In the autumn Susan went home for a week, for the Lancaster family
was convulsed by the prospect of Alfie's marriage to a little nobody
whose father kept a large bakery in the Mission, and Susan was
needed to brace Alfred's mother for the blow. Mary Lou's old admirer
and his little, invalid wife, were staying at the house now, and
Susan found "Ferd" a sad blow to her old romantic vision of him: a
stout, little, ruddy-cheeked man, too brilliantly dressed, with hair
turning gray, and an offensive habit of attacking the idle rich for
Susan's benefit, and dilating upon his own business successes.
Georgie came over to spend a night in the old home while Susan was
there, carrying the heavy, lumpy baby. Myra was teething now, cross
and unmanageable, and Georgie was worried because a barley
preparation did not seem to agree with her, and Joe disapproved of
patent foods. Joe hoped that the new baby--Susan widened her eyes.
Oh, yes, in May, Georgie announced simply, and with a tired sigh,--
Joe hoped the new baby would be a boy. She herself hoped for a
little girl, wouldn't it be sweet to call it May? Georgie looked
badly, and if she did not exactly break down and cry during her
visit, Susan felt that tears were always close behind her eyes.
Billy, beside her somewhat lachrymose aunt and cousins, shone out,
during this visit, as Susan had never known him to do before. He
looked splendidly big and strong and well, well groomed and erect in
carriage, and she liked the little compliment he paid her in
postponing the German lesson that should have filled the evening,
and dressing himself in his best to take her to the Orpheum. Susan
returned it by wearing her prettiest gown and hat. They set out in
great spirits, Susan chattering steadily, in the relief it was to
speak her mind honestly, and Billy listening, and now and then
shouting out in the laughter that never failed her spirited
narratives.
He told her of the Carrolls,--all good news, for Anna had been
offered a fine position as assistant matron in one of the best of
the city's surgical hospitals; Betts had sold a story to the
Argonaut for twelve dollars, and Philip was going steadily ahead;
"you wouldn't believe he was the same fellow!" said Billy. Jimmy and
Betts and their mother were to go up in a few days for a fortnight's
holiday in the little shooting-box that some Eastern friends had
built years ago in the Humboldt woods. The owners had left the key
with Mrs. Carroll, and she might use the little cabin as much as she
liked.
This was the best news of all. Jo was to go East for the winter with
one of her mother's friends, whose daughter was Jo's own age. They
were to visit Boston and Washington, New York for the Opera, Palm
Beach in February, and New Orleans for the Mardi Gras. Mrs.
Frothingham was a widow, and had a son at Yale, who would join them
for some of the holidays. Susan was absolutely delighted at the
news, and alluded to it over and over again.
"It's so different when people deserve a thing, and when it's all
new to them," she said to Billy, "it makes it seem so much more
glorious!"
They came out of the theater at eleven, cramped and blinking, and
Susan, confused for a moment, was trying to get her bearings, when
Billy touched her arm.
"The Earl of Somerset is trying to bow to you, Sue!"
She laughed, and followed the direction of his look. It was Stephen
Bocqueraz who was smiling at her, a very distinguished figure under
the lamp-post, with his fur-lined great-coat, his round tortoise-
shell eye-glasses and his silk hat. He came up to them at once, and
Susan, pleasantly conscious that a great many people recognized the
great man, introduced him to Billy.
He had just gotten back from a long visit in the Southern part of
the state, he said, and had been dining to-night with friends at the
Bohemian Club, and was walking back to his hotel. Susan could not
keep the pleasure the meeting gave her out of her eyes and voice,
and Billy showed a sort of boyish and bashful admiration of the
writer, too.
"But this--this is a very felicitous occasion," said Mr. Bocqueraz.
"We must celebrate this in some fitting manner!"
So he took them to supper, dismissing their hesitation as unworthy
of combat; Susan and Billy laughed helplessly and happily as they
sat down at the little table, and heard the German waiter's rapture
at the commands Stephen Bocqueraz so easily gave him in his mother
tongue. Billy, reddening but determined, must at once try his German
too, and the waiter and Bocqueraz laughed at him even while they
answered him, and agreed that the young man as a linguist was ganz
wunderbar. Billy evidently liked his company; he was at his best to-
night, unaffected, youthful, earnest. Susan herself felt that she
had never been so happy in her life.
Long afterward she tried to remember what they had talked about. She
knew that the conversation had been to her as a draught of sparkling
wine. All her little affections were in full play to-night, the
little odds and ends of worldly knowledge she had gleaned from Ella
and Ella's friends, the humor of Emily and Peter Coleman. And
because she was an Irishman's daughter a thousand witticisms flashed
in her speech, and her eyes shone like stars under the stimulus of
another's wit and the admiration in another's eyes.
It became promptly evident that Bocqueraz liked them both. He began
to call Billy "lad," in a friendly, older-brotherly manner, and his
laughter at Susan was alternated with moments of the gravest, the
most flattering attention.
"She's quite wonderful, isn't she?" he said to Billy under his
breath, but Susan heard it, and later he added, quite impersonally,
"She's absolutely extraordinary! We must have her in New York, you
know; my wife must meet her!"
They talked of music and musicians, and Bocqueraz and Billy argued
and disputed, and presently the author's card was sent to the leader
of the orchestra, with a request for the special bit of music under
discussion. They talked of authors and poets and painters and
actors, and he knew many of them, and knew something of them all. He
talked of clubs, New York clubs and London clubs, and of plays that
were yet to be given, and music that the public would never hear.
Susan felt as if electricity was coursing through her veins. She
felt no fatigue, no sleepiness, no hunger; her champagne bubbled
untouched, but she emptied her glass of ice-water over and over
again. Of the lights and the music and the crowd she was only
vaguely conscious; she saw, as if in a dream, the hands of the big
clock, at the end of the room, move past one, past two o'clock, but
she never thought of the time.
It was after two o'clock; still they talked on. The musicians had
gone home, lights were put out in the corners of the room, tables
and chairs were being piled together.
Stephen Bocqueraz had turned his chair so that he sat sideways at
the table; Billy, opposite him, leaned on his elbows; Susan, sitting
between them, framing her face in her hands, moved her eyes from one
face to the other.
"And now, children," said the writer, when at last they were in the
empty, chilly darkness of the street, "where can I get you a
carriage? The cars seem to have stopped."
"The cars stop at about one," said William, "but there's a place two
blocks up where we can get a hack. Don't let us take you out of your
way."
"Good-night, then, lad," said Bocqueraz, laying his hand
affectionately on Billy's shoulder. "Good-night, you wonderful
little girl. Tell my wife's good cousins in San Rafael that I am
coming over very soon to pay my respects."
He turned briskly on his heel and left them, and Susan stood looking
after him for a moment.
"Where's your livery stable?" asked the girl then, taking Billy's
arm.
"There isn't any!" Billy told her shamelessly. "But I've got just a
dollar and eighty cents, and I was afraid he would put us into a
carriage!"
Susan, brought violently to earth, burst out laughing, gathered her
skirts up philosophically, and took his arm for the long walk home.
It was a cool bright night, the sky was spattered thickly with
stars, the moon long ago set. Susan was very silent, mind and heart
swept with glorious dreams. Billy, beyond the remark that Bocqueraz
certainly was a king, also had little to say, but his frequent yawns
indicated that it was rather because of fatigue than of visions.
The house was astir when they reached it, but the confusion there
was too great to give anyone time to notice the hour of their
return. Alfie had brought his bride to see his mother, earlier in
the evening, and Ma had had hysterics the moment that they left the
house. These were no sooner calmed than Mrs. Eastman had had a
"stroke," the doctor had now come and gone, but Mary Lou and her
husband still hovered over the sufferer, "and I declare I don't know
what the world's coming to!" Mrs. Lancaster said despairingly.
"What is it-what is it?" Mary Lord was calling, when Susan reached
the top flight. Susan went in to give her the news, Mary was
restless to-night, and glad of company; the room seemed close and
warm. Lydia, sleeping heavily on the couch, only turned and grunted
occasionally at the sound of the girls' voices.
Susan lay awake until almost dawn, wrapped in warm and delicious
emotion. She recalled the little separate phases of the evening's
talk, brought them from her memory deliberately, one by one. When
she remembered that Mr. Bocqueraz had asked if Billy was "the
fiance," for some reason she could not define, she shut her eyes in
the dark, and a wave of some new, enveloping delight swept her from
feet to head. Certain remembered looks, inflections, words, shook
the deeps of her being with a strange and poignantly sweet sense of
weakness and power: a trembling joy.
