To wake, and hear the birds at early practise, and feel that winter
is over--is there any pleasanter moment?
That first morning in her new house, Gyp woke with the sparrow, or
whatever the bird which utters the first cheeps and twitters, soon
eclipsed by so much that is more important in bird-song. It seemed
as if all the feathered creatures in London must be assembled in
her garden; and the old verse came into her head:
"All dear Nature's children sweet
Lie at bride and bridegroom's feet,
Blessing their sense.
Not a creature of the air,
Bird melodious or bird fair,
Be absent hence!"
She turned and looked at her husband. He lay with his head
snoozled down into the pillow, so that she could only see his
thick, rumpled hair. And a shiver went through her, exactly as if
a strange man were lying there. Did he really belong to her, and
she to him--for good? And was this their house--together? It all
seemed somehow different, more serious and troubling, in this
strange bed, of this strange room, that was to be so permanent.
Careful not to wake him, she slipped out and stood between the
curtains and the window. Light was all in confusion yet; away low
down behind the trees, the rose of dawn still clung. One might
almost have been in the country, but for the faint, rumorous noises
of the town beginning to wake, and that film of ground-mist which
veils the feet of London mornings. She thought: "I am mistress in
this house, have to direct it all--see to everything! And my pups!
Oh, what do they eat?"
That was the first of many hours of anxiety, for she was very
conscientious. Her fastidiousness desired perfection, but her
sensitiveness refused to demand it of others--especially servants.
Why should she harry them?
Fiorsen had not the faintest notion of regularity. She found that
he could not even begin to appreciate her struggles in
housekeeping. And she was much too proud to ask his help, or
perhaps too wise, since he was obviously unfit to give it. To live
like the birds of the air was his motto. Gyp would have liked
nothing better; but, for that, one must not have a house with three
servants, several meals, two puppy-dogs, and no great experience of
how to deal with any of them.
She spoke of her difficulties to no one and suffered the more.
With Betty--who, bone-conservative, admitted Fiorsen as hardly as
she had once admitted Winton--she had to be very careful. But her
great trouble was with her father. Though she longed to see him,
she literally dreaded their meeting. He first came--as he had been
wont to come when she was a tiny girl--at the hour when he thought
the fellow to whom she now belonged would most likely be out. Her
heart beat, when she saw him under the trellis. She opened the
door herself, and hung about him so that his shrewd eyes should not
see her face. And she began at once to talk of the puppies, whom
she had named Don and Doff. They were perfect darlings; nothing
was safe from them; her slippers were completely done for; they had
already got into her china-cabinet and gone to sleep there! He
must come and see all over.
Hooking her arm into his, and talking all the time, she took him
up-stairs and down, and out into the garden, to the studio, or
music-room, at the end, which had an entrance to itself on to a
back lane. This room had been the great attraction. Fiorsen could
practice there in peace. Winton went along with her very quietly,
making a shrewd comment now and then. At the far end of the
garden, looking over the wall, down into that narrow passage which
lay between it and the back of another garden he squeezed her arm
suddenly and said:
"Oh, rather lovely--in some ways." But she did not look at him,
nor he at her. "See, Dad! The cats have made quite a path there!"
Winton bit his lips and turned from the wall. The thought of that
fellow was bitter within him. She meant to tell him nothing, meant
to keep up that lighthearted look--which didn't deceive him a bit!
It was. Even a bee or two had come. The tiny leaves had a
transparent look, too thin as yet to keep the sunlight from passing
through them. The purple, delicate-veined crocuses, with little
flames of orange blowing from their centres, seemed to hold the
light as in cups. A wind, without harshness, swung the boughs; a
dry leaf or two still rustled round here and there. And on the
grass, and in the blue sky, and on the almond-blossom was the first
spring brilliance. Gyp clasped her hands behind her head.
And Winton thought: 'She's changed!' She had softened, quickened--
more depth of colour in her, more gravity, more sway in her body,
more sweetness in her smile. But--was she happy?
Winton, watching, was sure of supplication in her face. And,
forcing a smile, he said:
"You seem very snug here. Glad to see you again. Gyp looks
splendid."
Another of those bows he so detested! Mountebank! Never, never
would he be able to stand the fellow! But he must not, would not,
show it. And, as soon as he decently could, he went, taking his
lonely way back through this region, of which his knowledge was
almost limited to Lord's Cricket-ground, with a sense of doubt and
desolation, an irritation more than ever mixed with the resolve to
be always at hand if the child wanted him.
He had not been gone ten minutes before Aunt Rosamund appeared,
with a crutch-handled stick and a gentlemanly limp, for she, too,
indulged her ancestors in gout. A desire for exclusive possession
of their friends is natural to some people, and the good lady had
not known how fond she was of her niece till the girl had slipped
off into this marriage. She wanted her back, to go about with and
make much of, as before. And her well-bred drawl did not quite
disguise this feeling.
Gyp could detect Fiorsen subtly mimicking that drawl; and her ears
began to burn. The puppies afforded a diversion--their points,
noses, boldness, and food, held the danger in abeyance for some
minutes. Then the mimicry began again. When Aunt Rosamund had
taken a somewhat sudden leave, Gyp stood at the window of her
drawing-room with the mask off her face. Fiorsen came up, put his
arm round her from behind, and said with a fierce sigh:
"If I see them too much near you, perhaps I shall."
