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“Well, my dear, we’ll see it through between us; you and I-and
Clarissa,” he said with his rasping laugh, rising to follow her.
He caught her hand and gave it a short pressure as they re-entered the drawing-room, where Ellie was saying plaintively to
Fred Gillow: “I can never hear that thing sung without wanting
to cry like a baby.”
IX.
NELSON VANDERLYN, still in his travelling clothes, paused on the
threshold of his own dining-room and surveyed the scene with
pardonable satisfaction.
He was a short round man, with a grizzled head, small facetious
eyes and a large and credulous smile.
At the luncheon table sat his wife, between Charlie Strefford
and Nick Lansing. Next to Strefford, perched on her high chair,
Clarissa throned in infant beauty, while Susy Lansing cut up a
peach for her. Through wide orange awnings the sun slanted in
upon the white-clad group.
“Well—well—well! So I’ve caught you at it!” cried the happy
father, whose inveterate habit it was to address his wife and
friends as if he had surprised them at an inopportune moment.
Stealing up from behind, he lifted his daughter into the air,
while a chorus of “Hello, old Nelson,” hailed his appearance.
It was two or three years since Nick Lansing had seen Mr.
Vanderlyn, who was now the London representative of the big New
York bank of Vanderlyn & Co., and had exchanged his sumptuous
house in Fifth Avenue for another, more sumptuous still, in
Mayfair; and the young man looked curiously and attentively at
his host.
Mr. Vanderlyn had grown older and stouter, but his face still
kept its look of somewhat worn optimism. He embraced his wife,
greeted Susy affectionately, and distributed cordial hand-grasps
to the two men.
“Hullo,” he exclaimed, suddenly noticing a pearl and coral
trinket hanging from Clarissa’s neck. “Who’s been giving my
daughter jewellery, I’d like to know!”
“Oh, Streffy did—just think, father! Because I said I’d rather
have it than a book, you know,” Clarissa lucidly explained, her
arms tight about her father’s neck, her beaming eyes on
Strefford.
Nelson Vanderlyn’s own eyes took on the look of shrewdness which
came into them whenever there was a question of material values.
“What, Streffy? Caught you at it, eh? Upon my soul-spoiling
the brat like that! You’d no business to, my dear chap-a
lovely baroque pearl—” he protested, with the half-apologetic
tone of the rich man embarrassed by too costly a gift from an
impecunious friend.
“Oh, hadn’t I? Why? Because it’s too good for Clarissa, or too
expensive for me? Of course you daren’t imply the first; and as
for me—I’ve had a windfall, and am blowing it in on the
ladies.”
Strefford, Lansing had noticed, always used American slang when
he was slightly at a loss, and wished to divert attention from
the main point. But why was he embarrassed, whose attention did
he wish to divert, It was plain that Vanderlyn’s protest had
been merely formal: like most of the wealthy, he had only the
dimmest notion of what money represented to the poor. But it
was unusual for Strefford to give any one a present, and
especially an expensive one: perhaps that was what had fixed
Vanderlyn’s attention.
“A windfall?” he gaily repeated.
“Oh, a tiny one: I was offered a thumping rent for my little
place at Como, and dashed over here to squander my millions with
the rest of you,” said Strefford imperturbably.
Vanderlyn’s look immediately became interested and sympathetic.
“What—the scene of the honeymoon?” He included Nick and Susy
in his friendly smile.
“Just so: the reward of virtue. I say, give me a cigar, will
you, old man, I left some awfully good ones at Como, worse
luck—and I don’t mind telling you that Ellie’s no judge of
tobacco, and that Nick’s too far gone in bliss to care what he
smokes,” Strefford grumbled, stretching a hand toward his host’s
cigar-case.
“I do like jewellery best,” Clarissa murmured, hugging her
father.
Nelson Vanderlyn’s first word to his wife had been that he had
brought her all her toggery; and she had welcomed him with
appropriate enthusiasm. In fact, to the lookers-on her joy at
seeing him seemed rather too patently in proportion to her
satisfaction at getting her clothes. But no such suspicion
appeared to mar Mr. Vanderlyn’s happiness in being, for once,
and for nearly twenty-four hours, under the same roof with his
wife and child. He did not conceal his regret at having
promised his mother to join her the next day; and added, with a
wistful glance at Ellie: “If only I’d known you meant to wait
for me!”
But being a man of duty, in domestic as well as business
affairs, he did not even consider the possibility of
disappointing the exacting old lady to whom he owed his being.
“Mother cares for so few people,” he used to say, not without a
touch of filial pride in the parental exclusiveness, “that I
have to be with her rather more than if she were more sociable”;
and with smiling resignation he gave orders that Clarissa should
be ready to start the next evening.
“And meanwhile,” he concluded, “we’ll have all the good time
that’s going.”
The ladies of the party seemed united in the desire to further
this resolve; and it was settled that as soon as Mr. Vanderlyn
had despatched a hasty luncheon, his wife, Clarissa and Susy
should carry him off for a tea-picnic at Torcello. They did not
even suggest that Strefford or Nick should be of the party, or
that any of the other young men of the group should be summoned;
as Susy said, Nelson wanted to go off alone with his harem. And
Lansing and Strefford were left to watch the departure of the
happy Pasha ensconced between attentive beauties.
