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"In a moment, Langly. I am merely reminding you of what has happened.
Concerning myself I have nothing to say. Look at me. You know what I was; you see what I am. I'm not whining; it's all in a lifetime. And the man who is not fitted to take care of what is his, loses. That's all."
Sprowl's head was averted after an involuntary glance at the man before him. His face was red--or it may have been the ruddy evening sun striking flat across it.
Ledwith said: "You will marry her, of course. But I merely wish to hear you say so."
Sprowl swung on him, his thick lips receding:
"I'll marry whom I choose! Do you understand that?"
"Of course. But you will choose to marry her."
"Do you think so?"
"Yes. Or--I'll kill you," he said seriously.
Langly stared at him, every vein suddenly dark and swollen; then his bark of a laugh broke loose.
"I suppose you've got it in your pocket," he said.
Ledwith fumbled in his coat pocket and produced a dully blued weapon of heavy calibre; and Sprowl walked slowly up to him, slapped his face, took the revolver from him, and flung it into the woods.
"Now go home and punch yourself full of dope," he said; swung on his heel, and sauntered off.
Ledwith looked after him, one bloodless hand resting on the cheek which Sprowl had struck--watched him out of sight. Then, patiently, he started to search for the weapon, dropping on all-fours, crawling, peering, parting the ferns and bushes. But the sun was low and the woods dusky, and he could not find what he was looking for. So he sat up on the ground among the dead leaves of other years, drew from his pocket what he needed, and slowly bared his scarred arm to the shoulder.
As for Sprowl, his vigorous tread lengthened to a swinging stride as he shouldered his way through a thicket and out again into the open.
Already he scarcely remembered Ledwith at all, or his menace, or the blow; scarcely even recollected that Mary Ledwith had returned or that his aunt was within driving distance of his own quarters.
A dull hot anguish, partly rage, possessed him, tormenting brain and heart incessantly and giving him no rest. His own clumsy madness in destroying what he believed had been a certainty--his stupidity, his loss of self-control, not only in betraying pa.s.sion prematurely but in his subsequent violence and brutality, almost drove him insane.
Never before in any affair with women had he forgotten caution in any crisis; his had been a patience unshakable when necessary, a dogged, driving persistence when the time came, the subtlety of absolute inertness when required. But above all and everything else he has been a master of patience, and so a master of himself; and so he had usually won.
And now--now in this crisis--a crisis involving the loss of what he cared for enough to marry--if he must marry to have his way with her--what was to be done?
He tried to think coolly, but the cinders of rage and pa.s.sion seemed to stir and move with every breath he drew awaking the wild fire within.
He would try to reason and think clearly--try to retrace matters to the beginning and find out why he had blundered when everything was in his own hands.
It was his aunt's sudden policy that betrayed him into a premature move--Mary Ledwith's return, and his aunt's visit. Mary Ledwith was there to marry him; his aunt to make mischief unless he did what was expected of him.
Leisurely but thoroughly he cursed them both as he walked back across his lawn. But he was already thinking of Strelsa again when, as he entered the wide hall, his aunt waddled across the rugs of the drawing-room, p.r.o.nouncing his name with unmistakable decision. And, before the servants, he swallowed the greeting he had hoped to give her, and led her into the library.
"Mercy on us, Langly!" she exclaimed, eyeing his reeking boots and riding-breeches; "do you live like a pig up here?"
"I've been out," he said briefly. "What do you want?"
Her little green eyes lighted up, and her smile, which was fading, she forced into a kind of fixed grin.
"Your polished and thoughtful inquiry is characteristic of you," she said. "Mary is here, and I want you to come over to dinner."
"I'm not up to it," he said.
"I want you to come."
"I tell you I'm not up to it," he said bluntly.
"And I tell you that you'd better come."
"_Better_ come?" he repeated.
"Yes, _better_ come. More than that, Langly, you'd better behave yourself, or I'll make New York too hot to hold you."
His prominent eyes were expressionless.
"Ah?" he remarked.
"Exactly, my friend. Your race is run. You've done one thing too publicly to squirm out of the consequences. The town has stood for a good deal from you. When that girl at the Frivolity Theatre shot herself, leaving a letter directed to you, the limit of public patience was nearly reached. You had to go abroad, didn't you? Well, you can't go abroad this time. Neither London nor Paris nor Vienna nor Budapest--no, nor St. Petersburg nor even Constantinople would stand you! Your course is finished. If you've an ounce of brains remaining you know that you're done for this time. So go and dress and come over to dinner.... And don't worry; I'll keep away from you after you're married."
"You'll keep your distance before that," he said slowly.
"You're mistaken. Many people are afraid of you, but I never was and never could be. You're no good; you never were. If you didn't lug my name about with you I'd let you go to h.e.l.l. You'll go there anyway, but you'll go married first."
"I expect to."
"Married to Mary Ledwith," she said looking at him.
He picked up a cigar, examined it, yawned, then glanced at her:
"As I had--recently--occasion to tell Chester Ledwith, I'll marry whom I please. Now suppose you clear out."
"Are you dining with us?"
"No."
"What time may we expect you to-morrow?"
"At no time."
"Do you intend to marry Mary Ledwith?"
"No."
"Is that final?"
"Yes!"
"Do you expect to marry anybody else?"