<h3><SPAN name="XI" id="XI"></SPAN>XI</h3>
<h3>Engagement of Marriage</h3>
<p>"I am engaged to be married," Alex repeated to herself, in a vain
endeavour to realize the height to which she must have now attained. But
that realization, by which she meant tangible certainty, for which she
craved, continually eluded her.</p>
<p>The preliminary formalities, indeed, duly took place, from her own
avowal before a graciously-maternal Lady Isabel, to Noel's formal
interview with Sir Francis in the traditional setting of the library.</p>
<p>After that, however, a freakish fate seemed to take control of all the
circumstances connected with Alex' engagement.</p>
<p>Noel Cardew's father became ill, and in the uncertainty consequent upon
a state of health which his doctor declared might be almost indefinitely
prolonged, there could be no question of immediately announcing the
engagement.</p>
<p>"Just as well, perhaps. We're all delighted about it, but they're both
young enough to wait a little while," Lady Isabel smilingly made the
best of it. "Next year will be quite time enough to settle anything."</p>
<p>Her serenity was the obvious outcome of an extreme contentment.</p>
<p>Alex found herself better able to regard herself in the light of one
betrothed in her mother's company than in that of Noel. He treated her
almost exactly as he had always done, with cheerful good-fellowship, and
only at the very outset of the engagement with any tinge of shyness in
his bearing.</p>
<p>"Of course, I ought to have got a ring," he said very seriously, "but I
don't believe in taking any chances, and so, just in case there was any
hitch, I waited. Besides, I don't know what you like best—you'll have
to choose."</p>
<p>Alex smiled at the words. There was a glamour about such a choice, even
beyond that with which her own sense of the romantic perforce enveloped
it.</p>
<p>She wondered whether she would be allowed to go with Noel to a
jeweller's, or whether he would, after all, choose his token alone, and
bring it to her, and place it on her finger with one of those low,
ardently-spoken sentences which she could hear so clearly in her own
mind, and which seemed so strangely and utterly impossible in Noel's
real presence.</p>
<p>But the arrival of Noel's ring, after all, took her by surprise.</p>
<p>He had been lunching with them in Clevedon Square, when the jeweller's
assistant was announced, just as Lady Isabel was rising from the
luncheon-table.</p>
<p>She turned enquiringly.</p>
<p>"Noel?"</p>
<p>"I told him to come here. I thought you wouldn't mind. You see, I want
Alex to choose her ring."</p>
<p>"Oh, my dear boy! how very exciting! But may we see too?"</p>
<p>Mrs. Cardew was also present.</p>
<p>"Oh, rather," said Noel heartily. "We shall want your advice."</p>
<p>They all trooped hastily into the library, where the man was waiting,
with the very large assortment of gleaming rings ordered for inspection
by Noel.</p>
<p>"What beauties!" said Lady Isabel. "But, really, I don't know if I ought
to let him."</p>
<p>She glanced at Mrs. Cardew, who said in a very audible voice:</p>
<p>"Of course. He's so happy. It's quite delightful to watch them both."</p>
<p>She was looking hard and appraisingly at the rings as she spoke.</p>
<p>Alex looked at them too, quite unseeing of their glittering
magnificence, but acutely conscious that every one was waiting for her
first word.</p>
<p>"Oh, how lovely!" she exclaimed faintly.</p>
<p>She chid herself violently for the sick disappointment that invaded her,
not, indeed, at the matter, but at the manner of the gift.</p>
<p>And yet she realized dimly, that it was impossible that it should have
happened in any other way—that any other way, indeed, would have been
as utterly uncharacteristic of Noel Cardew as this was typical.</p>
<p>"Which do you like?" he asked her. "I chose all the most original ones I
could see. I always like unconventional designs better than conventional
ones, I'm afraid. Where's that long one you showed me this morning?"</p>
<p>"The diamond marquise, sir?" The assistant deferentially produced it,
glancing the while at Alex.</p>
<p>"That's it," said Noel eagerly. "Try it on, Alex, won't you?"</p>
<p>He used her name quite freely and without any shyness.</p>
<p>Alex felt more of genuine excitement, and less of wistful bewilderment,
than at any moment since Noel had first asked her to marry him, as she
shyly held out her left hand and the jeweller slipped the heavy,
beautiful ring onto her third finger.</p>
<p>She had long, slim hands, the fingers rather too thin and the knuckles,
