On clear Sundays Anthony Cardew played golf all day. He kept his
religious observances for bad weather, but at such times as he
attended service he did it with the decorum and dignity of a Cardew,
who bowed to his God but to nothing else. He made the responses
properly and with a certain unction, and sat during the sermon with
a vigilant eye on the choir boys, who wriggled. Now and then,
however, the eye wandered to the great stained glass window which
was a memorial to his wife. It said beneath: "In memoriam, Lilian
Lethbridge Cardew."
He thought there was too much yellow in John the Baptist. On the
Sunday afternoon following her ride into the city with Louis Akers,
Lily found herself alone. Anthony was golfing and Grace and Howard
had motored out of town for luncheon. In a small office near the
rear of the hall the second man dozed, waiting for the doorbell.
There would be people in for tea later, as always on Sunday
afternoons; girls and men, walking through the park or motoring up
in smart cars, the men a trifle bored because they were not golfing
or riding, the girls chattering about the small inessentials which
somehow they made so important.
Lily was wretchedly unhappy. For one thing, she had begun to feel
that Mademoiselle was exercising over her a sort of gentle espionage,
and she thought her grandfather was behind it. Out of sheer
rebellion she had gone again to the house on Cardew Way, to find
Elinor out and Jim Doyle writing at his desk. He had received her
cordially, and had talked to her as an equal. His deferential
attitude had soothed her wounded pride, and she had told him
something - very little - of the situation at home.
"Don't let them break your spirit, Lily," he had said. "Success
can make people very hard. I don't know myself what success would
do to me. Plenty, probably." He smiled. "It isn't the past your
people won't forgive me, Lily. It's my failure to succeed in what
they call success."
"It isn't that," she had said hastily. "It is - they say you are
inflammatory. Of course they don't understand. I have tried to
tell them, but - "
"There are fires that purify," he had said, smilingly.
She had gone home, discontented with her family's lack of vision,
and with herself.
She was in a curious frame of mind. The thought of Louis Akers
repelled her, but she thought of him constantly. She analyzed him
clearly enough; he was not fine and not sensitive. He was not even
kind. Indeed, she felt that he could be both cruel and ruthless.
And if she was the first good woman he had ever known, then he
must have had a hateful past.
The thought that he had kissed her turned her hot with anger and
shame at such times, but the thought recurred.
Had she had occupation perhaps she might have been saved, but she
had nothing to do. The house went on with its disciplined service;
Lent had made its small demands as to church services, and was over.
The weather was bad, and the golf links still soggy with the spring
rains. Her wardrobe was long ago replenished, and that small
interest gone.
And somehow there had opened a breach between herself and the little
intimate group that had been hers before the war. She wondered
sometimes what they would think of Louis Akers. They would admire
him, at first, for his opulent good looks, but very soon they would
recognize what she knew so well - the gulf between him and the men
of their own world, so hard a distinction to divine, yet so real for
all that. They would know instinctively that under his veneer of
good manners was something coarse and crude, as she did, and they
would politely snub him. She had no name and no knowledge for the
urge in the man that she vaguely recognized and resented. But she
had a full knowledge of the obsession he was becoming in her mind.
"If I could see him here," she reflected, more than once, "I'd get
over thinking about him. It's because they forbid me to see him.
It's sheer contrariness."
But it was not, and she knew it. She had never heard of his theory
about the mark on a woman.
She was hating herself very vigorously on that Sunday afternoon.
Mademoiselle and she had lunched alone in Lily's sitting-room, and
Mademoiselle had dozed off in her chair afterwards, a novel on her
knee. Lily was wandering about downstairs when the telephone rang,
and she had a quick conviction that it was Louis Akers. It was
only Willy Cameron, however, asking her if she cared to go for a
walk.
"I've promised Jinx one all day," he explained, "and we might as
well combine, if you are not busy."
"Wait a moment." Then: "Yes, Jinx says the park is right."
His wholesome nonsense was good for her. She drew a long breath.
"You are precisely the person I need to-day," she said. "And come
soon, because I shall have to be back at five."
When he came he was very neat indeed, and most scrupulous as to his
heels being polished. He was also slightly breathless.
"Had to sew a button on my coat," he explained. "Then I found I'd
sewed in one of my fingers and had to start all over again."
Lily was conscious of a change in him. He looked older, she thought,
and thinner. His smile, when it came, was as boyish as ever, but
he did not smile so much, and seen in full daylight he was shabby.
He seemed totally unconscious of his clothes, however.
"What do you do with yourself, Willy?" she asked. "I mean when you
are free?"
"Read and study. I want to take up metallurgy pretty soon. There's
a night course at the college."
"We use metallurgists in the mill. When you are ready I know father
would be glad to have you."
