<h3><SPAN name="XV" id="XV"></SPAN>XV</h3>
<h3>Diamond Jubilee</h3>
<p>All that summer every one spoke of "Jubilee weather," and London grew
hotter and sunnier and more crowded day by day.</p>
<p>Alex found herself wishing, fretfully and almost angrily, that she could
enjoy it all. But the sensation of loneliness that had always oppressed
her, although she did not analyse it, was always most poignant amongst a
great number of people, and her listlessness and self-absorption in
society at last caused Lady Isabel to ask her gently, but with
unmistakable vexation, whether she had rather "leave most of the
gaieties to little Barbara, to whom it's all new and amusing."</p>
<p>"Why?" asked Alex, startled.</p>
<p>"My darling, I can see you're not very happy, and I quite understand
that, of course, one doesn't get over these things in a minute," said
Lady Isabel, with a sigh for the memory of Noel Cardew. "This will be
your third season, and I had hoped it would be the best of them all,
what with the Jubilee celebrations and everything—but if you're rather
out of heart with the gaieties just now, I don't want to force you into
them, poor child."</p>
<p>Lady Isabel gazed with wistful, puzzled eyes that held nothing but
uncomprehending perplexity at her disappointing eldest daughter. Alex
knew that she was wondering silently why that daughter, expensively
educated and still more expensively dressed, admittedly pretty and
well-bred, should still lack any semblance of attractiveness, should
still fail to achieve any semblance of popularity.</p>
<p>Alex herself wondered drearily if she was always destined to find
herself out of all harmony with her surroundings. She never questioned
but that the fault lay entirely in herself, and a sort of fatalism made
her accept it all with apathetic matter-of-factness.</p>
<p>She gave inert acquiescence to Lady Isabel's tentative suggestion that
most of the invitations pouring in daily should be accepted on Barbara's
behalf only, partly because she hated being taken out with her sister,
who was always critical and observant, and partly from sheer desire that
Lady Isabel should no longer have the mortification of watching a social
progress, the indifference of which Alex regarded with morbid
exaggeration.</p>
<p>Barbara, rather to Alex' surprise, although enjoying herself with a sort
of quiet determination, proved to be exceedingly shy, but in two months
she had achieved several gushing, intimate friendships with girls rather
older than herself, which led to her receiving innumerable invitations
to tea-parties, a form of entertainment always abhorred by Alex, but
from which Barbara generally returned with one or two new acquaintances,
who were sure to claim dances from her on meeting her at subsequent
balls.</p>
<p>She was not very pretty, and evening dresses, displaying her thin arms
and shoulders, took away from the effect of smartness that she had
acquired in France, but she danced exceptionally well, and was seldom
left partnerless.</p>
<p>Alex often wondered what Barbara, who was notoriously silent and awkward
with strangers, could find to talk about to her partners.</p>
<p>It did not occur to her that Barbara made an art of listening to them.</p>
<p>The climax of the season's festivities was reached on the blazing day
towards the end of June, when the Jubilee procession wound its way
through the flagged and decorated streets, with the small, stout,
black-clad figure in the midst of it all, bowing indefatigably to the
crowds that thronged streets and windows and balconies and even, when
practical roofs.</p>
<p>A window of Sir Francis' Club in Piccadilly was placed by him, with some
ceremony, at the disposal of his wife, his eldest son up from Eton, and
one daughter, but it was evident that he would regard any further
display of family as rather excessive, and Alex herself suggested that
she should see it all from a window in Grosvenor Place which had been
procured for Pamela and Archie, under the care of old Nurse, and various
minor members of the household.</p>
<p>"But that would be so dull!" protested Lady Isabel, shocked.</p>
<p>"Alex can do as she pleases, my dear," said Sir Francis stiffly.</p>
<p>He was not pleased with his eldest daughter, and imagined that her
evident shrinking from society arose, not from her acute perception of
this fact, but from shame at the recollection of her behaviour towards
Noel Cardew, which Sir Francis in his own mind stigmatized as both
dishonourable and unladylike. The further reflection he gave to the
matter—and reflection with Sir Francis was never anything but
deliberate—the more seriously he resented his daughter's lapse from the
code of "good form," and the harassed look which she was gradually
causing to mar his wife's placid beauty.</p>
<p>He would have liked Alex to be prettily eager for pleasure, as were the
young ladies of his day and ideal, and he regarded her obvious
discontent and unhappiness as a slur on Lady Isabel's exertions on her
behalf.</p>
<p>Very slowly, with the dull implacability of a man slow to assimilate a
grievance, and slower still to forgive what he does not understand, Sir
Francis was becoming angry with Alex.</p>
<p>"Let her do as she likes, Isabel," he repeated. "If the society we can
provide is less amusing than that of children and servants, by all means
let her join them."</p>
<p>Lady Isabel did not repeat his words to Alex. She only said:</p>
<p>"Your father says, do as you like, darlin'. We shan't have over-much
room, of course, especially as we have asked so many people for lunch
afterwards, but if you really cared about comin' with us, I could manage
it in a minute—"</p>
<p>She paused, as though for Alex' eager acclamation, but Barbara broke in
quickly:</p>
<p>"There won't be <i>much</i> room, with all those people coming, will there?
