What the paper suggested was the feeling that lay in his innermost heart and that no reviving cheerfulness could long quench--the feeling that after all and above all he was a good fellow wronged.With it came a hearty hope that the Bellegardes were enjoying their suspense as to what he would do yet.
The more it was prolonged the more they would enjoy it!
He had hung fire once, yes; perhaps, in his present queer state of mind, he might hang fire again.But he restored the little paper to his pocket-book very tenderly, and felt better for thinking of the suspense of the Bellegardes.
He felt better every time he thought of it after that, as he sailed the summer seas.He landed in New York and journeyed across the continent to San Francisco, and nothing that he observed by the way contributed to mitigate his sense of being a good fellow wronged.
He saw a great many other good fellows--his old friends--but he told none of them of the trick that had been played him.
He said simply that the lady he was to have married had changed her mind, and when he was asked if he had changed his own, he said, "Suppose we change the subject." He told his friends that he had brought home no "new ideas" from Europe, and his conduct probably struck them as an eloquent proof of failing invention.
He took no interest in chatting about his affairs and manifested no desire to look over his accounts.He asked half a dozen questions which, like those of an eminent physician inquiring for particular symptoms, showed that he still knew what he was talking about; but he made no comments and gave no directions.
He not only puzzled the gentlemen on the stock exchange, but he was himself surprised at the extent of his indifference.
As it seemed only to increase, he made an effort to combat it;he tried to interest himself and to take up his old occupations.
But they appeared unreal to him; do what he would he somehow could not believe in them.Sometimes he began to fear that there was something the matter with his head; that his brain, perhaps, had softened, and that the end of his strong activities had come.
This idea came back to him with an exasperating force.A hopeless, helpless loafer, useful to no one and detestable to himself--this was what the treachery of the Bellegardes had made of him.
In his restless idleness he came back from San Francisco to New York, and sat for three days in the lobby of his hotel, looking out through a huge wall of plate-glass at the unceasing stream of pretty girls in Parisian-looking dresses, undulating past with little parcels nursed against their neat figures.
At the end of three days he returned to San Francisco, and having arrived there he wished he had stayed away.
He had nothing to do, his occupation was gone, and it seemed to him that he should never find it again.He had nothing to do here, he sometimes said to himself; but there was something beyond the ocean that he was still to do; something that he had left undone experimentally and speculatively, to see if it could content itself to remain undone.But it was not content:
it kept pulling at his heartstrings and thumping at his reason;it murmured in his ears and hovered perpetually before his eyes.
It interposed between all new resolutions and their fulfillment;it seemed like a stubborn ghost, dumbly entreating to be laid.
Till that was done he should never be able to do anything else.
One day, toward the end of the winter, after a long interval, he received a letter from Mrs.Tristram, who apparently was animated by a charitable desire to amuse and distract her correspondent.
She gave him much Paris gossip, talked of General Packard and Miss Kitty Upjohn, enumerated the new plays at the theatre, and inclosed a note from her husband, who had gone down to spend a month at Nice.
Then came her signature, and after this her postscript.
The latter consisted of these few lines: "I heard three days since from my friend, the Abbe Aubert, that Madame de Cintre last week took the veil at the Carmelites.It was on her twenty-seventh birthday, and she took the name of her, patroness, St.Veronica.
Sister Veronica has a life-time before her!"This letter came to Newman in the morning; in the evening he started for Paris.His wound began to ache with its first fierceness, and during his long bleak journey the thought of Madame de Cintre's "life-time," passed within prison walls on whose outer side he might stand, kept him perpetual company.
Now he would fix himself in Paris forever; he would extort a sort of happiness from the knowledge that if she was not there, at least the stony sepulchre that held her was.
He descended, unannounced, upon Mrs.Bread, whom he found keeping lonely watch in his great empty saloons on the Boulevard Haussmann.
They were as neat as a Dutch village, Mrs.Bread's only occupation had been removing individual dust-particles.She made no complaint, however, of her loneliness, for in her philosophy a servant was but a mysteriously projected machine, and it would be as fantastic for a housekeeper to comment upon a gentleman's absences as for a clock to remark upon not being wound up.
No particular clock, Mrs.Bread supposed, went all the time, and no particular servant could enjoy all the sunshine diffused by the career of an exacting master.She ventured, nevertheless, to express a modest hope that Newman meant to remain a while in Paris.Newman laid his hand on hers and shook it gently.
"I mean to remain forever," he said.
He went after this to see Mrs.Tristram, to whom he had telegraphed, and who expected him.She looked at him a moment and shook her head.
"This won't do," she said; "you have come back too soon." He sat down and asked about her husband and her children, tried even to inquire about Miss Dora Finch.In the midst of this--"Do you know where she is?"he asked, abruptly.
Mrs.Tristram hesitated a moment; of course he couldn't mean Miss Dora Finch.