As first published in Harper’s Monthly, December
1903
It was on an impulse hardly needing
the arguments he found himself advancing in its favor,
that Thursdale, on his way to the club, turned as
usual into Mrs. Vervain’s street.
The “as usual” was his
own qualification of the act; a convenient way of
bridging the interval in days and other
sequences that lay between this visit and
the last. It was characteristic of him that he
instinctively excluded his call two days earlier, with
Ruth Gaynor, from the list of his visits to Mrs. Vervain:
the special conditions attending it had made it no
more like a visit to Mrs. Vervain than an engraved
dinner invitation is like a personal letter. Yet
it was to talk over his call with Miss Gaynor that
he was now returning to the scene of that episode;
and it was because Mrs. Vervain could be trusted to
handle the talking over as skilfully as the interview
itself that, at her corner, he had felt the dilettante’s
irresistible craving to take a last look at a work
of art that was passing out of his possession.
On the whole, he knew no one better
fitted to deal with the unexpected than Mrs. Vervain.
She excelled in the rare art of taking things for
granted, and Thursdale felt a pardonable pride in the
thought that she owed her excellence to his training.
Early in his career Thursdale had made the mistake,
at the outset of his acquaintance with a lady, of
telling her that he loved her and exacting the same
avowal in return. The latter part of that episode
had been like the long walk back from a picnic, when
one has to carry all the crockery one has finished
using: it was the last time Thursdale ever allowed
himself to be encumbered with the debris of a feast.
He thus incidentally learned that the privilege of
loving her is one of the least favors that a charming
woman can accord; and in seeking to avoid the pitfalls
of sentiment he had developed a science of evasion
in which the woman of the moment became a mere implement
of the game. He owed a great deal of delicate
enjoyment to the cultivation of this art. The
perils from which it had been his refuge became naively
harmless: was it possible that he who now took
his easy way along the levels had once preferred to
gasp on the raw heights of emotion? Youth is
a high-colored season; but he had the satisfaction
of feeling that he had entered earlier than most into
that chiar’oscuro of sensation where every half-tone
has its value.
As a promoter of this pleasure no
one he had known was comparable to Mrs. Vervain.
He had taught a good many women not to betray their
feelings, but he had never before had such fine material
to work in. She had been surprisingly crude when
he first knew her; capable of making the most awkward
inferences, of plunging through thin ice, of recklessly
undressing her emotions; but she had acquired, under
the discipline of his réticences and evasions,
a skill almost equal to his own, and perhaps more
remarkable in that it involved keeping time with any
tune he played and reading at sight some uncommonly
difficult passages.
It had taken Thursdale seven years
to form this fine talent; but the result justified
the effort. At the crucial moment she had been
perfect: her way of greeting Miss Gaynor had made
him regret that he had announced his engagement by
letter. It was an evasion that confessed a difficulty;
a deviation implying an obstacle, where, by common
consent, it was agreed to see none; it betrayed, in
short, a lack of confidence in the completeness of
his method. It had been his pride never to put
himself in a position which had to be quitted, as it
were, by the back door; but here, as he perceived,
the main portals would have opened for him of their
own accord. All this, and much more, he read in
the finished naturalness with which Mrs. Vervain had
met Miss Gaynor. He had never seen a better piece
of work: there was no over-eagerness, no suspicious
warmth, above all (and this gave her art the grace
of a natural quality) there were none of those damnable
implications whereby a woman, in welcoming her friend’s
betrothed, may keep him on pins and needles while
she laps the lady in complacency. So masterly
a performance, indeed, hardly needed the offset of
Miss Gaynor’s door-step words “To
be so kind to me, how she must have liked you!” though
he caught himself wishing it lay within the bounds
of fitness to transmit them, as a final tribute, to
the one woman he knew who was unfailingly certain
to enjoy a good thing. It was perhaps the one
drawback to his new situation that it might develop
good things which it would be impossible to hand on
to Margaret Vervain.
The fact that he had made the mistake
of underrating his friend’s powers, the consciousness
that his writing must have betrayed his distrust of
her efficiency, seemed an added reason for turning
down her street instead of going on to the club.
He would show her that he knew how to value her; he
would ask her to achieve with him a feat infinitely
rarer and more delicate than the one he had appeared
to avoid. Incidentally, he would also dispose
of the interval of time before dinner: ever since
he had seen Miss Gaynor off, an hour earlier, on her
return journey to Buffalo, he had been wondering how
he should put in the rest of the afternoon. It
was absurd, how he missed the girl.... Yes, that
was it; the desire to talk about her was, after all,
at the bottom of his impulse to call on Mrs. Vervain!
