<h2><SPAN name="IX" id="IX">IX</SPAN><br/> MR. NIX</h2>
<p>Mr. Nix, the manager of Hortons, had never
been an analyser of the human character: it
startled him, therefore, considerably, somewhere about
March or April of 1919, to find himself deep in introspection.</p>
<p>What is deep to one may not be deep to another, and
Mr. Nix's introspection amounted to little more than
that he felt, as he found himself confiding to a friend
one evening, as though he "were nothing more or less
than a blooming juggler—one of those fellows, Joe, that
tosses eight or ten balls in the air at a time. That's
what I'm doing, positively."</p>
<p>"If you ask me," said his friend, "what you're doing,
Sam, is thinking too much about yourself—being morbidly
introspective, that's what you're being. I should
drop it. That kind of thing grows."</p>
<p>"No, am I really?" said Mr. Nix, anxiously. "Upon
my word, Joe, I believe you're right."</p>
<p>What Mr. Nix meant, however, when he said that he
felt like a trick juggler, was literally true. He not only
felt like it, he dreamt it. This dream was recurrent;
he saw himself, dressed in purple tights, one foot on a
rope, the other in mid-air, and tossing a dozen golden
balls. Beneath him, far, far beneath him, was the sawdust<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</SPAN></span>
ring, tiers of people rising to either side of it.
The balls glittered and winked and tumbled in the fierce
electric light. Always they returned to him as though
drawn towards his stomach by a magnet, but always
present with him was the desperate fear lest one should
avoid and escape him. The sweat stood in beads on
his forehead; the leg upon which everything depended
began to tremble. The balls seemed to develop a wild
individuality of their own: they winked at him, they
sniggered. They danced and mocked and dazzled. He
missed one, he missed two, three ... the crowd beneath
him began to shout ... he swerved, he jolted,
he was over, he was falling, the balls swinging in laughing
derision about him ... falling, falling.... He
was awake.</p>
<p>This dream came to him so often that he consulted
a doctor. The doctor consoled him, telling him that
everyone was having bad dreams just now, that it was
the natural reaction after the four years of stress and
turmoil through which we have passed. "You yourself,
Mr. Nix, have had your troubles I don't doubt?"</p>
<p>Yes, Mr. Nix had lost his only son.</p>
<p>"Ah, well, that is quite enough to account for it.
Don't eat a heavy meal at night. Sleep lightly covered ... plenty
of fresh air."</p>
<p>This interview only confirmed Mr. Nix in his already
deep conviction that all doctors were humbugs.</p>
<p>"The matter with me," he said to himself, "is just
this, that I've got too much to do."</p>
<p>Nineteen hundred and nineteen was a very difficult
year for anyone engaged in such business as Hortons.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>That spontaneous hour or two of mirth and happiness
on the morning of the Armistice had its origin in the
general human belief that the troubles of those nightmare
years were now over. At once, as though the
Fairy Firkin had waved her wand, the world would
be changed. The world <i>was</i> changed, but only because
a new set of difficulties and problems had taken the
place of the old ones, and these new troubles were in
many ways harder to fight. That was a year of bafflement,
bewilderment, disappointment, suspicion. Quite
rightly so—but the justice of it could not be seen by the
actors in it.</p>
<p>Mr. Nix was making a brave fight of it, just as
throughout the war he had made a brave fight. He was
a little man with a buoyant temperament, and no touch
of morbidity. His boy's death had shocked him as
an incredible event, but he had forbidden it to change
the course of his life, and it remained deep down, unseen,
a wound that never healed and was never
examined.</p>
<p>His embarrassments—the balls with which he was
forever a-juggling—were in the main four. First, the
Directors in whose power the fate of Hortons and several
other service flats lay. Secondly, Hortons itself,
its servants, its tenants, the furniture, its food, its
finances, its marriages, births, and deaths. Thirdly,
his own private speculations, his little private business
enterprises, his pals, his games, his vices, and his ambitions.
