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"I should like to see the armory," he said; "but I really forget--let me see, it is at the end of the long gallery, isn't it?"
She led him there without a word. She was getting a little afraid of him. They inspected the library and wandered back into the picture gallery. It was she, now, who was silent. She had shown him all her favorite treasures without being able to evoke a single spark of enthusiasm.
"Once," she remarked, "we all had a terrible fright. We were told that everything was going to be sold."
He nodded.
"I did think of it," he admitted; "but there seemed to be no hurry. All these things are growing into money year by year. Some day I shall send everything to Christie's."
She looked at him in horror.
"You cannot--oh, you cannot mean it?" she cried.
"Why not? They are no use to me."
"No use?" she faltered.
"Not a bit. I don't suppose I shall see them again for many years. And the money--well, one can use that."
"But I thought--that you were rich?" she faltered.
"So I am," he answered, "and yet I go on making more and more, and I shall go on. Money is the whip with which its possessor can scourge humanity. It is with money that I deal out my--forgive me, I forgot that I was talking aloud, and to a child," he wound up suddenly.
She looked at him, dry-eyed, but with a strained look of sorrow strangely altering her girlish face.
"You must be very unhappy," she said.
"Not at all," he a.s.sured her. "I am one of those fortunate persons who have outlived happiness and unhappiness. I have nothing to do but live--and pay off a few little debts."
He rose directly afterwards, and she walked with him out to the gardens whence a short cut led to the village.
"I have not tried again to make you change your mind," he said as they stood for a moment on the terrace. "If my wishes have any weight with you, I trust that you will do nothing without consulting Mr. Pengarth."
"And you--" she faltered, "are you--never in London? Sha'n't I see you again any time?"
"If you care to, by all means," he answered. "Tell Mr. Pengarth to let me have your address. Goodbye! Thank you for taking care of my treasures so well."
She held his cold hand in hers and suddenly raised it to her lips. Then she turned away and hurried indoors.
Wingrave stood still for a moment and gazed at his hand through the darkness as though the ghosts of dead things had flitted out from the dark laurel shrubs. Then he laughed quietly to himself.
SPREADING THE NETS
"By the bye," the Marchioness asked him, "have you a Christian name?"
"Sorry," Wingrave answered, "if I ever had, I've forgotten it."
"Then I must call you Wingrave," she remarked. "I hate calling anyone I know decently well Mr. anything."
"Charmed," Wingrave answered; "it isn't a bad name."
"It isn't," she admitted. "By the bye," she continued, looking at him critically, "you are rather a surprising person, aren't you?"
"Glad you've found it out," Wingrave answered. "I always thought so."
"One a.s.sociates all sorts of terrible things with millionaires--especially African and American ones," she remarked. "Now you could pa.s.s anywhere for the ordinary sort of decent person."
Wingrave nodded.
"I was told the other day," he remarked reflectively, "that if I would only cultivate two things, I might almost pa.s.s as a member of the English aristocracy."
"What were they?" she asked rashly.
"Ignorance and impertinence," he answered.
The Marchioness was silent for a moment. There was a little more color than usual in her beautiful cheeks and a dangerous glitter in her eyes.
"You can go home, Mr. Wingrave," she said.
He rose to his feet imperturbably. The Marchioness stretched out a long white hand and gently forced him back again.
"You mustn't talk like that to me," she said quietly. "I am sensitive."
He bowed.
"A privilege, I believe, of your order," he remarked.
"Of course, if you want to quarrel--" she began.
"I don't," he a.s.sured her.
"Then be sensible! I want to talk to you."
"Sensible, alone with you!" he murmured. "I should establish a new record."
"You certainly aren't in the least like a millionaire," she declared, smiling at him, "you are more like a--"
"Please go on," he begged.
"I daren't," she answered, shaking her head.
"Then you aren't in the least like a marchioness," he declared. "At least, not like our American ideas of one."
She laughed outright.
"Bring your chair quite close to mine," she ordered, "I really want to talk to you."