unattainable.”</p>
+
+<p>“Thank you.”</p>
+
+<p>“We’ll say thirty to start with. If you make
+good, I’ll give you this department, at seventy-five.
+Katherine is a beautiful bonehead....”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_312">[Pg 312]</span></p>
+
+<p>He leaped up. “I’ll send a stock-girl. For God’s
+sake don’t ask any questions. Use your common sense
+and sell hats.”</p>
+
+<p>He stepped forward and with no softening of his
+expression, touched her hair. “That’s a good girl.”</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>Lilah discovered before long that Reilly was withholding
+the reward, the promise of that first day. Summer
+melted into the stifling heat of September and beneath
+a metallic, dark blue sky the city shimmered,
+quivered as if licked by the minute flames of an infernal
+fire. “My God, it’s hot,” the stately Katherine
+remarked. She stood by the open window, in silhouette,
+her attitude reminiscent of Francesca, the
+disdainful melancholy of Duse. “My God, it’s hot.
+Why don’t Reilly close on Saturday?”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know.”</p>
+
+<p>“I do. He might lose a dollar.”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah had changed her opinion of Reilly; he paid
+very little attention to her; she had never again had
+to endure that brief, impersonal caress. He had called
+her, without preface of any sort: “Lilah.” And he
+had left her to her own devices.</p>
+
+<p>She came to the conclusion that Reilly was either
+a fraud or an artist. The room in which he received
+his clients had only one window and three doors, one
+leading into the workroom, one into his bath and the
+other into the “Salotto d’Oro.” His desk bore, in
+addition to an alabaster lamp, stacked copies of <i>La
+Vie Parisienne</i>: a copy, in French of <i>Le Mariage de
+Loti</i>; a box made of lacquered leather heavily embossed;
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_313">[Pg 313]</span>and a small colored bust in terra-cotta that
+at first glance might have been Florentine but was,
+actually, Egyptian. Behind him, in an angle of the
+wall, a secretary of inlaid wood towered almost to
+the ceiling. There were three Venetian chairs, ornate
+and faded. And hung together above a small cabinet,
+signed photographs of Ibanez, Poiret, Chaliapin and
+Nora Bayes.</p>
+
+<p>Lilah found that Reilly was a man of violent enthusiasms.
+His interest in her had been immediate,
+sharp; he had, perhaps, been studying her. There
+was a certain zest in competing for his attention, since
+he had indicated in the beginning, a definite award.
+Lilah held aloof from the other women of the establishment,
+because Reilly had warned her that she
+could expect jealousy, and that she must avoid conflict
+if she expected to advance. Her ambition was
+trivial. But faith in herself, her potentiality, returned
+slowly. She was humble and, in her recollection of
+Flagg, disciplined. As the actuality of that experience
+receded, its meaning became more clear.</p>
+
+<p>Katherine, stretching her long arms above her head,
+yawned. “I could stand the present if it wasn’t for
+the future,” she said. “Waiting’s hell when nothing
+happens.”</p>
+
+<p>She caught herself as the mirror-paneled door of the
+elevator slid back and two women stepped into the
+room. “<i>B’ jour, mesdames</i>,” she murmured; her body
+undulated; she swam toward them.</p>
+
+<p>Lilah’s expression of polite concern deepened into
+surprise, dismay. She recognized Grace Whiteside,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_314">[Pg 314]</span>fat, over-ornamented, placid in the secure possession
+of family and position, and, behind her, Miss Fuller,
+as always, in gray with a little pan-cake hat made
+of leaves.</p>
+
+<p>Lilah held up her hand to ward off their recognition.
+Grace Whiteside came to a full stop; she seemed to
+spread, to puff out, like an angry turkey.</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t,” Lilah said faintly. She turned and ran
+out of the room.</p>
+
+<p>She waited, leaning against the closed door. She
+heard a murmur of voices, Katherine’s suave and insinuating:
+“Very <i>chic, madame</i>. Very new. Reboux.
