The Glimpses of the Moon by Edith Wharton (best ereader for pdf .TXT) đź“•
"After all, we owe them this!" she mused.
Her husband, lost in the drowsy beatitude of the hour, had notrepeated his question; but she was still on the trail of thethought he had started. A year--yes, she was sure now thatwith a little management they could have a whole year of it!"It" was their marriage, their being together, and away frombores and bothers, in a comradeship of which both of them hadlong ago guessed the immediate pleasure, but she at least hadnever imagined the deeper harmony.
It was at one of their earliest meetings--at one of theheterogeneous dinners that the Fred Gillows tried to think"literary"--that the young man
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then if you’re alone—and out of a job, just for the moment?”
Susy smiled. “Well, I’m not sure.”
“Oh, but if you are, darling, and you would come to Ruan! I
know Fred asked you didn’t he? And he told me that both you and
Nick had refused. He was awfully huffed at your not coming; but
I suppose that was because Nick had other plans. We couldn’t
have him now, because there’s no room for another gun; but since
he’s not here, and you’re free, why you know, dearest, don’t
you, how we’d love to have you? Fred would be too glad—too
outrageously glad—but you don’t much mind Fred’s love-making,
do you? And you’d be such a help to me—if that’s any argument!
With that big house full of men, and people flocking over every
night to dine, and Fred caring only for sport, and Nerone simply
loathing it and ridiculing it, and not a minute to myself to try
to keep him in a good humour …. Oh, Susy darling, don’t say
no, but let me telephone at once for a place in the train to
morrow night!”
Susy leaned back, letting the ash lengthen on her cigarette.
How familiar, how hatefully familiar, was that old appeal!
Ursula felt the pressing need of someone to flirt with Fred for
a few weeks … and here was the very person she needed. Susy
shivered at the thought. She had never really meant to go to
Ruan. She had simply used the moor as a pretext when Violet
Melrose had gently put her out of doors. Rather than do what
Ursula asked she would borrow a few hundred pounds of Strefford,
as he had suggested, and then look about for some temporary
occupation until—
Until she became Lady Altringham? Well, perhaps. At any rate,
she was not going back to slave for Ursula.
She shook her head with a faint smile. “I’m so sorry, Ursula:
of course I want awfully to oblige you—”
Mrs. Gillow’s gaze grew reproachful. “I should have supposed
you would,” she murmured. Susy, meeting her eyes, looked into
them down a long vista of favours bestowed, and perceived that
Ursula was not the woman to forget on which side the obligation
lay between them.
Susy hesitated: she remembered the weeks of ecstasy she had
owed to the Gillows’ wedding cheque, and it hurt her to appear
ungrateful.
“If I could, Ursula … but really … I’m not free at the
moment.” She paused, and then took an abrupt decision. “The
fact is, I’m waiting here to see Strefford.”
“Strefford’ Lord Altringham?” Ursula stared. “Ah, yes-I
remember. You and he used to be great friends, didn’t you?”
Her roving attention deepened …. But if Susy were waiting to
see Lord Altringham—one of the richest men in England!
Suddenly Ursula opened her gold-meshed bag and snatched a
miniature diary from it.
“But wait a moment—yes, it is next week! I knew it was next
week he’s coming to Ruan! But, you darling, that makes
everything all right. You’ll send him a wire at once, and come
with me tomorrow, and meet him there instead of in this nasty
sloppy desert …. Oh, Susy, if you knew how hard life is for
me in Scotland between the Prince and Fred you couldn’t possibly
say no!”
Susy still wavered; but, after all, if Strefford were really
bound for Ruan, why not see him there, agreeably and at leisure,
instead of spending a dreary day with him in roaming the wet
London streets, or screaming at him through the rattle of a
restaurant orchestra? She knew he would not be likely to
postpone his visit to Ruan in order to linger in London with
her: such concessions had never been his way, and were less
than ever likely to be, now that he could do so thoroughly and
completely as he pleased.
For the first time she fully understood how different his
destiny had become. Now of course all his days and hours were
mapped out in advance: invitations assailed him, opportunities
pressed on him, he had only to choose …. And the women! She
had never before thought of the women. All the girls in England
would be wanting to marry him, not to mention her own
enterprising compatriots. And there were the married women, who
were even more to be feared. Streff might, for the time, escape
marriage; though she could guess the power of persuasion, family
pressure, all the converging traditional influences he had so
often ridiculed, yet, as she knew, had never completely thrown
off …. Yes, those quiet invisible women at Altringham-his
uncle’s widow, his mother, the spinster sisters—it was not
impossible that, with tact and patience—and the stupidest women
could be tactful and patient on such occasions—they might
eventually persuade him that it was his duty, they might put
just the right young loveliness in his way …. But meanwhile,
now, at once, there were the married women. Ah, they wouldn’t
wait, they were doubtless laying their traps already! Susy
shivered at the thought. She knew too much about the way the
trick was done, had followed, too often, all the sinuosities of
such approaches. Not that they were very sinuous nowadays:
more often there was just a swoop and a pounce when the time
came; but she knew all the arts and the wiles that led up to it.
She knew them, oh, how she knew them—though with Streff, thank
heaven, she had never been called upon to exercise them! His
love was there for the asking: would she not be a fool to
refuse it?
