In these days, the Studdifords were
househunting in all of Jim’s free hours; confining
their efforts almost entirely to the city, although
a trip to San Mateo or Ross Valley made a welcome
change now and then. It was not until late in
October that the right house was found, on Pacific
Avenue, almost at the end of the cable-car line.
It was a new house, large and square, built of dignified
dark-red brick, and with a roomy and beautiful garden
about it. There was a street entrance, barred
by an iron gate elaborately grilled, and giving upon
three shallow brick steps that led to the heavily
carved door. On the side street was an entrance
for the motor car and tradespeople, the slope of the
hill giving room for a basement kitchen, with its
accompanying storerooms and laundries.
Upstairs, the proportions of the rooms,
and their exquisite finish, made the house prominent
among the city’s beautiful homes. Even Jim
could find nothing to change. The splendid dark
simplicity of the drawing-room was in absolute harmony
with the great main hall, and in charming contrast
to the cheerful library and the sun-flooded morning-room.
The dining-room had its own big fireplace, with leather-cushioned
ingle seats, and quaint, twinkling, bottle-paned windows
above. On the next floor the four big bedrooms,
with their three baths and three dressing-rooms and
countless closets, were all bright and sunny, with
shining cream-coloured panelling, cretonne papers in
gay designs of flowers and birds, and crystal door
knobs. Upstairs again were maids’ rooms,
storerooms lined in cedar, and more baths.
“Perfect!” said Jim radiantly,
on the afternoon when, the Studdifords first inspected
the house. “It’s just exactly right,
and I’m strong for it!” He came over to
Julia, who was thoughtfully staring out of a drawing-room
window. Her exquisite beauty was to-day set off
by a long loose sealskin coat, for the winter was
early, and a picturesque little motor bonnet, also
of seal, with a velvet rose against her soft hair.
“Little bit sad to-day, sweetheart?” Jim
asked, kissing the tip of her ear.
“No — o. I was
just thinking what a lovely, sheltered backyard!”
Julia said sensibly, raising her blue eyes. But
she had brightened perceptibly at his tenderness.
“I love you, Jim,” she said, very simply.
“And I adore you!” Jim
answered, his arms about her. “I’ve
been thinking all day how rotten that sounded this
morning!” he added in a lower tone. “I’m
so sorry!”
“As if it was your fault!”
Julia protested generously. And a moment later
she charmed him by declaring herself to be entirely
satisfied with this enchanting house, and by entering
vigorously upon the question of furnishings.
The little episode to which Doctor
Studdiford had made a somewhat embarrassed allusion
had taken place in their rooms at the hotel that morning,
while they were breakfasting. Plans for a little
dinner party were progressing pleasantly, over the
omelette and toast, when Jim chanced to suggest that
a certain Mrs. Pope be included among the guests.
“Oh, Jim — not Mrs.
Jerry Pope?” Julia questioned, wide eyed.
“Yes, but she calls herself
Mrs. Elsie Carroll Pope now. Why not?”
“Oh, Jim — but she’s divorced!”
“Well, so are lots of other people!”
“Yes, I know. But it was such a horrid
divorce, Jim!”
“Horrid how?”
“Oh, some other man, and letters
in the papers, and Mr. Pope kept both the children!
It was awful!”
“Oh, come, Ju — she’s
a nice little thing, awfully witty and clever.
Why go out of your way to knock her!”
“I’m not going out of
my way,” Julia answered with dignity. “But
she was a great friend of Mary Chetwynde, who used
to teach at The Alexander, and she came out there
two or three times, and she’s a noisy, yelling
sort of woman — and her hair is dyed — yes,
it is, Jim!”
“Lord, you women do love to
rip each other up the back!” Jim smiled lazily,
as he wheeled his chair about, and lighted a cigarette.
“I’m not ripping her up
the back at all,” Julia protested with spirit.
“But she’s not a lady, and I hate the particular
set she goes with — ”
“Not a lady — ha!” Jim ejaculated.
“She was a Cowdry.”
Julia leaned back in her chair, and
opened a fat letter from Sally Borroughs in Europe,
that had come in her morning’s mail.
“Ask her by all means to dinner,”
she said calmly. “Only don’t expect
me to admire her and approve of her, Jim, for I won’t
do it; I know too much about her!”
“It’s just possible Mrs.