There was a silence. Willy Cameron sat on the bench, bent and
staring ahead. Jinx brought the stick, and, receiving no attention,
insinuated a dripping body between his knees. He patted the dog's
head absently.
"I have been thinking about the night I went to dinner at your house,"
he said at last. "I had no business to say what I said then. I've
got a miserable habit of saying just what comes into my mind, and
I've been afraid, ever since, that it would end in your not wanting
to see me again. Just try to forget it happened, won't you?"
"I knew it was an impulse, but it made me very proud, Willy."
"All right," he said quietly. "And that's that. Now about your
grandfather. I've had him on my mind, too. He is an old man, and
sometimes they are peculiar. I am only sorry I upset him. And you
are to forget that, too."
In spite of herself she laughed, rather helplessly.
He smiled too, and straightened himself, like a man who has got
something off his chest.
"Certainly there is, Miss Cardew. Me. Myself. I want you to know
that I'm around, ready to fetch and carry like Jinx here, and about
as necessary, I suppose. We are a good bit alike, Jinx and I. We're
satisfied with a bone, and we give a lot of affection. You won't
mind a bone now and then?"
His cheerful tone reassured the girl. There was no real hurt, then.
"Well," he said slowly, "you know there are men who prefer a dream
to reality. Perhaps I'm like that. Anyhow, that's enough about me.
Do you know that there is a strike coming?"
"Yes. I ought to tell you, Willy. I think the men are right."
"Right?" he said. "Why, my dear child, most of them want to strike
about as much as I want delirium tremens. I've talked to them, and
I know."
"A slave may be satisfied if he has never known freedom."
"Oh, fudge," said Willy Cameron, rudely. "Where do you get all that?
You're quoting; aren't you? The strike, any strike, is an
acknowledgment of weakness. It is a resort to the physical because
the collective mentality of labor isn't as strong as the other side.
Or labor thinks it isn't, which amounts to the same thing. And
there is a fine line between the fellow who fights for a principle
and the one who knocks people down to show how strong he is."
"Fine little Cardew you are!" he scoffed. "Don't make any mistake.
There have been fights by labor for a principle, and the principle
won, as good always wins over evil. But this is different. It's
a direct play by men who don't realize what they are doing, into the
hands of a lot of - well, we'll call them anarchists. It's
Germany's way of winning the war. By indirection."
"I do," he said grimly. "That's a family accident and you can't
help it. But I do mean Doyle. Doyle and a Pole named Woslosky,
and a scoundrel of an attorney here in town, named Akers, among others."
"If they have been teaching you their dirty doctrines, Lily," he said
at last, "I can only tell you this. They can disguise it in all the
fine terms they want. It is treason, and they are traitors. I know.
I've had a talk with the Chief of Police."
"Not very well." But there were spots of vivid color flaming in her
cheeks. He drew a long breath.
"I can't retract it," he said. "I didn't know, of course. Shall we
start back?"
They were very silent as they walked. Willy Cameron was pained and
anxious. He knew Akers' type rather than the man himself, but he
knew the type well. Every village had one, the sleek handsome animal
who attracted girls by sheer impudence and good humor, who made
passionate, pagan love promiscuously, and put the responsibility for
the misery they caused on the Creator because He had made them as
they were.
He was agonized by another train of thought. For him Lily had always
been something fine, beautiful, infinitely remote. There were other
girls, girls like Edith Boyd, who were touched, some more, some less,
with the soil of life. Even when, they kept clean they saw it all
about them, and looked on it with shrewd, sophisticated eyes. But
Lily was - Lily. The very thought of Louis Akers looking at her as
he had seen him look at Edith Boyd made him cold with rage.
"Maybe, but I'm going to anyhow, Lily. I don't like to think of you
seeing Akers. I don't know anything against him, and I suppose if I
did I wouldn't tell you. But he is not your sort."
"I know that as well as you do. I know him better than you do. But,
he stands for something, at least," she added rather hotly. "None
of the other men I know stand for anything very much. Even you,
Willy."
"I stand for the preservation of my country," he said gravely. "I
mean, I represent a lot of people who - well, who don't believe that
change always means progress, and who do intend that the changes
Doyle and Akers and that lot want they won't get. I don't believe
- if you say you want what they want - that you know what you are
talking about."
"Perhaps I am more intelligent than you think I am."
He was, of course, utterly wretched, impressed by the futility of
arguing with her.
"Do your people know that you are seeing Louis Akers!"
"I am being rather anxious. I wouldn't dare, of course, if we
hadn't been such friends. But Akers is wrong, wrong every way, and
I have to tell you that, even if it means that you will never see
me again. He takes a credulous girl - "
"And talks bunk to her and possibly makes love to her - "
"Haven't we had enough of Mr. Akers?" Lily asked coldly. "If you
cannot speak of anything else, please don't talk."
The result of which was a frozen silence until they reached the
house.
