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Gregory, holding the little locket, looked at it silently. Then he put it to his lips. "You care for me, don't you, Karen?" he said.
"You know, I think," said Karen, repeating her former words.
He laid the locket in her hand, and the moment had for him a sacramental holiness so that the locket was like a wedding-ring; holding it and her hand together he said, lifting his eyes to hers, "I love you. Do you love me?"
Her eyes had filled with tears when he had kissed her mother's face, and there was young awe in her gaze; but no shadow, no surprise.
"Yes," she said, unhesitatingly. "Yes, I love you, dear Gregory."
The simplicity, the inevitableness of his bliss overwhelmed him. He held her hand and looked down at it. All about them was the blue. All her past, its beauty, its dark, forgotten things, she had given to him. She was his for ever. "Oh, my darling Karen," he murmured.
She bent down to look at him now, smiling and unclosing her hand from his gently, so that she could look at her mother's face. "How glad she would be if she could know," she said. "Perhaps she does know. Do you not think so?"
"Dear--I don't know what I think about those hopes. I hope."
"Oh, it is more than hope, my belief that she is there; that she is not lost. Only one cannot tell how or when or where it all may be. For that, yes, it can be only hope. She, too, would love you, I am sure," Karen continued.
"Would she? I'm glad you think so, darling."
"We are so much alike, you see, that it is natural to feel sure that we should think alike. Do you not think that her face is much like mine?
What happiness! I am glad it is not a day of rain for our happiness."
And she then added, "I hope we may be married."
"Why, we are to be married, dear child," Gregory said, smiling at her.
"There is no 'may' about it, since you love me."
"Only one," said Karen, who still looked at her mother's face. "And perhaps it will be well not to speak much of our love till we can know.
But I feel sure that she will say this happiness is for me."
"She?" Gregory repeated. For a moment he imagined that she meant some superst.i.tion connected with her mother.
Karen, slipping the ribbon over her head, had returned the locket to its place. "Yes; Tante," she said, still with the locket in her hand.
"Tante?" Gregory repeated.
At his tone, its change, she lifted startled eyes to his.
"What has she to do with it?" Gregory asked after a moment in which she continued to gaze at him.
"What has Tante to do with it?" said Karen in a wondering voice. "Do you think I could marry without Tante's consent?"
"But you love me?"
"I do not understand you. Was it wrong of me to have said so before I had her consent? Was that not right? Not fair to you?"
"Since you love me you ought to be willing to marry me whether you have your guardian's consent or not." His voice strove to control its bitterness; but the day had darkened; all his happiness was blurred. He felt as if a great injury had been done him.
Karen continued to gaze at him in astonishment. "Would you have expected me to marry you without my mother's consent? She is in my mother's place."
"If you loved me I should certainly expect you to say that you would marry me whether your mother consented or not. You are of age. There is nothing against me. Those aren't English ideas at all, Karen."
"But I am not English," said Karen, "my guardian is not English. They are our ideas."
"You mean, you seriously mean, that, loving me, you would give me up if she told you to?"
"Yes," said Karen, now with the heaviness of their recognized division.
"She would not refuse her consent unless it were right that I should give you up."
For some moments after this Gregory, in silence, looked down at the gra.s.s between them, clasping his knees; for he now sat upright. Then, controlling his anger to argumentative rationality, he said, while again wrenching away at the strongly rooted tufts: "If she did refuse, what reason could she give for refusing? As I say, there's absolutely nothing against me."
Karen had kept her troubled eyes on his downcast face. "There might be things she did not like; things she would not believe for my happiness in married life," she replied.
"And you would take her word against mine?"
"You forget, I think," he had lifted his eyes to hers and she looked back at him, steadily, with no entreaty, but with all the perplexity of her deep pain. "She has known me for eleven years. I have only known you for three months."
He could not now control the bitterness or the dismay; for, coldly, cuttingly he knew it, it was quite possible that Madame von Marwitz would not "like things" in him. Their one encounter had not been of a nature to endear him to her. "It simply means," he said, looking into her eyes, "that you haven't any conception of what love is. It means that you don't love me."
They looked at each other for a moment and then Karen said, "That is hard." And after another moment she rose to her feet. Gregory got up and they went down the cliff-path towards Les Solitudes.
He had not spoken recklessly. His words expressed his sense of her remoteness. He could not imagine what sort of love it was that could so composedly be put aside. And making no feminine appeal or protest, she walked steadily, in silence, before him. Only at a turning of the way did he see that her lips were compressed and tears upon her cheeks.
"Karen," he said, looking into her face as he now walked beside her; "won't you talk it over? You astonish me so unspeakably. Can she destroy our friends.h.i.+p, too? Would you give me up as a friend if she didn't like things in me?"
The tears expressed no yielding, for she answered "Yes."
"And how far do you push submission? If she told you to marry someone she chose for you, would you consent, whether you loved him or not?"
"It is not submission," said Karen. "It is our love, hers and mine. She would not wish me to marry a man I did not love. The contrary is true.
My guardian before she went away spoke to me of a young man she had chosen for me, someone for whom she had the highest regard and affection; and I, too, am very fond of him. She felt that it would be for my happiness to marry him, and she hoped that I would consent. But I did not love him. I told her that I could never love him; and so it ended immediately. You do her injustice in your thoughts of her; and you do me injustice, too, if you think of me as a person who would marry where I did not love."
He walked beside her, bitterly revolving the sorry comfort of this last speech. "Who was the young man?" he asked. Not that he really cared to know.
"His name is Herr Franz Lippheim," said Karen, gravely. "He is a young musician."
"Herr Franz Lippheim," Gregory repeated, with an irritation glad to wreak itself on this sudden object presented opportunely. "How could you have been imagined as marrying someone called Lippheim?"
"Why not, pray?"
"Is he a German Jew?" Gregory inquired after a moment.
"He is, indeed, of Joachim's nationality," Karen answered, in a voice from which the tears were gone.
They walked on, side by side, the estrangement cutting deep between their new-won nearness. Yet in the estrangement was an intimacy deeper than that of the merely blissful state. They seemed in the last miserable half hour to have advanced by years their knowledge of each other. Mrs. Talcott and tea were waiting for them in the morning-room.
The old woman fixed her eyes upon each face in turn and then gave her attention to her tea-pot.
"I am sorry, Mrs. Talcott, that we are so late," Karen said. Her composure was kept only by an effort that gave to her tones a stately conventionality.
"Don't mention it," said Mrs. Talcott. "I'm only just in myself."