Pope isn’t waiting for your admiration and approval,
my dear,” Jim said, nettled “But I doubt,
whatever she knew of you, if she would speak so unkindly
about you!”
Julia turned as scarlet as if a whip
had fallen across her face. She stared at him
for a moment with fixed, horrified eyes, then crushed
her letter together with a spasmodic gesture of the
hands, and let it fall as she went blindly toward
the bedroom door. Jim sat staring after her,
puzzled at first, then with the red blood surging into
his face. He dropped his cigarette and his newspaper,
and for perhaps three minutes there was no sound in
the apartment but the coffee bubbling in the percolator,
and the occasional clank of the radiator.
Then Jim jumped up suddenly and flung
open the door of the bedroom. Julia was sitting
at her dressing-table, one elbow resting upon it, and
her head dropped on her hand. She raised heavy
eyes and looked at him.
“Don’t be a fool, Ju,”
Jim said, solicitous and impatient. “You
know I didn’t mean anything by that. I
wouldn’t be such a cad. You know I wouldn’t
say a thing like that — I couldn’t.
Come on back and finish your coffee.”
But he did not kiss her; he did not
put his arm about her; and Julia felt curiously weary
and cold as she came slowly back to her place.
Jim immediately lighted a fresh cigarette, and began
to rattle away somewhat nervously of his plans for
the day. He was going over to the Oakland Hospital
to look at his man with the spine — better
not try to meet for lunch. But how about that
Pacific Avenue house? If Julia took the motor
and stopped at the agent’s for the key, he would
meet her there at four — how about it?
Agreed. Gosh! It was nearly
ten o’clock, and Jim had to get out to the Children’s
Hospital before he went to Oakland. Julia had
a quick kiss, and was advised to take good care of
herself. Then Jim was gone, and she could fling
her arm across the table and sob as if her heart would
break.
Julia cried for a long time.
Then she stopped resolutely, and spent a long half
hour in serious thought, her fingers absently tracing
the threads of the tablecloth with a fork, her thoughts
flying.
Presently she roused herself, telephoned
Jim’s chauffeur and the agent of the Pacific
Avenue house, bathed her reddened eyes, and inspected
her new furs, just home from the shop. Now and
then her breast rose with a long sigh, but she did
not cry again.
“I’ll wear my new furs,”
she decided soberly. “Jim loves me to look
pretty. And I must cheer up; he hates me
to be blue! Who can I lunch with, to cheer up?
Aunt Sanna! I’ll get a cold chicken and
some cake, and go out to The Alexander!”
So the outward signs of the storm
were obliterated, and no one knew of the scar that
Julia carried from that day in her heart. Only
a tiny, tiny scar, but enough to remind her now and
then with cold terror that even into her Paradise
the serpent could thrust his head, enough to prove
to her bitter satisfaction that there was already something
that Jim’s money could not buy.
The furnishing of the Pacific Avenue
house proceeded apace — it was an eminently
gratifying house to furnish, and Jim and Julia almost
wished their labours not so light. All rugs looked
well on those beautiful floors; all pictures were
at their best against the dull rich tones of the walls.
Did Mrs. Studdiford like the soft blue curtains in
the library, or the dull gold, or the coffee-coloured
tapestry? Mrs. Studdiford, an exquisite little
figure of indecision, in a great Elizabethan chair
of carved black oak, didn’t really know; they
were all so beautiful! She wondered why the blue
wouldn’t be lovely in the breakfast room, if
they used the gold here? Then she wouldn’t
use the English cretonne in the breakfast room?
Oh, yes, of course, she had forgotten the English
cretonne!
At last it was all done, from the
two stained little Roman marble benches outside the
front door, to the monogrammed sheets in the attic
cedar closet. The drawing-room had its grand piano,
its great mahogany davenport facing the fire, its
rich dark rugs, its subdued gleam of copper and crystal,
dull blue china and bright enamel. The little
reception room was gay with yellow-gold silk and teakwood;
Jim’s library was severely handsome with its
dark leather chairs and rows of dark leather bindings.
A dozen guests could sit about the long oak table in
the dining-room; the great sideboard with its black
oak cupids and satyrs, and its enormous claw feet,
struck perhaps the only pretentious note in the house.
