SYLVIA DRIFTS WITH THE MAJORITY
“No, they don’t let you
sit down in here if you’re as shabby as I am,”
said the man, continuing his slow, feeble, shuffling
progress. “They know you’re only
a vagrant, here to get out of the rain. They won’t
even let you stand still long.”
Sylvia had not been inside the Pantheon
before, had never been inside a building with so great
a dome. They stood under it now. She sent
her glance up to its vast, dim, noble heights and
brought it down to the saturnine, unsavory wreck at
her side. She was regretting the impulse which
had made her call out to him. What could she say
to him now they were together? What word, what
breath could be gentle enough, light enough not to
be poison to that open sore?
On his part he seemed entirely unconcerned
about the impression he made on her. His eyes,
his sick, filmed eyes, looked at her with no shrinking,
with no bravado, with an entire indifference which
gave, through all the desolation of his appearance,
the strangest, careless dignity to the man. He
did not care what she thought of him. He did
not care what any one thought of him. He gave
the impression of a man whose accounts are all reckoned
and the balance struck, long ago.
“So this is Sylvia,” he
said, with the slightest appearance of interest, glancing
at her casually. “I always said you would
make a beautiful woman. But since I knew Victoria,
I’ve seen that you must be quite what she was
at your age.” It might have been a voice
speaking from beyond the grave, so listless, so dragging
was its rhythm. “How do you happen to be
in Paris?” he asked. “Are your parents
still alive?”
“Oh yes!” said
Sylvia, half startled by the preposterousness of the
idea that they might not be. “They’re
very well too. I had such a good letter from
Mother the other day. Do you remember Professor
Kennedy? He has just given up his position to
be professor emeritus. I suppose now he’ll
write that book on the idiocy of the human race he’s
been planning so long. And old Mr. Reinhardt,
he’s still the same, they say ... wonderful,
isn’t it, at his age?” She was running
on, not knowing what to say, and chattering rather
foolishly in her embarrassment. “Judith
is a trained nurse; isn’t that just the right
thing for her? I’m visiting Aunt Victoria
here for a while. Lawrence is a Freshman at....”
He broke in, his hollow voice resounding
in the immense, vault-like spaces around them.
“You’d better go home,” he said.
“I’d leave tonight, if I were you.”
She looked at him startled, half-scared, thinking
that she had been right to fancy him out of his mind.
She saw with relief a burly attendant in a blue uniform
lounging near a group of statuary. She could
call to him, if it became necessary.
“You’d better go away
from her at once,” went on the man, advancing
aimlessly from one bay of the frescoes to another.
Sylvia knew now of whom he was speaking,
and as he continued talking with a slow, dreary monotony,
her mind raced back over the years, picking up a scrap
here, a half-forgotten phrase there, an intercepted
look between her father and mother, a recollection
of her own, a half-finished sentence of Arnold’s
...
“She can’t be fatal for
you in the same way she has been for the others, of
course,” the man was saying. “What
she’ll do for you is to turn you into a woman
like herself. I remember now, I have thought
many times, that you were like her ... of the
same clay. But you have something else too, you
have something that she’ll take away from you
if you stay. You can’t keep her from doing
it. No one can get the better of her. She
doesn’t fight. But she always takes life.
She has taken mine. She must have taken her bogie-husband’s,
she took young Gilbert’s, she took Gilbert’s
wife’s, she took Arnold’s in another way....
God! think of leaving a young, growing, weak soul in
the care of a woman like Victoria! She took that
poet’s, I forget his name; I suppose by this
time Felix Morrison is ...”
At this name, a terrible contraction
of the heart told Sylvia that she was listening to
what he said. “Felix Morrison!” she
cried in stern, angry protest. “I don’t
know what you’re talking about but
if you think that Aunt Victoria if you
think Felix Morrison ” She was inarticulate
in her indignation. “He was married last
autumn to a beautiful girl and Aunt Victoria what
an idea! no one was more pleased
than she why you are crazy!”
She flung out at him the word, which two moments before
she would not have been so cruel as to think.
It gave him no discomfort. “Oh
no, I’m not,” he said with a spectral
laugh, which had in it, to Sylvia’s dismay, the
very essence of sanity. She did not know why
she now shrank away from him, far more frightened
than before. “I’m about everything
else you might mention, but I’m not crazy.
And you take my word for it and get out while you
still can ... if you still can?” He faintly
indicated an inquiry, looking at her sideways, his
dirty hand stroking the dishonoring gray stubble of
his unshaven face. “As for Morrison’s
wife ... let her get out too. Gilbert tried marrying,
tried it in all unconsciousness. It’s only
when they try to get away from her that they know she’s
in the marrow of their bones. She lets them try.