"Good-by," she said primly. "It was very nice of you to call me up.
Good-by, Jinx." She went up the steps, leaving him bare-headed and
rather haggard, looking after her.
He took the dog and went out into the country on foot, tramping
through the mud without noticing it, and now and then making little
despairing gestures. He was helpless. He had cut himself off from
her like a fool. Akers. Akers and Edith Boyd. Other women.
Akers and other women. And now Lily. Good God, Lily!
Jinx was tired. He begged to be carried, planting two muddy feet
on his master's shabby trouser leg, and pleading with low whines.
Willy Cameron stooped and, gathering up the little animal, tucked
him under his arm. When it commenced to rain he put him under his
coat and plunged his head through the mud and wet toward home.
Lily had entered the house in a white fury, but a moment later she
was remorseful. For one thing, her own anger bewildered her. After
all, he had meant well, and it was like him to be honest, even if
it cost him something he valued.
She ran to the door and looked around for him, but he had
disappeared. She went in again, remorseful and unhappy. What had
come over her to treat him like that? He had looked almost stricken.
"Mr. Akers is calling, Miss Cardew," said the footman. "He is in
the drawing-room."
Louis Akers had been waiting for some time. He had lounged into the
drawing-room, with an ease assumed for the servant's benefit, and
had immediately lighted a cigarette. That done, and the servant
departed, he had carefully appraised his surroundings. He liked
the stiff formality of the room. He liked the servant in his dark
maroon livery. He liked the silence and decorum. Most of all, he
liked himself in these surroundings. He wandered around, touching
a bowl here, a vase there, eyeing carefully the ancient altar cloth
that lay on a table, the old needle-work tapestry on the chairs.
He saw himself fitted into this environment, a part of it; coming
down the staircase, followed by his wife, and getting into his
waiting limousine; sitting at the head of his table, while the
important men of the city listened to what he had to say. It would
come, as sure as God made little fishes. And Doyle was a fool. He,
Louis Akers, would marry Lily Cardew and block that other game. But
he would let the Cardews know who it was who had blocked it and saved
their skins. They'd have to receive him after that; they would
cringe to him.
Then, unexpectedly, he had one of the shocks of his life. He had
gone to the window and through it he saw Lily and Willy Cameron
outside. He clutched at the curtain and cursed under his breath,
apprehensively. But Willy Cameron did not come in; Akers watched
him up the street with calculating, slightly narrowed eyes. The
fact that Lily Cardew knew the clerk at the Eagle Pharmacy was an
unexpected complication. His surprise was lost in anxiety. But
Lily, entering the room a moment later, rather pale and unsmiling,
found him facing the door, his manner easy, his head well up, and
drawn to his full and rather overwhelming height. She found her
poise entirely gone, and it was he who spoke first.
"I know," he said. "You didn't ask me, but I came anyhow."
He let her go at once. He had not played his little game so long
without learning its fine points. There were times to woo a woman
with a strong arm, and there were other times that required other
methods.
"Right-o," he said, "I'm sorry. I've been thinking about you so
much that I daresay I have got farther in our friendship than I
should. Do you know that you haven't been out of my mind since
that ride we had together?"
"Isn't it rather fine when two people, a man and a woman, suddenly
find a tremendous attraction that draws them together, in spite of
the fact that everything else is conspiring to keep them apart?"
"I don't know," she said uncertainly. "It just seemed all wrong,
somehow."
"I don't want to discuss it, Mr. Akers. It is over."
While he was away from her, her attraction for him loomed less than
the things she promised, of power and gratified ambition. But he
found her, with her gentle aloofness, exceedingly appealing, and
with the tact of the man who understands women he adapted himself
to her humor.
"You are making me very unhappy; Miss Lily," he said. "If you'll
only promise to let me see you now and then, I'll promise to be as
mild as dish-water. Will you promise?"
She was still struggling, still remembering Willy Cameron, still
trying to remember all the things that Louis Akers was not.
"Then," he said slowly, "you are going to cut me off from the one
decent influence in my life."
She was still revolving that in her mind when tea came. Akers,
having shot his bolt, watched with interest the preparation for the
little ceremony, the old Georgian teaspoons, the Crown Derby cups,
the bell-shaped Queen Anne teapot, beautifully chased, the old
pierced sugar basin. Almost his gaze was proprietary. And he
watched Lily, her casual handling of those priceless treasures, her
taking for granted of service and beauty, her acceptance of quality
because she had never known anything else, watched her with
possessive eyes.
"You are being very nice to me, in view of the fact that you did not
ask me to come. And also remembering that your family does not
happen to care about me."
"I knew that, or I should not have come. I don't want to make
trouble for you, child." His voice was infinitely caressing. "As
it happens, I know your grandfather's Sunday habits, and I met your
father and mother on the road going out of town at noon. I knew
they had not come back."