The new thrill, whatever it was, was with her when she wakened, and
when she ran downstairs, humming the Toreador's song, Mary Lou and
her aunt told her that she was like a bit of sunshine in the house;
the girl's eyes were soft and bright with dreams; her cheeks were
glowing.
When the postman came she flew to meet him. There was no definite
hope in her mind as she did so, but she came back more slowly,
nevertheless. No letter for her.
But at eleven o'clock a messenger boy appeared with a special
delivery letter for Miss Susan Brown, she signed the little book
with a sensation that was almost fear. This--this was beginning to
frighten her---
Susan read it with a fast-beating heart. It was short, dignified.
Mr. Bocqueraz wrote that he was sending her the book of which he had
spoken; he had enjoyed nothing for a long time as much as their
little supper last evening; he hoped to see her and that very fine
lad, Billy, very soon again. His love to them both. He was her
faithful friend, all ways and always, Stephen Graham Bocqueraz.
She slipped it inside her blouse, ignored it for a few moments,
returned to it from other thoughts with a sense of infinite delight,
and read it again. Susan could not quite analyze its charm, but in
her whole being she was conscious of a warmth, a lightness, and a
certain sweet and heady happiness throughout the entire day and the
next day.
Her thoughts began to turn toward New York. All young Californians
are conscious, sooner or later in their growth, of the call of the
great city, and just now Susan was wrapped in a cloud of dreams that
hung over Broadway. She saw herself one of the ebbing and flowing
crowd, watching the world from her place at the breakfast table in a
great hotel, sweeping through the perfumed warmth and brightness of
a theater lobby to her carriage.
Stephen Bocqueraz had spoken of her coming to New York as a matter
of course. "You belong there," he decided, gravely appraising her.
"My wife will write to ask you to come, and we will find you just
the niche you like among your own sort and kind, and your own work
to do."
"Oh, it would be too wonderful!" Susan had gasped.
"New York is not wonderful," he told her, with smiling, kindly,
disillusioned eyes, "but you are wonderful!"
Susan, when she went back to San Rafael, was seized by a mood of
bitter dissatisfaction with herself. What did she know--what could
she do? She was fitted neither for the stage nor for literature, she
had no gift of music or of art. Lost opportunities rose up to haunt
her. Ah, if she had only studied something, if she were only wiser,
a linguist, a student of poetry or of history. Nearing twenty-five,
she was as ignorant as she had been at fifteen! A remembered line
from a carelessly read poem, a reference to some play by Ibsen or
Maeterlinck or d'Annunzio, or the memory of some newspaper clipping
that concerned the marriage of a famous singer or the power of a new
anaesthetic,--this was all her learning!
Stephen Bocqueraz, on the Sunday following their second meeting,
called upon his wife's mother's cousin. Mrs. Saunders was still at
the hospital, and Emily was driven by the excitement of the occasion
behind a very barrier of affectations, but Kenneth was gracious and
hospitable, and took them all to the hotel for tea. Here they were
the center of a changing, admiring, laughing group; everybody wanted
to have at least a word with the great man, and Emily enjoyed a
delightful feeling of popularity. Susan, quite eclipsed, was
apparently pleasantly busy with her tea, and with the odds and ends
of conversation that fell to her. But Susan knew that Stephen
Bocqueraz did not move out of her hearing for one moment during the
afternoon, nor miss a word that she said; nor say, she suspected, a
word that she was not meant to hear. Just to exist, under these
conditions, was enough. Susan, in quiet undertones, laughed and
chatted and flirted and filled tea-cups, never once directly
addressing the writer, and never really addressing anyone else.
Kenneth brought "Cousin Stephen" home for dinner, but Emily turned
fractious, and announced that she was not going down.
"You'd rather be up here just quietly with me, wouldn't you, Sue?"
coaxed Emily, sitting on the arm of Susan's chair, and putting an
arm about her.
"Of course I would, old lady! We'll send down for something nice,
and get into comfortable things," Susan said.
It hardly disappointed her; she was walking on air. She went
demurely to the library door, to make her excuses; and Bocqueraz's
look enveloped her like a shaft of sunlight. All the evening,
upstairs, and stretched out in a long chair and in a loose silk
wrapper, she was curiously conscious of his presence downstairs;
whenever she thought of him, she must close her book, and fall to
dreaming. His voice, his words, the things he had not said ... they
spun a brilliant web about her. She loved to be young; she saw new
beauty to-night in the thick rope of tawny hair that hung loosely
across her shoulder, in the white breast, half-hidden by the fold of
her robe, in the crossed, silk-clad ankles. All the world seemed
beautiful tonight, and she beautiful with the rest.
Three days later she came downstairs, at five o'clock on a gloomy,
dark afternoon, in search of firelight and tea. Emily and Kenneth,
Peter Coleman and Mary Peacock, who were staying at the hotel for a
week or two, were motoring. The original plan had included Susan,
but at the last moment Emily had been discovered upstairs, staring
undecidedly out of the window, humming abstractedly.
"Aren't you coming, Em?" Susan had asked, finding her.
"I--I don't believe I will," Emily said lightly, without turning.
"Go on, don't wait for me! It's nothing," she had persisted, when
Susan questioned her, "Nothing at all! At least," the truth came out
at last, "at least, I think it looks odd. So now go on, without me,"
said Emily.
"If I did," Emily said, in a low, quiet tone, still looking out of
the window, "it would be simply because of the looks of things!"
"Well, go because of the looks of things then!" Susan agreed
cheerfully.
"No, but you see," Emily said eagerly, turning around, "it does look
odd--not to me, of course! But mean odd to other people if you go
and I don't-don't you think so, Sue?"
"Ye-es," drawled Susan, with a sort of bored and fexasperated sigh.
And she went to her own room to write letters, not disappointed, but
irritated so thoroughly that she could hardly control her thoughts.
At five o'clock, dressed in a childish black velvet gown--her one
pretty house gown--with the deep embroidered collar and cuffs that
were so becoming to her, and with her hair freshly brushed and swept
back simply from her face, she came downstairs for a cup of tea.
And in the library, sunk into a deep chair before the fire, she
found Stephen Bocqueraz, his head resting against the back of the
chair, his knees crossed and his finger-tips fitted together.
Susan's heart began to race.
He got up and they shook hands, and stood for too long a moment
looking at each other. The sense of floating--floating--losing her
anchorage--began to make Susan's head spin. She sat down, opposite
him, as he took his chair again, but her breath was coming too short
to permit of speech.
"Upon my word I thought the woman said that you were all out!" said
Bocqueraz, appreciative eyes upon her, "I hardly hoped for a piece
of luck like this!"
"Well, they are, you know. I'm not, strictly speaking, a Saunders,"
smiled Susan.
"No; you're nobody but yourself," he agreed, following a serious
look with his sudden, bright smile. "You're a very extraordinary
woman, Mamselle Suzanne," he went on briskly, "and I've got a nice
little plan all ready to talk to you about. One of these days Mrs.
Bocqueraz--she's a wonderful woman for this sort of thing!--shall
write to your aunt, or whoever is in loco parentis, and you shall
come on to New York for a visit. And while you're there---" He broke
off, raised his eyes from a study of the fire, and again sent her
his sudden and sweet and most disturbing smile.
"Oh, don't talk about it!" said Susan. "It's too good to be true!"
"Nothing's too good to be true," he answered. "Once or twice before
it's been my extraordinary good fortune to find a personality, and
give it a push in the right direction. You'll find the world kind
enough to you--Lillian will see to it that you meet a few of the
right people, and you'll do the rest. And how you'll love it, and
how they'll love you!" He jumped up. "However, I'm not going to
spoil you," he said, smilingly.
He went to one of the bookcases and presently came back to read to
her from Phillips' "Paolo and Francesca," and from "The Book and the
Ring." And never in later life did Susan read either without hearing
his exquisite voice through the immortal lines:
"A ring without a poesy, and that ring mine?
O Lyric Love! ..."
"O Lord of Rimini, with tears we leave her, as we leave a
child,
Be gentle with her, even as God has been...."
"Some day I'll read you Pompilia, little Suzanne," said Bocqueraz.
"Do you know Pompilia? Do you know Alice Meynell and some of
Patmore's stuff, and the 'Dread of Height'?"
"I don't know anything," said Susan, feeling it true. "Well," he
said gaily, "we'll read them all!"
Susan presently poured his tea; her guest wheeling his great leather
chair so that its arm touched the arm of her own.
"You make me feel all thumbs, watching me so!" she protested.
"I like to watch you," he answered undisturbed. "Here, we'll put
this plate on the arm of my chair,--so. Then we can both use it.
