If Jack, who was certainly not going to be a pauper, probably not even an invalid, had pa.s.sed through London without coming to see Barbara, that meant that he did not want to see Barbara. Perhaps he _had_ seen her. . . .
Eric telephoned to Berkeley Square and found his voice greeted with surprise and apprehensive pleasure.
"I thought you were in the country! You _are_ getting restless, Eric!
When did you come up?"
"Only two days ago. Babs . . . Jack"s in England; he called here during the week-end, but of course I was away. I . . . I thought you"d like to know."
"Thank you, Eric," she answered quietly.
There was a pause which neither liked to break. At last Eric said:
"He didn"t come to see you? Why don"t you recognize that it"s all over, Babs? You say that your soul isn"t yours and that you owe it to Jack; well, he"s had the chance to come and claim it."
There was a second pause followed by a sigh.
"It"s hard to explain, Eric. You see, only he and I know how much he was in love with me before. I was the only person he"d ever cared for. . . .
Even I didn"t understand how much he loved me until that night." She sighed again. "I don"t believe that, after loving me, he could suddenly cease to love me."
"You gave him pretty good provocation," Eric suggested.
"But you don"t cease loving people because they behave badly to you.
I"ve behaved abominably to _you_. You"ve given me everything, and all I"ve done in return is to make you ill and miserable. I"ve ruined your work, your life--you"ve told me so, Eric. I"ve been utterly selfish and heartless. You know I"m vain, you know I"m spoiled, you admit I"ve behaved atrociously. But you want to marry me in spite of it all."
"I love you in spite of it all."
Barbara said nothing, and her silence was a confession and answer. There were a hundred reasons why Jack had not come to see her yet; his future was uncertain, he must wait for a final verdict from his doctor, he was perhaps still chewing the cud of his resentment. And, when the first reasons were exhausted, her vanity wove a hundred more in stout, impenetrable protection against the fantastic thought that any man could tire of her.
"Oh, I wish you _didn"t_!" Barbara cried at last. "Why don"t you go away and forget all about me?"
She had trapped him neatly, as he had no doubt she well knew.
"I can"t forget you," he answered, savagely conscious that he was presenting her with new weapons. "Whatever you did, you"d be the biggest thing in my life; I should always need you."
This time she put her triumph into words.
"Don"t you think that Jack may need me as badly?"
"He"s had his chance. . . ."
Eric discovered suddenly that the wire had ceased to throb. Evidently she had quietly hung up the receiver. In another moment she could only have offered to say good-bye; and that she would not do. He was beginning to know her moods and her nature very well. . . .
Lighting a cigarette, he was trying to think what he had been doing before their conversation started, when the telephone-bell rang.
"Eric? It"s me, darling. We were cut off. Eric, don"t be bitter with me.
I"ve never done anything to deserve your love, but it"s been so wonderful that I won"t allow you to say anything which will spoil it.
Some day I think you"ll look back on it as the biggest thing in your life."
2
As soon as Manders announced the opening night of "Mother"s Son," Eric booked his pa.s.sage to New York for the following week. For the first time he informed his parents that he was leaving England and gave them to understand that he was very fully occupied. There were a hundred and one arrangements to conclude, fare-wells to take; and, when he applied to Gaisford for a medical certificate, he found himself packed off to bed with orders to stay there till the day of sailing.
"If you"ll do what I tell you, I"ll do my best for you," said the doctor sternly. "If you won"t, Eric, on my honour I"ll wash my hands of you.
Now, which is it to be?"
"I shall get up for my own first night," said Eric.
"You"ll do what I tell you. If you"re fit to go, you shall go. But I don"t think you"ll be in a condition to stand the excitement of it."
Two days later Eric sent a message to Barbara, reminding her that she had promised to come with him to the first night and warning her that in all probability he would not be able to go. The doctor, he explained, insisted on absolute quiet and absence of excitement. It would have been more honest to add that the doctor had forbidden him to see any visitors; but Eric hoped that Barbara would hurry round as soon as she heard that he was ill and before he could tell her that he was not allowed to have her there. It was a bitter disappointment when his secretary brought back a message of sympathy. Later in the day he received a present of carnations and grapes. It was only when Gaisford commented on them next morning that his disappointment was mitigated.
"I saw her the other day," explained the doctor. "She was sorry to hear you were ill. I told her that I wasn"t letting you see any one."
"Where did you see her?" Eric asked, trying to keep his voice unconcerned.
"At her house. The moment I"d left you. I"ve attended her since she was a baby, so I felt I knew her well enough to tell her once again to leave you alone."
Not until the afternoon of the production did Gaisford relax discipline; then he admitted rather grudgingly that Eric might go to the theatre if he refused all invitations to supper and came straight back to bed. He was to dine at home and he would be wise to leave the house before any one could call on him for a speech.
Eric tried to find out whether a box had been reserved for him, but by the time that he had received a reply from the theatre and telephoned to Barbara, she was not to be found. Dinner was an agony which he strove to make as short as possible. Ordinary nervousness was reinforced by bitter contrasts of this evening with the night when "The Bomb-Sh.e.l.l"
was produced. Then Barbara had dined with him and sat in his box, comforting him in the torturing first moments before the play had come into its own; (and he had driven a ring into her poor finger). It had been a night of triumph for them both. Never, before or since, had they been nearer. . . .
