<h3><SPAN name="XXV" id="XXV"></SPAN>XXV</h3>
<h3>Violet</h3>
<p>For days and nights to come, the question of the money that Barbara had
paid for her clothes weighed upon Alex.</p>
<p>She had no idea how she was to repay her.</p>
<p>The money that had been given her in Rome for her journey to England had
only lasted her to Charing Cross, and even her cab fare to Hampstead had
been supplemented by Barbara. Alex remembered it with fresh dismay. Even
when she had left Downshire Hill and was in Clevedon Square again, the
thought lashed her with a secret terror, until one day she said to
Cedric:</p>
<p>"What ought I to do, Cedric, to get my fifty pounds a year? Who do I get
it from?"</p>
<p>"Don't Pumphrey and Scott send it half yearly? I thought that was the
arrangement. You gave them your change of address, I suppose."</p>
<p>"Oh, no," said Alex gently. "I've never written to them, except once,
just after father died, to ask them to make the cheques payable to to
the Superior."</p>
<p>"What on earth made you do that?"</p>
<p>"They thought it was best. You see, I had no banking account, so the
money was paid into the Community's account."</p>
<p>"I see," Cedric remarked drily. "Well, the sooner you write and revoke
that arrangement, the better. When did they last send you a cheque? In
June?"</p>
<p>"I don't know," Alex was forced to say, feeling all the time that Cedric
must be thinking her a helpless, unpractical fool.</p>
<p>"Write and find out. And meanwhile—I say, Alex, have you enough to go
on with?"</p>
<p>"I—I haven't any money, Cedric. In Rome they gave me enough for my
travelling expenses, but nothing is left of that."</p>
<p>"But what have you done all this time? I suppose you've wanted clothes
and things."</p>
<p>"I got some with Barbara, but they aren't paid for. And there are some
other things I need—you see, I haven't got anything at all—not even
stamps," said Alex forlornly. "Violet said something about taking me to
some shops with her, but I suppose all her places are very expensive."</p>
<p>"They are—dashed expensive," Cedric admitted, with a short laugh. "But
look here, Alex, will you let me advance you what you want? It couldn't
be helped, of course—but the whole arrangement comes rather hard on
you, as things are now. You see, poor Barbara is really as badly off as
she can be. Ralph was a most awful ass, between ourselves, and muddled
away the little he had, and she gets pretty nearly nothing, except a
widow's pension, which was very small, and the money father left. If
you'll believe me, Ralph didn't even insure his life, before going to
South Africa. Of course, he didn't go to fight, but on the staff of one
of the big papers, and it was supposed to be a very good thing, and then
what did he do but go and get dysentery before he'd been there a
fortnight!"</p>
<p>Cedric's voice held all the pitying scorn of the successful.</p>
<p>"Poor Barbara," said Alex.</p>
<p>"That's just what she is. Of course, I think myself that Pamela will
make your share over to you again when she marries. <i>She's</i> not likely
to make a rotten bad match like Barbara—far from it. But until then she
can't do anything, you know—at least, not until she's of age, if then."</p>
<p>Cedric stopped, and his right hand tapped with his spectacles on his
left hand, in the little, characteristic trick that was so like Sir
Francis.</p>
<p>Alex had already heard him make much the same observations, but she
realized that Cedric had retained all his old knack of reiteration.</p>
<p>"I see," she said.</p>
<p>"Well, my dear, the long and the short of it is, that you must let me be
your banker for the time being. And—and, Alex," said Cedric, with a
most unwonted touch of embarrassment breaking into his kind, assured
manner, "you needn't mind taking it. There's—there's plenty of money
here—there is really—now-a-days."</p>
<p>Alex realized afterwards that it would hardly have occurred to her to
<i>mind</i> taking the twenty pounds which Cedric offered her with such
patent diffidence. She had never known the want of money, either in her
Clevedon Square days or during her ten years of convent life. She did
not realize its value in the eyes of other people.</p>
<p>The isolation of her point of view on this and other kindred subjects
gradually became evident to her. Her scale of relative values had
remained that which had been set before her in the early days of her
novitiate. That held by her present surroundings differed from it in
almost every particular, and more especially in degree of concentration.
