Part 1
About four years and a quarter later--to be exact, it was four years and four
months--Mr. and Mrs. Capes stood side by side upon an old Persian carpet that
did duty as a hearthrug in the dining-room of their flat and surveyed a shining
dinner-table set for four people, lit by skilfully-shaded electric lights,
brightened by frequent gleams of silver, and carefully and simply adorned with
sweet-pea blossom. Capes had altered scarcely at all during the interval, except
for a new quality of smartness in the cut of his clothes, but Ann Veronica was
nearly half an inch taller; her face was at once stronger and softer, her neck
firmer and rounder, and her carriage definitely more womanly than it had been in
the days of her rebellion. She was a woman now to the tips of her fingers; she
had said good-bye to her girlhood in the old garden four years and a quarter
ago. She was dressed in a simple evening gown of soft creamy silk, with a yoke
of dark old embroidery that enhanced the gentle gravity of her style, and her
black hair flowed off her open forehead to pass under the control of a simple
ribbon of silver. A silver necklace enhanced the dusky beauty of her neck. Both
husband and wife affected an unnatural ease of manner for the benefit of the
efficient parlor-maid, who was putting the finishing touches to the sideboard
arrangements.
"It looks all right," said Capes.
"I think everything's right," said Ann Veronica, with the roaming eye of a
capable but not devoted house-mistress.
"I wonder if they will seem altered," she remarked for the third time.
"There I can't help," said Capes.
He walked through a wide open archway, curtained with deep-blue curtains,
into the apartment that served as a reception-room. Ann Veronica, after a last
survey of the dinner appointments, followed him, rustling, came to his side by
the high brass fender, and touched two or three ornaments on the mantel above
the cheerful fireplace.
"It's still a marvel to me that we are to be forgiven," she said, turning.
"My charm of manner, I suppose. But, indeed, he's very human."
"Did you tell him of the registry office?"
"No--o--certainly not so emphatically as I did about the play."
"It was an inspiration--your speaking to him?"
"I felt impudent. I believe I am getting impudent. I had not been near the
Royal Society since--since you disgraced me. What's that?"
They both stood listening. It was not the arrival of the guests, but merely
the maid moving about in the hall.
"Wonderful man!" said Ann Veronica, reassured, and stroking his cheek with
her finger.
Capes made a quick movement as if to bite that aggressive digit, but it
withdrew to Ann Veronica's side.
"I was really interested in his stuff. I WAS talking to him before I saw his
name on the card beside the row of microscopes. Then, naturally, I went on
talking. He--he has rather a poor opinion of his contemporaries. Of course, he
had no idea who I was."
"But how did you tell him? You've never told me. Wasn't it--a little bit of a
scene?"
"Oh! let me see. I said I hadn't been at the Royal Society soiree for four
years, and got him to tell me about some of the fresh Mendelian work. He loves
the Mendelians because he hates all the big names of the eighties and nineties.
Then I think I remarked that science was disgracefully under-endowed, and
confessed I'd had to take to more profitable courses. 'The fact of it is,' I
said, 'I'm the new playwright, Thomas More. Perhaps you've heard--?' Well, you
know, he had."
"Fame!"
"Isn't it? 'I've not seen your play, Mr. More,' he said, 'but I'm told it's
the most amusing thing in London at the present time. A friend of mine,
Ogilvy'--I suppose that's Ogilvy & Ogilvy, who do so many divorces, Vee?--'was
speaking very highly of it--very highly!' " He smiled into her eyes.
"You are developing far too retentive a memory for praises," said Ann
Veronica.
"I'm still new to them. But after that it was easy. I told him instantly and
shamelessly that the play was going to be worth ten thousand pounds. He agreed
it was disgraceful. Then I assumed a rather portentous manner to prepare him."
"How? Show me."
"I can't be portentous, dear, when you're about. It's my other side of the
moon. But I was portentous, I can assure you. 'My name's NOT More, Mr. Stanley,'
I said. 'That's my pet name.' "
"Yes?"
