<h3><SPAN name="XXIII" id="XXIII"></SPAN>XXIII</h3>
<h3>N.W.</h3>
<p>Alex got off the boat at Folkestone, dazed and bewildered. She had been
ill all through the crossing, and her head was still swimming. She
grasped her heavy, clumsy suit-case and was thankful to have no luggage,
when she saw the seething crowd of passengers, running after uniformed
porters in search of heavy baggage that was being flung on to trucks to
an accompaniment of noise and shouting that frightened her.</p>
<p>She made her way to the train and into a third-class carriage, too much
afraid of its starting without her to dare to go in search of the hot
tea which she saw the passengers drinking thankfully. It was a raw, grey
day, and Alex, in her thin serge coat and skirt, that had been so much
too hot in Italy, shivered violently. Her gloves were nearly thread-bare
and her hands felt clammy and stiff. She took off her little black-straw
toque and leant her head against the back of the seat, wishing that she
could sleep.</p>
<p>It seemed to her that the other people in the carriage were looking at
her suspiciously, and she closed her eyes so as not to see them.</p>
<p>After a long while the train started.</p>
<p>Alex tried to make plans. In the shabby purse which she had clasped in
her hand all the way, for fear of its being stolen, was a piece of paper
with Barbara's address. She would not go to Clevedon Square, for fear of
Cedric's unknown wife. Cedric with a wife and child! Alex marvelled, and
could not believe that she might soon make the acquaintance of these
beings who seemed to her so nearly mythical.</p>
<p>The thought of Barbara as a widow living in a little house of her own in
Hampstead, seemed far less unfamiliar. Barbara had always written
regularly to Alex, and had twice been to see her when she was in the
English house and once in her early days in Belgium.</p>
<p>Barbara had often said in her letters that she was very lonely, and that
it was terrible having to live so far out of town because of expenses.
Ralph, poor dear, had left her very, very badly off, and there had been
very little more for her on the death of Sir Francis. Alex supposed that
Downshire Hill must be a very unfashionable address, but she did not
connect "N.W." with any particular locality.</p>
<p>She was always very stupid at finding her way about, and, anyhow, her
bag was heavy. She decided that she would take a cab.</p>
<p>At Charing Cross it was raining, and the noise was deafening. Alex had
meant to send Barbara a telegram from Folkestone, but had not known
where to find the telegraph office, and she now realized with a pang of
dismay that her sister would not be expecting her.</p>
<p>"How stupid I am, and how badly I manage things," she thought. "I hope
she won't be out."</p>
<p>The number of taxis at the station bewildered Alex, who had only seen
one or two crawling about the streets in Rome, and had heard of them,
besides, as ruinously expensive. She found a four-wheeled cab and put
her bag on the floor. The man did not get down from his box to open the
door for her, as she expected. He leant down and asked hoarsely.</p>
<p>"Where d'you want to go, Miss?"</p>
<p>"Downshire Hill," said Alex. "No. 101."</p>
<p>"Downshire 'Ill? Where's that?"</p>
<p>"I don't know," said Alex, frightened. She wondered if the man was
drunk, and prepared to pull her bag out of the cab again.</p>
<p>"'Alf a minute."</p>
<p>He called out something unintelligible to another driver, and received
an answer.</p>
<p>"Downshire 'Ill's N.W.," he then informed her. "Out 'Ampstead w'y."</p>
<p>"Yes," said Alex. "Can't you take me there?"</p>
<p>He looked at her shabby clothes and white, frightened face.</p>
<p>"I'd like to see my fare, first, if <i>you</i> please," he said insolently.</p>
<p>Alex was too much afraid of his making a scene to refuse.</p>
<p>"How much will it be?"</p>
<p>"Seven and sixpence, Miss."</p>
<p>She pulled two half-crowns out of her purse. It was all she had left.</p>
<p>"This is all the change I have," she told him in a shaking voice. "They
will pay the rest when I get there."</p>
<p>He muttered something dissatisfied, but put the coins into his pocket.</p>
<p>Alex climbed into the cab.</p>
<p>It jolted away very slowly.</p>
<p>The rain was falling fast, and dashing against the windows of the cab.