All Violet's warm, healthy affection for Rosemary did not prevent her
intense preoccupation with her own clothes and her own jewels, or her
innocently-assured conviction that no one was ever in London during the
month of August, and that to be so would constitute a calamity.</p>
<p>All Cedric's pride in' his wife and love for her, in no way lessened his
manifest satisfaction at his own success in life and at the renovated
fortunes of the house of Clare.</p>
<p>Both he and Violet found their recreation in playing bridge, Cedric at
his club and Violet in her own house, or at the houses of what seemed to
Alex an infinite succession of elaborately-gowned friends, with all of
whom she seemed to be on exactly the same terms of an unintimate
affection.</p>
<p>Violet at night, when she dismissed her maid and begged Alex to stay and
talk to her until Cedric came upstairs, which he never did until past
twelve o'clock, was adorable.</p>
<p>She listened to Alex' incoherent, nervous outpourings, which Alex
herself knew to be vain and futile from the very longing which possessed
her to make herself clear, and said no word of condemnation or of
questioning.</p>
<p>At first the gentle pressure of Violet's soft hand on her hair, and her
low, sympathetic, murmuring voice, soothed Alex to a sort of worn-out,
tearful gratitude in which she would nightly cry herself to sleep.</p>
<p>It was only as she grew slowly physically stronger that the craving for
self-expression, which had tormented her all her life, woke again. Did
Violet understand?</p>
<p>She would reiterate her explanations and dissections of her own past
misery, with a growing consciousness of morbidity and a positive terror
lest Violet should at last repulse, however gently, the endless demand
for an understanding that Alex herself perpetually declared to be
impossible.</p>
<p>It now seemed to her that nothing mattered so long as Violet understood,
and by that understanding restored to Alex in some degree her utterly
shattered self-respect and self-confidence. This dependence grew the
more intense, as she became more aware how unstable was her foothold in
the world of normal life.</p>
<p>With the consciousness of an enormous and grotesque mistake behind her,
mingled all the convent tradition of sin and disgrace attached to broken
vows and the return to an abjured world. One night she said to Violet:</p>
<p>"I didn't do anything <i>wrong</i> in entering the convent. It was a mistake,
and I'm bearing the consequence of the mistake. But it seems to me that
people find it much easier to overlook a sin than a mistake."</p>
<p>"Well, I'd rather ask a <i>divorc�e</i> to lunch than a woman who ate peas
off her knife," Violet admitted candidly.</p>
<p>"That's what I mean. There's really no place for people who've made bad
mistakes—anywhere."</p>
<p>"If you mean yourself, Alex, dear, you know there's always a place for
you here. Just as long as you're happy with us. Only I'm sometimes
afraid that it's not quite the sort of life—after all you've been
through, you poor dear. I know people do come in and out a good
deal—and it will be worse than ever when Pam is at home."</p>
<p>"Violet, you're very good to me. You're the only person who has seemed
at all to understand."</p>
<p>"My dear, I do understand. Really, I think I do. It's just as you
say—you made a mistake when you were very young—<i>much</i> too young to be
allowed to take such a step, in my opinion—and you're suffering the
most bitter consequences. But no one in their senses could blame you,
either for going into that wretched place, or—still less—for coming
out of it."</p>
<p>"One is always blamed by some one, I think, for every mistake. People
would rather forgive one for murder, than for making a fool of oneself."</p>
<p>"Forgiveness," said Violet thoughtfully. "It's rather an overrated
virtue, in my opinion. I don't think it ought to be very hard to forgive
any one one loved, anything."</p>
<p>"Would <i>you</i> forgive anything, Violet?"</p>
<p>"I think so," said Violet, looking rather surprised. "Unless I were
deliberately deceived by some one whom I trusted. That's different. Of
course, one might perhaps forgive even then in a way—but it wouldn't be
the same thing again, ever."</p>
<p>"No," said Alex. "No, of course not. Every one feels the same about
deceit."</p>
<p>In the depths of her own consciousness, Alex was groping dimly after
some other standard—some elusive certainty, that continually evaded
her. Were not those things which were hardest to forgive, the most in
need of forgiveness?</p>
<p>Alex, with the self-distrust engrained in the unstable, wondered if that
question were not born of the fundamental weakness in her own character,
which had led her all her life to evade or pervert the truth in a
passionate fear lest it should alienate from her the love and confidence
that she craved for from others.</p>
<p>Sometimes she thought, "Violet will find me out, and then she will stop
being fond of me."</p>
<p>And, knowing that her claim on Violet's compassion was the strongest
link that she could forge between them, she would dilate upon the mental
and physical misery of the last two years, telling herself all the time
that she was trading on her sister's pity.</p>
<p>Her days in Clevedon Square were singularly empty, after Violet had
tried the experiment of taking Alex about with her to the houses of one
or two old friends, and Alex had come back trembling and nearly crying,
and begging never to go again.</p>
<p>Her nerves were still utterly undependable, and her health had suffered
no less than her appearance. Violet would have taken her to see a
doctor, but Alex dreaded the questions that he would, of necessity, put
to her, and Cedric, who distrusted inherently the practice of any
science of which he himself knew nothing, declared that rest and good
food would be her best physicians.</p>
<p>Sometimes she went to see Barbara at Hampstead, but seldom willingly.
