I
Curious and strange things had a way
of happening to Vera-perhaps because she
was an extremely feminine woman. But of all the
curious and strange things that ever did happen to
Vera, this was certainly the strangest and the most
curious. It makes a somewhat exasperating narrative,
because the affair ended-or, rather, Vera
caused it to end-on a note of interrogation.
The reader may, however, draw consolation from the
fact that, if he is tormented by an unanswerable query,
Vera herself was much more tormented by precisely the
same query.
Two days before Christmas, at about
three o’clock in the afternoon, just when it
was getting dusk and the distant smokepall of the Five
Towns was merging in the general greyness of the northern
sky, Vera was sitting in the bow-window of the drawing-room
of Stephen Cheswardine’s newly-acquired house
at Sneyd; Sneyd being the fashionable suburb of the
Five Towns, graced by the near presence of a countess.
And as the slim, thirty-year-old Vera sat there, moody
(for reasons which will soon appear), in her charming
teagown, her husband drove up to the door in the dogcart,
and he was not alone. He had with him a man of
vigorous and dashing appearance, fair, far from ugly,
and with a masterful face, keen eyes, and most magnificent
furs round about him. At sight of the visitor
Vera’s heart did not exactly jump, but it nearly
jumped.
Presently, Stephen brought his acquaintance
into the drawing-room.
“My wife,” said Stephen,
rubbing his hands. “Vera, this is Mr Bittenger,
of New York. He will give us the pleasure of spending
the night here.”
And now Vera’s little heart really did jump.
She behaved with the delicious wayward
grace which she could always command when she chose
to command it. No one would have guessed that
she had not spoken to Stephen for a week.
‘I’m most happy-most
happy,’ said Mr Bittenger, with a marked accent
and a fine complimentary air. And obviously he
was most happy. Vera had impressed him.
There was nothing surprising in that. She was
in the fullness of her powers in that direction.
It is at this point-at
the point of the first jumping of Vera’s heart-that
the tale begins to be uncanny and disturbing.
Thus runs the explanation.
During the year Stephen had gradually
grown more and more preoccupied with the subject of
his own health. The earthenware business was very
good, although, of course, manufacturers were complaining
just as usual. Trade, indeed, flourished to such
an extent that Stephen had pronounced himself to be
suffering from nervous strain and overwork. The
symptoms of his malady were chiefly connected with
the assimilation of food; to be brief, it was dyspepsia.
And as Stephen had previously been one of those favoured
people who can eat anything at any hour, and arise
in the best of health the next day, Stephen was troubled.
At last-about August, when he was obliged
to give up wine-he had suddenly decided
that the grimy air of the Five Towns was bad for him,
and that the household should be removed to Sneyd.
And removed to Sneyd it accordingly was. The
new house was larger and more splendid even than the
Cheswardine abode at Bursley. But Vera did not
like the change. Vera preferred the town.
Nevertheless, she could not openly demur, since Stephen’s
health was supposed to be at stake.
During the autumn she was tremendously
bored at Sneyd. She had practically no audience
for her pretty dresses, and her friends would not
flock over from Bursley because of the difficulty of
getting home at night. Then it was that Vera
had the beautiful idea of spending Christmas in Switzerland.
Someone had told her about a certain hotel called
The Bear, where, on Christmas Day, never less than
a hundred well-dressed and wealthy English people
sat down to an orthodox Christmas dinner. The
notion enchanted her. She decided, definitely,
that she and Stephen should do their Christmassing
at The Bear, wherever the Bear was. And as she
was fully aware of the power of her capricious charm
over Stephen, she regarded the excursion as arranged
before she had broached it to him.
Stephen refused. He remarked
bitterly that the very thought of a mince-tart made
him ill; and that he hated ‘abroad’.
Vera took her defeat badly.
She pouted. She sulked.
She announced that, if she was not to be allowed to
do her Christmassing at The Bear, she would not do
it anywhere. She indicated that she meant to
perish miserably of ennui in the besotted dullness
of Sneyd, and that no Christmas-party of any kind
should occur in her house. She ceased to
show interest in Stephen’s health. She
would not speak. In fact, she went too far.
One day, in reply to her rude silence, Stephen said:
’Very well, child, if that’s your game,
I’ll play it with you. Except when other
people are present, not a word do I speak to you until
you have first spoken to me.’