He arrived at the Regency early enough to find the house almost empty.
Hiding himself behind the curtains of his box, he watched the familiar audience settling in place, recognizing friends, waving and calling out whispered greetings. Mrs. O"Rane and Colonel Grayle; Lady Poynter and Gerry Deganway; Lady Maitland and one of her boys. . . . He started and drew farther back, though he was already concealed by the curtains.
Barbara had come in with George Oakleigh. They were standing in the gangway, waiting to be shewn their seats. While George disposed of his hat and coat, she threw open her cloak and pinned a bunch of carnations into her dress. They talked for a moment, studied their programmes and began talking again. After a few minutes George produced a pair of opera-gla.s.ses and took a leisurely survey of the house. Barbara looked with careless deliberation at the box from which she had watched "The Bomb-Sh.e.l.l"; seeing no one in it, she looked away as deliberately and glanced at the watch on her wrist.
Eric began to open a pile of telegrams. "Good wishes." "All possible success"; such a tribute had meant much to him when his first play was produced. . . . Two thirds of the stalls were full, though no doubt there would still be enough const.i.tutional late-comers to spoil the first five minutes of the play. Why people could not take the trouble . . . He pulled himself up and went back to the telegrams; he would not live through the evening if he began to excite himself like this. But what he wanted was to have Barbara by his side, to feel her lips at his ear and to catch her whisper of love and encouragement--"It"s going to be a tremendous success! I _will_ it to be!"
He would like to catch her eye. . . . If the first act went even tolerably, he could allow himself to be seen; perhaps she would come and sit with him for the other two. . . .
The lights were lowered, there was a moment"s silence, and the curtain rolled noiselessly up. Eric sat forward with his eyes fixed on the stage. Then, as the first line was spoken, he threw himself back in his chair with a smothered oath. A trim programme-seller was tripping down the gangway with mincing daintiness--down and down to the very front row of the stalls. A party of four stumbled after her, whispering and groping in the darkness, while she gave them programmes and herded them into their seats. There were whispered apologies, as they squeezed in front of their neighbours; whispered thanks as one man stood up, crushing himself back, and another stepped into the gangway to let them pa.s.s. At last they were in place! And then it was time for the two women of the party to whisper again, gesticulating for a redistribution of seats. The men fussed and fidgeted, untying their m.u.f.flers and rolling up their overcoats. And then it was time for all four to rustle their programmes. Every one was looking at them instead of at the stage; there was nothing else to look at! For three minutes they had blocked the view for everybody behind them!
Eric was looking at them himself, first indignant, then startled. . . .
He could guess the ident.i.ty of the first woman, though he could not see her face; of the others there was no doubt. The refraction of the foot-lights shewed him Agnes Waring, with her father in the next seat; on the other side sat Jack. There was no mistaking him; a white circle, the size of a florin, revealed the mark of his scalp wound. . . .
After drawing back instinctively behind his curtain, Eric leaned an inch forward to steal a glance at Barbara. She was in the third row, six feet behind Jack in a direct line; like every one else she had seen the late-comers, she could not have failed to identify Jack. . . . But there was no sign of embarra.s.sment; she did not lower her eyes or affect absorption in her programme; she was looking at the stage. . . . As in "The Bomb-Sh.e.l.l," there came a sudden laugh, sharp as a dog"s bark; it was followed by other single laughs, by a boom of throaty, good-tempered chuckling; and the whole house was warmer. Barbara did not laugh, but her white-gloved hands clapped like a child"s. She stopped suddenly and touched George Oakleigh"s arm, pointing ruefully to a split thumb. Jack Waring sent up a belated rocket of laughter, which started the general laughter again; Eric saw him burying his head, shamefaced, in his hands; Barbara was peeling off the injured glove.
It was conceivable that she had not seen Jack, for she gave no sign of emotion; and, if she had seen him for the first time in more than two years, this would be the strongest emotion of her life. Yet she was watching eagerly, applauding eagerly, wholly engrossed in the play.
Once, when the house was silent and concentrated on the stage, she looked round with her earlier deliberation and let her eyes rest on Eric"s box. He started guiltily before remembering that she could not see him. Next she borrowed George"s gla.s.ses and, after a single glance at the stage, raked the four boxes on either side.
"_I propose to give the thing a trial. Every one must admit that the present position is intolerable._"
The line told Eric that in twenty seconds the curtain would fall. He had hardly any idea how the play was being received, but, obviously, he must not allow any one to see him; he could not stand mouthing inanities to a box full of people when Jack and Barbara were meeting downstairs or when they met--unexpectedly--in his presence. They were within six feet of each other. . . .
And they would meet within six seconds. . . .
There was a burst of sustained applause as the curtain fell. It rose again on the full company, fell and rose again on McGrath and Helen Graye, Constable and Lillian Hartley, Joan Castle and Manders; fell and rose again on Joan Castle and Manders alone. Evidently this play, too, was a success. The lights remained lowered, and the company came forward to take the calls--with the usual pause before Manders made his appearance, the usual extra half-minute"s smiling and bowing. With practised unconcern he looked for a moment toward Eric"s box and then looked away again, as though he had never expected to see any one there.