“Well—that’s what you call being married!” Strefford
commented, waving his battered Panama at Clarissa.
“Oh, no, I don’t!” Lansing laughed.
“He does. But do you know—” Strefford paused and swung about
on his companion—“do you know, when the Rude Awakening comes, I
don’t care to be there. I believe there’ll be some crockery
broken.”
“Shouldn’t wonder,” Lansing answered indifferently. He wandered
away to his own room, leaving Strefford to philosophize to his
pipe.
Lansing had always known about poor old Nelson: who hadn’t,
except poor old Nelson? The case had once seemed amusing
because so typical; now, it rather irritated Nick that Vanderlyn
should be so complete an ass. But he would be off the next day,
and so would Ellie, and then, for many enchanted weeks, the
palace would once more be the property of Nick and Susy. Of all
the people who came and went in it, they were the only ones who
appreciated it, or knew how it was meant to be lived in; and
that made it theirs in the only valid sense. In this light it
became easy to regard the Vanderlyns as mere transient
intruders.
Having relegated them to this convenient distance, Lansing shut
himself up with his book. He had returned to it with fresh
energy after his few weeks of holiday-making, and was determined
to finish it quickly. He did not expect that it would bring in
much money; but if it were moderately successful it might give
him an opening in the reviews and magazines, and in that case he
meant to abandon archaeology for novels, since it was only as a
purveyor of fiction that he could count on earning a living for
himself and Susy.
Late in the afternoon he laid down his pen and wandered out of
doors. He loved the increasing heat of the Venetian summer, the
bruised peach-tints of worn house-fronts, the enamelling of
sunlight on dark green canals, the smell of half-decayed fruits
and flowers thickening the languid air. What visions he could
build, if he dared, of being tucked away with Susy in the attic
of some tumble-down palace, above a jade-green waterway, with a
terrace overhanging a scrap of neglected garden—and cheques
from the publishers dropping in at convenient intervals! Why
should they not settle in Venice if he pulled it off!
He found himself before the church of the Scalzi, and pushing
open the leathern door wandered up the nave under the whirl of
rose-and-lemon angels in Tiepolo’s great vault. It was not a
church in which one was likely to run across sight-seers; but he
presently remarked a young lady standing alone near the choir,
and assiduously applying her field-glass to the celestial
vortex, from which she occasionally glanced down at an open
manual.
As Lansing’s step sounded on the pavement, the young lady,
turning, revealed herself as Miss Hicks.
“Ah—you like this too? It’s several centuries out of your
line, though, isn’t it!” Nick asked as they shook hands.
She gazed at him gravely. “Why shouldn’t one like things that
are out of one’s line?” she answered; and he agreed, with a
laugh, that it was often an incentive.
She continued to fix her grave eyes on him, and after one or two
remarks about the Tiepolos he perceived that she was feeling her
way toward a subject of more personal interest.
“I’m glad to see you alone,” she said at length, with an
abruptness that might have seemed awkward had it not been so
completely unconscious. She turned toward a cluster of straw
chairs, and signed to Nick to seat himself beside her.
“I seldom do,” she added, with the serious smile that made her
heavy face almost handsome; and she went on, giving him no time
to protest: “I wanted to speak to you—to explain about
father’s invitation to go with us to Persia and Turkestan.”
“To explain?”
“Yes. You found the letter when you arrived here just after
your marriage, didn’t you? You must have thought it odd, our
asking you just then; but we hadn’t heard that you were
married.”
“Oh, I guessed as much: it happened very quietly, and I was
remiss about announcing it, even to old friends.”
Lansing frowned. His thoughts had wandered away to the evening
when he had found Mrs. Hicks’s letter in the mail awaiting him
at Venice. The day was associated in his mind with the
ridiculous and mortifying episode of the cigars—the expensive
cigars that Susy had wanted to carry away from Strefford’s
villa. Their brief exchange of views on the subject had left
the first blur on the perfect surface of his happiness, and he
still felt an uncomfortable heat at the remembrance. For a few
hours the prospect of life with Susy had seemed unendurable; and
it was just at that moment that he had found the letter from
Mrs. Hicks, with its almost irresistible invitation. If only
her daughter had known how nearly he had accepted it!
“It was a dreadful temptation,” he said, smiling.
“To go with us? Then why—?”
“Oh, everything’s different now: I’ve got to stick to my
writing.”
Miss Hicks still bent on him the same unblinking scrutiny.
“Does that mean that you’re going to give up your real work?”
“My real work—archaeology?” He smiled again to hide a twitch
of regret. “Why, I’m afraid it hardly produces a living wage;
and I’ve got to think of that.” He coloured suddenly, as if
suspecting that Miss Hicks might consider the avowal an opening
for he hardly knew what ponderous offer of aid. The Hicks
munificence was too uncalculating not to be occasionally
oppressive. But looking at her again he saw that her eyes were
full of tears.
“I thought it was your vocation,” she said.
“So did I. But life comes along, and upsets things.”
“Oh, I
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