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"Let's prowl then," he said, and turned his steps southward again.
"I suppose you know I've been hunting for you."
"Yes."
She volunteered no more.
"When did you get back?" he asked slowly.
"Tuesday. I wasted no time, you see, in looking for you. I've just come from the studio."
"You might have seen me in Normandy if you had cared to."
"Oh, I saw quite enough of you there," she said dryly. "Besides, I knew what you wanted. I wasn't ready to talk to you. I am now."
He laughed uneasily, sparring for wind.
"What have you to say to me?"
"Much. I've been thinking, John. Curious, isn't it? Wearing, too.
Adversity's sweet milk, philosophy. Is beauty's ensign yet crimson in my cheeks?"
"If you weren't sure of it you wouldn't ask me," he laughed. "Why didn't you want to see me?"
"I didn't say I didn't want to see you. I merely suggested that I didn't think it wise to."
"Why not?"
"You might not have understood my point of view. You mayn't now. I think I was a trifle bewildered over there. Now I'm clear again," She paused, her gaze focusing quickly, "O John, what a mess you've made of my ideals!"
"I?" he muttered stupidly, but he knew what she meant. "What have I to do with your ideals, Olga?"
"Nothing--except that you gave them birth and then destroyed them.
It's infanticide--nothing less," she said slowly.
He groped for a word, stammered and was silent.
She examined him curiously, then smiled.
"Silence? Confession!"
"I've nothing to confess." And then desperately. "Appearances are--were against us. If you've spoken of that--you've done a great mischief--an irreparable wrong--to--to Hermia."
She was laughing again, silently, inwardly, her head bent.
"Oh, as to that, I'll relieve your anxiety at once," she said at last.
"It was to rich a secret to tell too quickly--too good a story--and then the embroideries--I had to think of those. No, I have not told it, John,--not yet. You see, after I left you, I changed my mind about things. Your rural _amourette_ is still a secret, _mon ami_."
He gasped a sigh of relief. How could he ever have believed it of her?
He laughed lightly with an air of carelessness.
"You wouldn't tell. I knew that. You're not that sort, Olga--"
"Not so fast, my poor friend," she put in quickly. "I've said that your indiscretion was still a secret, but I still reserve the right to tell it here in New York if the humor seizes me."
"Nonsense," he laughed. "I simply don't believe you would."
She shrugged.
"I have told you the truth. I mean what I say. I shall tell what I know, unless--"
She paused. Her moment was not yet.
"Unless?" he questioned.
"Unless I find reasons why I shouldn't," she finished provokingly.
"Meaning--what?" he persisted.
He regarded her for a moment in silence, quickly joining in her laughter.
"Oh, what's the use of making such a lot of fuss over a thing? It was imprudent, indiscreet of us, if you like. Hermia and I met by accident. I was tramping it--as you know. I asked her if she didn't want to go along, and she did. Simplest thing in the world. We waved convention aside. Nothing odd about that. We're doing it every day."
"Oh, are we?"
"Yes. The laws of convention were only made as props and crutches for the crooked. If you're straight, you don't need 'em."
"Still," she mused sweetly, "society must be protected. Who is to tell which of us is straight and which crooked? Even if we were crooked, you know, neither of us would be willing t admit it."
"But it's a question not so much of my wisdom--as of Hermia's. You'll admit--"
"I admit nothing," she said quickly. "You've surprised, shocked and grieved me beyond words, both of you, also made me feel a trifle foolish. My judgment is shaken to the earth. Here I've been holding you up as a kind of paragon, a fossilized _Galahad_, with a horizon just at your elbows, to find you touring France, _faisant l'aimable_ with a frolicsome scapegrace in a bolero jacket."
"I would remind you," he broke in stiffly, "that you're speaking of Hermia Challoner."
"Oh, I'm quite aware of it," with a careless wave of her hand. "And as to Hermia's wisdom--life has taught me this--that a woman may be clever, she may be intuitive, she may be skillful, but she's never wise. And so I say--I'm shocked, John Markham, outraged and shocked beyond expression."
"Oh, you're the limit, Olga," he blurted out.
"Simply because I adhere to the traditions of my s.e.x, because I adhere to the memory of my friends.h.i.+ps. I like you, John Markham, your simplicity has always appealed to me. And now that you add gallantry to your more sober charms I confess you're quite irresistible."
Markham stopped short.
"I can't have you talking like this," he said quietly. "I don't mind what you say of me, of course, but your choice of words is not fortunate. Miss Challoner and I--"
"Spare your breath," she said, turning on him swiftly. "I'm no fool.
I've lived in the world. If Hermia Challoner chooses to lay herself open to criticism that's her lookout. I'll say what I please of her.
She has earned that retribution. Talk as you will of your own virtues and hers you'd never succeed in convincing anyone of your innocence--me least of all. What's the use of beating around the bush. I can see through a millstone--if it has a hole in it. Hermia Challoner--"