Alex glanced out, but the streets through which they were driving were
all unfamiliar to her. It seemed a very long way to Downshire Hill.</p>
<p>She began to wonder very much how Barbara would receive her, and how she
could make clear to her the long, restless agony that had led her to
obtain release from her vows. Would Barbara understand?</p>
<p>Letters had been very inadequate, and although Barbara had written that
Alex had better come to her for a while if she meant to return to
England, she had given no hint of any deeper comprehension.</p>
<p>"We must make plans when we meet," she had written at the end of the
letter.</p>
<p>Alex wondered with a sense of apprehension what those plans would be.
She had for so long become accustomed to being treated as a chattel,
without volition of her own, that it did not occur to her that she would
have any hand in forming her future life.</p>
<p>Presently she became conscious that the rain had stopped, and that the
atmosphere was lighter. She let down the glass of the window nearest
her, and saw, with surprise, that there was a rolling expanse of green,
with a number of willow-trees, on one side of the road. It did not look
like London.</p>
<p>Then the cab turned a corner, and Alex saw "Downshire Hill" on a small
board against the wall.</p>
<p>This was where Barbara lived, then.</p>
<p>The little houses were small and compact, but of agreeably varying
height and shape, with a tiny enclosure of green in front of each,
protected by railings and a little gate. No. 101, before which the cab
drew up, had a bush that Alex thought must be lilac, and was covered
with ivy. There were red blinds to the windows.</p>
<p>She got out, pulling her heavy bag after her, and timidly pushed open
the little gate, glancing up at the windows as she did so.</p>
<p>There was no one to be seen.</p>
<p>Still clutching at her suit-case, Alex pulled the bell faintly.</p>
<p>"There's half my fare owing yet," said the cabman gruffly.</p>
<p>Thus reminded, Alex rang again.</p>
<p>An elderly parlour-maid with iron-grey hair and a hard face opened the
door.</p>
<p>"Is—is Mrs. MacAllister at home?" faltered Alex.</p>
<p>"I'll inquire," said the maid, with a lightning glance at the suit-case.</p>
<p>She left the door open, and Alex saw a little flight of stairs. A
murmured colloquy took place at the top, and then Barbara, slight and
severely black-clad, came down.</p>
<p>"Alex, that's not you?"</p>
<p>"Yes. Oh, Barbara!"</p>
<p>"My dear—I've been expecting to hear from you every day! I've been
imagining all sorts of awful things. Why didn't you wire? Do come
in—you must be dead, and have you been carrying that huge bag?"</p>
<p>"I came from the station in a cab."</p>
<p>"A cab!" echoed Barbara in rather a dismayed voice. "What a long way to
come, when you could have done it so easily by the underground railway
but I suppose you didn't know?"</p>
<p>"No," repeated Alex blankly. "I didn't know."</p>
<p>"What's he waiting for? Will he carry your trunk upstairs?"</p>
<p>"That is all the luggage I have, and I can carry it up quite well, and
it isn't heavy. But I hadn't quite enough money for the fare—he ought
to have another half-crown."</p>
<p>"Oh, dear," said Barbara. "Wait a minute, then, Alex."</p>
<p>She disappeared up the stairs, leaving Alex alone with the severe
parlour-maid, who still held open the front door.</p>
<p>She leant against the wall in the tiny passage, wondering what she had
expected of her actual arrival, that the reality should give her such a
sense of misery.</p>
<p>If only she had telegraphed to Barbara from Folkestone!</p>
<p>"Here's two shillings. Ada, have you got a sixpence, by any chance?"</p>
<p>"There's sixpence in the kitchen, 'm," said Ada, and fetched it.</p>
<p>"There!" said Barbara. "Pay him then, please, Ada. Now, Alex, come
upstairs and sit down. You look dreadfully ill and worn-out, my dear."</p>
<p>Alex lifted the suit-case again.</p>
<p>"Oh, Ada will see to that. Your room is all ready, Alex. It's very
small, but then the house is a perfect doll's house, as you see. This is
my tiny drawing-room."</p>
<p>"It's very pretty," said Alex, sinking into a chair.</p>
<p>"It's not bad—the things are nice enough. Ralph had some exquisite
things—but, of course, the house is too hateful, and I hate living all
the way out here. No one ever comes near me. Cedric's wife can't get her
chauffeur to bring her—he pretends he doesn't know where it is. The
only person who ever comes is Pamela."</p>
<p>"I thought she was to live with you?"</p>
<p>"Pam! Oh, she wouldn't bury herself out here, for long. Pam's very much
in request, my dear. She's been paying visits all over the place, and
can go on indefinitely, I believe. She makes her headquarters with
Cedric and Violet in Clevedon Square, you know, but of course she'll
marry. Pam's all right."</p>
<p>"Last time I saw Pam she was in short frocks and a pigtail."</p>
<p>"She's come out in the most extraordinary way. Every one says so. Not
exactly pretty, but frightfully taking, and most awfully attractive to
men. They say she's so full of life. I must say, when <i>we</i> came out,
Alex, we didn't have nearly such a good time as she has. Men seem to go
down like ninepins before her. She's always bringing them out here to
tea, and to look at the view of London from the Heath. One always used
to look on Hampstead Heath as a sort of joke—Phil May's drawings, and
that kind of thing. I certainly never expected to live here—but lots of
artists do, and Ralph had a big studio here. And it's very inexpensive.