And father always says that one grown-up daughter at a time is enough,
so if Alex really doesn't want to come it seems a pity...."</p>
<p>So Alex, with an unreasonable sense of injury, that yet was in some
distorted way a relief to her, as showing her not to be alone in fault,
watched the procession from Grosvenor Place, with Archie flushed and
shouting with excitement, and Pamela, in curly, cropped hair and Liberty
silk picture frock, such as was just coming into fashion, breaking into
shrill cheers of rather spasmodic loyalty, as she fidgeted up and down
the length of the bunting-hung balcony.</p>
<p>Alex, on the whole, was sorry when it was all over, and the two children
ordered into the carriage by Nurse for the return to Clevedon Square.</p>
<p>She declared that she was going to walk home across the Park, partly
because the crowds interested her, partly to assert her independence of
old Nurse.</p>
<p>"Then you'll take James with you, in a crowd like this," the old
autocrat declared.</p>
<p>"Nonsense, I don't want James. You'll come with me, won't you, Holland?"</p>
<p>"Yes, Miss," said the maid submissively.</p>
<p>Since Barbara's coming out, the sisters had shared a maid of their own,
and Holland very much preferred Alex, who cared nothing what happened to
her clothes, and read a book all the time that her hair was being
dressed, to the exacting and sometimes rather querulous Barbara.</p>
<p>They found the Park comparatively free from people. Every one had gone
to find some place of refreshment, or had made a rush to secure places
for the return route of the procession from St. Paul's Cathedral.</p>
<p>Flags streamed and waved in the sunshine, and swinging rows of little
electric globes hung everywhere, in readiness for the evening's display
of illuminations.</p>
<p>Alex suddenly felt very tired and hot, and longed to escape from the
glare and the noise.</p>
<p>She wondered whether, if Noel had been with her, she could have taken
part in the general sense of holiday and rejoicing, sharing it with him,
and whilst her aching loneliness cried, "Yes," some deeper-rooted
instinct warned her that a companionship rooted only in proximity brings
with it a deeper sense of isolation than any solitude.</p>
<p>Her steps began to flag, and she wished that the way through the Park
did not seem so interminable.</p>
<p>"Couldn't we find a cab, Holland? I'm tired."</p>
<p>"It won't be easy, Miss, today," said the maid, a disquieted eye roving
over the Park railings to the dusty streets where pedestrians, indeed,
thronged endlessly, but few vehicles of any sort were to be discerned.</p>
<p>Alex would have liked to sit down, but none of the benches were
unoccupied, and, in any case, she knew that Lady Isabel would be shocked
at her doing such a thing, under no better chaperonage than that of a
maid.</p>
<p>Quite conscious of her own unreason, she yet said fretfully:</p>
<p>"I really can't get all the way home, unless I can sit down and rest
somewhere."</p>
<p>She had only said it to relieve her own sense of fatigue and
irritability, and was surprised when Holland replied in a tone of
reasonable suggestion:</p>
<p>"There's the convent just close to Bryanston Square, Miss. You can
always go in there it's always open."</p>
<p>"What convent?"</p>
<p>Holland named the Order of the house at Li�ge where Alex had been at
school.</p>
<p>She exclaimed at the coincidence.</p>
<p>"I thought their London house was in the East End."</p>
<p>"Yes, Miss," Holland explained, becoming suddenly voluble. "But the
Sisters opened a new house last year. I went to the consecration of the
chapel. It was a beautiful ceremony, Miss."</p>
<p>"Of course, you're a Catholic, aren't you? I forgot."</p>
<p>"Yes, Miss," said Holland, stiffening. It was evident that the fact to
which Alex referred so lightly was of supreme importance to her.</p>
<p>"Well, a church is better than nowhere in this heat," said Miss Clare
disconsolately.</p>
<p>Lady Isabel had decreed nearly two years ago that church-going, at all
events during the season, was incompatible with late nights, and Alex
had acquiesced without much difficulty.</p>
<p>Religion did not interest her, and she had kept up no intercourse with
the nuns at Li�ge since leaving school.</p>
<p>Holland, looking at once shocked and rather excited, pointed out the