Fourth, his wife, Nancy.</p>
<p>Those four "elements" had all been complicated
enough before the war; it would take a man all his time,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</SPAN></span>
he used to say, to deal with the Board—nice enough
men, but peremptory in many ways, not understanding,
and always in a hurry.</p>
<p>He had spent the best years of his life in persuading
those men that Hortons was the best service flat in
London; they did at length believe that; they were
satisfied; but having brought them to such a height
they must be maintained there. The war brought discontent,
of course. Only the old men were active on
the board, and the old men had always been the trying
ones to deal with. The war, as it dragged its weary
coils along, brought nerves and melodrama with it.
Only Mr. Nix, it seemed, in all the world, was allowed
to be neither nervous nor melodramatic. He must
never show anger nor disappointment nor a sense of injustice ... there
were days he honestly confessed to
Nancy, his wife, when he longed to pull some of those
old white beards....</p>
<p>But worse than those old men were the tenants of
Hortons themselves. Here was a golden ball of truly
stupendous heaviness and eccentricity. The things they
had demanded, the wild, unnatural, impossible things!
And the things that Hortons itself demanded! To
Hortons the war was as nothing. It must be fed,
clothed, cleaned, just as it had always been! You
might shout to it about the prices, the laziness of workmen,
the heaviness of taxation. It did not care. The
spirit of Hortons must be maintained: it might as well
not exist as be less than the fine creation it had always
been.</p>
<p>As to the third of Mr. Nix's "elements," his private<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</SPAN></span>
life, that had dwindled until it was scarcely visible.
He had no private life. He did not want to have one
now that his son, who had been so deeply connected
with it, was gone. Everything that he had done he
had done for his son: that was his future. He did not
look to the future now, but worked for the day, and
rather to his own surprise, for Hortons, which had
become a concrete figure, gay, debonair, autocratic....</p>
<p>His personal life dropped. He saw little of his
friends, never passed the doors of his club, sat at home
in the evenings, reading first the <i>Times</i>, then the <i>Morning
Post</i>, then the <i>Daily News</i>. He liked to have an
all-round view of the situation.</p>
<p>It was his sense of Fair Play.</p>
<p>In this way the third wheel of his life infringed upon
and influenced the fourth, his wife.</p>
<p>Mrs. Nix, whose maiden name had been Nancy Rolls,
was "about" forty years of age. Even Mr. Nix was
not quite sure how old she was: it was her way to exclaim,
with her hearty, cheerful laugh: "We're all getting
on, you know. There was a time when to be thirty
seemed to be as good as dead.... Now that I'm over
thirty...." She was round, plump, red-faced,
brown-haired, with beseeching eyes, and a little brown
mole on the middle of her left cheek. She dressed
just a little too smartly, with a little too much colour.
Mr. Nix, himself attached to colour, did not notice this.
He liked to see her gay. "Nancy's a real sport," was
his favourite exclamation about her. He had married
her when she was a "baby" seventeen years of age.
They had been great "pals" ever since. Sentiment had<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</SPAN></span>
perhaps gone a little out of their relationship. They
were both deeply sentimental people, but for some
reason sentiment was the last thing that they evoked
from one another. The death of their boy Lancelot
should have brought them together emotionally, but their
attitude had been, for so long, that of an almost masculine
good cheer and good humour, that they bore their
great sorrow individually. They had forgotten the
language of emotion.</p>
<p>Mr. Nix, in the deep recesses of his soul, pondered
over this. He wanted now to get closer to Nancy. He
was sure that she felt "our Lance's" death quite desperately,
but after the shock of the first month she
put on her bright clothes again, and went about to the
theatre and entertained her friends. "There's enough
misery in the world without my trying to add to it,"
she would say. "I know some people think it's bad of
me to wear these clothes, but it is what Lance would
have liked."</p>
<p>As they sat in their cosy little flat, perched high on
the top floor of Hortons, evening after evening, Mr.