Your scones on that side, and mine on this, and my butter-knife
between the two, like Prosper Le Gai's sword, eh?"
Susan's color heightened suddenly; she frowned. He was a man of the
world, of course, and a married man, and much older than she, but
somehow she didn't like it. She didn't like the laughter in his
eyes. There had been just a hint of this--this freedom, in his
speech a few nights ago, but somehow in Billy's presence it had
seemed harmless---
"And why the blush?" he was askingly negligently, yet watching her
closely, as if he rather enjoyed her confusion.
"You know why," Susan said, meeting his eyes with a little
difficulty.
"I know why. But that's nothing to blush at. Analyze it. What is
there in that to embarrass you?"
"I don't know," Susan said, awkwardly, feeling very young.
"Life is a very beautiful thing, my child," he said, almost as if he
were rebuking her, "and the closer we come to the big heart of life
the more wonderful things we find. No--no--don't let the people
about you make you afraid of life." He finished his cup of tea, and
she poured him another. "I think it's time to transplant you," he
said then, pleasantly, "and since last night I've been thinking of a
very delightful and practical way to do it. Lillian--Mrs. Bocqueraz
has a very old friend in New York in Mrs. Gifford Curtis--no, you
don't know the name perhaps, but she's a very remarkable woman--an
invalid. All the world goes to her teas and dinners, all the world
has been going there since Booth fell in love with her, and Patti--
when she was in her prime!--spent whole Sunday afternoons singing to
her! You'll meet everyone who's at all worth while there now,
playwrights, and painters, and writers, and musicians. Her daughters
are all married to prominent men; one lives in Paris, one in London,
two near her; friends keep coming and going. It's a wonderful
family. Well, there's a Miss Concannon who's been with her as a sort
of companion for twenty years, but Miss Concannon isn't young, and
she confided to me a few months ago that she needed an assistant,--
someone to pour tea and write notes and play accompaniments---"
"A sort of Julie le Breton?" said Susan, with sparkling eyes. She
resolved to begin piano practice for two hours a day to-morrow.
"I beg pardon? Yes--yes, exactly, so I'm going to write Lillian at
once, and she'll put the wheels in motion!"
"I don't know what good angel ever made you think of me," said
Susan.
"Don't you?" the man asked, in a low tone. There was a pause. Both
stared at the fire. Suddenly Bocqueraz cleared his throat.
"Well!" he said, jumping up, "if this clock is right it's after
half-past six. Where are these good people?"
"Here they are--there's the car coming in the gate now!" Susan said
in relief. She ran out to the steps to meet them.
A day or two later, as she was passing Ella's half-open doorway,
Ella's voice floated out into the hall.
"That you, Susan? Come in. Will you do your fat friend a favor?"
Ella, home again, had at once resumed her despotic control of the
household. She was lying on a couch at this moment, lazily waving a
scribbled half sheet of paper over her head.
"Take this to Mrs. Pullet, Sue," said she, "and ask her to tell the
cook, in some confidential moment, that there are several things
written down here that he seems to have forgotten the existence of.
I want to see them on the table, from time to time. While I was with
the Crewes I was positively mortified at the memory of our meals!
And from now on, while Mr. Bocqueraz's here, we'll be giving two
dinners a week."
"While--?" Susan felt a delicious, a terrifying weakness run like a
wave from head to feet.
"He's going to be here for a month or two!" Ella announced
complacently. "It was all arranged last night. I almost fell off my
feet when he proposed it. He says he's got some work to finish up,
and he thinks the atmosphere here agrees with him. Kate Stanlaws
turned a lovely pea-green, for they were trying to get him to go
with them to Alaska. He'll have the room next to Mamma's, with the
round porch, and the big room off the library for a study. I had
them clear everything out of it, and Ken's going to send over a
desk, and chair, and so on. And do try to do everything you can to
make him comfortable, Sue. Mamma's terribly pleased that he wants to
come," finished Ella, making a long arm for her novel, "But of
course he and I made an instant hit with each other!"
"Oh, of course I will!" Susan promised. She went away with her list,
pleasure and excitement and a sort of terror struggling together in
her heart.
Pleasure prevailed, however, when Stephen Bocqueraz was really
established at "High Gardens," and the first nervous meeting was
safely over. Everybody in the house was the happier and brighter for
his coming, and Susan felt it no sin to enjoy him with the rest.
Meal times became very merry; the tea-hour, when he would come
across the hall from his workroom, tired, relaxed, hungry, was often
the time of prolonged and delightful talks, and on such evenings as
Ella left her cousin free of dinner engagements, even Emily had to
admit that his reading, under the drawing-room lamp, was a rare
delight.
Sometimes he gave himself a half-holiday, and joined Emily and Susan
in their driving or motoring. On almost every evening that he did
not dine at home he was downstairs in time for a little chat with
Susan over the library fire. They were never alone very long, but
they had a dozen brief encounters every day, exchanged a dozen
quick, significant glances across the breakfast table, or over the
book that he was reading aloud.
Susan lived in a dazed, wide-eyed state of reasonless excitement and
perilous delight. It was all so meaningless, she assured her pretty
vision in the mirror, as she arranged her bright hair,--the man was
married, and most happily married; he was older than she; he was a
man of honor! And she, Susan Brown, was only playing this
fascinating game exceptionally well. She had never flirted before
and had been rather proud of it. Well, she was flirting now, and
proud of that, too! She was quite the last girl in the world to fall
seriously in love, with her eyes wide open, in so extremely
undesirable a direction! This was not falling in love at all.
Stephen Bocqueraz spoke of his wife half a dozen times a day. Susan,
on her part, found plenty of things about him to dislike! But he was
clever, and--yes, and fascinating, and he admired her immensely, and
there was no harm done so far, and none to be done. Why try to
define the affair by cut-and-dried rules; it was quite different
from anything that had ever happened before, it stood in a class
quite by itself.
The intangible bond between them strengthened every day. Susan,
watching him when Ella's friends gathered about him, watching the
honest modesty with which he evaded their empty praises, their
attempts at lionizing, could not but thrill to know that her praise
stirred him, that the deprecatory, indifferent air was dropped
quickly enough for her! It was intoxicating to know, as she did
know, that he was thinking, as she was, of what they would say when
they next had a moment together; that, whatever she wore, he found
her worth watching; that, whatever her mood, she never failed to
amuse and delight him! Her rather evasive beauty grew more definite
under his eyes; she bubbled with fun and nonsense. "You little
fool!" Ella would laugh, with an approving glance toward Susan at
the tea-table, and "Honestly, Sue, you were killing tonight!" Emily,
who loved to be amused, said more than once.
One day Miss Brown was delegated to carry a message to Mr. Bocqueraz
in his study. Mrs. Saunders was sorry to interrupt his writing, but
a very dear old friend was coming to dinner that evening, and would
Cousin Stephen come into the drawing-room for a moment, before he
and Ella went out?
Susan tripped demurely to the study door and rapped.
"Come in!" a voice shouted. Susan turned the knob, and put her head
into the room. Mr. Bocqueraz, writing at a large table by the
window, and facing the door across its shining top, flung down his
pen, and stretched back luxuriously in his chair.
"Well, well!" said he, smiling and blinking. "Come in, Susanna!"
"But come in! I've reached a tight corner; couldn't get any further
anyway!" He pushed away his papers. "There are days, you know, when
you're not even on bowing acquaintance with your characters."
He looked so genial, so almost fatherly, so contentedly lazy,
leaning back in his big chair, the winter sunshine streaming in the
window behind him, and a dozen jars of fragrant winter flowers
making the whole room sweet, that Susan came in, unhesitatingly. It
was the mood of all his moods that she liked best; interested,
interesting, impersonal.
"But I oughtn't--you're writing," said Susan, taking a chair across
the table from him, and laying bold hands on his manuscript,
nevertheless. "What a darling hand you write!" she observed, "and
what enormous margins. Oh, I see, you write notes in the margins--
corrections?"
"Exactly!" He was watching her between half-closed lids, with lazy
pleasure.
"'The only,' in a loop," said Susan, "that's not much of a note! I
could have written that myself," she added, eying him sideways
through a film of drifting hair.
"Very well, write anything you like!" he offered amusedly.
"Oh, honestly?" asked Susan with dancing eyes. And, at his nod, she
dipped a pen in the ink, and began to read the story with a serious
scowl.
"Here!" she said suddenly, "this isn't at all sensible!" And she
read aloud:
"So crystal clear was the gaze with which he met her own,
that she was aware of an immediate sense, a vaguely alarming
sense, that her confidence must be made with concessions not
only to what he had told her--and told her so exquisitely as to
indicate his knowledge of other facts from which those he
chose to reveal were deliberately selected--but also to what he
had not--surely the most significant detail of the whole significant
episode--so chosen to reveal!"