One of her visits there was the occasion for a stupid, childish lie, of
which the remembrance made her miserable.</p>
<p>Alex, amongst other unpractical disabilities, was as entirely devoid as
it is possible to be of any sense of direction. She had never known how
to find her way about, and would turn as blindly and instinctively in
the wrong direction as a Dartmoor pony turns tail to the wind.</p>
<p>For ten years she had never been outside the walls of the convent alone,
and when she had lived in London as a girl, she could not remember ever
having been out-of-doors by herself.</p>
<p>Violet, always driven everywhere in her own motor, and accustomed to
Pamela's modern resourcefulness and independence, never took so childish
an inability into serious consideration.</p>
<p>"Alex, dear, Barbara hoped you'd go down to her this afternoon. Will you
do that, or come to Ranelagh? The only thing is, if you wouldn't mind
going to Hampstead in a taxi? I shall have to use the Merc�d�s, and the
little car is being cleaned."</p>
<p>"Of course, I shouldn't mind. I'll go to Barbara, I think."</p>
<p>"Just whichever you like best. And you'll be back early, won't you?
because we're dining at seven, and you know how ridiculous Cedric is
about punctuality and the servants, and all that sort of thing."</p>
<p>After Violet had gone, in all her soft, elaborate laces and
flower-wreathed hat, Alex, with every instinct of her convent training
set against the extravagance of a taxi, started out on foot, rejoicing
that a sunny July day should give her the opportunity of enjoying
Pamela's boasted delight, the top of an omnibus.</p>
<p>She took the wrong one, discovered her mistake too late, and spent most
of the afternoon in bewilderedly retracing her own footsteps. Finally
she found a taxi, and arrived at Downshire Hill very tired, and after
five o'clock.</p>
<p>Barbara was shocked, as Alex had known she would be, at the taxi.</p>
<p>"Violet is so inconsiderate. Because she can afford taxis as a matter of
course herself, she never thinks that other people can't. I know myself
how every shilling mounts up. I'll see you into an omnibus when you go,
Alex. It takes just under an hour, and you need only change once."</p>
<p>But that change took place at the junction of four roads, all of them
seething with traffic.</p>
<p>And again Alex was hopelessly at sea, and boarded at last an omnibus
that conveyed her swiftly in the wrong direction.</p>
<p>She was late for dinner, and when Cedric inquired, with his assumption
of the householder whose domestic routine has been flung out of gear,
what had delayed her, she stammered and said that Barbara had kept
her—she hadn't let her start early enough—had mistaken the time.</p>
<p>It was just such a lie as a child might have told in the fear of
ridicule or blame, and she told it badly as a child might have told it,
stammering, with a frightened widening of her eyes, so that even
easy-going Violet looked momentarily puzzled.</p>
<p>Alex despised and hated herself.</p>
<p>She knew vaguely that her sense of proportion was disorganized. She was
a woman of thirty-one, and her faults, her judgments and appreciations,
even her mistakes, were those of an ill-regulated, unbalanced child of
morbid tendencies.</p>
<p>When Pamela came back to Clevedon Square, Alex was first of all afraid
of her, and then became jealous of her.</p>
<p>She was jealous of Pam's self-confidence, of her enormous security in
her own popularity and success, jealous even of the innumerable common
interests and the mutual love of enjoyment that bound her and Violet
together.</p>
<p>She was miserably ashamed of her feelings, and sought to conceal them,