Nix with the paper, Mrs. Nix with a novel, they were
both perhaps conscious that the boy's death had made a
barrier, and as they lay side by side in their bed at night
they were still more conscious of this. The darkness
seemed to strip from them that lively exterior life that
they had developed. Mr. Nix would lie there and think
about Nancy for hours....</p>
<p>In the daytime indeed, his hands were full. The
servants alone were problem enough for anybody. First,
the men all went away to the war, and he had to have<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[Pg 181]</SPAN></span>
women—women for everything, women for the kitchen,
women for the hall, women valets. And then, just as
he was getting used to them, the men began to come
back—or rather, he had to get new men, men who must
be taught their jobs, and learn his rules, and fall in with
his ways.</p>
<p>Fortunately he was blessed with a wonderful portress,
Fanny. Fanny, on whom, after a time, the whole great
establishment seemed to hang. But what did Fanny
do but become restless after the Armistice, fall a victim
to a conscience which persuaded her that she was, by
remaining, keeping a man out of his proper job, and,
when he had persuaded her over that difficulty, what
should she do then but become engaged to one of the
valets, whom she presently married. Then the tenants
of the flats were disturbed and agitated by the general
unrest. Poor old Mr. Jay was so deeply agitated by
the new world that he died of the shock of it, and as
though that were not enough, old Miss Morganhurst
went out of her mind, and died in a fit.</p>
<p>It became more and more difficult to secure the right
kind of tenants. Hortons had always been a very expensive
place, and only wealthy people could afford to
live there. But how strange now the people who had
money! A young man like the Hon. Clive Torby, representative
of one of the finest families in England,
found suddenly that he had not a penny in the world,
and gaily took to house-painting, while on the other
side of the shield there were people like the Boddingtons,
who simply did not know how to behave, who,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[Pg 182]</SPAN></span>
wealthy though they were, should never have been in
Hortons at all.</p>
<p>Then again, Mr. Nix was most seriously disturbed
by the strange new interchanging of the sexes that
seemed to have sprung up in this post-war England.
"Positively," he said to his wife one evening, "all the
men seem to be turning into women, and all the women
into men." He read an article in some paper that
lamented the rapidity with which women were abandoning
all the mysteries that had made them once so charming.
How thoroughly Mr. Nix agreed with the writer
of the article! He read it all through to Mrs. Nix,
who was entirely in accord with every word of it.</p>
<p>"The girls are nothing better than baggages," she
declared; "that's my belief."</p>
<p>Hortons, its dignity, its traditions, its morality, was
in danger. "I'll save it if I have to die for it," Nix
declared.</p>
<p>As the weeks advanced his troubles extended. One
strike followed another—coal, food, labour, clothes, all
faltered, died, were revived again. Mr. Robsart, the
famous novelist, his most eminent tenant, awoke early
one morning to find a pipe leaking. His dining-room
wall-paper—a very beautiful and exclusive one—developed
bright pink and purple spots. It was weeks before
anything could be done. Mr. Robsart, who had
been led by an excited female public to believe his personality
to be one upon which the sun never set, said
what he thought about this. The balls faltered in the
air, their glittering surfaces menacing and threatening.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[Pg 183]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The tight-rope trembled; the crowd roared like angry
beasts.... This dream was ruining Mr. Nix.</p>
<p>And through it all, like a refrain that set rhythm and
measure to the rest, was the sense that he ought to do
"something" for Mrs. Nix, that she was unhappy, but
would not tell him about her unhappiness, that he should
come closer to her, and did not know how.</p>
<p>Into this new troubled confusion of Mr. Nix's life
came a figure. One day a young man who had known
Lancelot in France came to see them. His name was
Harry Harper. He was little more than a boy, was in
the London Joint City and Midland Bank, and was as
fresh and charming a lad as you would be likely to
find anywhere. Mr. Nix liked him at once. In the
first place, he had many new things to tell about Lance,
and he told them in just the right way, with sentiment,
but not too much, with humour a little, and with real
appreciation of Lance's bravery, and his popularity
with his men, and his charm with everyone.</p>
<p>Mrs. Nix sat there, on her bright red sofa, whilst
young Harper told his tale, and her face was as red
as the furniture. The tears glittered in her eyes, but
they did not fall. Her plump hands were locked lightly
on her lap. She stared before her as though she were
seeing straight through into the horrors of that terrible
No Man's Land, where her boy had faced the best and
the worst and made his choice.</p>
<p>"He was always a good boy," she said at last. "You
will understand, Mr. Harper, I'm sure. From his very
cradle he was good. He never cried like other babies
and made a fuss. Of course, as he grew older he had<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[Pg 184]</SPAN></span>
a little of the devil in him, as one might say. I'm sure
no mother would have it otherwise. But—Oh! he
<i>was</i> a good boy!"</p>
<p>"There, there, mother," said Mr. Nix, patting her
soft shoulder. "I'm sure it's very good of you, Mr.
