_The Woman:_ Promise!
_The Girl:_ I promise; but--
_The Woman:_ Thank you, Betty.
_The Girl_ (growing serious): What is all this about, Grace? You look so earnest.
_The Woman:_ Some day you will understand. Will you answer me one question, as a daughter would answer her mother?
_The Girl_ (gravely): Yes.
_The Woman:_ Would you marry a t.i.tle for the t.i.tle"s sake?
_The Girl_ (indignantly): I?
_The Woman:_ Yes; would you?
_The Girl:_ I shall marry the man I love, and if not him, n.o.body. I mean, of course, _when_ I love.
_The Woman:_ Blushing again? My dear, is Karloff anything to you?
_The Girl:_ Karloff? Mercy, no. He is handsome and fascinating and rich, but I could not love him. It would be easier to love--to love my groom outside.
(They both smile.)
_The Woman_ (grave once more): That is all I wished to know, dear.
Karloff is not worthy of you.
_The Girl_ (sitting very erect): I do not understand. Is he not honorable?
_The Woman_ (hesitating): I have known him for seven years; I have always found him honorable.
_The Girl:_ Why, then, should he not be worthy of me?
_The Woman_ (lightly): Is any man?
_The Girl:_ You are parrying my question. If I am to be your daughter, there must be no fencing.
_The Woman_ (rising and going over to the portrait again): There are some things that a mother may not tell even to her daughter.
_The Girl_ (determinedly): Grace, you have said too much or too little.
I do not love Karloff, I never could love him; but I like him, and liking him, I feel called upon to defend him.
_The Woman_ (surprised into showing her dismay): You defend him? You!
_The Girl:_ And why not? That is what I wish to know: why not?
_The Woman:_ My dear, you do not love him. That is all I wished to know. Karloff is a brilliant, handsome man, a gentleman; his sense of honor, such as it is, would do credit to many another man; but behind all this there is a power which makes him helpless, makes him a puppet, and robs him of certain worthy impulses. I have read somewhere that corporations have no souls; neither have governments. Ask me nothing more, Betty, for I shall answer no more questions.
_The Girl:_ I do not think you are treating me fairly.
_The Woman:_ At this moment I would willingly share with you half of all I possess in the world.
_The Girl:_ But all this mystery!
_The Woman:_ As I have said, some day you will understand. Treat Karloff as you have always treated him, politely and pleasantly. And I beg of you never to repeat our conversation.
The Girl (to whom illumination suddenly comes; rises quickly and goes over to the woman; takes her by the shoulders, and the two stare into each other"s eyes, the one searchingly, the other fearfully): Grace!
The Woman: I am a poor foolish woman, Betty, for all my worldliness and wisdom; but I love you (softly), and that is why I appear weak before you. The blind envy those who see, the deaf those who hear; what one does not want another can not have. Karloff loves you, but you do not love him.
(The girl kisses the woman gravely on the cheek, and without a word, makes her departure.)
The Woman (as she hears the carriage roll away): Poor girl! Poor, happy, unconscious, motherless child! If only I had the power to stay the blow! ... Who can it be, then, that she loves?
The Girl (in her carriage): Poor thing! She adores Karloff, and I never suspected it! I shall begin to hate him.
How well women read each other!
James had never parted with his rose and his handkerchief. They were always with him, no matter what livery he wore. After luncheon, William said that Miss Annesley desired to see him in the study. So James spruced up and duly presented himself at the study door.
"You sent for me, Miss?"--his hat in his hand, his att.i.tude deferential and attentive.
She was engaged upon some fancy work, the name of which no man knows, and if he were told, could not possibly remember for longer than ten minutes. She laid this on the reading-table, stood up and brushed the threads from the little two-by-four cambric ap.r.o.n.
"James, on Monday night I dropped a rose on the lawn. (Finds thread on her sleeve.) In the morning when I looked for it (brushes the ap.r.o.n again), it was gone. Did you find it?" She made a little ball of the straggling threads and dropped it into the waste-basket. A woman who has the support of beauty can always force a man to lower his gaze.
James looked at his boots. His heart gave one great bound toward his throat, then sank what seemed to be fathoms deep in his breast. This was a thunderbolt out of heaven itself. Had she seen him, then? For a s.p.a.ce he was tempted to utter a falsehood; but there was that in her eyes which warned him of the uselessness of such an expedient. Yet, to give up that rose would be like giving up some part of his being. She repeated the question: "I ask you if you found it."
"Yes, Miss Annesley."
"Do you still possess it?"
"Yes, Miss."
"And why did you pick it up?"
"It was fresh and beautiful; and I believed that some lady at the dinner had worn it."
"And so you picked it up? Where did you find it?"
"Outside the bow-window, Miss."
"When?"
He thought for a moment. "In the morning, Miss."
"Take care, James; it was not yet eleven o"clock, at night."