none the less as she became aware of a certain shrewdness of judgment
underlying all Pamela's breezy vitality and <i>joie de vivre</i>. She and her
sister had nothing in common.</p>
<p>To Pamela, Alex evidently appeared far removed from herself as a being
of another generation, less of a contemporary than pretty, sought-after
Violet, or than little Rosemary in her joyous, healthy play. Pamela
could accompany Violet everywhere, always radiantly enjoying herself,
and receiving endless congratulations, thinly disguised as raillery, on
her universal popularity and the charm that she seemed to radiate at
will. She could play whole-heartedly with Rosemary, thoroughly enjoying
a romp for its own sake, and making even Cedric laugh at her complete
<i>abandon</i>.</p>
<p>"Don't you like children?" Pamela asked Alex, looking up from the
nursery floor where she was playing with her niece.</p>
<p>"Yes, I like them," said Alex sombrely.</p>
<p>She had been reflecting bitterly that she would have known how to play
with a baby of her own. But with Pamela and the nurse in the room, she
was afraid of picking up Rosemary and making a fuss with her as Pam was
doing, afraid with the terrible insecurity of the self-conscious.</p>
<p>And she never would have babies of her own now. The thought had
tormented her often of late, watching Violet with her child, and Pamela
with her own radiantly-secure future that would hold home and happiness
as her rights.</p>
<p>But Alex concealed her thoughts, even, as far as possible, from herself.</p>
<p>The married woman who is denied children may lament her deprivation and
receive compassion, but the spinster whose lot forbids her the hope,
must either conceal her regrets or know herself to be accounted morbid
and indelicate.</p>
<p>"I like babies while they're small," Pam remarked. "Don't I, you little
horror of a niece? Other people's, you know. I don't know that I should
want any of my own—they're all very well when they're tiny, but I can't
bear them at the tell-me-a-story stage. I make it a rule never to tell
the children stories at the houses where I stay. I always say, the very
first evening, that I don't know any. Then they know what to expect.
Some girls let themselves be regularly victimized, if they want to
please the children's mother, and get asked again. I must say I do hate
that sort of thing myself, and I don't believe it really does any good.
Men are generally frightfully bored by the sort of girl who's 'perfectly
wonderful with children.' They'd much rather have one who can play
tennis, or who's good at bridge."</p>
<p>Pamela laughed comfortably at her own cynicism. "I must say I do think
it pays one to be honest in the long run. I always say exactly what I
feel myself, and don't care what any one thinks of me."</p>
<p>Alex felt a dull anger at her sister's self-complacent statement of what
she knew to be the truth. Pamela could afford to be frank, and her boast
seemed to Alex to cast an oblique reflection on herself. She gazed at
her without speaking, wretchedly conscious of her own unreason.</p>
<p>"Look at Aunt Alex, Baby!" mischievously exclaimed Pam in a loud
whisper. "We're rather afraid of her when she pulls a long face like
that, aren't we? Have we been naughty, do you think?"</p>
<p>Alex tried to laugh, contorting her lips stiffly. Pamela jumped up from
the floor.</p>
<p>"Really and truly, you know, Alex," she gravely told her sister, "you
ought to try and make things less <i>au grand s�rieux</i>. I think you'd be
much happier, if you'd only cultivate a sense of humour—we all think
so."</p>
<p>Then she ran out of the room.</p>
<p>Alex sat still.</p>
<p>So they all thought that she ought to cultivate a sense of humour. She
