Before Jane went to bed a telegram
came from Miss Garnett saying she would take them,
so she had no need of anxiety on that score. The
morning proved gray and cold. Breakfast was a
silent affair.
Baby was the only cheerful member
of the party which started for the station in a taxicab.
He was so absorbed in the experience in hand that
he provided a topic of interest.
“He’s keen on taxicabs;
this is his second one and see how he takes to it!”
said Jerry.
“Mebbe he’s going to be a ‘chauffer,’”
suggested Anna.
So with trivialities they managed
to keep up appearances until Jerry was to leave them.
“Will you write to me, Jane?” he asked,
bending over her.
“No, but I will send for you
the minute I am sure of myself. We shall not
be far away and we are to be comfortably housed in
a place I know, so don’t worry about us.
Have a good holiday and forget us, Jerry.”
“That’s a good idea,” he remarked.
He kissed his son, shook hands with
Anna. Then, as the engine bell sounded, he laid
his hands on Jane’s shoulders and looked into
her eyes for a long second. Then he was gone.
He left in Jane’s mind an impression of an appeal
he would not let himself make in words.
They found Miss Garnett’s cottage
just as Jane remembered it. There was something
soothing about going back to it, as if she had slipped
out of the years that had come since, into that other
girlish self. She recalled her mother’s
pleasure in the holiday. How she wished that her
frail spirit might come to visit them, and fall victim
to small Jerry’s charms.
Even Miss Garnett looked the same.
She was the sort of dried-up creature which shows
no age. She did not remember Jane, but she was
interested in the baby. They were the only boarders,
as it happened, so no one could be disturbed by the
boy. They had two big, sunny rooms, with the balcony
out of one of them, on which Jerry Jr. could sleep.
It was comfortable and independent, the two things
Jane desired.
The first day was spent in getting
unpacked, settling Baby’s routine. Jane
gave her full attention to all these practical details
before she so much as let her mind wander toward the
problem she had come here to consider.
With the second day their regime was
inaugurated. Late breakfast for Jane, an hour
with Baby, bathing him herself, playing with him in
the sun. A long walk while he slept. Leisurely
luncheon more Baby a rest for
all of them; then more walk, with Baby in his carriage,
or a drive. It was not until she had been there
several days that Jane remembered about her book.
She smiled at the thought of how tremendously important
it had seemed to her only a week ago to have a book
published, and yet for days she had forgotten it.
“Living, living is the important
thing,” she said aloud, with the swift after-thought
that it was Martin who had taught her that philosophy,
Jerry who had given her the thing itself.
She went over every minute of her
life with the two men, for in her thoughts they occupied
places side by side. Her first reaction against
her marriage with Jerry had passed. She saw it
clearly as practical and unlovely but not as sin.
Passion had had no place in her experience or her
thoughts at the time of her marriage; it had certainly
not been the moving force for Jerry, either.
She felt that Baby justified her somewhat.
She had refused none of the responsibilities imposed
upon her by her union with Jerry.
But, on the other hand, as she had
said to him before Martin, her soul and her senses
had found no common speech.
Intellectually she examined herself
in relation to Jerry and found herself guilty.
She had kept secret, between herself and Martin, the
really big impulse of her life. Through a childish
fear of ridicule, she had deliberately shut him out
of the inner chamber of her thoughts and hopes.
Was this fair?
To be sure, he had not shared with
her his inner thoughts and ambitions. He had
not sought to bring her into any closer mental relationship
with him. Was he, too, held back by fear of her
laughter?
When she looked into her mind, it
was flooded with Martin. He was in every nook
and cranny of it. He invaded it like an army with
banners. Her whole growth and development had
been so accelerated by him that it seemed as if she
had stood in one spot always until he arrived.
No wonder she had not turned to Jerry for companionship
when she had been swallowed up, as it were, in the
microcosm which was Martin Christiansen.
But when it came to the world of the
senses, she had spoken the absolute truth when she
told Jerry that she had never once thought of Martin
with sentiment in the ordinary sex sense
of that word. He was master-counsellor, god,
but never man-mate. So the moment of his passion
had come upon her like a lightning flash, rending the
heavens, levelling her house of life to the grounds,
leaving her naked and terror-struck.