"Do you think I can be happy if you hurt things because they love
me?"
He sat down and drew her on to his knee. She did not resist, but
made not the faintest return to his caresses. The first time--the
very first friend to come into her own new home! It was too much!
"You do not love me. If you loved me, I should feel it through
your lips. I should see it in your eyes. Oh, love me, Gyp! You
shall!"
But to say to Love: "Stand and deliver!" was not the way to touch
Gyp. It seemed to her mere ill-bred stupidity. She froze against
him in soul, all the more that she yielded her body. When a woman
refuses nothing to one whom she does not really love, shadows are
already falling on the bride-house. And Fiorsen knew it; but his
self-control about equalled that of the two puppies.
Yet, on the whole, these first weeks in her new home were happy,
too busy to allow much room for doubting or regret. Several
important concerts were fixed for May. She looked forward to these
with intense eagerness, and pushed everything that interfered with
preparation into the background. As though to make up for that
instinctive recoil from giving her heart, of which she was always
subconscious, she gave him all her activities, without calculation
or reserve. She was ready to play for him all day and every day,
just as from the first she had held herself at the disposal of his
passion. To fail him in these ways would have tarnished her
opinion of herself. But she had some free hours in the morning,
for he had the habit of lying in bed till eleven, and was never
ready for practise before twelve. In those early hours she got
through her orders and her shopping--that pursuit which to so many
women is the only real "sport"--a chase of the ideal; a pitting of
one's taste and knowledge against that of the world at large; a
secret passion, even in the beautiful, for making oneself and one's
house more beautiful. Gyp never went shopping without that faint
thrill running up and down her nerves. She hated to be touched by
strange fingers, but not even that stopped her pleasure in turning
and turning before long mirrors, while the saleswoman or man, with
admiration at first crocodilic and then genuine, ran the tips of
fingers over those curves, smoothing and pinning, and uttering the
word, "moddam."
On other mornings, she would ride with Winton, who would come for
her, leaving her again at her door after their outings. One day,
after a ride in Richmond Park, where the horse-chestnuts were just
coming into flower, they had late breakfast on the veranda of a
hotel before starting for home. Some fruit-trees were still in
blossom just below them, and the sunlight showering down from a
blue sky brightened to silver the windings of the river, and to
gold the budding leaves of the oak-trees. Winton, smoking his
after-breakfast cigar, stared down across the tops of those trees
toward the river and the wooded fields beyond. Stealing a glance
at him, Gyp said very softly:
"Only once--the very ride we've been to-day. She was on a black
mare; I had a chestnut--" Yes, in that grove on the little hill,
which they had ridden through that morning, he had dismounted and
stood beside her.
Gyp stretched her hand across the table and laid it on his.
"Very like you, Gyp. A little--a little"--he did not know how to
describe that difference--"a little more foreign-looking perhaps.
One of her grandmothers was Italian, you know."
"No; but I don't want to have them. And I don't--I don't want to
love like that. I should be afraid."
Winton looked at her for a long time without speaking, his brows
drawn down, frowning, puzzled, as though over his own past.
"Love," he said, "it catches you, and you're gone. When it comes,
you welcome it, whether it's to kill you or not. Shall we start
back, my child?"
When she got home, it was not quite noon. She hurried over her
bath and dressing, and ran out to the music-room. Its walls had
been hung with Willesden scrim gilded over; the curtains were
silver-grey; there was a divan covered with silver-and-gold stuff,
and a beaten brass fireplace. It was a study in silver, and gold,
save for two touches of fantasy--a screen round the piano-head,
covered with brilliantly painted peacocks' tails, and a blue
Persian vase, in which were flowers of various hues of red.
Fiorsen was standing at the window in a fume of cigarette smoke.
He did not turn round. Gyp put her hand within his arm, and said:
"So sorry, dear. But it's only just half-past twelve."
His face was as if the whole world had injured him.
"Pity you came back! Very nice, riding, I'm sure!"
Could she not go riding with her own father? What insensate
jealousy and egomania! She turned away, without a word, and sat
down at the piano. She was not good at standing injustice--not
good at all! The scent of brandy, too, was mixed with the fumes of
his cigarette. Drink in the morning was so ugly--really horrid!
She sat at the piano, waiting. He would be like this till he had
played away the fumes of his ill mood, and then he would come and
paw her shoulders and put his lips to her neck. Yes; but it was
not the way to behave, not the way to make her love him. And she
said suddenly:
"Gustav; what exactly have I done that you dislike?"
Gyp sat quite still for a few seconds, and then began to laugh. He
looked so like a sulky child, standing there. He turned swiftly on
her and put his hand over her mouth. She looked up over that hand
which smelled of tobacco. Her heart was doing the grand ecart
within her, this way in compunction, that way in resentment. His
eyes fell before hers; he dropped his hand.
He answered roughly: "No," and went out into the garden.
Gyp was left dismayed, disgusted. Was it possible that she could
have taken part in such a horrid little scene? She remained
sitting at the piano, playing over and over a single passage,
without heeding what it was.