1
Noel went on with her work for a month,
and then, one morning, fainted over a pile of dishes.
The noise attracted attention, and Mrs. Lynch was
summoned.
The sight of her lying there so deadly
white taxed Leila’s nerves severely. But
the girl revived quickly, and a cab was sent for.
Leila went with her, and told the driver to stop at
Camelot Mansions. Why take her home in this state,
why not save the jolting, and let her recover properly?
They went upstairs arm in arm. Leila made her
lie down on the divan, and put a hot-water bottle
to her feet. Noel was still so passive and pale
that even to speak to her seemed a cruelty. And,
going to her little sideboard, Leila stealthily extracted
a pint bottle of some champagne which Jimmy Fort had
sent in, and took it with two glasses and a corkscrew
into her bedroom. She drank a little herself,
and came out bearing a glass to the girl. Noel
shook her head, and her eyes seemed to say: “Do
you really think I’m so easily mended?”
But Leila had been through too much in her time to
despise earthly remedies, and she held it to the girl’s
lips until she drank. It was excellent champagne,
and, since Noel had never yet touched alcohol, had
an instantaneous effect. Her eyes brightened;
little red spots came up in her cheeks. And suddenly
she rolled over and buried her face deep in a cushion.
With her short hair, she looked so like a child lying
there, that Leila knelt down, stroking her head, and
saying: “There, there; my love! There,
there!”
At last the girl raised herself; now
that the pallid, masklike despair of the last month
was broken, she seemed on fire, and her face had a
wild look. She withdrew herself from Leila’s
touch, and, crossing her arms tightly across her chest,
said:
“I can’t bear it; I can’t
sleep. I want him back; I hate life I
hate the world. We hadn’t done anything only
just loved each other. God likes punishing; just
because we loved each other; we had only one day to
love each other only one day only
one!”
Leila could see the long white throat
above those rigid arms straining and swallowing; it
gave her a choky feeling to watch it. The voice,
uncannily dainty for all the wildness of the words
and face, went on:
“I won’t I
don’t want to live. If there’s another
life, I shall go to him. And if there isn’t it’s
just sleep.”
Leila put out her hand to ward of
these wild wanderings. Like most women who live
simply the life of their senses and emotions, she was
orthodox; or rather never speculated on such things.
“Tell me about yourself and him,” she
said.
Noel fastened her great eyes on her
cousin. “We loved each other; and children
are born, aren’t they, after you’ve loved?
But mine won’t be!” From the look on her
face rather than from her words, the full reality
of her meaning came to Leila, vanished, came again.
Nonsense! But what an awful thing,
if true! That which had always seemed to her such
an exaggerated occurrence in the common walks of life why!
now, it was a tragedy! Instinctively she raised
herself and put her arms round the girl.
“My poor dear!” she said; “you’re
fancying things!”
The colour had faded out of Noel’s
face, and, with her head thrown back and her eyelids
half-closed, she looked like a scornful young ghost.
“If it is I shan’t
live. I don’t mean to it’s
easy to die. I don’t mean Daddy to know.”
“Oh! my dear, my dear!” was all Leila
could stammer.
“Was it wrong, Leila?”
“Wrong? I don’t know wrong?
If it really is so it was unfortunate.
But surely, surely you’re mistaken?”
Noel shook her head. “I did it so that
we should belong to each other.
Nothing could have taken him from me.”
Leila caught at the girl’s words.
“Then, my dear he hasn’t quite
gone from you, you see?”
Noel’s lips formed a “No”
which was inaudible. “But Daddy!”
she whispered.
Edward’s face came before Leila
so vividly that she could hardly see the girl for
the tortured shape of it. Then the hedonist in
her revolted against that ascetic vision. Her
worldly judgment condemned and deplored this calamity,
her instinct could not help applauding that hour of
life and love, snatched out of the jaws of death.
“Need he ever know?” she said.
“I could never lie to Daddy.
But it doesn’t matter. Why should one go
on living, when life is rotten?”
Outside the sun was shining brightly,
though it was late October. Leila got up from
her knees. She stood at the window thinking hard.
“My dear,” she said at
last, “you mustn’t get morbid. Look
at me! I’ve had two husbands, and and well,
a pretty stormy up and down time of it; and I daresay
I’ve got lots of trouble before me. But
I’m not going to cave in. Nor must you.
The Piersons have plenty of pluck; you mustn’t
be a traitor to your blood. That’s the last
thing. Your boy would have told you to stick
it. These are your ‘trenches,’ and
you’re not going to be downed, are you?”
After she had spoken there was a long
silence, before Noel said:
“Give me a cigarette, Leila.”
Leila produced the little flat case she carried.
“That’s brave,”
she said. “Nothing’s incurable at
your age. Only one thing’s incurable getting
old.”
Noel laughed. “That’s curable too,
isn’t it?”
“Not without surrender.”
Again there was a silence, while the
blue fume from two cigarettes fast-smoked, rose towards
the low ceiling. Then Noel got up from the divan,
and went over to the piano. She was still in her
hospital dress of lilac-coloured linen, and while
she stood there touching the keys, playing a chord
now, and then, Leila’s heart felt hollow from
compassion; she was so happy herself just now, and
this child so very wretched!
