“I know this place; I’ll take you for a walk where you won’t get your shoes wet. Shall I?” he suggested, with all his guile and cunning quite plain to Thessalie, and his purpose perfectly transparent to her smiling eyes.
But she consented prettily, and went with him without demurring, picking her way over the stepping-stone walk with downcast gaze and the trace of a smile on her lips — a smile as delicately indefinable as the fancy which moved her to accept this young man’s headlong advances — which had recognized them and accepted them from the first. But why, she did not even yet understand.
“Agreeable weather, isn’t it?” said Westmore, fatuously revealing his present paucity of ideas apart from those which concerned the wooing of her. And he was an intelligent young man at that, and a sculptor of attainment, too. But now, in his infatuated head, there remained room only for one thought, the thought of this girl who walked so demurely and daintily beside him over the flat, grass-set stepping stones toward the three white pines on the little hill.
For it had been something or other at first sight with Westmore — love, perhaps — anyway that is what he called the mental chaos which now disorganised him. And it was certain that something happened to him the first time he laid eyes on Thessalie Dunois. He knew it, and she could not avoid seeing it, so entirely naïve his behaviour, so utterly guileless his manoeuvres, so direct, unfeigned and childish his methods of approach.
At moments she felt nervous and annoyed by his behaviour; at other times apprehensive and helpless, as though she were responsible for something that did not know how to take care of itself — something immature, irrational, and entirely at her mercy. And it may have been the feminine response to this increasing sense of obligation — the confused instinct to guide, admonish and protect — that began being the matter with her.
Anyway, from the beginning the man had a certain fascination for her, unwillingly divined on her part, yet specifically agreeable even to the point of exhilaration. Also, somehow or other, the girl realised he had a brain.
And yet he was a pitiably hopeless case; for even now he was saying such things as:
“Are you quite sure that your feet are dry? I should never forgive myself, Thessa, if you took cold.... Are you tired?... How wonderful it is to be here alone with you, and strive to interpret the mystery of your mind and heart! Sit here under the pines. I’ll spread my coat for you.... Nature is wonderful, isn’t it, Thessa?”
And when she gravely consented to seat herself he dropped recklessly onto the wet pine needles at her feet, and spoke with imbecile delight again of nature — of how wonderful were its protean manifestations, and how its beauties were not meant to be enjoyed alone but in mystic communion with another who understood.
It was curious, too, but this stuff seemed to appeal to her, some commonplace chord within her evidently responding. She sighed and looked at the mountains. They really were miracles of colour — masses of purest cobalt, now, along the horizon.
But perhaps the trite things they uttered did not really matter; probably it made no difference to them what they said. And even if he had murmured: “There are milestones along the road to Dover,” she might have responded: “There was an old woman who lived in a shoe”; and neither of them would have heard anything at all except the rapid, confused, and voiceless conversation of two youthful human hearts beating out endless questions and answers that never moved their smiling lips. There was the mystery, if any — the constant wireless current under the haphazard flow of words.
There was no wind in the pines; meadow and pasture, woodland and swale stretched away at their feet to the distant, dark-blue hills. And all around them hung the rain-washed fragrance of midsummer under a still, cloudless sky.
“It seems impossible that there can be war anywhere in the world,” she said.
“You know,” he began, “it’s getting on my nerves the way those swine from the Rhine are turning this decent green world into a bloody wallow! Unless we do something about it pretty soon, I think I’ll go over.”
She looked up:
“Where?”
“To France.”
She remained silent for a while, merely lifting her dark eyes to him at intervals; then she grew preoccupied with other thoughts that left her brows bent slightly inward and her mouth very grave.
He gazed reflectively out over the fields and woods:
“Yes, I can’t stand it much longer,” he mused aloud.
“What would you do there?” she inquired.
“Anything. I could drive a car. But if they’ll take me in some Canadian unit — or one of the Foreign Legions — it would suit me.... You know a man can’t go on just living in the world while this beastly business continues — can’t go on eating and sleeping and shaving and dressing as though half of civilisation were not rolling in agony and blood, stabbed through and through — —”
His voice caught — he checked himself and slowly passed his hand over his smoothly shaven face.
“Those splendid poilus,” he said; “where they stand we Americans ought to be standing, too.... God knows why we hesitate.... I can’t tell you what we think.... Some of us — don’t agree — with the Administration.”
His jaws snapped on the word; he stared out through the sunshine at the swallows, now skimming the uncut hay fields in their gusty evening flight.
“Are you really going?” she asked, at length.
“Yes. I’ll wait a little while longer to see what my country is going to do. If it doesn’t stir during the next month or two, I shall go. I think Garry will go, too.”
She nodded.
“Of course,” he remarked, “we’d prefer our own flag, Garry and I. But if it is to remain furled — —” He shrugged, picked a spear of grass, and sat brooding and breaking it into tiny pieces.
“The only thing that troubles me,” he went on presently, keeping his gaze riveted on his busy fingers, “the only thing that worries me is you!”
“Me?” she exclaimed softly. And an inexplicable little thrill shot through her.
“You,” he repeated. “You worry me to death.”