It was absurd, if you like but it was delightfully
rejuvenating. He could recall the time when he
had been afraid of being obvious: now he felt
that this return to the primitive emotions might be
as restorative as a holiday in the Canadian woods.
And it was precisely by the girl’s candor, her
directness, her lack of complications, that he was
taken. The sense that she might say something
rash at any moment was positively exhilarating:
if she had thrown her arms about him at the station
he would not have given a thought to his crumpled
dignity. It surprised Thursdale to find what
freshness of heart he brought to the adventure; and
though his sense of irony prevented his ascribing
his intactness to any conscious purpose, he could
but rejoice in the fact that his sentimental economies
had left him such a large surplus to draw upon.
Mrs. Vervain was at home as
usual. When one visits the cemetery one expects
to find the angel on the tombstone, and it struck Thursdale
as another proof of his friend’s good taste
that she had been in no undue haste to change her
habits. The whole house appeared to count on his
coming; the footman took his hat and overcoat as naturally
as though there had been no lapse in his visits; and
the drawing-room at once enveloped him in that atmosphere
of tacit intelligence which Mrs. Vervain imparted
to her very furniture.
It was a surprise that, in this general
harmony of circumstances, Mrs. Vervain should herself
sound the first false note.
“You?” she exclaimed;
and the book she held slipped from her hand.
It was crude, certainly; unless it
were a touch of the finest art. The difficulty
of classifying it disturbed Thursdale’s balance.
“Why not?” he said, restoring
the book. “Isn’t it my hour?”
And as she made no answer, he added gently, “Unless
it’s some one else’s?”
She laid the book aside and sank back
into her chair. “Mine, merely,” she
said.
“I hope that doesn’t mean
that you’re unwilling to share it?”
“With you? By no means. You’re
welcome to my last crust.”
He looked at her reproachfully. “Do you
call this the last?”
She smiled as he dropped into the
seat across the hearth. “It’s a way
of giving it more flavor!”
He returned the smile. “A visit to you
doesn’t need such condiments.”
She took this with just the right measure of retrospective
amusement.
“Ah, but I want to put into
this one a very special taste,” she confessed.
Her smile was so confident, so reassuring,
that it lulled him into the imprudence of saying,
“Why should you want it to be different from
what was always so perfectly right?”
She hesitated. “Doesn’t
the fact that it’s the last constitute a difference?”
“The last my last visit to you?”
“Oh, metaphorically, I mean there’s
a break in the continuity.”
Decidedly, she was pressing too hard: unlearning
his arts already!
“I don’t recognize it,”
he said. “Unless you make me ”
he added, with a note that slightly stirred her attitude
of languid attention.
She turned to him with grave eyes.
“You recognize no difference whatever?”
“None except an added link in the
chain.”
“An added link?”
“In having one more thing to
like you for your letting Miss Gaynor see
why I had already so many.” He flattered
himself that this turn had taken the least hint of
fatuity from the phrase.
Mrs. Vervain sank into her former
easy pose. “Was it that you came for?”
she asked, almost gaily.
“If it is necessary to have a reason that
was one.”
“To talk to me about Miss Gaynor?”
“To tell you how she talks about you.”
“That will be very interesting especially
if you have seen her since her second visit to me.”
“Her second visit?” Thursdale
pushed his chair back with a start and moved to another.
“She came to see you again?”
“This morning, yes by appointment.”
He continued to look at her blankly. “You
sent for her?”
“I didn’t have to she
wrote and asked me last night. But no doubt you
have seen her since.”
Thursdale sat silent. He was
trying to separate his words from his thoughts, but
they still clung together inextricably. “I
saw her off just now at the station.”
“And she didn’t tell you that she had
been here again?”
“There was hardly time, I suppose there
were people about ” he floundered.
“Ah, she’ll write, then.”
He regained his composure. “Of
course she’ll write: very often, I hope.
You know I’m absurdly in love,” he cried
audaciously.
She tilted her head back, looking
up at him as he leaned against the chimney-piece.
He had leaned there so often that the attitude touched
a pulse which set up a throbbing in her throat.
“Oh, my poor Thursdale!” she murmured.
“I suppose it’s rather
ridiculous,” he owned; and as she remained silent,
he added, with a sudden break “Or
have you another reason for pitying me?”
