Passion never plays the game. It, at all events, is free from
self-consciousness, and pride; from dignity, nerves, scruples,
cant, moralities; from hypocrisies, and wisdom, and fears for
pocket, and position in this world and the next. Well did the old
painters limn it as an arrow or a wind! If it had not been as
swift and darting, Earth must long ago have drifted through space
untenanted--to let. . . .
After that fevered night Lennan went to his studio at the usual
hour and naturally did not do a stroke of work. He was even
obliged to send away his model. The fellow had been his
hairdresser, but, getting ill, and falling on dark days, one
morning had come to the studio, to ask with manifest shame if his
head were any good. After having tested his capacity for standing
still, and giving him some introductions, Lennan had noted him
down: "Five feet nine, good hair, lean face, something tortured and
pathetic. Give him a turn if possible." The turn had come, and
the poor man was posing in a painful attitude, talking, whenever
permitted, of the way things had treated him, and the delights of
cutting hair. This morning he took his departure with the simple
pleasure of one fully paid for services not rendered.
And so, walking up and down, up and down, the sculptor waited for
Nell's knock. What would happen now? Thinking had made nothing
clear. Here was offered what every warm-blooded man whose Spring
is past desires--youth and beauty, and in that youth a renewal of
his own; what all men save hypocrites and Englishmen would even
admit that they desired. And it was offered to one who had neither
religious nor moral scruples, as they are commonly understood. In
theory he could accept. In practice he did not as yet know what he
could do. One thing only he had discovered during the night's
reflections: That those who scouted belief in the principle of
Liberty made no greater mistake than to suppose that Liberty was
dangerous because it made a man a libertine. To those with any
decency, the creed of Freedom was--of all--the most enchaining.
Easy enough to break chains imposed by others, fling his cap over
the windmill, and cry for the moment at least: I am unfettered,
free! Hard, indeed, to say the same to his own unfettered Self!
Yes, his own Self was in the judgment-seat; by his own verdict and
decision he must abide. And though he ached for the sight of her,
and his will seemed paralyzed--many times already he had thought:
It won't do! God help me!
Then twelve o'clock had come, and she had not. Would 'The Girl on
the Magpie Horse' be all he would see of her to-day--that
unsatisfying work, so cold, and devoid of witchery? Better have
tried to paint her--with a red flower in her hair, a pout on her
lips, and her eyes fey, or languorous. Goya could have painted
her!
After taking one look at his face, she slipped in ever so quietly,
like a very good child. . . . Marvellous the instinct and finesse
of the young when they are women! . . . Not a vestige in her of
yesterday's seductive power; not a sign that there had been a
yesterday at all--just confiding, like a daughter. Sitting there,
telling him about Ireland, showing him the little batch of drawings
she had done while she was away. Had she brought them because she
knew they would make him feel sorry for her? What could have been
less dangerous, more appealing to the protective and paternal side
of him than she was that morning; as if she only wanted what her
father and her home could not give her--only wanted to be a sort of
daughter to him!
She went away demurely, as she had come, refusing to stay to lunch,
manifestly avoiding Sylvia. Only then he realized that she must
have taken alarm from the look of strain on his face, been afraid
that he would send her away; only then perceived that, with her
appeal to his protection, she had been binding him closer, making
it harder for him to break away and hurt her. And the fevered
aching began again--worse than ever--the moment he lost sight of
her. And more than ever he felt in the grip of something beyond
his power to fight against; something that, however he swerved, and
backed, and broke away, would close in on him, find means to bind
him again hand and foot.
In the afternoon Dromore's confidential man brought him a note.
The fellow, with his cast-down eyes, and his well-parted hair,
seemed to Lennan to be saying: "Yes, sir--it is quite natural that
you should take the note out of eyeshot, sir--but I know;
fortunately, there is no necessity for alarm--I am strictly
confidential."
"You promised to ride with me once--you did promise, and you never
have. Do please ride with me to-morrow; then you will get what you
want for the statuette instead of being so cross with it. You can
have Dad's horse--he has gone to Newmarket again, and I'm so
lonely. Please--to-morrow, at half-past two--starting from here.
--NELL."
To hesitate in view of those confidential eyes was not possible; it
must be 'Yes' or 'No'; and if 'No,' it would only mean that she
would come in the morning instead. So he said:
"Very good, sir." Then from the door: "Mr. Dromore will be away
till Saturday, sir."
Now, why had the fellow said that? Curious how this desperate
secret feeling of his own made him see sinister meaning in this
servant, in Oliver's visit of last night--in everything. It was
vile--this suspiciousness! He could feel, almost see, himself
deteriorating already, with this furtive feeling in his soul. It
would soon be written on his face! But what was the use of
troubling? What would come, would--one way or the other.
And suddenly he remembered with a shock that it was the first of
November--Sylvia's birthday! He had never before forgotten it. In
the disturbance of that discovery he was very near to going and
pouring out to her the whole story of his feelings. A charming
birthday present, that would make! Taking his hat, instead, he
dashed round to the nearest flower shop. A Frenchwoman kept it.
Next door was a jeweller's. He had never really known if Sylvia
cared for jewels, since one day he happened to remark that they
were vulgar. And feeling that he had fallen low indeed, to be
trying to atone with some miserable gewgaw for never having thought
of her all day, because he had been thinking of another, he went in
and bought the only ornament whose ingredients did not make his
gorge rise, two small pear-shaped black pearls, one at each end of
a fine platinum chain. Coming out with it, he noticed over the
street, in a clear sky fast deepening to indigo, the thinnest slip
of a new moon, like a bright swallow, with wings bent back, flying
towards the ground. That meant--fine weather! If it could only be
fine weather in his heart! And in order that the azalea might
arrive first, he walked up and down the Square which he and Oliver
had patrolled the night before.
When he went in, Sylvia was just placing the white azalea in the
window of the drawing-room; and stealing up behind her he clasped
the little necklet round her throat. She turned round and clung to
him. He could feel that she was greatly moved. And remorse
stirred and stirred in him that he was betraying her with his kiss.
But, even while he kissed her, he was hardening his heart.