She doesn’t even care. She knows they’ll
come back. Gilbert did. And his wife ...
well, I’m sorry for Morrison’s wife.”
“She’s dead,” said Sylvia abruptly.
He took this in with a nod of the
head. “So much the better for her.
How did it happen that you didn’t fall
for Morrison’s ...” he looked at her sharply
at a change in her face she could not control.
“Oh, you did,” he commented slackly.
“Well, you’d better start home for La
Chance tonight,” he said again.
They were circling around and around
the shadowy interior, making no pretense of looking
at the frescoed walls, to examine which had been their
ostensible purpose in entering. Sylvia was indeed
aware of great pictured spaces, crowded dimly with
thronging figures, men, horses, women they
reached no more than the outer retina of her eye.
She remembered fleetingly that they had something
to do with the story of Ste. Genevieve.
She wanted intensely to escape from this phantom whom
she herself had called up from the void to stalk at
her side. But she felt she ought not to let pass,
even coming from such a source, such utterly frenzied
imaginings against one to whom she owed loyalty.
She spoke coldly, with extreme distaste for the subject:
“You’re entirely wrong about Aunt Victoria.
She’s not in the least that kind of a woman.”
He shook his head slowly. “No,
no; you misunderstand me. Your Aunt Victoria
is quite irreproachable, she always has been, she always
will be. She is always in the right. She
always will be. She did nothing to me but hire
me to teach her stepson, and when my habits became
too bad, discharge me, as any one would have done.
She did nothing to Arnold except to leave him to the
best schools and the best tutors money could buy.
What more could any one have done? She had not
the slightest idea that Horace Gilbert would try to
poison his wife, had not the slightest connection
with their quarrel. The young poet, Adams
was his name, now I remember did not consult
her before he took to cocaine. Morphine is my
own specialty. Victoria of course deplored it
as much as any one could. No, I’m not for
a minute intimating that Victoria is a Messalina.
We’d all be better off if she were. It’s
only our grossness that finds fault with her.
Your aunt is one of the most respectable women who
ever lived, as ’chaste as unsunned snow the
very ice of chastity is in her!’ Indeed, I’ve
often wondered if the redoubtable Ephraim Smith himself,
for all that he succeeded in marrying her, fared any
better than the rest of us. Victoria would be
quite capable of cheating him out of his pay.
She parches, yes, she dries up the blood but
it’s not by her passion, not even by ours.
Honest passion never kills. It’s the Sahara
sands of her egotism into which we’ve all emptied
our veins.”
Sylvia was frozen to the spot by her
outraged indignation that any one should dare speak
to her thus. She found herself facing a fresco
of a tall, austere figure in an enveloping white garment,
an elderly woman with a thin, worn, noble face, who
laid one fine old hand on a stone parapet and with
divine compassion and tenderness looked out over a
sleeping city. The man followed the direction
of her eyes. “It’s Puvis de Chavannes’
Ste. Genevieve as an old woman, guarding and praying
for the city. Very good, isn’t it?
I especially admire the suggestion of the plain bare
cell she has stepped out from. I often come here
to look at it when I’ve nothing to eat.”
He seemed as flaccidly willing to speak on this as
on any other topic; to find it no more interesting
than the subject of his former speech.
Sylvia was overcome with horror of
him. She walked rapidly away, towards the door,
hoping he would not follow her. He did not.
When she glanced back fearfully over her shoulder,
she saw him still standing there, looking up at the
gaunt gray figure of beneficent old age. His
dreadful broken felt hat was in his hand, the water
dripped from his frayed trousers over the rotting
leather of his shoes. As she looked, he began
to cough, loudly, terribly, so that the echoing reaches
of the great nave resounded to the sound. Sylvia
ran back to him and thrust her purse into his hand.
At first he could not speak, for coughing, but in
a moment he found breath to ask, “Is it Victoria’s
money?”
She did not answer.
He held it for a moment, and then
opening his hand let it drop. As she turned away
Sylvia heard it fall clinking on the stone floor.
At the door she turned for one last look, and saw
him weakly stooping to pick it up again. She
fairly burst out of the door.
It was almost dusk when she was on
the street again, looking down the steep incline to
the Luxembourg Gardens. In the rainy twilight
the fierce tension of the Rodin “Thinker”
in front of the Pantheon loomed huge and tragic.
She gave it a glance of startled sympathy. She
had never understood the statue before. Now she
was a prey to those same ravaging throes. There
was for the moment no escaping them. She felt
none of her former wild impulse to run away. What
she had been running away from had overtaken her.
