"I think Mr. Brokenshire is ill."
Oddly enough. I was convinced of that. It was the one a.s.suaging fact. He might hate me, but he wouldn"t have made me the object of this mad-bull rush if he had been in his right mind. He was not in his right mind; he was merely a blood-blinded animal as he went on:
"Ask her again, Hugh. You"re the only one she"s been able to keep in the dark; but then"--his eyes followed his wife, who was still slowly retreating--"but then that"s nothing new. She"ll let you believe anything--till she gets you. That"s always the game with women of the sort. But once you"re fast in her clutches--then, my boy, look out!"
I heard Pauline whisper, "Jack, for Heaven"s sake, do something!"
Once more Jack"s hand was laid on his parent"s arm, with his foolish "Say, dad--"
Once more the restraining hand was shaken off. The cutting tones were addressed to Hugh:
"You see what a hurry she"s been in to be married, don"t you? How many times has she asked you to do it up quick? She"s been afraid that you"d slip through her fingers." He turned toward me. "Don"t be alarmed, my dear. We shall keep our word. You"ve worked hard to capture the position, and I shall not deny that you"ve been clever in your attacks.
You deserve what you"ve won, and you shall have it. But all in good time. Don"t rush. The armies in Europe are showing us that you must intrench yourself where you are if you want, in the end, to push forward. You push a little too hard."
Poor Hugh had gone white. He was twisting my wrist as if he would wring it off, though I felt no pain till afterward.
"Tell me!" he whispered. "Tell me! You"re--you"re not marrying me for--for my money, are you?"
I could have laughed hysterically.
"Hugh, don"t be an idiot!" came, scornfully, from Ethel Rossiter.
I could see her get up, cross the room, and sit down on the edge of Mildred"s couch, where the two engaged in a whispered conversation. Jim Rossiter, too, got up and tiptoed his sleek, slim person out of the room. Cissie Boscobel followed him. They talked in low tones at the head of the stairs outside. I found voice at last:
"No, Hugh; I never thought of marrying you for that reason. I was doing it only because it seemed to me right."
Mr. Brokenshire emitted a sound, meant to be a laugh:
"Right! Oh, my G.o.d!"
Mrs. Brokenshire was now no more than a pale-rose shadow on the farther side of the room, but she came to my aid:
"She was, Howard. Please believe her. She was, really!"
"Thanks, darling, for the corroboration! It comes well from you. Where there"s a question of right you"re an authority."
Mrs. Billing"s hoa.r.s.e, prolonged "Ha-a!" implied every shade of comprehension. I saw the pale-rose shadow sink down on a sofa, all in a little heap, like something shot with smokeless powder.
Hugh was twisting my wrist again and whispering:
"Alix, tell me. Speak! What are you marrying me for? What about the other fellow? Is it Strangways? Speak!"
"I"ve given you the only answer I can, Hugh. If you can"t believe in my doing right--"
"What were you in such a hurry for? Was that the reason--what dad says--that you were afraid you wouldn"t--hook me?"
I looked him hard in the eye. Though we were speaking in the lowest possible tones, there was a sudden stillness in the room, as though every one was hanging on my answer.
"Have I ever given you cause to suspect me of that?" I asked, after thinking of what I ought to say.
Three words oozed themselves out like three drops of his own blood. They were the distillation of two years" uncertainty:
"Well--sometimes--yes."
Either he dropped my wrist or I released myself. I only remember that I was twisting the sapphire-and-diamond ring on my finger.
"What made you think so?" I asked, dully.
"A hundred things--everything!" He gave a great gasp. "Oh, little Alix!"
Turning away suddenly, he leaned his head against the mantelpiece, while his shoulders heaved.
It came to me that this was the moment to make an end of it all; but I saw Mrs. Rossiter get up from her conference with Mildred and come forward. She did it leisurely, pulling up one shoulder of her dcollet gown as she advanced.
"Hugh, don"t be a baby!" she said, in pa.s.sing. "Father, you ought to be ashamed of yourself!"
If the heavens had fallen my amazement might have been less. She went on in a purely colloquial tone, extricating the lace of her corsage from a spray of diamond flowers as she spoke:
"I"ll tell you why she was marrying Hugh. It was for two or three reasons, every one of them to her credit. Any one who knows her and doesn"t see that must be an idiot. She was marrying him, first, because he was kind to her. None of the rest of us was, unless it was Mrs.
Brokenshire; and she was afraid to show it for fear you"d jump on her, father. The rest of us have treated Alix Adare like brutes. I know I have."
"Oh no!" I protested, though I could scarcely make myself audible.
"But Hugh was nice to her. He was nice to her from the start. And she couldn"t forget it. No nice girl would. When he asked her to marry him she felt she had to. And then, when he put up his great big bluff of earning a living--"
"It wasn"t a bluff," Hugh contradicted, his face still buried in his hands.
"Well, perhaps it wasn"t," she admitted, imperturbably. "If you, father, hadn"t driven him to it with your heroics--"
"If you call it heroics that I should express my will--"
"Oh your will! You seem to think that no one"s got a will but you. Here we are, all grown up, two of us married, and you still try to keep us as if we were five years old. We"re sick of it, and it"s time some of us spoke. Jack"s afraid to, and Mildred"s too good; so it"s up to me to say what I think."
Mr. Brokenshire"s first shock having pa.s.sed, he got back something of his lordly manner, into which he threw an infusion of the misunderstood.
"And you"ve said it sufficiently. When my children turn against me--"
"Nonsense, father! Your children don"t do anything of the sort. We"re perfect sheep. You drive us wherever you like. But, however much we can stand ourselves, we can"t help kicking when you attack some one who doesn"t quite belong to us and who"s a great deal better than we are."
Mrs. Billing crowed again:
"Brava, Ethel! Never supposed you had the pluck."
Ethel turned her attention to the other side of her corsage.
"Oh, it isn"t a question of pluck; it"s one of exasperation. Injustice after a while gets on one"s nerves. I"ve had a better chance of knowing Alix Adare than any one; and you can take it from me that, when it comes to a question of breeding, she"s the genuine pearl and we"re only imitations--all except Mildred."
Both of Mr. Brokenshire"s handsome hands went up together. He took a step forward as if to save Mrs. Rossiter from a danger.