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It was not long before she had slipped her hand into his arm, and was saying, as they moved through the crowd:--
"If you care to go into the conservatory, we shall find it much pleasanter there, I think."
The house was one of those new and majestic structures near the Park. It occupied a corner, sweeping far backward from Fifth Avenue into an adjacent street. It had an almost imperial amplitude, and was a building in which no lordly or pleasurable detail seemed to have been overlooked.
The conservatory, whose s.p.a.cious interior wooed through breadths of gla.s.s its kindest warmth from the churlish winter suns.h.i.+ne, was of refres.h.i.+ng temperature after the heated rooms beyond, while its ma.s.ses of leafing or blooming plants loaded the air with delightful odors.
A few people were strolling about the cool courts, as Claire and Thurston now entered them. The entertainment of to-day was a kind of house-warming; the Vanvelsors, in current metropolitan phrase, were old people, but their present mansion was new in a decisive sense; they had migrated hither from a residence in Bond Street, where they had dwelt for forty years or more. The push of the younger generation, left with inherited millions, had thus architecturally a.s.serted itself. Few of their guests knew the ways of their changed and palatial home. But Claire knew them; she had dined in this imposing abode not less than a fortnight ago. There were many bearers of precious Dutch names who had known the Vanvelsors for many decades; but Claire had been preferred to hosts of these nice-lineaged legitimists. She was the fas.h.i.+on; other people were paying homage to her; the younger Vanvelsors liked everything that was the fas.h.i.+on; they had paid homage, too.
"We can find a seat," Claire said to her companion; "the place is not full, as you see; we might sit yonder, in those two vacant chairs--that is, if you care to sit; I do; I am tired."
It was not until they were both seated, with glossy tropical leaves touching their heads, that Thurston answered:--
"You say you are tired. That might mean a little or a great deal. Which does it mean?"
Claire responded with a question, looking at him fixedly.
"Why did you write me that letter?" she said.
"Did it offend you?" he asked.
"No and yes. You might not have reproached me until you knew more of the real truth."
Thurston stroked his gray mustache. "I think I knew all the truth," he said. "I know it now, at least."
"Your sister has told you," Claire retorted, with speed.
"Yes and no," he responded, not mocking her own recent words, yet leaving a distinct impression that he had half repeated them. "You forget that I have seen you reigning on your new throne."
"Let us be candid," said Claire. "Your note was almost a sneer."
He slowly shook his head. "It was a regret."
"You think I might have done greater things."
"I think you might have done better things."
"You admit that I have achieved success?"
"A marvelous success. It shows your extraordinary gifts. The town, in a certain way, is ringing with your name. If an ordinary woman had gained your place she would have found in it a splendid gratification. She would have been amply, perfectly satisfied."
"You mean that I am not satisfied. Pray allow it. Your tones and your look both show it me."
Thurston smiled, transiently and sadly. "I mean that you are miserable,"
he said.
Claire bit her lip, and slightly drooped her head. "You have no cause to tell me that."
He leaned closer to her. "I do tell you. It is true. I saw it in your face when I first looked at you. There is a change. I can't define it, but it exists. You are more beautiful than when I saw you last. You have an air of ease, dignity, command. But you express a kind of superb weariness, and yet occasional flashes of excitement are in your talk and demeanor. You see, I have watched you from a distance; I have my opinions."
"Yes, you have your opinions," said Claire, lifting her head and directly regarding him. "That is very plain."
"It all makes an exquisite picture," Thurston continued. "I have seen the world, as you know. I have seen many beautiful women. Your personality, as I now encounter it, is an absolute astonishment to me. I don't know where, in these few months, you acquired your repose, your serenity, your magnificence, your air. Do you remember what I told you of the restless American type that you represent? I knew you would strive to rise; it was in you; you pushed to the front, as I was sure you would do. But I had no prescience of this mighty accomplishment."
"You are sneering at me, as your note sneered," said Claire, looking at him steadily. "Acknowledge it. I perceive it with great accuracy. I somehow cannot answer you as I would answer another. You warned me months ago. You knew what I desired, and told me of the danger that lay in my path. I recollect all that you wanted me to try and be. Perhaps I _would_ have tried, under differing conditions."
She paused, and Thurston instantly said, "As my wife you would have tried--and succeeded."
"Perhaps," she answered, very low of tone, not meeting his look. "But all that is past. Don't pull corpses out of graves."
"My love for you is living," he said to her. There was no touch of pa.s.sion in his voice; there was only a mournful respect. "I don't think I am wrong to speak of it now. There's a sanct.i.ty and chast.i.ty about the feeling I bear for you which the fact of your being a wife does not affect. I want to know the man whom you have married; I am curious to meet him and know him well. He has a large publicity, as you are aware.
They have heard of him in Europe."
"I understand the question you wish to put yet do not," Claire said, at this point. "You lead up to it very adroitly; I might play the role of ignorant innocence, if I chose. But I do not choose. You want to ask me whether I loved the man I married."
Thurston again stroked his mustache, for a moment. "Yes," he presently said, "I should like to know that."
A silence now ensued between them. Claire broke it. "He loved me," she said.
"Which means that you did not care for him?"
"Oh, yes. I cared very much. It was no worldly sale of myself. He was not even rich when I married him. He attracted me--in a manner charmed me. I felt that I should never meet another man who would attract and charm me more. Do you understand?"
"Thoroughly.... Since then you have met Stuart Goldwin. I know him well.
He is a man of exceptional fascination. They tell me that he is your slave."
"Do they?" said Claire, coloring under this rapid attack of candor.
"Well, if he is my slave--which I, of course, deny--then I am not his.
They did not tell you that, I am sure. They did not even hint it."
"No. You have escaped the least breath of scandal."
"Be sure that I have. And I shall continue to escape it. I recollect that you once declared I was cold, and that my coldness would prove a safeguard. 'It is very protective to a woman,' you said."
"Quote me in full or not at all," he corrected, with a grim pleasantry.
"I said that it is very protective to a woman--while it lasts."
"True," returned Claire. "And it _has_ lasted. I prophesied that it would last, and I was right.... By the way, from whom have you learned all these important items? Perhaps from your sister. She is not my friend."
Thurston started a little. "She is not your enemy?" he said, putting the words as a distinct question.
"I hope not. But I am by no means sure. Thus far she has held herself aloof from me. She has not openly opposed me, but she has behaved with telling reserve. Everybody else has paid me tribute, so to speak. No, I am wrong. There is one other woman--her cousin, Mrs. Lee."
"Of course you know why poor Sylvia would be your foe. She is madly in love with Goldwin; she has been for years. You must have cost her dire pangs."
Claire chose to ignore this last statement. "I think your sister dislikes me from pride," she said. "I mean pride of family." Here she paused for a moment, and seemed almost bashfully reluctant to proceed.
But her hesitation had in it a gentle, una.s.suming modesty; it sprang wholly from unwillingness to touch on a subject which she knew that only the most delicate tact should deal with, if to deal with it at all were not folly and rashness. "Your sister found out," she softly continued, "that you had liked me enough to ask me to be your wife. Heaven knows, Beverley Thurston, that _I_ did not tell her!"
Thurston looked very grave. "I told her," he said. "Or rather, she drew it from me. I was foolish to let her. Cornelia is so clever.... Well,"
he suddenly went on, with an unusual show of animation, "do you mean that she accused you of having rejected me?"