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Mary hesitated for a second, and then she shook her head.
"I shall manage quite well by myself," she said. "It will be better so.
I'm quite used to travelling alone as you know. And the journey to Nice is nothing. I shall be in one carriage all the way from Calais. You could come out after, if necessary."
"I would come gladly, dear."
"I know, Gillie, and it's sweet of you. But you couldn't be of use and it would be miserable for you. It is better that I should be alone with Dolly. I can always wire if I want you."
"As you think best, dear. Then I will stay quietly down here."
"Yes, do. You have that poem to work on, 'A Lady in a Library.' It is a beautiful fancy and will make you greater than ever! It's quite the best thing you've done so far. And then there's the shooting."
"Oh, I shall do very well, Molly. Don't bother about me, dear."
She held him closer. Her cool white arms were around his neck.
"But I always do bother about you, husband," she whispered, "because I love you better than anything else in the world. It is sweet of you to let me go like this. And I feel so much happier about you now, since the doctor has come to the village."
He winced with pain and shame at her loving words. A pang went right through him.
It pa.s.sed as swiftly as it had come. Sweet and loving women too often provide men with excuses for their own ill conduct. Lothian knew that--under the special circ.u.mstances of which his wife knew nothing--it was his duty to go with Mary. But he didn't want to go. He would have hated going.
Already a wide vista was opening before him--a freedom, an absolute freedom! Wild music! The Wine of Life! Now, if ever, Fate, Destiny, call it what he would, was preparing the choicest banquet.
He had met Rita. Rita was waiting, he could be with Rita!
And yet, so subtle and tortuous is the play of egoism upon conscience, he felt pleased with himself for his ready concurrence in his wife's plans. He a.s.sumed the role she gave him with avidity, and when he answered her she thought him the best and n.o.blest of men.
"It will be dreadful without you, darling, but you are quite right to go. Send for me if you want me. I'll catch the next boat. But I have my work to do, and I can see a good deal of Morton Sims"--he knew well, and felt with shame, the cunning of this last statement--"and if I'm dull I can always run up to town for a day or two and stay at the club."
"Of course you can, dear. You won't feel so lonely then. Now about details. I must pack to-night."
"Yes, dear, and then you can go off with d.i.c.ker in the morning, and catch the night boat. If you like, that is."
"Well, I shouldn't gain anything by that, dear. I should only have to wait about in Calais until one o'clock the next day when the train de luxe starts. But I should like to go first thing to-morrow. I couldn't wait about here the whole day. d.i.c.ker will be company of sorts. I shall get to town about two, and go to the Charing Cross Hotel. Then I shall do some shopping, go to bed early, and catch the boat train from the station in the morning. I would rather do it like that."
Both of them were experienced travellers and knew the continental routes well. It was arranged so.
Mary did not come down to dinner. A tray was sent up to her room.
Lothian dined alone with Ingworth. The voices of the two men were hushed to a lower tone in deference to the grief of the lady above. But there was a subdued undercurrent of high spirits nevertheless. Ingworth was wildly excited by the prospect before him; Gilbert fell into his mood with no trouble at all.
He also had his own thoughts, his own private thoughts.
--"I say, d.i.c.ker, let's have some champagne, shall we?--just to wish your mission success."
"Yes, do let's. I'm just in the mood for buzz-water to-night."
The housemaid went to the cellar and fetched the wine.
"Here's to you, d.i.c.ker! May you become a G. W. Stevens or a Julian Ralph!"
"Thanks, old chap. I'll do my best, now that my chance has come. I say I am awfully sorry about Lady Davidson. It's such rough luck on Mrs.
Gilbert. You'll be rather at a loose end without your wife, won't you?--or will you write?"
He tossed off his second gla.s.s of Pol Roger.
"Oh, I shall be quite happy," Lothian answered, and as he said it a quiet smile came placidly upon his lips. It glowed out from within, as from some comfortable inward knowledge.
Ingworth saw it, and his mind, quickened by wine and excitement, found the truth unerringly.
Anger and envy flushed the young man's veins. He hated his host once more.
"So that is his game, d.a.m.ned hypocrite!" Ingworth thought. "I shall be away, his wife will be out of the way and he will make the running with Rita Wallace just as he likes."
He looked at Lothian, and then had a mental vision of himself.
"He's fat and bloated," he thought. "Surely a young and lovely girl like Rita _can't_ care for him?"
But even as he endeavoured to comfort his greedy conceit by these imaginings, he felt the shadow of the big mind falling upon them. He knew, as he had known so often of late, the power of that which was cased in its envelope of flesh, and which could not be denied.
Perhaps there is no hate so bitter, no fear so impotent and distressing, as that which is experienced by the surface for the depth.
It is the fury of the brilliant scabbard against the sword within, decoration versus that which cleaves.
Ingworth wished that he were not going away--leaving the field clear... .
"Have a cigar, d.i.c.ker. No?--well, here's the very best of luck."
"Thanks, the same to you!"
END OF BOOK TWO
BOOK THREE
FRUIT OF THE DEAD SEA
"Let thy fountain be blessed: and rejoice with the wife of thy youth."
"Let her be as the loving hind and pleasant roe: let her b.r.e.a.s.t.s satisfy thee at all times: and be thou ravished always with her love."
"And why wilt thou, my son, be ravished with a strange woman, and embrace the bosom of a stranger?"
"_His own iniquities shall take the wicked himself, and he shall be holden with the cords of his sins._"