That pa.s.sed too quickly, too soon she was Lucinda Druce once more, grown up and married, disillusioned....
And with a shiver of pain Lucinda realized anew what the afternoon with its unsought boons of novelty and diversion had made her for hours on end forget, the secret dolour of her heart.
X
Notwithstanding that she drove directly home, or paused only to drop Daubeney at his club and the Lontaines at their hotel, it was after seven when Lucinda regained her rooms and was free at last to be once more her simple self, disembarra.s.sed of the pride and circ.u.mstance that stayed the public personality of Mrs. Bellamy Druce.
Out of that social character she stepped as naturally as out of her gown, and with much the same sense of relief, in the easing of that tension to which she had been keyed all afternoon. Even at the studio, when interest in that quaint, ephemeral environment of other lives had rendered her forgetful of both self and the pa.s.sage of time, subconsciously the strain of keeping up appearances had been still constant and made unremitting demands upon her stores of fort.i.tude and nervous energy.
But she counted that cost not exorbitant, seeing the immunity it had purchased.
Dobbin alone had not been taken in....
She began to be a bit afraid of Dobbin. A danger signal she had the wit to apprehend in its right value. The woman who pretends to be afraid is setting a snare, but she who is truly afraid is herself already in the toils.
Dobbin saw too much, too deeply and clearly, and let her know it in a way that not only disarmed resentment but made her strangely willing to let him see more. She to whom reserve was as an article of faith! But if the woman in love with her husband knew she had no right to foster an intimacy, however innocent, with any other man, the woman hara.s.sed and half-distracted was too hungry for sympathetic understanding not to be tempted when it offered, grateful for it and disinclined to pa.s.s it by.
This common life is unending quest for spiritual companionship--and love is the delusion that one has found it.
At twenty-six Lucinda was learning what life often takes twice that tale to teach, that though flesh must cleave unto flesh, the soul is lost unless it walk alone, creature and creator in one of its own bleak isolation.
In a moment of clear vision she promised herself to go warily with Dobbin....
And in the next, the telephone rang in the boudoir. Lucinda was in her bath, so her maid answered for her, and presently came to report: Mr.
Druce had called up to say he wouldn't be dining at home that night, he was detained by a "conference."
Without looking, Lucinda knew that the woman's eyes were demure, her lips twitching.
Her just anger of that afternoon recurred with strength redoubled.
Not that she had been looking forward with any eagerness to the evening, the "quiet" dinner during which Bel would defiantly continue his tippling, the subsequent hours at the opera poisoned by forebodings, the homeward drive in antagonized silence, finally the trite old scene behind closed doors, of the piqued wife and the peccant husband, with its threadbare business of lies, aggrieved innocence, attempts at self-extenuation, ultimate collapse and confession, tears of penitence and empty promises ... and her own spirit failing and in the end yielding to Bel's importunity, out of sheer weariness and want of hope.
It had been sad enough to have all that to antic.i.p.ate. To be left in this fashion, at loose ends, not knowing what to expect, except the worst, was too much.
On leaving her bath Lucinda delayed only long enough to shrug into a dressing-gown before going to the telephone.
The voice that responded to her call said it thought Mr. Daubeney had just left the club, but if madame would hold the wire it would make sure.
She knew a moment of pure exasperation with the evident conspiracy of every circ.u.mstance in her despite.
Then the apparatus at her ear p.r.o.nounced in crisp impatience: "Yes? This is Mr. Daubeney. Who wants him, please?"
"Oh, Dobbin! I'm so glad."
"You, Cinda!" The instantaneous change of tone would have been laughable if it hadn't been worse, the cause of a little flutter of forbidden delight. "Why, bless your soul! I'm glad I came back. They barely caught me at the door."
"Were you in a hurry to get on somewhere, Dobbin? I mean, am I detaining you?"
"Not a bit. Foolishly staggering out to try to find some place where the cooking was less perfunctory than here at the club."
"Sure you've got nothing important on?"
"If you must know, I was wondering what to do with a lonely evening."
"Then that makes two of us. Why can't we join forces and be miserable together?"
"With you? I'll do my best, but I don't promise.... What's up?"
"Oh, everything, more or less. I'm in a villainous temper, Dobbin, and you'll be a dear if you'll come and dine with me--Bel's telephoned he won't be home--talk me into a decent humour and take me to the opera.
And then--I don't care what we do!"
"Well, if you're half as reckless as you try to make out, you certainly need somebody to keep you from kicking over the traces."
"Then you will come?"
"Stop pretending to be stupid. When?"
"As soon as you like."
Later, seated at her dressing-table, adding those deft touches whose secret one woman in ten thousand knows, touches which lift an evening toilette out of the ruck of commonplace prettiness and render it wholly sorcerous, Lucinda caught in her mirror an odd look of dubious speculation on the face of the maid who waited by her shoulder.
Half an hour earlier such a look would have irritated, now its impertinence had no more effect than to make Lucinda smile illegibly at her image in the gla.s.s. What did it matter what questions might be taking form in that shallow mind? If Bel could afford to ignore the gossip of servants, that had its source in knowledge of his escapades no doubt infinitely more detailed and precise than she might ever hope or fear to gain--why, so could Bel's wife afford to go her own way and let this scandal-mongering world go hang.
Whether or not she could afford it, she meant henceforward to make her own life--as Bel did, as everybody did--and an end to this drifting with the winds of forlorn and fading hopes. She was too young, too proud, too richly warmed by ardent wine of life, to accept without a murmur affronts and slights such as were now her daily portion, without a struggle reconcile herself to the estate of the outworn wife, tolerated mainly as an ornamental prop to the dignity of the house of Druce.
Bel should learn....
Poised lightly before the cheval-gla.s.s for the final inspection from head to foot, she perceived that she had never made herself lovelier for Bel; and Dobbin's spontaneous tribute as she entered the drawing-room agreeably confirmed this judgment.
"Heavens, Cinda! how do you do it?"
"Like the way I look tonight?"
"Like! It's unfair, it's premeditated cruelty, monstrous! You ought to be ashamed of yourself to look like that to a man who's having a tough-enough fight with himself as it is."
"Fraud," Lucinda commented coolly. "You know you fancy yourself no end in the role of the luckless lover, you'd be scared silly if I gave you any reason to fear you'd ever have another part to play."
"Try me and see."
"No fear. I like you too well as you are. The part fits you to perfection, you do play it beautifully. Please don't ever stop: I love it."
"Imp! You need a good shaking. Don't you know you're flirting with me?"
"Do you mind?"