"DEAR CHARMIAN,--Only a word to wish you and your genius a gigantic success to-night. We"ve all been praying for it. Even Susan has condescended from the universal to the particular on this occasion, because she"s so devoted to both of you. We are all coming, of course, Box Number Fifteen, and are going to wear our best Sunday tiaras in honor of the occasion. I hear you are to have a marvellous audience, all the millionaires, as well as your humble friends, the Adelaides and the Susans and the Henriette Senniers.
Mr. Crayford is a magnificent drum-beater, but after to-night your genius won"t need him, I hope and believe. I enclose a box for Jacques Sennier"s first night, which, as you"ll see by the date, has had to be postponed for four days--something wrong with the scenery. No hitch in your case! I feel you are on the edge of a triumph.
"Hopes and prayers for the genius.--Yours ever sincerely,
"ADELAIDE SHIFFNEY."
"Susan sends her love--not the universal brand."
Claude read the note, and kept it for a moment in his hand. He was looking at it, but he knew Charmian"s eyes were on him, he knew she was silently asking him to tell her all that had happened between Mrs.
Shiffney and him. And he realized that her curiosity was the offspring of a jealousy which she probably wished to conceal, but which she suffered under even on such a day of anxiety and antic.i.p.ation as this.
"Very kind of her!" he said at last, giving back the note with the box ticket carefully folded between the leaves. "Of course we will go to hear Sennier"s opera. He is coming to ours."
"To yours!"
"Ours!" Claude repeated, with emphasis.
Charmian looked down. Then she went to the writing-table and put Mrs.
Shiffney"s note into one of its little drawers. She pushed the drawer softly. It clicked as it shut. She sighed. Something in the note they had just read made her feel apprehensive. It was almost as if it had given out a subtle exhalation which had affected her physically.
"Claudie!" she said, turning round. "I would give almost anything to be like Susan to-day."
"Would you? But why?"
"She would be able to take it all calmly. She would be able to say to herself--"all this is pa.s.sing, a moment in eternity, whichever way things go my soul will remain unaffected"--something like that. And it would really be so with Susan."
"She certainly carries with her a great calmness."
Charmian gazed at him.
"You are wonderful to-day, too."
Claude had kept up to this moment his dominating, almost bold air of a conqueror of circ.u.mstances, the armor which he had put on as a dress suitable to New York.
"But in quite a different way," she added. "Susan never defies."
Claude was startled by her shrewdness but avoided comment on it.
"Madre must be thinking of us to-day," he said.
"Yes. I thought--I almost expected she would send us a cablegram."
"It may come yet. There"s plenty of time."
Charmian looked at the clock.
"Only four hours before the curtain goes up."
"Or we may find one for us at the theater."
"Somehow I don"t think Madre would send it there."
She went to sit down on the sofa, putting cushions behind her with nervous hands, leaned back, leaned forward, moved the cushions, again leaned back.
"I almost wish we"d asked Alston to come in to-day," she said.
"But he"s resting."
"I know. But he would have come. He could have rested here with us."
"Better for him to keep his voice perfectly quiet. To-night is his debut. He has got to pay back over three years to Crayford with his performance to-night. And we shall have him with us at supper."
Charmian moved again, pushed the cushions away from her.
"Yes, I"ve ordered it, a wonderful supper, all the things you and Alston like best."
"We"ll enjoy it."
"Won"t we? You sent Miss Mardon the flowers?"
"Yes."
The telephone sounded.
"It is Miss Mardon," Claude said, as he listened. "She"s thanking me for the flowers."
"Give her my love and best wishes for to-night."
Claude obeyed, and added his own in a firm and cheerful voice.
"She"s resting, of course," said Charmian.
"Yes."
"Everyone resting. It seems almost ghastly."
"Why?" he said, laughing.
"Oh, I don"t know--death-like. I"m stupid to-day."
She longed to say, "I am full of forebodings!" But she was held back by the thought, "Shall I fail in resolution at the last moment, show the white feather when he is so cool, so master of himself? I who have been such a courageous wife, who have urged him on, who have made this day possible!"
"It"s only the physical reaction," she added hastily. "After all we"ve gone through."
"Oh, we mustn"t give way to reaction yet. We"ve got the big thing in front of us. All the rest is nothing in comparison with to-night."
"I know! I hope Madre will cable. If she doesn"t, it will seem like a bad omen. I shall feel as if she didn"t care what happens."
He said nothing.