Besides, if you know you way about, it's quite easy to come in and out
from town. Pamela always brings her young men on the top of a 'bus.
Girls can do anything now-a-days, of course. Fancy father, if one of
<i>us</i> had done such a thing!"</p>
<p>"Who looks after her?" asked Alex, rather awe-struck.</p>
<p>"She looks after herself, my dear, and does it uncommonly effectively.
She could marry tomorrow if she liked—and marry well, too. Of course,
Cedric is her guardian in a sort of way, I suppose, but he lets her do
anything she like—only laughs."</p>
<p>"Cedric!" spoke Alex wistfully. "Do you know, I haven't seen Cedric
since—I left Clevedon Square."</p>
<p>"My dear, that's ten years, isn't it? Cedric's grown exactly like
father. He's got just his way of standing in front of the fire and
shaking his spectacles up and down in his hand—you remember father's
way? Of course, he's done extraordinarily well—every one says so—and
his marriage was an excellent thing, too."</p>
<p>"Is—Violet—nice?"</p>
<p>Barbara laughed rather drily.</p>
<p>"She's got a lot of money, and—yes, I suppose she is nice. Between
ourselves, Alex, she's the sort of person who rather aggravates me.
She's always so prosperous and happy, as though nothing had ever gone
wrong with her, or ever could. She's very generous, I will say that for
her—and extraordinarily good-natured. Most people adore her—she's the
sort of woman that other women rave about, but I must say most men like
her, too. Her people were rather inclined to think she could have done
better for herself than Cedric. Of course, he isn't well off, and she's
two years older than he is. But it's answered all right, and they were
tremendously in love with one another."</p>
<p>"Is she very pretty?"</p>
<p>"She's inclined to be fat, but, of course, she is pretty, in her own
style—very. And the little girl is a perfect darling—little Rosemary.</p>
<p>"But, Alex, here am I talking you to death when you must be dying for
tea. What sort of a crossing did you have?"</p>
<p>"Not very bad, but I was ill all the way."</p>
<p>"Oh, no wonder you look so washed out," said Barbara, as though
relieved, but she went on eyeing her sister uneasily through the rapidly
increasing dusk.</p>
<p>When Ada came in with the tea appointments, Barbara told her to bring
the lamp.</p>
<p>"Yes'm. And your bag, 'm—may I have the key?"</p>
<p>Alex looked bewildered, then recollected that the maid was offering to
unpack for her, and pulled out the key from her purse.</p>
<p>"Isn't there your trunk still to come?" asked Barbara.</p>
<p>"No. You see, I hadn't much to bring—only just one or two things that I
got in Rome."</p>
<p>Alex wondered if Barbara understood that until a few months ago she had
been a nun, living the life of a nun. She thought of the apprehension
with which she had viewed making an explanation to Barbara, and almost
smiled. It appeared that no explanation would be required of her.</p>
<p>But presently Barbara said uneasily:</p>
<p>"It seems extraordinary, your having no luggage like this, Alex. I don't
know what Ada will think, I'm sure. I told her that you'd been living
abroad for a good many years—I thought that was the best thing to say.