A wide-lipped bowl, in clear yellow glass, held rosy
pippins or sprawling purple grapes on the table in
the window, the sideboard carried old jugs and flagons
in blackened silver or dull pottery.
Upstairs the sunny perfection of the
bedrooms was not marred by the need of so much as
a cake of violet soap. Julia revelled in details
here: flowers in the bedrooms must match the
hangings; there must be so many fringed towels and
so many plain, in each bathroom. She amused as
well as edified Jim with her sedate assurance in the
matter of engaging maids; her cheeks would grow very
pink when interviews were afoot, but she never lost
her air of calm.
“We are as good as they are,”
said Julia, “but how hard it is to remember
it when you are talking to them!”
Presently Foo Ting was established
supreme in the kitchen, Lizzie secured as waitress,
and Ellie, Lizzie’s sister, engaged to do upstairs
work. Chadwick, Jim’s chauffeur, was accustomed
occasionally to enact also the part of valet, so that
it was with a real luxury of service that the young
Studdifords settled down for the winter.
Julia had anticipated this settling
as preceding a time of quiet, when she and Jim should
loiter over their snug little dinners, should come
to know the comforts of their own chairs, at each
side of the library fire, and laugh and cry over some
old book, or talk and dream while they stared into
the coals. The months were racing about to her
first wedding anniversary, yet she felt that she really
knew Jim only in a certain superficial, holiday sense — she
knew what cocktail he liked best, of course, and what
seats in the theatre; she was quite sure of the effect
of her own beauty upon him. But she longed for
the real Jim, the soul that was hidden somewhere under
his gay mask, under the trim, cleanshaven, smiling
face. When there was less confusion, less laughing
and interrupting and going about, then she would find
her husband, Julia thought, and they would have long
silent hours together in which to build the foundation
of their life.
Her beautiful earnest face came to
have a somewhat strained and wistful look, as the
weeks fled past without bringing the quiet, empty time
for which she longed. All about her now stretched
the glittering spokes of the city’s great social
wheel, every mail brought her a flood of notes, every
quarter hour summoned her to the telephone, every fraction
of the day had its appointed pleasure. Julia
must swiftly eliminate from her life much of the rich
feminine tradition of housewifery; it was not for
her to darn her husband’s hose, to set exquisite
patches in thinning table linen, to gather flowers
for jars and vases. Julia never saw Jim’s
clothing except when he was wearing it, the table linen
was Ellie’s affair, and Lizzie had the entire
lower floor bright and fragrant with fresh flowers
before Jim and Julia came down to breakfast. Young
Mrs. Studdiford found herself readily assuming the
society woman’s dry, brief mannerisms.
Jim used to grin sometimes when he heard her at the
telephone:
“Oh, that would be charming,
Mrs. Babcock,” Julia would say, “if you’ll
let me run away at three, for I must positively keep
an appointment with Carroll at three, if I’m
to have my gown for dear Mrs. Morton’s bal
masque Friday night. And if I’m just a tiny
bit late you won’t be cross? For we all
do German at twelve now, you know, and it will
run over the hour! Oh, you’re very sweet!
Oh, no, Mrs. Talcott spoke to me about it, but we
can’t — we’re both so sorry,
but this week seems to be just full — no,
she said that, but I told her that next week was just
as bad, so she’s to let me know about the week
after. Oh, I know she is. And I did
want to give her a little tea, but there doesn’t
seem to be a moment! I think perhaps I’ll
ask Mrs. Castle to let us dine with her some other
time, and give Betty a little dinner Monday — ”
And so on and on, in the quick harassed
voice of one who must meet obligations.
“You’re a great social
success, Ju,” Jim said, smiling, one morning.
Julia made a little grimace over her letters.
“Oh, come off, now!” her
husband railed good-naturedly. “You know
you love it. You know you like to dress up and
trot about with me and be admired!”
“I like to trot about with you,”
Julia conceded, sighing in spite of her smile.
“But I get very tired of dinners. Some other
woman gets you, and some other woman’s husband
gets me, and we say such flat things, about
motor cars, or the theatre — nothing friendly
or intimate or interesting!”
“Wait until you know them all
better, Ju. Besides, you couldn’t get intimate
at a dinner, very well. Besides” — Jim
defended the institutions of his class — “you
didn’t look very gay when young Jo Coutts seemed
inclined to get very friendly at dinner the other night!”