“Play to me,” she said;
“no don’t; I’ll play to
you.” And sitting down, she began to play
and sing a little French song, whose first line ran:
“Si on est jolie, jolie comme
vous.” It was soft, gay, charming.
If the girl cried, so much the better. But Noel
did not cry. She seemed suddenly to have recovered
all her self-possession. She spoke calmly, answered
Leila’s questions without emotion, and said she
would go home. Leila went out with her, and walked
some way in the direction of her home; distressed,
but frankly at a loss. At the bottom of Portland
Place Noel stopped and said: “I’m
quite all right now, Leila; thank you awfully.
I shall just go home and lie down. And I shall
come to-morrow, the same as usual. Goodbye!”
Leila could only grasp the girl’s hand, and
say: “My dear, that’s splendid.
There’s many a slip besides, it’s
war-time.”
With that saying, enigmatic even to
herself, she watched the girl moving slowly away;
and turned back herself towards her hospital, with
a disturbed and compassionate heart.
2
But Noel did not go east; she walked
down Regent Street. She had received a certain
measure of comfort, been steadied by her experienced
cousin’s vitality, and the new thoughts suggested
by those words: “He hasn’t quite
gone from you, has he?” “Besides, it’s
war-time.” Leila had spoken freely, too,
and the physical ignorance in which the girl had been
groping these last weeks was now removed. Like
most proud natures, she did not naturally think much
about the opinion of other people; besides, she knew
nothing of the world, its feelings and judgments.
Her nightmare was the thought of her father’s
horror and grief. She tried to lessen that nightmare
by remembering his opposition to her marriage, and
the resentment she had felt. He had never realised,
never understood, how she and Cyril loved. Now,
if she were really going to have a child, it would
be Cyril’s Cyril’s son Cyril
over again. The instinct stronger than reason,
refinement, tradition, upbringing, which had pushed
her on in such haste to make sure of union the
irrepressible pulse of life faced with annihilation seemed
to revive within her, and make her terrible secret
almost precious. She had read about “War
babies” in the papers, read with a dull curiosity;
but now the atmosphere, as it were, of those writings
was illumined for her. These babies were wrong,
were a “problem,” and yet, behind all that,
she seemed now to know that people were glad of them;
they made up, they filled the gaps. Perhaps,
when she had one, she would be proud, secretly proud,
in spite of everyone, in spite of her father!
They had tried to kill Cyril God and everyone;
but they hadn’t been able, he was alive within
her! A glow came into her face, walking among
the busy shopping crowd, and people turned to look
at her; she had that appearance of seeing no one,
nothing, which is strange and attractive to those who
have a moment to spare from contemplation of their
own affairs. Fully two hours she wandered thus,
before going in, and only lost that exalted feeling
when, in her own little room, she had taken up his
photograph, and was sitting on her bed gazing at it.
She had a bad breakdown then. Locked in there,
she lay on her bed, crying, dreadfully lonely, till
she fell asleep exhausted, with the tear-stained photograph
clutched in her twitching fingers. She woke with
a start. It was dark, and someone was knocking
on her door.
“Miss Noel!”
Childish perversity kept her silent.
Why couldn’t they leave her alone? They
would leave her alone if they knew. Then she heard
another kind of knocking, and her father’s voice:
“Nollie! Nollie!”
She scrambled up, and opened. He looked scared,
and her heart smote her.
“It’s all right, Daddy; I was asleep.”
“My dear, I’m sorry, but dinner’s
ready.”
“I don’t want any dinner; I think I’ll
go to bed.”
The frown between his brows deepened.
“You shouldn’t lock your
door, Nollie: I was quite frightened. I went
round to the hospital to bring you home, and they told
me about your fainting. I want you to see a doctor.”
Noel shook her head vigorously. “Oh, no!
It’s nothing!”
“Nothing? To faint like
that? Come, my child. To please me.”
He took her face in his hands. Noel shrank away.
“No, Daddy. I won’t
see a doctor. Extravagance in wartime! I
won’t. It’s no good trying to make
me. I’ll come down if you like; I shall
be all right to-morrow.”
With this Pierson had to be content;
but, often that evening, she saw him looking at her
anxiously. And when she went up, he came out of
his study, followed to her room, and insisted on lighting
her fire. Kissing her at the door, he said very
quietly:
“I wish I could be a mother to you, my child!”
For a moment it flashed through Noel:
‘He knows!’ then, by the puzzled look
on his face, she knew that he did not. If only
he did know; what a weight it would be off her mind!
But she answered quietly too; “Good night, Daddy
dear!” kissed him, and shut the door.
She sat down before the little new
fire, and spread her hands out to it; all was so cold
and wintry in her heart. And the firelight flickered
on her face, where shadows lay thick under her eyes,
for all the roundness of her cheeks, and on her slim
pale hands, and the supple grace of her young body.
And out in the night, clouds raced over the moon, which
had come full once more.