"On the contrary; it"s for me, more than for almost any one, to justify my right to being in the world."
"Oh, come now! Don"t let us begin on that."
"I don"t want to begin on it. I"d much rather not. But if you don"t, you throw away the key that explains everything about me."
"All right," he rejoined, in an argumentative tone. "Let"s talk about it, then. Let"s have it out. You feel your position; granted. Mind you, I"ve always said you wouldn"t have done so if it hadn"t been for Gertrude Wayne. The world to-day has too much common sense to lay stress on a circ.u.mstance of that kind. Believe me, n.o.body thinks about it but yourself. Did Lady Bonchurch? Did any of her friends? You"ve got it a little bit--just a little bit--on the brain; and the fault isn"t yours; it belongs to the woman whose soul is gone, I hope, where it"s freed from the rules of a book of etiquette."
"She meant well--"
"Oh, every failure, and bungler, and mischief-maker means well. That"s their charter. I"m not concerned with that. I"m speaking of what she did.
She fixed it in your mind that you were like a sapling sprung from a seed blown outside the orchard. You think you can minimize that accident by bringing forth as good as any to be found within the pale. Consequently you"ve taken a poor, helpless, blind man off the hands of the people whose duty it is to look after him--and who are well able to do it--"
"That isn"t the reason," she declared, flushing. "If Mr. Wayne and I live together it"s because we"re used to each other--and in a way he has taken the place of my father."
"Oh, come now! That"s all very fine. But haven"t you got in the back of your mind the thought that the wild tree that"s known by its good fruit is the one that"s best worth grafting?"
"If I had--" she began, with color deepening.
"If you had, you"d simply be taking a long way round, when there"s a short cut home. I"m the orchard, Miriam. All you"ve got to do is to walk into it--with me."
A warmer tone came into his voice as he uttered the concluding words, adding to her discomfort. She moved the tea-things about, putting them into an unnecessary state of order, before she could reply.
"There"s a reason why I couldn"t do that," she said, meeting his sharp eyes with one of her fugitive glances. "I would have given it to you when--when you brought up this subject last spring, only you didn"t ask me."
"Well, what is it?"
"I couldn"t love you."
She forced herself to bring out the words distinctly. He leaned back in his chair, threw one leg across the other, and stroked the thin, colorless line of his mustache.
"No, I suppose you couldn"t," he said, quietly, after considering her words.
"So that my answer has to be final."
"I don"t see that. Love is only one of the many motives for marriage--and not, as I understand it, the highest one. The divorce courts are strewn with the wrecks of marriages made for love. Those that stand the test of life and time are generally those that have been contracted from some of the more solid--and worthier--motives."
"Then I don"t know what they are."
"I could explain them to you if you"d let me. As for love--if it"s needed at all--I could bring enough into hotch-potch as the phrase goes, to do for two. I"m over fifty years of age. It never occurred to me that you could--care about me--as you might have cared for some one else. But as far as I can see, there"s no one else. If there was, perhaps I shouldn"t persist."
She looked up with sudden determination.
"If there was any one else, you--would consider that as settling the question?"
"I might. I shouldn"t bind myself. It would depend."
"Then I"ll tell you; there _is_ some one else." The words caused her to flush so painfully that she hastened to qualify them. "That is, there might have been."
"What do you mean by--might have been?"
"I mean that, though I don"t say I"ve ever--loved--any man, there was a man I might have loved, if it had been possible."
"And why wasn"t it possible?"
"I"d rather not tell you. It was a long time ago. He went away. He never came back again."
"Did he say he"d come back again?"
She shook her head. She tried to meet his gaze steadily, but it was like facing a search-light.
"Were you what you would call--engaged?"
"Oh no." Her confusion deepened. "There was never anything. It was a long time ago. I only want you to understand that if I could care for any one it would be for him. And if I married you--and he came back--"
"Are you expecting him back?"
She was a long time answering the question. She would not have answered it at all had it not been in the hope of getting rid of him.
"Yes."
He took the declaration coolly, and went on.
"Why? What makes you think he"ll come?"
"I have no reason. I think he will--that"s all."
"Where is he now?"
"I haven"t the faintest idea."
"Hasn"t he ever written to you?"
"Never."
"And you don"t know what"s become of him?"
"Not in the least."
"And yet you expect him back?"
She nodded a.s.sent.
"You"re waiting for him?"
Once more she braced herself to look him in the eyes and answer boldly.
"I am."
He leaned back in his chair and laughed, not loudly, but in good-humored derision.