Ca.s.sy took another bitter-sweet. "She"s that. Any one would know it."
Lennox bit at the cigar. "Too good for me, though. So good that she threw me over."
Ca.s.sy put a finger through it. "She did not understand. Any girl might have done the same."
Sombrely Lennox considered her. "Would you? You say she did not understand. I know well enough she did not. But if you cared for a man, would you throw him over because of a charge which you could not be sure was true and without giving him a chance to disprove it? Would you?"
He could stand on his head, yes, but it was unfair to grill her. She flushed.
"I don"t see what that has to do with it."
"How, you don"t see?"
"Isn"t it obvious? Miss Austen and I move in different worlds. On any subject our views might differ and I don"t mean at all but that hers would be superior."
"There can be but one view of what"s square."
"I am sure she meant to be."
Unconcernedly, Lennox smiled. The smile lit his face. From sombre it became radiant.
"That"s all very well. The point is what you would think. Would you think it square to throw a man over as she threw me?"
Ca.s.sy showed her teeth. "If I didn"t care for him, certainly I would."
"But if you did?"
That was too much. Ca.s.sy exclaimed at it. "If! If! How can I tell? I don"t know. I lack experience."
"But not heart."
He was right about that, worse luck. How it beat, too! It would kill her though to have him suspect it.
"I do wish you would tell me," he added.
Ca.s.sy, casting about, felt like an imbecile and said brilliantly: "Haven"t you a match? Shall I fetch one?"
Lennox extracted a little case. "Thanks. It"s an answer I"d like."
It was enough to drive you mad and again casting about, but not getting it, she hedged.
"It will have to be in the abstract, then."
"Very good. Let"s have it in the abstract."
Yet even in the abstract! However, with an uplift of the chin that gave her, she felt, an air of discussing a matter in which she had no concern at all, she plunged.
"One never knows, don"t you know, but it seems to me that if by any chance I did care for a man--not that it is in the least presumable that I ever shall--but if I did, why, then, no. He couldn"t get rid of me, not unless he tried very hard, but if he didn"t, then no matter what I heard, no matter how true it might be, I would cling to his coat-tails, that is, if he wore them, and if, also, he cared for a ninny like me."
Ca.s.sy paused, shook her docked hair and solemnly resumed: "Which, of course, he couldn"t."
"I knew you would say that."
"Say what?" Previously flushed, she reddened. But there is a G.o.d. The room had grown dim.
"That you wouldn"t cut and run."
She could have slapped him. "Then why did you ask me?"
Lennox blew a ring of smoke.
"To have you see it as I do. To have you see that at the first flurry Miss Austen ran to cover. I am quite sure I could show her that she ran too quick, but I am equally sure it is a blessing that she did run. It is not ambitious of a man to want a girl who will stand her ground.
Sooner or later some other flurry would have knocked the ground from under and then it might have been awkward. This one let me out."
He stood up, opened the window, dropped the cigar from it. The cigar might have been Margaret Austen.
"What are your plans?" he asked and sat again.
Ah, how much safer that was! Ca.s.sy grabbed at it.
"You are the third person to ask me. First, Mr. Jones. Then--then----"
But she did not want to mention Dunwoodie or anything about the great cascade of gorgeous follies and she jumped them both. "Then an agent. He asked me yesterday and to-day he had a contract for me and a cheque in advance. He is a very horrid little man but so decent!"
"When does it begin?"
"The engagement? Next week. What plans have you?"
"A few that have been made for me. Presently we sail."
"For France?"
"For France."
It was cooler now, at least her face was, and she got up and switched the light.
"I wish I might go, too," she told him. "But I lack the training to be nurse and the means to be vivandiere--canteener, I think they call it."
She hesitated and added, "Shall I see you before you go?"
But now from the phonograph in the neighbourly flat, the _Non te scordar_ drifted, sung n.o.bly by some fat tenor who probably loathed it.
Lennox, who had risen with her, asked: "May I come to-morrow?"
The aria enveloped them and for a moment Ca.s.sy trilled in.
"Perhaps to-morrow you will sing for me," he continued.
"Yes, I"ll sing."
Later, in the black room on the white bed, the fat tenor"s tuneful prayer floated just above her. Ca.s.sy repeated the words and told herself she was silly. She may have been, but also she was tired. She knew it and for a moment wondered why. Painted hours dancing to jewelled harps are not to be sneezed at. But when they are not yours, when you have really no right to them, it is not fatiguing to say so. A gesture does not fatigue. It is certainly taxing to go to a greasy office, sign your name and receive a cheque. Taxing but endurable. It is not that that does you up. It is argument that tires you, particularly when there is no need for any and you are forced to turn yourself inside out. How fortunate it was, though, that the room had been dark! In the balm of that, sleep took her.