She considered him a moment, her lips parted as though she were about to say something, but it remained unsaid, and a slight colour came into her cheeks.
“What am I to do about you?” he went on, apparently addressing the blade of grass he was staring at. “I can’t leave you as matters stand.”
She said:
“Please, you are not responsible for me, are you?” And tried to laugh, but scarcely smiled.
“I want to be,” he muttered. “I desire to be entirely — —”
“Thank you. You have been more than kind. And very soon I hope I shall be on happy terms with my own Government again. Then your solicitude should cease.”
“If your Government listens to reason — —”
“Then I also could go to France!” she interrupted. “Merely to think of it excites me beyond words!”
He looked up quickly:
“You wish to go back?”
“Of course!”
“Why?”
“How can you ask that! If you had been a disgraced exile as I have been, as I still am — and falsely accused of shameful things — annoyed, hounded, blackmailed, offered bribes, constantly importuned to become what I am not — a traitor to my own people — would you not be wildly happy to be proven innocent? Would you not be madly impatient to return and prove your devotion to your own land?”
“I understand,” he said in a low voice.
“Of course you understand. Do you imagine that I, a French girl, would have remained here in shameful security if I could have gone back to France and helped? I would have done anything — anything, I tell you — scrubbed the floors of hospitals, worked my fingers to the bone — —”
“I’ll wait till you go,” he said.... “They’ll clear your record very soon, I expect. I’ll wait. And we’ll go together. Shall we, Thessa?”
But she h
ad not seemed to hear him; her dark eyes grew remote, her gaze swept the sapphire distance. It was his hand laid lightly over hers that aroused her, and she withdrew her fingers with a frown of remonstrance.
“Won’t you let me speak?” he said. “Won’t you let me tell you what my heart tells me?”
She shook her head slowly:
“I don’t desire to hear yet — I don’t know where my own heart — or even my mind is — or what I think about — anything. Please be reasonable.” She stole a look at him to see how he was taking it, and there was concern enough in her glance to give him a certain amount of hope had he noticed it.
“You like me, Thessa, don’t you?” he urged.
“Have I not admitted it? Do you know that you are becoming a serious responsibility to me? You worry me, too! You are like a boy with all your emotions reflected on your features and every thought perfectly unconcealed and every impulse followed by unconsidered behaviour.
“Be reasonable. I have asked it a hundred times of you in vain. I shall ask it, probably, innumerable times before you comply with my request. Don’t show so plainly that you imagine yourself in love. It embarrasses me, it annoys Garry, and I don’t know what his family will think — —”
“But if I am in love, why not — —”
“Does one advertise all one’s most intimate and secret and — and sacred emotions?” she interrupted in sudden and breathless annoyance. “It is not the way that successful courtship is conducted, I warn you! It is not delicate, it is not considerate, it is not sensible.... And I do want you to — to be always — sensible and considerate. I want to like you.”
He looked at her in a sort of dazed way:
“I’ll try to please you,” he said. “But it seems to confuse me — being so suddenly bowled over — a thing like that rather knocks a man out — so unexpected, you know! — and there isn’t much use pretending,” he went on excitedly. “I can’t see anybody else in the world except you! I can’t think of anybody else! I’m madly in love — blindly, desperately — —”
“Oh, please, please!” she remonstrated. “I’m not a girl to be taken by storm! I’ve seen too much — lived too much! I’m not a Tzigane to be galloped alongside of and swung to a man’s saddle-bow! Also, I shall tell you one thing more. Happiness and laughter are necessities to me! And they seem to be becoming extinct in you.”
“Hang it!” he demanded tragically, “how can I laugh when I’m in love!”
At that a sudden, irresponsible little peal of laughter parted her lips.
“Oh, dear!” she said, “you are funny! Is it a matter of prayer and fasting, then, this gloomy sentiment which you say you entertain for me? I don’t know whether to be flattered or vexed — you are so funny!” And her laughter rang out again, clear and uncontrolled.
The girl was quite irresistible in her care-free gaiety; her lovely face and delicious laughter no man could utterly withstand, and presently a faint grin became visible on his features.
“Now,” she cried gaily, “you are becoming human and not a Grecian mask or a gargoyle! Remain so, mon ami, if you expect me to wish you good luck in your love — your various affairs — —” She blushed as she checked herself. But he said very quickly:
“Will you wish me luck, Thessa, in my various love affairs?”
“How many have you on hand?”
“Exactly one. Do you wish me a sporting chance? Do you, Thessa?”
“Why — yes — —”
“Will you wish me good luck in my courtship of you?”
The quick colour again swept her cheeks at that, but she laughed defiantly:
“Yes,” she said, “I wish you luck in that, also. Only remember this — whether you win or lose you must laugh. That is good sportsmanship. Do you promise? Very well! Then I wish you the best of luck in your — various — courtships! And may the girl you win at least know how to laugh!”
“She certainly does,” he said so naïvely that they both gave way to laughter again, finding each other delightfully absurd.
“It’s the key to my heart, laughter — in case you are looking for the key,” she said daringly. “The world is a grim scaffold, mon ami; mount it gaily and go to the far gods laughing. Tell me, is there a better way to go?”