With the shock of it had come a vision
of what love might be. With it had come a pitiless
revelation of what her union with Jerry was. It
was this cataclysm of her whole world that made her
run away into solitude to try and get herself together.
She tried again and again to reconstruct
the scene with Martin to try to recapture
her sensations of the moment she was in his arms.
Had it been rapture, or only surprise? Had it
been a surge of gratitude to him because he loved
her? After all, he was the first man to say his
devotion to her. Jerry had made no protestations
of love; she had expected none. Were not her
feelings, at the moment, those of any woman when she
is told for the first time that she is loved?
She thought of herself as Martin’s
wife, living with him in all the daily intimacies
of marriage; she found that her mind, here, turned
swiftly away to their mental association. It was
always Jerry she saw shaving, Jerry she heard singing
in his bath. She could not manage the transfer
successfully at all, she found.
Then she tried to conceive of her
life devoid of Martin. If she were still married
to Jerry, and Martin was gone for good, what then?
It seemed like saying “could you be comfortable
without your right hand?”
Some days she bitterly regretted the
death of the unknown Mrs. Christiansen which had precipitated
this climax. It was so much easier, the old way,
with Jerry and Martin both in her life. Again
she was glad it had all turned out so, glad that Martin
loved her, wanted her. Glad that she had to face
a decision about Jerry.
There was one unescapable knot, no
matter how she untangled the skein. She could
not argue away the baby. He constituted Jerry’s
biggest hold upon her. For if Jerry had not given
her love, he had given her something in its place
which had aroused the one great passion in her nature.
She loved Jerry Jr. with every throb of her heart.
Wasn’t this mother love enough?
It had filled her life so far. It was, with Jane,
fierce and absorbing. Man and woman love had so
many elements, so many complexities, such possibilities
of tragedy and sorrow. Would she not better cling
to what she had and let the rest go by? So she
told herself one day, only to cry out the next:
“No, no; that is the old nun Jane! I want
it all all.”
Divorce was ugly to her. She
forced herself to vision all its details. Explanations
to their friends arrangements about the
child. She computed its effect upon little Jerry,
torn between loyalty to his father and his mother,
spending his time, now with one parent, now with the
other. Growing up to a contempt for marriage,
perhaps, or worse yet, contempt for his mother and
father who publicly admitted their failure to keep
their contract.
She tried to get Jerry’s point
of view in the situation by reversing it. Suppose
that Jerry had told her that he wished his freedom,
in order to marry Althea. How would she have
met that demand? It gave her a pang to think
of going away, with Baby, to some strange place, to
try to make a new life for themselves. There
would still be Martin in her life; who would be left
to Jerry, if she left him? Would he turn to Bobs,
who still loved him? She knew he would never
succumb to Althea’s plans. Would Martin’s
love for her, and her love for him if she
did love him make up for all this havoc?
Could she, by any process, so divorce
herself from old habits and associations as to decide
this step with reference to her one self only?
She had been saying to herself for years that she had
a right to every rich experience life could offer,
she had been greedy for more and more. But was
there such a thing as continence? In order to
get away from that despised word “self-denial”
she looked upon the thing as a matter of spiritual
health. If overeating was destruction to the body
tissue, was greediness for experience also destruction
to the soul stuff?
Day after day she pondered these questions
as she tramped around the lake, or as they drove through
the still, silver-gray forests, where the only hint
of spring was an occasional whiff of arbutus as they
passed. Jane found great peace and help from
those straight, slim trees. They were so unfettered,
so upstanding, so sure. She repeated over and
over:
“Hast thou ne’er known the
longings
Ambitions vain desires
The hope, the fear, the yearning
Which mortal man inspires?”
She gathered into her being all the
calm of Nature, strength from her out-of-door life,
wisdom out of silence and Baby’s talk, but yet
she could not bring herself to send for Jerry.
She knew that both of these men were suffering, as
they waited for her answer; she wanted not to hurt
them, and still she hesitated.