<h3><SPAN name="XVII" id="XVII"></SPAN>XVII</h3>
<h3>Lawn-Tennis</h3>
<p>Looking back long afterwards, to that last week of the brilliant Jubilee
season in London and to the two months that followed, spent in a house
near Windsor, taken principally to gratify Cedric's passion for tennis,
Alex could never remember whether the first definite suggestion of her
entering the religious life had come from herself or from Mother
Gertrude.</p>
<p>Neither she nor Barbara had been taken to Cowes that year, and the first
fortnight spent at the Windsor house, which stood in a large, rambling
garden, full of roses, close to the river, reminded her strangely of the
summer holidays they had spent together as children.</p>
<p>Cedric, very sunburnt and sturdy, played tennis with a sort of
concentrated, cumulative enthusiasm, took part in innumerable cricket
matches—possessing already a very real reputation in Eton circles as a
promising slow bowler and a very reliable bat—and occasionally took his
sisters on the river. Barbara, on whom late nights in London had told,
slept half the morning, and then practised "serves" at tennis
assiduously under her brother's coaching, while Pamela, already a
hoyden, romped screaming over the lawn, in a fashion that in Alex' and
Barbara's nursery days would have met with instant and drastic
punishment. But old Nurse was lenient with the last and youngest of her
charges, and now-a-days her guardianship was almost a nominal one only.</p>
<p>Alex was preoccupied, aimlessly brooding over one absorbing interest, as
in the summer holidays that the Clare children had spent at Fiveapples
Farm.</p>
<p>Just as then she had waited and looked and longed for Queenie's letters,
so now she waited for those of Mother Gertrude.</p>
<p>Day after sunlit day, she stood at the bottom of the straggling,
over-grown paddock that gave on to the dusty high-road, and waited for
the afternoon post to be delivered.</p>
<p>She was often disappointed, but never with the sick intensity of dismay
that had marked every fresh stage in her realization of Queenie
Torrance's indifference to friendship.</p>
<p>Mother Gertrude only wrote when she could find a little spare time, and
left by far the greater number of Alex' daily outpourings to her
unanswered, but she read them all—she understood, Alex told herself in
a passion of pure gratitude—and she thought of her child and prayed
daily for her.</p>
<p>Her letters began, "My dearest child," and Alex treasured the words, and
the few earnest counsels and exhortations that the letters contained.</p>
<p>It was much easier to carry out those exhortations at Windsor than it
had been in London. Alex went almost every day to a small Catholic
church, of which Holland had discovered the vicinity, and sometimes
spent the whole afternoon in the drowsy heat of the little building,
that was almost always empty.</p>
<p>Her thoughts dwelt vaguely on her own future, and on the craving
necessity for self-expression, of which Mother Gertrude had made her
more intensely aware than she knew. Could it be that her many failures
were to prove only the preliminary to an immense success, predestined
for her out of Eternity? The allurement of the thought soothed Alex with
an infinite sweetness.</p>
<p>When Sir Francis and his wife joined the Windsor party, Lady Isabel
exclaimed with satisfaction at her daughters' looks. "Only a fortnight,
and it's done such wonders for you both! Barbara was like a little,
washed-out rag, and now she's quite blooming. You've got more colour
too, Alex, darling, and I'm so thankful to see that you're holdin'
yourself rather better. Evidently country air and quiet was what you
both needed."</p>
<p>Nevertheless, Lady Isabel lost no time in issuing and accepting various
invitations that led to luncheons, tennis-parties and occasional dinners
with the innumerable acquaintances whom she immediately discovered to be
within walking or driving distance.</p>
<p>It annoyed Alex unreasonably that her liberty should be interfered with