Harper, to come and tell us all this. You can understand
that we appreciate it."</p>
<p>Young Harper took it all the right way. His tact
was wonderful for a boy of his years. Mr. Nix, who,
like most Englishmen, was a deep-dyed sentimentalist
without knowing it, loved the boy.</p>
<p>"You come and see us whenever you like. We're
in most evenings. You'll always be welcome."
Harper availed himself of the invitation and came very
often. He was leading, it seemed, a lonely life. His
parents lived in Newcastle and they had many children.
His lodgings were far away in Pimlico, and he had
few friends in London. Before a month had passed
he was occupying a little spare bedroom in the Nix
quarters—a very little bedroom, but wonderful for
him, he declared, being so marvellously in the centre of
London. "You've given me a home," he cried; "can't
thank you enough. You don't know what Pimlico
can be for a fellow!"</p>
<p>As the days passed Mr. Nix was more and more
delighted with the arrangement. Mrs. Nix had a
way of going to bed early and Mr. Nix and Harry would
sit up talking. Mr. Nix looked forward to those evenings.
He had, he discovered, been wanting someone
with whom he might talk, and clear his ideas a bit.
Harry, although he was so young, had really thought<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[Pg 185]</SPAN></span>
very deeply. Mr. Nix, whose thinking was rather of
an amateur kind, very quickly forgot the difference
between their years. Harry and he talked as man to
man. If anything, Harry was perhaps the older of
the two....</p>
<p>Mr. Nix found that it helped him very much when
Harry talked. He did not seem to be balancing so
many balls in mid-air when Harry was sharing his
difficulties.</p>
<p>The boy had, too, a charm. His air of asking Mr.
Nix's advice, as a man of the world. That was what
Mr. Nix liked to be considered, and he told Harry
many sensible things, especially about women.</p>
<p>"Don't let them catch you," was the burden of his
opinion. "They are the devil for getting hold of a
man before he knows where he is. Play with them,
but don't take them seriously, until the right one
comes along. You'll know it as soon as she does. So
much wiser to wait. But they're clever ... damned
clever...."</p>
<p>"You're right, sir," said Harry. "Ab-so-lute-ly: I
remember a girl once——"</p>
<p>He plunged into reminiscence. Finally, however,
he declared that he didn't care very much about
women. He meant to lead his life apart from them.
He'd watched other fellows and he knew the mess
they could get into.... Especially married
women....</p>
<p>"Ah! married women!" repeated Mr. Nix with a
sigh. There wasn't much that he didn't know about
married women. It was terrible the way that they<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[Pg 186]</SPAN></span>
were kicking over the traces these days. Really
stopped at nothing. Why, he remembered a married
woman....</p>
<p>Then Harry remembered a married woman....</p>
<p>Then Mr. Nix remembered still another married
woman.</p>
<p>This led quite naturally to certain disclosures about
Mrs. Nix. Mr. Nix had indeed reasons to be thankful.
<i>There</i> was a woman who was corrupted by none
of these modern ideas.</p>
<p>She was no prude, she knew her world, but she believed
in the good old rules—"One man for one
woman."</p>
<p>"It's been a bit lonely for her," Mr. Nix continued,
"since Lancelot went, and it's a bit difficult to make
her happy. I'm so busy all day, you see. Takes the
whole of a man's time to run a place like this nowadays,
I can tell you. Be nice to her, Harry. See as
much of her as you can. She likes you."</p>
<p>"Indeed, I will," said Harry fervently. "You two
are the first real friends I've ever had. I'm grateful,
I can tell you."</p>
<p>Now, strangely enough, the more Mr. Nix thought
of his wife, the more seriously and earnestly he puzzled
as to the right way to bring her close to him, and
make her happy, the less he seemed to realise her.