Perhaps; though on that point her mind still wavered. But at
any rate she saw that, decidedly, it would be better to yield to
Ursula’s pressure; better to meet him at Ruan, in a congenial
setting, where she would have time to get her bearings, observe
what dangers threatened him, and make up her mind whether, after
all, it was to be her mission to save him from the other women.
“Well, if you like, then, Ursula ….”
“Oh, you angel, you! I’m so glad! We’ll go to the nearest post
office, and send off the wire ourselves.”
As they got into the motor Mrs. Gillow seized Susy’s arm with a
pleading pressure. “And you will let Fred make love to you a
little, won’t you, darling?”
XVIII“BUT I can’t think,” said Ellie Vanderlyn earnestly, “why you
don’t announce your engagement before waiting for your divorce.
People are beginning to do it, I assure you—it’s so much
safer!”
Mrs. Vanderlyn, on the way back from St. Moritz to England, had
paused in Paris to renew the depleted wardrobe which, only two
months earlier, had filled so many trunks to bursting. Other
ladies, flocking there from all points of the globe for the same
purpose, disputed with her the Louis XVI suites of the Nouveau
Luxe, the pink-candled tables in the restaurant, the hours for
trying-on at the dressmakers’; and just because they were so
many, and all feverishly fighting to get the same things at the
same time, they were all excited, happy and at ease. It was the
most momentous period of the year: the height of the “dress
makers’ season.”
Mrs. Vanderlyn had run across Susy Lansing at one of the Rue de
la Paix openings, where rows of ladies wan with heat and emotion
sat for hours in rapt attention while spectral apparitions in
incredible raiment tottered endlessly past them on aching feet.
Distracted from the regal splendours of a chinchilla cloak by
the sense that another lady was also examining it, Mrs.
Vanderlyn turned in surprise at sight of Susy, whose head was
critically bent above the fur.
“Susy! I’d no idea you were here! I saw in the papers that you
were with the Gillows.” The customary embraces followed; then
Mrs. Vanderlyn, her eyes pursuing the matchless cloak as it
disappeared down a vista of receding mannequins, interrogated
sharply: “Are you shopping for Ursula? If you mean to order
that cloak for her I’d rather know.”
Susy smiled, and paused a moment before answering. During the
pause she took in all the exquisite details of Ellie Vanderlyn’s
perpetually youthful person, from the plumed crown of her head
to the perfect arch of her patent-leather shoes. At last she
said quietly: “No—to-day I’m shopping for myself.”
“Yourself? Yourself?” Mrs. Vanderlyn echoed with a stare of
incredulity.
“Yes; just for a change,” Susy serenely acknowledged.
“But the cloak—I meant the chinchilla cloak … the one with
the ermine lining ….”
“Yes; it is awfully good, isn’t it? But I mean to look
elsewhere before I decide.”
Ah, how often she had heard her friends use that phrase; and how
amusing it was, now, to see Ellie’s amazement as she heard it
tossed off in her own tone of contemptuous satiety! Susy was
becoming more and more dependent on such diversions; without
them her days, crowded as they were, would nevertheless have
dragged by heavily. But it still amused her to go to the big
dressmakers’, watch the mannequins sweep by, and be seen by her
friends superciliously examining all the most expensive dresses
in the procession. She knew the rumour was abroad that she and
Nick were to be divorced, and that Lord Altringham was “devoted”
to her. She neither confirmed nor denied the report: she just
let herself be luxuriously carried forward on its easy tide.
But although it was now three months since Nick had left the
Palazzo Vanderlyn she had not yet written to him-nor he to her.
Meanwhile, in spite of all that she packed into them, the days
passed more and more slowly, and the excitements she had counted
on no longer excited her. Strefford was hers: she knew that he
would marry her as soon as she was free. They had been together
at Ruan for ten days, and after that she had motored south with
him, stopping on the way to see Altringham, from which, at the
moment, his mourning relatives were absent.
At Altringham they had parted; and after one or two more visits
in England she had come back to Paris, where he was now about to
join her. After her few hours at Altringham she had understood
that he would wait for her as long as was necessary: the fear
of the “other women” had ceased to trouble her. But, perhaps
for that very reason, the future seemed less exciting than she
had expected. Sometimes she thought it was the sight of that
great house which had overwhelmed her: it was too vast, too
venerable, too like a huge monument built of ancient territorial
traditions and obligations. Perhaps it had been lived in for
too long by too many serious-minded and conscientious women:
somehow she could not picture it invaded by bridge and debts and
adultery. And yet that was what would have to be, of course …
she could hardly picture either Strefford or herself continuing
there the life of heavy county responsibilities, dull parties,
laborious duties, weekly church-going, and presiding over local
committees …. What a pity they couldn’t sell it and have a
little house on the Thames!
Nevertheless she was not sorry to let it be known that
Altringham was hers when she chose to take it. At times she
wondered whether Nick knew … whether rumours had reached him.
If they had, he had only his own letter to thank for it. He had
told her what course to pursue; and she was pursuing it.
For a moment the meeting with Ellie Vanderlyn had been a shock
to her; she had hoped never to see Ellie again. But now that
they were actually
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