Her answer was another question.
“Have you been back to your rooms since you
left her?”
“Since I left her at the station? I came
straight here.”
“Ah, yes you could:
there was no reason ” Her words passed
into a silent musing.
Thursdale moved nervously nearer.
“You said you had something to tell me?”
“Perhaps I had better let her
do so. There may be a letter at your rooms.”
“A letter? What do you
mean? A letter from her? What has happened?”
His paleness shook her, and she raised
a hand of reassurance. “Nothing has happened perhaps
that is just the worst of it. You always hated,
you know,” she added incoherently, “to
have things happen: you never would let them.”
“And now ?”
“Well, that was what she came
here for: I supposed you had guessed. To
know if anything had happened.”
“Had happened?” He gazed
at her slowly. “Between you and me?”
he said with a rush of light.
The words were so much cruder than
any that had ever passed between them that the color
rose to her face; but she held his startled gaze.
“You know girls are not quite
as unsophisticated as they used to be. Are you
surprised that such an idea should occur to her?”
His own color answered hers:
it was the only reply that came to him.
Mrs. Vervain went on, smoothly:
“I supposed it might have struck you that there
were times when we presented that appearance.”
He made an impatient gesture. “A man’s
past is his own!”
“Perhaps it certainly
never belongs to the woman who has shared it.
But one learns such truths only by experience; and
Miss Gaynor is naturally inexperienced.”
“Of course but supposing
her act a natural one ” he floundered
lamentably among his innuendoes “I
still don’t see how there was anything ”
“Anything to take hold of? There wasn’t ”
“Well, then ?”
escaped him, in crude satisfaction; but as she did
not complete the sentence he went on with a faltering
laugh: “She can hardly object to the existence
of a mere friendship between us!”
“But she does,” said Mrs. Vervain.
Thursdale stood perplexed. He
had seen, on the previous day, no trace of jealousy
or resentment in his betrothed: he could still
hear the candid ring of the girl’s praise of
Mrs. Vervain. If she were such an abyss of insincerity
as to dissemble distrust under such frankness, she
must at least be more subtle than to bring her doubts
to her rival for solution. The situation seemed
one through which one could no longer move in a penumbra,
and he let in a burst of light with the direct query:
“Won’t you explain what you mean?”
Mrs. Vervain sat silent, not provokingly,
as though to prolong his distress, but as if, in the
attenuated phraseology he had taught her, it was difficult
to find words robust enough to meet his challenge.
It was the first time he had ever asked her to explain
anything; and she had lived so long in dread of offering
élucidations which were not wanted, that she
seemed unable to produce one on the spot.
At last she said slowly: “She
came to find out if you were really free.”
Thursdale colored again. “Free?”
he stammered, with a sense of physical disgust at
contact with such crassness.
“Yes if I had quite
done with you.” She smiled in recovered
security. “It seems she likes clear outlines;
she has a passion for definitions.”
“Yes well?”
he said, wincing at the echo of his own subtlety.
“Well and when I
told her that you had never belonged to me, she wanted
me to define my status to know exactly
where I had stood all along.”
Thursdale sat gazing at her intently;
his hand was not yet on the clue. “And
even when you had told her that ”
“Even when I had told her that
I had had no status that I had never
stood anywhere, in any sense she meant,” said
Mrs. Vervain, slowly “even then she
wasn’t satisfied, it seems.”
He uttered an uneasy exclamation.
“She didn’t believe you, you mean?”
“I mean that she did believe me: too
thoroughly.”
“Well, then in God’s name,
what did she want?”
“Something more those were the words
she used.”
“Something more? Between between
you and me? Is it a conundrum?” He laughed
awkwardly.
“Girls are not what they were
in my day; they are no longer forbidden to contemplate
the relation of the sexes.”
“So it seems!” he commented.
“But since, in this case, there wasn’t
any ” he broke off, catching the dawn
of a revelation in her gaze.
“That’s just it.
The unpardonable offence has been in our
not offending.”
He flung himself down despairingly.
“I give it up! What did you tell
her?” he burst out with sudden crudeness.
“The exact truth. If I
had only known,” she broke off with a beseeching
tenderness, “won’t you believe that I would
still have lied for you?”
“Lied for me? Why on earth
should you have lied for either of us?”
“To save you to hide
you from her to the last! As I’ve hidden
you from myself all these years!” She stood
up with a sudden tragic import in her movement.