But I never thought of your having no luggage."</p>
<p>"I hadn't got anything to bring, you see. I must get some things,"
repeated Alex forlornly.</p>
<p>"You see," said her sister half apologetically, "Ada's been with me ever
since I married. She was Ralph's mother's maid, and perfectly devoted to
him. I couldn't ever get that sort of servant to live out here, if it
wasn't for that—she waits at meals, and maids me, and does everything,
except the actual cooking. I know she's rather disagreeable in her
manner, but she's a perfect treasure to me."</p>
<p>When Ada had brought in the lamps and filled the little room with
cheerful light, drawing the blinds and curtains, Barbara looked again
hard at her sister.</p>
<p>"Good heavens, Alex, how thin you are! and you look as though you hadn't
slept for a month."</p>
<p>"Oh, but I have," said Alex eagerly, and then stopped.</p>
<p>She did not feel able to explain to Barbara the insatiable powers of
sleep which seemed as though they could never be satisfied, after those
ten years of unvarying obedience to a merciless five o'clock bell.</p>
<p>"I am glad to hear it," Barbara replied in a dissatisfied voice. "But I
never saw any one so changed. Have you been ill?"</p>
<p>"Rather run down," Alex said hurriedly, with the convent instinct of
denying physical ills. "I had two or three very troublesome abscesses in
my throat, just before Easter, and that left me rather weak."</p>
<p>"My dear, how awful! You never told me. Did you have an operation? Are
you scarred?"</p>
<p>"No. They broke of themselves <i>inside</i> my throat, luckily."</p>
<p>"Oh—don't!" cried Barbara, and shuddered.</p>
<p>The sisters were very silent during tea. Alex saw her sister looking
hard at her hands, and became conscious of contrast. Barbara was thin,
but her hands were slender and exceedingly white. She wore, besides her
wedding-ring, a sapphire one, which Alex thought must have been her
engagement-ring. On her wrist was a tiny gold watch, and a gold
curb-chain bracelet. Her own hands, Alex now saw, were more than thin.
They were almost emaciated, with knuckles that shone white, and a sharp
prominence at each wrist-bone. They were not white, but rough and
mottled, with broken skin round each finger-nail. She wondered if her
whole person was in as striking a contrast to her sister's. When she had
put on the serge skirt and white muslin shirt, the sensation had
overwhelmed her, accustomed to the heavy religious habit, of being
lightly, almost indecently clad. But Barbara's dress was of soft, silky
material, with a low, turned-down collar, such as was just beginning to
come into fashion. Her hair was piled into a shining knot of little,
sausage-shaped curls, and parted in front. Though she was only
twenty-eight, the grey in Barbara's hair was plentiful, but her small
face looked youthful enough, and had none of the hard lines and shadows
that Alex knew to lie round her own eyes and lips. Her little, slight
figure was very erect, and she wore black su�de shoes with sparkling
buckles. Alex looked down at her own clumsy, ill-made boots, which had
already begun to hurt her feet, and instinctively put up her hands to
the cheap black toque, that felt heavy on her head.</p>
<p>"Why don't you take off your hat?" Barbara asked her kindly. "I am sure
it would rest you."</p>
<p>She was too much used to obedience not to comply instantly, pushing back
with both hands the weight of untidy hair that instantly fell over her
eyes.</p>
<p>"Oh, Alex! Your hair!"</p>
<p>"It's growing very fast. I—I've not been cutting it lately. There's
just enough to put it up, Barbara."</p>
<p>"It's much darker than it used to be, isn't it?"</p>
<p>"Yes, it's nearly black now. Do you remember how light the ends used to
be? But I think it lost its colour from being always under the veil, you
know. The worst of it is that it's not growing evenly, it's all short
lengths."</p>
<p>"Yes. That's very awkward," said Barbara dispassionately. "Especially
when it's so straight."</p>
<p>Alex reflected that her sister was just as self-contained as ever.</p>
<p>"Wouldn't you like to come to your room and rest till dinner, Alex?"</p>
<p>Alex got up at once.</p>
<p>"You ought to take Plasmon, or something of that sort, and try to get a
little fatter. There's simply nothing of you, Alex—you're all eyes,