“No; it’s the right way, Thessa. I shan’t be a gloom any more. Come on; let’s walk! What if you do get your bally shoes wet! I’m through mooning and fussing and worrying over you, young lady! You’re as sturdy and vigorous as I am. After all, it’s a comrade a man wants in the world — not a white mouse in cotton batting! Come! Are you going for a brisk walk across country? Or are you a white mouse?”
She stood up in her dainty shoes and frail gown and cast a glance of hurt reproach at him.
“Don’t be brutal,” she said. “I’m not dressed to climb trees and fences with you.”
“You won’t come?”
Their eyes met in silent conflict for a few moments. Then she said: “Please don’t make me.... It’s such a darling gown, Jim.”
A wave of deep happiness enveloped him and he laughed: “All right,” he said, “I won’t ask you to spoil your frock!” And he spread his coat on the pine needles for her once more.
She considered the situation for a few moments before she sat down. But she did seat herself.
“Now,” he said, “we are going to discuss a situation. This is the situation: I am deeply in love. And you’re quite right, it’s no funeral; it’s a joyous thing to be in love. It’s a delight, a gaiety, a happy enchantment. Isn’t it?”
She cast a rather shy and apprehensive glance at him, but nodded slightly.
“Very well,” he said, “I’m in love, and I’m happy and proud to be in love. What I wish then, naturally, is marriage, a home, children — —”
“Please, Jim!”
“But I can’t have ‘em! Why? Because I’m going to France. And the girl I wish to marry is going also. And while I bang away at the boche she makes herself useful in canteens, rest-houses, hospitals, orphanages, everywhere, in fact, where she is needed.”
“Yes.”
“And after it’s all over — all over — and ended — —”
“Yes?”
“Then — then if she finds out that she loves me — —”
“Yes, Jim — if she finds that out.... And thank you for — asking me — so sweetly.”... She turned sharply and looked out over a valley suddenly blurred.
For it had been otherwise with her in years gone by, and men had spoken then quite as plainly but differently. Only d’Eblis, burnt out, done for, and obsessed, had wearily and unwillingly advanced that far.... And Ferez, too; but that was unthinkable of a creature in whom virtue and vice were of the same virus.
Looking blindly out over the valley she said:
“If my Government deals justly with me, then I shall go to France with you as your comrade. If I ever find that I love you I will be your wife.... Until then — —” She stretched out her hand, not looking around at him; and they exchanged a quick, firm clasp.
And so matters progressed between, these two — rather ominously for Barres, in case he entertained any really serious sentiments in regard to Thessalie. And, recently, he had been vaguely conscious that he entertained something or other concerning the girl which caused him to look with slight amazement and unsympathetic eyes upon the all too obvious behaviour of his comrade Westmore.
At present he was standing in the summer house which terminated the blossoming tunnel of the rose arbour, watching water falling into a stone basin from the fishy mouth of a wall fountain, and wondering where Thessalie and Westmore had gone.
Dulcie, in a thin white frock and leghorn hat, roaming entranced and at hazard over lawn and through shrubbery and garden, encountered him there, still squinting abstractedly at the water spout.
It was the first time the girl had seen him since their arrival at Foreland Farms. And now, as she paused under the canopy of fragrant rain-drenched roses and looked at th
is man who had made all this possible for her, she suddenly felt the change within herself, fitting her for it all — a subtle metamorphosis completing itself within her — the final accomplishment of a transmutation, deep, radical, permanent.
For her, the stark, starved visage which Life had worn had relaxed; in the grim, forbidding wall which had closed her horizon, a door opened, showing a corner of a world where she knew, somehow, she belonged.
And in her heart, too, a door seemed to open, and her youthful soul stepped out of it, naked, fearless, quite certain of itself and, for the first time during their brief and earthly partnership, quite certain of the body wherein it dwelt.
He was thinking of Thessalie when Dulcie came up and stood beside him, looking down into the water where a few goldfish swam.
“Well, Sweetness,” he said, brightening, “you look very wonderful in white, with that big hat on your very enchanting red hair.”
“I feel both wonderful and enchanted,” she said, lifting her eyes. “I shall live in the country some day.”
“Really?” he said smiling.
“Yes, when I earn enough money. Do you remember the crazy way Strindberg rolls around? Well, I feel like doing it on that lawn.”
“Go ahead and do it,” he urged. But she only laughed and chased the goldfish around the basin with gentle fingers.
“Dulcie,” he said, “you’re unfolding, you’re blossoming, you’re developing feminine snap and go and pep and je-ne-sais-quoi.”
“You’re teasing. But I believe I’m very feminine — and mature — though you don’t think so.”
“Well, I don’t think you’re exactly at an age called well-preserved,” he said, laughing. He took her hands and drew her up to confront him. “You’re not too old to have me as a playmate, Sweetness, are you?”
She seemed to be doubtful.
“What! Nonsense! And you’re not too old to be bullied and coaxed and petted — —”
“Yes, I am.”
“And you’re not too old to pose for me — —”
She grew pink and looked down at the submerged goldfish. And, keeping her eyes there:
Works of Robert W Chambers Page 883