The Heart of Rachael
BOOK TWO
CHAPTER II
Plans for the big dance presently began to move briskly, and there was much
talk of the affair. As hostess, Rachael would not mask, nor would Warren, but
they were already amusing themselves with the details of elaborate costumes.
Warren's rather stern and classic beauty was to be enhanced by the blue and buff
of an officer of the Revolution, fine ruffles falling at wrist and throat, wide
silver buckles on square-toed shoes, and satin ribbon tying his white wig.
Rachael, separately tempted by the thought of Dutch wooden shoes and of the
always delightful hoop skirts, eventually abandoned both because it was not
possible historically to connect either costume with the one upon which Warren
had decided. She eventually determined to be the most picturesque of Indian
maidens, with brown silk stockings disappearing into moccasins, exquisite
beadwork upon her fringed and slashed skirt, feathers in her loosened hair, and
a small but matchless tiger skin, strapped closely across her back, to lend a
touch of distinction to the costume.
On the Monday evening before the dance she tried on her regalia and appeared
before her husband and three or four waiting dinner guests, so exquisite a
vision of glowing and radiant beauty that their admiration was almost a little
awed. Her cheeks were crimson between her loosened rich braids of hair; her eyes
shone deeply blue, and the fantastic costume, with its fluttering strips of
leather and richly colored wampum, gave an extraordinary quality of youth and
almost of frailty to her whole aspect.
"The woman just sent this home. I couldn't resist showing you!" said Rachael,
in a shower of compliments. "Isn't my tiger a darling? Warren went six hundred
and seventy-two places to catch him. Of course there never was a stripey tiger
like this in North America but what care I? I'm only a poor little redskin; a
trifling inconsistency like that doesn't worry ME!"
"Me taky you my wikiup-HUH!" said Frank Whittaker invitingly. "You my squaw?"
"Come here, Hattie Fishboy," said her husband, catching her by the arm. His
face showed no more than an amused indulgence to her caprice, but Rachael knew
he was pleased. "Well, when you first planned this outfit I thought it was going
to be an awful mess," said he, turning her slowly about. "But it isn't so bad!"
"Isn't so bad!" Mrs. Bowditch said scornfully; "it's the loveliest thing I
ever saw. I'll tell you what, Rachael, if you come down to Easthampton this
summer we'll have a play, and you can be an Indian — "
"I'd love it," Rachael said, and making a deep bow before her husband she
added: "I'll be Squaw-Afraid-of-Her-Man!"
She heard them laughing as she ran upstairs to change to a more conventional
dress.
"Etta," said she, consigning the Indian costume to her maid, "I'm too happy
to live!"
Etta, one of those homely, conscientious women who extract in some mysterious
way an actual pride and pleasure from the beauty of the women whom they serve,
smiled faintly and dully.
"The weather's getting real nice now," she submitted, as one who will not
discourage a worthy emotion.
Rachael laughed out joyously. The next instant she had flung up a window and
leaned out in the spring darkness. Trees on the drive were rustling over pools
of light, a lighted steamboat went slowly up the river, the brilliant eyes of
motor cars curved swiftly through the blackness. A hurdy-gurdy, guarded by two
shadowy forms, was pouring out a wild jangle of sound from the curb. When the
window was shut, a moment later, the old Italian man and woman who owned the
musical instrument decided that they must mark this apartment house for many a
future visit, and, chattering hopefully, went upon their way. The belladonna in
the spangled gown, who had looked down upon them for a brief interval, meanwhile
ran down to her guests.
She was in wild spirits, inspired with her most enchanting mood; for an hour
or two there was no resisting her. Mrs. Whittaker and Mrs. Bowditch fell as
certainly under her spell as did the three men. "She really HAS changed since
she married Greg," said Louise Bowditch to Mrs. Whittaker; "but it's all
nonsense — this talk about her being no more fun! She's more fun than ever!"
"She's prettier than ever," Gertrude Whittaker said with a sigh.
The next afternoon, a dreary, wet afternoon, at about four o'clock, Warren
Gregory stepped out of the elevator, and quietly admitted himself to his own
hallway with a latchkey. It was an unusual hour for the doctor to come home, and
in the butler's carefully commonplace tone as he answered a few questions Warren
knew that he knew.
The awning had been stretched across the sidewalk, caterers' men were in
possession, the lovely spacious rooms were full of flowers; the big studio had
been emptied of furniture, there were great palms massed in the musicians'
corner; maids were quietly busy everywhere; no eye met the glance of the man of
the house as he went upstairs.
He found Mrs. Gregory alone in her own luxurious room. No one who had seen
her in the excited beauty of the night before would have been likely to
recognize her now. She was pale, tense, and visibly nervous, wrapped in a great
woolly robe, as if she were cold, and with her hair bound carelessly and tightly
back as a woman binds it for bathing.
"You've seen it?" she said instantly, as her husband came in.
"George called my attention to it; I came straight home. I knew" — he was
kneeling beside her, one arm about her, all his tenderness and devotion in his
face — "I knew you'd need me."