felt herself to be ridiculous in their eyes, with her eternal air of
tragedy, her sombre despair in the midst of their gay, good-humoured
conventions, that admitted of everything except of weighty, unseasonable
gloom.</p>
<p>Pamela's spontaneous and unwearied high spirits seemed to her to throw
her own dejection into greater relief; her own utter social
incompetence.</p>
<p>She began to long for the end of July, when the household in Clevedon
Square would be dispersed for the remainder of the summer.</p>
<p>Pamela talked incessantly of a yachting invitation which she had
received for August, and spoke of the difficulty of "sandwiching in"
country-house visits for autumn shooting-parties, and Alex knew that
Violet's people were taking a house in Scotland, and wanted her and
Cedric and the baby to make it their headquarters. She wondered, with a
sense of impending crisis, what would happen to her.</p>
<p>At last Cedric said to her:</p>
<p>"Have you any particular plans for August, Alex? I want to get Violet up
north as soon as possible, she's done so much rushing about lately. I
wish you could come with us, my dear, but we're going to the
Temples'—that's the worst of not having a place of one's own in the
country—"</p>
<p>"Oh," said Alex faintly, "don't bother about me, Cedric. I shall find
somewhere."</p>
<p>He looked dissatisfied, but said only:</p>
<p>"Well, you'll talk it over with Violet. I know she's been vexed at
seeing so little of you lately, but Pamela's an exacting young woman,
and chaperoning her is no joke. I wish she'd hurry up and get
settled—all this rushing about is too much for Violet."</p>
<p>"I thought she liked it."</p>
<p>"So she does. Anyhow," said Cedric, with an odd, shy laugh, "she'd like
anything that pleased somebody else. She's made like that. I've never
known her anything but happy—like sunshine." Then he flung a
half-smoked cigarette into the fireplace, looked awkward at his own
unusual expression of feeling, and abruptly asked Alex if she'd seen the
newspaper.</p>
<p>Alex crept away, wondering why happiness should be accounted a virtue.
She loved Violet with a jealous, exclusive affection and admiration, but
she thought enviously that she, too, could have been like sunshine if
she had received all that Violet received. She, too, would have liked to
be always happy.</p>
<p>She had her talk with Violet.</p>
<p>There was the slightest shade of wistfulness in Violet's gentleness.</p>
<p>"I wish we'd made you happier, but I really believe quiet is what you
want most, and things aren't ever very quiet here—especially with Pam.
I simply love having her, but I'm not sure she is the best person for
you, just now."</p>
<p>"I don't feel I know her very well. I mean, I'm not at all at home with
her. She makes me realize what a stranger I am to the younger ones,
after all these years."</p>
<p>"Poor Alex!"</p>
<p>"You're much more like my sister than she is, and yet a year ago I
didn't know you."</p>
<p>"Alex, dear, I'm so glad if I'm a comfort to you—but I wish you
wouldn't speak in that bitter way about poor little Pamela. It seems so
unnatural."</p>
<p>Violet's whole healthy instinct was always, Alex had already discovered,
to tend towards the normal—the outlook of well-balanced sanity. She was
instinctively distressed by abnormality of any kind.</p>
<p>"I didn't really mean it," said Alex hurriedly, with the old fatal
instinct of propitiation, and read dissent into the silence that
received her announcement.</p>
<p>It was the subconscious hope of rectifying herself in Violet's eyes that
made her add a moment later:</p>
<p>"Couldn't Barbara have me for a little while when you go up to Scotland?