"I think--yes, I went on in a pleasing blend of the casual and sotto voce,
'The fact of it is, sir, I happen to be your son-in-law, Capes. I do wish you
could come and dine with us some evening. It would make my wife very happy.' "
"What did he say?"
"What does any one say to an invitation to dinner point-blank? One tries to
collect one's wits. 'She is constantly thinking of you,' I said."
"And he accepted meekly?"
"Practically. What else could he do? You can't kick up a scene on the spur of
the moment in the face of such conflicting values as he had before him. With me
behaving as if everything was infinitely matter-of-fact, what could he do? And
just then Heaven sent old Manningtree--I didn't tell you before of the fortunate
intervention of Manningtree, did I? He was looking quite infernally
distinguished, with a wide crimson ribbon across him--what IS a wide crimson
ribbon? Some sort of knight, I suppose. He is a knight. 'Well, young man,' he
said, 'we haven't seen you lately,' and something about 'Bateson & Co.'--he's
frightfully anti-Mendelian--having it all their own way. So I introduced him to
my father-in-law like a shot. I think that WAS decision. Yes, it was Manningtree
really secured your father. He--"
"Here they are!" said Ann Veronica as the bell sounded.
Part 2
They received the guests in their pretty little hall with genuine effusion.
Miss Stanley threw aside a black cloak to reveal a discreet and dignified
arrangement of brown silk, and then embraced Ann Veronica with warmth. "So very
clear and cold," she said. "I feared we might have a fog." The housemaid's
presence acted as a useful restraint. Ann Veronica passed from her aunt to her
father, and put her arms about him and kissed his cheek. "Dear old daddy!" she
said, and was amazed to find herself shedding tears. She veiled her emotion by
taking off his overcoat. "And this is Mr. Capes?" she heard her aunt saying.
All four people moved a little nervously into the drawing-room, maintaining a
sort of fluttered amiability of sound and movement.
Mr. Stanley professed a great solicitude to warm his hands. "Quite unusually
cold for the time of year," he said. "Everything very nice, I am sure," Miss
Stanley murmured to Capes as he steered her to a place upon the little sofa
before the fire. Also she made little pussy-like sounds of a reassuring nature.
"And let's have a look at you, Vee!" said Mr. Stanley, standing up with a
sudden geniality and rubbing his hands together.
Ann Veronica, who knew her dress became her, dropped a curtsy to her father's
regard.
Happily they had no one else to wait for, and it heartened her mightily to
think that she had ordered the promptest possible service of the dinner. Capes
stood beside Miss Stanley, who was beaming unnaturally, and Mr. Stanley, in his
effort to seem at ease, took entire possession of the hearthrug.
"You found the flat easily?" said Capes in the pause. "The numbers are a
little difficult to see in the archway. They ought to put a lamp."
Her father declared there had been no difficulty.
"Dinner is served, m'm," said the efficient parlor-maid in the archway, and
the worst was over.
"Come, daddy," said Ann Veronica, following her husband and Miss Stanley; and
in the fulness of her heart she gave a friendly squeeze to the parental arm.
"Excellent fellow!" he answered a little irrelevantly. "I didn't understand,
Vee."
"Quite charming apartments," Miss Stanley admired; "charming! Everything is
so pretty and convenient."
The dinner was admirable as a dinner; nothing went wrong, from the golden and
excellent clear soup to the delightful iced marrons and cream; and Miss
Stanley's praises died away to an appreciative acquiescence. A brisk talk sprang
up between Capes and Mr. Stanley, to which the two ladies subordinated
themselves intelligently. The burning topic of the Mendelian controversy was
approached on one or two occasions, but avoided dexterously; and they talked
chiefly of letters and art and the censorship of the English stage. Mr. Stanley
was inclined to think the censorship should be extended to the supply of what he
styled latter-day fiction; good wholesome stories were being ousted, he said, by
"vicious, corrupting stuff" that "left a bad taste in the mouth." He declared
that no book could be satisfactory that left a bad taste in the mouth, however
much it seized and interested the reader at the time. He did not like it, he
said, with a significant look, to be reminded of either his books or his dinners
after he had done with them. Capes agreed with the utmost cordiality.
