<h3><SPAN name="XIII" id="XIII"></SPAN>XIII</h3>
<h3>Decision</h3>
<p>On making up her mind that she must break off her engagement, Alex,
unaware, took the bravest decision of her life.</p>
<p>She was being true to an instinctive standard, in which she herself only
believed with part of her mind, and which was absolutely unknown to any
of those who made up her surroundings.</p>
<p>She hardly knew, however, that she had taken any resolution in her many
wakeful nights and discontented days, until the moment when she actually
put it into execution. She wrote no eloquent letter, entered into no
elaborate explanation such as would have seemed to her, after the manner
of her generation, theoretically indispensable to the situation.</p>
<p>She blurted out three bald words which struck upon her own hearing with
a sense of extreme shock the moment they were uttered.</p>
<p>"It's no use."</p>
<p>Noel looked hard at her for a moment, and then did not pretend to
misunderstand her meaning.</p>
<p>"What, us being engaged?"</p>
<p>His intuitive comprehension, of which Alex had received so little proof
ever before, might be unflattering, but it struck her with immense
relief.</p>
<p>"Yes."</p>
<p>They gazed at each other in silence for a few moments, and Alex was
furious with herself for a phrase sprung from nowhere that reiterated
itself in her brain as she looked at Noel's handsome, inexpressive
face—"<i>Fish-like flaccidity</i>...."</p>
<p>And again and again "<i>Fish-like flaccidity.</i>"</p>
<p>They were in the drawing-room at Clevedon Square, and Noel, as though
seeking to relieve his obvious embarrassment by moving, got up and
walked across the room to the window.</p>
<p>"Of course, I've felt for some time that you weren't very happy about it
all, and naturally—if you feel like that...."</p>
<p>All the seething disappointment and wounded vanity and aching loneliness
that had tortured her since the very first moments of her engagement to
Noel Cardew, rushed back on Alex, but she sought vainly for words in
which to convey any part of her feelings to him.</p>
<p>It would be like trying to explain some abstruse principle of science to
a little child. The sense of the utter uselessness of any attempt at
making clear to him the reasons which were chaotic even to herself,
paralysed Alex' utterance.</p>
<p>"I don't think it's any use going on," she repeated feebly.</p>
<p>"You're perfectly free," Noel assured her scrupulously; "and though, of
course, I—I—I—you—we—it would be—" He broke off, very red.</p>
<p>Alex wished vaguely that it was possible for them to talk it all out
quite frankly and dispassionately with one another, but the hard,
crystalline detachment of the generation that was to follow theirs, had
as yet no place in the scheme of things known to Noel and Alex.</p>
<p>They made awkward, conventional phrases to one another.</p>
<p>"Naturally," the boy said with an effort, "the whole blame must rest
with me."</p>
<p>"Oh, no, I'll tell father and mother that I wanted to—to—break it
off."</p>
<p>Alex stopped, conscious that she could not think of anything else to
say.</p>
<p>But rather to her surprise, it appeared that Noel had something else to
say.</p>
<p>He faced her with hands thrust into his pockets, his hair and little,
fair moustache and his brown eyes looking very light indeed contrasted
with his flushed face.</p>
<p>"Of course, you're absolutely free, as I said, only I must say, Alex,
that you're making rather a mistake. Every one was awfully pleased about
it, and we've known each other since we were kids—since <i>you</i> were a
kid, at any rate—and a broken engagement—well, of course, I don't want
to say anything, naturally, but it <i>does</i> put a girl in a—a—well, in
what's called rather an invidious position. Especially when it isn't as
though there was any particular reason for it."</p>
<p>"The principal reason—" Alex began faintly, not altogether certain of
what it was that she was about to say.</p>
<p>"You see, I always thought we should hit it off together so well. We
always did as kids—when you were a kid, I mean," Noel explained. "We
always seemed to like the same things, and have a good deal in common."</p>
<p>"I don't think that you liked any of the things <i>I</i> cared about
especially," Alex said, with a flash of spirit.</p>
<p>"What does that matter?" Noel demanded na�vely, "so long as one of us
likes the things that the other does? It would be exactly the same
thing."</p>
<p>Alex had never told herself, and was therefore quite unable to tell
Noel, that she had never liked anything particularly, except his liking
for her, which she had striven almost frenziedly to gain and retain by
means of an artificially-stimulated display of sympathetic interest in
his enthusiasms.</p>
<p>"There's another thing—I don't know whether I ought to say it to you,
quite—but, of course, after one's—well, married—there's a lot more
one has in common, naturally."</p>
<p>"Yes," said Alex forlornly. She quite believed it.</p>
<p>There was an awkward silence.</p>
<p>"Are you angry, Noel?"</p>
<p>She did not think he was at all angry, or very violently moved in any
way, but she asked the question from an instinctive desire to hear from
him any expression of his real feelings.</p>
<p>He replied stiffly, "Not at all. Of course, it's much better that you
