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[Ill.u.s.tration: "Beatrix still sat at the disordered table"]
The interval, seemingly so endless, lasted only for a moment. Then, with a beast-like snarl, Lorimer sprang up, overturning his chair, and hurled himself straight upon Thayer. Strong as he was, Thayer tottered before the blow, for the strength of Lorimer just then was far beyond the human. Drink-crazed and brutalized, he had the fierce power of a maddened brute. There was a swift, sharp struggle, broken by strange, inarticulate cries, making the women hide their faces and cram their fingers into their ears to shut out sight and sound. Then the struggle grew still again, and they heard Thayer's steady voice saying,--
"I think he is quiet now. Dane, will you help me to carry him to his room?"
One by one, the terrified guests slank away. There were no good-nights scarcely a whispered word in the dressing-rooms upstairs. At length, they were all gone, and the house was still. The lights from the open windows glared out across the night, and the rooms inside were heavy with the fragrance of roses and the smell of champagne. Upstairs in Lorimer's room, Thayer and Bobby Dane were watching the lethargic sleep which had fallen upon their host, and counting the moments until Arlt could bring the doctor back with him. Downstairs, alone in the abandoned dining-room, Beatrix still sat at the disordered table, with her head bowed forward upon her clasped hands.
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
"It's a devilish mess, do what you will," Bobby said grimly, the next morning.
"The punishment seems a good deal out of proportion to the cause,"
Thayer replied briefly.
"Hh!" Bobby grunted. "I think he did well to get off without a genuine case of D. T."
"I was speaking of your cousin, not of Lorimer."
Bobby stared at him in astonishment.
"Really, Thayer, I can't see any cause that was of Beatrix's making," he returned haughtily.
"It was mistaken judgment, to say the least, to have champagne in the house," Thayer answered.
"Beatrix had nothing to do with that," Bobby blazed forth angrily. "It was that brute of a Lorimer, and he deserves all he got, and more, too.
I saw the order to the caterer, made out in Beatrix's handwriting, and there wasn't a pint of champagne on it. Lorimer sent in the order afterwards, just as he invited that serpent of a Lloyd Avalons. Beatrix couldn't help herself."
"She could have countermanded the order."
"She didn't know it till the guests were there. I was with her when she discovered it, and she took it like a heroine. She was perfectly helpless. She couldn't make a scene in her own house, and she couldn't reasonably be expected to send her guests home. She knew exactly what was bound to happen, what she couldn't help happening, and she kept her head steady and faced the thing as boldly as she could. I never thought you would be the one to go back on her, Thayer."
Thayer started to speak. Then he squared his jaw, and was silent. After a long interval, he said humbly,--
"I have wronged your cousin, Dane. I am very sorry."
"So am I," Bobby returned flatly. "Beatrix has come to where she needs every friend she owns in the world to stand by her. By to-night, the story of that supper will have spread from the Battery to Poughkeepsie bridge. It will be garbled and twisted into all manner of shapes, and it will come boomeranging back at her from every quarter of the town. When it comes to gossip, we find Manhattan Island is a mighty small place; but I suppose Australia is just as bad."
Thayer interrupted his meditations ruthlessly.
"How is Lorimer, this morning? You've been to the house, I suppose."
"Yes, I've just come from there. Lorimer is convalescent, which means he is a blamed sight better than he deserves to be. I didn't care to see him; but they a.s.sured me he was sitting up and regaling himself on raw oysters and chicken broth. He is probably an edifying spectacle by this time, a mush of maudlin penitence. I've seen him before this in his next-morning mood. Put not your trust in a moral jellyfis.h.!.+" And Bobby, his fists in his pockets, stamped up and down the room to ease his resentment. "The next move is to be a radical one," he continued, after a pause. "They are going into the Adirondacks."
Thayer looked up sharply.
"They? Who?"
"Beatrix and Lorimer."
"What for?"
"Safety; taking to the woods, and all that."
"What do you mean, Dane?" Thayer asked sternly. "This is no time for joking. Do speak out."
"I beg your pardon, Thayer. The fact is, I am utterly reckless, this morning, and I don't know nor care what I am saying. If you loved Beatrix as I do--"
"Yes," Thayer returned quietly. "I understand."
"No; you don't. You can't. We've been such chums. What hurts her, hurts me; and, to my dying day, I shall never forget her as we found her in the dining-room, last night. She knew then it was all over." Bobby's voice broke upon the last words; then he pulled himself up sharply.
"This morning, we had a council of war, Mrs. Dane and Beatrix and the doctor and I. The doctor says that Beatrix isn't well, and that another such scene would kill her, or worse. I was for shutting Lorimer up in an inebriate asylum; but Beatrix opposed the idea. She was so excited about it that the doctor finally took sides with her, and said that she and Lorimer would better not be separated, at least, not until something else comes up. Do you grasp the pleasant state of things? Lorimer is to be left with her till something does come up; when the something does come, it may kill her. That's what they call an alternative, I suppose."
"But the Adirondacks?" Thayer reminded him. It was unlike Bobby Dane to go off like this into conversational blind alleys. Thayer, as he listened and looked at his friend's haggard face, realized suddenly that Bobby was far less superficial than was generally supposed.
"The doctor ordered them both out of town. It is the only way to keep Lorimer out of mischief, get him into the wilderness to live on venison and bromides. We chose the Adirondacks because it was near and safe, and because we could tell people that Beatrix needed the air. Of course, they'll know we are lying; but we may as well lie valiantly and plausibly, while we are about it."
"When do they go?"
"Monday."
"Who goes?"
"They hire a cottage, and take enough servants to run it. Then there will be a man for Lorimer. The doctor insisted upon that."
"Who else?"
"Beatrix and Lorimer."
"And Mrs. Dane?"
"No; no one else."
"You don't mean that Mrs. Lorimer is going up into that wilderness alone?"
"Alone with her liege lord," Bobby said bitterly.
"But she mustn't. It's not safe."
"Who can go? Mrs. Dane is not strong; she would only be an extra care for Beatrix."
"Mr. Dane, then."
"He's no use. I would go, myself; but I can't well get off. Besides, Lorimer hates me, and my being there would only make it harder for Beatrix. Do you really think she ought to have someone?" Bobby's voice was anxious.