“Jo Coutts was drunk,”
Julia asserted briefly. “As they very often
are,” she added severely. “Not raging
drunk, but just silly, or sentimental and important,
you know.”
“I know,” Jim laughed.
“And it makes me furious!”
Julia said. “As for knowing them better,
they aren’t one bit more interesting when they’re
old friends. They’re more familiar, I admit
that, but all this cheeky yelling back and forth isn’t
interesting — it’s just tiresome!
’I’m holding your husband’s hand,
Alice!’ ‘All right, then I’m going
to kiss your husband!’” Her voice rose
in mimicry. “And then Kenneth Roberts tells
some little shady story, and every one screams, and
every one goes on telling it over and over! Why,
that little silly four-line verse Conrad Kent had last
night — every one in the room had to learn
it by heart and say it six hundred times before we
were done with it!”
“You’re a cynic, woman,”
Jim said, kissing his wife, who by this time had come
around to his chair. “It’s all too
easy for you, that’s the trouble! They’ve
accepted you with open arms; you’re the rage!
You ought to have been kept for a while on the anxious
seat, like the poor Groves, and Mrs. McCann; then
you’d appreciate High Sassiety!”
“Well, I wouldn’t make
myself ridiculous and pathetic like the Groves, trying
to burst into society, and giving people a chance to
snub me!” Julia said thoughtfully. “Never
mind,” she added, “next month Lent begins,
and then there must be some let-up!”
However, Lent had only begun when
the Studdifords made a flying trip to Honolulu, where
Jim had a patient. The great liner was fascinating
to Julia, and, as usual, her beauty and charm, and
the famous young surgeon’s unostentatious bigness,
made them friends on all sides, so that the life of
cocktail mixing and card playing and gossip went on
as merrily as it had in San Francisco. Julia
could not spend the empty days staring dreamily out
at the rolling green Pacific; every man on board was
anxious to improve her acquaintance, from the Captain
to the seventeen-year-old little English lad who was
going out to his father in India, and to not one of
them did it ever occur that lovely little Mrs. Studdiford
might prefer to be left alone.
But the sea air shook Julia into splendid
health and energy, and she was her sweetest self in
Honolulu; she and Jim both seemed to recapture here
some of the exquisite tenderness of their honeymoon
a year ago. Neither would admit that there had
been any drifting apart, they had never been less
than lovers, yet now they experienced the delights
of a reconciliation. Julia, in her delicate linens
and thin embroidered pongees, with a filmy parasol
shading her bright hair, seemed more wonderful than
ever before, and lovely Hawaii was a setting for one
of their happiest times together.
On the boat, coming home, however,
there occurred a little incident that darkened Julia’s
sky for a long time to come. On the very day of
starting she and Jim, with some other returning San
Franciscans, were standing, a laughing group on the
deck, when a dark, handsome young woman came forward
from a nearby cabin doorway, and held out her hand.
“Do you remember me, Julia?” said she,
smiling.
Julia, whose white frock was draped
with a dozen ropes of brilliant flowers, and who looked
like a little May Queen in her radiant bloom, looked
at the newcomer for a few moments, and then said, with
a clearing face:
“Hannah! Of course I know
you. Mrs. Palmer, may I present Doctor Studdiford?”
Jim smilingly shook hands, and as
the rest of the group melted away, Mrs. Palmer explained
that her husband’s business was in Manila, but
she was bringing up her two little children to visit
her parents in Oakland.
“She’s extremely pretty,”
Jim said, when he and Julia were alone in their luxurious
stateroom. “Who is she?”
“I don’t know why I supposed
you knew that she is one of Mark’s sisters,”
Julia said, colouring. “I saw something
of them all, after — afterward, you know.”
“Oh!” Jim’s face,
which he chanced to be washing, also grew red; he
scowled as he plunged it again into the towel.
Julia proceeded with her own lunch toilet in silence,
humming a little now and then, but the brightness
was gone from the day for her; the swift-flying green
water outside the window had turned to lead, the immaculate
little apartment was bleak and bare. Jim did
not speak as they went down to lunch, nor was he himself
when they met again, after a game of auction, at dinner.
In fact, this marked Julia’s first acquaintance
with a new side of his character.