+Just try this one, <i>madame</i>.”</p>
+
+<p>Presently they were gone. The elevator came up;
+the door rattled; it descended again, making a hollow,
+reverberating sound in the wall.</p>
+
+<p>Lilah wondered at her own fear; it was not a moral
+cowardice, of that she was certain; she was not
+ashamed. She had a different sense of responsibility
+toward herself and the opinion people had of her. She
+was unwilling to face Miss Whiteside and Grace Fuller
+because she had not, as far as they could see, progressed;
+the change that had taken place within her
+was beyond their comprehension. The new self had
+always been there, dormant; but it had been disclosed
+by Flagg’s death, by the questioning which had followed.</p>
+
+<p>Katherine emerged from the “Salotto d’Oro” suddenly.
+Her expression was sly and gratified, as if she
+had caught Lilah in an indiscretion. She passed, without
+a word, going toward Reilly’s office, the black satin
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_315">[Pg 315]</span>drapery of her skirt slipping over the carpet like a
+smooth serpent.</p>
+
+<p>Lilah went back to the salesroom. Grace Whiteside
+had been trying on bonnets, Reilly’s rare confections of
+lace and spangles designed for grandmothers of the
+stage. It had been, apparently, a perfunctory inspection.</p>
+
+<p>As Lilah put the hats back in their place, she pictured
+Miss Whiteside rushing to the nearest telegraph
+office to wire Junius Peabody.... Grace Fuller would
+probably try to prevent what, in the end, would mean
+her own happiness. But nothing could turn aside the
+fanatical thrusts of the outraged spinster; she would
+plant her vengeance sooner or later. Now, Lilah must
+let herself be divorced; an eventuality which would deprive
+her of her position with Reilly, since the inevitable
+scandal would affect her usefulness. Reilly was
+beginning to cast in social waters, and he was baiting
+his hook cautiously. He was shrewd but he was not
+sophisticated. His knowledge of society had been derived
+at second hand. Into his vocabulary the word
+“form” had appeared. He had subjugated the theatrical
+world and now, longing for other, more difficult attainment,
+he was angling for what he termed, in a
+whisper, “Newport and Bar Harbor....”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah’s mind went off at a tangent; she caught herself
+wondering whether Grace Fuller had been chaperoning
+Robert’s aunt through another attack of gallstones,
+or whether—</p>
+
+<p>Reilly came in, shutting the door with an irritable
+bang. “What’s this? What’s Katherine trying to put
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_316">[Pg 316]</span>over?” Lilah did not answer and snatching the bonnet
+away from her, Reilly tossed it aside. “I hate
+tittle-tattle! She came down stairs, gloating, as if she
+had caught you picking the safe. What happened?”</p>
+
+<p>With a sense of the futility of any explanation, Lilah
+said: “I lost my head and Katherine lost a sale....”</p>
+
+<p>“Damn the sale!”</p>
+
+<p>Reilly stood, wrapped in a sort of angry contemplation,
+his hands in his pockets, his small, gaitered feet
+spread. “You’d better let me go,” Lilah said. “It
+might happen again.” She added, with a curious smile:
+“I’m sorry, more so than I can say.”</p>
+
+<p>He fixed his eyes on her face.</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll let you know,” he answered sharply and left
+the room.</p>
+
+<p>A week later, he sent for her.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m going to put you in the workroom. I think you
+have the makings of a designer. Later, perhaps, I’ll
+send you to Paris, Vienna.... It won’t do to have you
+upstairs.”</p>
+
+<p>He hesitated and then said sharply: “I’ve heard from
+your family.”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah had not expected this. She leaned against the
+desk with a feeling of faintness.</p>
+
+<p>“They’ve written me. One of them—a Mr. Junius
+Peabody—wants to see you.”</p>
+
+<p>“I can’t! No.... For heaven’s sake, no! I don’t
+want to see him.”</p>
+
+<p>Reilly considered her. “I thought I’d warn you.