though small, too prominent for beauty. But, thanks to the tyranny of
old Nurse, and to Lady Isabel's insistence upon the use of nightly
glycerine-and-honey, they were exquisitely soft and white.</p>
<p>The diamonds gleamed and flashed at her as she moved the ring up and
down her finger.</p>
<p>"We can easily make it smaller, to fit your finger," said the jeweller's
assistant.</p>
<p>"It really is beautiful. Look, Francis," said Lady Isabel.</p>
<p>Alex' father put up his glasses, and after inspection he also exclaimed:</p>
<p>"Beautiful."</p>
<p>"You've such little fingers, dear, it'll have to be made smaller," said
Mrs. Cardew graciously.</p>
<p>"Is it to be that one, then?" Lady Isabel asked.</p>
<p>Alex saw that her mother's pretty, youthful-looking flush of pleasurable
excitement had mounted to her face. She herself, conscious of an
inexplicable oppression, felt tongue-tied, and unable to do more than
repeat foolishly and lifelessly:</p>
<p>"Oh, it's lovely, it's perfectly lovely. It's <i>too</i> beautiful."</p>
<p>Noel, however, looked gratified at the words of admiration.</p>
<p>"That's the one <i>I</i> like," he said with emphasis. "I knew when I saw
them this morning that I liked that one much the best. We'll settle on
that one, then, shall we?"</p>
<p>"You silly boy," laughed his mother, "that's for Alex to decide. Perhaps
she likes something else better. Try the emerald, Alex?"</p>
<p>"Oh, this is lovely," repeated Alex again, shrinking back a little.
Furious with herself, she was yet only desirous that the scene should
not be prolonged any longer.</p>
<p>"Come and look at it in the light?" The urgent pressure of Lady Isabel's
hand on her arm drew her into the embrasure of the window.</p>
<p>"Alex," said her mother low and swiftly, all the time holding up her
hand against the light as though studying the ring. "Alex, you <i>must</i> be
more gracious. What <i>is</i> the matter with you?"</p>
<p>"Nothing," said Alex childishly, feeling inclined to burst into tears.</p>
<p>"Then for Heaven's sake do try and smile and show a <i>little</i>
enthusiasm," said her mother with unwonted sharpness.</p>
<p>Alex, scarlet, and most visibly discomposed, returned to the group round
the library table.</p>
<p>Forcing herself to make some attempt at obeying her mother's behest, she
picked up the nearest jewel, two pearls in a prettily-twisted setting,
and began to examine it.</p>
<p>"I like that design, too. It's original," said Mrs. Cardew.</p>
<p>"Oh, but pearls are unlucky—she couldn't have pearls," protested Lady
Isabel.</p>
<p>"They mean tears, don't they?" Alex contributed to the discussion, for
the sake of making her mother see that she was willing to do her best.</p>
<p>"Are you superstitious?" Noel asked rather reproachfully. "I can't say I
believe in all that sort of thing myself, you know. In fact I make
rather a principle of doing things on a 13th, or walking under ladders,
and all the rest of it, just to prove there's nothing in it."</p>
<p>Sir Francis fixed the young man benevolently through his monocle.</p>
<p>"I presume, however, that in this instance you prefer not to tempt the
gods," he remarked affably, and Noel, always obviously in awe of his
betrothed's father, hastily agreed with him.</p>
<p>"Then it's diamonds, is it?—unless Alex prefers the emerald."</p>
<p>"I like the diamond one best," Noel reiterated. "I really pitched on
that one the minute I saw it. I like originality."</p>
<p>"Well, it couldn't be lovelier," said Lady Isabel contentedly.</p>
<p>The jeweller was shown out, leaving the diamond marquise ring, in its
little white-velvet case, on the table in front of Alex.</p>
<p>Sir Francis opened the door for his wife and Mrs. Cardew.</p>
<p>"Oh," said Noel urgently. "You <i>must</i> stay and see her put it on."</p>
<p>Both ladies laughed at the boyish exclamation, and Alex flushed scarlet
once more.</p>
<p>Noel opened the case and looked proudly at his gift.</p>
<p>"You must put it on for her," said his mother, "when it's been made
smaller."</p>
<p>The hint was unmistakable.</p>
<p>Noel held out the ring.</p>
<p>"Let's see it on now at once, Alex. It can go back to the shop later."</p>
<p>Alex, in a sort of utter desperation, thrust out her hand, and Noel,
politely and carefully avoiding touching it with his own, slipped the
heavy hoop over her finger.</p>
<p>"Thank you," she stammered.</p>
<p>There was another laugh.</p>
<p>"Poor dears! Let's leave them in peace," cried Mrs. Cardew mockingly,
and rustled to the door again.</p>
