|
In a small New England university town, shortly
after the World War, writer Charlie Marsden returns home from Europe and
visits Nina Leeds, the woman he secretly loves. When he arrives at the
Leeds home, Charlie interrupts an argument between Nina and her father,
Professor Leeds. Nina is distraught and hysterical over the death of
her lover Gordon, who perished in a plane crash during the war, and blames
her father for preventing Gordon from marrying her. To atone for
Gordon's loss, Nina insists upon going to Boston to work as a nurse in a
sanitarium for wounded soldiers. Her father objects, but finally
admits that his own jealousy drove him to prevent Nina's marriage, and
agrees to let her go.
One year later, Nina is called home when her
father falls gravely ill. By the time she arrives home, accompanied by
her colleague, Dr. Ned Darrell, and Sam Evans, and old friend of Gordon's,
her father has died. At the Leeds house, Sam tells Charlie that he has
proposed to Nina and, when Charlie questions Ned about Sam, Ned declares
that he thinks marriage to Sam would offer salvation to the morbid Nina.
When Nina confesses to Charlie that her obsession with Gordon has caused her
to be promiscuous with men, Charlie, a weak-willed mama's boy, realizes that
Nina needs a strong man and urges her to marry Sam. Hoping that a
normal married life with children will restore equilibrium to her life, Nina
agrees to the match.
Nina's realizes her mistake during their
honeymoon, however, when Sam's mother confides in her that insanity runs
through the Evans family, making it unthinkable for her to have a baby with
Sam. Mrs. Evans tells Nina that Sam knows nothing about the "family
curse" and suggests that Nina have a child by another man. Nina soon
begins to detest her husband and, when Ned visits, she tells him about the
Evans curse and the two decide to conceive a child. During their
afternoon together, Nina realizes that she loves Ned, but Ned struggles
against her love and the control over his life that it implies. To
prevent Nina from telling Sam about their love, Ned announces that Nina is
pregnant and that he is leaving for Europe for a year.
During Ned's absence, Nina gives birth to a son,
whom she names Gordon. No longer able to deny his love for Nina, Ned
returns and begs her to run away with him but Nina, realizing that Sam would
be destroyed, proclaims that she is happy with her "three men" and her baby.
Mirroring their "silent partnership" in Nina's marriage, Ned and Charlie
become silent partners in Sam's business and Sam makes them all wealthy.
As Gordon grows to boyhood, he develops a hatred
of Ned, who spends most of his time at his biological station in the West
Indies. Time passes and Gordon, now an adult, becomes an outstanding
college athlete.
One day when Ned, Charlie, Nina and Sam assemble
to watch Gordon compete in a regatta, Ned announces that he plans to marry
his sweetheart, Madeleine. Unwilling to relinquish her son, Nina
violently objects and asks Ned to stop the marriage and tell Sam the truth
about his paternity. When Ned refuses, a frustrated Nina tells Charlie
the truth. Gordon wins the regatta and Sam, overcome with excitement,
suffers a fatal heart attack.
After the funeral, as Gordon prepares to leave
with Madeleine, he and Ned quarrel and Gordon strikes Ned, causing Nina to
blurt out that he has struck his own father. Gordon misunderstands,
however, and confesses that he always sensed Nina and Ned's love for each
other and gives them his blessing. Ned is about to tell Gordon the
truth when Nina stops him. After Gordon leaves, Nina tells Ned that
their life has not been in vain because they have "saved Sam's soul."
Realizing that it is too late for them to find happiness together, Ned
departs, leaving Nina with the faithful Charlie. |