with rings like saucers round them."</p>
<p>After Barbara had left her in the tiny, pretty bedroom, that Alex
thought looked wonderfully luxurious, she went straight to her
looking-glass.</p>
<p>"Good heavens, how ugly I am!" she said to herself involuntarily.</p>
<p>Her face was sallow, with sunken cheeks, and the Roman sun had powdered
her skin all over with little, pale freckles. Her eyes, as Barbara had
said, had rings like saucers round them, and looked oddly large and
prominent, from the slight puffiness of the under-lids.</p>
<p>Her teeth had, perhaps, suffered most of all. She had had one or two
taken out, and the gaps were visible and unsightly. They had never been
very good teeth, and she remembered still all that she had suffered at
the hands of an unskilled Brussels dentist in Belgium. For the last few
years she had endured intermittent toothache, sooner than submit to
further torture, and she saw now that a small black patch was spreading
between the two front teeth. Barbara, with the grey mingled freely in
her light hair, and her severe widow's weeds, might look more than
twenty-eight but Alex, at thirty-one, bore the semblance of a woman of
forty.</p>
<p>She hid her face in her disfigured hands.</p>
<p>Presently she saw that there was hot water in a little brass can on the
washing-stand, and she thankfully made use of it.</p>
<p>Ada had unpacked everything, and Alex saw the brush and comb that she
had hastily purchased, on the dressing-table. Beside them was the packet
of hair-pins that she had remembered to get at the last moment, and that
was all.</p>
<p>"There ought to be something else, but I've forgotten," thought Alex.</p>
<p>She wondered if Barbara would expect her to dress for dinner. The idea
had not occurred to her. She had one other blouse, a much better one,
made of black net, so transparent as to show glimpses of her coarse,
white-cotton underwear, with its high yoke and long sleeves.</p>
<p>Her hair, of course, was impossible. Even if it had not been so short
and of such an intractable, limp straightness. Alex had forgotten how to
do it. She remembered with dim surprise that at Clevedon Square Lady
Isabel's maid had always done her hair for her.</p>
<p>She brushed it away from her face, and made a small coil on the top of
her head, after the fashion which she remembered best, and tried to
fasten back the untidy lengths that fell over her ears and forehead.</p>
<p>The hair-pins that she had bought were very long and thick. She wished
that they did not show so obviously.</p>
<p>"Alex?" said Barbara's cool voice at her door.</p>
<p>Alex came out, and they went downstairs together, Alex a few steps
behind her sister, since the stairs were not broad enough for two to
walk abreast. She tried awkwardly not to step on the tail of Barbara's
black lace teagown. Ada waited upon them, and although the helpings of
food seemed infinitesimal to Alex, everything tasted delicious, and she
wondered if Barbara always had three courses as well as a dessert of
fruit and coffee, even when she was by herself.</p>
<p>"You don't smoke, I suppose?" Barbara said. "No, of course not how
stupid of me! Let's go up to the drawing-room again."</p>
<p>"Barbara, do you smoke?"</p>
<p>"No. Ralph hated women to smoke, and I don't like to see it myself,
though pretty nearly every one does it now. Violet smokes <i>far</i> too
much. I wonder Cedric lets her. But as a matter of fact, he lets her do
anything she likes."</p>
<p>"I can't realize Cedric married."</p>
<p>"I know. Look here, Alex, he'll want to see you—and you'll be wanting
to talk over plans, won't you?"</p>
<p>"Yes," said Alex nervously. "I—I don't want to have a lot of fuss, you
know. Of course I know it's upsetting for everybody—my coming out of
the convent after every one thought I was settled. But, oh, Barbara! I
<i>had</i> to leave!"</p>
<p>"Personally, I can't think why you ever went in," said Barbara
impersonally. "Or why you took ten years to find out you weren't suited
to the life. That sounds unkind, and I don't mean to be—you know I
don't. Of course, you were right to come away. Only I'm afraid they've
ruined your health—you're so dreadfully thin, and you look much older
than you've any right to, Alex. I believe you ought to go into the
country somewhere and have a regular rest-cure. Every one is doing them