She knew he would abide by that.
He was a monster. She hated him. She loathed
him (so she said to herself).
That night, in the agony of her distress,
she had dreamed a dream. She dreamed that a stranger
came to the house. The details were vague, but
the stranger had travelled many miles over water.
She could not see him distinctly, but she knew that
he was quite bald. In spite of his baldness he
inspired her with sympathy. He understood her,
praised her costumes, and treated a woman as a woman
ought to be treated. Then, somehow or other,
he was making love to her, the monster Stephen being
absent. She was shocked by his making love to
her, and she moved a little farther off him on the
sofa (he had sat down by her on a vague sort of sofa
in a vague sort of room); but still she was thrilled,
and she could not feel as wicked as she felt she ought
to feel. Then the dream became hazy; it became
hazy at the interesting point of her answer to the
love-making. A later stage was very clear.
Something was afoot between the monster Stephen and
the stranger in the dining-room, and she was locked
out of the dining-room. It was Christmas night.
She knocked frantically at the door, and at last forced
it open, and Stephen was lying in the middle of the
floor; the table had been pushed into a corner.
‘I killed him quite by accident,’ said
the stranger affably. And then he seized her
by the hand and ruthlessly dragged her away, away,
away; and they travelled in trains and ships and trains,
and they came to a very noisy, clanging sort of city-and
Vera woke up. It had been a highly realistic
dream, and it made a deep impression on Vera.
Can one wonder that Vera’s heart,
being a superstitious little heart, like all our hearts,
should leap when the very next day Stephen turned
up with a completely unexpected stranger from New York?
Of course, dreams are nonsense! Of course!
Still-
She did not know whether to rejoice
or mourn over the fact that Mr Bittenger was not bald.
He was decidedly unbald; he had a glorious shock of
chestnut hair. That hair of his naturally destroyed
any possible connection with the dream. None
the less the coincidence was bizarre.
II
That evening, before dinner, Vera,
busy in her chamber beautifying her charms for the
ravishment of men from New York, waited with secret
anxiety for the arrival of Stephen in his dressing-room.
And whereas she usually closed the door between the
bedroom and the dressing-room, on this occasion she
carefully left it wide open. Stephen came at last.
And she waited, listening to his movements in the dressing-room.
Not a word! She made brusque movements in the
bedroom to attract his attention; she even dropped
a brush on the floor. Not a word! After a
few moments, she actually ventured into the dressing-room.
Stephen was wiping his face, and he glanced at her
momentarily over the towel, which hid his nose and
mouth. Not a word! And how hard was the
monster’s glance! She felt that Stephen
was one of your absurd literal persons. He had
said that he would not speak to her until she had first
spoken to him-that was to say in private-public
performances did not count. And he would stick
to his text, no matter how deliciously she behaved.
She left the dressing-room in haste.
Very well! Very well! If Stephen wished
for war, he should have it. Her grievance against
him grew into something immense. Before, it had
been nothing but a kind of two-roomed cottage.
She now erected it into a town hall, with imposing
portals, and many windows and rich statuary, and suite
after suite of enormous rooms, and marble staircases,
and lifts that went up and down. She wished she
had never married him. She wished that Mr Bittenger
had been bald.
At dinner everything went with admirable
smoothness. Mr Bittenger sat betwixt them.
And utmost politeness reigned. In their quality
of well-bred hosts, they both endeavoured to keep
Mr Bittenger at his ease despite their desolating
quarrel; and they entirely succeeded. As the
champagne disappeared (and it was not Stephen that
drank it), Mr Bittenger became more than at his ease.
He was buyer for an important firm of earthenware
dealers in New York (Vera had suspected as much-these
hospitalities to American buyers are an essential part
of business in the Five Towns), and he related very
drolly the series of chances or mischances that had
left him stranded in England at that season so unseasonable
for buying. Vera reflected upon the series of
chances or mischances, and upon her dream of the man
from over the long miles of water. Of course,
dreams are nonsense.... But still-
The conversation passed to the topic
of Stephen’s health, as conversations in Stephen’s
house had a habit of doing. Mr Bittenger listened
with grave interest.
‘I know, I know!’ said
Mr Bittenger. ’I used to be exactly the
same. I guess I understand how you feel-some!
Don’t I?’
‘And you are cured?’ Stephen
demanded, eagerly, as he nibbled at dry toast.