tall, narrow building, wedged into a line of similar buildings, with a
high flight of steps leading to the open door.</p>
<p>"It's always open like that," Holland said. "Any one can go into the
chapel."</p>
<p>The open door, indeed, gave straight on to the oak door of the chapel
across a narrow entrance lobby.</p>
<p>Alex was instantly conscious of the sharply-defined contrast between the
hot glare and incessant roar of multifarious noises outside in the
brilliant streets, and the dark, cool hush that pervaded the silent
convent chapel.</p>
<p>The sudden sensation of physical relief almost brought tears to her
eyes, as she sank thankfully on to a little cushioned <i>prieu-dieu</i> drawn
up close to the high, carved rood-screen before the chancel steps.</p>
<p>Holland had slid noiselessly to her knees behind one of the humble
wooden benches close to the entrance.</p>
<p>There was absolute silence.</p>
<p>As her eyes grew accustomed to the soft gloom, Alex saw that the chapel
was a very small one, of an odd oblong shape, with high, carved stalls
on either side of it that recalled the big convent chapel at Li�ge to
her mind. The wax candles shed a peculiarly mild glow over the High
Altar, which was decked with a mass of white blossom and feathery green,
but the rest of the chapel was unlit except by the warm, softened shaft
of sunshine that struck through the painted oval windows behind the
altar, and lay in deep splashes of colour over the white-embroidered
altar-cloth and the red-carpeted altar steps.</p>
<p>The peace and harmony of her surroundings fell on Alex' wearied spirit
with an almost poignant realization of their beauty. The impression thus
made upon her, striking with utter unexpectedness, struck deep, and to
the end of her life the remembrance was to remain with her, of the
sudden sense which had come upon her of entering into another world,
when she stepped straight from the streets of London into the convent
chapel, on Diamond Jubilee Day.</p>
<p>It seemed to her that she had been sitting still there for some time,
scarcely conscious of thought or feeling, when the remembrance gradually
began to filter through her mind, as it were, of teachings, unheeded at
the time, from her schooldays at Li�ge.</p>
<p>What if the solution to all her troubles lay here, before the small gilt
door of the tabernacle?</p>
<p>Alex had never prayed in her life. The mechanical formula extorted from
the Clare children by old Nurse had held no meaning for them, least of
all to Alex, who was not temperamentally religious, and instinctively
disliked anything which was presented to her in the light of an
obligation.</p>
<p>Her lack of fundamental religious instruction had remained undiscovered,
and consequently unrectified, throughout her schooldays, and she had
unconsciously adopted since then the standard typified no less in Sir
Francis' courteously blank attitude towards the faith of his fathers,
than in Lady Isabel's conventional adherence to the minimum of
church-going permitted by the social code.</p>
<p>What if comfort had been waiting for her all the time?</p>
<p>"Come unto Me all ye that labour and are heavy burdened, and I will
refresh you."</p>
<p>Alex did not know that she was crying until she found herself wiping
away the tears that were blinding her.</p>
<p>The loneliness that encompassed her seemed to her to be suddenly
lightened, and she formulated the first vague, stammering prayer of her
life.</p>
<p>"Help me ... make me good ... and let there be some one soon who will
understand ... some one who will understand and still love me ... who
will want me to care too ... If only there was some one for whose sake
everything really mattered, I believe I could be good.... Please help
me...."</p>
<p>She felt certain that her prayer would be heard and granted.</p>
<p>There was the slightest possible movement beside her, and turning
sharply, she saw the tall figure of a woman wearing the habit of the
Order, standing over her.</p>
<p>She had not known that this nun was in the chapel.</p>
<p>The tall, commanding presence bent and knelt down on the ground beside
her, with a deep inclination of her head towards the High Altar.</p>
<p>"Forgive me for disturbing you, but when you are quite ready to come
away, will you come and speak to me for a moment or two before you go?"
