Una and her mother did not come to
Horsham Manor during the following week, and it was
early in June before Jerry ordered the rooms to be
prepared for them. Jack Ballard, too, having at
last found Newport irksome, promised to make up the
house-party.
It did not seem to me that Jerry was
especially overjoyed at the prospect of these guests.
During the week or more that followed his encounter
with Marcia in the woods, he had reverted to his former
habits of strolling aimlessly about when he wasn’t
at Briar Hills or in town, at times cheerful enough;
at others obstinately morose. But he did not
drink. Whatever the differences between us, he
evidently thought seriously enough of his word to
me to make that promise worth keeping. I know
he believed me to be meddlesome and with good reason
(if he had known all), but he would not let me leave
the Manor. I was a habit with him, a bad habit
if you like, but it seemed a necessary one. Nevertheless
in spite of the apparently pleasant nature of our
relations, there was a coolness between us. Much
as he loved me, and I was still sure that Marcia had
made no real change in that affection, there was a
new reserve in his manner, meant, I think, to show
me that I had gone too far and that his affair with
Marcia was not to be the subject of further discussion
between us.
Had he known how thankful I was for
that! I knew all that I wanted to know of Marcia
Van Wyck and of their curious relations. And
unfortunate as my ambush had seemed, demeaning to my
honor and painful to my conscience, I had begun to
look upon my venture beneath that infernal rock as
a kind of mixed blessing. At least I knew!
Of Una, Jerry said much in terms of
real friendship and undisguised admiration of
his visits to her in town and the progress of her work,
a frankness which, alas! was the surest token of his
infatuation elsewhere. And yet I could not believe
that the boy was any more certain of the real nature
of his feeling for Marcia than he had been a month
ago. He was still bewildered, hypnotized, obsessed,
his joyous days too joyous, his gloomy ones too hopeless.
Like a green log, he burned with much crackling or
sullenly simmered. But the fire was still there.
Nothing had happened that would put it out, not even
Una.
As the hour of the visit of the Habbertons
approached, I found myself a prey to some misgivings.
It was not difficult for me to imagine that the frank
nature of Jerry’s visits to Una might have given
the girl a false notion of the state of Jerry’s
mind, for it was like the boy to have told her of
Marcia’s mellifluous contrition which, as I knew,
was no more genuine than any other of her carefully
planned emotional crises. I did not know what
Marcia thought of Una’s approaching visit or
whether Jerry had even told her of it, but I had no
fancy to see Una Habberton again placed in a false
position. A visit to Miss Gore made one morning
when Jerry was in town at the office showed me that
even if Marcia knew of Una’s approaching visit,
she had not told Miss Gore of it and also revealed
the unpleasant fact of Channing Lloyd’s presence
in the neighborhood, a guest of the Carews and at the
very moment of my visit a companion of Marcia in a
daylong drive up to Big Westkill Mountain. This
was the way she was keeping her promise to give Lloyd
up! What a little liar she was!
Of course, having learned wisdom,
I said nothing to Miss Gore, but passed a very profitable
morning in her society after which she invited me
to stay for lunch. I can assure you that after
Jerry’s glum looks, Miss Gore’s amiable
conversation and warm hospitality were balm to my
wounded spirit. I had no desire to discuss her
intangible relative or she, I presume, the unfortunate
Jerry, both of us having washed our hands of the entire
affair. She was a prudent person, Miss Gore,
and though full of the milk of human kindness, not
disposed to waste it where it would do no good.
I left with the promise to call upon her another morning
and read to her a paper I had written for a philosophical
magazine upon the “The Identical Character of
Thought and Being.”
Jack Ballard arrived upon the morning
of the appointed day in his own machine, and since
Jerry and his other guests were not expected until
evening, we had a long afternoon of it together.
We took a tramp across the country, and while Jack
listened with great interest to my disclosures, I
poured out my heart to him, omitting nothing, not even,
to salve my self-esteem, my unfortunate experience
in eavesdropping. I don’t really know why
I should have expected his sympathy, but he only laughed,
laughed so much and so long that the tears ran down
his cheeks and he had to sit down.
“Oh, Pope a chipmunk!
He might at least have allowed you the dignity of
a bear or a mountain lion!”
“There are no mountain lions
in these parts,” I said with some dignity.
“Or a duck-billed platypus.
Oh, I say, Pope, it’s too rich. I can’t
help picturing it. Did they coo? Oh, Lord!”
“It was nauseating!” I
retorted in accents so genuine that he laughed again.
“It’s no laughing matter,
I tell you, Jack,” I said. “The boy
is completely bewitched. He thinks he adores
her. He doesn’t. I know.”
