"What?" she asked in an engaging manner of invitation to confidence.
"That you are to be married. I have it on the word of my landlady."
"I?"
"So it is rumored in the village."
"I am glad my family is not so anxious to thrust me off as my friends are."
"And you are unwilling to be thrust off, as you put it?"
"Married? No, not unwilling; unprepared. It is so very final, you know.
A woman gives up everything."
"Not necessarily."
"Oh, yes she does: freedom, family, a.s.sociations."
"And in return?"
"From the right man she gets--a sort of compensation."
"Not a high valuation."
"A true one; she knows she cares more than he does."
"No, no!" Noakes spoke from a full heart.
"She does; and knowing it, she need not expect equal return--only part compensation. But how good he ought to be!"
"Good?" he asked doubtfully.
"Yes, everything she thinks he is."
"No man loved of woman is that."
"Noakes, you are disillusioning, and incorrect, and moreover traitorous to your kind."
"Not a bit of it; you overpraise my kind."
"But--let"s be definite--you know he may be all--"
"And may not always have been; in which connection he may not be expected to enlighten the dreaming lady, may he?"
"I think he may."
"But he may possess a certain masculine trait, a kind of secretiveness."
"Secretive," she mused. "Then he is a bit of a coward, I think."
"He would be a cad," Noakes said quickly, "to tell her things that would pain her."
"Understanding will come sooner or later," she said oracularly. "It is better to become accustomed to a thing than have it come as a revelation."
"I see," Noakes said; "like taking a tonic in midwinter to fend off spring fever. You forget," he continued in a different tone, looking at her speculatively, "that understanding may never come."
"Then he has put her on a lower intellectual plane; he has withheld from her, as he might from a child."
"No, he has loved her too well to hurt her."
"Loved her so ill that he has deceived her from the beginning."
"To my mind there is something active in deception; this would be rather an omission."
"An omission that is an insult to her."
"Not at all!" Noakes spoke somewhat vehemently.
"Don"t think I mean," she said, "that there should be a detailed interchange of trivial confidence. That would be tiresome. If, however, there were one big thing in his life that might influence her feeling toward him, he should tell it, and let her judge."
"Not smooth over a disagreeable occurrence?"
"Never! It would be cruel."
Noakes sat very still.
"If I were the girl,--" she began, and checked the speech with a faint laugh. "But we will not be dramatic, nor personal."
Noakes told himself he had always known that this was her thought; she was too clear-hearted to feel anything else. The understanding of which she had half-seriously spoken must never come, and the only means of avoiding it was to-night"s silence, the silence of all the days to follow. He foresaw the revelation which might come, and realized that any abnegation was worthless except the sacrifice of his love. Alive, aware of its possible fulfillment, he could not condemn himself to the sacrifice. She had not asked it of him, and he would not face that which she might ask if he obeyed the weak voice which counseled a surrender to her judgment. To the last intoxicating drop he would drink, in reverent loving-thankfulness for the draught vouchsafed him. He would care, not in fearful acc.u.mulation of credit against a day of reckoning, but in surrender to the br.i.m.m.i.n.g abundance of their store. He would secure to her freedom from that possible pain by following the inevitable trend.
His regard was a compelling force with which he had lived and grown since he had known Becky. He had not spoken of it to her, silenced by the piteous bane of insufficient income; but now almost he was free.
When he spoke, the breadth and depth of the thing it was would induce her a.s.sent. Of this he was so sure that he did not consider the possibility of refusal. His failure to antic.i.p.ate such a chance was by no means due to an under-estimation of her powers of will, determination, or selection; rather to the feeling which, with the beat of his heart, knocked for freedom to go out, out, about the world, and with its sweeping lines converged again, to enter and permeate a heart attuned to reception and response.
He sat beside her on the piano-bench, and placed before her the songs he liked best.
Her voice was a pure soprano, of an expressive sweetness which affected Noakes as nothing else he had known. It seemed to him that her clarity of soul found expression in her exquisitely pure singing tones.
With hands tight-clasped between his knees, fearing to look at her, Noakes listened while she sang him into a half-visualized dream, as obsessing as it was immanent, which he clung to and enjoyed to the full in order that he might ignore the longing then to speak his thought. His dream keyed him to a responsiveness which made his throat throb in sympathy with the vibration of her tones.
Presently he went away.
Alone in the silver-splotched yard, the spell yet held him; but when the white road pointed a way back to what he had left behind, a fog of uncertainty encircled him, dissipating the glow of his dream, checking his antic.i.p.ation, crushing his problem close to him in the narrow circle of his vision, so close that, although a thing solved and set aside, it loomed ominous and insistent.
He followed the road back to what he had left behind.
In the laboratory Noakes bent over a crucible. The room was still. Not even the night-sounds penetrated the shut door and closed window. The light from a single bulb played upon the set lines of his jaw, and upon the still hand which lay on the switch-lever. He drew a deep breath that quivered through the room with startling distinctness. He bent closer to the tiny quant.i.ty of powder in the bottom of the vessel.
Suddenly he stood erect and looked about him. His glance slowly circled the room, and fell to the hand on the switch-lever. Then he advanced the lever.