There comes, perhaps, that moment in most married
lives when the intimacy of years has thickened the
personalities of man and wife so deeply with custom
and habit that the real individualities can no longer
be discerned. Something of the kind came now to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[Pg 187]</SPAN></span>
Mr. Nix. The more he attempted to draw closer to
Nancy, the more he realised that he was hearing a
voice, watching a physical form, having physical contact,
but dealing with shadows. He knew so precisely
her every movement, her laugh, the way that she
caught her breath when she was agitated, the touch of
her step on the carpet, that she was no longer a person
at all. She was part of himself, perhaps, but a part
of himself that he could not treat with his imagination.
He had not known before that he had an imagination.
The war had given it birth and now it was growing,
demanding food, living, thrusting, experiencing, leading
its master into many queer places—but neglecting
altogether Mrs. Nix.</p>
<p>He found himself, as he sat in his little office downstairs,
positively trying to force himself to realise what
his wife was like. She had bright yellow hair, a rosy
face, a plump figure; she wore two rings, one with a
ruby stone, another a pearl. She was marvellously
young for her age.... She....</p>
<p>Then, when with a start of surprise he realised what
he was doing, he wondered positively whether he were
not going mad. He buried himself more and more
in the work of the place, of the office, fighting to keep
everything straight and proper, realising, although he
was frightened to admit it, that Hortons was more
vivid to him than anything or anybody else.</p>
<p>Except Harry! "Thank God that boy's here," he
thought. "I don't know what we'd do without him.
That was a piece of luck for us."</p>
<p>He lay on his bed staring up into the dark ceiling;<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[Pg 188]</SPAN></span>
he heard his wife's regular breathing at his side, and
he saw, there in the living dusk above him, the golden
balls dancing, rising and falling, multiplying, diminishing,
tumbling faster and faster and faster.</p>
<p>Then, with the months of June and July, Mr. Nix
was given very little more time in which to speculate
about life, women, and his wife. Everything in his
business affairs became so complicated that his life
extended into a real struggle for existence. He had
the sense that Hortons, which had hitherto shown him
a kindly, friendly face, was suddenly hostile, as
though it said to him: "Well, I've stood your hanky-panky
long enough. I'll have no more of it. I'm finished
with your management of me!"</p>
<p>Strange how a building suddenly decides to fall
to pieces! Hortons so decided. Every window, every
door, every pipe, every chimney misbehaved; tenants
appeared from all sides bitterly complaining. Servants
rioted; the discontent that was already flooding
the world poured through the arteries of the building,
sweeping it, deluging.</p>
<p>Mr. Nix showed them the character that he had.
He took off his coat and set to work. He was no longer
the round ball-like little man with the cherubic countenance
and the amiable smile. He was stern, autocratic,
unbending. He argued, persuaded, advised.
He wrote, to his own surprise, a very stiff letter to the
Board of Directors, telling them that they must understand
that times were difficult. Rome wasn't built
in a day, and that if they were dissatisfied with him
they must find someone else in his place. To his<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[Pg 189]</SPAN></span>
amazement, he received a very polite letter from the
Secretary of the Board, saying that the Directors were
thoroughly satisfied with him and had no complaints.</p>
<p>He went on during that month from struggle to
struggle. He forgot Harry; he puzzled no longer
about Mrs. Nix. He was so tired when night came
that he slept the sleep of a drugged man. He no
longer saw the dancing balls. He was invigorated,
uplifted, desperately excited. He found in himself a
capacity for organisation that he had never suspected.
He discovered that it delighted him to meet and to
conquer his servants. He saw in their eyes, and he
was delighted to see it, their own astonishment at this
new character that he was developing. He browbeat
them, told them to go, showed them that they had
better stay, held them together and forced them to
content. They were afraid of him. By Jove!—They
were afraid of him! He looked at himself in the
glass. He blessed the crisis that had shown him in
his true colours. He contemplated the life of
Napoleon....</p>
<p>He went out, and with his own right arm fetched
in sulky and wage-demanding workmen. He talked
to them and found that there was a great deal to be
said on their side.</p>
<p>He began to discover that strange truth that almost
everyone was discovering just at this time—namely,
that when you read the papers or thought of your fellow
human beings in the mass, you hated and despised
them, but that, if you talked to any individual, man
or woman, you liked and understood them.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[Pg 190]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Pride grew in his heart, and happiness and contentment.</p>
<p>By the middle of July Hortons was itself again.
