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Laura had not lowered her eyes, and as he finished she smiled into his face.
"And you did not sell?" she asked.
"I never got the letter--but the odd part is she says she came to see me about it the day you were there with Gerty--that she saw you and that she left the letter with you to deliver--"
He broke off and stood waiting with a half angry, half baffled look; and then as she was still silent he picked up a red leather box from the table, laid it down again and came nearer to where she stood.
"Is it all a lie, Laura?" he demanded.
The justification which she had attempted alone in the night came back to her while she stood there with her hands, which felt like dead things, hanging limp at her sides. "It was so very little that it escaped my memory," was what she had said to herself in the darkness; but now, face to face with him in the light of day, she could not bring her mind to think these words nor her lips to utter them.
"No, it isn't a lie--it is true," she answered.
"It is true?" he repeated in an astonishment which gave place to anger as he went on. "Do you mean you really met her in my rooms?"
"I met her there--I met her there!" she rejoined in a bitter triumph of truth which seemed, somehow, a relief to her.
"And you did not tell me?"
She shook her head. "I'd never have told you."
"But the letter? What became of the letter?"
She had drawn a step away from him, not in any fresh spirit of evasion, but that she might gain a better view of the look with which he confronted her. Her eyes had not wavered from his since the first question he had asked, but her hands were nervously knotting and unknotting a silver cord which she had picked up from a jeweller's box upon the table at her side.
"Why didn't I get the letter, Laura?" he asked again.
"Because I burned it," she answered slowly, "I burned it in the fire in your room just before you came in--I burned it," she repeated for the third time, raising her voice to clearer distinctness.
A dark flush rose to his face and the sombre colour gave him an almost brutal look.
"In G.o.d's name why did you do it?" he asked; and she saw the contempt in his eyes as she had seen it before in her imagination. "I am to presume, I suppose, that you were prompted by jealousy?" he added. "An amiable beginning for a marriage."
"I don't know why I did it," she replied, in a voice which was so constrained as to sound unfeeling. "I didn't know at the time and I don't know now. Yes, I suppose jealousy is as good a reason as any other."
"And is this what I am to expect in the future?" he enquired, with an irony which he might as well have flung at a figure of wood. "Good G.o.d!"
he exclaimed as his righteous resentment swept from his mind all recollection of his own relapses. "Are you willing to marry a man whom you can't trust out of your sight?"
The force with which he uttered the words drove them so deeply into his consciousness that he was convinced by his own violence of the justice in the stand he took. "Have you absolutely no faith in me?" he demanded.
For a moment the question occupied her thoughts.
"No, I don't think I have any now," she answered, "I've tried to make myself believe I had--I've told a lie to my conscience about it every day I lived--but I don't think I've ever really had faith in you since that night--"
"And yet you are willing to marry me?" he asked, and the scorn in his voice stung her like a physical blow. He looked at her with an angry glance, and while his eyes rested upon her, she understood that he had never really seen her in his life--that he had never penetrated beyond the outward aspect, the trick of gesture.
"No!--No!" she cried out suddenly, as if she had awakened in terror from her sleep. At the instant she saw herself through his eyes, humiliated, beaten down, unwomanly, and she was possessed by a horror of her own individuality which she felt in some way to be a part of her horror of the man who had revealed it to her.
In his perplexity he had fallen back a step and stood now pulling nervously at his moustache with a gesture which recalled his resemblance to Perry Bridewell. This gesture, more than any words he spoke, shocked her into an acuteness of perception which was almost unnatural in its vividness. It was as if her soul, so long drugged to insensibility, had started up in the last battle for liberation.
"No--no--it is impossible!" she repeated.
"Aren't you rather late in coming to this decision?" he enquired with a short laugh.
But his irony was wasted upon her, for she saw only the look in his eyes, which revealed her deception to her in a blaze of scorn--and she felt that she hated him and herself with an almost equal hatred.