"Oh, I see what it means, when I read it aloud," said Susan,
cheerfully honest. "But at first it didn't seem to make sense!"
"Well---" Susan dimpled. "Then I'll--let's see--I'll put 'surely'
after 'also,'" she announced, "and end it up, 'to what he had not so
chosen to reveal!' Don't you think that's better?"
His quiet certainty that these scattered pages would surely be a
book some day thrilled Susan, as power always thrilled her. Just as
she had admired Thorny's old scribbled prices, years before, so she
admired this quiet mastery now. She asked Stephen Bocqueraz
questions, and he told her of his boyhood dreams, of the early
struggles in the big city, of the first success.
"One hundred dollars for a story, Susan. It looked a little
fortune!"
"Married?" He smiled. "My dear child, Mrs. Bocqueraz is worth almost
a million dollars in her own right. No--we have never faced poverty
together!" There was almost a wistful look in his eyes.
"And to whom is this book going to be dedicated?" asked Susan.
"Well, I don't know. Lillian has two, and Julie has one or two, and
various men, here and in London. Perhaps I'll dedicate this one to a
bold baggage of an Irish girl. Would you like that?"
"Because, your wife---" she began awkwardly, turning a fiery red.
Bocqueraz abruptly left his seat, and walked to a window.
"Susan," he said, coming back, after a moment, "have I ever done
anything to warrant--to make you distrust me?"
"No,--never!" said Susan heartily, ashamed of herself.
"Friends?" he asked, gravely. And with his sudden smile he put his
two hands out, across the desk.
It was like playing with fire; she knew it. But Susan felt herself
quite equal to anyone at playing with fire.
"Friends!" she laughed, gripping his hands with hers. "And now," she
stood up, "really I mustn't interrupt you any longer!"
"But wait a moment," he said. "Come see what a pretty vista I get--
right across the Japanese garden to the woods!"
"The same as we do upstairs," Susan said. But she went to stand
beside him at the window.
"No," said Stephen Bocqueraz presently, quietly taking up the thread
of the interrupted conversation, "I won't dedicate my book to you,
Susan, but some day I'll write you a book of your own! I have been
wishing," he added soberly, his eyes on the little curved bridge and
the dwarfed shrubs, the pond and the stepping-stones across the
garden, "I have been wishing that I never had met you, my dear. I
knew, years ago, in those hard, early days of which I've been
telling you, that you were somewhere, but--but I didn't wait for
you, Susan, and now I can do no more than wish you God-speed, and
perhaps give you a helping hand upon your way! That's all I wanted
to say."
"I'm--I'm not going to answer you," said Susan, steadily,
composedly.
Side by side they looked out of the window, for another moment or
two, then Bocqueraz turned suddenly and catching her hands in his,
asked almost gaily:
"Well, this is something, at least, isn't it--to be good friends,
and to have had this much of each other?"
"Surely! A lot!" Susan answered, in smiling relief. And a moment
later she had delivered her message, and was gone, and he had seated
himself at his work again.
How much was pretense and how much serious earnest, on his part, she
wondered. How much was real on her own? Not one bit of it, said
Susan, fresh from her bath, in the bracing cool winter morning, and
walking briskly into town for the mail. Not--not much of it, anyway,
she decided when tea-time brought warmth and relaxation, the leaping
of fire-light against the library walls, the sound of the clear and
cultivated voice.
But what was the verdict later, when Susan, bare-armed and bare-
shouldered, with softened light striking brassy gleams from her
hair, and the perfumed dimness and silence of the great house
impressing every sense, paused for a message from Stephen Bocqueraz
at the foot of the stairs, or warmed her shining little slipper at
the fire, while he watched her from the chair not four feet away?
When she said "I--I'm not going to answer you," in the clear, bright
morning light, Susan was enjoyably aware of the dramatic value of
the moment; when she evaded Bocqueraz's eye throughout an entire
luncheon she did it deliberately; it was a part of the cheerful,
delightful game it pleased them both to be playing.
But not all was posing, not all was pretense. Nature, now and then,
treacherously slipped in a real thrill, where only play-acting was
expected. Susan, laughing at the memory of some sentimental fencing,
was sometimes caught unaware by a little pang of regret; how blank
and dull life would be when this casual game was over! After all, he
was the great writer; before the eyes of all the world, even this
pretense at an intimate friendship was a feather in her cap!
And he did not attempt to keep their rapidly developing friendship a
secret; Susan was alternately gratified and terrified by the reality
of his allusions to her before outsiders. No playing here! Everybody
knew, in their little circle, that, in the nicest and most elder-
brotherly way possible, Stephen Bocqueraz thought Susan Brown the
greatest fun in the world, and quoted her, and presented her with
his autographed books. This side of the affair, being real, had a
tendency to make it all seem real, and sometimes confused, and
sometimes a little frightened Susan.
"That a woman of Emily's mental caliber can hire a woman of yours,
for a matter of dollars and cents," he said to Susan whimsically,
"is proof that something is radically wrong somewhere! Well, some
day we'll put you where values are a little different. Anybody can
be rich. Mighty few can be Susan!"
She did not believe everything he said, of course, or take all his
chivalrous speeches quite seriously. But obviously, some of it was
said in all honesty, she thought, or why should he take the trouble
to say it? And the nearness of his bracing personality blew across
the artificial atmosphere in which she lived like the cool breath of
great moors or of virgin forests. Genius and work and success became
the real things of life; money but a mere accident. A horrible sense
of the unreality of everything that surrounded her began to oppress
Susan. She saw the poisoned undercurrent of this glittering and
exquisite existence, the selfishness, the cruelties, the narrowness.
She saw its fundamental insincerity. In a world where wrongs were to
be righted, and ignorance enlightened, and childhood sheltered and
trained, she began to think it strange that strong, and young, and
wealthy men and women should be content to waste enormous sums of
money upon food to which they scarcely ever brought a normal
appetite, upon bridge-prizes for guests whose interest in them
scarcely survived the moment of unwrapping the dainty beribboned
boxes in which they came, upon costly toys for children whose
nurseries were already crowded with toys. She wondered that they
should think it worth while to spend hours and days in harassing
dressmakers and milliners, to make a brief appearance in the gowns
they were so quickly ready to discard, that they should gratify
every passing whim so instantly that all wishes died together, like
little plants torn up too soon.
The whole seemed wonderful and beautiful still. But the parts of
this life, seriously analyzed, seemed to turn to dust and ashes. Of
course, a hundred little shop-girls might ache with envy at reading
that Mrs. Harvey Brock was to give her debutante daughter a fancy-
dress ball, costing ten thousand dollars, and might hang wistfully
over the pictures of Miss Peggy Brock in her Dresden gown with her
ribbon-tied crook; but Susan knew that Peggy cried and scolded the
whole afternoon, before the dance, because Teddy Russell was not
coming, that young Martin Brock drank too much on that evening and
embarrassed his entire family before he could be gotten upstairs,
and that Mrs. Brock considered the whole event a failure because
some favors, for which she had cabled to Paris, did not come, and
the effect of the german was lost. Somehow, the "lovely and gifted
heiress" of the newspapers never seemed to Susan at all reconcilable
with Dolly Ripley, vapid, overdressed, with diamonds sparkling about
her sallow throat, and the "jolly impromptu" trip of the St. Johns
to New York lost its point when one knew it was planned because the
name of young Florence St. John had been pointedly omitted from Ella
Saunders dance list.
Boasting, lying, pretending--how weary Susan got of it all! She was
too well schooled to smile when Ella, meeting the Honorable Mary
Saunders and Sir Charles Saunders, of London, said magnificently,
"We bear the same arms, Sir Charles, but of course ours is the
colonial branch of the family!" and she nodded admiringly at Dolly
Ripley's boyish and blunt fashion of saying occasionally "We
Ripleys,--oh, we drink and gamble and do other things, I admit;
we're not saints! But we can't lie, you know!"
"I hate to take the kiddies to New York, Mike," perhaps some young
matron would say simply. "Percy's family is one of the old, old
families there, you know, shamelessly rich, and terribly exclusive!
And one doesn't want the children to take themselves seriously yet
awhile!"
"Bluffers!" the smiling and interested Miss Brown would say to
herself, as she listened. She listened a great deal; everyone was
willing to talk, and she was often amused at the very slight
knowledge that could carry a society girl through a conversation. In
Hunter, Baxter & Hunter's offices there would be instant challenges,
even at auntie's table affectation met its just punishment, and
inaccuracy was promptly detected. But there was no such censorship
here.
