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<h2> CHAPTER L </h2>
<p>Audrey was in Paris on the eleventh of November. Now and then she got back
there, and reveled for a day or two in the mere joy of paved streets and
great orderly buildings. She liked the streets and the crowds. She liked
watching the American boys swaggering along, smoking innumerable cigarets
and surveying the city with interested, patronizing eyes. And, always,
walking briskly along the Rue Royale or the Avenue de l'Opera, or in the
garden of the Tuileries where the school-boys played their odd French
games, her eyes were searching the faces of the men she met.</p>
<p>Any tall man in civilian clothes set her heart beating faster. She was
quite honest with herself; she knew that she was watching for Clay, and
she had a magnificent shamelessness in her quest. And now at last The
Daily Mail had announced his arrival in France, and at first every ring of
her telephone had sent her to it, somewhat breathless but quite confident.
He would, she considered, call up the Red Cross at the Hotel Regina, and
they would, by her instructions, give her hotel.</p>
<p>Then, on that Monday morning, which was the eleventh, she realized that he
would not call her up. She knew it suddenly and absolutely. She sat down,
when the knowledge came to her, with a sickening feeling that if he did
not come to her now he never would come. Yet even then she did not doubt
that he cared. Cared as desperately as she did. The bond still held.</p>
<p>She tried very hard, sitting there by her wood fire in the orderly uniform
which made her so quaintly young and boyish, to understand the twisted
mental processes that kept him away from her, now that he was free. And,
in the end, she came rather close to the truth: his sense of failure; his
loss of confidence in himself where his love life was concerned; the
strange twisting and warping that were Natalie's sole legacy from their
years together.</p>
<p>For months she had been tending broken bodies and broken spirits. But the
broken pride of a man was a strange and terrible thing.</p>
<p>She did not know where he was stopping, and in the congestion of the Paris
hotels it would be practically impossible to trace him. And there, too,
her own pride stepped in. He must come to her. He knew she cared. She had
been honest with him always, with a sort of terrible honesty.</p>
<p>Surveying the past months she wondered, not for the first time, what had
held them apart so long, against the urge that had become the strongest
thing in life to them both. The strength in her had come from him. She
knew that. But where had Clay got his strength? Men were not like that,
often. Failing final happiness, they so often took what they could get.
Like Chris.</p>
<p>Perhaps, for the first and last time, she saw Clayton Spencer that morning
with her mind, as well as with her heart. She saw him big and generous and
fine, but she saw him also not quite so big as his love, conventional,
bound by tradition and early training, somewhat rigid, Calvinistic, and
dominated still by a fierce sex pride.</p>
<p>At once the weaknesses of the middle span, and its safety. And,
woman-fashion, she loved him for both his weakness and his strength. A
bigger man might have taken her. A smaller man would have let her go. Clay
was—just Clay; single-hearted, intelligent but not shrewd,
blundering, honest Clay.</p>
<p>She was one great ache for the shelter of his arms.</p>
<p>She had a small sense of shame that, on that day of all others, she should
be obsessed with her own affairs.</p>
<p>This was a great day. That morning, if all went well, the war was to
cease. The curtain was to fall on the great melodrama, and those who had
watched it and those who had played in it would with the drop of the
curtain turn away from the illusion that is war, to the small and quiet
things of home.</p>
<p>"Home!" she repeated. She had no home. But it was a great day,
nevertheless. Only that morning the white-capped femme de chambre had
said, with exaltation in her great eyes:</p>
<p>"So! It is finished, Madame, or soon it will be—in an hour or two."</p>
<p>"It will be finished, Suzanne."</p>
<p>"And Madame will go back to the life she lived before." Her eyes had
turned to where, on the dressing-table, lay the gold fittings of Audrey's
dressing-case. She visualized Audrey, back in rich, opulent America,
surrounded by the luxury the gold trinkets would indicate.</p>
<p>"Madame must be lovely in the costume for a ball," she said, and sighed.
For her, a farm in Brittany, the endless round of small duties; for the
American—</p>
<p>Sitting there alone Audrey felt already the reactions of peace. The war
had torn up such roots as had held her. She was terribly aware, too, that
she had outgrown her old environment. The old days were gone. The old
Audrey was gone; and in her place was a quiet woman, whose hands had known
service and would never again be content to be idle. Yet she knew that,
with the war, the world call would be gone. Not again, for her, detached,
impersonal service. She was not of the great of the earth. What she
wanted, quite simply, was the service of love. To have her own and to care
for them. She hoped, very earnestly, that she would be able to look beyond
her own four walls, to see distress and to help it, but she knew, as she
knew herself, that the real call to her would always be love.</p>
<p>She felt a certain impatience at herself. This was to be the greatest day
in the history of the world, and while all the earth waited for the signal
guns, she waited for a man who had apparently determined not to take her
back into his life.</p>
<p>She went out onto her small stone balcony, on the Rue Danou, and looked
out to where, on the Rue de la Paix, the city traffic moved with a sort of
sporadic expectancy. Men stopped and consulted their watches. A few stood
along the curb, and talked in low voices. Groups of men in khaki walked
by, or stopped to glance into the shop windows. They, too, were waiting.