should say all this in time ... as I say, I've felt for some time that
you weren't particularly cheerful. But I must say, Alex, I'm dashed if I
know why."</p>
<p>"I don't know why, exactly—except that I—I don't feel as if
we—really—cared enough for one another—"</p>
<p>Alex spoke with a pause between each word, blushing scarlet, as though
it really cost her a physical effort to break through the barrier of
reserve that she had been taught so relentlessly should always be
erected between her own soul and the naked truth of her own sensations
and intimate convictions.</p>
<p>Noel blushed too and Alex felt that he was shocked, which increased her
own self-contempt almost unbearably.</p>
<p>"Naturally, if I hadn't—" he left a blank to supply the words, "I
shouldn't have asked you to be engaged to me. I must say, Alex, I think
you're rather exacting, you know."</p>
<p>Alex quivered from head to foot, as though he had insulted her most
brutally. She, who had shrunk, with a genuine dread that had surprised
herself, from Noel's few, shyly-uttered endearments, and had found so
entire a lack of response in herself to his occasionally-attempted
displays of tenderness, to be accused of having been exacting!</p>
<p>She did not for an instant realize, what even Noel faintly surmised,
that she had indeed been exacting, of a romantic fervour which she was
as incapable 'of inspiring as he of bestowing; from which, had it
existed, the outward expressions of love would have leapt spontaneously,
supremely appropriate, and necessary to them both.</p>
<p>In the mental chaos and muddle of their extreme youth, they looked at
one another confused and bewildered, almost like two children suddenly
conscious of the magnitude of their own naughtiness.</p>
<p>Noel said, rather proudly, as though one of the children suddenly tried
to appear grown-up:</p>
<p>"You must allow me to undertake the distressing task of—breaking it
to—<i>them</i>."</p>
<p>Alex almost shuddered, so acute was her own apprehension of the
disclosure to her father and mother.</p>
<p>"I shall tell mother at once," she said, lacking the courage even to
mention Sir Francis.</p>
<p>It was typical of the whole time and circumstances of their brief
engagement that both Noel, and, in a lesser degree, Alex, had looked
upon the relation into which they had entered as one in which their
parents held the stakes and were of primary concern. They themselves
were only puppets for whom strings were pulled, so as to cause certain
vibrations and reactions over which they had no personal control.</p>
<p>This belief, unformulated by either, and entirely characteristic of a
late Victorian generation, was, perhaps, that which they held most in
common.</p>
<p>Alex even wondered whether she ought to wait and speak to Lady Isabel
before taking the next step which she had in mind, but her desire to try
and raise their trivial, shamefaced parting to a higher level by one
dramatic touch, was too strong for her.</p>
<p>She slowly pulled the diamond engagement-ring off her finger, and handed
it to him.</p>
<p>"Oh, I say," stammered Noel. He looked miserably undecided, and she knew
that he was wondering whether he could not ask her to keep it just the
same.</p>
<p>But in the end he slipped it into his pocket, after balancing it
undecidedly for a moment in the palm of his hand.</p>
<p>She sat on the sofa, her left hand feeling strangely bare, unweighted by
the heavy, glittering hoop, and Noel looked out of the window.</p>
<p>"I think I shall go abroad," he announced suddenly, and with mingled
relief and mortification, Alex detected the sound of satisfaction latent
in his voice. She felt that he thought himself to be doing the proper
thing in the circumstances, and the sting inflicted on her pride by his
acquiescence in their parting, though she had expected nothing else,
gave her the sudden impulse necessary to rise and cross the room until
she stood beside him at the window.</p>
<p>"Please forgive me, Noel."</p>
<p>"Oh, there's nothing to forgive," he returned hastily. "Of course, if
you feel like that, it's all over."</p>
<p>He looked at her steadily and Alex felt the suspicion rush over her that
he was trying obliquely to convey a warning to her that if she dismissed
him now, it would be of no use to recall him later.</p>
<p>Alex felt passionately that in the depths of his stubborn vanity lay the
truest presentment of himself that Noel would ever show her. If there
was another side to his personality—and she was dimly willing to
believe it for all her utter ignorance of him—the power to call it
forth did not dwell in her.</p>
<p>Her momentary feeling of anger gave way to humiliation, and she half
held out her hand.</p>
<p>"Good-bye, Noel," she said humbly.</p>
<p>As though to atone for the lack of feeling in his tone, Noel wrung her
hand until it hurt her, as he replied automatically: "Good-bye, Alex."</p>
<p>"I suppose we shall never meet again," thought Alex, with all the
finality of youth, and felt dazed as she saw him open the door.</p>
<p>Mechanically, she rang the bell in order that the servants downstairs
might know that he was leaving, and come into the hall to find his hat
and stick and to open the door for him.</p>
<p>Lady Isabel had instilled into Alex that it was part of her