+He’s downstairs. There’s his card.” He tossed it
+across the desk. “You’d better see him.” Reilly rose
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_317">[Pg 317]</span>and came around to her; his hand fell on her shoulder.
+“You’re not a coward, are you?”</p>
+
+<p>“No.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then face things! If you don’t, they steal up behind
+you and knock you down. Always keep your eye
+on your fears.” His clasp tightened. “Do you know
+why I hired you? I was afraid of you! I’m not
+familiar with your sort. You made me ashamed of
+what I am.... Now, it seems, you are ashamed of
+what you are.... Either you’re stubborn or you’re
+guilty. I don’t pretend to understand. I’d like to
+put across to you—well, don’t make a mistake.”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah smiled, made a gesture of surrender. “I’ll see
+him.”</p>
+
+<p>“That’s a good girl.” Reilly paused on the threshold.
+“And listen. Don’t hold out against him because
+of any resentment ... don’t be a damn fool.
+There is more than one way of making good.”</p>
+
+<p>A moment later, rigid, consciously and painfully correct,
+he bowed Junius Peabody into the room and
+closed the door again, softly, as if he were closing it
+upon the sacred essence of good form.</p>
+
+<p>Lilah faced Junius with a trace of confusion; her
+lips trembled; she smiled unsteadily, because he was
+so unfalteringly Junius in spite of everything. He
+carried his overcoat on his arm; his head, bared, was
+held erect, the white, thick hair brushed carefully back
+from the veined forehead. Immaculate, even exquisite,
+at eighty-seven he still gave the impression of vigorous
+and aristocratic possession. He said: “Lilah,” and,
+leaning forward, she kissed him, clung to him suddenly
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_318">[Pg 318]</span>with a passionate eagerness to be understood. Forgiveness
+was not required, looked for, since she had
+had to do what she had done.</p>
+
+<p>She felt his hand, patting, patting her back. “<i>There,
+there</i>,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>She made an effort and controlled herself, remembering
+that at Junius’ age emotion is painful and perhaps
+ugly.</p>
+
+<p>He sat down; disposed of his coat, his hat and the
+heavy, goldmounted cane, and glanced about him. “My
+first visit to a dressmaker’s since ’Eighty-six,” he said.
+“They’ve changed. No ribbons here!” He made a
+gesture of dislike. “That fellow—that popinjay—”</p>
+
+<p>“Emilie,” Lilah said, wiping her eyes. A flash of
+her old self came through, evoked by Junius’ presence.
+But she could not, now, laugh at Reilly. He was her
+destiny. She was forced to admit that without Reilly
+she might be caught in the tide and carried out to sea.</p>
+
+<p>“He’s really very clever.”</p>
+
+<p>“A man dressmaker,” Junius stated dryly, “puts me
+on edge. I will never be reconciled—”</p>
+
+<p>He broke off and scrutinized her. “Well, Lilah.”</p>
+
+<p>With sudden violence she burst out: “I know! You
+can’t understand why I’ve hidden myself away. I
+had to. You and I are alike, but you’ve never had to
+remake yourself. You still look down on people you
+consider inferior, and I’ve had to learn to respect them.
+I’ve had to kill my old self—or starve.”</p>
+
+<p>“I have always admired you inordinately,” he remarked.</p>
+
+<p>“But you have never cared—how could you—whether
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_319">[Pg 319]</span>I was being cowardly and selfish, so long as I
+was superior, like you, a snob. We’re both materialists,
+you, because you could afford to be and I because I
+wanted to be. I haven’t changed. I want finished,
+rare, superlative things as much as ever. But I hate
+myself because I am a materialist. And that’s as
+good as changing.”</p>
+
+<p>“You’ve been unhappy.”</p>
+
+<p>She turned away. And Junius continued: “You are
+coming back, of course?”</p>
+
+<p>She shook her head.</p>
+
+<p>With a trace of impatience, Junius Peabody demanded:
+“Why not? There isn’t any one else—another
+attachment—” Rebuked by her quick glance, he
+apologized: “I know. What you felt was genuine.