And bit by bit, while his expression
grew interested, I told him all that I had heard.
“It’s animal, purely animal,”
I concluded. “And he doesn’t know
it.”
“By George! He’s awakening, you think?”
“I’m sure of it.
She’s leading him on, for the mere sport of the
thing. It has been going on for four months now,
almost every day. He’s pretty desperate.
She won’t marry him. She doesn’t love
him. She loves nobody but herself.”
“What will be the end of the matter?”
he asked.
I shrugged.
“She’ll throw him over when she debases
him.”
“Debase !”
“Yes,” I said wildly.
“I tell you he thinks her an angel, Can’t
you see? A man doesn’t learn that sort
of thing her sort of thing from
the woman he loves. It’s like hearing impurity
from the lips of one’s God! And you ask
me if she’s debasing him! Why, Jack, he’s
all ideals still. The world has taught him something,
but he still holds fast to his childish faith in everyone.”
“Bless him! He does.” And then,
“What can I do, Pope?”
“Nothing. I’m waiting.
But I don’t like his temper. It’s
dangerous. I think he’s beginning to suspect
her sincerity and when he finds out that she’s
still playing false with Channing Lloyd then
look out!”
“You’re going to tell him?”
“No, he’ll discover it. She’s
quite brazen.”
He was silent for a while.
“Pope, you surprise me,”
he muttered at last. “The modern girls,
I give them up. There’s a name for this
sort, perverted coquettes, ’teasers.’
The man of the world abominates them, they’re
beneath contempt; but Jerry No,”
he remarked with a shake of the head, “he wouldn’t
understand that.”
“And when he does?”
“H m!”
His manner added no encouragement.
“It would serve her jolly well
right,” he muttered cryptically in a moment.
“What?” I asked.
I think he understood Jerry now as well as I did.
“Violence,” he blurted out.
“Ah! Then I’m not a fool. You
agree with me.”
“I’m glad I’m not in Lloyd’s
shoes, that’s all.”
We resumed our walk, turning back
toward the Manor, and I told him of how matters stood
with Jerry and Una. He had not met her, but he
knew her history and was, I think, willing to accept
her upon her face value.
“But you can’t match mere
affection with that sort of witchcraft!” he
said. “It’s like trying to treat the
hydrophobia with eau de Cologne. It
can’t be done, my boy. Your device does
credit to your heart if not to your intelligence.
She may come in a pretty bottle which exudes comforting
odors but she’s not for him.”
“You’ll be pleasant to
her, Jack? She’s fond of Jerry, not in love
with him, you know, but fond. And doesn’t
want to see him made a fool of any more than I do.”
I owed Una this. Whatever I thought
of her feelings toward Jerry, even Jack had no right
to be aware of them.
“Pleasant!” he grinned.
“Just you watch. I’ll be her Fidus
Achates. That’s my specialty. Pretty,
you say?” He kissed the tip of his fingers and
gestured lightly toward the heavens. “I’m
your man. Well, rather. I’ll make
Jerry want to pound my head. And if he neglects
her for Marcia, I’ll pound his.”
Una and her mother were having tea
with Jerry on the terrace when we reached the Manor.
Mrs. Habberton was, as Jerry had described her, “a
dear old lady” with calm eyes and level brows,
“astonishingly well informed” and immensely
proud of her pretty daughter. She was not assertive
and while I knew nothing of Mr. Habberton, she somehow
conveyed the impression that if there was anything
in Mendel’s theory of the working of heredity
she and her six daughters went a long way toward exemplifying
it. There was a genuineness about the pair which
was distinctly refreshing to Jack’s jaded tastes
in fashionable feminine fripperies and he fell into
the conversation as smoothly as a finger into a well-fitting
glove. Una made no secret of her delight at being
at the Manor and her enthusiasm as we wandered over
the place brought more than one smile into Jerry’s
tired face. I know that he enjoyed her being
there, but there was a weight upon him which he masked
with a dignity that might have deceived others but
not Una or me.
“You’ve been buying too
many steamship companies this week. Jerry.
I’m sure of it. You’re ‘sicklied
o’er with the pale cast of thought.’
It’s too bad you have a conscience. It
must be fearfully inconvenient.” And then
as we came to the swimming pool, “Isn’t
it huge? And all of marble! You’re
the most luxurious creature. I was just wondering ”
She paused.
“Wondering what ?”
“How many Blank Street families
I could clean in it without even changing the water.”
He laughed. “Build one. I’ll
pay for it.”
“It would be great for
the boys and men, wouldn’t it? But, then ”
she sighed. “We haven’t got our club
yet.”