thus by entertainments which afforded her no pleasure. She ungraciously
conceded her place to Barbara as often as possible, and went off to seek
the solitude of the chapel with an inward conviction of her own great
unworldliness and spirituality.</p>
<p>Barbara showed plenty of eagerness to avail herself of the opportunities
thus passed on to her. She had sedulously cultivated a great enthusiasm
for tennis, and by dint of sheer hard practice had actually acquired a
certain forceful skill, making up for a natural lack of suppleness that
deprived her play of any grace.</p>
<p>Her rather manufactured displays of enjoyment, which had none of the
spontaneous vitality of little Pamela's noisy, bounding high spirits,
were always in sufficient contrast to Alex' supine self-absorption to
render them doubly agreeable to Sir Francis and Lady Isabel.</p>
<p>"I like to take my little daughter about and see her enjoying herself,"
Sir Francis would say, with more wistfulness than pleasure in his voice
sometimes, as though wishing that Barbara's gaiety could have been
allied to Alex' prettier face and position as his eldest daughter.</p>
<p>It was only in his two sons—Cedric, with his sort of steady brilliance,
and idle, happy-go-lucky Archie, by far the best-looking of the Clare
children—that Sir Francis found unalloyed satisfaction.</p>
<p>Pamela was the modern child in embryo, and disconcerted more than she
pleased him.</p>
<p>It was principally to gratify Cedric that Lady Isabel arranged a tennis
tournament for the end of the summer, on a hot day of late September
that was to remain in Alex' memory as a milestone, unrecognized at the
time, marking the end of an era.</p>
<p>"Thank Heaven it's fine," piously breathed Barbara at the window in the
morning. "I shall wear my white piqu�."</p>
<p>Alex shrugged her shoulders.</p>
<p>Neither she nor Barbara would have dreamed of inaugurating a new form of
toilette without previous reference to Lady Isabel, and Barbara's small
piece of self-assertion was merely designed to emphasize the butterfly
r�le which she was embracing with so much determination.</p>
<p>"Of course, you'll wear your piqu�. Mother said so," Alex retorted,
conscious of childishness. "You've worn a piqu� at every tennis party
you've been to."</p>
<p>"Well, this is a new piqu�," said Barbara, who invariably found a last
word for any discussion, and she went downstairs singing in a small,
tuneful chirp made carefully careless.</p>
<p>"Who is coming?" Alex inquired, having taken no part whatever in the
lengthy discussions as to partners and handicaps which had engrossed
Cedric and Barbara for the past ten days.</p>
<p>Cedric looked up, frowning, from the list on which he was still engaged.
He did not speak, however; but Barbara said very sweetly, and with an
emphasis so nearly imperceptible that only her sister could appreciate
it:</p>
<p>"Oh, nobody in whom you're at all specially interested, I'm afraid."</p>
<p>Alex did not miss the implication, and coloured angrily.</p>
<p>"I'm going to play with that artist, the one staying with the Russells.
He isn't at all a good player," said Barbara smoothly.</p>
<p>"Then why are you playing with him?"</p>
<p>Barbara smiled rather self-consciously. "It would hardly do to annex the
best partners for ourselves, would it?" she inquired. "And we're trying
to equalize the setts as far as possible. Cedric has to play with the
youngest Russell girl, who's too utterly hopeless."</p>
<p>"I shall take all her balls," said Cedric calmly, "so it'll be all
right. She doesn't mind any amount of poaching. We shall lose on her
serves, of course, but that may be just as well."</p>
<p>"Why, dear?" innocently inquired Lady Isabel.</p>
<p>"I don't think it looks well to carry off a prize at one's own show,"
Cedric said candidly.</p>
<p>"I should rather love the Indian bangles," owned Barbara, glancing
enviously at the array of silver trifles that constituted the prizes.</p>
<p>"You won't get them, my child—not with McAllister as your partner.