I think she would be quite glad."</p>
<p>"Of course she would. She's often lonely, isn't she? And you think you'd
be happy with her?"</p>
<p>"Oh, yes," said Alex eagerly, bent on showing Violet that she had no
unnatural aversion from being with her own sister.</p>
<p>But Violet still looked rather troubled.</p>
<p>"You remember that you found it rather difficult there, when you first
got back. You said then that Barbara and you had never understood one
another even as children."</p>
<p>"Oh, but that will all be different now," said Alex, confused, and
knowing that her manner was giving an impression of shiftiness from her
very consciousness that she was contradicting herself.</p>
<p>As Pamela's claims and her own ceaseless fear of inadequacy made her
increasingly unsure of Violet, Alex became less and less at ease with
her.</p>
<p>The old familiar fear of being disbelieved gave uncertainty to every
word she uttered and she could not afford to laugh at Pam's merciless
amusement in pointing out the number of times that she contradicted
herself. Violet always hushed Pamela, but she looked puzzled and rather
distressed, and her manner towards Alex was more compassionate than
ever.</p>
<p>Alex, with the impetuous unwisdom of the weak, one day forced an issue.</p>
<p>"Violet, do you trust me?"</p>
<p>"My dear child, what <i>do</i> you mean? Why shouldn't I trust you? Are you
thinking of stealing my pearls?"</p>
<p>But Alex could not smile.</p>
<p>"Do you believe everything that I say?"</p>
<p>Violet looked at her and asked very gently:</p>
<p>"What makes you ask, Alex? You're not unhappy about the nonsense that
child Pamela sometimes talks, are you?"</p>
<p>"No, not exactly. It's—it's just everything...." Alex looked miserable,
tongue-tied.</p>
<p>"Oh, Alex, do try and take things more lightly. You make yourself so
unhappy, poor child, with all this self-torment. Can't you take things
as they come, more?"</p>
<p>The counsel found unavailing echo in Alex' own mind. She knew that her
mental outlook was wrenched out of all gear, and she knew also, in some
dim, undefined way, that a worn-out physical frame was responsible for
much of her self-inflicted torment of mind. Sometimes she wondered
whether the impending solution to her whole destiny, still hanging over
her, would find her on the far side of the abyss which separates the
normal from the insane.</p>
<p>The days slipped by, and then, just before the general dispersal, Pamela
suddenly announced her engagement to Lord Richard Gunvale, the youngest
and by far the wealthiest of her many suitors.</p>
<p>"Oh, Pam, Pam!" cried Violet, laughing, "why couldn't you wait till
after we'd left town?"</p>
<p>But every one was delighted, and congratulations and letters and
presents and telegrams poured in.</p>
<p>Pamela declared that she would not be married until the winter, and
refused to break her yachting engagement. She was more popular than ever
now, and every one laughed at her delightful originality and gazed at
the magnificence of the emerald and diamond ring on her left hand.</p>
<p>And Alex began to hope faintly that perhaps when Pamela was married,
things might be different at Clevedon Square.</p>
<p>Then one night, just before she was to go to Hampstead, she overheard a
conversation between Cedric and his wife.</p>
<p>She was on the stairs in the dark, and they were in the lighted hall
below, and from the first instant that Cedric spoke, Alex lost all sense
of what she was doing, and listened.</p>
<p>"...they're wearing you out, Pam and Alex between them. I won't have any
more of it, I tell you."</p>
<p>"No, no, my dear old goose. Of course they're not." Violet's soft
laughter came up to Alex' ears with a muffled sound, as though her head
were resting against Cedric's shoulder. "Anyhow, it isn't Pam—I'm
<i>delighted</i> about her, of course. Only Alex—I wish she was happier!"</p>
<p>"And why isn't she? You're a perfect angel to her," said Cedric
resentfully.</p>
<p>"I'm so <i>sorry</i> for her—only it's difficult sometimes—a feeling like
shifting sands. One doesn't know what to be <i>at</i> with her. If only she
said what she wanted or didn't want, right out, but it's that awful
anxiety to please—poor darling."</p>
<p>"She always was like that, from our nursery days. You never could get
the rights of a matter out of her—plain black or white—she'd say one
thing one day and another the next, always."</p>
<p>"That's what I find so difficult! It's impossible to do anything for a
person like that—it's the one thing I <i>can't</i> understand."</p>
<p>"Pack her off to Hampstead tomorrow," Cedric observed gruffly. "I <i>will</i>
not have you bothered."</p>
<p>"Oh, Cedric! I'm not bothered—how can you? She'll be going next week,
anyway, poor dear, and it may be easier for her to be herself with
Barbara, who's her own sister, after all. But I don't know what about
afterwards—when we get back."</p>
<p>"You'll have quite enough to think about with Pam's wedding, without
Alex on your hands as well. Violet," said Cedric, with a note in his
voice that Alex had never heard there, "when I think of the way you've
behaved to all my wretched family—"</p>
<p>Alex did not hear Violet's answer, which was very softly spoken.</p>
<p>She had turned and gone away upstairs in the dark.</p>
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