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Alice crossed swiftly to her and knelt beside her. "Darling," she said, "you must face it. It is better. I do not say so because I do not personally like Margaret Edes, but you must have courage and face it."
"I have not courage enough," said Annie and she felt that she had not, for it was one of the awful tasks of the world which was before her: The viewing the mutilated face of love itself.
"You must," said Alice. She put an arm around the slight figure and drew the fair head to her broad bosom, her maternal bosom, which served her friends in good stead, since it did not pillow the heads of children. Friends in distress are as children to the women of her type.
"Darling," she said in her stately voice from which the anger had quite gone. "Darling, you must face it. Margaret did read that chapter from your book and she told, or as good as told everybody that she had written it."
Then Annie sobbed outright and the tears came.
"Oh," she cried, "Oh, Alice, how she must want success to do anything like that, poor, poor Margaret! Oh, Alice!"
"How she must love herself," said Alice firmly. "Annie, you must face it. Margaret is a self-lover; her whole heart turns in love toward her own self, instead of toward those whom she should love and who love her. Annie, Margaret is bad, bad, with a strange degenerate badness. She dates back to the sins of the First Garden. You must turn your back upon her. You must not love her any more."
"No, I must not love her any more," agreed Annie, "and that is the pity of it. I must not love her, Alice, but I must pity her until I die. Poor Margaret!"
"Poor Annie," said Alice. "You worked so hard over that book, dear, and you were so pleased. Annie, what shall you do about it?"
Annie raised her head from Alice's bosom and sat up straight, with a look of terror.
"Alice," she cried, "I must go to-morrow and see my publishers. I must go down on my knees to them if necessary."
"Do you mean," asked Alice slowly, "never to tell?"
"Oh, never, never, never!" cried Annie.
"I doubt," said Alice, "if you can keep such a matter secret. I doubt if your publishers will consent."
"They must. I will never have it known! Poor Margaret!"
"I don't pity her at all," said Alice. "I do pity her husband who worships her, and there is talk of his running for State Senator and this would ruin him. And I am sorry for the children."
"n.o.body shall ever know," said Annie.
"But how can you manage with the publishers?"
"I don't know. I will."
"And you will have written that really wonderful book and never have the credit for it. You will live here and see Margaret Edes praised for what you have done."
"Poor Margaret," said Annie. "I must go now. I know I can trust you never to speak."
"Of course, but I do not think it right."
"I don't care whether it is right or not," said Annie. "It must never be known."
"You are better than I am," said Alice as she rang the bell, which was presently answered. "Peter has gone home for the night, Marie said," Alice told Annie, "but Marie and I will walk home with you."
"Alice, it is only a step."
"I know, but it is late."
"It is not much after ten, and--I would rather go alone, if you don't mind, Alice. I want to get settled a little before Aunt Harriet sees me. I can do it better alone."
Alice laughed. "Well," she said, "Marie and I will stand on the front porch until you are out of sight from there and then we will go to the front gate. We can see nearly to your house and we can hear if you call."
It was a beautiful night. The moon was high in a sky which was perceptibly blue. In the west was still a faint glow, which was like a memory of a cowslip sunset. The street and the white house-front were plumy with soft tree shadows wavering in a gentle wind. Annie was glad when she was alone in the night. She needed a moment for solitariness and readjustment since one of the strongest readjustments on earth faced her--the realisation that what she had loved was not. She did not walk rapidly but lingered along the road.
She was thankful that neither of her aunts had been to the annual meeting. She would not need to account for her time so closely.
Suddenly she heard a voice, quite a loud voice, a man's, with a music of gladness in it. Annie knew instinctively whose it was, and she stepped quickly upon a lawn and stood behind a clump of trees. A man and woman pa.s.sed her--Margaret Edes and her husband--and Wilbur was saying in his glad, loving voice, "To think you should have done such a thing, Margaret, my dear, you will never know how proud I am of you."
Annie heard Margaret's voice in a whisper hushing Wilbur. "You speak so loud, dear," said Margaret, "everybody will hear you."
"I don't care if they do," said Wilbur. "I should like to proclaim it from the housetops." Then they pa.s.sed and the rose scent of Margaret's garments was in Annie's face. She was glad that Margaret had hushed her husband. She argued that it proved some little sense of shame, but oh, when all alone with her own husband, she had made no disclaimer. Annie came out from her hiding and went on. The Edes ahead of her melted into the shadows but she could still hear Wilbur's glad voice. The gladness in it made her pity Margaret more.
She thought how horrible it must be to deceive love like that, to hear that joyful tone, and know it all undeserved. Then suddenly she heard footsteps behind and walked to one side to allow whoever it was to pa.s.s, but a man's voice said: "Good evening, Miss Eustace," and Von Rosen had joined her. He had in truth been waiting like any village beau near Alice Mendon's house for the chance of her emerging alone.
Annie felt annoyed, and yet her heart beat strangely.
"Good evening, Mr. von Rosen," she said and still lingered as if to allow him to pa.s.s, but he slowed his own pace and sauntered by her side.
"A fine evening," he remarked tritely.
"Very," agreed Annie.
"I saw you at the evening club," said Von Rosen presently.
"Yes," said Annie, "I was there."
"You left early."
"Yes, I left quite early with Alice. I have been with her since."
Annie wondered if Mr. von Rosen suspected anything but his next words convinced her that he did not.
"I suppose that you were as much surprised as the rest of us, although you are her intimate friend, at Mrs. Edes' announcement concerning the authorship of that successful novel," said he.
"Yes," said Annie faintly.
"Of course you had no idea that she had written it?"
"No."
"Have you read it?"
"Yes."
"What do you think of it? I almost never read novels but I suppose I must tackle that one. Did you like it?"
"Quite well," said Annie.
"Tell me what is it all about?"