“You believe me capable of that, don’t
you? If I had only guessed but I have
never known a girl like her; she had the truth out
of me with a spring.”
“The truth that you and I had never ”
“Had never never
in all these years! Oh, she knew why she
measured us both in a flash. She didn’t
suspect me of having haggled with you her
words pelted me like hail. ’He just took
what he wanted sifted and sorted you to
suit his taste. Burnt out the gold and left a
heap of cinders. And you let him you
let yourself be cut in bits’ she mixed
her metaphors a little ’be cut in
bits, and used or discarded, while all the while every
drop of blood in you belonged to him! But he’s
Shylock and you have bled to death of the
pound of flesh he has cut out of you.’
But she despises me the most, you know far
the most ” Mrs. Vervain ended.
The words fell strangely on the scented
stillness of the room: they seemed out of harmony
with its setting of afternoon intimacy, the kind of
intimacy on which at any moment, a visitor might intrude
without perceptibly lowering the atmosphere.
It was as though a grand opera-singer had strained
the acoustics of a private music-room.
Thursdale stood up, facing his hostess.
Half the room was between them, but they seemed to
stare close at each other now that the veils of reticence
and ambiguity had fallen.
His first words were characteristic.
“She does despise me, then?” he exclaimed.
“She thinks the pound of flesh
you took was a little too near the heart.”
He was excessively pale. “Please
tell me exactly what she said of me.”
“She did not speak much of you:
she is proud. But I gather that while she understands
love or indifference, her eyes have never been opened
to the many intermediate shades of feeling. At
any rate, she expressed an unwillingness to be taken
with reservations she thinks you would have
loved her better if you had loved some one else first.
The point of view is original she insists
on a man with a past!”
“Oh, a past if she’s
serious I could rake up a past!” he
said with a laugh.
“So I suggested: but she
has her eyes on his particular portion of it.
She insists on making it a test case. She wanted
to know what you had done to me; and before I could
guess her drift I blundered into telling her.”
Thursdale drew a difficult breath.
“I never supposed your revenge is
complete,” he said slowly.
He heard a little gasp in her throat.
“My revenge? When I sent for you to warn
you to save you from being surprised as
I was surprised?”
“You’re very good but
it’s rather late to talk of saving me.”
He held out his hand in the mechanical gesture of
leave-taking.
“How you must care! for
I never saw you so dull,” was her answer.
“Don’t you see that it’s not too
late for me to help you?” And as he continued
to stare, she brought out sublimely: “Take
the rest in imagination! Let it at
least be of that much use to you. Tell her I lied
to her she’s too ready to believe
it! And so, after all, in a sense, I sha’n’t
have been wasted.”
His stare hung on her, widening to
a kind of wonder. She gave the look back brightly,
unblushingly, as though the expedient were too simple
to need oblique approaches. It was extraordinary
how a few words had swept them from an atmosphere
of the most complex dissimulations to this contact
of naked souls.
It was not in Thursdale to expand
with the pressure of fate; but something in him cracked
with it, and the rift let in new light. He went
up to his friend and took her hand.
“You would do it you would do it!”
She looked at him, smiling, but her hand shook.
“Good-by,” he said, kissing it.
“Good-by? You are going ?”
“To get my letter.”
“Your letter? The letter won’t matter,
if you will only do what I ask.”
He returned her gaze. “I
might, I suppose, without being out of character.
Only, don’t you see that if your plan helped
me it could only harm her?”
“Harm her?”
“To sacrifice you wouldn’t
make me different. I shall go on being what I
have always been sifting and sorting, as
she calls it. Do you want my punishment to fall
on her?”
She looked at him long and deeply.
“Ah, if I had to choose between you !”
“You would let her take her
chance? But I can’t, you see. I must
take my punishment alone.”
She drew her hand away, sighing.
“Oh, there will be no punishment for either
of you.”
“For either of us? There
will be the reading of her letter for me.”
She shook her head with a slight laugh.
“There will be no letter.”
Thursdale faced about from the threshold
with fresh life in his look. “No letter?
You don’t mean ”
“I mean that she’s been
with you since I saw her she’s seen
you and heard your voice. If there is a
letter, she has recalled it from the first
station, by telegraph.”
He turned back to the door, forcing
an answer to her smile. “But in the mean
while I shall have read it,” he said.
The door closed on him, and she hid
her eyes from the dreadful emptiness of the room.