The crisis was over. Prices were impossible, labour
rebellious, the world topsy-turvy, but Hortons was at
peace. He sighed, put back his shoulders, patted his
little stomach appreciatively, loved all the world and,
once again, considered Mrs. Nix.</p>
<p>He would give her now all his time. He would take
her out; make her presents; they should have a splendid
new life together.</p>
<p>He came back one evening after a successful meeting
with the Board, opened his little hall door, hung
up his coat, whistling to himself, opened his drawing-room
door, saw Mrs. Nix on the red sofa, enveloped
in the arms of Harry, who was kissing her ears, her
eyes, her mouth.</p>
<p>He saw this, and then he saw the neat little sitting-room
sway and heave. A bright blue vase, holding
yellow sprays of some dried flower, raced towards him
across the mantelpiece, and he stepped back, putting
his hand on to a chair behind him to avoid its contact.
The room steadied itself and he realised that he felt
sick. He put up his hand to his mouth. Then every
sensation was swallowed up by a mad, violent anger,
an anger that seemed to increase with every wild beat
of his heart, as though that heart were, of its own
purpose, pounding him on to some desperate act.</p>
<p>Behind his anger he saw the two faces. Nancy was
sitting square on the sofa, her hands spread out, plunging
deep into the red stuff of the sofa. Harry was<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</SPAN></span>
standing, his face white, his eyes bewildered and defiant.</p>
<p>"You might at least have locked the door," Mr. Nix
said, whispering.</p>
<p>His knees trembled so that he suddenly sat down and
stared across at them.</p>
<p>"Why didn't you lock the door?" he repeated. "You
knew I'd be coming back."</p>
<p>"Look here ..." Harry began. He stopped, took
a pull at himself, straightened his back, stood instinctively
as though he were obeying orders—"I love your
wife. I've loved her for weeks. Of course, it's all
my fault. She doesn't care for me in that way. She's
just lonely, that's all."</p>
<p>"Lonely!" said Mr. Nix.</p>
<p>"Yes—lonely! You don't know that you've been
neglecting her all this time, do you? But you have!
And it's your own fault, all this. Nothing's happened.
She'd never deceive you. She's too good for that.
But it would be your own fault if she did.... Not
that I'm not a cad. Of course I am, coming in and
your being such a friend to me and then behaving like
this. I'm a cad all right, but you're to blame too.
She's the only one who hasn't done any wrong."</p>
<p>Where had Mr. Nix heard all this before? He'd
seen it on the stage. Just like this. Exactly. Nevertheless,
his anger mounted. He saw the room coloured
crimson. He suddenly bounded from his chair
and rushed at Harry. He tried to hit him in the face.
There was a most ludicrous struggle. The two hot
faces were suddenly close to one another. Then a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</SPAN></span>
chair fell with a crash, and, as though the noise made
both men feel the absurdity of their situation, they
withdrew from one another and stood there glaring....</p>
<p>Mr. Nix hated that he should be trembling as he
was. Every part of him was shaking, and he was so
conscious of this that he wanted to escape and return
only when he was calmer.</p>
<p>"Very well ..." he said. "Of course, I know
what to do. I hope that I shall never see either of
you again."</p>
<p>"One moment." It was his wife's voice, and he
turned round surprised that it should sound just as
it had always sounded.</p>
<p>That was pathetic, and there was an impulse in him,
that he instantly fiercely defeated, to go to her and
take her hand.</p>
<p>"One moment," she repeated. "I've got something
to say to this." She rose and stood, her hands moving
nervously against her dress, her eyes staring
straight into her husband's face. "It's quite right that
I was kissing Harry, but it isn't right that I love him.
I don't love him a bit. I don't love anybody. I'm
just sick of men. I've been sick of them a long time.