You'll see, Lady Essie Cameron will get them, or one of the Nottinghams,
if they're in good form."</p>
<p>"Peter Nottingham is playing with you, Alex," Barbara informed her.</p>
<p>"That boy!"</p>
<p>"Nottingham is nearly eighteen, let me tell you," said Cedric in tones
of offence, "and plays an extraordinarily good game of tennis. In fact,
he'll be about the best man there probably, which is why I've had to
give him to you for a partner. As you've not taken the trouble to
practise a single stroke the whole summer, I should advise you to keep
out of his way, and let him stand up to the net and take every blessed
thing he can get.</p>
<p>"It'll be a nice thing for me," said Cedric bitterly, "to have to
apologize to Nottingham for making him play with the worst girl there,
and that my sister."</p>
<p>"Cedric," said his mother gently, "I'm sure I've seen Alex play very
nicely."</p>
<p>Alex was grateful, but she wished that, like Barbara, she had practised
her strokes under Cedric's tuition.</p>
<p>It was characteristic of her that when the occasion for excelling had
actually come, she should passionately desire to excel, whereas during
previous weeks of supine indifference, it had never seemed to her worth
while to exert herself in the attainment of proficiency.</p>
<p>After breakfast she went out to the tennis-court, freshly marked and
rolled, and wondered if it would be worth while to make Archie send her
over some balls, but Cedric hurried up in a business-like way and
ordered everybody off the ground while he instructed the garden boy in
the science of putting up a new net.</p>
<p>Alex moved disconsolately away, and tried to tell herself that none of
these trivial, useless enthusiasms which they regarded so earnestly were
of any real importance.</p>
<p>She wandered down to the chapel and sat there, for the most part
pondering over her own infinitesimal chances of success in the coming
tournament, and thinking how much she would like to astonish and
disconcert Barbara and Cedric by a sudden display of skill.</p>
<p>It was true that she had not practised, and was at no time a strong
player, but she had sometimes shown an erratic brilliance in a sudden,
back-handed stroke and, like all weak people, she had an irrational
belief in sudden and improbable accessions of luck.</p>
<p>Needless to say, this belief was not justified.</p>
<p>Peter Nottingham, a tall, shy boy with a smashing service and tremendous
length of reach, was intent on nothing but victory, and though he
muttered politely, "Not all, 'm sure," at Alex' preliminary, faltering
announcement of her own bad play, the very sense of his keenness made
her nervous.</p>
<p>She missed every stroke, gave an aimless dash that just succeeded in
stopping a ball that would obviously have been "out," and felt her nerve
going.</p>
<p>Just as success always led her on to excel, so failure reduced her
capabilities to a minimum. Her heart sank.</p>
<p>They lost the first game.</p>
<p>"Will you serve?" enquired Peter Nottingham politely.</p>
<p>"I'd rather you did."</p>
<p>Alex was infinitely relieved that responsibility should momentarily be
off her own shoulders, but young Nottingham's swift service was as
swiftly returned by Lady Essie Cameron, an excellent player, and one who
had no hesitation in smashing the ball on to the farthest corner of the
court, where Alex stood, obviously nervous and unready.</p>
<p>She failed to reach it, and could have cried with mortification.</p>
<p>Thanks to Nottingham, however, they won the game.</p>
<p>It was their solitary victory.</p>
<p>Alex served one fault after another, and at last ceased even to murmur
perfunctory apologies as she and her partner, whose boyish face
expressed scarlet vexation, crossed over the court. She was not clear as
to the system on which Cedric had arranged the tournament, but presently
she saw that the losing couples would drop out one by one until the
champions, having won the greatest number of setts, would finally
challenge any remaining couples whom they had not yet encountered.</p>
<p>"I say, I'm afraid this is pretty rotten for you, old chap," she heard
Cedric, full of concern, say to her partner.</p>
<p>"Perhaps we may get another look in at the finals," said Peter
Nottingham, with gloomy civility.</p>
<p>He and Alex, with several others, sat and watched the progress of the
games. It gave Alex a shock of rather unpleasant surprise to see the
improvement in Barbara's play.</p>
<p>Her service, an overhand one in which very few girl players were then
proficient, gave rise to several compliments. Her partner was the