She laid an arm about his neck, sighed deeply, but continued to stare
distractedly beyond him.
"Warren, what shall we do?" she said with a certain vagueness and brokenness
in her manner that he found very disquieting.
"Do, sweetheart?" he echoed at a loss.
"With all those people coming to-night," she added, mildly impatient.
"Why, what CAN we do, dear?"
"You don't mean," Rachael said incredulously, "that we shall have to GO ON
with it?"
"Think a minute, dearest. Why shouldn't we?"
"But" — her color, better since his entrance, was waning again — "with
Clarence Breckenridge dying while we dance!" she shuddered.
"Could anything be more preposterous than your letting anything that concerns
Clarence Breckenridge affect what you do now?" he asked with kindly patience.
"No, it's not that!" she answered feverishly. "But — but for any old friend
one would — would make a difference, and surely — surely he was more than
that!"
"He WAS more than that, of course, but he has been less than nothing to you
for a long time!"
"Yes, legally — technically, of course," Rachael agreed nervously. She sat
silent for a moment, frowning over some sombre thought. "But, Warren, they'll
all know of it, they'll all be THINKING of it," she said presently. "I — really
I don't think I can go through it!"
"It's too bad, of course," Warren Gregory said with his arm still about her.
"I'd give ten thousand dollars to have had the poor fellow select some other
time. But you've had nothing to do with it, and you simply must put it out of
your mind!"
"It was Billy's marriage, of course!"
"Of course. She was married yesterday, you see, the day she came of age. Poor
kid — it's rather a sad start for her, especially with no one but Joe Pickering
to console her!"
"She was mad about her father," Rachael said in a preoccupied whisper. "Poor
Billy — poor Billy! She never crossed him in anything but this. What did you
see it in?"
"The World. How did you hear it?"
"Etta brought up the paper." She closed her eyes and leaned back in her
chair. "It seemed to jump at me — his picture and the name. Is he living —
where is he?"
"At St. Mark's. He won't live. Poor fellow!" Warren Gregory scowled
thoughtfully as he gave a moment's thought to the other man's situation, and
then smiled sunnily at his wife with a brisk change of topic. "Well," he said
cheerfully, "is anyone in this place glad to see me, or not, or what?"
"It just seems to me that I CANNOT face all those people to- night!" Rachael
said, giving him a quick, unthinking kiss before she gently put him away from
her, and got to her feet. "It seems so wrong — so coarse — to be utterly and
totally indifferent to the man who was my husband a year ago. I don't love him,
he is nothing to me, but it's all wrong, this way. If it was Peter Pomeroy or
Joe Butler, of COURSE we'd put off our dance — Warren," she turned to him with
sudden hope in her eyes, "do you suppose anybody'll come?"
"My dear girl," he said, displeased, "why are you working yourself into a
fever over this? It's most unfortunate, but as far as you're concerned, it's
unavoidable, and you'll simply have to put a brave face on it, and get through
it SOMEHOW! I am absolutely confident that when you've pulled yourself together
you'll come through with flying colors. Of course everyone'll come; this is
their chance to show you exactly how little they ever think of you as
Breckenridge's wife! And this is your chance, too, to act as if you'd never
heard of him. Dash it! it does spoil our little party, but it can't be helped!"
"Do you suppose Billy's with him?" Rachael asked, her absent, glittering eyes
fixed upon her own person as she sat before her mirror.
"Oh, no — she and Pickering sailed yesterday for England — that's the
dreadful thing for her. Clarence evidently spent the whole night at the club,
sitting in the library, thinking. Berry Stokes went in for his mail after the
theatre, and they had a little talk. He promised to dine there to-night. At
about ten this morning Billings, the steward there, saw old Maynard going out —
Maynard's one of the directors — and asked him if he wouldn't please go and
speak to Mr. Breckenridge. Mayn went over to him, and Clarence said, 'Anything
you say — '"
Rachael gave a gasp that was like a shriek, and put her two elbows on the
dressing-table, and her face in her hands. It was Clarence's familiar phrase.
"Oh, don't — don't — don't — Greg!"
"Well, that was all there was to it," her husband said, watching her
anxiously. "He had the thing in his pocket. He stood up — everybody heard it.
Fellows came rushing in from everywhere. They got him to a hospital."
"Florence is with him, of course?"
"Florence is at Palm Beach."
"Then who IS with him, Greg?"
"My dear girl, how do I know? It's none of my affair!"
Rachael sat still for perhaps two minutes, while her husband, ostentatiously
cheerful, moved about the room selecting a change of clothes.
"To-morrow you can take it as hard as you like, sweet," said he. "But
to-night you'll have to face the music! Now get into something warm — it's a
little cool out — and I'll take you for a spin, and we'll have dinner
somewhere. Then we'll get back here about eight o'clock, and take our time
dressing."
