The doctor was still very busy but
he returned to the hotel four times a day and gave
her small doses of whatever liquor she demanded.
In a short time he diluted them with Napa Soda water.
She was always pacing the room when he entered and
looked at him like a wild animal at bay. But
she never mentioned Masters’ name, even when
her nerves whipped her suddenly to hysterics; and
although he sometimes thought he should go mad with
the horror of it all, he had faith in his method,
and in her own pride, as soon as the first torments
wore down. She refused to walk out of doors or
to wear anything but a dressing gown; she took her
slender meals in her room.
But Madeleine’s sufferings were
more mental than physical, although she was willing
the doctor should form the natural conclusion.
She was possessed by the fear that a cure would be
forced upon her; she was indifferent even to the taste
of liquor, and had merely preferred it formerly to
bitter or nauseous tonics; in Society it had been a
necessary stimulant, when her strength began to fail,
nothing more. After her grim decision she had
forced large quantities down her throat by sheer strength
of will. But she had found the result all that
she had expected, she had alternated between exhilaration
and oblivion, and was sure that it was killing her
by inches. Now, she could indulge in neither
wild imaginings nor forget. And if he cured her!—but
her will when she chose to exert it was as strong as
his, and her resource seldom failed her.
One day in her eternal pacing she
paused and stared at the keyhole of the cupboard,
then took a hairpin from her head and tried to pick
the lock. It was large and complicated and she
could do nothing with it. She glanced at the
clock. The doctor would not return for an hour.
She dressed hastily and went out and bought a lump
of soft wax. She took an impress of the keyhole
and waited with what patience she could summon until
her husband had come and gone. Then she went out
again. The next day she had the key and that night
she needed no valerian.
Doctor Talbot paced the parlor himself
until morning. But he did not despair. He
had had not dissimilar experiences before. He
removed his supplies to the cellar of the hotel and
carried a flask in his pocket from which he measured
her daily drams.
The same chambermaid had been on her
floor for years, and was devoted to her. She
sent her out for gin on one pretext or another, although
the woman was not deceived for a moment; she had “seen
how it was” long since. But she was middle-aged,
Irish, and sympathetic. If the poor lady had
sorrows let her drown them.
Madeleine was more wary this time.
She told her husband she was determined to take her
potions only at noon and at night; in the daytime
she restrained herself after four o’clock, although
she took enough to keep up her spirits at the dinner-table
to which she had thought it best to return.
The doctor, thankful, no longer neglected
his practice, and left immediately after dinner for
the Club as she went to her room at once and locked
the door. There was no doubt of her hostility,
but that, too, was not unnatural, and he was content
to wait.
Society returned to town, but she
flatly refused to enter it. Nor would she receive
any one who called. The doctor remonstrated in
vain. He trusted her perfectly and a glass of
champagne at dinner would not hurt her. If she
expected to become quite herself again she must have
diversions. She was leading an unnatural life.
She deigned no answer.
He warned her that tongues would wag.
He had met several of the women during the summer
and told them her lungs were healed…. No doubt
he had been over-anxious, mistaken—in the
beginning. He wished he had given her a tonic
of iron arsenic and strychnine, alternated with cod-liver
oil. But it was too late for regrets, and at least
she was well on the road to recovery; if she snubbed
people now they would take their revenge when she
would be eager for the pleasures of Society again.
Madeleine laughed aloud.
“But, my dear, this is only
a passing phase. Of course your system is depressed
but that will wear off, and what you need now, even
more than brandy twice a day, is a mental tonic.
By the way, don’t you think you might leave
it off now?”
“No, I do not. If my system
is depressed I’d go to pieces altogether without
it.”
“I’ll give you a regular tonic—”
“I’ll not take it. You are not disposed
to use force, I imagine.”
“No, I cannot do that.
But you’ll accept these invitations—some
of them?” He indicated a pile of square envelopes
on the table. He had opened them but she had
not given them a passing glance.
“Society would have the effect
of arresting my ‘cure.’ I hate it.
If you force me to go out I’ll drink too much
and disgrace you.”
“But what shall I tell them?”
he asked in despair. “I see some of them
every day and they’ll quiz my head off.
They can’t suspect the truth, of course, but—but—”
he paused and his ruddy face turned a deep brick red.
He had never mentioned Masters’ name to her since
he announced his impending departure, but he was desperate.
“They’ll think you’re pining, that’s
what! That you won’t go out because you
take no interest in any one but Langdon Masters.”
She was standing by the window with
her back to him, looking down into the street.
She turned and met his eyes squarely.
“That would be quite true,” she said.
“You do not mean that!”
“I have never forgotten him
for a moment and I never shall as long as I live.”
She averted her eyes from his pallid face but went
on remorselessly. “If you had been merciful
you would have let me die when I was so ill.
But you showed me another way, and now you would take
even that from me.”
“Do—do you mean to say that you tried
to drink yourself to death?”
“Yes, I mean that. And
if you really cared for me you would let me do it
now.”
“That I’ll never do,”
he cried violently. “I’ll cure you
and you’ll get over this damned nonsense in
time.”
“I never shall get over it.
Don’t delude yourself for an instant.”
He stared at her with a sickening
sense of impotence—and despair. He
thought she had never looked more beautiful. She
wore a graceful wrapper of pale blue camel’s
hair and her long hair in two pendent braids.
She was very white and she looked as cold and remote
as the moon.
“Madeleine! Madeleine!
You have changed so completely! I cannot believe
that you’ll never be the same Madeleine again.
Why—you—you look as if you were
not there at all!”
“Only my shell is here. The real me is
with him.”
“Curse the man! Curse him!
Curse him! I wish I’d blown out his brains!”
He threw his arms about wildly and she wondered if
he would strike her. But he threw himself into
a chair and burst into heavy sobbing. Madeleine
ran out of the room.