He laughed again.
“But you’re going to have it, you know,
when the day nursery is done.”
“Oh, are we?”
“Of course, that’s settled.”
We had reached the gymnasium.
“And this is where you ?”
A pleading look from Jerry made her pause. “And
do you pull all these ropes? What fun! I
believe you could have fifty boys in here at once
all playing and not one of them in the other’s
way.”
We couldn’t help smiling.
In spite of herself, she was thinking in terms of
her beloved Blank Street.
“You’ll have to forgive
me, Jerry, if I’m covetous. That’s
my besetting sin. But it is a fine place so
spacious. And it would make such an adorable
laundry!”
“You shall have one,” said Jerry.
The girl laughed.
“No. I won’t dare
to wish any more. The purse of Fortunatus
brought him into evil ways. It must be terrible,
Jerry, not to be able to want something.”
“But I do want many things.”
“Yes. I suppose we all
do that,” she said, quickly finishing the discussion,
but I think she had noticed the sudden drop in Jerry’s
voice.
From there we went to the museum to
look over the specimens, and in a moment Una and Jerry
were deep in a butterfly talk. There Jack and
I left them, taking Mrs. Habberton into the main hall,
where I rang for one of the maids who showed her to
her room.
“Well,” I asked of Jack. “What
do you think of her?”
“What I think is of course a
matter of no importance to Jerry. But since you
ask, I don’t mind telling you that I love her
to distraction. Where are the boy’s eyes?
His ears? And all the rest of his receptive organs?
If I were ten years younger ” and
he patted his embonpoint regretfully, “I’d
ask something of her charity, something immediate
and practical. She should found the John K. Ballard
Home, Pope, a want of mine for many years. But,
alas! She has eyes only for Jerry.”
“Do you really think so?” I asked.
“Yes, I do. And he’s
not worth bothering about. He ought to be shot,
offhand.”
“I entirely agree with you,” I smiled.
Dinner that night was gay and most
informal. Jack was at his best and gave us in
inimitable satire a description of a luncheon at Newport
in honor of a prize chow dog attended by all the high-bred
pups of Bellview Avenue, including Jack’s own
bull terrier Scotty, which in an inadvertent moment
devoured the small Pekingese of Jack’s nearest
neighbor, a dereliction of social observance which
caused the complete and permanent social ostracism
of Scotty and Jack.
“How terrible!” said Una.
“It was, really, but it was
a kind of poetic canine justice, you know. The
Pekingese just stared at Scotty and stared without
wagging his tail. Very impolite, not wagging
your tail at a luncheon. Scotty grew embarrassed
and angry and then just took him at a gulp.
It was the easiest way out.”
“Or in,” I suggested.
“Scotty is naturally polite.
He never could abide a tail that wouldn’t
wag.”
“Nor can I,” said Una
with a laugh. “Dogs’ tails must
be meant to wag, or what are they there for?
I wish people had tails and then you could tell whether
they were pleasant or not.”
“Some of ’em have,” said Jack.
“Hoofs too and horns.”
“I don’t believe that,” she laughed.
Jerry took no animated part in the
conversation except when we spoke of Una’s work.
Then he waxed eloquent until Una stopped him.
Mrs. Habberton, I think, watched Jerry a little dubiously
as though there was something about him that she couldn’t
understand. Some feminine instinct was waking.
But Una’s cheerfulness and interest in all things
was unabated. We three men smoked I,
too, for I had lately fallen from grace with
the ladies’ permission in the drawing-room where
Una played upon the piano and sang. I don’t
think that Jerry had known about her music for he
had said nothing of it to me, and when her voice began
softly:
“Oh doux printemps d’autrefois”
Massenet’s “Elegie,”
as I afterwards learned a hush fell over
the room and we three men sat staring at the sweet
upturned profile, as her lovely throat gave forth
the tender sad refrain:
“Oh doux printemps d’autrefois,
vertes saisons où
Vous avez fui
pour toujours
Je ne vois
plus lé ciel bleu
Je n’entends plus
les chants joyeux des oiseaux
En emportant mon bonheur,
O bien aime tu
t’en es alle
Et c’est en
vain que revient lé printemps.”
She sang on to the end and long after
she had finished we still sat silent, immovable as
though fearful to break the spell that was upon us.
Jerry was near me and I had caught a glimpse of his
face when she began. He glanced toward her, moved
slightly forward in his chair and then sat motionless,
the puzzled lines in his face relaxing like those
of a person passing into sleep. When the last
long-drawn sigh died away and merged into the drowsy
murmur of the night outside, Jerry’s voice broke
almost harshly upon the silence.
