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Thayer made no answer, and she sat looking up at him with a steady wishfulness which made him uneasy. Her next words, though chosen by chance, increased his uneasiness.
"Have you seen Miss Dane, since you came back?"
"I was there, yesterday."
"How did she seem to you?"
His steady eyes met hers without wavering.
"I don't quite understand what you mean by the question."
Miss Gannion varied the form of her words.
"Did you think she looked well?"
"Very."
"And yet, I don't think Beatrix is happy," Miss Gannion said, half to herself.
"Why not?"
"How can she be? Beatrix is not dense. She thinks things, and she must know the uncertainty of the future."
"But I thought it was quite certain." There was a level monotony in Thayer's accent.
"You think Mr. Lorimer has really reformed and is out of danger?" Miss Gannion asked quickly.
"I wish he had," Thayer answered half involuntarily.
"Then there is still trouble?"
But already Thayer was once more upon his guard.
"I have heard of nothing since I came home."
"Have you seen Mr. Lorimer?"
"No."
There was a curt brevity in his manner which was new to Miss Gannion. In spite of herself, it set her to wondering whether prosperity had been good for her friend, whether the consciousness of his own importance were making him indifferent to the interests of others. Perhaps, after all, it was true that he was becoming impersonal. He might be growing larger; he was certainly growing more remote from her life. Miss Gannion cared for Thayer. Now, while she watched him, her eyes were lighted with an almost fierce affection, even though her disappointment made her voice take on a hard, metallic ring, as she asked,--
"Are you turning your back upon the problem of your old friend, Mr.
Thayer?"
"No," he answered; "but I thought we had solved it, in this very room."
She raised her brows interrogatively.
"'To say our prayers, and wait,'" he quoted.
Her momentary distrust of him weakened, and her face lighted, as she heard him quoting her own words, spoken so long ago.
"Yes; but I--we all--think it is time--think it may be a mistake."
He lifted his eyes from the fire, looked at her steadily for a minute, and then stared into the fire again. She grew restless with the stillness.
"And we thought perhaps you could say something."
"To--?" he asked, without raising his eyes.
"To Mr. Lorimer."
"What could I say?"
"Something to break it off."
In spite of himself, he laughed outright.
"Would you advise threats or bribery, Miss Gannion? I really can't imagine any argument that would lead Lorimer to give up Miss Dane of his own accord."
"Couldn't you put it to him strongly that he has no moral right to hold her to her promise?"
"I could; but he would probably put it to me just as strongly that I have no moral right to interfere in his concerns."
Miss Gannion sat up straight, bracing her elbows against the sides of her chair.
"Mr. Thayer, have you any idea that Mr. Lorimer will ever give up drinking, drinking more than is good for him?"
"I have not."
"Have you any idea that Beatrix, if she marries him, can escape years of anxiety and wretchedness?"
"I have not," he answered again.
"Oh, how cold you are!" she cried, in pa.s.sionate revolt against his even tone. "Don't you care anything at all for Beatrix?"
If he flinched at her question, he rallied again too quickly for her to discover it. Then he looked her squarely in the eye.
"I would do anything in my power to protect Miss Dane; but this is a case where I have no right to speak to her. I have spoken to Lorimer again and again, urging him to control himself for her sake. Beyond that, I have no right to go."
"But you said once that you thought she ought to be told."
"That was months ago. She found out, without being told."
"Not all."
"Enough."
"But, if she knew all about it, all that you know, Beatrix Dane would never marry Sidney Lorimer."