‘You bet I’m cured!’ said Mr Bittenger.
‘You must tell me about that,’
said Stephen, and added, ’some time tonight.’
He did not care to discuss the bewildering internal
economy of the human frame at his dinner-table.
There were details...and Mr Bittenger was in a mood
that it was no exaggeration to describe as gay.
Shortly afterwards, there arose a
discussion as to their respective ages. They
coquetted for a few moments, as men invariably will,
each diffident about giving away the secret, each
asserting that the other was younger than himself.
‘Well,’ said Mr Bittenger
to Vera, at length, ’what age should you give
me?’
‘I-I should give
you five years less than Stephen,’ Vera replied.
‘And may I ask just how old
you are?’ Mr Bittenger put the question at close
range to Stephen, and hit him full in the face with
it.
‘I’m forty,’ said Stephen.
‘So am I!’ said Mr Bittenger.
‘Well, you don’t look it,’ said
Stephen.
‘Sure!’ Mr Bittenger admitted, pleased.
‘My husband’s hair is turning grey,’
said Vera, ‘while yours-’
‘Turning grey!’ exclaimed
Mr Bittender. ’I wish mine was. I’d
give five thousand dollars today if mine was.’
‘But why ?’ Vera smiled.
‘Look here, my dear lady,’
said Mr Bittenger, in a peculiar voice, putting down
his glass.
And with a swift movement he lifted
a wig of glorious chestnut hair from his head-just
lifted it for an instant, and dropped it. The
man was utterly and completely bald.
III
Vera did nothing foolish. She
neither cried, screamed, turned deadly pale, clenched
her fragile hands, bit her lips till the blood came,
smashed a wine-glass, nor fell with a dull thud senseless
to the floor. Nevertheless, she was extremely
perturbed by this astounding revelation of Mr Bittenger’s.
Of course, dreams are nonsense. But still-The
truth is, one tries to believe that dreams are nonsense,
and up to a certain point one may succeed in believing.
But it seemed to Vera that circumstances had passed
that point. She could not but admit, also, that
if the dream went on being fulfilled, within forty-eight
hours Mr Bittenger would have made love to her, and
would have killed her husband.
She was so incensed against Stephen
that she really could not decide whether she wanted
the dream to be fulfilled or not. No one would
have imagined that that soft breast could conceal
a homicidal thought. Yet so it was. That
pretty and delightful woman, wandering about in the
edifice of her terrific grievance against Stephen,
could not say positively to herself that she would
not care to have Stephen killed as a punishment for
his sins.
After dinner, she found an excuse
for retiring. She must think the puzzle out in
solitude. Matters were really going too far.
She allowed it to be understood that she was indisposed.
Mr Bittenger was full of sorrow and sympathy.
But did Stephen show the slightest concern? Stephen
did not. She went upstairs, and she meditated,
stretched on the sofa at the foot of the bed, a rug
over her knees and the fire glinting on her face.
Yes, it was her duty as a Christian, if not as an outraged
wife, to warn Stephen that the shadow of death was
creeping up behind him. He ought at least to
be warned. But how could she warn him? Clearly
she could not warn him in the presence of Mr Bittenger,
the prospective murderer. She would, therefore,
have to warn him when they were alone. And that
meant that she would have to give way in the great
conjugal sulking match. No, never! It was
impossible that she should give way there! She
frowned desperately at the leaping flames, and did
ultimately decide that Stephen’s death was preferable
to her defeat in that contest. Of such is human
nature.
After all, dreams were nonsense.
Surely Stephen would come upstairs
to inquire about her health, her indisposition?
But no! He came not. And, as he continued
not to come, she went downstairs again and proclaimed
that she was better.
And then she learned that she had
been worrying herself to no purpose whatever.
Mr Bittenger was leaving on the morrow, the morrow
being Christmas Eve. Stephen would drive him
to Bursley in the morning. He would go to the
Five Towns Hotel to get his baggage, and catch the
Liverpool express at noon. He had booked a passage
on the Saxonia, which sailed at threethirty o’clock.
Thus he would spend his Christmas at sea; and, spending
his Christmas at sea, he could not possibly kill Stephen
in the village of Sneyd on Christmas night.
Relief! And yet a certain vague
regret in the superstitious little heart! The
little heart went to bed again. And Stephen and
the stranger stayed up talking very late-doubtless
about the famous cure.