"Life is upsetting enough, without the novels taking a share," said Mr.
Stanley.
For a time Ann Veronica's attention was diverted by her aunt's interest in
the salted almonds.
"Quite particularly nice," said her aunt. "Exceptionally so."
When Ann Veronica could attend again she found the men were discussing the
ethics of the depreciation of house property through the increasing tumult of
traffic in the West End, and agreeing with each other to a devastating extent.
It came into her head with real emotional force that this must be some
particularly fantastic sort of dream. It seemed to her that her father was in
some inexplicable way meaner-looking than she had supposed, and yet also, as
unaccountably, appealing. His tie had demanded a struggle; he ought to have
taken a clean one after his first failure. Why was she noting things like this?
Capes seemed self-possessed and elaborately genial and commonplace, but she knew
him to be nervous by a little occasional clumsiness, by the faintest shadow of
vulgarity in the urgency of his hospitality. She wished he could smoke and dull
his nerves a little. A gust of irrational impatience blew through her being.
Well, they'd got to the pheasants, and in a little while he would smoke. What
was it she had expected? Surely her moods were getting a little out of hand.
She wished her father and aunt would not enjoy their dinner with such quiet
determination. Her father and her husband, who had both been a little pale at
their first encounter, were growing now just faintly flushed. It was a pity
people had to eat food.
"I suppose," said her father, "I have read at least half the novels that have
been at all successful during the last twenty years. Three a week is my
allowance, and, if I get short ones, four. I change them in the morning at
Cannon Street, and take my book as I come down."
It occurred to her that she had never seen her father dining out before,
never watched him critically as an equal. To Capes he was almost deferential,
and she had never seen him deferential in the old time, never. The dinner was
stranger than she had ever anticipated. It was as if she had grown right past
her father into something older and of infinitely wider outlook, as if he had
always been unsuspectedly a flattened figure, and now she had discovered him
from the other side.
It was a great relief to arrive at last at that pause when she could say to
her aunt, "Now, dear?" and rise and hold back the curtain through the archway.
Capes and her father stood up, and her father made a belated movement toward the
curtain. She realized that he was the sort of man one does not think much about
at dinners. And Capes was thinking that his wife was a supremely beautiful
woman. He reached a silver cigar and cigarette box from the sideboard and put it
before his father-in-law, and for a time the preliminaries of smoking occupied
them both. Then Capes flittered to the hearthrug and poked the fire, stood up,
and turned about. "Ann Veronica is looking very well, don't you think?" he said,
a little awkwardly.
"Very," said Mr. Stanley. "Very," and cracked a walnut appreciatively.
"Life--things--I don't think her prospects now--Hopeful outlook."
"You were in a difficult position," Mr. Stanley pronounced, and seemed to
hesitate whether he had not gone too far. He looked at his port wine as though
that tawny ruby contained the solution of the matter. "All's well that ends
well," he said; "and the less one says about things the better."
"Of course," said Capes, and threw a newly lit cigar into the fire through
sheer nervousness. "Have some more port wine, sir?"
"It's a very sound wine," said Mr. Stanley, consenting with dignity.
"Ann Veronica has never looked quite so well, I think," said Capes, clinging,
because of a preconceived plan, to the suppressed topic.
Part 3
At last the evening was over, and Capes and his wife had gone down to see Mr.
Stanley and his sister into a taxicab, and had waved an amiable farewell from
the pavement steps.
"Great dears!" said Capes, as the vehicle passed out of sight.
"Yes, aren't they?" said Ann Veronica, after a thoughtful pause. And then,
"They seem changed."
"Come in out of the cold," said Capes, and took her arm.
"They seem smaller, you know, even physically smaller," she said.
"You've grown out of them. . . . Your aunt liked the pheasant."
