"I wonder," Mrs. Sardis continued, "if you have ever realized what a power _you_ are in England and America to-day."
"Power!" I echoed. "I have done nothing but try to write as honestly and as well as I could what I felt I wanted to write."
"No one can doubt your sincerity, my dear friend," Mrs. Sardis said. "And I needn"t tell you that I am a warm admirer of your talent, and that I rejoice in your success. But the tendency of your work--"
"Surely," I interrupted her coldly, "you are not taking the trouble to tell me that my books are doing harm to the great and righteous Anglo-Saxon public!"
"Do not let us poke fun at our public, my dear," she protested. "I personally do not believe that your books are harmful, though their originality is certainly daring, and their realism startling; but there exists a considerable body of opinion, as you know, that strongly objects to your books. It may be reactionary opinion, bigoted opinion, ignorant opinion, what you like, but it exists, and it is not afraid to employ the word "immoral.""
"What, then?"
"I speak as one old enough to be your mother, and I speak after all to a motherless young girl who happens to have genius with, perhaps, some of the disadvantages of genius, when I urge you so to arrange your personal life that this body of quite respectable adverse opinion shall not find in it a handle to use against the fair fame of our calling."
"Mrs. Sardis!" I cried. "What do you mean?"
I felt my nostrils dilate in anger as I gazed, astounded, at this incarnation of mediocrity who had dared to affront me on my own hearth; and by virtue of my youth and my beauty, and all the homage I had received, and the clear sincerity of my vision of life, I despised and detested the mother of a family who had never taken one step beyond the conventions in which she was born. Had she not even the wit to perceive that I was accustomed to be addressed as queens are addressed?... Then, as suddenly as it had flamed, my anger cooled, for I could see the painful earnestness in her face. And Mrs. Sardis and I--what were we but two groups of vital instincts, groping our respective ways out of one mystery into another? Had we made ourselves? Had we chosen our characters? Mrs. Sardis was fulfilling herself, as I was. She was a natural force, as I was. As well be angry with a hurricane, or the heat of the sun.
"What do you mean?" I repeated quietly. "Tell me exactly what you mean."
I thought she was aiming at the company which I sometimes kept, or the freedom of my diversions on the English Sabbath. I thought what trifles were these compared to the dilemma in which, possibly within a few hours, I should find myself.
"To put it in as few words as possible," said she, "I mean your relations with a married man. Forgive my bluntness, dear girl."
"My--"
Then my secret was not my secret! We were chattered about, he and I. We had not hidden our feeling, our pa.s.sions. And I had been imagining myself a woman of the world equal to sustaining a difficult part in the masque of existence. With an abandoned gesture I hid my face in my hands for a moment, and then I dropped my hands, and leaned forward and looked steadily at Mrs. Sardis. Her eyes were kind enough.
"You won"t affect not to understand?" she said.
I a.s.sented with a motion of the head.
"Many persons say there is a--a liaison between you," she said.
"And do you think that?" I asked quickly.
"If I had thought so, my daughter would not have been here to-night," she said solemnly. "No, no; I do not believe it for an instant, and I brought Jocelyn specially to prove to the world that I do not. I only heard the gossip a few days ago; and to-night, as I sat here, it was borne in upon me that I must speak to you to-night. And I have done so. Not everyone would have done so, dear girl. Most of your friends are content to talk among themselves."
"About me? Oh!" It was the expression of an almost physical pain.
"What can you expect them to do?" asked Mrs. Sardis mildly.
"True," I agreed.
"You see, the circ.u.mstances are so extremely peculiar. Your friendship with her--"
"Let me tell you"--I stopped her--"that not a single word has ever pa.s.sed between me and--and the man you mean, that everybody might not hear. Not a single word!"
"Dearest girl," she exclaimed; "how glad I am! How glad I am! Now I can take measures to--.
"But--" I resumed.
"But what?"
In a flash I saw the futility of attempting to explain to a woman like Mrs. Sardis, who had no doubts about the utter righteousness of her own code, whose rules had no exceptions, whose principles could apply to every conceivable case, and who was the very embodiment of the vast stolid London that hemmed me in--of attempting to explain to such an excellent, blind creature why, and in obedience to what ideal, I would not answer for the future. I knew that I might as well talk to a church steeple.
"Nothing," I said, rising, "except that I thank you. Be sure that I am grateful. You have had a task which must have been very unpleasant to you."
She smiled, virtuously happy.
"You made it easy," she murmured.
I perceived that she wanted to kiss me; but I avoided the caress. How I hated kissing women!
"No more need be said," she almost whispered, as I put my hand on the k.n.o.b of the front-door. I had escorted her myself to the hall.
"Only remember your great mission, the influence you wield, and the fair fame of our calling."
My impulse was to shriek. But I merely smiled as decently as I could; and I opened the door.
And there, on the landing, just emerging from the lift, was Ispenlove, haggard, pale, his necktie astray. He and Mrs. Sardis exchanged a brief stare; she gave me a look of profound pain and pa.s.sed in dignified silence down the stairs; Ispenlove came into the flat.
"Nothing will convince her now that I am not a liar," I reflected.
It was my last thought as I sank, exquisitely drowning, in the sea of sensations caused by Ispenlove"s presence.
II
Without a word, we pa.s.sed together into the drawing-room, and I closed the door. Ispenlove stood leaning against the piano, as though intensely fatigued; he crushed his gibus with an almost savage movement, and then bent his large, l.u.s.trous black eyes absently on the flat top of it. His thin face was whiter even than usual, and his black hair, beard, and moustache all dishevelled; the collar of his overcoat was twisted, and his dinner-jacket rose an inch above it at the back of the neck.
I wanted to greet him, but I could not trust my lips. And I saw that he, too, was trying in vain to speak.
At length I said, with that ba.n.a.lity which too often surprises us in supreme moments:
"What is it? Do you know that your tie is under your ear?"
And as I uttered these words, my voice, breaking of itself and in defiance of me, descended into a tone which sounded harsh and inimical.
"Ah!" he murmured, lifting his eyes to mine, "if you turn against me to-night, I shall--"
"Turn against you!" I cried, shocked. "Let me help you with your overcoat!"
And I went near him, meaning to take his overcoat.
"It"s finished between Mary and me," he said, holding me with his gaze.
"It"s finished. I"ve no one but you now; and I"ve come--I"ve come--"