For Jim’s sunny nature was balanced
by an occasional mood so dark as to make him a different
man while it lasted. Barbara had once lightly
hinted this to Julia — “Jim was glooming
terribly, and did nothing but snarl” — and
Miss Toland had confirmed the hint when she asked him,
at Christmas dinner, when he and Julia had been eight
months man and wife: “Well, Jim, never
a blue devil once, eh?”
“Never a one. Aunt Sanna!” Jim had
responded gayly.
“What should he have blue devils
about?” Julia had demanded on this occasion,
presenting herself indignantly to them, and looking
in her black velvet and white lace like a round-eyed
child.
She thought of that happy moment this
afternoon, with a little chill at her heart.
For there was no doubt that Jim had blue devils now.
When she came back to her stateroom at six o’clock,
he was already there, flung across the bed, his arms
locked under his head, his sombre eyes on the ceiling,
where green water-lights were playing.
“Jim, don’t you feel well, dear?”
“Perfectly well, thank you!” Jim said
coldly.
Slightly angered by his tone, Julia
fell silent, busied herself with her brushes, hooked
on a gown of demure cherry colour and gray, caught
up a great silky scarf.
“Anything I can do for you, Jim?” she
said then, politely.
“Just — let me alone!”
Jim answered, without stirring.
Hurt to the quick, and with sudden
colour in her face, Julia left the room. She
held her head high, but she felt almost a little sick
with the shock. Five minutes later she was the
centre of a chattering group on the deck. A milky
twilight held the sea, the skyline was no longer to
be discerned in the opal spaces all about them, the
ship moved over a vast plain of pearl-coloured smooth
waters. Where staterooms were lighted, long fingers
of rosy brightness fell across the deck; here and there
in the shelter of a bit of wall were dark blots that
were passengers, wrapped and reclining, and unrecognizable
in the gloom.
Julia and a young man named Manners
began to pace the deck. Mr. Manners was a poet,
and absorbed in the fascinating study of his own personality,
but he served Julia’s need just now, and never
noticed her abstraction and indifference. He
described to Julia the birth of his own soul, when
he was what the world considered only a clumsy, unthinking
lad of seventeen, and Julia listened as a pain-racked
fever patient might listen with vague distress to
the noise of distant hammers.
Presently they were all at dinner;
soup, but no Jim; fish, but no Jim. Here was
Jim at last, pale, freshly shaven, slipping into his
place with a muttered apology and averted eyes.
With a sense of impending calamity upon her, Julia
struggled through her dinner; after a while she found
herself holding cards, under a bright light; after
a while again, she reached her stateroom.
Julia turned up the light. The
room was close and empty, littered with the evidences
of Jim’s hasty toilet. She opened a window,
and the sweet salt air filtered in, infinitely soothing
and refreshing. She began to go about the room,
picking up Jim’s clothes, and putting the place
in order. Once or twice her face twitched with
pain, and once she stopped and pressed Jim’s
coat to her heart with both hands, as if to stop a
wound, but she did not cry, and presently began her
usual preparations for bed in her usual careful fashion.
The cherry-coloured gown had been put away, and Julia,
in an embroidered white kimono almost stiff enough
to stand alone, was putting her rings into their little
cases when Jim came in. She looked at him over
her shoulder.
“Where have you been, Jim?”
she asked quietly, noticing his white face, his tumbled
hair, and a certain disorder in his appearance.
Jim did not answer, and after a puzzled moment Julia
repeated her question.
“Up on deck,” Jim said,
a bitter burst of words breaking through his ugly
silence. He dropped into a chair, and put his
head in his hands.
Julia watched him for a few moments
in silence, while she went on with her preparations.
She wound her little watch and put it under her pillow;
she folded the counterpanes neatly back from both beds,
and got out her slippers. Then she sat down to
put trees into the little satin slippers she had been
wearing, and carried them to the closet.
Suddenly Jim sat up, dropped his hands,
and stared at her haggardly.
“Julia,” said he hoarsely,
“I’ve been up there thinking — I’m
going mad, I guess — ”
He stopped, and there was silence.
Julia stood still, looking at him.
“Tell me,” Jim said, “was it Mark?”
The hideous suddenness of it struck
Julia like a bodily blow; she stood as if she had
been turned to ice. A great weight seemed to seize
her limbs, a sickening vertigo attacked her.