now. However, we'll see what Cedric and Violet say."</p>
<p>"When shall I see them?" asked Alex nervously.</p>
<p>"Well," said her sister, hesitating, "what about tomorrow? It's better
to get it over at once, isn't it? I thought I'd ring them up this
evening—I know they're dining at home." She glanced at the clock.</p>
<p>"Look here, Alex, why don't you go to bed? I always go early myself—and
you're simply dead tired. Do! Then tomorrow we might go into town and do
some shopping. You'll want some things at once, won't you?"</p>
<p>Alex saw that Barbara meant her to assent, and said "Yes" in a dazed
way.</p>
<p>She was very glad to go to her room, and the bed seemed extraordinarily
comfortable.</p>
<p>Barbara had kissed her and said anxiously, "I do hope you'll feel more
like yourself tomorrow, my dear. I hardly feel I know you."</p>
<p>Then she had rustled away, and Alex had heard her go downstairs, perhaps
to telephone to Clevedon Square.</p>
<p>Lying in bed in the dark, she thought about her sister.</p>
<p>It seemed incredible to Alex that she could ever have bullied and
domineered over Barbara. Yet in their common childhood, this had
happened. She could remember stamping her foot at Barbara, and
compelling her to follow her sister's lead again and again. And there
was the time when she had forced a terrified, reluctant Barbara to play
at tight-rope dancing on the stairs, and Barbara had obediently
clambered on to the newel-post, and fallen backwards into the hall and
hurt her back.</p>
<p>Alex remembered still the agonized days and nights of despairing remorse
which had followed, and her own sense of being all but a murderess. She
had thought then that she could never, never quarrel and be angry with
Barbara again. But she had gone away to school, and Barbara had got
well, and in the holidays Alex had been more overbearing than ever in
the schoolroom.</p>
<p>And now Barbara seemed so infinitely competent—so remote from the
failures and emotional disasters that had wrecked Alex. She made Alex
feel like a child in the hands of a serious, rather ironical grown-up
person, who did not quite know how to dispose of it.</p>
<p>Alex herself wondered what would happen to her, much as a child might
have wondered. But she was tired enough to sleep.</p>
<p>And the next morning Barbara, more competent than ever, came in and
suggested that she should have her breakfast in bed, so as to feel
rested enough for a morning's shopping in town.</p>
<p>"Though I must say," said Barbara, in a dissatisfied voice, "that you
don't look any better than you did last night. I hoped you might look
more like yourself, after a night's rest. I really don't think the
others will know you."</p>
<p>"Am I going to see them?"</p>
<p>"Oh, I talked to Violet last night on the telephone, and she said I was
to give you her love, and she hoped we'd both lunch there tomorrow."</p>
<p>"At Clevedon Square?" asked Alex, beginning to tremble.</p>
<p>"Yes. You don't mind, do you?"</p>
<p>"No, I don't mind."</p>
<p>It was very strange to be in the remembered London streets again,
stranger still to be taken to shops by Barbara and authoritatively
guided in the choice of a coat and skirt, a hat that should conceal as
much as possible of the disastrous <i>coiffure</i> underneath, and a pair of
black su�de walking-shoes, that felt oddly light and soft to her feet.</p>
<p>"There's no hurry about the other things, is there?" said Barbara, more
as though stating a fact than asking a question. "Now we'd better take a
taxi to Clevedon Square, or we shall be late."</p>
<p>A few minutes later, as the taxi turned into the square, she said, with
what Alex recognized in surprise as a kind of nervousness in her voice:</p>
<p>"We thought you'd rather get it all over at once, you know, Alex. Seeing
the family, I mean. Pam is staying there anyway, and Violet said Archie
was coming to lunch. There'll be nobody else, except, perhaps, one of
Violet's brothers. She's always got one or other of them there."</p>
<p>Alex felt sick with dismay. Then some remnant of courage came back to
her, and she clenched her hands unseen, and vowed that she would go
through with it.</p>
<p>The cab stopped before the familiar steps, and Barbara said, as to a
stranger: "Here we are."</p>
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