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Here was the whole thing in a nutsh.e.l.l. There were some who might consider this to be an ideal state. Not to care about anything at all was not to have anything at all to worry about. Certain philosophies were based upon this state of mind. In part, Monte's own philosophy was so based. If not to care too much were well, then not to care at all should be better. It should leave one utterly and sublimely free.
But should it also leave one utterly miserable?
There was something inconsistent in that--something unfair. To be free, and yet to feel like a prisoner bound and gagged; not to care, and yet to feel one's vitals eaten with caring; to obtain one's objective, and then to be marooned there like a forsaken sailor on a desert island--this was unjust.
Ah, but she did care! It was as if some portion of her refused absolutely to obey her will in this matter. In silence she might declare her determination not to care, or through tense lips she might mutter the same thing in spoken words; but this made no difference.
She was a free agent, to be sure. She had the right to dictate terms to herself. She had the sole right to be arbiter of her destiny. It was to that end she had craved freedom. It was for her alone to decide about what she should care and should not care. She was no longer a schoolgirl to be controlled by others. She was both judge and jury for herself, and she had pa.s.sed sentence to the effect that, since she had chosen not to care when to care had been her privilege, it was no longer her privilege to care when she chose to care. Nothing since then had developed to give her the right to alter that verdict. If anything, it held truer after Peter's departure than ever. She must add to her indictment the harm she had done him.
Still, she cared. Staring out of her window upon the quay, she caught her breath at sight of every new pa.s.ser-by, in fearful hope that it might prove to be Monte. She did this when she knew that Monte was hundreds of miles away. She did this in face of the fact that, if his coming depended upon her consent, she would have withheld that consent.
If in truth he had suddenly appeared, she would have fled in terror.
He must not come; he should not come--but, O G.o.d, if he would come!
[Ill.u.s.tration: "But, O G.o.d, if he would come!"]
Sometimes this thought held her for a moment before she realized it.
Then for a s.p.a.ce the sun appeared in the blue sky and the birds set up such a singing as Marie had never heard in all her life. Perhaps for a step or two she saw him striding toward her with his face aglow, his clear, blue eyes smiling, his tender man mouth open to greet her. So her heart leaped to her throat and her arms trembled. Then--the fall into the abyss as she caught herself. Then her head drooping upon her arm and the racking, dry sobs.
How she did care! It was as if everything she had ever hungered for in the past--all her beautiful, timid girlhood dreams; all that good part of her later hunger for freedom; all of to-day and all that was worth while of the days to come, had been gathered together, like jewels in a single jewel casket, and handed over to him. He had them all. None had been left her. She had none left.
She had always known that if ever she loved it was so that she must love. It was this that she had feared. She had known that if she gave at all she must give utterly--all that she ever had or hoped to have.
Suddenly she recalled Mrs. Chic. It was with a new emotion. The latter had always been to her the symbol of complete self-sacrifice.
It centered around the night Chic, Junior was born. That night she had been paler than Mrs. Chic herself; she had whimpered more than Mrs.
Chic. Outside, waiting, she had feared more than the wife within who was wrestling with death for a new life. She had sat alone, with her hands over her ears in an agony of fear and horror. She had marveled that any woman would consent to face such a crisis. It had seemed wrong that love--an affair of orange blossoms and music and laughter--should lead to that. Wide-eyed, she had sobbed in terror until it was over. It was with awe and wonder that a few days later she had seen Mrs. Chic lying in her big white bed so crooningly happy and jubilant.
Now she understood. The fear and horror had vanished. Had she been in the next room to-day, her heart would have leaped with joy in tune with her who was fighting her grim fight. Because the aches and the pains are but an incident of preparation. Not only that, but one can so love that pain, physical pain, may in the end be the only means for an adequate expression of that love. The two may be one, so blended as to lead, in the end, to perfect joy. Even mental pains, such as she herself now suffered, can do that. For all she was undergoing she would not have given up one second to be back again where she was a month before.
