"I don"t mind that in a man," replied Margaret.
"His hands are like--like a coachman"s," said Lucia. "Whenever I look at them I think of Thomas."
"No, they"re more like the parrot"s--they"re claws.... That"s why I"m marrying him."
"Because he has ugly hands?"
"Because they"re ugly in just that way. They"re the hands of the man who gets things and holds on to things. I"m taking him because he can get for me what I need." Margaret patted her sister on the shoulder. "Cheer up, Lucia! I"m lucky, I tell you. I"m getting, merely at the price of a little lying and a little shuddering, what most people can"t get at any price."
"But he hasn"t any money," objected Lucia.
"If he had, no doubt you"d find him quite tolerable. Even you--a young innocent."
"It does make a difference," admitted Lucia. "You see, people have to have money or they can"t live like gentlemen and ladies."
"That"s it," laughed Margaret. "What"s a little thing like self-respect beside ease and comfort and luxury? As grandmother said, a lady who"d put anything before luxury has lost her self-respect."
"Everybody that"s nice ought to have money," declared Lucia. "Then the world would be beautiful, full of love and romance, with everybody clean and well-dressed and never in a hurry."
But Margaret seemed not to hear. She was gazing at the fountain, her unseeing eyes gloomily reflecting her thoughts.
"If Mr. Craig hasn"t got money why marry him?" asked her sister.
"He can get it," replied Margaret tersely. "He"s the man to trample and crowd and clutch, and make everybody so uncomfortable that they"ll gladly give him what he"s s.n.a.t.c.hing for." She laughed mockingly. "Yes, I shall get what I want"--then soberly--"if I can get him."
"Get HIM! Why, he"ll be delighted! And he ought to be."
"No, he oughtn"t to be; but he will be."
"A man like him--marrying a lady! And marrying YOU!" Lucia threw her arms round her sister"s neck and dissolved in tears. "Oh, Rita, Rita!"
she sobbed. "You are the dearest, loveliest girl on earth. I"m sure you"re not doing it for yourself, at all. I"m sure you"re doing it for my sake."
"You"re quite wrong," said Rita, who was sitting unmoved and was looking like her grandmother. "I"m doing it for myself. I"m fond, of luxury--of fine dresses and servants and all that.... Think of the thousands, millions of women who marry just for a home and a bare living!... No doubt, there"s something wrong about the whole thing, but I don"t see just what. If woman is made to lead a sheltered life, to be supported by a man, to be a man"s plaything, why, she can"t often get the man she"d most like to be the plaything of, can she?"
"Isn"t there any such thing as love?" Lucia ventured wistfully.
"Marrying for love, I mean."
"Not among OUR sort of people, except by accident," Margaret a.s.sured her. "The money"s the main thing. We don"t say so. We try not to think so. We denounce as low and coa.r.s.e anybody that does say so. But it"s the truth, just the same.... Those who marry for money regret it, but not so much as those who marry only for love--when poverty begins to pinch and to drag everything fine and beautiful down into the mud. Besides, I don"t love anybody--thank G.o.d! If I did, Lucia, I"m afraid I"d not have the courage!"
"I"m sure you couldn"t!" cried Lucia, eager to save all possible illusion about her sister. Then, remorseful for disloyal thoughts: "And, if it wasn"t right, I"m sure you"d not do it. You MAY fall in love with him afterward."
"Yes," a.s.sented Margaret, kissing Lucia on an impulse of grat.i.tude.
"Yes, I may. I probably shall. Surely, I"m not to go through life never doing anything I ought to do."
"He"s really handsome, in that bold, common way. And you can teach him."
Margaret laughed with genuine mirth. "How surprised he"d be," she exclaimed, "if he could know what"s going on in my head!"
"He"ll be on his knees to you," pursued Lucia, wonderfully cheered up by her confidence in the miracles Margaret"s teaching would work. "And he"ll do whatever you say."
"Yes, I"ll teach him," said Margaret, herself more hopeful; for must always improves with acquaintance. "I"ll make him over completely. Oh, he"s not so bad as they think--not by any means."
Lucia made an exaggerated gesture of shivering.
"He gets on my nerves," said she. "He"s so horribly abrupt and ill-mannered."
"Yes, I"ll train him," said Margaret, musing aloud. "He doesn"t especially fret my nerves. A woman gets a good, strong nervous system--and a good, strong stomach--after she has been out a few years."