“I didn’t know you could
sing like that,” he said. “It’s
wonderful, but so so hopeless.”
“Something more cheerful, dear,
‘Der Schmetterling,’” put
in her mother.
She sang again, this time lightly,
joyously, and we re ponded to her mood like harp-strings
all in accord. The room, awakened to melody after
the long years of silence, seemed transformed by Una’s
splendid gift, a fine, clear soprano, not big nor
yet thin or reedy, but rounded, full-bodied and deep
with feeling. Jerry was smiling now, the shadow
seemed to have lifted.
“That’s your song.
It must have been written for you,” he cried.
“You are the butterfly girl when you
sing like that.”
“Bis!” cried Jack, clapping his
hands.
She was very obliging and sang again
and again. I was silent and quite content.
The shadow did not fall upon Jerry again that night.
I was almost ready to believe he had forgotten that
such a person as Marcia Van Wyck lived in the world.
Who could have resisted the gentle appeal of Una’s
purity, friendliness and charm? Not I. Nor Jack.
He followed the mood of her songs like a huge chameleon,
silent when she sang of sadness, tender when she sang
of love, and joyous with her joy.
When she got up from the piano he rose.
“I wonder why I can find so few evenings like
this,” he sighed.
“It’s so fearfully old-fashioned,
Victorian, to be simple nowadays,” she laughed.
“That’s it,” he
cried. “The terror of your modern hostess,
simplicity. You can’t go out to dine unless
some madwoman drags you away from your coffee to the
auction table, where other madmen and madwomen scowl
at you all the evening over their cards. Or else
they dance. Dance! Dance! Hop!
Skip! Not like joyous gamboling lambs but with
set faces, as though there was nothing else in the
world but the martyrdom of their feet. Mad!
All mad! Please don’t tell me that you dance,
Miss Habberton.”
“I do,” she laughed, “and I love
it.”
“Youth!” Jack sighed and relapsed into
silence.
The evening passed in general conversation,
interesting conversation which the world, it seems,
has come to think is almost a lost art, not the least
interesting part of which was Una’s contribution
on some of the lighter aspects of Blank Street.
And I couldn’t help comparing again the philosophy
of this girl, the philosophy of helpfulness, with
the bestial selfishness of the point of view of the
so-called Freudians who, as I have been credibly informed,
only live to glut themselves with the filth of their
own baser instincts. Self-elimination as against
self-expression, or since we are brute-born, merely
self-animalization! Una Habberton’s philosophy
and Marcia Van Wyck’s! Any but a blind
man could run and read, or if need be, read and run.
Mrs. Habberton was tired and went
up early, her daughter accompanying her. I saw
Jerry eyeing the girl rather wistfully at the foot
of the stair. I think he was pleading with her
to come down again but she only smiled at him brightly
and I heard her say, “Tomorrow, Jerry.”
“Shall we fish?”
“That will be fine.”
“Just you and I?”
“If you think,” and she
laughed with careless gayety, “if you think
Marcia won’t object.”
“Oh, I say ” But his jaw fell
and he frowned a little.
“Good-night, Jerry, dear,”
she flung at him from the curve of the landing.
“Good-night, Una,” he called.
The telephone bell rang the next morning
before the breakfast hour and Jerry was called to
it. I was in my study and the door was open.
I couldn’t help hearing. Marcia Van Wyck
was on the wire. I couldn’t hear her voice
but Jerry’s replies were illuminating.
“I couldn’t,” I heard him say, “I
had guests to dinner.”
Fortunately neither Una nor her mother was down.
“I didn’t tell you,”
he replied to her question. “It was er rather
sudden. Miss Habberton and her mother. They’re
staying here for a few days. How are you ?
Oh, I don’t see why you What difference
does that make ? Won’t you come
over this afternoon? Please. Why not ?
I’m awfully anxious to see you. Why, I couldn’t,
Marcia, not just now and besides What ?”
Apparently she had rung off.
He tried to get her number and when he got it came
away from the instrument suddenly, for the girl had
evidently refused to talk to him.
At the breakfast table, to which the
ladies but not Jack Ballard descended, he was very
quiet. I pitied him, but led the conversation
into easy paths in which after a while he joined us.
I saw Una glancing at him curiously, but no personal
comment passed and when we went out on the shaded
terrace to look down toward the lake, over the shimmering
summer landscape, Una took a deep breath and then gave
a long sigh of delight.
“Isn’t it wonderful just
to live on a day like this?” And then with a
laugh, “Jerry, you simply must give us
Horsham Manor as a fresh air farm.”