She had a suffocating sense that time was passing,
that ages were going by in that bright, glaring room,
with the sea air coming in a shuttered window, and
the two beds, with their smooth white pillows, so
neatly turned down — Still, she could not
speak — not yet.
“Yes, it was Mark,” she
said tonelessly and gently, after a long silence.
“I thought you knew.”
“Oh, my God!” Jim said,
choking. He flung his hands madly in the air and
got on his feet. Then, as if ashamed, through
all the boiling surge of his emotions, at this loss
of control, he rammed his hands into the pockets of
his light overcoat, and began to pace the room.
“You — you — you!” he
said, in a sort of wail, and in another moment, muttering
some incoherency about air, he had snatched up his
cap and was gone again.
Julia slowly crossed the room, and
sat down on her bed. She felt as a person who
had swallowed a dose of poison might feel: agonies
were soon to begin that would drive the life from
her body, but she could not feel them yet. Instead
she felt tired, tired beyond all bearing, and the
lights hurt her eyes. She slipped her kimono from
her, stepped out of her slippers, and plunged the
room into utter darkness. Like a tired child
she crept into bed, and with a great sigh dropped her
head on the pillow.
The ship plowed on, its great lights
cutting a steady course over the black water, its
whole bulk quivering to the heartbeat of the mighty
engines; whispered good-nights and laughing good-nights
were said in the narrow, hot hallways. Lights
went out in cabin after cabin. The decks were
dark and deserted. Below stairs the world that
never slept hummed like a beehive; squads of men were
washing floors, laying tables; the kitchen was as
hot and busy as at midday; the engine rooms were filled
with silhouetted forms briskly coming and going.
Up on one of the dark decks, with the soft mist blowing
in his face, Jim spent the long night, his folded
arms resting on the rail, his sombre eyes following
the silent rush of waters, and in her cabin Julia
lay wide awake and battling with despair.
She had thought the old dim horror
over and done with. Now she knew it never would
be that; now she knew there was no escape. The
happy little castle she had builded for herself fell
about her like a house of cards; she was dishonoured,
she was abased, she was powerless. In telling
Jim her whole history, on that terrible night at the
settlement house, she had flung down her arms; there
was no new extenuating fact to add to the story; it
was all stale and unchangeable; it must stand before
their eyes forever, a hideous fact. And it seemed
to Julia, tossing restlessly in the dark, that a thousand
sleeping menaces rose now to terrify her. Perhaps
Hannah Palmer knew! Julia’s breath stopped,
her whole body shook with terror. And if Hannah,
why not others? A letter of Mark’s to some
one — to any one — might be in existence
now, waiting its hour to appear, and to disgrace her,
and Jim, and all who loved them!
And was it for this, she asked herself
bitterly, that she had so risen from the past, so
studied and struggled and aspired? Had she been
mad all these years to forget the danger in which
she stood, to imagine that she had buried her tragedy
too deep for discovery? Had she been mad to marry
Jim, her dear, sweet, protecting old Jim, who was always
so good to her?
But at the thought of him, and of
her bitter need of him in this desolate hour, Julia
fell to violent crying, and after her tears she drifted
into a deep sleep, her lashes wet, and her breast occasionally
rising with a sharp sigh as a child’s might.
When she awakened, dawn was breaking,
the level waste of the sea was pearl colour and rose
under a slowly rising mist. Julia bathed and
dressed, and went out to the deck, where, with a great
plaid wrapped about her, she might watch the miracle
of the birth of day. And as the warming rays
of the sun enveloped her, and the newly washed decks
dried under its touch, and as signs of life began
to be heard all about, slamming doors and gay greetings,
laughter and the crisp echoes of feet, hope and self-confidence
crept again into her heart. She was young, after
all, and pretty, and Jim’s very agony of jealousy
only proved that he loved her. She had never
deceived him, he could not accuse her of one second’s
weakness there. He had only had a sudden, terrible
revelation of the truth he had known so long; it could
not affect him permanently.
“Going down?” said a voice gayly.
Julia turned to smile upon a group of cheerful acquaintances.
“Thinking about it,” she smiled.
“Where’s Himself?” somebody asked.
“Still asleep — the
lazy bones!” Julia answered calmly. They
all went downstairs together, and Julia was perhaps
a little ashamed to find the odours of coffee and
bacon delightful, and to enjoy her breakfast.