She faced it now, looked at it squarely, gave it her
ear for the first time; the grinding, dissonant note
under the rich harmony of the life she had known for
all these past months, the obscure vaults underlying
the shining temple in which she had been living.
What beauty could there be which was
founded on such an action as Felix’ marriage
to Molly Molly, whose passionate directness
had known the only way out of the impasse into which
Felix should never have let her go?... An echo
from what she had heard in the mass at Notre Dame
rang in her ears, and now the sound was louder Austin’s
voice, Austin’s words: “A beauty
that can’t endure disharmony in conduct, the
fine true ear for the deeper values, the foundations ”
It was Austin, asking himself what beauty could be
in any life founded, even remotely as his was, on
any one’s misery?
For a long time she stood there, silent,
motionless, her hands clenched at her sides, looking
straight before her in the rain. Above her on
his pedestal, the great, bronze, naked, tortured man
ground his teeth as he glared out from under the inexorable
limitations of his ape-like forehead, and strove wildly
against the barriers of his flesh....
Wildly and vainly, against inexorable
limitations! Sylvia was aware that an insolent
young man, with moist protuberant eyes, had come up
where she stood there, alone, motionless on the public
street. He put his arm in hers, clasped her hand
in a fat, soft palm, and, “Allons, ma belle!”
he said with a revolting gayety.
Sylvia pulled away from him, cried
out fiercely in English, “Don’t you dare
to touch me!” and darted away.
He made no attempt at pursuit, acknowledging
his mistake with an easy shrug and turning off to
roam, a dim, predatory figure, along the dusky street.
He had startled and frightened the girl so that she
was trembling when she ventured to slow down to a
walk under the glaring lights of the Boulevard St.
Michel. She was also shivering with wet and cold,
and without knowing it, she was extremely hungry.
As she fled along the boulevard in the direction of
her own quarter of the city, her eye caught the lighted
clock at the kiosk near Cluny. She was astonished
to see that it was after seven o’clock.
How long could she have stood there, under the shadow
of that terrific Thinker, consumed quite as much as
he by the pain of trying to rise above mere nature?
An hour more than an hour, she must have
been there. The Pantheon must have closed during
that time, and the dreadful, sick man must have passed
close by her. Where was he now? What makeshift
shelter harbored that cough, those dirty, skeleton
hands, those awful eyes which had outlived endurance
and come to know peace before death....
She shivered and tried to shrink away
from her wet, clinging clothing. She had never,
in all her life before, been wet and cold and hungry
and frightened, she had never known from what she had
been protected. And now the absence of money
meant that she must walk miles in the rain before
she could reach safety and food. For three cents
she could ride. But she had not three cents.
How idiotic she had been not to keep a few sous
from her purse. What a sickening thing it had
been to see him stoop to pick it up after he had tried
to have the pride not to touch it. That was what
morphine had done for him. And he would buy more
morphine with that money, that was the reason he had
not been able to let it lie ... the man who had been
to her little girlhood the radiant embodiment of strength
and fineness!
Her teeth were chattering, her feet
soaked and cold. She tried to walk faster to
warm her blood, and discovered that she was exhausted,
tired to the marrow of her bones. Her feet dragged
on the pavement, her arms hung heavily by her side,
but she dared not stop a moment lest some other man
with abhorrent eyes should approach her.
She set her teeth and walked; walked
across the Seine without a glance at its misted lights
blinking through the rain, walked on past the prison
of Marie Antoinette, without a thought of that other
harmless woman who had loved bright and lovely things
while others suffered: walked on upon the bridge
across the Seine again. This bewildered her,
making her think that she was so dazed she had doubled
on her tracks. She saw, a long way off, a solitary
hooded sergent de ville, and dragged
herself across an endless expanse of wet asphalt to
ask him her way. But just before she reached
him, she remembered suddenly that of course she was
on the island and was obliged to cross the Seine again
before reaching the right bank. She returned weary
and disheartened to her path, crossed the bridge,
and then endlessly, endlessly, set one heavy foot
before the other under the glare of innumerable electric
lights staring down on her and on the dismal, wet,
and deserted streets. The clocks she passed told
her that it was nearly eight o’clock. Then
it was past eight. What must they be thinking
of her on the Rue de Presbourg? She tried again
to hurry, but could force her aching muscles to no
more than the plod, plod, plod of her dogged advance
over those interminable miles of pavement. There
was little of her then that was not cold, weary, wet
flesh, suffering all the discomforts that an animal
can know. She counted her steps for a long time,
and became so stupidly absorbed in this that she made
a wrong turning and was blocks out of her way before
she noticed her mistake. This mishap reduced
her almost to tears, and it was when she was choking
them weakly back and setting herself again to the cruel
long vista of the Champs-Elysees that an automobile
passed her at top speed with a man’s face pressed
palely to the panes. Almost at once the car stopped
in answer to a shouted command; it whirled about and
bore down on her. Felix Morrison sprang out and
ran to her with outstretched arms, his rich voice
ringing through the desolation of the rain and the
night “Sylvia! Sylvia! Are
you safe?”