She paused for a second, but Alex was too much surprised to reply.</p>
<p>"Don't hurry. I shall wait for you outside."</p>
<p>The nun rose slowly, laying her hand for an instant on Alex' shoulder,
and moved soundlessly away.</p>
<p>Alex looked at her watch, and was surprised by the lateness of the hour.</p>
<p>She drew down her veil, and gathered up the long, fashionable skirt of
her dress, preparatory to leaving the chapel.</p>
<p>In the little lobby outside she looked round curiously. On the instant,
some one moved forward out of a shadowy corner.</p>
<p>"Come in here for a moment, won't you? I think it is Miss Clare?"</p>
<p>"Yes."</p>
<p>Alex, faintly uneasy, although she could not have explained why, looked
round for her maid.</p>
<p>Holland came forward at once.</p>
<p>"Good afternoon, Mary," said the nun, addressing her calmly. "How are
you?"</p>
<p>"Very well, thank you, Mother Gertrude. I hadn't hoped to be here again
so soon, but Miss Clare was tired, and we were just going past, on the
way back after the procession."</p>
<p>"Ah, yes, to be sure," said the nun with the air of recalling an
unimportant fact—"the Jubilee procession takes place today. That must
make the streets unpleasantly crowded. Won't you rest a little while in
the parlour, Miss Clare? Perhaps your maid might find a cab to take you
home."</p>
<p>"Will you try, Holland?" said Alex eagerly. She felt unable to walk any
more.</p>
<p>This time Holland made no demur at the suggestion, and only glanced a
respectful farewell at the nun, who said, with a smile that seemed
somehow full of authority: "Good-bye, then, Mary, for the present. I
will take care of your young lady whilst you are away. It may take a
little while to find a cab on a day like this."</p>
<p>As the maid went out, Mother Gertrude motioned to Alex to precede her
down the small, uneven steps leading out of the lobby into a
better-lighted passage beyond.</p>
<p>"There are two steps down, that's all. These old houses are dark, and
inconveniently built but we are lucky to get anything so central....
