VIII
“Yes,” I said, “I am to meet the Charterises in Genoa. Yes, it is rather sudden. I am off tomorrow. I shall not see you dear good people for some time, I fancy. …”
When Hardress had gone the woman said in a stifled voice: “No, I will not dance. Take me somewhere—there is a winter-garden, I know—”
“No, Jill,” said I, with decision. “It’s no use. I am really going. We will not argue it.”
Gillian Hardress watched the dancers for a moment, as with languid interest. “You fear that I am going to make a scene. Well! I can’t. You have selected your torture chamber too carefully. Oh, after all that’s been between us, to tell me here, to my husband’s face, in the presence of some three hundred people, without a moment’s warning, that you are ‘off tomorrow!’ It—it is for good, isn’t it?”
“Yes,” I said. “It had to be—some time, you know.”
“No, don’t look at me. Watch the dancing, I will fan myself and seem bored. No, I shall not do anything rash.”
I was uncomfortable. Yet at bottom it was the theatric value of this scene which impressed me—the gaiety and the brilliance on every side of her misery. And I did not look at her. I did just as she ordered me.
“I was proud once. I haven’t any pride now. You say you must leave me. Oh, dearest boy, if you only knew how unhappy I will be without you, you could not leave me. Sweetheart, you must know how I love you. I long every minute to be with you, and to see you even at a distance is a pleasure. I know it is not right for me to ask or expect you to love me always, but it seems so hard.”
“It’s no use, Jill—”
“Is it another woman? I won’t mind. I won’t be jealous. I won’t make scenes, for I know you hate scenes, and I have made so many. It was because I cared so much. I never cared before, Jack. You have tired of me, I know. I have seen it coming. Well, you shall have your way in everything. But don’t leave me, dear! oh, my dear, my dear, don’t leave me! Oh, I have given you everything, and I ask so little in return—just to see you sometimes, just to touch your hand sometimes, as the merest stranger might do. …”
So her voice went on and on while I did not look at her. There was no passion in this voice of any kind. It was just the long monotonous wail of some hurt animal. … They were playing the “Valse Bleu,” I remember. It lasted a great many centuries, and always that low voice was pleading with me. Yes, it was uncommonly unpleasant; but always at the back of my mind some being that was not I was taking notes as to precisely how I felt, because some day they might be useful, for the book I had already outlined. “It is no use, Jill,” I kept repeating, doggedly.
Then Armitage came smirking for his dance. Gillian Hardress rose, and her fan shut like a pistol-shot. She was all in black, and throughout that moment she was more beautiful than any other woman I have ever seen.
“Yes, this is our dance,” she said, brightly. “I thought you had forgotten me, Mr. Armitage. Well! goodbye, Mr. Townsend. Our little talk has been very interesting—hasn’t it? Oh, this dress always gets in my way—”
She was gone. I felt that I had managed affairs rather crudely, but it was the least unpleasant way out, and I simply had not dared to trust myself alone with her. So I made the best of an ill bargain, and remodeled the episode more artistically when I used it later, in Afield.