She laughed. "And he thinks I"m as fine and delicate as--as--"
"As you look," suggested Lucia.
"As I look," accepted Margaret. "How we do deceive men by our looks!
Really, Lucia, HE"S far more sensitive than I--far more."
"That"s too silly!"
"If I were a millionth part as coa.r.s.e as he is he"d fly from me. Yet I"m not flying from him."
This was unanswerable. Lucia rejoined: "When are you going to--to do it?"
"Right away.... I want to get it over with. I can"t stand the suspense.... I can"t stand it!" And Lucia was awed and silenced by the sudden, strained look of anguish almost that made Margaret"s face haggard and her eyes wild.
CHAPTER VII
MRS. SEVERENCE IS ROUSED
Craig swooped upon the Severences the next afternoon. His arrivals were always swoopings--a swift descent on a day when he was not expected; or, if the day was forearranged, then the hour would be a surprise. It was a habit with him, a habit deliberately formed. He liked to take people unawares, to create a flurry, reasoning that he, quick of eye and determined of purpose, could not but profit by any confusion. He was always in a hurry--that is, he seemed to be. In this also there was deliberation. It does not follow because a man is in a hurry that he is an important and busy person; no more does it follow that a man is an inconsequential procrastinator if he is leisurely and dilatory. The significance of action lies in intent. Some men can best gain their ends by creating an impression that they are extremely lazy, others by creating the impression that they are exceedingly energetic. The important point is to be on the spot at the moment most favorable for gaining the desired advantage; and it will be found that of the men who get what they want in this world, both those who seem to hasten and those who seem to lounge are always at the right place at the right time.
It best fitted Craig, by nature impatient, noisily aggressive, to adopt the policy of rush. He arrived before time usually, fumed until he had got everybody into that nervous state in which men, and women, too, will yield more than they ever would in the kindly, melting mood. Though he might stay hours, he, each moment, gave the impression that everybody must speak quickly or he would be gone, might quickly be rid of him by speaking quickly. Obviously, intercourse with him was socially unsatisfactory; but this did not trouble him, as his theory of life was, get what you want, never mind the way or the feelings of others. And as he got by giving, attached his friends by self-interest, made people do for him what it was just as well that they should do, the net result, after the confusion and irritation had calmed, was that everybody felt, on the whole, well content with having been compelled. It was said of him that he made even his enemies work for him; and this was undoubtedly true--in the sense in which it was meant as well as in the deeper sense that a man"s enemies, if he be strong, are his most a.s.siduous allies and advocates. It was also true that he did a great deal for people. Where most men do favors only when the prospect of return is immediate, he busied himself as energetically if returns seemed remote, even improbable, as he did when his right hand was taking in with interest as his left hand gave. It was his nature to be generous, to like to give; it was also his nature to see that a reputation for real generosity and kindness of heart was an invaluable a.s.set, and that the only way to win such a reputation was by deserving it.
Craig arrived at the Severences at half-past four, when no one was expected until five. "Margaret is dressing," explained Mrs. Severence, as she entered the drawing-room. "She"ll be down presently--if you care to wait." This, partly because she hoped he would go, chiefly because he seemed in such a hurry.
"I"ll wait a few minutes," said Craig in his sharp, irritating voice.
And he began to tour the room, glancing at pictures, at articles on the tables, mussing the lighter pieces of furniture about. Mrs. Severence, pink-and-white, middle-aged, fattish and obviously futile, watched him with increasing nervousness. He would surely break something; or, being by a window when the impulse to depart seized him, would leap through, taking sash, curtains and all with him.
"Perhaps we"d better go outdoors," suggested she. She felt very helpless, as usual. It was from her that Lucia inherited her laziness and her taste for that most indolent of all the dissipations, the reading of love stories.
"Outdoors?" exploded Craig, wheeling on her, as if he had previously been unconscious of her presence. "No. We"ll sit here. I want to talk to you."
And he plumped himself into a chair near by, his claw-like hands upon his knees, his keen eyes and beak-like nose bent toward her. Mrs.
Severence visibly shrank. She felt as if that handsome, predatory face were pressed against the very window of her inmost soul.
"You wish to talk to me," she echoed, with a feeble conciliatory smile.