He almost carried her back to the
car, lifted her in. There were wraps there, great
soft, furry, velvet wraps which he cast about her,
murmuring broken ejaculations of emotion, of pity,
of relief “Oh, your hands, how cold!
Sylvia, how could you? Here, drink this!
I’ve been insane, absolutely out
of my mind! Let me take off your hat Oh,
your poor feet I was on my way to I
was afraid you might have Oh, Sylvia, Sylvia,
to have you safe!” She tried to bring to mind
something she had intended to remember; she even repeated
the phrase over to herself, “It was an ugly,
ugly thing to have married Molly,” but she knew
only that he was tenderness and sheltering care and
warmth and food and safety. She drew long quivering
breaths like a child coming out of a sobbing fit.
Then before there was time for more
thought, the car had whirled them back to the door,
where Aunt Victoria, outwardly calm, but very pale,
stood between the concierge and his wife, looking out
into the rainy deserted street.
At the touch of those warm embracing
arms, at that radiant presence, at the sound of that
relieved, welcoming voice, the nightmare of the Pantheon
faded away to blackness....
Half an hour later, she sat, fresh
from a hot bath, breathing out delicately a reminiscence
of recent violet water and perfumed powder; fresh,
fine under-linen next her glowing skin; shining and
refreshed, in a gown of chiffon and satin; eating
her first mouthful of Yoshido’s ambrosial soup.
“Why, I’m so sorry,”
she was saying. “I went out for a walk,
and then went further than I meant to. I’ve
been over on the left bank part of the time, in Notre
Dame and the Pantheon. And then when I started
to come home it took longer than I thought. It’s
so apt to, you know.”
“Why in the world, my dear,
did you walk home?” cried Aunt Victoria,
still brooding over her in pitying sympathy.
“I’d I’d lost my purse.
I didn’t have any money.”
“But you don’t pay for
a cab till you come to the end of your journey!
You could have stepped into a taxi and borrowed the
money of the concierge here.”
Sylvia was immensely disconcerted
by her rustic naïveté in not thinking of this obvious
device. “Oh, of course! How could I
have been so but I was tired when I came
to start home I was very tired too
tired to think clearly!”
This brought them all back to the
recollection of what had set her off on her walk.
There was for a time rather a strained silence; but
they were all very hungry dinner was two
hours late and the discussion of Yoshido’s
roast duckling was anything but favorable for the
consideration of painful topics. They had champagne
to celebrate her safe escape from the adventure.
To the sensation of perfect ease induced by the well-chosen
dinner this added a little tingling through all Sylvia’s
nerves, a pleasant, light, bright titillation.
All might have gone well if, after
the dinner, Felix had not stepped, as was his wont,
to the piano. Sylvia had been, up to that moment,
almost wholly young animal, given over to bodily ecstasy,
of which not the least was the agreeable warmth on
her silk-clad ankle as she held her slippered foot
to the fire.
But at the first chords something
else in her, slowly, with extreme pain, awoke to activity.
All her life music had spoken a language to which
she could not shut her ears, and now her
face clouded, she shifted her position, she held up
a little painted screen to shield her face from the
fire, she finally rose and walked restlessly about
the room. Every grave and haunting cadence from
the piano brought to her mind, flickering and quick,
like fire, a darting question, and every one she stamped
out midway, with an effort of the will.
The intimacy between Felix and Aunt
Victoria, it was strange she had never before thought of
course not what a hideous idea! That
book, back in Lydford, with Horace Gilbert’s
name on the fly-leaf, and Aunt Victoria’s cool,
casual voice as she explained, “Oh, just a young
architect who used to ” Oh, the man
in the Pantheon was simply brutalized by drugs; he
did not know what he was saying. His cool, spectral
laugh of sanity sounded faintly in her ears again.
And then, out of a mounting foam of
arpeggios, there bloomed for her a new idea, solid
enough, broad enough, high enough, for a refuge against
all these wolfish fangs. She sat down to think
it out, hot on the trail of an answer, the longed-for
answer.
It had just occurred to her that there
was no possible logical connection between any of
those skulking phantoms and the golden lovely things
they tried to defile. Even if some people of wealth
and ease and leisure were not as careful about moral
values as about colors, and aesthetic harmonies that
meant nothing. The connection was purely fortuitous.