good-looking artist, Ralph McAllister.</p>
<p>"Well played!" he shouted enthusiastically, again and again.</p>
<p>Once or twice, when Barbara missed a stroke, Alex heard him exclaim
softly, "Oh, hard luck! Well tried, partner."</p>
<p>Alex, tired and mortified, almost angry, wondered why Fate should have
assigned to her as a partner a mannerless young cub like Nottingham, who
thought of nothing but the horrid game. It did not occur to her that
perhaps McAllister would not have been moved to the same enthusiasm had
she, instead of Barbara, been playing with him.</p>
<p>The combination, however, was beaten by Cedric and the youngest of the
Russell girls, a pretty, roundabout child, who left all the play to her
partner and screamed with excitement and admiration almost every time he
hit the ball.</p>
<p>It was quite evident that the final contest lay between them and Lady
Essie Cameron, a strapping, muscular Scotch girl, whose partner kept
discreetly to the background, and allowed her to stand up to the net and
volley every possible ball that came over.</p>
<p>When she and her partner had emerged victorious from every contest,
nothing remained but for Cedric and Miss Russell to make good their
claim to the second place by conquering the remaining couples.</p>
<p>Alex played worse than ever, and the sett was six games to love. As she
went past, Cedric muttered to her low and viciously:</p>
<p>"Are you doing it <i>on purpose</i>?"</p>
<p>She knew that he was angry and mortified at his friend Nottingham's
disappointment, but his words struck her like a blow.</p>
<p>She stood with her back to every one, gulping hard.</p>
<p>"You didn't have a chance, old man," said a sympathetic youth behind
her. "They might have arranged the setts better."</p>
<p>Peter Nottingham growled in reply.</p>
<p>"Who was the girl you were playing with?"</p>
<p>Alex realized that her white frock and plain straw hat were
indistinguishable from all the other white frocks and straw hats
present, seen from the back.</p>
<p>"Hush," said young Nottingham more cautiously. "That was one of the
girls of the house, a Miss Clare."</p>
<p>"Can't play a bit, can she? The other one wasn't bad. Didn't one of them
give poor Cardew the chuck or something?"</p>
<p>"Oh, shut up," Nottingham rebuked the indiscreet one. "Much more likely
<i>he</i> chucked <i>her</i>, if you ask me."</p>
<p>Alex could bear the risk of their discovering her proximity no longer,
and hastened into the house.</p>
<p>It was the first afternoon since her arrival at Windsor that she had not
looked eagerly for the afternoon post.</p>
<p>The letter, a square, bluish envelope of cheap glazed paper, caught her
eye almost accidentally on the table in the hall.</p>
<p>She recognized it instantly, and snatching it up, opened and read it
standing there, with the scent of a huge bowl of late roses pervading
the whole hall, and the distant sound of cries and laughter faintly
penetrating to her ears from the tennis-court and garden outside.</p>
<p>Mother Gertrude's writing showed all the disciplined regularity
characteristic of a convent, with the conventional French slope and
long-tailed letters, the careful making of which Alex herself had had
instilled into her in Belgium.</p>
<p>The phraseology of the Superior's letter was conventional, too, and even
her most earnest exhortations, when delivered in writing, bore the marks
of restraint.</p>
<p>But this letter was different.</p>
<p>Alex knew it at once, even before she had read it to the end of the four
closely-covered sheets.</p>
<p><span style="margin-left: 26.5em;">"Sept. 30, 1897.</span><br/></p>
<blockquote><p>"MY DEAREST CHILD,</p>
<p>"There are many letters from you waiting to be answered, and I
thank you for them all, and for the confidence you bestow upon me,
which touches me very deeply.</p>
<p>"Now at last I am able to sit down and feel that I shall have a
quiet half-hour in which to talk to my child, although I dare not
hope that it will be an uninterrupted one!</p>
<p>"So the life you are leading does not satisfy you, Alex? You tell
me that you come in from the gaieties and amusements and little
parties, which, after all, are natural to your age and to the
position in which God has placed you, full of dissatisfaction and
restlessness of mind.</p>
<p>"Alex, my dear child, I am not surprised. You will never find that
what the world can offer will satisfy you. Most of us may have
known similar moments of fatigue, of disillusionment, but to a
heart and mind like yours, above all, it is inconceivable that
anything less than Infinity itself should bring any lasting joy.