Come into the parlour, we shall not be disturbed, and your maid will
know where to find us when she returns."</p>
<p>"I had no idea that Holland came here, and—and knew you," said Alex,
rather confused.</p>
<p>In the stiff, ugly parlour, furnished with cane-seated chairs and a
round table, it was easy to see Mother Gertrude, as she seated herself
opposite to Alex in the window.</p>
<p>She was an exceptionally tall, upright woman, a natural dignity of
carriage emphasized by the sweeping black folds of veil and habit, her
hands demurely hidden under the wide-falling sleeves as she sat with
arms lightly crossed. Her strong, handsome face, of a uniform light
reddish colour, showed one or two hard lines, noticeably round the
closed, determined mouth, and her strongly-marked eyebrows almost met
over straight-gazing, very light grey eyes. Even her religious habit
could not conceal the lines and contour of a magnificent figure,
belonging to a woman in the full maturity of life.</p>
<p>"Are you surprised to find that your maid comes to the convent?" she
asked, smiling.</p>
<p>Her voice was deep and of a commanding quality that seemed to match her
personality, but her smile was her least attractive feature. It was only
a slow widening of her mouth, showing a set of patently porcelain teeth,
and deepening the creases on either side of her face. Her eyes remained
watchful and unchanged.</p>
<p>"Mary Holland was one of our children when she was quite a little thing,
at our Poor-school at Bermondsey. She has always been a good girl, and
we take a great interest in her."</p>
<p>"Was that why you knew who I was?" Alex inquired, remembering how the
nun had addressed her by-name.</p>
<p>"Yes. I knew that Mary Holland had taken a place with Lady Isabel Clare,
and was much interested to hear from her of her 'young lady.' Tell me,
were you not at school at our Mother-house in Belgium?"</p>
<p>Alex, unversed in the infinitely far-reaching ramifications of
inter-conventual communication, was again surprised.</p>
<p>"Yes, I was there for about five years, but I don't remember—" She
hesitated.</p>
<p>"Oh, no, I was never there. I have been Superior in London for more than
ten years, but I have heard your name several times, though not since
you left school. We like to keep in touch with our children, but you
have probably been busy going about with your mother?"</p>
<p>"I didn't even know there was a house of the Order here," Alex admitted.</p>
<p>"It has not been established very long. Our chapel was only consecrated
a few months ago. It is very tiny, but perhaps some day you will pay
another visit here."</p>
<p>Mother Gertrude was not looking at Alex as she spoke, but down at her
own long rosary beads; and the fact somehow made it easier for Alex to
reply without embarrassment.</p>
<p>"Yes, I should like to come if I may—and if I can. It felt so—so
peaceful."</p>
<p>"Yes," returned the nun, without any show of surprise or indeed, any
emotion at all, in her carefully colourless voice. "Yes, it is very
peaceful here—a great contrast to the hurry and unrest of the world.
And for any one who is tired, or troubled, or perhaps unhappy, and
conscious of wrong-doing, there is always comfort to be found here. No
one asks any questions, and if, perhaps, a poor soul is too much
worn-out with conflict for prayer, why, even that is not necessary."</p>
<p>Alex gazed at her, surprised.</p>
<p>"Do you think that God wants things put into words?" said the nun with
her slow smile.</p>
<p>Alex did not know what to reply. She looked silently at the Superior,
and felt that those light, penetrating, grey eyes had probed to the
depths of her confusion and beyond it, to the scenes of loneliness and
bewilderment that had made her weep in the chapel.</p>
<p>"Do a lot of people come here?" she asked involuntarily, from the sense
that a wide experience of humanity must have gone to the making of those
keen perceptions.</p>
<p>"Yes. Many of them I know, and see here, and anything that passes in
this little room is held in sacred confidence. But very often, of
course, there are visitors to the chapel of whom we know nothing—just
passers-by."</p>
<p>"That was what I was."</p>
<p>The nun looked at her for a moment. "And yet," she said slowly,
"something made me want to come and speak to you, even before I caught
sight of your maid, and guessed you must be Miss Clare. It is curious
that you should have turned out to be one of our children."</p>
<p>Alex thought so too, but the term with its sense of shelter touched her
strangely. She was shaken both by physical fatigue and her recent
violent crying, and moreover, the forceful, magnetic personality of the
Superior was already making its sure impression upon her young,
unbalanced susceptibilities.</p>
<p>"May I see you again, next time I come?" she asked rather tremulously.</p>
<p>Mother Gertrude stood up.</p>
<p>"Whenever you like," she said emphatically, her direct gaze adding
weight to the deliberately-spoken words. "Come whenever you like. You
have been brought here by what looks like a strange chance. Don't
neglect the way now that you know it."</p>
<p>She held Alex' hand in hers for a moment, and then took her back to the
little lobby.</p>
<p>"Mary has actually got a four-wheeled cab! That is very clever of her. I
hope they will not have been anxious about you at home. You must tell
them that you were with <i>friends</i>, quite safe."</p>
<p>She laid a slight emphasis on the words, smiling a little.</p>
<p>"Good-bye," said Alex; "thank you very much."</p>
<p>"Good-bye," repeated the Nun. "And God bless you, my child."</p>
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