responsibility in grown-up life to ring the bell for departing guests,
as unostentatiously as possible, at just the right moment, and every
time that she remembered to do it, she always felt rather proud of
herself.</p>
<p>This time she thought:</p>
<p>"It's the last time Noel will ever be in this room with me. He is going
right out of my life."</p>
<p>She was quite unconsciously trying to awaken in herself an anguish of
regret that might yet justify her to herself in recalling her lover.</p>
<p>If he turns round at the door and says, "Alex!" She tried to cheat
herself with a hope that was yet not a hope.</p>
<p>Noel turned at the door.</p>
<p>In a solemn, magnanimous voice he said:</p>
<p>"Alex! I don't want you to feel—ever—that you need reproach yourself,
whatever any one may say. Remember that, if"—he suddenly looked like a
rather frightened little boy—"if there's a great fuss."</p>
<p>Then the door closed very quietly behind him, and Alex heard him go
downstairs slowly.</p>
<p>It seemed to her that Noel's farewell had plumbed the final depth of his
inadequacy.</p>
<p>Presently she sank into an armchair before the fire, and tried to
visualize the effects of her own action.</p>
<p>She was principally conscious of a certain amazement, that a step which
seemed likely to have such far-reaching consequences should have been so
largely the result of sudden impulse. She had not thought the night
before of breaking off her engagement. It had all happened very quickly
in a few minutes, when the sense of tension which had hung round her
intercourse with Noel had suddenly seemed to reach an unbearable pitch,
so that something had snapped. Was this how Important Things happened to
one through life?</p>
<p>Alex felt that she could not believe it.</p>
<p>But a broken engagement—could there be anything more important, more
desperate? Alex felt with melancholy satisfaction that at least it was
real life, as she had always imagined it, full of drama and tragedy.
With, of course, a glory of happiness as final climax, that would make
up for everything.... More physically tired than she knew, Alex
abandoned herself dreamily to the old, idle visions of the wonderful,
perfect love that should come to crown her life. There was no faint,
latent sense of disloyalty to Noel now, in returning to her old dreams,
that had been hers in one form or another ever since her childish ideal
of a perfect friend who would always understand, and yet love one just
the same.</p>
<p>It was with a violent start that Alex came back to reality again. She
had dismissed Noel Cardew, had given him back his beautiful diamond
engagement-ring, and now she would have to tell her father and mother,
with no better reason to adduce than her own caprice.</p>
<p>She felt sick with fright.</p>
<p>She remembered Sir Francis's silent but unmistakable pride and pleasure
in his engaged daughter, and Lady Isabel's additional display of
affection, and even of deference to Alex' taste in choosing her frocks
and hats, and her own sense of having at last atoned to them both for
her unsatisfactory childhood and lack of any conspicuous social success,
such as they had coveted for her.</p>
<p>Alex, cowering in her chair now, wondered how she could face them. Her
only shred of comfort lay in the remembrance that Lady Isabel had said
to her:</p>
<p>"My darlin', I'm so thankful to know you are marrying for love."</p>
<p>Alex, in bitter bewilderment, remembered those words again and again in
the days which followed.</p>
<p>No one reproached her, she heard hardly a word of blame, and the most
severe censure spoken to her was in her mother's soft voice, far more
distressed than angry.</p>
<p>"But, Alex, do you know what people say, about a girl who's behaved as
you have? That she's a vulgar <i>jilt</i>, neither more nor less. To throw
over a young man after being engaged to him for four weeks, with no
reason except a capricious fit.... Oh, my darling, <i>why</i> couldn't you
have asked me first? To go and give him back that lovely ring, and hurt
and insult him.... Of course, he'll never come back. Your father says
how well he's behaved, poor boy.... Alex, Alex, what shall I do with
you?"</p>
<p>Tears were running down her pretty face, so slightly lined even now.</p>
<p>Alex cried too, from pity for her mother and wretched, undefined
remorse, and a growing conviction that in acting on her own distorted
impulse she had once more involved herself, and, far worse, others, in
far-reaching and disastrous consequences.</p>
<p>"Thank Heaven, we hadn't announced the engagement, but, of course, it
will all get about—things always do. And there's nothing worse for a
girl than to get that sort of reputation, especially when she's not—not
tremendously sought after, or pretty or anything."</p>
<p>Lady Isabel had never before come so near to an avowal that her eldest
daughter's career had proved a disappointment to her, and Alex in the
admission, rightly gauged the extent of her mother's dismay.</p>
<p>"Why did you do it, Alex?"</p>
<p>Alex tried haltingly to explain, but she could only say:</p>
<p>"I—I felt I didn't care for him enough."</p>
<p>"But you hadn't had time to find out! You accepted him when he proposed,
so you must have been quite ready to like him then, and you'd only been
engaged for four weeks. How could you tell—a little thing like you?"
