It had never before occurred to him that she might, after all, have missed the purport of the document he had put in her way. What if, in her hurried inspection of the papers, she had passed it over as related to the private business of some client? What, for instance, was to prevent her concluding that Glennard was the counsel of the unknown person who had sold the "Aubyn Letters." The subject was one not likely to fix her attention--she was not a curious woman.
Glennard at this point laid down his fork and glanced at her between the candle-shades. The alternative explanation of her indifference was not slow in presenting itself. Her head had the same listening droop as when he had caught sight of her the day before in Flamel's company; the attitude revived the vividness of his impression. It was ****** enough, after all. She had ceased to care for him because she cared for someone else.
As he followed her upstairs he felt a sudden stirring of his dormant anger. His sentiments had lost all their factitious complexity. He had already acquitted her of any connivance in his baseness, and he felt only that he loved her and that she had escaped him. This was now, strangely enough, his dominating thought: the consciousness that he and she had passed through the fusion of love and had emerged from it as incommunicably apart as though the transmutation had never taken place. Every other passion, he mused, left some mark upon the nature; but love passed like the flight of a ship across the waters.
She sank into her usual seat near the lamp, and he leaned against the chimney, moving about with an inattentive hand the knick- knacks on the mantel.
Suddenly he caught sight of her reflection in the mirror. She was looking at him. He turned and their eyes met.
He moved across the room and stood before her.
"There's something that I want to say to you," he began in a low tone.
She held his gaze, but her color deepened. He noticed again, with a jealous pang, how her beauty had gained in warmth and meaning. It wasas though a transparent cup had been filled with wine.He looked at her ironically.
"I've never prevented your seeing your friends here," he broke out. "Why do you meet Flamel in out-of-the-way places? Nothing makes a woman so cheap--"She rose abruptly and they faced each other a few feet apart. "What do you mean?" she asked.
"I saw you with him last Sunday on the Riverside Drive," he went on, the utterance of the charge reviving his anger.
"Ah," she murmured. She sank into her chair again and began to play with a paper-knife that lay on the table at her elbow.
Her silence exasperated him.
"Well?" he burst out."Is that all you have to say?" "Do you wish me to explain?" she asked, proudly. "Do you imply I haven't the right to?""I imply nothing. I will tell you whatever you wish to know. I went for a walk with Mr. Flamel because he asked me to.""I didn't suppose you went uninvited. But there are certain things a sensible woman doesn't do. She doesn't slink about in out-of-the-way streets with men. Why couldn't you have seen him here?"She hesitated."Because he wanted to see me alone.""Did he, indeed? And may I ask if you gratify all his wishes with equal alacrity?""I don't know that he has any others where I am concerned." She paused again and then continued, in a lower voice that somehow had an under-note of warning. "He wished to bid me good-by. He's going away."Glennard turned on her a startled glance."Going away?""He's going to Europe to-morrow. He goes for a long time. I supposed you knew."The last phrase revived his irritation. "You forget that I depend on you for my information about Flamel. He's your friend and not mine. In fact, I've sometimes wondered at your going out of your way to be so civil to him when you must see plainly enough that I don't like him."Her answer to this was not immediate. She seemed to be choosing her words with care, not so much for her own sake as for his, and his exasperation was increased by the suspicion that she was trying to spare him.
"He was your friend before he was mine. I never knew him till I was married. It was you who brought him to the house and who seemed to wish me to like him."Glennard gave a short laugh. The defence was feebler than he had expected: she was certainly not a clever woman.
"Your deference to my wishes is really beautiful; but it's not the first time in history that a man has made a mistake in introducing his friends to his wife. You must, at any rate, have seen since then that my enthusiasm had cooled; but so, perhaps, has your eagerness to oblige me."She met this with a silence that seemed to rob the taunt of half its efficacy.
"Is that what you imply?" he pressed her.
"No," she answered with sudden directness. "I noticed some time ago that you seemed to dislike him, but since then--""Well--since then?"
"I've imagined that you had reasons for still wishing me to be civil to him, as you call it.""Ah," said Glennard, with an effort at lightness; but his irony dropped, for something in her voice made him feel that he and she stood at last in that naked desert of apprehension where meaning skulks vainly behind speech.
"And why did you imagine this?" The blood mounted to his forehead. "Because he told you that I was under obligations to him?"She turned pale."Under obligations?"
"Oh, don't let's beat about the bush. Didn't he tell you it was I who published Mrs. Aubyn's letters? Answer me that.""No," she said; and after a moment which seemed given to the weighing of alternatives, she added: "No one told me.""You didn't know then?"
She seemed to speak with an effort."Not until--not until--""Till I gave you those papers to sort?" Her head sank.
"You understood then?" "Yes."
He looked at her immovable face. "Had you suspected--before?" was slowly wrung from him.
"At times--yes--"Her voice dropped to a whisper. "Why?From anything that was said--?"There was a shade of pity in her glance. "No one said anything-- no one told me anything." She looked away from him. "It was your manner--""My manner?"