"Yes, I'll do that," Rachael agreed automatically. A moment later she said
urgently: "Warren, isn't there a chance that I'm right about this? Mightn't it
be better simply to telephone everyone that the dance is postponed? Make it next
week, or Mi-Careme — anything. If they talk — let them! I don't care what they
say. They'll talk anyway. But every fibre of my being, every delicate or decent
instinct I ever had, rebels against this. Say I'm not well, and let them buzz! I
know what you are going to say — I know that it would SEEM less sensitive, less
fine, to mourn for one man while I'm another man's wife, than to absolutely
ignore what happens to him, but you know what's the truth! I never loved him,
and I love every hair of your head — you know that. Only — "
She stopped short, baffled by the difficulty of expressing herself
accurately.
"If you really love me, do what I ask you to-night," Warren Gregory said
firmly.
His wife sat as if turned to stone for only a few seconds. When she spoke it
was naturally and cheerfully.
"I'll be ready in no time, dear. Where are we to dine?" She glanced at her
little crystal clock as she spoke, as if she were computing casually the length
of the drive before dinner. But what she said in her heart was, "At this time
to-morrow it will all have been over for many hours!"
A few days later the Gregorys sailed for Bermuda, Rachael with a sense of
whipped and smarting shame that was all the more acute because she could not
share it with this dearest comrade and confidant. Warren thought indeed that the
miserable episode of the past week had been dismissed from her mind, and
delighting like a boy in the little holiday, and proud of his beautiful wife, he
found their hours at sea cloudless. With two men, whose acquaintance was made on
the steamer, they played bridge, and Rachael's game drew other players from all
sides to watch her leads and grin over her bidding. They walked up and down the
deck for hours together, they lay side by side in deck chairs lazily watching
the blue water creep up and down the painted white ropes of the rail; but they
never spoke of Clarence Breckenridge.
The Mardi-Gras dance had been like a hideous dream to Rachael. She had known
that it would be hard from the first sick moment in which the significance of
Clarence's suicide had rushed upon her. She had known that her arriving guests
would be gay and conversational, that the dance and the supper would go with a
dash and swing which no other circumstance could more certainly have assured for
them; and she knew that in every heart would be the knowledge that Clarence
Breckenridge was dying by his own hand, and his daughter on the ocean, and that
this woman in the Indian dress, with painted lips and a tiger skin outlining her
beautiful figure, had been his wife.
This she had expected, and this was as she had expected. But there were other
circumstances that made her feel even more acutely the turn of the screw. Joe
Butler, always Clarence's closest friend, did not come to the dance, and at
about twelve o'clock an innocent maid delivered to Warren a message that several
persons besides Warren heard: "Mr. Butler to speak to you on the telephone,
Doctor Gregory."
Everyone could surmise where Joe Butler was, but no one voiced the
supposition. Warren, handsome in his skirted coat, knee breeches, and ruffles,
disappeared from the room, and the dancing went on. The scene was unbelievably
brilliant, the hot, bright air sweet with flowers and perfume, and the more
subtle odors of silk and fine linen and powder on delicate skin. Warren was
presently among them again, and there was a supper, the hostess' lovely face
showing no more strain or concern than was natural to a woman eager to make
comfortable nearly a hundred guests.
After supper there was more dancing, and an augmented gayety. There were no
more telephone messages, nor was there any definite foundation for the rumor
that was presently stealthily circulating. Women, powdering their noses as they
waited for their wraps, murmured it in the dressing-rooms; a clown, smoking in
the hall, confided it to a Mephistopheles; a pastry cook, after his effusive
good-nights, confirmed it as he climbed into the motorcar that held the
Pierrette who was his wife: "Dead, poor fellow!"
"Dead, poor Clarence!" said Mrs. Prince, magnificent as Queen Elizabeth, as
she and Elinor Vanderwall went downstairs. She had once danced a fancy dance
with him more than twenty years ago. "Awful!" said Elinor, shuddering.
After the last guest was gone Warren telephoned to the hospital, Rachael, a
little tired and pale in the Indian costume, watching and listening tensely. She
was sick at heart. Even into the library, where they stood, the Mardi-Gras
disorder had penetrated: a blue silk mask was lying across Warren's blotter, a
spatter of confetti lay on the polished floor, and on the reading table was a
tray on which were two glasses through whose amber contents a lazy bubble still
occasionally rose. The logs that had snapped in the fireplace were gone, only
gray ashes remained, and to Rachael, at least, the room's desolation and
disorder seemed to typify her own state of mind.
She could tell from Warren's look that he found the whole matter painful and
distasteful to an almost unbearable degree; on his handsome serious face was an
expression of grim endurance, of hurt yet dignified protest against events. He
did not blame her, how could he blame her? But he was suffering in every fibre
of his sensitive soul at this sordid notoriety, at this blatant voicing of a
hundred ugly whispers in a matter so closely touching the woman he loved.
"Dead?" Rachael said quietly, when his brief conversation was over.
Warren Gregory, setting the telephone back upon the desk, nodded gravely.
Rachael made no comment. For a moment her eyes widened nervously, and a
little shudder rippled through her. Then silently she gathered up the leather
belt and chains of beads that she had been loosening as she listened, and slowly
went toward the door.