How silly she had been not to see that. Grant,
for purposes of argument, that Aunt Victoria was self-centered
and had lived her life with too little regard for
its effect on other people, grant even
that Felix had, under an almost overpowering temptation,
not kept in a matter of conduct the same rigid nicety
of fastidiousness which characterized his judgment
of marbles what of it? That did not
mean that one could only be fine and true in conduct
by giving up all lovely things and wearing hair-shirts.
What an outgrown, mediaeval idea! How could she
have been for a moment under its domination!
It was just that old Puritanism, Spartanism of her
childhood, which was continually reaching up its bony
hand from the grave where she had interred it.
The only danger came, she saw it now,
read it plainly and clear-headedly in the lives of
the two people with her, the only danger came from
a lack of proportion. It certainly did seem to
be possible to allow the amenities and aesthetic pleasures
to become so important that moral fineness must stand
aside till they were safe. But anybody who had
enough intelligence could keep his head, even if the
temptation was alluring. And simply because there
was that possible danger, why not enjoy delightful
things as long as they did not run counter to moral
fineness! How absurd to think there was any reason
why they should; quite the contrary, as a thousand
philosophers attested. They would not in her
case, at least! Of course, if a decision had
to be taken between the two, she would never hesitate never!
As she phrased this conviction to herself, she turned
a ring on her white slim finger and had a throb of
pleasure in the color of the gem. What harmless,
impersonal pleasures they were! How little they
hurt any one! And as to this business of morbidly
probing into healthy flesh, of insisting on going
back of everything, farther than any one could possibly
go, and scrutinizing the origin of every dollar that
came into your hand ... why, that way lay madness!
As soon try to investigate all the past occupants
of a seat in a railway before using it for a journey.
Modern life was not organized that way. It was
too complicated.
Her mind rushed on excitedly, catching
up more certainty, more and more reinforcements to
her argument as it advanced. There was, therefore,
nothing inherent in the manner of life she had known
these last months to account for what seemed ugly
underneath. There was no reason why some one
more keenly on his guard could not live as they did
and escape sounding that dissonant note!
The music stopped. Morrison turned
on the stool and seeing her bent head and moody stare
at the fire, sent an imploring glance for help to
Mrs. Marshall-Smith.
Just let her have the wealth and leisure
and let her show how worthily she could use it!
There would be an achievement! Sylvia came around
to another phase of her new idea, there would be something
worth doing, to show that one could be as fine and
true in a palace as in a hut, even as in
a Vermont farmhouse! At this, suddenly all thought
left her. Austin Page stood before her, fixing
on her his clear and passionate and tender eyes.
At that dear and well-remembered gaze, her lip began
to quiver like a child’s, and her eyes filled.
Mrs. Marshall-Smith stirred herself
with the effect of a splendid ship going into action
with all flags flying. “Sylvia dear,”
she said, “this rain tonight makes me think
of a new plan. It will very likely rain for a
week or more now. Paris is abominable in the rain.
What do you say to a change? Madeleine Perth
was telling me this afternoon that the White Star
people are running a few ships from Portsmouth by
way of Cherbourg around by Gibraltar, through the Mediterranean
to Naples. That’s one trip your rolling-stone
of an aunt has never taken, and I’d rather like
to add it to my collection. We could be in Naples
in four days from Cherbourg and spend a month in Italy,
going north as the heat arrived. Felix why
don’t you come along? You’ve been
wanting to see the new low reliefs in the Terme,
in Rome?”
Sylvia’s heart, like all young
hearts, was dazzled almost to blinking by the radiance
shed from the magic word Italy. She turned, looking
very much taken aback and bewildered, but with light
in her eyes, color in her face.
Morrison burst out: “Oh,
a dream realized! Something to live on all one’s
days, the pines of the Borghese the cypresses
of the Villa Medici roses cascading over
the walls in Rome, the view across the Campagna from
the terraces at Rocca di Papa ”
Sylvia thought rapidly to herself:
“Austin said he did not want me to answer
at once. He said he wanted me to take time to
take time! I can decide better, make more sense
out of everything, if I after I have thought
more, have taken more time. No, I am not turning
my back on him. Only I must have more time to
think ”
Aloud she said, after a moment’s
silence, “Oh, nothing could be lovelier!”
She lay in her warm, clean white bed
that night, sleeping the sound sleep of the healthy
young animal which has been wet and cold and hungry,
and is now dry and warmed and fed.
Outside, across the city, on his bronze
pedestal, the tortured Thinker, loyal to his destiny,
still strove terribly against the limitations of his
ape-like forehead.