Peter was tired of that issue. His controlled manner showed it.
"I know what you think about that, Electra," he said. "You see we don"t agree. We mustn"t talk about it."
Electra answered him with a gracious certainty.
"That was what she told me, Peter. She told grandmother, too. For some reason she has abandoned her deception. She has a reason for ending it.
That was what she said. Tom never married her."
Peter"s face was blazing, the indignant blood in it, the light darting from his eyes. He straightened. His hands clenched. His voice was thick with anger.
"Tom never married her?"
"That was what she told us."
"The d.a.m.ned scoundrel!"
Electra had been regarding him in serene certainty of her own position and her ability to hold it. But human nature flashed out in her, the loyalty of blood.
"Are you speaking of my brother?" she demanded.
"I am speaking of your precious brother. And I might have known it."
Ire, gathering in him, suffused his face anew. "I might have known Tom Fulton would do the dastardly trick in any given situation. Of course he never married her."
"You don"t seem to think of her," she reminded him, under her breath.
"Not think of her! What else am I thinking of? Poor child! poor child!"
Electra was always having to feel alone in the world. Art left her desolate when other people sang and painted and she could only praise.
Love and the fierce loyalty she coveted were always failing her and lavishing themselves elsewhere. She had one momentary impulse to speak for herself.
"Do you wonder now," she said, "that I wouldn"t accept her."
"Not accept her, when she had been hurt? Good G.o.d, Electra! how monstrous it is. You, a delicate woman, fully believed he had wronged another woman as lovely as yourself, and yet the only impression it made on you was that you could not accept her."
Electra resisted the impulse to turn away or put her hands to her face; the tears were coming. She held herself rigid for a moment, choking down the shuddering of her nerves, lest her lips quiver and betray her.
"I suppose,"--the words were almost inaudible, yet he heard them,--"I suppose that is because you have lived so long in France."
"What, Electra?" He spoke absently, his mind with Rose.
"These things have ceased to mean anything to you. It is not a moral question. You see the woman is pretty and you--"
"No, no! She is beautiful, but that"s not it. I can"t theorize about it, Electra, only the whole thing seems to me monstrous. That he should wrong her! That he should be able to make her care about him in the first place--a fellow like him--just because he was handsome as the devil and had the tongue of angels--but that he should wrong her, that she should come over here expecting kindness--" It was Peter who put a hand before his eyes, not because there were tears there, but as if to shut her out from a knowledge of his too candid self. But in an instant he was looking at her again, not in anger, but sorrowfully.
"Isn"t it strange?" she exclaimed, almost to herself.
"What, Electra?"
"Strange to think what power a woman has--a woman of that stamp."
"Don"t, Electra. You mustn"t cla.s.sify her. You can"t."
She was considering it with a real curiosity.
"You don"t blame her at all," she said. "You know Tom did wrong. You don"t think she did."
"Electra," he said gently, "we can"t go back to that. It"s over and done with. Besides, it is between those two. It isn"t our business."
"You could blame Tom!" She clung to that. He saw she would not release her hold.
"Electra!" He put out his hands and took her unwilling ones. Then he gazed at her sweetly and seriously; and when Peter was in gentle earnest, he did look very good. "Electra, can"t you see what she is?"
His appealingness had for the instant soothed that angry devil in her.
She wrenched her hands free, with the one hoa.r.s.e cry instinct with mental pain,--
"You are in love with her!"
Peter stepped back a pace. His face paled. He could not answer. Electra felt the rush of an emotion stronger than herself. It swept her on, her poise forgotten, her rules of life snapping all about her.
"I have always known it, from the first day you spoke of her. She has bewitched you. Perhaps this is what she really came for--to separate us.
Well, she has done it."
Something seemed demanded of him, and he could only answer in her own words,--
"Has she done it?"
Her heat had cooled. Her soberer self had the upper hand again, and she spoke now like the gracious lady called to some dignified dismissal.
"I find," she said, "I must have intended to say this for days. We must give up--what we meant to do."
"You must give me up, Electra?"
"I give you up."
"I came to-day,"--Peter"s voice sounded very honest in his endeavor to show how well he had meant,--"I came to ask you to go back to France. We would live on a little. We would serve the Brotherhood--the chief says you have joined already--" Electra bowed her head slightly, still in a designed remoteness.
"I shall go to France," she said, "later. But I shall never marry you.
That is over. As you said of something else, it is over and done with."
She glanced toward the door, but he kept his place. Peter was conscious that of all the things he ought to feel, he could not summon one. It did not seem exactly the woman he had loved who was dismissing him. This was a handsome and unfriendly stranger, and in the bottom of his heart surged a sweet new feeling that was like hope and pain.
"Let us not talk any more," she was saying, with that air of extreme courtesy which still invited him to go.
Peter walked slowly to the door.
"I am wondering"--he hesitated. "Why do you say that, Electra? Why do you tell me I am in love with her?"
He looked as shy as a girl. It struck her full in the mind that even in this interview she had no part. She had refused a lover, and he was going away with his thoughts stirred by another woman.