She could see, far below, her valet de chambre in his green felt apron,
and the concierge in his blue frock coat and brass buttons, unbending in
the new democracy of hope to talk to a cabman.</p>
<p>Suddenly Audrey felt the same exaltation that had been in Suzanne's eyes.
Those boys below in uniform—they were not tragic now. They were the
hope of the world, not its sacrifice. They were going to live. They were
going to live.</p>
<p>She went into her bedroom and put on her service hat. And as she opened
the door Suzanne was standing outside, one hand upraised. Into the quiet
hallway there came the distant sound of the signal guns.</p>
<p>"C'est l'armistice!" cried Suzanne, and suddenly broke into wild
hysterical sobbing.</p>
<p>All the way down-stairs Audrey was praying, not articulately, but in her
heart, that this was indeed the end; that the grapes of wrath had all been
trampled; that the nations of the world might again look forward instead
of back. And—because she was not of the great of the earth, but only
a loving woman—that somewhere Clay was hearing the guns, as she was,
and would find hope in them, and a future.</p>
<p>When a great burden is lifted, the relief is not always felt at once. The
galled places still ache. The sense of weight persists. And so with Paris.
Not at once did the city rejoice openly. It prayed first, and then it
counted the sore spots, and they were many. And it was dazed, too. There
had been no time to discount peace in advance.</p>
<p>The streets filled at once, but at first it was with a chastened people.
Audrey herself felt numb and unreal. She moved mechanically with the
shifting crowd, looking overhead as a captured German plane flew by,
trying to comprehend the incomprehensible. But by mid-day the sober note
of the crowds had risen to a higher pitch. A file of American doughboys,
led by a corporal with a tin trumpet and officered by a sergeant with an
enormous American cigar, goose-stepped down the Avenue de l'Opera, gaining
recruits at every step. It snake-danced madly through the crowd, singing
that one lyric stand-by of Young America: "Hail! hail! the gang's all
here!"</p>
<p>But the gang was not all there, and they knew it. Some of them lay in the
Argonne, or at Chateau-Thierry, and for them peace had come too late. But
the Americans, like the rest of the world, had put the past behind them.
Here was the present, the glorious present, and Paris on a sunny Monday.
And after that would be home.</p>
<p>"Hail, hail, the gang's all here,<br/>
What the hell do we care?<br/>
What the hell do we care?<br/>
Hail, hail, the gang's all here,<br/>
What the hell do we care now?"<br/></p>
<p>Gradually the noise became uproarious. There were no bands in Paris, and
any school-boy with a tin horn or a toy drum could start a procession.
Bearded little poilus, arm in arm from curb to curb, marched grinning down
the center of the streets, capturing and kissing pretty midinettes, or
surrounding officers and dancing madly; Audrey saw an Algerian, ragged and
dirty from the battle-fields, kiss on both cheeks a portly British Admiral
of the fleet, and was herself kissed by a French sailor, with extreme
robustness and a slight tinge of vin ordinaire. She went on smiling.</p>
<p>If only Clay were seeing all this! He had worked so hard. He had a right
to this wonderful hour, at least. If he had gone to the front, to see
Graham—but then it must be rather wonderful at the front, too. She
tried to visualize it; the guns quiet, and the strained look gone from the
faces of the men, with the wonderful feeling that as there was to-day, now
there would also be to-morrow.</p>
<p>She felt a curious shrinking from the people she knew. For this one day
she wanted to be alone. This peace was a thing of the soul, and of the
soul alone. She knew what it would be with the people she knew best in
Paris,—hastily arranged riotous parties, a great deal of champagne
and noise, and, overlying the real sentiment, much sentimentality. She
realized, with a faint smile, that the old Audrey would have welcomed that
very gayety. She was even rather resentful with herself for her own
aloofness.</p>
<p>She quite forgot luncheon, and early afternoon found her on the balcony of
the Crillon Hotel, overlooking the Place de la Concorde. Paris was truly
awake by that time, and going mad. The long-quiet fountains were playing,
Poilus and American soldiers had seized captured German cannon and were
hauling them wildly about. If in the morning the crowd had been largely
khaki, now the French blue predominated. Flags and confetti were
everywhere, and every motor, as it, pushed slowly through the crowd,
carried on roof and running board and engine hood crowds of self-invited
passengers. A British band was playing near the fountain. A line of
helmets above the mass and wild cheers revealed French cavalry riding
through, and, heralded by jeers and much applause came a procession of the
proletariat, of odds and ends, soldiers and shop-girls, mechanics and
street-sweepers and cabmen and students, carrying an effigy of the Kaiser
on a gibbet.</p>
<p>As the sun went down, the outlines of the rejoicing city took on the faint
mist-blue of a dream city. It softened the outlines of the Eiffel tower to