"She liked everything. Did you hear us through the archway, talking cookery?"
They went up by the lift in silence.
"It's odd," said Ann Veronica, re-entering the flat.
"What's odd?"
"Oh, everything!"
She shivered, and went to the fire and poked it. Capes sat down in the
arm-chair beside her.
"Life's so queer," she said, kneeling and looking into the flames. "I
wonder--I wonder if we shall ever get like that."
She turned a firelit face to her husband. "Did you tell him?"
Capes smiled faintly. "Yes."
"How?"
"Well--a little clumsily."
"But how?"
"I poured him out some port wine, and I said--let me see--oh, 'You are going
to be a grandfather!' "
"Yes. Was he pleased?"
"Calmly! He said--you won't mind my telling you?"
"Not a bit."
"He said, 'Poor Alice has got no end!' "
"Alice's are different," said Ann Veronica, after an interval. "Quite
different. She didn't choose her man. . . . Well, I told aunt. . . . Husband of
mine, I think we have rather overrated the emotional capacity of those--those
dears."
"What did your aunt say?"
"She didn't even kiss me. She said"--Ann Veronica shivered again--" 'I hope
it won't make you uncomfortable, my dear'--like that--'and whatever you do, do
be careful of your hair!' I think--I judge from her manner--that she thought it
was just a little indelicate of us--considering everything; but she tried to be
practical and sympathetic and live down to our standards."
Capes looked at his wife's unsmiling face.
"Your father," he said, "remarked that all's well that ends well, and that he
was disposed to let bygones be bygones. He then spoke with a certain fatherly
kindliness of the past. . . ."
"And my heart has ached for him!"
"Oh, no doubt it cut him at the time. It must have cut him."
"We might even have--given it up for them!"
"I wonder if we could."
"I suppose all IS well that ends well. Somehow to-night--I don't know."
"I suppose so. I'm glad the old sore is assuaged. Very glad. But if we had
gone under--!"
They regarded one another silently, and Ann Veronica had one of her
penetrating flashes.
"We are not the sort that goes under," said Ann Veronica, holding her hands
so that the red reflections vanished from her eyes. "We settled long ago--we're
hard stuff. We're hard stuff!"
Then she went on: "To think that is my father! Oh, my dear! He stood over me
like a cliff; the thought of him nearly turned me aside from everything we have
done. He was the social order; he was law and wisdom. And they come here, and
they look at our furniture to see if it is good; and they are not glad, it does
not stir them, that at last, at last we can dare to have children."
She dropped back into a crouching attitude and began to weep. "Oh, my dear!"
she cried, and suddenly flung herself, kneeling, into her husband's arms.
"Do you remember the mountains? Do you remember how we loved one another? How
intensely we loved one another! Do you remember the light on things and the
glory of things? I'm greedy, I'm greedy! I want children like the mountains and
life like the sky. Oh! and love--love! We've had so splendid a time, and fought
our fight and won. And it's like the petals falling from a flower. Oh, I've
loved love, dear! I've loved love and you, and the glory of you; and the great
time is over, and I have to go carefully and bear children, and--take care of my
hair--and when I am done with that I shall be an old woman. The petals have
fallen --the red petals we loved so. We're hedged about with discretions--and
all this furniture--and successes! We are successful at last! Successful! But
the mountains, dear! We won't forget the mountains, dear, ever. That shining
slope of snow, and how we talked of death! We might have died! Even when we are
old, when we are rich as we may be, we won't forget the tune when we cared
nothing for anything but the joy of one another, when we risked everything for
one another, when all the wrappings and coverings seemed to have fallen from
life and left it light and fire. Stark and stark! Do you remember it all? . . .
Say you will never forget! That these common things and secondary things sha'n't
overwhelm us. These petals! I've been wanting to cry all the evening, cry here
on your shoulder for my petals. Petals! . . . Silly woman! . . . I've never had
these crying fits before. . . ."
"Blood of my heart!" whispered Capes, holding her close to him. "I know. I
understand."
End
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