He straightened up and his dark eyes, that would have been somber but for their keenness, ran quickly down over her face and figure and then rested again with a softened expression upon hers.
"I would like you to believe that, whatever was the result of what I did, I had no evil or selfish motive in doing it. Can you feel that much confidence in me, Miss Marne?"
She bent her eyes upon the desk for the moment of silence that followed his question and made effort to voice her reply in a cool, disinterested tone.
"I can understand that you might have been moved by a sense of duty toward the public welfare--if you believed in your own a.s.sertions. I gather from what you said just now that you wish to be considered Mr.
Brand"s friend; but that sort of thing does not agree with my idea of the loyalty there should be between friends."
His black brows drew together in a slight frown as he looked intently at her averted face. "Well," he said, more slowly than he had previously spoken, "I shall not try to justify myself. I shall only repeat that my motive was neither selfish nor malicious. I had not thought particularly, in fact, I had not thought at all then, about the public side of it. I did it solely in the hope that it would have a good effect upon Felix." He paused again for a moment and as she noted his familiar use of her employer"s name she thought that, after all, the relations between them must be intimate.
"But I hope," he went on, his manner again brusque, "that you will free your mind from all suspicion as to my reasons for coming here today."
She flushed and turned a little more away, and he smiled behind his hand as he stroked his short, thick, black mustache.
"I know already more about Felix Brand and his affairs than pleases me and I am just now much more interested in my own."
She faced him with a sudden movement and asked sharply: "Do you know where he is?"
Her eyes caught an inscrutable change in his. Something almost like awe came into them and into his countenance as his gaze turned to the window and sought the blue and distant sky.
"No," he said, his voice sounding a solemn note, and repeated: "No, I do not. I do not know where he is now."
His eyes returned to her face and as he met her startled expression he exclaimed in a kindly way, leaning forward as if to rea.s.sure her: "There! I"ve frightened you! Please don"t be alarmed. I a.s.sure you, there"s nothing to be anxious about. Although I don"t know positively where Felix is, just now, I do know he has suffered no harm, no real harm, and I believe, I am quite sure, he will be back here again as well as ever, before very long. I came here to tell you this."
She studied his face for a moment and somehow, against her will, the conviction came upon her that this man was moved, as he declared, by good motives.
"It was kind of you," she replied at last with a gracious smile, "and I thank you very much. I was quite anxious, but I believe what you have told me and I am greatly relieved."
He looked pleased and exclaimed impulsively: "And I thank you for your confidence in me!"
As he rose to go, his glance once more traveled quickly down over her face and figure and returned to her eyes with a look in his own that her woman"s instinct knew to mean appreciation, interest, liking.
"By the way," he said, turning impulsively toward her and speaking in a quick, brusque way, "there is another matter I must not forget. It was part of my reason for coming here. There was a letter--you remember--that Felix had you write the last day he was here and then asked you not to send just then. You haven"t mailed it yet, have you?"
She stared at him in astonishment and said "No," before she could take counsel of her caution.
"I didn"t suppose you had. However, I happen to know, he told me, that he would like you to send it at once, just as it stands now."
Henrietta was so astounded by this revelation of the intimacy that must exist between the two men that for a moment she could not reply.
For the letter was concerned with an effort Brand was making to get control of the marble quarry company in which he had invested some months before, and she knew that he was keeping the matter very secret and considered it of great importance. It had worried her more than anything else in his arrested affairs, for she hesitated to mail it without farther instructions from him and yet had feared that if she did not his plans might fall through.
Gordon went on without appearing to notice her surprise, although she felt sure that he saw it and was amused by it. "As you know, he wanted to wait a day or two for certain developments at the other end."
Henrietta nodded. "Yes, and I have not been able to find out just what happened."
"It"s all right--just as Felix hoped it would be," he a.s.sured her and went on to tell her briefly what had occurred.
After his departure Henrietta found herself comparing her visitor with her employer. All her previous thought of Gordon had been in connection with Brand as the cause of his troubles, as his enemy and even his persecutor. So now, when Gordon appeared in person, it was against a contrasting background of the appearance and character of the man to whom she felt so grateful for the opportunity of livelihood amid congenial surroundings.
Gordon was much in her mind during the rest of the day; and as she traveled homeward in the afternoon, in the subway, across the ferry in the glowing sunset light, and in the clattering trolley car, her thought was busy with speculation about him, with comparison of him with Felix Brand, with recollections of what he had said and how he had looked, with conjecture as to the meaning of his expression when she asked him if he knew where Brand was.
At dinner she spoke of her caller to her mother and sister. At once they were interested and were eager to know what he was like and what Henrietta thought of him. As she answered their questions she felt her cheeks flushing when she saw their surprise that she should praise or seem to admire the man who was Felix Brand"s enemy.