It was just because I didn't feel Harry was a man at
all that I let him kiss me. A dog or a baby would
have done just as well.... I don't care what you do.
You can turn me out. I want to be turned out. I
want to be free, I want to be with women, and work
on my own, and do sensible things, and have my own
life with no men in it.... No men in it anywhere.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[Pg 193]</SPAN></span>
I've been wanting this for years; ever since the war
started. The world's just run for men and you think
you're so important that you're <i>everything</i>. But
you're not. Not to a woman of my age who's been
through it all, and hasn't children. What have I been
sitting at home for, waiting for you, seeing after your
food, keeping you in a good temper, looking after you?
Why should I? I'm myself—not half of you. And
Harry too. He was a nice boy at first. But suddenly
he wants me to love him, to belong to him, to
follow him. Why should I, a boy like that? I want
to be with other women, women who understand me,
women who know how I feel, women who have their
own world and their own life, and are independent of
men altogether.... I've wanted to go for months—and
now I'm going."</p>
<p>She moved towards the door. The absurdity of
what she had said kept him standing there in front
of her. She wanted only women! Oh, of course, that
was only bluff, put up to carry off a difficult situation.</p>
<p>People did not <i>want</i> their own sex—a man for a
woman, a woman for a man. That was the way the
world went, and it was right that it should be so.</p>
<p>Nevertheless, her words had had behind them a
strange ring of conviction. He stared at her in his
round, puzzled, solid way. He did not move from
where he was, and she could not reach the door without
brushing against him, so she also stayed.</p>
<p>Another mood came to her. "Oh! I'm so sorry ..." she
said. "I've done very wrong to hurt you.
You've always done your very best, but it was over—you<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[Pg 194]</SPAN></span>
and I—so long ago. Long, long before Lance
was killed!"</p>
<p>"Over?" he repeated.</p>
<p>"Yes, over—men never know unless it's worth some
woman's while to tell them."</p>
<p>Harry's voice broke in.</p>
<p>"I'd better go.... I ought to ... I mustn't...."
He murmured something more, but they
neither of them noticed him. They were intent upon
one another. He left the room.</p>
<p>Mr. Nix stared desolately around him. "I don't
know what to do," he repeated to himself. "I don't
know what to do."</p>
<p>She sighed as she might have done with a child who
was trying her.</p>
<p>"We've both got to think it out," she said. "I'm
glad now that it's happened. It ends all that falseness.
I'll talk it over with you as long as you like."</p>
<p>She moved forward; he stood aside and she left the
room. He sat down on the red sofa and stayed there,
until late into the night, trying to puzzle out his position.
Sometimes, in his distress, he spoke to himself
aloud.</p>
<p>"That's what it is ... the world's changed. Entirely
changed. Women don't want men any more.
But that's awful! They can't get on alone. Nancy
can't get on alone. She thinks she can, but she can't.
She gets taken in by the first silly boy that comes
along. I believe she cares for Harry more than she
said.... She must.... She wouldn't have let him
kiss her...."</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>And that was the first thing that he found in the
voyage of mental discovery that he was now making—namely,
that he couldn't be jealous of Harry if he
tried. His anger had left him. There was nothing
in that. He knew it absolutely. Nancy had spoken the
truth when she had said that she didn't care for that
boy any more than for a dog or a baby. No, he felt
no jealousy, and now, oddly enough, no anger.</p>
<p>But he did not know how he felt. He did not know
what to do. Again he saw the golden balls tossing
in the air above him, and there was she, alluring, glittering,
tumbling, escaping.</p>
<p>He thought, with a smile of contempt, of his conquest
of Hortons. That was no achievement. But this,
this new woman, this new Nancy, here was something.</p>
<p>He slept that night on the sofa, taking off his coat
and wrapping a rug around him. He slept the slumber
of the dead.</p>
<p>Next day they had only one talk together, and that
a very little one. Suddenly after breakfast she turned
round upon him.</p>
<p>"Well," she said, "what are you going to do?"</p>
<p>"I don't know," he answered, and then because he
felt that she would despise him for being so indeterminate,
he went on, "It doesn't matter about Harry. I
was only angry for a moment seeing you together like
that. I know that you don't care for him. It was
what you said afterwards—about not caring for me
any more. Did you mean that?"</p>
<p>"Why no," she answered, "I never said that. Of
course I care for you. How could it be otherwise<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</SPAN></span>
after all these years? But I don't want to give up my
whole life to you any more. I don't love you. I
haven't loved you for years. I think Lance took all
the love I had after he was born. And so I don't
want to be always with you. Why should I be? Men
when they are friends aren't always together. I want
to be free, to do some of the things independent women
are doing. There are so many things women can do
now. I see no reason for our staying always together.
