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The door opened, and Jarvis entered and ushered in "Mr. Brent." Alaric hurried into the garden.
CHAPTER II
CHRISTIAN BRENT
A few words of description of Christian Brent might be of interest, since he represents a type that society always has with it.
They begin by deceiving others: they end by deceiving themselves.
Christian Brent was a dark, tense, eager, scholarly-looking man of twenty-eight years of age. His career as a diplomatist was halted at its outset by an early marriage with the only daughter of a prosperous manufacturer. Brent was moderately independent in his own right, but the addition of his wife's dowry seemed to destroy all ambition. He no longer found interest in carrying messages to the various legations or emba.s.sies of Europe, or in filling a routine position as some one's secretary. From being an intensely eager man of affairs he drifted into a social lounger--the lapdog of the drawing-room--where the close breath of some rare perfume meant more than the clash of interests, and the conquest of a woman greater than that of a nation.
Just at this period Ethel Chichester was the especial object of his adoration.
Her beauty appealed to him.
Her absolute indifference to him stung him as a lash. It seemed to belittle his powers of attraction. Consequently he redoubled his efforts.
Ethel showed neither like nor dislike--just a form of toleration. Brent accepted this as a dog a crumb, in the hope of something more substantial to follow. He had come that morning with a fixed resolve.
His manner was determined. His voice wooed as a caress. He went tenderly to Ethel the moment the door closed on Jarvis.
"How are you?" he asked, and there was a note of subdued pa.s.sion in his tone.
"Fair," replied Ethel, without even looking at him. "Where is your mother?" suggesting that much depended on the answer.
"Lying down," answered Ethel, truthfully and without any feeling.
"And Alaric?"
"In the garden."
"Then we have a moment or two--alone?" Brent put a world of meaning into the suggestion.
"Very likely," said Ethel, picking up a score of Boheme and looking at it as if she saw it for the first time: all the while watching him through her half-closed eyes.
Brent went to her. "Glad to see me?" he asked.
"Why not?"
"I am glad to see you." He bent over her. "More than glad."
"Really?"
He sat beside her: "Ethel," he whispered intensely: "I am at the Cross-roads."
"Oh?" commented Ethel, without any interest.
"It came last night."
"Did it?"
"This is the end--between Sybil and myself."
"Is it?"
"Yes--the end. It's been horrible from the first--horrible. There's not a word of mine--not an action--she doesn't misunderstand."
"How boring," said Ethel blandly.
"She would see harm even in THIS!"
"Why?"
"She'd think I was here to--to--" he stopped.
"What?" innocently inquired Ethel.
"Make love to you," and he looked earnestly into her eyes.
She met his look quite frankly and astonished him with the question: "Well? Aren't you?"
He rose anxiously: "Ethel!"
"Don't you always?" persisted Ethel.
"Has it seemed like that to you?"
"Yes," she answered candidly. "By insinuation: never straightforwardly."
"Has it offended you?"
"Then you admit it?"
"Oh," he cried pa.s.sionately, "I wish I had the right to--to--" again he wavered.
"Yes?" and Ethel looked straight at him.
"Make love to you straightforwardly." He felt the supreme moment had almost arrived. Now, he thought, he would be rewarded for the long waiting; the endless siege to this marvellous woman who concealed her real nature beneath that marble casing of an a.s.sumed indifference.
He waited eagerly for her answer. When it came it shocked and revolted him.
Ethel dropped her gaze from his face and said, with the suspicion of a smile playing around her lips:
"If you had the right to make love to me straightforwardly--you wouldn't do it."