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"Oh, very well," said Blake, "Although I'm absurdly self-conscious."
"The Exchange needed new blood, I'm told. I think you are a happy choice. Opportunity has singled you out and evidently intends to bear you forward on her shoulders whether you wish or not. Jove! you _have_ made strides! Let me see, you are thirty--"
"Two! This makes me look older than I am." Norvin touched his hair, which was gray, and Bernie nodded.
"Funny how your hair changed so suddenly. I remember seeing you four years ago at the Lexington races just after you returned from Europe the second time. You were dark then. I saw you a year later and you were gray. Did the wing of sorrow brush your brow?"
Blake shrugged. "They say fear will turn men gray."
Dreux laughed lightly. "Fancy! You afraid!"
"And why not? Have you never been afraid?"
"I? To be sure. I rather like it, too! It's invigorating--unusual. You know there's a kind of fascination about certain emotions which are in themselves unpleasant. But--my dear boy, you can't understand. We were talking about you the other night at the Boston Club after your election, and Thompson told about that affair you had with those n.i.g.g.e.rs up the State, when you were sheriff. It was quite thrilling to hear him tell it."
"Indeed?"
"Oh, yes! He made you out a great hero. I never knew why you went in for politics, or at least why, if you went in at all, you didn't try for something worth while. You could have gone to the legislature just as easily. But for a Blake to be sheriff! Well, it knocked us all silly when we heard of it, and I don't understand it yet. We pictured you locking up drunken men, serving subpoenas, and selling widows'
farms over their heads."
"There's really more to a sheriff's duties than that."
"So I judged from Thompson's blood-curdling tales. I felt very anaemic and insignificant as I listened to him."
"It doesn't hurt a gentleman to hold a minor political office, even in a tough parish. I think men ought to try themselves out and find what they are made of."
"It isn't your lack of exclusiveness that strikes one; it's your nerve."
"Oh, that's mostly imaginary. I haven't much, really. But the truth is I'm interested in courage. They say a man always admires the quality in which he is naturally lacking, and wants to acquire it. I'm interested in brave men, too; they fascinate me. I've studied them; I've tried to a.n.a.lyze courage and find out what it is, where it lies, how it is developed, and all about it, because I have, perhaps, a rather foolish craving to be able to call myself fairly brave."
"If you hadn't made a reputation for yourself, this sort of modesty would convict you of cowardice," Dreux exclaimed. "It sounds very funny, coming from you, and I think you are posing. Now with me it is wholly different. I couldn't stand what you have; why, the sight of a dead man would unsettle me for months and, as for risking my life or attempting the life of a fellow creature--well, it would be a physical impossibility. I--I'd just turn tail. You are exceptional, though you may not know it; you're not normal. The majority of us, away back in the woodsheds of our minds, recognize ourselves as cowards, and I differ from the rest in that I'm brave enough to admit it."
"How do you know you are a coward?"
"Oh, any little thing upsets me."
"Your people were brave enough."
"Of course, but conditions were different in those days; we're more advanced now. There's nothing refined about swinging sabers around your head like a windmill and chopping off Yankee arms and legs; nor is there anything especially artistic in two gentlemen meeting at dawn under the oaks with shotguns loaded with sc.r.a.p iron." Mr. Dreux shuddered. "I'm tremendously glad the war is over and duels are out of fas.h.i.+on."
"Well, be thankful that antiques are not out of fas.h.i.+on. There is still a profit in them, I suppose?"
Dreux shook his head mournfully. "Not in the good stuff. I just sold the original sword of Jean Lafitte to a man who makes preserved tomatoes. It is the eighth in three weeks. The business in Lafitte sabers is very fair lately. General Jackson belt-buckles are moving well, too, not to mention plug hats worn by Jefferson Davis at his inauguration. There was a fabulous hardwood king at the St. Charles whom I inflamed with the beauties of marquetrie du bois. It was all modern, of course, made in Baltimore, but I found him a genuine Sinurette four-poster which was very fine. I also discovered a royal Sevres vase for him, worth a small fortune, but he preferred a bath sponge used by Louis XIV. I a.s.sured him the sponge was genuine, so he bought a Buhl cabinet to put it in. I took the vase for Myra Nell."
"Do you think Myra Nell would care to be Queen of the Carnival?"
Norvin inquired.
"Care?" Bernie started forward in his chair, his eyes opened wide.
"You're--joking! Is--is there any--" He relaxed suddenly, and after an instant's hesitation inquired, "What do you mean?"
"I mean what I say. She can be Queen if she wishes."
Dreux shook his head reluctantly. "She'd be delighted, of course; she'd go mad at the prospect, but--frankly, she can't afford it." He flushed under Blake's gaze.
"I'm sorry, Bernie. I've been told to ask her."
"I am very much obliged to you for the honor, and it's worth any sacrifice, but--Lord! It is disgusting to be poor." He prodded viciously with his cane.
"It is a great thing for any girl to be Queen. The chance may not come again."
Dreux made a creditable effort to conceal his disappointment, but he was really beside himself with chagrin. "You needn't tell me," he said, "but there is no use of my even dreaming of it; I've figured over the expense too often. She was Queen of Momus last year--that's why I've had to vouch for so many Lafitte swords and Davis high hats.
If those tourists ever compare notes they'll think that old pirate must have been a centipede or a devilfish to wield all those weapons."
"I would like to have her accept," Blake persisted.
Bernie Dreux glanced at the speaker quickly, feeling a warm glow suffuse his withered body at the hint of encouragement for his private hopes. What more natural, he reasoned, than for Blake to wish his future wife to accept the highest social honor that New Orleans can confer? Norvin's next words offered further encouragement, yet awoke a very conflicting emotion.
"In view of the circ.u.mstances, and in view of all it means to Myra Nell, I would consider it a privilege to lend you whatever you require. She need never know."
Involuntarily the little bachelor flushed and drew himself up.
"Thanks! It's very considerate of you, but--I can't accept, really."
"Even for her sake?"
"If I didn't know you so well, or perhaps if you didn't know us so well, I'd resent such a proposal."
"Nonsense! Don't be foolish." Realizing thoroughly what this sacrifice meant to Miss Warren's half-brother, Norvin continued: "Suppose we say nothing further about it for the time being. Perhaps you will feel differently later."
After a pause Dreux said: "Heaven knows where these carnivals will end if we continue giving bigger pageants every year. It's a frightful drain on the antique business, and I'm afraid I will have to drop out next season. I scarcely know what to do."
"Why don't you marry?" Blake inquired.
"Marry?" Dreux smiled whimsically. "That lumber king had a daughter, but she was freckled."
"Felicite Delord isn't freckled."
Bernie said nothing for a moment, and then inquired quietly:
"What do you know about Felicite?"
"All there is to know, I believe. Enough, at any rate, to realize that you ought to marry her."
As Dreux made no answer, he inquired, "She is willing, of course?"
"Of course."
"Then why don't you do it?"