They did not speak again of Clarence that night, although they chatted easily
for the next hour on other topics, even laughing a little as the various
episodes of the evening were passed in review.
But Rachael did not sleep, nor did she sleep during the long hours of the
following night. On the third night she wakened her husband suddenly from his
sleep.
"Greg — Greg! Won't you talk to me a little? I'm going mad, I think!"
"Rachael! What is it?" stammered the doctor, blinking in the dim light of
Rachael's bedside lamp. His wife, haggard, with her rich hair falling in two
long braids over her shoulders, was sitting on the side of his bed. "What is it,
darling — hear something?" he asked, more naturally, putting his arm about her.
"I've been lying awake — and lying awake!" said Rachael, panting. "I haven't
shut my eyes — it's nearly three. Greg, I keep seeing it — Clarence's face,
you know, with that horrible scar! What shall I do?"
Shivering, gasping, wild-eyed, she clung to him, and for a long hour he
soothed her as if she had been an hysterical child. He put her into a
comfortable chair, mixed her a sedative, and knelt beside her, slowly winning
her back to calm and sanity again. It was terrible, of course, but no one but
Clarence himself was to blame, unless it was poor Billy —
"Yes, I must see Billy when she comes back!" Rachael said quickly, when the
tranquillizing voice reached this point. If Warren Gregory's quiet mouth
registered any opposition, she did not see it, and he did not express it. She
was presently sound asleep, still catching a long childish breath as she slept.
But she woke smiling, with all the horrid visions of the past few days
apparently blotted out, and she and Warren went gayly downtown to get steamer
tickets, and buy appropriate frocks and hats for the spring heat of Bermuda.
In midsummer came the inevitable invitation to visit old friends at Belvedere
Bay. Rachael was pleased to accept Mrs. Moran's hospitality for a glorious July
week. Warren, to her delight, took an eightdays' holiday, and while he looked to
his racquet and golf irons she packed her prettiest gowns. Belvedere Bay
welcomed them rapturously, and beautiful Mrs. Gregory was the idol of the hour.
Mrs. Moulton, giving a tennis tea during this week, duly sent Mrs. Gregory a
card. But when society wondering whether Rachael would really be a guest in her
own old home, had duly gathered at the Breckenridge house, young Dicky Moran was
so considerate as to be flung from his riding-horse. Neither the Gregorys nor
the Morans consequently appeared at the tea, but Rachael, meeting all inquirers
on the Moran terrace, late in the afternoon, with the news that Dicky was quite
all right, no harm done, asked prettily for details of the affair they had
missed.
She told herself that the past really made no difference in the radiant
present, but she knew it was not so. In a thousand little ways she had lost
caste, and she saw it, if Warren did not. A certain bloom was gone. Girls were
not quite as deferentially adoring, women were a little less impressed. The old
prestige was somehow lessened. She knew that newcomers at the club, struck by
her beauty, were a little chilled by her history. She felt the difference in the
very air.
In her musings she went over the old arguments hotly. Why was she merely the
"divorced Mrs. Gregory?" Why were these casual inquirers not told of Clarence,
of her long endurance of neglect and shame? More than once the thought came to
her, that if other, events had been as they were, and only the facts of her
divorce and remarriage lacking, she would have been Clarence's widow now.
"What's the difference? It all comes out the same!" commented Warren, to whom
she confided this thought.
"Then you and I would have been only engaged now," said Rachael, smiling.
"And I would like that!"
"You mean you regret your marriage?" he laughed, his arms about her.
"I'd like to live the first days over and over and over again, Greg!" she
answered passionately.
"You are an insatiable creature!" he said. But her earnestness was beginning
to puzzle him a little. She was too deeply wrapped in her love for her own
happiness or his. There was something almost startling in her intensity. She was
jealous of every minute that they were apart; she made no secret of her blind
adoration.
Warren had at first found this touching; it had humbled him. Later, in the
first months of their marriage, he had shared it, and their mutual passion had
seemed to them both a source of inexhaustible delight. But now, even while he
smiled at her, his keen sensitiveness where her dignity was concerned had shown
him that there was in her attitude something a little pitiful, something even a
little absurd.
Judy and Gertrude and little Mrs. Sartoris listened interestedly when Rachael
talked of Greg, of his likes, his dislikes, his favorite words, his old-maidish
way of arranging his ties, his marvellous latest operation. But Warren, watching
his wife's flushed, lovely face, wondered if they were laughing at her. He
smiled uncomfortably when she interrupted her bridge game to come across the
club porch to him, to ask him if the tennis had been good, to warn him that he
would catch cold if he did not instantly get out of those wet flannels, to ask
Frank Whittaker what he meant by beating her big boy three sets in succession?
"Rachael, I'm dealing for you — come back here!" Gertrude might call.
"Deal away!" Rachael, one hand on Warren's arm, would look saucily at the
others over his shoulder. "I like my beau," she would assert brazenly, "and if
you say a word more, I'll kiss him here and now!"
They all shrieked derisively when the kiss was duly delivered and Gregory
Warren with a self-conscious laugh had escaped to his shower. But Rachael saw
nothing absurd; she told Warren that she loved him, and let them laugh if they
liked!
"Listen, dearest!" he said on the last night of their stay. "Will you be a
darling, and not trail round the links if we play to- morrow?"
"Why not?" asked Rachael absently, fluffing his hair from her point of
vantage on the arm of his chair.
"Well, wouldn't you rather stay up on the porch with the girls?"
"If you men want to swear at your strokes, I decline to be a party to it!"
Rachael said maternally.
"I know. But, darling, it does rather affect our game," Warren said
uncertainly; "that is, you don't play, you see! And it only gets you hot and
mussy, and I love my wife to be waiting when we come up. It isn't that I don't
think you're a darling to want to do it," he added in hasty concern.
No use. She was deeply hurt. She went to her dressing-table and began her
preparations for the night with a downcast face. Certainly she wouldn't bother
Warren. She only did it because she loved him so. A tear splashed down on her
white hand.
Next day she triumphantly accompanied the golfers. Warren had petted and
coaxed her out of her sulks, and she was radiant again. When they had said their
good-byes to Judy, and were spinning into town in the car that afternoon, she
made him confess that she had not spoiled the game at all; he couldn't make her
believe that Frank and Tom and Peter had been pretending their pleasure at
having her go along!
But later in the summer she realized that Belvedere Bay was smiling quietly
at her bride-like infatuation, and she resented it deeply. The discovery came
about on a lazy summer afternoon when several women, Rachael among them, were
enjoying gossip and iced drinks on the Parmalees' porch. Rachael had been
talking of the emeralds that Warren was having reset for her, and chanced to
observe that Tiffany's man had said that Warren's taste in jewelry was
astonishing.
"Rachael," yawned little Vivian Sartoris, "for heaven's sake talk about
something else than Warren?"
"I talk about him because I like him!" Rachael said. "Better than anybody
else in the world."
"And he likes you better than anybody else in the world, I suppose?" Vivian
said idly.
"He says so," Rachael answered with a demure smile. "Then that settles it!"
Vivian laughed. But she and several of her intimates fell into low conversation,
and the older women were presently interrupted by Vivian's voice again.
"Rachael!" she challenged, "Katrina says that SHE knows somebody Warren likes as
well as he does you!"
"I did not!" protested Katrina, scarlet-cheeked and giggling, giving Vivian,
who sat next her on the wide tiled steps, a violent push.
"Oh, you did, too!" one of the group exclaimed.
Katrina murmured something unintelligible.
"Well, that's the same thing!" Vivian assured her promptly. "She says now
that Warren DID like her as well, Rachael!"
"Well, don't tell me who it is, and break my heart!" Rachael warned them. But
her old sense of humor so far failed her that she could not help adding
curiously, "If Warren ever cared for anybody else, he'll tell me!"
There was a general burst of laughter, and Rachael colored.
"No, it's nobody," Katrina said hastily. "It's only idiocy!" She and the
other girls laughed in a suppressed fashion for some time. Finally, to Rachael's
secret relief, Gertrude Whittaker energetically demanded the secret. More
giggling ensued. Then Katrina agreed that she would whisper it in Mrs.
Whittaker's ear, which she did. Rachael saw Gertrude color and look puzzled for
a second, then she laughed scornfully.
"What geese girls are! I never heard anything so silly!" Gertrude said.
Several hours later she told Rachael.
She did not tell her without some hesitation. It was so silly — it was just
like that scatter-brained Katrina, she said. Rachael, proudly asserting that
nothing Katrina said would make any difference to her, nevertheless urged the
confidence.
"Well, it's nothing," Gertrude said at last. "This is what Katrina said: she
said that Warren Gregory had liked Rachael Breckenridge as well as he liked
Rachael Gregory! That was all."
Rachael looked puzzled in turn for a minute. Then she smiled proudly, and
colored.
"But that's not true," she said presently. "For I have never seen a man
change as much since marriage as Warren! It's still a perfect miracle to him. He
says himself that he gets happier and happier — "
"Oh, Rachael, you're hopeless!" Gertrude laughed, and Rachael colored again.
She flushed whenever she thought of this particular visit.
Far happier were the days they spent with the Valentines at Clark's Bar.
Rachael loved them all dearly, from little Katharine to the big quiet doctor;
she was not misunderstood nor laughed at here.
They swam, tramped, played cards, and talked tirelessly. Rachael slept like a
child on the wide, windbathed porch. To the great satisfaction of both doctors
she and Alice grew to be devoted friends, and when Warren's holiday was over,
Rachael stayed on, for a longer visit, and the men came down in the car on
Fridays.
On her birthday this year her husband gave Rachael Gregory, and her heirs and
assigns forever, a roomy, plain old colonial farmhouse that stood near Alice's
house, in a ring of great elms, looking down on the green level surface of the
sea. Rachael accepted it with wild delight. She loved the big, homelike halls,
the simple fireplaces, the green blinds that shut a sweet twilight into the
empty rooms. Her own barns, her own strip of beach, her own side yard where she
and Alice could sit and talk, she took eager possession of them all.
She went into town for chintzes, papers, wicker tables and chairs. She
brought old Mrs. Gregory down for the housewarming, and had all the Valentines
to dinner on the August evening when the Gregorys moved in. And late that same
evening, when Warren's arms were about her, she told him her great news. There
were to be little feet running about Home Dunes, and a little voice echoing
through the new home. "Shall you be glad, Greg?" she asked, with tears in her
eyes; "shall you be just a little jealous?"
"Rachael!" he said in a quick, tense whisper, afraid to believe her. And
Rachael, caught in his dear arms, and with his cheek against her wet lashes,
felt a triumph and a confidence rise within her, and a glorious content that it
was so.
When the happy suspicion was a happy certainty she told his mother, and
entered at once into the world of advice and reassurance, planning and
speculation that belongs to women alone. Mrs. Valentine was also full of eager
interest and counsel, and Rachael enjoyed their solicitude and affection as she
had enjoyed few things in life. This was a perfectly natural symptom, that was a
perfectly natural phase, she must do this thing, get that, and avoid a third.
The fact that she was not quite herself in soul or body, that she must be
careful, must be guarded and saved, was a source of strange and mysterious
satisfaction to her as the quick months slipped by. Her increasing helplessness
shut her quite naturally away into a world that contained only her husband and
herself and a few intimate friends, and Rachael found this absolutely
satisfying, and did not miss the social world that hummed on as busily and gayly
as ever without her.
Her baby was born in March, a beautiful boy, like his father even in the
first few moments of his life. Rachael, whose experience had been, to her
astonishment, described complacently by physician and nurses as "perfectly
normal," was slow to recover from the experience in body; perhaps never quite
recovered in soul. It changed all her values of life — this knowledge of what
the coming of a child costs; she told Alice that she was glad of the change.
"What a fool I've been about the shadows," she said. "This is the reality!
This counts, as it seems to me that nothing else I ever did in my life counts."
She felt nearer than ever to Warren now, and more dependent upon him. But a
new dignity came into her relationship with him: husband and wife, father and
mother, they wore the great titles of the world, now!
He found her more beautiful than ever, and as the baby was the centre of her
universe, and all her hopes and fears and thoughts for the child, the old bridal
attitude toward him vanished forever, and she was the more fascinating for that.
His love for her rose like a great flame, and the passionate devotion for which
she had been wistfully waiting for months enveloped her now, when, shaken in
body and soul, she wished only to devote herself to the miracle that was her
child.
When he was but six weeks old James Warren Gregory Third terrified the little
circle of his family and friends with a severe touch of summer sickness. The
weather, in late April, was untimely — hot and humid — and the baby seemed to
suffer from it, even in his airy nursery. There were two hideous days in which
he would take no food, and when Rachael heard nothing but the little wailing
voice through the long hours. All night she sat beside him, hearing Warren's
affectionate protests as little as she heard the dignified remonstrance of the
nurse. When day came she was haggard and exhausted, but still she would not
leave her baby. She knelt at the crib, impressing the tiny countenance upon mind
and heart — her first-born baby, upon whose little features the wisdom of
another world still lingered like a light!
Only a few weeks old, and thousands of them older than he died every year!
Fear in another form had come to Rachael now — life seemed all fear.
"Oh, Warren, is he very ill?"
"Pretty sick, dear little chap!"
"But, Warren, you don't think — "
"My darling, I don't know!"
She turned desperately to George Valentine when that good friend came in his
professional capacity at five o'clock.
"George, there's been a change — I'm sure of it. Look at him!"
"You ought to take better care of your wife, Greg," was Doctor Valentine's
quiet almost smiling answer to this. "You'll have her sick next!"
"How is he?" Rachael whispered, as the newcomer bent over the baby. There was
a silence.
"Well, my dear," said Doctor Valentine, as he straightened himself, "I
believe this little chap has decided to remain with us a little while. Very —
much — better!"
Rachael tried to smile, but burst out crying instead, and clung to her
husband's shoulder.
"Let him have his sleep out, Miss Snow," said the doctor, "and then sponge
him off and try him with food!"
"Oh — yes — yes — yes!" the baby's mother said eagerly, drying her eyes.
"And you'll be back later, George?"
"Not unless you telephone me, and I don't think you'll have to," George
Valentine said. Rachael's face grew radiant with joy.
"Oh, George, then he is better!" She was breathing like a runner.
"Better! I think he'll be himself to-morrow. Console yourself, my dear
Rachael, with the thought that you'll go through this a hundred times with every
one of your children!"
"Oh, what a world!" Rachael said, half laughing and half sighing. But later
she said to Warren, "Yet isn't it deliciously worth while!"
He had persuaded her to have some supper, and then they had come back to the
nursery, to see if the baby really would eat. He had awakened, and had had his
bath, and was crying again, but, as Rachael eagerly said, it was a healthy cry.
Trembling and smiling, she took the little creature in her arms, and when the
busy little lips found her breast, Rachael felt as if she could hardly bear the
exquisite incoming rush of joy again.
Warren, watching her, smiled in deep satisfaction, and Miss Snow smiled, too.
But before she gave herself up to the luxury of possession the mother's tears
fell hot on the baby's delicate gown and tiny face, and from that hour Rachael
loved her son with the passionate and intense devotion she felt for his father.
Years later, looking at the pictures they took of him that summer, or perhaps
stopped by the sight of some white-coated baby in the street, she would say to
herself, — with that little heartache all mothers know, "Ah, but Jim was the
darling baby!" After the first scare he bloomed like a rose, a splendid, square,
royal boy who laughed joyously when admitted to the company of his family and
friends, and lay contentedly dozing and smiling when it seemed good to them to
ignore him. Rachael found him the most delightfully amusing and absorbing
element her life had ever known; she would break into ecstatic laughter at his
simplest feat — when he yawned, or pressed his little downy head against the
bars of his crib and stared unsmilingly at her. She would run to the nursery the
instant she arrived home, her eager, "How's my boy?" making the baby crow, and
struggle to reach her, and it was an event to her to meet his coach in the park,
and give him her purse or parasol handle with which to play. Often old Mary, the
nurse, would see Mrs. Gregory pick up a pair of tiny white shoes that still bore
the imprint of the fat little feet, and touch them to her lips, or catch a
crumpled little linen coat from the drawer, and bury her face in it for a
moment.
Even in his tiny babyhood he was companionable to his mother, Rachael even
consenting to the plan of taking him to Home Dunes in June, although by this
arrangement she saw Warren only at week-end intervals until the doctor's
vacation came in August. When he came down, and the big car honked at the gate,
she invariably had the baby in her arms when she came to meet him.
"Hello, Daddy. Here we are! How are you, dearest?" Rachael would say, adding,
before he could answer her: "We want you to notice our chic Italian socks,
Doctor Gregory; how's that for five months? Take him, Greg! Go to Daddy, Little
Mister!"
"All very well, but how's my wife?" Warren Gregory might ask, kissing her
over the baby's bobbing head.
"Lovely! Do you know that your son weighs fifteen pounds — isn't that
amazing?" Rachael would hang on his free arm, in happy wifely fashion, as they
went back to the house.
"Want to go with me to London?" he asked her one day in the late fall when
they were back in town.
"Why not Mars?" she asked placidly, putting a fresh, stiff dress over Jimmy's
head.
"No, but I'm serious, my dear girl," Warren Gregory said surprised. "But — I
don't understand you. What about Jim?"
"Why, leave him here with Mary. We won't be gone four weeks."
Rachael smiled, but it was an uneasy, almost an affronted, smile.
"Oh, Warren, we couldn't! I couldn't! I would simply worry myself sick!"
"I don't see why. The child would be perfectly safe. George is right here if
anything happened!"
"George — but George isn't his mother!" Rachael fell silent, biting her lip,
a little shadow between her brows. "What is it — the convention?" she presently
asked. "Do you HAVE to go?"
"It isn't absolutely necessary," Warren said dryly. But this was enough for
Rachael, who opened the subject that evening when George and Alice Valentine
were there.
"George, DOES Warren have to go to this London convention, or whatever it
is?"
"Not necessarily," smiled Doctor Valentine. "Why, doesn't he want to go?"
"I don't want him to go!" Rachael asserted.
"It would be a senseless risk to take that baby across the ocean," Alice
contributed, and no more was said of the possibility then or at any other time,
to Rachael's great content.
But when the winter season was well begun, and Jimmy delicious in his
diminutive furs, Doctor Gregory and his wife had a serious talk, late on a snowy
afternoon, and Rachael realized then that her husband had been carrying a slight
sense of grievance over this matter for many weeks.
He had come in at six o'clock, and was changing his clothes for dinner, half
an hour later, when Rachael came into his dressing- room. Her hair had been
dressed, and under her white silk wrapper her gold slippers and stockings were
visible, but she seemed disinclined to finish her toilette.
"Awful bore!" she said, smiling, as she sat down to watch him.
"What — the Hoyts? Oh, I don't think so!" he answered in surprise.
"They all bore me to death," Rachael said idly. "I'd rather have a chop here
with you, and then trot off somewhere all by ourselves! Why don't they leave us
alone?"
"My dear girl, that isn't life," Warren Gregory said firmly. His tone chilled
her a little, and she looked up in quick penitence. But before she could speak
he antagonized her by adding disapprovingly: "I must say I don't like your
attitude of criticism and ungraciousness, my dear girl! These people are all our
good friends; I personally can find no fault with them. You may feel that you
would rather spend all of your time hanging over Jim's crib — I suppose all
young mothers do, and to a certain extent all mothers ought to — but don't, for
heaven's sake, let everything else slip out of your life!"
"I know, I know!" Rachael said breathlessly and quickly, finding his
disapproval almost unendurable. Warren did not often complain; he had never
spoken to her in this way before. Her face was scarlet, and she knew that she
wanted to cry. "I know, dear," she added more composedly; "I am afraid I do
think too much about Jim; I am afraid" — and Rachael smiled a little pitifully
— "that I would never want anyone but you and the boy if I had my own way!
Sometimes I wish that we could just slip away from everybody and everything, and
never see these people again!"
If she had expected him to endorse this radical hope she was disappointed,
for Warren responded briskly: "Yes, and we would bore each other to death in two
months!"
Rachael was silent, but over the sinking discouragement of her heart she was
gallantly forming new resolutions. She would think more of her clothes, she
would make a special study of dinners and theatre parties, she would be seen at
the opera at least every other week.
"I gave up the London trip just because you weren't enthusiastic," Warren was
saying, with the unmistakable readiness of one whose grievances have long been
classified in his mind. "It's baby — baby — baby! I don't say much — "
"Indeed you don't!" Rachael conceded gratefully.
"But I think you overdo it, my dear!" finished her husband kindly. Clarence
Breckenridge's wife would have assumed a different attitude during this little
talk, but Rachael Gregory felt every word like a blow upon her quivering heart.
She could not protest, she could not ignore. Her love for him made this moment
one of absolute agony, and it was with the humility of great love that she met
him more than halfway.
"You're right, of course, Greg, and it must have been stupid for you!"
Stupid! It seemed even in this moment treason, it seemed desecration, to use
this word of their quiet, wonderful summer together!
"Well," he said, mollified, "don't take what I say too much to heart. It's
only that I love my wife, and am proud of her, and I don't want to cut out
everything else but Jim's shoes and Mary's day off!" He came over and kissed
her, and Rachael clung to him.
"Greg, as if I could be angry with you for being jealous of your son!"
"Trust a woman to put that construction on it," he said, laughing. "You like
to think I'm jealous, don't you?"
"I like anything that makes you seem my devoted adorer," Rachael answered
wistfully, and smiling whimsically she added, "and I am going to get some new
frocks, and give a series of dinners, and win you all over again!"
"Bully!" approved Doctor Gregory, cheerfully going on with his dressing.
Rachael watched him thoughtfully for a moment before she went on to her own
dressing-room.
Long afterward she remembered that this conversation marked a certain change
in her life; it was never quite glad, confident morning again, although for many
months no definite element seemed altered. Alice and old Mrs. Gregory had told
her, and all the world agreed, that the coming of her child would draw her
husband and herself more closely together, but, as Rachael expressed it to
herself, it was if she alone moved — moved infinitely nearer to her husband
truly, came to depend upon him, to need him as she had never needed him in her
life before. But there was always the feeling that Warren had not moved. He
stood where he had always been, an eager sympathizer in these new and intense
experiences, but untouched and unaltered himself. For her pain, for her
responsibility, for her physical limitations, he had the most intense tenderness
and pity, but the fact remained that he might sleep through the nights, enjoy
his meals, and play with his baby, when the mood decreed, untroubled by personal
handicap.
Rachael, like all women, thought of these things seriously during the first
year of her child's life, and in February, when Jimmy was beginning to utter his
first delicious, stammering monosyllables, it was with great gravity that she
realized that motherhood was approaching her again, that at Thanksgiving she
would have a second child. She was wretchedly languid and ill during the entire
spring, and found her mother-in-law's and Alice Valentine's calm acceptance of
the situation bewildering and discouraging.
"My dear, I don't eat a meal in comfort, the entire time!" Alice said
cheerfully. "I mind that more than any other phase!"
"But I am such a broken reed!" Rachael smiled ruefully. "I have no energy!"
The older woman laughed.
"I know, my dear — haven't I been through it all? Just don't worry, and
spare Greg what you can — "
Rachael could do neither. She wanted Warren every minute, and she wanted
nobody else. Her favorite hours were when she lay on the couch, near the fire,
playing with his free hand, while he read to her or talked to her. She wanted to
hear, over and over again, that he loved no one else; and sometimes she declined
invitations without even consulting him, "because we're happier by our own fire
than anywhere else, aren't we, dearest?" "Don't tell me about your stupid
operations!" she would smile at him, "talk about — US!"
She went over and over the details of her old life with a certain morbid
satisfaction in his constant reassurance. Her marriage had not been the cause of
Clarence's suicide, nor of Billy's elopement; she had done her share for them
both, more than her share!
Summer came, and she and the baby were comfortably established at Home Dunes.
Warren came when he could, perhaps twice a month, and usually without warning.
If he promised her the week-ends, she felt aggrieved to have him miss one, so he
wired her every day, and sent her books and fruit, letters and magazines every
week, and came at irregular intervals. Alice and George Valentine and their
children, her garden, her baby, and the ocean she loved so well must fill this
summer for Rachael.