"Looks like a decent little cob!" some girl would say, staring at
rider passing the hotel window, at teatime.
"Yes," another voice would agree, "good points. Looks thoroughbred."
And, an ordinary rider, on a stable hack, having by this time passed
from view, the subject, would be changed.
Or perhaps some social offense would absorb everybody's attention
for the better part of half-an-hour.
"Look, Emily," their hostess would say, during a call, "isn't this
rich! The Bridges have had their crest put on their mourning-
stationery! Don't you love it! Mamma says that the girls must have
done it; the old lady must know better! Execrable bad taste, I call
it."
"Oh,isn't that awful!" Emily would inspect the submitted letter
with deep amusement.
"Oh, Mary, let's see it--I don't believe it!" somebody else would
exclaim.
"Poor things, and they try so hard to do everything right!" Kindly
pity would soften the tones of a fourth speaker.
"But you know Mary, they do do that in England," somebody might
protest.
"Why, of course they know!" shocked voices would protest. "It's
their business!"
"Well," the defender of the Bridges would continue loftily, "all I
can say is that Alice and I saw it--"
"I know that when we were in London," some pleasant, interested
voice would interpose, modestly, "our friends--Lord and Lady
Merridew, they were, you know, and Sir Henry Phillpots--they were in
mourning, and they didn't. But of course I don't know what other
people, not nobility, that is, might do!"
And of course this crushing conclusion admitted of no answer. But
Miss Peggy might say to Susan later, with a bright, pitying smile:
"Alice will roar when I tell her about this! Lord and Lady
Merridew,--that's simply delicious! I love it!"
"Bandar-log," Bocqueraz called them, and Susan often thought of the
term in these days. From complete disenchantment she was saved,
however, by her deepening affection for Isabel Wallace, and,
whenever they were together, Susan had to admit that a more lovely
personality had never been developed by any environment or in any
class. Isabel, fresh, unspoiled, eager to have everyone with whom
she came in contact as enchanted with life as she was herself,
developed a real devotion for Susan, and showed it in a hundred
ways. If Emily was away for a night, Isabel was sure to come and
carry Susan off for as many hours as possible to the lovely Wallace
home. They had long, serious talks together; Susan did not know
whether to admire or envy most Isabel's serene happiness in her
engagement, the most brilliant engagement of the winter, and
Isabel's deeper interest in her charities, her tender consideration
of her invalid mother, her flowers, her plan for the small brothers.
"John is wonderful, of course," Isabel would agree in a smiling
aside to Susan when, furred and glowing, she had brought her
handsome big lover into the Saunders' drawing-room for a cup of tea,
"but I've been spoiled all my life, Susan, and I'm afraid he's going
right on with it! And--" Isabel's lovely eyes would be lighted with
an ardent glow, "and I want to do something with my life, Sue,
something big, in return for it all!"
Again, Susan found herself watching with curious wistfulness the
girl who had really had an offer of marriage, who was engaged,
openly adored and desired. What had he said to her--and she to him--
what emotions crossed their hearts when they went to watch the
building of the beautiful home that was to be theirs?
A man and a woman--a man and a woman--loving and marrying--what a
miracle the familiar aspects of approaching marriage began to seem!
In these days Susan read old poems with a thrill, read "Trilby"
again, and found herself trembling, read "Adam Bede," and shut the
book with a thundering heart. She went, with the others, to "Faust,"
and turned to Stephen Bocqueraz a pale, tense face, and eyes
brimming with tears.
The writer's study, beyond the big library, had a fascination for
her. At least once a day she looked in upon him there, sometimes
with Emily, sometimes with Ella, never, after that first day, alone.
"You can see that he's perfectly devoted to that dolly-faced wife of
his!" Ella said, half-contemptuously. "I think we all bore him,"
Emily said. "Stephen is a good and noble man," said his wife's old
cousin. Susan never permitted herself to speak of him. "Don't you
like him?" asked Isabel. "He seems crazy about you! I think you're
terribly fine to be so indifferent about it, Susan!"
On a certain December evening Emily decided that she was very
unwell, and must have a trained nurse. Susan, who had stopped,
without Emily, at the Wallaces' for tea, understood perfectly that
the youngest Miss Saunders was delicately intimating that she
expected a little more attention from her companion. A few months
ago she would have risen to the occasion with the sort of cheerful
flattery that never failed in its effect on Emily, but to-night a
sort of stubborn irritation kept her lips sealed, and in the end she
telephoned for the nurse Emily fancied, a Miss Watts, who had been
taking care of one of Emily's friends.
Miss Watts, effusive and solicitous, arrived, and Susan could see
that Emily was repenting of her bargain long before she, Susan, had
dressed for dinner. But she ran downstairs with a singing heart,
nevertheless. Ella was to bring two friends in for cards,
immediately after dinner; Kenneth had not been home for three days;
Miss Baker was in close attendance upon Mrs. Saunders, who had
retired to her room before dinner; so Susan and Stephen were free to
dine alone. Susan had hesitated, in the midst of her dressing, over
the consideration of a gown, and had finally compromised with her
conscience by deciding upon quite the oldest, plainest, shabbiest
black silk in the little collection.
"Most becoming thing you ever put on!" said Emily, trying to
reestablish quite cordial relations.
When she and Stephen Bocqueraz came back into one of the smaller
drawing-rooms after dinner Susan walked to the fire and stood, for a
few moments, staring down at the coals. The conversation during the
softly lighted, intimate little dinner had brought them both to a
dangerous mood. Susan was excited beyond the power of reasonable
thought. It was all nonsense, they were simply playing; he was a
married man, and she a woman who never could by any possibility be
anything but "good," she would have agreed impatiently and gaily
with her own conscience if she had heard it at all--but just now she
felt like enjoying this particular bit of foolery to the utmost,
and, since there was really no harm in it, she was going to enjoy
it! She had not touched wine at dinner, but some subtler
intoxication had seized her, she felt conscious of her own beauty,
her white throat, her shining hair, her slender figure in its
clinging black, she felt conscious of Stephen's eyes, conscious of
the effective background for them both that the room afforded; the
dull hangings, subdued lights and softly shining surfaces.
Her companion stood near her, watching her. Susan, still excitedly
confident that she controlled the situation, began to feel her
breath come deep and swift, began to wish that she could think of
just the right thing to say, to relieve the tension a little-began
to wish that Ella would come in--
She raised her eyes, a little frightened, a little embarrassed, to
his, and in the next second he had put his arms about her and
crushed her to him and kissed her on the mouth.
"Susan," he said, very quietly, "you are my girl--you are my girl,
will you let me take care of you? I can't help it--I love you."
This was not play-acting, at last. A grim, an almost terrible
earnestness was in his voice; his face was very pale; his eyes dark
with passion. Susan, almost faint with the shock, pushed away his
arms, walked a few staggering steps and stood, her back turned to
him, one hand over her heart, the other clinging to the back of a
chair, her breath coming so violently that her whole body shook.
"Oh, don't--don't--don't!" she said, in a horrified and frightened
whisper.
"Susan"--he began eagerly, coming toward her. She turned to face
him, and breathing as if she had been running, and in simple
entreaty, she said:
"Please--please--if you touch me again--if you touch me again--I
cannot--the maids will hear--Bostwick will hear--"
"No, no, no! Don't be frightened, dear," he said quickly and
soothingly. "I won't. I won't do anything you don't want me to!"
Susan pressed her hand over her eyes; her knees felt so weak that
she was afraid to move. Her breathing slowly grew more even.
"My dear--if you'll forgive me!" the man said repentantly. She gave
him a weary smile, as she went to drop into her low chair before the
fire.
"No, no, Mr. Bocqueraz, I'm to blame," she said quietly. And
suddenly she put her elbows on her knees, and buried her face in her
hands.
"Listen, Susan--" he began again. But again she silenced him.
"Just--one--moment--" she said pleadingly. For two or three moments
there was silence.
"No, it's my fault," Susan said then, more composedly, pushing her
hair back from her forehead with both hands, and raising her
wretched eyes. "Oh, how could I--how could I!" And again she hid her
face.
Stephen Bocqueraz did not speak, and presently Susan added, with a
sort of passion:
"It was wicked, and it was common, and no decent woman--"
"No, you shan't take that tone!" said Bocqueraz, suddenly looking up
from a somber study of the fire. "It is true, Susan, and--and I
can't be sorry it is. It's the truest thing in the world!"
