But Nancy began to ask herself seriously; was it such fun? When
house and maids and children, garden, car, table-linen and clothes
had all been brought to the standard of Marlborough Gardens, was
the result worth while? Who enjoyed them, who praised them? It was
all taken for granted here; the other women were too deep in their
own problems to note more than the satisfactory fact; the Bradleys
kept the social law.
It was a terrible law. It meant that Nancy must spend every waking
moment of her life in thought about constantly changing trifles--
about the strip of embroidered linen that curtained the door,
about the spoons that were placed on the table, about a hundred
details of her dress, about every towel and plate, every stocking
and hat-pin she possessed. She must watch the other women, and see
how salad-dressing must be served, and what was the correct
disposition of grapefruit. And more than that she must be
reasonably conversant with the books and poetry of the day, the
plays and the political atmosphere. She must always have the right
clothing to wear, and be ready to change her plans at any time.
She must be ready to run gaily down to the door at the most casual
interruption; leaving Agnes to finish Priscilla's bath just
because Seward Smith felt in a mood to come and discuss the
fairness of golf handicaps with his pretty, sensible neighbour.
She did not realize that she had been happier years ago, when
every step Junior and Ned and Anne took was with Mother's hand for
guide, but she often found herself thinking of those days with a
sort of wistful pain at her heart. Life had had a flavour then
that it somehow lacked now. She had been tired, she had been too
busy. But what richness the memories had; memories of three small
heads about a kitchen table, memories of limp little socks and
crumpled little garments left like dropped petals in Mother's lap,
at the end of the long day.
"Are we the same people?" mused Nancy. "Have I really my car and
my man; is it the same old Bert whose buckskin pumps and whose
silk handkerchiefs are imitated by all these rich men? No wonder
we've lost our bearings a little, we've gone ahead--if it is
ahead--too fast!"
They were getting from life, she mused, just what everyone wanted
to get from life; home, friends, children, amusement. They lived
near the greatest city, they could have anything that art and
science provided, for the mere buying, no king could sleep in a
softer bed, or eat more delicious fare. When Mary Ingram asked
Nancy to go to the opera matinee with her, Nancy met women whose
names had been only a joke to her, a few years ago. She found them
rather like other persons, simple, friendly, interested in their
nurseries and their gardens and anxious to reach their own
firesides for tea. When Nancy and Bert went out with the Fieldings
they had a different experience; they had dinners that were works
of art, the finest box in the theatre, and wines that came
cobwebbed and dusty to the table.
So that there was no height left to scale; "if we could only
afford it," mused Nancy. Belle Fielding could afford it, of
course; her trouble was that the Fielding name was perhaps a
trifle too surely connected with fabulous sums of money. And Mary
Ingram could afford anything, despite her simple clothes and her
fancy for long tramps and quiet evenings with her delicate husband
and two big boys. Nancy sometimes wondered that with the Ingram
income anyone could be satisfied with Marlborough Gardens, but
after all, what was there better in all the world? Europe?--but
that meant hotel cooking for the man. Nancy visualized an
apartment in a big city hotel, a bungalow in California, a villa
in Italy, and came back to the Gardens. Nothing was finer than
this.
"If we could only appreciate it!" she said again, sighing. "And if
we need only see the people we like--and if time didn't fly so!"
And of course if there were more money! She reflected that if she
might go back a few years, to the time of their arrival at the
Gardens, she might build far more wisely for her own happiness and
Bert's. They had been drawn in, they had followed the crowd, it
was impossible to withdraw now. Nancy knew that something was
troubling Bert in these days, she guessed it to be the one real
cause for worry. She began almost to hope that he felt financial
trouble near, it would be a relief to fling aside, the whole
pretence to say openly and boldly, "we must economize," and to go
back to honest, simple living again. They could rent Holly Court--
Fired with enthusiasm, she looked for her check book, and for
Bert's, and with the counterfoils before her made some long
calculations. The result horrified her. She and Bert between them
had spent ten thousand dollars in twelve months. Nearly ten times
the sum upon which they had been so happy, years ago! The loans
upon the property still stood, twelve thousand dollars, and the
additional three, they had never touched it. There was a bank
balance, of course, but as Nancy courageously opened and read bill
after bill, and flattened the whole into orderly pile under a
paper weight, she saw their total far exceeded the money on hand
to meet them. They could wait of course, but meanwhile debts were
not standing still.
It was a quiet August afternoon; the house was still, but from the
shady lawn on the water side, Nancy could hear Priscilla crooning
like a dove, and hear Agnes's low voice, and Anne's high-pitched
little treble. For a long while she sat staring into space, her
brows knit. Ten thousand dollars--when they could have lived
luxuriously for five! The figures actually frightened her. Why,
they should have cleared off half the mortgage now, they might
easily have cleared it all. And if anything happened to Bert, what
of herself and the four children left absolutely penniless, with a
mortgaged home?
"This is wicked," Nancy decided soberly. "It isn't conscientious.
We both must be going crazy, to go on as we do. I am going to have
a long talk with Bert to-night. This can't go on!"
"Interrupting?" smiled pretty Mrs. Seward Smith, from the Dutch
doorway.
"Oh, come in, Mrs. Smith. I was just going over my accounts--"
"You are the cleverest creature; fancy doing that with everything
else you do!" the caller said, dropping into a chair. "I'm only
here for one second--and I'm bringing two messages from my
husband. The first is, that he has your tickets for the tennis
tournament with ours, we'll all be together; so tell Mr. Bradley
that he mustn't get them. And then, what did you decide about the
hospital? You see Mr. Ingram promised fifty dollars if we could
find nine other men to promise that, and make it an even thousand
from the Gardens, and Mr. Bradley said that even if he only gave
twenty-five himself he would find someone else to give the other
twenty-five. Tell him there's no hurry, but Ward wants to know
sometime before the first. I didn't know whether he remembered it
or not."
"I'll remind him!" Nancy promised brightly. She walked with her
guest to the car, and stood in the bright warm clear sunlight
smiling good-byes. "So many thanks for the tickets--and I'll tell
Bert about the hospital to-night!"
But when the car was gone she went slowly back. She eyed the cool
porchway sombrely, the opened casement windows, the blazing
geraniums in their boxes. Pauline was hanging checked glass towels
on the line, Nancy caught a glimpse of her big bare arms, over the
brick wall that shielded the kitchen yard. It was a lovely home,
it was a most successful establishment; surely, surely, things
would improve, it would never be necessary to go away from Holly
Court.