"I know you are surprised," she said, trying to overcome a sudden access of self-consciousness, "that he isn"t at all the sort of man we thought him, or at least that I was sure he must be. But it was certainly considerate of him to come, and there was nothing at all in anything he said or did that suggested a different motive. I never was more surprised in my life than I was by his appearance. You know Mr.
Brand told the reporters that he is a relative and I had supposed he must be some dissipated, disreputable sort of creature. And then in came this good-looking young man--for he is good-looking, though not so handsome as Mr. Brand--his face hasn"t that look of refinement and affability. He was well-dressed and looked like a prosperous young business man, and he has such a straightforward, independent air."
"Does he look like Mr. Brand?" queried Isabella, so interested that she was forgetting her dinner.
"A little--yes. In some ways a good deal, and then again he seems so different. He is dark and his features have a family resemblance. But otherwise the two men are not alike. You know that dear expression Mr.
Brand"s eyes always have, so winning and affectionate, and as if he thought the world of you. Well, Mr. Gordon"s eyes are large and brown, too, but they are keen and they look right through you and he flashes one glance around the room and you feel that he knows everything in it. He isn"t so polished in his manners----"
"Mr. Brand has the loveliest manners of any man I ever met," Isabella interrupted. "His mission in life ought to be to travel round and show them off as a pattern for all other young men. I wish Warren could have the advantage of a few lessons."
"Bella!" exclaimed her mother reprovingly. "You ought not to speak that way of the man who is almost your husband. And Warren is such a good man, too!"
"So is Mr. Brand," Isabella replied saucily, "awfully good, just too good to be true. Tell us more about Mr. Gordon, Harry."
"Why, as I was saying, his manner isn"t so polished as Mr. Brand"s. In fact, he is so direct and positive that he seems a little curt, though I"m sure he doesn"t mean to be. He makes you feel that he"s very sincere, too. Mr. Brand seems to draw people to him without making any effort, but Mr. Gordon is more compelling and something about him makes you take an interest in him and believe in him."
"He impressed you a good deal, didn"t he, Harry?" said Isabella, looking at her sister thoughtfully.
Henrietta felt her cheeks warming again and was annoyed at herself that she should blush in this way when, as she scolded herself, "there was no reason for it."
"I don"t know that he did, particularly," she said defensively. "His coming was rather curious and you and mother seemed interested and wanted to know all about him."
CHAPTER XI
PENELOPE HAS A VISITOR
Penelope Brand lay back in her wheel-chair in the gla.s.s-enclosed porch and gave herself up to luxurious enjoyment of its sun-filled warmth.
The table beside her with its books and its sewing, but just now finished and neatly folded, gave evidence that she had spent a busy morning. Outside there was bright sunshine, too, but there was also a raw March wind that filled the air with dust and stimulated the tear-ducts of the eyes that faced it. The little gla.s.s porch had brought a very great pleasure into her life, giving her, during the shut-in winter season, always hard for her to endure, wider views of earth and sky, a flood of the sunshine in which she loved to bask and, on days when it was possible to keep the entrance open, much more fresh air.
She sat there alone, loving the sunny warmth and thinking of the brother who had made her pleasure possible. Her secret mental att.i.tude toward him was marked by a certain aloofness and a quietly judicial estimate which she did her best to conceal from her mother.
It had cost her not a little effort, too, to keep this att.i.tude from developing into stern censorious judgment. Just now it added to her pleasure that her feeling toward him, at least for the time being, could be mainly that of grat.i.tude, though grat.i.tude tempered by curiosity.
"Perhaps he"d have done it long ago if I had asked him," she told herself. "And I"ve longed for something of the sort so much. I do wonder what made him finally think of it himself. It wasn"t like him.
He might have thought of it and wanted to do it ten or twelve years ago, before he had plenty of money. But it"s not like him now."
The click of the gate attracted her attention and she saw a man coming up the walk. "Why, that can"t be Felix," she thought in doubting surprise. Then, as she looked at him more attentively, "Oh, no! It"s that Mr. Gordon who was here last winter. Felix didn"t seem to like very well his calling on us. And mother isn"t at home. Well, I"ll have to see him. And perhaps it"s just as well, for I don"t care particularly whether Felix likes it or not."
He held her thin, talon-like hand affectionately as he asked how she was and if she enjoyed her gla.s.s cage.
"Enjoy it! Oh, Mr. Gordon! You can"t imagine how I delight in it! I sit here most of the time every day in all kinds of weather. It has given me the greatest pleasure, and I think I am better and stronger, too, because of it. I was just thinking how grateful I am to Felix."