"Oh, let's not--let's not talk that way!" All that was good and
honest in her came to Susan's rescue now, all her clean and
honorable heritage. "We've only been fooling, haven't we?" she urged
eagerly. "You know we have! Why, you--you--"
"No," said Bocqueraz, "it's too big now to be laughed away, Susan!"
He came and knelt beside her chair and put his arm about her, his
face so close that Susan could lay an arresting hand upon his
shoulder. Her heart beat madly, her senses swam.
"You mustn't!" said Susan, trying to force her voice above a hoarse
whisper, and failing.
"Do you think you can deceive me about it?" he asked. "Not any more
than I could deceive you! Do you think I'M glad--haven't you seen
how I've been fighting it--ignoring it--"
Susan's eyes were fixed upon his with frightened fascination; she
could not have spoken if life had depended upon it.
"No," he said, "whatever comes of it, or however we suffer for it, I
love you, and you love me, don't you, Susan?"
She had forgotten herself now, forgotten that this was only a sort
of play--forgotten her part as a leading lady, bare-armed and
bright-haired, whose role it was to charm this handsome man, in the
soft lamplight. She suddenly knew that she could not deny what he
asked, and with the knowledge that she did care for him, that this
splendid thing had come into her life for her to reject or to keep,
every rational thought deserted her. It only seemed important that
he should know that she was not going to answer "No."
"Do you care a little, Susan?" he asked again. Susan did not answer
or move. Her eyes never left his face.
She was still staring at him, a moment later, ashen-faced and
helpless, when they heard Bostwick crossing the hall to admit Ella
and her chattering friends. Somehow she stood up, somehow walked to
the door.
"After nine!" said Ella, briskly introducing, "but I know you didn't
miss us! Get a card-table, Bostwick, please. And, Sue, will you
wait, like a love, and see that we get something to eat at twelve--
at one? Take these things, Lizzie. Now. What is it, Stephen? A four-
spot? You get it. How's the kid, Sue?"
"I'm going right up to see!" Susan said dizzily, glad to escape. She
went up to Emily's room, and was made welcome by the bored invalid,
and gladly restored to her place as chief attendant. When Emily was
sleepy Susan went downstairs to superintend the arrangements for
supper; presently she presided over the chafing-dish. She did not
speak to Bocqueraz or meet his look once during the evening. But in
every fiber of her being she was conscious of his nearness, and of
his eyes.
The long night brought misgivings, and Susan went down to breakfast
cold with a sudden revulsion of feeling. Ella kept her guest busy
all day, and all through the following day. Susan, half-sick at
first with the variety and violence of her emotions, had convinced
herself, before forty-eight hours were over, that the whole affair
had been no more than a moment of madness, as much regretted by him
as by herself.
It was humiliating to remember with what a lack of self-control and
reserve she had borne herself, she reflected. "But one more word of
this sort," Susan resolved, "and I will simply go back to Auntie
within the hour!"
On the third afternoon, a Sunday, Peter Coleman came to suggest an
idle stroll with Emily and Susan, and was promptly seized by the
gratified Emily for a motor-trip.
"We'll stop for Isabel and John," said Emily, elated. "Unless," her
voice became a trifle flat, "unless you'd like to go, Sue," she
amended, "and in that case, if Isabel can go, we can--"
"Oh, heavens, no!" Susan said, laughing, pleased at the disgusted
face Peter Coleman showed beyond Emily's head. "Ella wants me to go
over to the hotel, anyway, to talk about borrowing chairs for the
concert, and I'll go this afternoon," she added, lowering her voice
so that it should not penetrate the library, where Ella and
Bocqueraz and some luncheon guests were talking together.
But when she walked down the drive half an hour later, with the
collies leaping about her, the writer quietly fell into step at her
side. Susan stopped short, the color rushing into her face. But her
companion paid no heed to her confusion.
"I want to talk to you, Susan," said he unsmilingly, and with a
tired sigh. "Where shall we walk? Up behind the convent here?"
"You look headachy," Susan said sympathetically, distracted from
larger issues by the sight of his drawn, rather colorless face.
"Bad night," he explained briefly. And with no further objection she
took the convent road, and they walked through the pale flood of
winter sunshine together. There had been heavy rains; to-day the air
was fresh-washed and clear, but they could hear the steady droning
of the fog-horn on the distant bay.
The convent, washed with clear sunlight, loomed high above its bare,
well-kept gardens. The usual Sunday visitors were mounting and
descending the great flight of steps to the doorway; a white-robed
portress stood talking to one little group at the top, her folded
arms lost in her wide sleeves. A three-year-old, in a caped white
coat, made every one laugh by her independent investigations of
arches and doorway.
"Dear Lord, to be that size again!" thought Susan, heavy-hearted.
"I've been thinking a good deal since Tuesday night, Susan," began
Bocqueraz quietly, when they had reached the shelved road that runs
past the carriage gates and lodges of beautiful private estates, and
circles across the hills, above the town. "And, of course, I've been
blaming myself bitterly; but I'm not going to speak of that now.
Until Tuesday I hoped that what pain there was to bear, because of
my caring for you, would be borne by me alone. If I blame myself,
Sue, it's only because I felt that I would rather bear it, any
amount of it, than go away from you a moment before I must. But when
I realize that you, too--"
He paused, and Susan did not speak, could not speak, even though she
knew that her silence was a definite statement.
"No--" he said presently, "we must face the thing honestly. And
perhaps it's better so. I want to speak to you about my marriage. I
was twenty-five, and Lillian eighteen. I had come to the city, a
seventeen-year-old boy, to make my fortune, and it was after the
first small success that we met. She was an heiress--a sweet,
pretty, spoiled little girl; she is just a little girl now in many
ways. It was a very extraordinary marriage for her to wish to make;
her mother disapproved; her guardians disapproved. I promised the
mother to go away, and I did, but Lillian had an illness a month or
two later and they sent for me, and we were married. Her mother has
always regarded me as of secondary importance in her daughter's
life; she took charge of our house, and of the baby when Julie came,
and went right on with her spoiling and watching and exulting in
Lillian. They took trips abroad; they decided whether or not to open
the town house; they paid all the bills. Lillian has her suite of
rooms, and I mine. Julie is very prettily fond of me; they like to
give a big tea, two or three times a winter, and have me in
evidence, or Lillian likes to have me plan theatricals, or manage
amateur grand-opera for her. When Julie was about ten I had my own
ideas as to her upbringing, but there was a painful scene, in which
the child herself was consulted, and stood with her mother and
grandmother--
"So, for several years, Susan, it has been only the decent outer
shell of a marriage. We sometimes live in different cities for
months at a time, or live in the same house, and see no more of each
other than guests in the same hotel. Lillian makes no secret of it;
she would be glad to be free. We have never had a day, never an
hour, of real companionship! My dear Sue--" his voice, which had
been cold and bitter, softened suddenly, and he turned to her the
sudden winning smile that she remembered noticing the first evening
they had known each other. "My dear Sue," he said, "when I think
what I have missed in life I could go mad! When I think what it
would be to have beside me a comrade who liked what I like, who
would throw a few things into a suit case, and put her hand in mine,
and wander over the world with me, laughing and singing through
Italy, watching a sudden storm from the doorway of an English inn--"
"You have never seen the Canadian forests, Sue, on some of the
tropical beaches, or the color in a japanese street, or the moon
rising over the Irish lakes!" he went on, "and how you would love it
all!",
"We oughtn't--oughtn't to talk this way--", Susan said unsteadily.
They were crossing a field, above the town, and came now to a little
stile. Susan sat down on the little weather-burned step, and stared
down on the town below. Bocqueraz leaned on the rail, and looked at
her.
"Always--always--always," he pursued seriously. "I have known that
you were somewhere in the world. Just you, a bold and gay and witty
and beautiful woman, who would tear my heart out by the roots when I
met you, and shake me out of my comfortable indifference to the
world and everything in it. And you have come! But, Susan, I never
knew, I never dreamed what it would mean to me to go away from you,
to leave you in peace, never guessing--"
"No, it's too late for that!" said Susan, clearing her throat. "I'd
rather know."
If she had been acting it would have been the correct thing to say.
The terrifying thought was that she was not acting; she was in
deadly, desperate earnest now, and yet she could not seem to stop
short; every instant involved her the deeper.
"We--we must stop this," she said, jumping up, and walking briskly
toward the village. "I am so sorry--I am so ashamed! It all seemed--
seemed so foolish up to--well, to Tuesday. We must have been mad
that night! I never dreamed that things would go so far. I don't
blame you, I blame myself. I assure you I haven't slept since, I
can't seem to eat or think or do anything naturally any more!