Something comes with love. It is that more than love itself which is the greatest thing in the world. Sitting by her window, watching the shadows pa.s.s, Marjory was sensing this. The knowledge was coming slowly, imperceptibly; but it was bringing her strength. It was steadying her nerves. It was preparing her for the supreme test.
Because that very day, toward sunset-time, as she still sat by her window, she saw a shadow that looked like Monte. She smiled a little, because she knew it would soon dissolve. Rapidly the shadow strode along the quay until opposite the hotel. Then, instead of vanishing, it came on--straight toward her. She sprang to her feet, leaning back against the wall, not daring to look again. So she stood, counting her heart-beats; for she was still certain that when a hundred or so of them had pa.s.sed, the illusion also would fade.
Marjory did not have time to count a full hundred heart-beats before she heard a light rap at the door. For the fraction of a second she swayed in the fear that, taking the stairs three at a time, Monte might have ventured to her very room. But it would be with no such gentle tap that he would announce himself.
"Yes?" she called.
"A card for madame," came the voice of the garcon.
Her knees still weak, she crossed the room and took the card. There was no longer any hope left to her. Apparitions do not materialize to the point where they present their cards.
"Madame is in?" queried the boy.
"What else can I say?" she asked, as if, in her desperate need, seeking counsel of him.
The boy shrugged his shoulders.
"If madame desires, I can report madame is away," he offered.
It was all one to him. It was all one to every one else in the world but herself. No one was interested. She was alone. Then why had not Monte himself let her alone? That was the point, but to determine that it was necessary to see him.
It was possible he had come merely by chance. It was possible he had come to see Peter, not knowing that Peter had gone. It was possible he had returned this way in order to take the Mediterranean route home.
On the face of it, anything was more probable than that he had come deliberately to see her.
"You will ask monsieur to wait, and I will be down in a few moments,"
she replied to the boy.
She called to Marie.
"I have a caller," she announced nervously. "You must make me look as young as possible."
Even if she had grown old inside, there was no reason why she should reveal her secret.
"I am glad," nodded Marie. "Madame should put on a white gown and wear a ribbon in her hair."
"A ribbon!" exclaimed madame. "That would look absurd."
"You shall see."
She was too weak to protest. She was glad enough to sit down and give herself up utterly to Marie.
"Only we must not keep him waiting too long," she said. "Monsieur Covington does not like to be kept waiting."
"It is he?" exclaimed Marie.
"It--it is quite a surprise." She blushed. "I--I do not understand why he is here."
"It should not be difficult to understand," ventured Marie.
To that madame made no reply. It was clear enough what Marie meant.
It was a natural enough mistake. To her, Monsieur Covington was still the husband of madame. She had stood in the little chapel in Paris when madame was married. When one was married, one was married; and that was all there was to it for all time. So, doubtless, Marie reasoned. It was the simple peasant way--the old, honest, woman way.
Madame folded her hands in her lap and closed her eyes while Marie did her hair and adjusted the ribbon. Then Marie slipped a white gown over her head.
"There," concluded the maid, with satisfaction, as she fastened the last hook. "Madame looks as young as when she was married."
But the color that made her look young vanished the moment Marjory started down the stairs alone to meet him. Several times she paused to catch her breath; several times she was upon the point of turning back.
Then she saw him coming up to meet her. She felt her hand in his.
"Jove!" he was saying, "but it's good to see you again."
"But I don't understand why you are here," she managed to gasp.
To him it was evidently as simple as to Marie.
"To see you," he answered promptly.
"If that is all, then you should not have come," she declared.
They were still on the stairs. She led the way down and into the lower reception-room. She did not care to go again into the sun parlor. She thought it would be easier to talk to him in surroundings not a.s.sociated with anything in the past. They had the room to themselves.
She sat down and motioned him to another chair at some little distance.
He paid no attention to her implied request. With his feet planted firmly, his arms folded, he stood before her while she tried to find some way of avoiding his gaze.