<p>"Did you ever see anything so young as they both are?" she murmured
sweetly to Lady Isabel, audibly enough for Alex to guess at the words,
if she did not actually hear them.</p>
<p>She was thankful that they should no longer be watching her, and turned
with something like relief to Noel's gratified, uncritical looks.</p>
<p>It became suddenly much easier to speak unconstrainedly.</p>
<p>Perhaps she was subconsciously aware that of all of them, it was Noel
himself who would expect the least of her, because his demands upon her
were so infinitesimal.</p>
<p>"It's a beautiful ring; thank you very, very much. I—" She stopped and
gulped, then said bravely, "I <i>love</i> it."</p>
<p>She emphasized the word almost without knowing it, as though to force
from him some response.</p>
<p>Although she had never actually realized it, it was a word which, in
point of fact, had never yet passed between them. Noel's fair face
coloured at last, as his light eyes met her unconsciously tragical gaze.</p>
<p>"<i>Alex a son air b�te aujourd'hui.</i>"</p>
<p>With horrid inappropriateness, the hated gibe of her schooldays flashed
into Alex' thoughts, stiffening her face into the old lines of morbid,
self-conscious misery.</p>
<p>Part of her mind, in unwilling detachment, contemplated ruefully the
oddly inadequate spectacle which they must present, staring shamefacedly
at one another across the glittering token of their troth.</p>
<p>Frenziedly desirous of breaking the silence, heavy with awkwardness,
that hung between them, she began to speak hastily and almost at random.</p>
<p>"Thank you so very much—I've never had such a lovely present—it's
lovely; thank you so much."</p>
<p>"I thought you'd like it," muttered Noel, more overcome with confusion,
if possible, than was Alex.</p>
<p>"Oh, yes, yes. It's lovely."</p>
<p>"I thought you'd like something rather original, you know, not a
conventional one."</p>
<p>"Oh, yes!"</p>
<p>"You're sure you wouldn't rather have one of the others—that emerald
one that mother liked?"</p>
<p>"Oh, no."</p>
<p>"I dare say they'd let me change it, the man knows us very well."</p>
<p>"Oh, no, no."</p>
<p>"Well, I, I—I'm awfully glad you like it."</p>
<p>"Yes, I <i>do</i> like it. I—I think it's lovely."</p>
<p>"I—I thought you'd like it."</p>
<p>Alex began to feel as though she was in a nightmare, but she was
mysteriously unable to put an end to their sorry dialogue.</p>
<p>"It's perfectly lovely, I think. I don't know how to thank you."</p>
<p>Noel swallowed two or three times, visibly and audibly, and then took a
couple of determined steps towards her.</p>
<p>"I think you—you'd better let me kiss you," he said hoarsely. "You
haven't yet, you know."</p>
<p>Something deep down within Alex was surging up in angry bewilderment,
and she was sufficiently aware of a sense of protest to rebut it
indignantly and with lightning-swift determination.</p>
<p>It was the humility of love that had prompted her lover to crave that
permission which should never have been asked.</p>
<p>So she told herself in the flash of a moment, while she waited for
Noel's kiss to lift her once and for all into some far realm of romance
where trivial details of manifestation should no longer obscure the true
values of life.</p>
<p>Unconsciously, she had shut her eyes, but at an unaccountable pause in
the proceedings, she opened them again.</p>
<p>Noel was carefully removing his pince-nez.</p>
<p>"I say," he stammered, "you're—you're sure you don't mind?"</p>
<p>If Alex had followed the impulse of her own feelings, she must have
cried out at this juncture:</p>
<p>"Not if you're quick and get it over!"</p>
<p>But instead, she heard herself murmuring feebly:</p>
<p>"Oh, no, not at all."</p>
<p>She hastily raised her face, turning it sideways to Noel, and felt his
lips gingerly touching the middle of her cheek. Then she opened her eyes
again, and, scrupulously avoiding Noel's embarrassed gaze, saw him
diligently polishing his pince-nez before replacing them.</p>
<p>It was the apotheosis of their anti-climax.</p>
<p>Alex possessed neither the light-heartedness which
is—mistakenly—generally ascribed to youth, nor the philosophy, to face
facts with any determination.</p>
<p>She continued to cram her unwilling mind with illusions which her
innermost self perfectly recognized as such.</p>
<p>It was, on the whole, easier to place her own interpretation upon Noel's
every act of commission or omission when the shyness subsequent to their
first ill-conducted embrace had left him, which it speedily did. Easier