"I am sorry, but--but I can't," she stammered. Feeling her words to be ineffectual she cast about wildly for some reason, some explanation however trivial--and in the effort she found her eyes wandering aimlessly about the room, taking in the scattered wedding presents, his dejected yet angry look, and the fading white rosebud Gerty had pinned jauntily in his coat. Then at last she realised that there was nothing further that she could say, so she stood helplessly knotting the silver cord while she watched the furious perplexity in which he tugged at his moustache.
"I can't for the life of me see why you should be so d.a.m.ned jealous, Laura," he burst out presently, thrust back from the surface conventions into a brute impulse of rage.
"I told you I didn't know," she answered irritably, "I told you that--"
"Of course, I'm willing to let it go this time," he went on, with what she felt to be a complacent return to his lordly att.i.tude, "there's no use making a fuss, so we may as well forget it--but, for heaven's sake, don't give me a jealous wife. There's nothing under heaven more likely to drive a man insane."
Some elusive grace in her att.i.tude--a suggestion of a wild thing poised for flight--arrested him suddenly as he looked at her; and she saw his face change instantly while the fire of pa.s.sion leaped to his eyes.
"Be a darling and we'll forget it all!" he exclaimed.
He made a step forward, but shrinking back until she appeared almost to crouch against the wall, she put out her hands as if warding off his approach.
"Don't touch me!" she said; and though she spoke in a whisper, her words seemed to shriek back at her from the air. The thought that she was fighting for the freedom of her soul rushed through her brain, and at the instant, had he laid his hand upon her, she knew that she would have thrown herself from the window.
"I don't want to touch you," he returned, cooling immediately, "but can't you come to your senses and be reasonable?"
"If you don't mind I wish you'd go," she said, looking at him with a smile which was like the smile of a statue.
"If I go now will you promise to get sensible again?" he asked, with annoyance, for it occurred to him that since he had made up his mind to be magnanimous, she had repulsed his generosity in a most ungrateful fas.h.i.+on.
"I am sensible," she responded, "I am sensible for the first time for months."
"Well, you've a pretty way of showing it," he retorted. His irritation got suddenly the better of him, and fearing that it might break out in spite of his control, he turned toward the door. "For G.o.d's sake, let's make the best of it now," he added desperately.
In his nervousness he stumbled against the table and upset the red leather box which contained the coffee service.
"I beg your pardon," he said, and stooping to pick it up, he replaced the silver in the case before he went into the hall and closed the door behind him.
CHAPTER III
PROVES A GREAT CITY TO BE A GREAT SOLITUDE
After he had gone Laura remained standing where he had left her, until the sound of the hall door closing sharply caused her to draw a breath of relief as if there had come a temporary lifting of the torture she endured. Then, with her first movement, as she looked about the room in the effort to bring order into the confusion of her thoughts, her eyes encountered the array of wedding presents, and the expression of her face changed back into the panic terror in which she had couched against the wall before Kemper's approach. She still saw herself revealed in the light of the scorn which had blazed in his eyes; and the one idea which possessed her now was to escape beyond the place where that look might again reach her. An instinct for flight like that of a wild thing in a jungle shook through her until she stood in a quiver from head to foot; and though she knew neither where she was going, nor of what use this flight would be to her, she went into her bedroom and began to dress herself hastily in her walking clothes. As she tied on her veil and took up her little black bag from the drawer she heard her own voice, which sounded to her ears like the voice of a stranger, repeating the words she had said to Kemper a little earlier: "No--no--I cant. It is impossible." And she said over these words many times because they infused into her heart the courage of despair which she needed to impel her to the step before her. When the door closed after her and she went down into the street, she was still speaking them half aloud to herself: "No--no--it is impossible."
The dusk had already settled; ahead of her the lights of the city shone blurred through the greyness, while above the housetops Auriga was driving higher in the east. With the first touch of fresh air in her face, she felt herself inspired by an energy; which seemed a part of the wind that blew about her; and as she walked rapidly through streets which she did not notice toward an end of which she was still ignorant, her thoughts breaking from the restraint which held them, rushed in an excited tumult through her brain.
"Why did he look at me so?" she asked, "for it is this look which has driven me away--which has made me hate both him and myself." She tried to recall the other expression which she had loved in his face, but instead there returned to her only the angry look with which he had responded to her confession.