He smiled slowly.
“It would do nicely, wouldn’t it?”
“Oh, yes, splendidly. Five
thousand acres! That would be an acre apiece
for every man, woman and child in the whole district.
We would build mills by the lake, factories along
the road and tenements in groups on the hills over
there. It might spoil the landscape, but
it would be so er so satisfying.”
“And you’d want me to pay the bills,”
he laughed.
“Oh, yes. Of course. What are bills
for unless to be paid?”
“Help yourself,” he smiled.
“Will you have the deeds made out today or wait
until next week?”
“I suppose I might wait until tomorrow.”
“Oh, thanks. And, for the present, we’ll
go fishing.”
“I’ll be ready in a moment.”
And she went upstairs for her hat and gloves.
Already he yielded again to the spell
of her comradeship and humor. And a moment later
I saw them set off toward the Sweetwater, Una glowing
with quiet delight, Jerry slowly showing the infection
of her happiness.
The nature of Una’s conversation
with Jerry during that morning of fishing and in the
days that followed must always remain a secret to
me. I know that when they returned Jerry was in
a cheerful mood and put through an afternoon of tennis
with Jack, while Una and her mother knitted in the
shade. She was wholesome, that girl, and no one
could be with her long without feeling the impress
of her personality. But I was not happy.
Marcia hung like a millstone around my neck. I
knew that it was at the risk of a considerable sacrifice
of pride that Una had decided to come with her mother
and make this visit. The world and her own frequent
contact with women of the baser sort had sharpened
her wits and instincts amazingly. I am sure that
she was just as well aware of the nature of Jerry’s
infatuation as though Jerry had told it himself.
If Una cared for him as deeply as I had had the temerity
to suppose, then her position was difficult painful
and thankless. But whatever her own wish to help
him, I am sure that the nature of the desire was unselfish.
After events prove that. All that Una saw in the
situation of Jerry and Marcia was a friend who needed
helping, who was worth helping from the snare of an
utterly worldly and heartless woman. I am sure
that her knowledge of the world must have made her
task seem hopeless and it must have taken some courage
to pit her own charm in the lists against one of Marcia’s
known quality. But if she was unhappy, no sign
of it reached my eyes. Only her mother, who sometimes
raised her eyes and calmly regarded her daughter, had
an inkling of what was in Una’s heart.
Jerry went no more to the telephone.
I kept an eye on it and I know. And when his
car went out, Una or Jack went with him. Three
days passed with no telephone calls from Briar Hills.
When Jerry’s guests were with him, the duties
of hospitality seemed sacred to him and he left nothing
undone for their comfort or entertainment. At
night Una sang to us, and Jerry was himself, but during
most of the day he moved mechanically, only speaking
to Jack or me when directly addressed.
“Acts like a sleepwalker,”
said Jack to me. “It’s hypnotic, sheer
moon-madness!”
Only Una had the power to draw him
out of himself. He always had a smile for her
and a friendly word, but I knew that she knew
that she had failed. Jerry was possessed of a
devil, a she-devil, that none of the familiar friendly
gods could cast out.
The end came soon and with a startling
suddenness. We were out driving in Jack’s
motor one morning before lunch, Jack at the wheel,
with Una beside him, Jerry and I in the rear seat,
when in passing along a quiet road not far from Briar
Hills, we saw at some distance ahead of us and going
our way, a red runabout, containing a man and a girl.
Jack was running the car very slowly, as the road was
none too good, and we ran close up behind the pair
before they were aware of us. I saw Jerry lean
forward in his seat, peering with the strange set look
I had recently seen so often in his eyes. I followed
his gaze and, as I looked, the man in the red car
put his arm around the girl’s neck and she raised
her chin and they kissed. All of us saw it.
Jack chuckled and blew his horn violently. The
pair drew apart suddenly and the man tried quickly
to get away, but Jack with a laugh had already put
on the power and we passed them before they could get
up speed. The girl hid her face but the man was
Channing Lloyd.
Jerry had recognized them. I
saw him start up in his seat, turning around, but
I caught at his wrist and held him. He was deathly
pale, ugly, dangerous. But he made no further
move. During the ride home he sat as though frozen
fast into his seat with no word for me or for our
companions, who had not turned or spoken to us.
I think that Jack suspected and Una knew and feared
to look at Jerry’s face. By the time we
reached the house Jerry had managed to control himself.
The dangerous look upon his face was succeeded by
a glacial calm, which lasted through luncheon, of
which he ate nothing. Jack did his best to bring
an atmosphere of unconcern but failed and we got up
from the table aware of impending trouble. Then
Jerry disappeared.