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Noel looked hard at her for a moment, and then did not pretend to misunderstand her meaning.
"What, us being engaged?"
His intuitive comprehension, of which Alex had received so little proof ever before, might be unflattering, but it struck her with immense relief.
"Yes."
They gazed at each other in silence for a few moments, and Alex was furious with herself for a phrase sprung from nowhere that reiterated itself in her brain as she looked at Noel's handsome, inexpressive face--"_Fish-like flaccidity_...."
And again and again "_Fish-like flaccidity._"
They were in the drawing-room at Clevedon Square, and Noel, as though seeking to relieve his obvious embarra.s.sment by moving, got up and walked across the room to the window.
"Of course, I've felt for some time that you weren't very happy about it all, and naturally--if you feel like that...."
All the seething disappointment and wounded vanity and aching loneliness that had tortured her since the very first moments of her engagement to Noel Cardew, rushed back on Alex, but she sought vainly for words in which to convey any part of her feelings to him.
It would be like trying to explain some abstruse principle of science to a little child. The sense of the utter uselessness of any attempt at making clear to him the reasons which were chaotic even to herself, paralysed Alex' utterance.
"I don't think it's any use going on," she repeated feebly.
"You're perfectly free," Noel a.s.sured her scrupulously; "and though, of course, I--I--I--you--we--it would be--" He broke off, very red.
Alex wished vaguely that it was possible for them to talk it all out quite frankly and dispa.s.sionately with one another, but the hard, crystalline detachment of the generation that was to follow theirs, had as yet no place in the scheme of things known to Noel and Alex.
They made awkward, conventional phrases to one another.
"Naturally," the boy said with an effort, "the whole blame must rest with me."
"Oh, no, I'll tell father and mother that I wanted to--to--break it off."
Alex stopped, conscious that she could not think of anything else to say.
But rather to her surprise, it appeared that Noel had something else to say.
He faced her with hands thrust into his pockets, his hair and little, fair moustache and his brown eyes looking very light indeed contrasted with his flushed face.
"Of course, you're absolutely free, as I said, only I must say, Alex, that you're making rather a mistake. Every one was awfully pleased about it, and we've known each other since we were kids--since _you_ were a kid, at any rate--and a broken engagement--well, of course, I don't want to say anything, naturally, but it _does_ put a girl in a--a--well, in what's called rather an invidious position. Especially when it isn't as though there was any particular reason for it."
"The princ.i.p.al reason--" Alex began faintly, not altogether certain of what it was that she was about to say.
"You see, I always thought we should hit it off together so well. We always did as kids--when you were a kid, I mean," Noel explained. "We always seemed to like the same things, and have a good deal in common."
"I don't think that you liked any of the things _I_ cared about especially," Alex said, with a flash of spirit.
"What does that matter?" Noel demanded navely, "so long as one of us likes the things that the other does? It would be exactly the same thing."
Alex had never told herself, and was therefore quite unable to tell Noel, that she had never liked anything particularly, except his liking for her, which she had striven almost frenziedly to gain and retain by means of an artificially-stimulated display of sympathetic interest in his enthusiasms.
"There's another thing--I don't know whether I ought to say it to you, quite--but, of course, after one's--well, married--there's a lot more one has in common, naturally."
"Yes," said Alex forlornly. She quite believed it.
There was an awkward silence.
"Are you angry, Noel?"
She did not think he was at all angry, or very violently moved in any way, but she asked the question from an instinctive desire to hear from him any expression of his real feelings.
He replied stiffly, "Not at all. Of course, it's much better that you should say all this in time ... as I say, I've felt for some time that you weren't particularly cheerful. But I must say, Alex, I'm dashed if I know why."
"I don't know why, exactly--except that I--I don't feel as if we--really--cared enough for one another--"
Alex spoke with a pause between each word, blus.h.i.+ng scarlet, as though it really cost her a physical effort to break through the barrier of reserve that she had been taught so relentlessly should always be erected between her own soul and the naked truth of her own sensations and intimate convictions.
Noel blushed too and Alex felt that he was shocked, which increased her own self-contempt almost unbearably.
"Naturally, if I hadn't--" he left a blank to supply the words, "I shouldn't have asked you to be engaged to me. I must say, Alex, I think you're rather exacting, you know."
Alex quivered from head to foot, as though he had insulted her most brutally. She, who had shrunk, with a genuine dread that had surprised herself, from Noel's few, shyly-uttered endearments, and had found so entire a lack of response in herself to his occasionally-attempted displays of tenderness, to be accused of having been exacting!
She did not for an instant realize, what even Noel faintly surmised, that she had indeed been exacting, of a romantic fervour which she was as incapable 'of inspiring as he of bestowing; from which, had it existed, the outward expressions of love would have leapt spontaneously, supremely appropriate, and necessary to them both.
In the mental chaos and muddle of their extreme youth, they looked at one another confused and bewildered, almost like two children suddenly conscious of the magnitude of their own naughtiness.
Noel said, rather proudly, as though one of the children suddenly tried to appear grown-up:
"You must allow me to undertake the distressing task of--breaking it to--_them_."
Alex almost shuddered, so acute was her own apprehension of the disclosure to her father and mother.
"I shall tell mother at once," she said, lacking the courage even to mention Sir Francis.
It was typical of the whole time and circ.u.mstances of their brief engagement that both Noel, and, in a lesser degree, Alex, had looked upon the relation into which they had entered as one in which their parents held the stakes and were of primary concern. They themselves were only puppets for whom strings were pulled, so as to cause certain vibrations and reactions over which they had no personal control.
This belief, unformulated by either, and entirely characteristic of a late Victorian generation, was, perhaps, that which they held most in common.
Alex even wondered whether she ought to wait and speak to Lady Isabel before taking the next step which she had in mind, but her desire to try and raise their trivial, shamefaced parting to a higher level by one dramatic touch, was too strong for her.
She slowly pulled the diamond engagement-ring off her finger, and handed it to him.
"Oh, I say," stammered Noel. He looked miserably undecided, and she knew that he was wondering whether he could not ask her to keep it just the same.
But in the end he slipped it into his pocket, after balancing it undecidedly for a moment in the palm of his hand.
She sat on the sofa, her left hand feeling strangely bare, unweighted by the heavy, glittering hoop, and Noel looked out of the window.
"I think I shall go abroad," he announced suddenly, and with mingled relief and mortification, Alex detected the sound of satisfaction latent in his voice. She felt that he thought himself to be doing the proper thing in the circ.u.mstances, and the sting inflicted on her pride by his acquiescence in their parting, though she had expected nothing else, gave her the sudden impulse necessary to rise and cross the room until she stood beside him at the window.