Sometimes I think I'm going crazy!"
"My poor little girl!" They were in a sheltered bit of road now, and
Bocqueraz put his two hands lightly on her shoulders, and stopped
her short. Susan rested her two hands upon his arms, her eyes,
raised to his, suddenly brimmed with tears. "My poor little girl!"
he said again tenderly, "we'll find a way out! It's come on you too
suddenly, Sue--it came upon me like a thunderbolt. But there's just
one thing," and Susan remembered long afterward the look in his eyes
as he spoke of it, "just one thing you mustn't forget, Susan. You
belong to me now, and I'll move heaven and earth--but I'll have you.
It's come all wrong, sweetheart, and we can't see our way now. But,
my dearest, the wonderful thing is that it has come---
"Think of the lives," he went on, as Susan did not answer, "think of
the women, toiling away in dull, dreary lives, to whom a vision like
this has never come!"
"Oh, I know!" said Susan, in sudden passionate assent.
"But don't misunderstand me, dear, you're not to be hurried or
troubled in this thing. We'll think, and talk things over, and plan.
My world is a broader and saner world than yours is, Susan, and when
I take you there you will be as honored and as readily accepted as
any woman among them all. My wife will set me free---" he fell into
a muse, as they walked along the quiet country road, and Susan, her
brain a mad whirl of thoughts, did not interrupt him. "I believe she
will set me free," he said, "as soon as she knows that my happiness,
and all my life, depend upon it. It can be done; it can be arranged,
surely. You know that our eastern divorce laws are different from
yours here, Susan---"
"I think I must be mad to let you talk so!" burst out Susan, "You
must not! Divorce---! Why, my aunt---!"
"We'll not mention it again," he assured her quickly, but although
for the rest of their walk they said very little, the girl escaped
upstairs to her room before dinner with a baffled sense that the
dreadful word, if unpronounced, had been none the less thundering in
her brain and his all the way.
She made herself comfortable in wrapper and slippers, rather to the
satisfaction of Emily, who had brought Peter back to dinner, barely
touched the tray that the sympathetic Lizzie brought upstairs, and
lay trying to read a book that she flung aside again and again for
the thoughts that would have their way.
She must think this whole thing out, she told herself desperately;
view it dispassionately and calmly; decide upon the best and
quickest step toward reinstating the old order, toward blotting out
this last fortnight of weakness and madness. But, if Susan was
fighting for the laws of men, a force far stronger was taking arms
against her, the great law of nature held her in its grip. The voice
of Stephen Bocqueraz rang across her sanest resolution; the touch of
Stephen Bocqueraz's hand burned her like a fire.
Well, it had been sent to her, she thought resentfully, lying back
spent and exhausted; she had not invited it. Suppose she accepted
it; suppose she sanctioned his efforts to obtain a divorce, suppose
she were married to him--And at the thought her resolutions melted
away in the sudden delicious and enervating wave of emotion that
swept over her. To belong to him!
"Oh, my God, I do not know what to do!" Susan whispered. She slipped
to her knees, and buried her face in her hands. If her mind would
but be still for a moment, would stop its mad hurry, she might pray.
A knock at the door brought her to her feet; it was Miss Baker, who
was sitting with Kenneth to-night, and who wanted company. Susan was
glad to go noiselessly up to the little sitting-room next to
Kenneth's room, and sit chatting under the lamp. Now and then low
groaning and muttering came from the sick man, and the women paused
for a pitiful second. Susan presently went in to help Miss Baker
persuade him to drink some cooling preparation.
The big room was luxurious enough for a Sultan, yet with hints of
Kenneth's earlier athletic interests in evidence too. A wonderful
lamp at the bedside diffused a soft light. The sufferer, in
embroidered and monogrammed silk night-wear, was under a trimly
drawn sheet, with a fluffy satin quilt folded across his feet. He
muttered and shook his head, as the drink was presented, and, his
bloodshot eyes discovering Susan, he whispered her name, immediately
shouting it aloud, hot eyes on her face:
"Well," the nurse pursed her lips, shook her head thoughtfully. "No,
I don't believe he could now. Doctor thinks the south of France will
do wonders, and he says that if Mr. Saunders stayed on a strict diet
for, say a year, and then took some German cure--but I don't know!
Nobody could make him do it anyway. Why, we can't keep him on a diet
for twenty-four hours! Of course he can't keep this up. A few more
attacks like this will finish him. He's going to have a nurse in the
morning, and Doctor says that in about a month he ought to get away.
It's my opinion he'll end in a mad-house," Miss Baker ended, with
quiet satisfaction.
"Well, a lot of them do, my dear! He'll never get entirely well,
that's positive. And now the problem is," the nurse, who was
knitting a delicate rainbow afghan for a baby, smiled placidly over
her faint pinks and blues, "now the question is, who's going abroad
with him? He can't go alone. Ella declines the honor," Miss Baker's
lips curled; she detested Ella "Emily--you know what Emily is! And
the poor mother, who would really make the effort, he says gets on
his nerves. Anyway, she's not fit. If he had a man friend---! But
the only one he'd go with, Mr. Russell, is married."
"Oh, my dear!" Miss Baker gave her a significant look. "There are
two classes of nurses," she said, "one sort wouldn't dare take a man
who has the delirium tremens anywhere, much less to a strange
country, and the other---! They tried that once, before my day it
was, but I guess that was enough for them. Of course the best thing
that he could do," pursued the nurse lightly, "is get married."
"Well," Susan felt the topic a rather delicate one. "Ought he
marry?" she ventured.
"Don't think I'd marry him!" Miss Baker assured her hastily, "but
he's no worse than the Gregory boy, married last week. He's really
no worse than lots of others!"
"Well, it's a lovely, lovely world!" brooded Susan bitterly. "I wish
to God," she added passionately, "that there was some way of telling
right from wrong! If you want to have a good time and have money
enough, you can steal and lie and marry people like Kenneth
Saunders; there's no law that you can't break--pride, covetousness,
lust, anger, gluttony, envy and sloth! That is society! And yet, if
you want to be decent, you can slave away a thousand years, mending
and patching and teaching and keeping books, and nothing beautiful
or easy ever comes your way!"
"I don't agree with you at all," said Miss Baker, in disapproval. "I
hope I'm not bad," she went on brightly, "but I have a lovely time!
Everyone here is lovely to me, and once a month I go home to my
sister. We're the greatest chums ever, and her baby, Marguerite, is
named for me, and she's a perfect darling! And Beek--that's her
husband--is the most comical thing I ever saw; he'll go up and get
Mrs. Tully--my sister rents one of her rooms,--and we have a little
supper, and more cutting-up! Or else Beek'll sit with the baby, and
we girls go to the theater!"
"Yes, that's lovely," Susan said, but Miss Baker accepted the words
and not the tone, and went on to innocent narratives of Lily, Beek
and the little Marguerite.
"And now, I wonder what a really good, conscientious woman would
do," thought Susan in the still watches of the night. Go home to
Auntie, of course. He might follow her there, but, even if he did,
she would have made the first right step, and could then plan the
second. Susan imagined Bocqueraz in Auntie's sitting-room and winced
in the dark. Perhaps the most definite stand she took in all these
bewildering days was when she decided, with a little impatient
resentment, that she was quite equal to meeting the situation with
dignity here.
But there must be no hesitation, no compromise. Susan fell asleep
resolving upon heroic extremes.
Just before dinner, on the evening following, she was at the grand
piano in the big drawing-room, her fingers lazily following the
score of "Babes in Toyland," which Ella had left open upon the rack.
Susan felt tired and subdued, wearily determined to do her duty,
wearily sure that life, for the years to come, would be as gray and
sad as to-day seemed. She had been crying earlier in the day and
felt the better for the storm. Susan had determined upon one more
talk with Bocqueraz,--the last.
And presently he was leaning on the piano, facing her in the dim
light. Susan's hands began to tremble, to grow cold. Her heart beat
high with nervousness; some primitive terror assailed her even here,
in the familiar room, within the hearing of a dozen maids.
"What's the matter?" he asked, as she did not smile.
Susan still watched him seriously. She did not answer.
"No-o." Susan's lip trembled. "Or perhaps it is, in a way," she said
slowly and softly, still striking almost inaudible chords. "I can't-
-I can't seem to see things straight, whichever way I look!" she
confessed as simply as a troubled child.
"Will you come across the hall into the little library with me and
talk about it for two minutes?" he asked.
"Because we must stop it all," the girl said steadily, "all, every
bit of it, before we--before we are sorry! You are a married man,
and I knew it, and it is all wrong--"
"No, it's not all wrong, I won't admit that," he said quickly.