Let me say what I have so often thought, after our conversations
together in my little room—there is only one way of peace for such
a nature as yours. <i>Give up all, and you shall find all.</i></p>
<p>"I have thought and prayed over this letter, my little Alex, and am
not writing lightly. You will forgive me if I am going too far, but
I long to see my child at rest, and for such as you there is only
one true rest here.</p>
<p>"Human love has failed you, and you are left alone, with all your
impulses of sacrifice and devotion to another thrown back upon
yourself. But, Alex, there is One to whom all the love and
tenderness of which you know yourself capable can be offered—and
He <i>wants</i> it. Weak though you are, and all-perfect though He is,
He wants you.</p>
<p>"I don't think there has been a day since I first heard His call,
when I have not marvelled at the wonder of it—at the infinite
honour done to me.</p>
<p>"If I have told you more of the secret story of my vocation than to
any one else, it has been for a reason which I think you have
guessed. I have seen for a long while what it was that God asked of
you, Alex, and I believe the time has come when you will see it
too. Your last letter, with its cry of loneliness, and the bitter
sense of being unwanted, has made me almost sure of it.</p>
<p>"You are not unwanted—you need never be lonely again. '<i>Leave all
things and follow Me!</i>' If you hear that call, which I believe with
all my heart to have sounded for you, can you disobey it? Will you
not rather, forsaking all things, follow Him, and in so doing, find
all things?"</p>
<p>"I have written a long while, and cannot go on now. God bless you
again and again, and help you to be truly generous with Him.</p>
<p>"Write to me as fully as you will, and count upon my poor prayers
and my most earnest religious affection. I need not add come and
see me again on your return to London. My child will always find
the warmest of welcomes! It was not for nothing that you came into
the convent chapel to find rest and quiet, that summer day, my
Alex!</p>
</blockquote>
<p><span style="margin-left: 12.5em;">"Your devoted Mother in Christ,</span><br/>
<br/>
<span style="margin-left: 16em;">"GERTRUDE OF THE HOLY CROSS."</span><br/></p>
<p>Alex stood almost as though transfixed. The letter hardly came as a
surprise. She had long since known subconsciously what was in the
Superior's mind, and yet the expression of it produced in her a sort of
stupefaction.</p>
<p>Could it be true?</p>
<p>Was there really such a refuge for her, somewhere a need of her, and of
that passionate desire for self-devotion that was so essential a part of
her?</p>
<p>The thought brought with it a tingling admixture of bitter
disappointment and of poignant rapture.</p>
<p>She realized almost despairingly that she could no longer stand in the
hall clasping Mother Gertrude's letter unconsciously to her.</p>
<p>Already light, flying feet were approaching from the garden.</p>
<p>"I came to look for you, Alex," said Barbara breathlessly in the
doorway. "They're going to give the prizes. What are you doing?"</p>
<p>"I'm coming," said Alex mechanically. She was rather surprised that
Barbara should have taken the trouble to come for her.</p>
<p>"Did mother send you?"</p>
<p>"No," said Barbara simply; "but I thought it would look very bad if you
kept out of the way of it because you happened to play badly and not win
a prize."</p>
<p>So Alex assisted at the prize-giving, and saw Lady Essie accept the
jingling, Indian silver bangles that were so much in fashion, with frank
pleasure and gratitude, and saw consolation prizes awarded to Cedric and
to his partner, who appeared entirely delighted, although she had done
nothing at all to deserve distinction.</p>
<p>"You ought to have a prize, you know," she heard Ralph McAllister tell
Barbara. "If you'd had a better partner you'd have won easily. You play
much better than Lady Essie, really!"</p>
<p>It was not in the least true that Barbara played better than Lady Essie,
or nearly so well, but she put on a little, gratified, complacent smile,
that apparently satisfied Ralph McAllister quite as well as modest
disclaimers.</p>
<p>Alex kept out of her partner's way, and avoided his eye. Not much
probability that <i>he</i> would address flattering speeches to her!</p>
<p>All the time a subconscious emotion was surging through her at the
thought of Mother Gertrude's letter and what it contained.</p>
<p>"The life you are leading does not satisfy you. You will never find that
what the world can offer will satisfy you."</p>
<p>It was true enough, Heaven knew, Alex thought drearily, as she addressed
perfunctory and obviously absent-minded civilities to her mother's
guests.</p>
<p>In the sense of depression engendered by the afternoon's failure, no
less than by the sight of McAllister's evident delight in Barbara's
demure, patently-artificial, alternate coyness and gaiety, Alex realized
both her own eternal dissatisfaction with her surroundings and the
subtle allurement of a renunciation that should yet promise her all that
she most longed for.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />