Shadows of Flames - BestLightNovel.com
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But Sophy was very moderate. She had no prudish objection to his drinking in reason. She didn't enjoy seeing him in the false high spirits engendered sometimes by extra "c.o.c.ktails," but she only positively objected to the amorousness occasioned by them. He had had his lesson, however.
And as the winter wore on, and Sophy became more familiar with the social life of New York, she understood better and better this side of Loring's character. She found that there were very few young men of his "set" who did not drink as a matter of course. Very often, nearly always at b.a.l.l.s and dances, many of them would be genially "tight" by the end of the evening. This only made them extremely noisy and "larky" as a rule. She found that the women took this state of affairs with indulgent philosophy. Often they were amused by it.
As a whole the social life of New York, quite apart from this feature, did not appeal to her. Its mad speed and ostentation resulted in a sort of golden glare of monotony. Yet there were charming people, both men and women, caught protesting in the maelstrom. They protested bitterly as they went whirling round and round. Yet, when the maelstrom spewed them forth in the spring tide--for the most part, they allowed themselves to be sucked in by other whirlpools, such as Paris and London and Newport. Sophy wondered at the nervous const.i.tutions which could stand such fevered repet.i.tion endlessly renewed. She reflected that Americans were said to be the most nervous people on earth. Yet she thought their nerves must be of thrice tempered steel to support the life that they protestingly led from year's end to year's end.
She determined that, since her lot was now cast here, she would temper her surroundings as much to her own taste as possible. For she had found out, among other somewhat astonis.h.i.+ng things, that Loring was socially ambitious for her. He was resolved to build an elaborate and sumptuous house in New York--what American journals call a "mansion." Sophy pleaded for ample time in which to decide on the architecture and type of this house. In the meantime they spent their spare hours in hunting for a temporary abode where they might live during the next three or four years.
The house of Loring's mother was the usual ma.s.s of gilding and marble that characterised the last quarter of the nineteenth century in New York. It was Italian. The lower floor looked like an ancient Roman Bath.
On the second floor was a Renaissance fountain. The library chimney-piece was formed of an entire doorway taken from some tomb in Italy, and still bearing the Italian family's coat-of-arms.
Sophy found what she wanted at last in a delightful old corner-house in Was.h.i.+ngton Square. Every one remonstrated. The tide of fas.h.i.+on was rus.h.i.+ng like an eagre "up to the Park." Sophy did not care for Central Park. She said that she was sure its Dryads were all made of cast-iron and went b.u.mping up and down every night between the horrific bronze colossi in the main avenue. This did not seem a sufficient reason to Loring's friends for selecting such an out-of-date, deserted spot as Was.h.i.+ngton Square in which to live for the next four years.
However, when Sophy had finished furnis.h.i.+ng and decorating the old house, Loring was charmed, and very proud of her. But the house was not completed until the following autumn.
In the meantime, Loring, without saying anything to Sophy, had leased one of the Newport "palaces" from an absent owner for five years.
Sophy saw that the world had claimed her again. Now her mind bent itself to the task of redeeming some months of the year for her own use. She began to feel afraid. How was such a delicate visitant as Poetry to be entertained amid all this confusion of tongues and glittering paraphernalia?
"I must go to Sweet-Waters for May," she told Loring. "I'll open the house in Newport on the first of June."
"But I'm booked for those polo matches on Long Island in May," said Loring.
"I'm sorry, dear.... However, you won't miss me when you're playing polo you know.... And I do long for a May in Virginia."
"d.a.m.n Virginia!" said Loring.
Sophy laughed at him.
"You'll love me all the more when I come back to you," she coaxed.
"Don't 'd.a.m.n' poor Virginia."
"I do d.a.m.n it.... I'm jealous of it."
"You needn't be."
She was still smiling at his sulky face.
"Yes, I do need ... you put it before me."
"Now, Morris...."
"Yes, 'Now, Morris'.... 'Now, Morris'...." (He mimicked her reproachful tone.) "It's always 'Now, Morris' when I want what belongs to me...."
"Oh! So I 'belong' to you, do I?" she teased affectionately.
"Yes! By gad, you do! You married me.... You're my wife. A wife should stay with her husband. You do belong to me."
He had his "Marmion" tone very p.r.o.nouncedly.
Sophy said prettily:
"I think it would be truer to say we both 'belong.'"
"Well.... _I'm_ not leaving _you_, am I?"
She reached out and took the sulky, cleft chin between her finger and thumb.
"Poor sing! Did dey 'buse it?" she said, as she addressed Dhu when he had one of his fits of collie-melancholy. But Loring jerked away his chin.
"Please don't treat me like a baby," he said stiffly. "I'm very far from feeling like one."
Sophy pondered a moment. Then she said:
"I hate to remind people of promises ... but you'll remember that you promised me I should have some time, every year, to myself----"
"You're tired of me already--is that it?"
"Now, dear--how am I to keep from treating you like a baby, when you act so exactly like one?"
"It's babyish for a man to want his wife with him, is it?"
"Isn't it rather babyish of him not to want her to take one little month to rest in and see her own people?"
"I thought my people were to be your people like the woman in the Bible?"
"So they are ... but I've seen them all winter."
"Tired of us all, eh?"
Sophy said nothing in reply to this.
"Oh, well!" he exclaimed angrily, flouncing to the door. "If the new salt has lost its savour--go to your old salt-lick----"
He bounced out, clapping the door. It was the first coa.r.s.e thing he had ever said to her. She felt indignant as well as hurt. But when she reflected that his ill temper came from jealousy she was sorry for him, too.
"But I must go all the same," she reflected. "If I give in this time, I can never call my soul my own again."
She left for Virginia two days later, taking Bobby with her. She and Loring had not quite "made up" before she left. They were very polite to each other. Sophy's heart felt sore. This att.i.tude of his was spoiling her visit home. She thought that he would surely soften before the train drew out. But he did not.
He lifted his hat as the engine began its hoa.r.s.e starting cough.
"Well--so long," he said. "A happy May to you!"
Sophy felt a proud impulse to reply in kind. Then the sad influence of parting, even for so short a time, melted her. She put her head from the window.
"You'll come down to Virginia to fetch me back, won't you, dear?" she asked.
"Don't know. Depends on how the games go," he answered curtly.