wailed Lady Isabel.</p>
<p>"Oh, Alex, if you'd only come to me about it first—I could have
explained it all to you—girls often get fancies about being in love."</p>
<p>"I thought you wanted me to marry for love. You said so," sobbed Alex.</p>
<p>"Of course, I don't want you to marry without it. But it's the love that
comes <i>after</i> marriage that really counts—and a boy you'd known all
your life, practically—that we all liked—you could have been ideally
happy, Alex." Lady Isabel looked at her almost resentfully.</p>
<p>"I don't know what will happen to you, my darling, I don't indeed. I
sometimes think you are just as headstrong and exaggerated as when you
were a little girl. And, Alex, I don't like even to say such a thing to
you—but—there's never been any one <i>but</i> Noel, and I'm afraid this
isn't the sort of thing that makes any man.... Nothing puts them off
more—and no wonder."</p>
<p>Alex thought momentarily of Queenie, but she knew that was different. In
the supreme object of woman, to attract, Queenie stood in a class apart.
Nothing that Queenie could ever do would ever rob her of the devotion
that was hers, wherever she chose to claim it, by mysterious right of
attraction.</p>
<p>From her father, Alex heard very little. She was left, in her abnormal
sensitiveness, to measure his disappointment and mortification by his
very silence.</p>
<p>Feeling again like the naughty little girl who had been responsible for
Barbara's fall from the balusters, and had been sent to Sir Francis for
sentence, she listened, in a silence that was broken only by the sobs
that she could hardly control, to his few, measured utterances.</p>
<p>"You are old enough to know your own mind." Sir Francis paused, swinging
his glasses lightly to and fro in his hand. Then he deliberately put
them across his nose and looked at her.</p>
<p>"At least," he added carefully, "I suppose you are. Your mother tells me
that you appear to have been—er—rather suddenly overwhelmed by a fear
of marrying without love. I don't wish to say, Alex, that such a
sentiment was not more or less proper and natural, but to act upon it so
hastily, and with such a heartless lack of consideration, appears to me
to be the action, my dear child"—Sir Francis paused, and then added
calmly—"of a fool. The word is not a pretty one, but I prefer it to the
only other alternative that I can see, for describing your conduct."</p>
<p>"Have you anything to say, my dear?"</p>
<p>Alex had nothing to say, and would, in any case, have been rendered by
this time powerless of saying it. Sir Francis looked at her with the
same grief and mortification on his handsome, severe face that had been
there eight years before when the nursery termagant, sobbing and
terrified, had stood before him in her short frock and pinafore.</p>
<p>"You could have asked advice," he said gently. "You have parents whose
only wish is to see you happy. Why did you not go to your mother?"</p>
<p>Alex tried to say, "Because—" but found that the only reason which
presented itself to her mind was her own conviction that Lady Isabel
would not have understood, and she dared not speak it aloud.</p>
<p>The Claire axiom, as that of thousands of their class and generation,
was that parents by Divine right knew more than their children could
ever hope to learn, and that nothing within the ken of these could ever
prove beyond their comprehension.</p>
<p>Sir Francis shook his head sadly.</p>
<p>"I will tell you, my poor child, since you will not answer me, why you
did not seek your mother's advice. It was because you are weakly
impulsive, and by one act of impetuous folly will lay up for yourself
years of unavailing remorse and regret."</p>
<p>Alex recognized with something like terror the truth of his description.
Weakly impulsive.</p>
<p>She had blindly followed an instinct, and, as usual, all her world had
blamed her and she had found herself faced by consequences that appalled
her.</p>
<p>Why must one always involve others?</p>
<p>She ceased to see clearly that marriage with Noel Cardew would have
meant misery, and blindly accepted the vision thrust upon her by her
surroundings. She had hurt and disappointed and shamed them, and they
could only see her action as a cruel, capricious impulse.</p>
<p>Alex, weakly impulsive, as Sir Francis had said, and sick with misery at
their unspoken blame and silent disappointment, presently lost her
always feeble hold of her own convictions, and saw with their eyes.</p>
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