"There has been no wrong."
It was a great weight lifted from Susan's heart to think that this
was true. Ended here, the friendship was merely an episode.
"If we stop here," he agreed, slowly. "If we end it all here. Well.
And of course, Sue, chance might, might set me free, you know, and
then--"
Again the serious look, followed by the sweet and irresistible
smile. Susan suddenly felt the hot tears running down her cheeks.
"Chance won't," she said in agony. And she began to fumble blindly
for a handkerchief.
In an instant he was beside her, and as she stood up he put both
arms about her, and she dropped her head on his shoulder, and wept
silently and bitterly. Every instant of this nearness stabbed her
with new joy and new pain; when at last he gently tipped back her
tear-drenched face, she was incapable of resisting the great flood
of emotion that was sweeping them both off their feet.
"Oh, yes--yes!" she whispered. And, at a sound from the hall, she
crushed his handkerchief back into his hand, and walked to the deep
archway of a distant window. When he joined her there, she was still
breathing hard, and had her hand pressed against her heart, but she
was no longer crying.
"I am mad I think!" smiled Susan, quite mistress of herself.
"Susan," he said eagerly, "I was only waiting for this! If you knew-
-if you only knew what an agony I've been in yesterday and to-day--!
And I'm not going to distress you now with plans, my dearest. But,
Sue, if I were a divorced man now, would you let it be a barrier?"
"No," she said, after a moment's thought. "No, I wouldn't let
anything that wasn't a legal barrier stand in the way. Even though
divorce has always seemed terrible to me. But--but you're not free,
Mr. Bocqueraz."
He was standing close behind her, as she stood staring out into the
night, and now put his arm about her, and Susan, looking up over her
shoulder, raised childlike blue eyes to his.
"How long are you going to call me that?" he asked.
"I don't know--Stephen," she said. And suddenly she wrenched herself
free, and turned to face him.
"I can't seem to keep my senses when I'm within ten feet of you!"
Susan declared, half-laughing and half-crying.
"But Sue, if my wife agrees to a divorce," he said, catching both
her hands.
"Don't touch me, please," she said, loosening them.
"I will not, of course!" He took firm hold of a chair-back. "If
Lillian--" he began again, very gravely.
Susan leaned toward him, her face not twelve inches away from his
face, her hand laid lightly for a second on his arm.
"You know that I will go with you to the end of the world, Stephen!"
she said, scarcely above a whisper, and was gone.
It became evident, in a day or two, that Kenneth Saunders' illness
had taken a rather alarming turn. There was a consultation of
doctors; there was a second nurse. Ella went to the extreme point of
giving up an engagement to remain with her mother while the worst
was feared; Emily and Susan worried and waited, in their rooms.
Stephen Bocqueraz was a great deal in the sick-room; "a real big
brother," as Mrs. Saunders said tearfully.
The crisis passed; Kenneth was better, was almost normal again. But
the great specialist who had entered the house only for an hour or
two had left behind him the little seed that was to vitally affect
the lives of several of these people.
"Dr. Hudson says he's got to get away," said Ella to Susan, "I wish
I could go with him. Kenneth's a lovely traveler."
"I wish I could," Emily supplemented, "but I'm no good."
"And doctor says that he'll come home quite a different person,"
added his mother. Susan wondered if she fancied that they all looked
in a rather marked manner at her. She wondered, if it was not fancy,
what the look meant.
They were all in the upstairs sitting-room in the bright morning
light when this was said. They had drifted in there one by one,
apparently by accident. Susan, made a little curious and uneasy by a
subtle sense of something unsaid--something pending, began to
wonder, too, if it had really been accident that assembled them
there.
But she was still without definite suspicions when Ella, upon the
entrance of Chow Yew with Mr. Kenneth's letters and the new
magazines, jumped up gaily, and said:
"Here, Sue! Will you run up with these to Ken--and take these
violets, too?"
She put the magazines in Susan's hands, and added a great bunch of
dewy wet violets that had been lying on the table. Susan, really
glad to escape from the over-charged atmosphere of the room,
willingly went on her way.
Kenneth was sitting up to-day, very white, very haggard,--clean-
shaven and hollow-eyed, and somehow very pitiful. He smiled at
Susan, as she came in, and laid a thin hand on a chair by the bed.
Susan sat down, and as she did so the watching nurse went out.
"Well, had you ordered a pillow of violets with shaky doves?" he
asked, in a hoarse thin echo of his old voice. "No, but I guess you
were pretty sick," the girl said soberly. "How goes it to-day?"
"Oh, fine!" he answered hardily, "as soon as I am over the ether
I'll feel like a fighting cock! Hudson talked a good deal with his
mouth," said Kenneth coughing. "But the rotten thing about me,
Susan," he went on, "is that I can't booze,--I really can't do it!
Consequently, when some old fellow like that gets a chance at me, he
thinks he ought to scare me to death!" He sank back, tired from
coughing. "But I'm all right!" he finished, comfortably, "I'll be
alright again after a while."
"Well, but now, honestly, from now on---" Susan began, timidly but
eagerly, "won't you truly try--"
"Oh, sure!" he said simply. "I promised. I'm going to cut it out,
all of it. I'm done. I don't mean to say that I've ever been a patch
on some of the others," said Kenneth. "Lord, you ought to see some
of the men who really drink! At the same time, I've had enough. It's
me to the simple joys of country life--I'm going to try farming. But
first they want me to try France for awhile, and then take this
German treatment, whatever it is. Hudson wants me to get off by the
first of the year."
"Oh, really! France!" Susan's eyes sparkled. "Oh, aren't you wild!"
"I'm not so crazy about it. Not Paris, you know, but some dinky
resort."
"Oh, but fancy the ocean trip--and meeting the village people--and
New York!" Susan exclaimed. "I think every instant of traveling
would be a joy!" And the vision of herself in all these places, with
Stephen Bocqueraz as interpreter, wrung her heart with longing.
Kenneth was watching her closely. A dull red color had crept into
his face.
Something in his tone made Susan color uncomfortably too.
"Thatdid sound as if I were asking myself along!" she smiled.
"Oh, no, it didn't!" he reassured her. "But--but I mean it. Why
don't you come?"
They were looking steadily at each other now. Susan tried to laugh.
"A scandal in high life!" she said, in an attempt to make the
conversation farcical. "Elopement surprises society!"
"That's what I mean--that's what I mean!" he said eagerly, yet
bashfully too. "What's the matter with our--our getting married,
Susan? You and I'll get married, d'ye see?"
And as, astonished and frightened and curiously touched she stood
up, he caught at her skirt. Susan put her hand over his with a
reassuring and soothing gesture.
"You'd like that, wouldn't you?" he said, beginning to cough again.
"You said you would. And I--I am terribly fond of you--you could do
just as you like. For instance, if you wanted to take a little trip
off anywhere, with friends, you know," said Kenneth with boyish,
smiling generosity, "you could always do it! I wouldn't want to tie
you down to me!" He lay back, after coughing, but his bony hand
still clung to hers. "You're the only woman I ever asked to
undertake such a bad job," he finished, in a whisper.
"Why--but honestly---" Susan began. She laughed out nervously and
unsteadily. "This is so sudden," said she. Kenneth laughed too.
"But, you see, they're hustling me off," he complained. "This
weather is so rotten! And El's keen for it," he urged, "and Mother
too. If you'll be so awfully, awfully good--I know you aren't crazy
about me--and you know some pretty rotten things about me--"
The very awkwardness of his phrasing won her as no other quality
could. Susan felt suddenly tender toward him, felt old and sad and
wise.
"Mr. Saunders," she said, gently, "you've taken my breath away. I
don't know what to say to you. I can't pretend that I'm in love with
you--"
"Of course you're not!" he said, very much embarrassed, "but if
there's no one else, Sue--"
"There is someone else," said Susan, her eyes suddenly watering.
"But--but that's not going--right, and it never can! If you'll give
me a few days to think about it, Kenneth--"
"It would be the very quietest and quickest and simplest wedding
that ever was, wouldn't it?" she asked.
"Oh, absolutely!" Kenneth seemed immensely relieved. "No riot!"
"And you will let me think it over?" the girl asked, "because--I
know other girls say this, but it's true!--I never dreamed--"
"Sure, you think it over. I'll consider you haven't given me the
faintest idea of how you feel," said Kenneth. They clasped hands for
good-by. Susan fancied that his smile might have been an invitation
for a little more affectionate parting, but if it was she ignored
it. She turned at the door to smile back at him before she went
downstairs.