still, when intercourse between them was renewed upon much the same
terms of impersonal enthusiasm in discussion as in Scotland, and easiest
of all when Alex herself, in retrospect, wrenched a sentimental
significance out of words or looks that had been meaningless at the time
of their occurrence.</p>
<p>When Noel went to Devonshire, whither his father by slow, invalid
degrees had at last been allowed to move, he said to Alex in farewell:</p>
<p>"I shall expect to hear from you very often, mind. I always like getting
letters, though I'm afraid I'm not much good at writing them. You know
what I mean: I can write simply pages if I'm in the mood—just as though
I were talking to some one—and other days I can't put pen to paper."</p>
<p>"I don't think I write very good letters myself," said Alex wistfully,
in the hope of eliciting reassurance.</p>
<p>"Oh, never mind," said Noel consolingly. "Just write when you feel like
it."</p>
<p>Alex, who had composed a score of imaginary love-letters, both on his
behalf and her own, tried to compensate herself the following evening
for the vague misery that was encompassing her spirit, by writing.</p>
<p>She was alone in her own room, the fire had fallen into red embers, and
her surroundings were sufficiently appropriate to render attainable the
state of mind which she desired to achieve.</p>
<p>As she involuntarily rehearsed to herself the elements of her own
situation, she lulled herself into a species of happiness.</p>
<p>His ring on her finger, his letter on its way to her—she was going to
write to the man who had asked her to become his wife.</p>
<p>There was really some one at last, Alex told herself, to whom she had
become the centre of the universe, to whom her letters would matter, to
whom everything that she might think or feel would be of importance.</p>
<p>She remembered Maurice Goldstein, his knowledge of Queenie's every
movement, his triumphant rapture at being allowed to take her out to
luncheon or tea. Even now, Alex had seen him follow his wife with his
ardent, glowing gaze, as she moved, serene and graceful, round a crowded
room on the arm of some other man—and the look had made her heart throb
sympathetically, and perhaps not altogether unenviously.</p>
<p>Almost fiercely she told herself that she had Noel's love. She was to
him what Queenie was to young Goldstein.</p>
<p>To every rebellious doubt that rose within her, she opposed the
soundless, vehement assertions, that the indelible proof of Noel's love
lay in the fact that he had asked her to marry him.</p>
<p>Gradually she persuaded herself that only her own self-consciousness, of
which she was never more aware than when with Noel, was responsible for
that strange lack, which she dared not attempt to define, lest in so
doing she should shatter the feeble structure built out of
sentimentality and resolute self-blinding.</p>
<p>Partly because she instinctively craved a relief to her own feelings,
and partly because she had really almost made herself believe in the
truth of her own imaginings, Alex wrote her first love-letter, the shy,
yet passionately-worded self-expression of a young and intensely
romantic girl, in love with the thought of Love, too ignorant for
reserve, and yet too conscious of the novelty of her own experience for
absolute spontaneity.</p>
<p>Alex did not sleep after she had written her letter, but she lay in bed
in the warm, soft glow of the firelight, and saw the square, white
envelope within which she had sealed her letter, leaning against the
silver inkstand on her writing-table.</p>
<p>When the maid came to her in the morning, she brought a letter addressed
in Noel's unformed hand.</p>
<p>It was quite short, and began:</p>
<p>"DEAREST ALEX (is that right?)"</p>
<p>It told her of the journey to Devonshire, of an improvement in the
invalid's state of health, and of Noel's own projected tour of
inspection round the estate, which he thought had been neglected by his
agent of late.</p>
<p>"But I shall be able to put all that right, I hope, as I'm rather keen
about the housing of the poor, and questions of that sort. You might
look out for any decent book on social economy, will you, Alex?"</p>
<p>The letter did not extend beyond the bottom of the second page, but Noel
was going to write again in a day or two, when there was more to tell
her, and with love to every one, he was hers for ever and a day, Noel.</p>
<p>Alex' reply went to Trevose the same day, but the letter she had written
in the firelight, she burnt.</p>
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