Afterward she went straight to her
room, not at all surprised to find Jim there, flung,
dressed as he was, across his bed, and breathing heavily.
Julia studied him for a moment in silence. Then
she set about the somewhat difficult task of rousing
him, quite her capable wifely little self when there
was something she could do for him.
“Jim! You’ll have
to get these damp things off, dear! Come, Jim,
you can’t sleep this way. Wake up, Jim!”
Drowsily, heavily, he consented to
be partially undressed, and covered with a warm rug.
Julia grew quite breathless over her exertions, tucked
him in carefully.
“I’m going to tell the
chambermaid not to come in until I ring, Jim.
But shall I send you in a cup of coffee?”
“Ha!” Jim said, already asleep.
“Do you want some coffee, Jim?”
“No — no coffee!”
Julia tiptoed about the room a moment
more, took her little sewing basket and a new magazine,
and giving a departing look at her husband, found
his eyes wide open and watching her. Instantly
a rush of tears pressed behind her eyelids, and she
felt herself grow weak and confused.
“Thank you for fixing me up so nicely, darling,”
Jim said meekly.
“Oh, you’re welcome!”
Julia answered, with a desperate effort to appear
calm.
“Will you kiss me, Julie?”
Jim pursued, and a second later she was on her knees
beside him, their arms were locked together, and their
lips met as if they had never kissed each other before.
“You little angel,” Jim
said, “what a beast I am! As if life hadn’t
been hard enough for you without my adding to it!
Oh, but what a night I’ve had! And you’ll
forgive me, won’t you, sweetheart, for I love
you so?”
Julia put her face down and cried
stormily, her wet face pressed against his, his arms
holding her close. After a while, when the sobs
lessened, they began to talk together, and then laugh
together in the exquisite relief of being reconciled.
Then Jim went to sleep, and Julia sat beside him,
his hand in hers, her eyes idly following the play
of broken bright lights that quivered on the wall.
She leaned back in her big chair,
feeling weary and spent, broken, but utterly at peace.
From that hour life was changed to her, and she dimly
felt the change, accepted it as stoically as an Indian
might the loss of a limb, and adjusted herself to
all it implied. If Jim was a little less her
god, he was still hers, hers in some new relationship
that appealed to what was protective and maternal
in her. And if the burden of her secret had grown
inconceivably heavy for her to bear, she knew by some
instinct that this burst of jealous frenzy had somehow
lightened its weight for Jim; she, not he, would henceforth
pay the price.
“And life isn’t easy and
gay, say what you will,” thought Julia philosophically.
“There is no use grumbling and groaning, and
saying to yourself, ‘Oh, if only it wasn’t
just this or that thing worrying me!’ for there
is always this or that. Kennedy and Bab think
I am the most fortunate girl in the world, and yet,
to be able to go back ten years, and live a few weeks
over again, I’d give up everything I have, even
Jim. Just to start square! Just to
feel that wretched thing wasn’t there like a
layer of mud under everything I do, making it a farce
for me to talk of uplifting girls by settlement work,
as people are eternally making me talk! Or if
only every one knew it, it would be easier,
for then I would feel at least that I stood on my
own feet! But now, of course, that’s impossible,
on Jim’s account. What a horrible scandal
it would be, what a horrible thing it is, that
any girl can cloud her own life in this way!
“As for boys, I suppose mighty
few of them are pure by the time they’re through
college, by the time they’re through High School,
perhaps! It’s all queer, for that involves
girls and women, too, thousands of them! And
how absurd it would be to bring such a charge as this
against a man, ten years after it happened, when he
was married and a respectable citizen!
“Well, society is very queer;
civilization hasn’t got very far; sometimes
I think virtue is a good deal of an accident, and that
people take themselves pretty seriously!” And
so musing, Julia dozed, and wakened, and dozed again.
But in her heart had been sowed the seed that was
never to be uprooted, the little seed of doubt:
doubt of the social structure, doubt of its grave
authorities, its awe-inspired interpreters. What
were the mummers all so busy about and how little
their mummery mattered! This shall be permitted,
this shall not be permitted; what is in your heart
and brain concerns us not at all; where your soul
spends its solitudes is not our affair; so that you
keep a certain surface smoothness, so that you dress
and talk and spend as we bid you, you — for
such time as we please — shall be one of us!