strange and fairy-like beauty and gave to the trees in the Tuileries
gardens the lack of definition of an old engraving. And as if to remind
the rejoicing of the price of their happiness, there came limping through
the crowd a procession of the mutilees. They stumped along on wooden legs
or on crutches; they rode in wheeled chairs; they were led, who could not
see. And they smiled and cheered. None of them was whole, but every one
was a full man, for all that.</p>
<p>Audrey cried, shamelessly like Suzanne, but quietly. And, not for the
first time that day, she thought of Chris. She had never loved him, but it
was pitiful that he could not have lived. He had so loved life. He would
have so relished all this, the pageantry of it, and the gayety, and the
night's revelry that was to follow. Poor Chris! He had thrown everything
away, even life. The world perhaps was better that these mutilees below
had given what they had. But Chris had gone like a pebble thrown into a
lake. He had made his tiny ripple and had vanished.</p>
<p>Then she remembered that she was not quite fair. Perhaps she had never
been fair to Chris. He had given all he had. He had not lived well, but he
had died well. And there was something to be said for death. For the first
time in her healthy life she wondered about death, standing here on the
Crillon balcony, with the city gone mad with life below her. Death was
quiet. It might be rather wonderful. She thought, if Clay did not want
her, that perhaps it would be very comforting just to die and forget about
everything.</p>
<p>From beneath the balcony there came again, lustily the shouts of a dozen
doughboys hauling a German gun:</p>
<p>"Hail! hail! the gang's all here!<br/>
What the hell do we care?<br/>
What the hell do we care?<br/>
Hail, hail, the gang's all here!<br/>
What the hell do we care now?"<br/></p>
<p>Then, that night, Clay came. The roistering city outside had made of her
little sitting-room a sort of sanctuary, into which came only faintly the
blasts of horns, hoarse strains of the "Marseillaise" sung by an un-vocal
people, the shuffling of myriad feet, the occasional semi-hysterical
screams of women.</p>
<p>"Mr. Spencer is calling," said the concierge over the telephone, in his
slow English. And suddenly a tight band snapped which had seemed to bind
Audrey's head all day. She was calm. She was herself again. Life was very
wonderful; peace was very wonderful. The dear old world. The good old
world. The kind, loving, tender old world, which separated people that
they might know the joy of coming together again. She wanted to sing, she
wanted to hang over her balcony and teach the un-vocal French the
"Marseillaise."</p>
<p>Yet, when she had opened the door, she could not even speak. And Clay,
too, after one long look at her, only held out his arms. It was rather a
long time, indeed, before they found any words at all. Audrey was the
first, and what she said astounded her. For she said:</p>
<p>"What a dreadful noise outside."</p>
<p>And Clay responded, with equal gravity: "Yes, isn't it!"</p>
<p>Then he took off his overcoat and put it down, and placed his hat on the
table, and said, very simply: "I couldn't stay away. I tried to."</p>
<p>"You hadn't a chance in the world, Clay, when I was willing you to come."</p>
<p>Then there was one of those silences which come when words have shown
their absolute absurdity. It seemed a long time before he broke it.</p>
<p>"I'm not young, Audrey. And I have failed once."</p>
<p>"It takes two to make a failure," she said dauntlessly. "I—wouldn't
let you fail again, Clay. Not if you love me."</p>
<p>"If I love you!" Then he was, somehow, in that grotesque position that is
only absurd to the on-looker, on his knees beside her. His terrible
self-consciousness was gone. He only knew that, somehow, some way, he must
prove to her his humility, his love, his terrible fear of losing her
again, his hope that together they might make up for the wasted years of
their lives. "I worship you," he said.</p>
<p>The little room was a sanctuary. The war lay behind them. Wasted and
troubled years lay behind them. Youth, first youth, was gone, with its
illusions and its dreams. But before them lay the years of fulfilment,
years of understanding. Youth demanded everything, and was discontented
that it secured less than its demands. Now they asked but three things,
work, and peace, and love. And the greatest of these was love.</p>
<p>Something like that he said to her, when the first inarticulateness had
passed, and when, as is the way of a man with the woman who loves him, he
tried to lay his soul as well as his heart at her feet. The knowledge that
the years brought. That love in youth was a plant of easy growth,
springing up in many soils. But that the love of the middle span of a
man's life, whether that love be the early love purified by fire, or a new
love, sowed in sacrifice and watered with tears, the love that was to
carry a man and a woman through to the end, the last love, was God's
infinitely precious gift. A gift to take the place of the things that had
gone with youth, of high adventure and the lilt of the singing heart.</p>
<p>The last gift.</p>
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