The leave-taking the next morning
increased the vague regret. Mr Bittenger was
the possessor of an attractive individuality, and Vera
pondered upon its attractiveness far into the afternoon.
How nicely Mr Bittenger had thanked her for her gracious
hospitality-with what meaning he had charged
the expression of his deep regret at leaving her!
After all, dreams were nonsense.
She was sitting in the bow-window
of the drawing-room, precisely as she had been sitting
twenty-four hours previously, when whom should she
see, striding masculinely along the drive towards the
house, but Mr Bittenger?
This time she was much more perturbed
even than she had been by the revelation of Mr Bittenger’s
baldness.
After all-
She uprose, the blood having rushed
to her head, and retreated she knew not whither, blindly,
without a purpose. And found herself in a little
morning-room which was scarcely ever used, at the end
of the hall. She had not shut the door.
And Mr Bittenger, having been admitted by a servant,
caught sight of her, and breezily entered her retreat,
clad in his magnificent furs.
And as he doffed the furs, he gaily
told her what had happened. Owing to difficulties
with the Cheswardine mare on the frosty, undulating
road between Sneyd and Bursley, and owing to delays
with his baggage at the Five Towns Hotel, he had just
missed the Liverpool express, and, therefore, the
steamer also. He had returned to Stephen’s
manufactory. Stephen had insisted that he should
spend his Christmas with them. And, in brief,
there he was. He had walked from Bursley.
Stephen, kept by business, was coming later, and so
was some of the baggage.
Mr Bittenger’s face radiated
joy. The loss of his twenty-guinea passage on
the Saxonia did not appear to cause him the least regret.
And he sat down by the side of Vera.
And Vera suddenly noticed that they
were on a sofa-the sofa of her dream-and
she fancied she recognized the room.
‘You know, my dear lady,’
said Mr Bittenger, looking her straight in the eyes,
’I’m just glad I missed my steamer.
It gives me a chance to spend a Christmas in England,
and in your delightful society-your delightful
society-’ He gazed at her, without
adding to the sentence.
If this was not love-making on a sofa, what could
be?
Mr Bittenger had certainly missed
the Liverpool express on purpose. Of that Vera
was convinced. Or, if he had not missed it on
purpose, he had missed it under the dictates of the
mysterious power of the dream. Those people who
chose to believe that dreams are nonsense were at
liberty to do so.
IV
So that in spite of Vera’s definite
proclamation that there should be no Christmassing
in her house that year, Christmassing there emphatically
was. Impossible to deny anything to Mr Bittenger!
Mr Bittenger wanted holly, the gardener supplied it.
Mr Bittenger wanted mistletoe, a bunch of it was brought
home by Stephen in the dogcart. Mr Bittenger
could not conceive an English Christmas without turkey,
mince-pies, plum-pudding, and all the usual indigestiveness.
Vera, speaking in a voice which seemed somehow not
to be hers, stated that these necessaries of Christmas
life would be produced, and Stephen did not say that
the very thought of a mince-tart made him ill.
Even the English weather, which, it is notorious,
has of late shown a sad disposition to imitate, and
even to surpass, in mildness the weather of the Riviera
at Christmas, decided to oblige Mr Bittenger.
At nightfall on Christmas Eve it began to snow gently,
but steadily-fine, frozen snow. And
the waits, consisting of boys and girls from the Countess
of Chell’s celebrated institute close by, came
and sang in the garden in the falling snow, by the
light of a lantern. And Mr Bittenger’s heart
was as full as it could hold of English Christmas.
As for Vera’s heart, it was
full of she knew not what. Mr Bittenger’s
attitude towards her grew more and more chivalrous.
He contrived to indicate that he regarded all the
years he had spent before making the acquaintance
of Vera as so many years absolutely wasted. And
Stephen did not seem to care.
They retired to rest that evening
up a staircase whose banisters the industrious hands
of Mr Bittenger had entwined with holly and paper
festoons, and bade each other a merry Christmas with
immense fervour; but in the conjugal chamber Stephen
maintained his policy of implacable silence.
And, naturally, Vera maintained hers. Could it
be expected of her that she should yield? The
fault was all Stephen’s. He ought to have
taken her to The Bear, Switzerland. Then there
would have been no dream, no Mr Bittenger, and no
danger. But as things were, within twenty-four
hours he would be a dead man.