I don't want to stay with anyone always."</p>
<p>"Then you don't love me any more?"</p>
<p>"No, of course I don't—and you don't love me.
You know that. For ever so long now you haven't
felt anything about me at all. You've pretended to
because you thought it was right, but I've been a
shadow to you."</p>
<p>She was so right that he could only stare dumbly at
her wisdom.</p>
<p>"You're not a shadow any longer," he said.</p>
<p>She laughed.</p>
<p>"That's only because we've just had a scene. I shall
be a shadow again in a day or two."</p>
<p>They waited. At last he said, "Well, you won't
go at once, will you? Please, promise me that. Stay
until we've straightened everything out. Promise
me."</p>
<p>She shook her head.</p>
<p>"No, I'll promise nothing any more. I should only
break my promises. But I'll tell you before I'm going."</p>
<p>There began then for him the strangest time.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[Pg 197]</SPAN></span>
Slowly an entirely new woman stole into his life, a
woman whom he did not know at all, a creation as
strange and novel as though he had but now met her
for the first time. Every evening, when he returned
to the flat, it was with the expectation of finding her
gone. He questioned her about nothing. She continued
as she had done before to look after the flat
and his clothes and his food. He did not touch her;
he did not kiss her. They sat in the evening in their
little sitting-room reading. They discussed the events
of the day.</p>
<p>Soon he realised that it was beginning to be a passionate
determination with him that he must keep her.
He did not know how to set about it. He found that
he was beginning to woo her again, to woo her as he
had never wooed anybody before. He did not let her
see it. He fancied that he was the last word in tact.
One evening he brought her some roses. He tried to
speak casually about it. His voice trembled. One
night he kissed her, but very indifferently as though
he were thinking of other things.</p>
<p>And how mysterious she was becoming to him!
Not in the old way. He could not believe that there
had ever been a time when he had known her so well
that he could not see her. He saw her continually
now, through all his work, through every moment of
the day. His heart beat when he thought of her.
He would wait for a moment outside the door in the
evening, his hands trembling with the thought that he
might look inside and find her gone.</p>
<p>He never questioned her now as to where she went,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</SPAN></span>
but he was forced to admit that she did not go out
any more than she had done in the old days. It was
strange when you came to think of it, that she had
not followed up more completely her fine declaration
of independence.</p>
<p>They went one evening to a theatre, together. They
sat close to one another in the dark, and he longed to
take her hand, but did not dare. He felt like a boy
again, and she was surely young too—younger than he
had ever known her.</p>
<p>There were times when he fancied that after all she
was quite contented with her domesticity. But he
did not dare to believe that. If he once caught the
golden ball and held it, what would happen?</p>
<p>There came at last an evening when imprudence
overcame him. He caught her in his arms and kissed
her—kissed her as he had not done for years. The
first wonderful thing that he knew was that she responded,
responded with all the passion of their first
days of courtship.</p>
<p>He heard her murmur:</p>
<p>"Poor old Sam—you poor, blind, silly old Sam."</p>
<p>A moment later she was out of his arms and across
the floor.</p>
<p>"But don't imagine," she cried, "that I'm sure that
I'm going to stay. I may be off at any minute. This
very night perhaps!"</p>
<p>He was alone staring at the closed door. The
golden balls were still dancing. He wanted to follow
her. He got up. He stopped. He had a moment
of intense disappointment.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Then—"By Jove, I believe I'm glad. I don't want
to be sure of her. I hope I'll never be sure of her
again!"</p>
<p>And on that flash of self-realisation he began his
new life.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</SPAN></span></p>
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