+But since it is over, done with—”</p>
+
+<p>She interrupted: “I wonder if you can understand.
+What happened is as immaterial as a dream. I can’t
+repent. Atone. Do any of the expected things....
+I’m not sorry or ashamed. I am not even, in the accepted
+sense, chastened. As you say, it is over. But I
+am different, deep down, out of sight, beyond my
+knowledge....”</p>
+
+<p>She smiled at him. “It’s a mixed-up world. I know,
+now, that it isn’t nasty.... We, ourselves, are nasty.”</p>
+
+<p>“Robert needs you.”</p>
+
+<p>With a flash of scorn she demanded: “Did he expect
+you to tell me so?”</p>
+
+<p>Junius shook his head. “Don’t misunderstand.
+Robert hasn’t any illusions. They are all gone. He
+is burned out, Lilah. But I like him better than I ever
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_320">[Pg 320]</span>did when he was moon-struck. I think, at times, he
+hates you because you took away his belief in that
+moon of his. I could have told him that he was worshipping,
+not a moon but a glow-worm, because, as you
+say, we are very much alike, you and I.”</p>
+
+<p>“We give a lovely light,” Lilah said.</p>
+
+<p>The memory of an old appreciation warmed them
+both. The door of the workroom opened suddenly,
+and violently a head was thrust in. “Mr. Reilly,
+here’s that fitting—<i>Oh, excuse me!</i>” The door slammed
+again, shutting out the noisy clatter of machines, the
+snip-snip of scissors, the staccato treble of women’s
+voices.</p>
+
+<p>Junius rose.</p>
+
+<p>“We are living very quietly at the Point,” he said.
+“I came down on purpose to see you, talk to you. I
+won’t urge you. After all, what more can I say than
+that you are needed?”</p>
+
+<p>Lilah cried desperately. “But I don’t love Robert,
+Junius.”</p>
+
+<p>Junius Peabody faced her, a moment, in silence.
+She noticed that every detail of his dress was correct,
+meticulous; he displayed the interest of a young man
+in the outward semblance of superiority, of pride.
+Something unfamiliar in her nature caused her to recoil,
+almost to resent this deliberate conforming to
+prejudice.... Then, as suddenly, she admired him
+for this very tenacity, this unswerving adherence to
+an ideal of behavior, of appearance. He took her hand.
+“There is such a thing as being beyond personal happiness.
+I hoped that you had learned to do without it.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_321">[Pg 321]</span>There is no other serenity.... You’ll come back?”</p>
+
+<p>“Perhaps.”</p>
+
+<p>She covered her face with her hands.</p>
+
+<p>She saw herself, not in the garden, not in the forest,
+but on the green before the kennels, where Robert’s
+spaniels romped and barked. She saw herself kneeling
+in the grass, fondling a wriggling puppy, stroking and
+kissing the soft fur. She heard herself saying: “Oh,
+Robert, aren’t they darlings!”</p>
+
+
+<p class="center p4">THE END</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+<div class="transnote">
+ <p class="ph2" id="TRANSCRIBERS_NOTES">
+ TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES
+ </p>
+
+
+<p>Typos corrected: “saxaphone” to “saxophone” (<a href="#Page_114">page 114</a>); “skiis” to
+“skis” (<a href="#Page_191">page 191</a>);
+“Troisieme” to “Troisième” (<a href="#Page_272">page 272</a>);
+“spinister” to “spinster” (<a href="#Page_315">page 315</a>).</p>
+
+<p>Extraneous/missing punctuation corrected on pages <a href="#Page_30">30</a>, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>, <a href="#Page_191">191</a>, <a href="#Page_269">269</a>,
+and <a href="#Page_277">277</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Author’s spelling of “Nietzschan” (<a href="#Page_14">page 14</a>) retained.</p>
+
+<p>Inconsistencies in hyphenation have been left unchanged.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 78615 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>
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+
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+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for eBook #78615
+(https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/78615)