And throughout Christmas Day Vera,
beneath the gaiety with which she met the vivacious
sallies of Mr Bittenger, waited in horrible suspense
for the dream to fulfil itself. Stephen alone
observed her agitated condition. Stephen said
to himself: ’The quarrel is getting on her
nerves. She’ll yield before she’s
a day older. It will do her good. Then I’ll
make it up to her handsomely. But she must yield
first.’
He little knew he was standing on
the edge of the precipice of death.
The Christmas dinner succeeded admirably;
and Stephen, in whom courage was seldom lacking, ate
half a mince-pie. The day was almost over.
No premature decease had so far occurred. And
when both the men said that, if Vera permitted, they
would come with her at once to the drawing-room and
smoke there, Vera decided that after all dreams were
nonsense. She entered the drawing-room first,
and Mr Bittenger followed her, with Stephen behind;
but just as Stephen was crossing the mat the gardener,
holding a parcel in his hands and looking rather strange
there in the hall, spoke to him. And Stephen
stopped and called to Mr Bittenger. And the drawing-room
door was closed upon Vera.
She waited, solitary, for an incredible
space of time, and then, having heard unaccustomed
and violent sounds in the distance, she could contain
herself no longer, and she rang the bell.
‘Louisa,’ she demanded
of the parlourmaid, ‘where is your master?’
‘Oh, ma’am,’ replied
Louisa, giggling-a little licence was surely
permissible to the girl on Christmas night-’Oh,
ma’am, there’s such a to-do! Tinsley
has just brought some boxing-gloves, and master and
Mr Bittenger have got their coats off in the dining-room.
And they’ve had the table pushed up by the door,
and you never saw such a set-out in all your life
ma’am.’
Vera dismissed Louisa.
There it was-the dream!
They were going to box. Mr Bittenger was doubtless
an expert, and she knew that Stephen was not.
A chance blow by Mr Bittenger in some vital part,
and Stephen would be lying stretched in eternal stillness
in the middle of the dining-room floor where the table
ought to be! The life of the monster was at stake!
The life of the brute was in her hands! The dream
was fulfilling itself to the point of tragedy!
She jumped up and rushed to the dining-room
door. It would not open. Again, the dream!
‘You can’t come in,’
cried Stephen, laughing. ‘Wait a bit.’
She pushed against the door, working the handle.
She was about to insist upon the door
being opened, when the idea of the danger of such
a proceeding occurred to her. In the dream, when
she got the door opened, her husband’s death
had already happened!
Frantically she ran to the kitchen.
‘Louisa,’ she ordered.
’Go into the garden and tap at the dining-room
window, and tell your master that I must speak to him
at once in the drawing-room.’
And in a pitiable state of excitation,
she returned to the drawing-room.
After another interminable period
of suspense, her ear caught the sound of the opening
of doors, and then Stephen came into the drawing-room.
A singular apparition! He was coatless, as Louisa
had said, and the extremities of his long arms were
bulged out with cream-coloured boxing-gloves.
She sprang at him and kissed him.
‘Steve,’ she said, ‘are we friends?’
‘I should think we were!’
he replied, returning her kiss heartily. He had
won.
‘What are you doing?’ she asked him.
’Bittenger and I are just going
to have a real round with the gloves. It’s
part of his cure for my indigestion, you know.
He says there’s nothing like it. I’ve
only just been able to get gloves. Tinsley brought
them up just now. And so we sort of thought we’d
like to have a go at once.’
‘Why wouldn’t you let me into the dining-room?’
’My child, the table was up
against the door. And I fancied, perhaps, you
wouldn’t be exactly charmed, so I-’
‘Stephen,’ she said, in
her most persuasive voice, ’will you do something
to please me?’
‘What is it?’
‘Will you?’
A pause.
‘Yes, certainly.’
‘Don’t box tonight.’
‘Oh-well! What will Bittenger
think?’
Another pause.
‘Never mind! You don’t want me to
box, really?’
‘I don’t want you to box-not
tonight.’ ‘Agreed, my chuck!’
And he kissed her again. He could well afford
to be magnanimous.
Mr Bittenger ploughed the seas alone to New York.
But supposing that Vera had not interfered,
what would have happened? That is the unanswerable
query which torments the superstitious little brain
of Vera.