Anna stood in the middle of the room,
her eyes on the door. Darrow’s questioning
gaze was still on her, and she said to herself with
a quick-drawn breath: “If only he doesn’t
come near me!”
It seemed to her that she had been
suddenly endowed with the fatal gift of reading the
secret sense of every seemingly spontaneous look and
movement, and that in his least gesture of affection
she would detect a cold design.
For a moment longer he continued to
look at her enquiringly; then he turned away and took
up his habitual stand by the mantel-piece. She
drew a deep breath of relief .
“Won’t you please explain?” he said.
“I can’t explain:
I don’t know. I didn’t even know—till
she told you—that she really meant to break
her engagement. All I know is that she came to
me just now and said she wished to leave Givre today;
and that Owen, when he heard of it—for
she hadn’t told him—at once accused
her of going away with the secret intention of throwing
him over.”
“And you think it’s a
definite break?” She perceived, as she spoke,
that his brow had cleared.
“How should I know? Perhaps you can tell
me.”
“I?” She fancied his face
clouded again, but he did not move from his tranquil
attitude.
“As I told you,” she went
on, “Owen has worked himself up to imagining
that for some mysterious reason you’ve influenced
Sophy against him.”
Darrow still visibly wondered.
“It must indeed be a mysterious reason!
He knows how slightly I know Miss Viner. Why
should he imagine anything so wildly improbable?”
“I don’t know that either.”
“But he must have hinted at some reason.”
“No: he admits he doesn’t
know your reason. He simply says that Sophy’s
manner to him has changed since she came back to Givre
and that he’s seen you together several times—in
the park, the spring-house, I don’t know where—talking
alone in a way that seemed confidential—almost
secret; and he draws the preposterous conclusion that
you’ve used your influence to turn her against
him.”
“My influence? What kind of influence?”
“He doesn’t say.”
Darrow again seemed to turn over the
facts she gave him. His face remained grave,
but without the least trace of discomposure.
“And what does Miss Viner say?”
“She says it’s perfectly
natural that she should occasionally talk to my friends
when she’s under my roof— and refuses
to give him any other explanation.”
“That at least is perfectly natural!”
Anna felt her cheeks flush as she
answered: “Yes—but there is
something——”
“Something——?”
“Some reason for her sudden
decision to break her engagement. I can understand
Owen’s feeling, sorry as I am for his way of
showing it. The girl owes him some sort of explanation,
and as long as she refuses to give it his imagination
is sure to run wild.”
“She would have given it, no
doubt, if he d asked it in a different tone.”
“I don’t defend Owen’s
tone—but she knew what it was before she
accepted him. She knows he’s excitable
and undisciplined.”
“Well, she’s been disciplining
him a little—probably the best thing that
could happen. Why not let the matter rest there?”
“Leave Owen with the idea that
you have been the cause of the break?”
He met the question with his easy
smile. “Oh, as to that— leave
him with any idea of me he chooses! But leave
him, at any rate, free.”
“Free?” she echoed in surprise.
“Simply let things be.
You’ve surely done all you could for him and
Miss Viner. If they don’t hit it off it’s
their own affair. What possible motive can you
have for trying to interfere now?”
Her gaze widened to a deeper wonder.
“Why—naturally, what he says of
you!”
“I don’t care a straw
what he says of me! In such a situation a boy
in love will snatch at the most far-fetched reason
rather than face the mortifying fact that the lady
may simply be tired of him.”
“You don t quite understand
Owen. Things go deep with him, and last long.
It took him a long time to recover from his other
unlucky love affair. He’s romantic and
extravagant: he can’t live on the interest
of his feelings. He worships Sophy and she seemed
to be fond of him. If she’s changed it’s
been very sudden. And if they part like this,
angrily and inarticulately, it will hurt him horribly—hurt
his very soul. But that, as you say, is between
the two. What concerns me is his associating
you with their quarrel. Owen’s like my
own son—if you’d seen him when I first
came here you’d know why. We were like
two prisoners who talk to each other by tapping on
the wall. He’s never forgotten it, nor
I. Whether he breaks with Sophy, or whether they make
it up, I can’t let him think you had anything
to do with it.”
She raised her eyes entreatingly to
Darrow’s, and read in them the forbearance of
the man resigned to the discussion of non-existent
problems.
“I’ll do whatever you
want me to,” he said; “but I don’t
yet know what it is.”
His smile seemed to charge her with
inconsequence, and the prick to her pride made her
continue: “After all, it’s not so
unnatural that Owen, knowing you and Sophy to be almost
strangers, should wonder what you were saying to each
other when he saw you talking together.”
She felt a warning tremor as she spoke,
as though some instinct deeper than reason surged
up in defense of its treasure. But Darrow’s
face was unstirred save by the flit of his half-amused
smile.
“Well, my dear—and
couldn’t you have told him?” “I?”
she faltered out through her blush.
“You seem to forget, one and
all of you, the position you put me in when I came
down here: your appeal to me to see Owen through,
your assurance to him that I would, Madame de Chantelle’s
attempt to win me over; and most of all, my own sense
of the fact you’ve just recalled to me:
the importance, for both of us, that Owen should like
me. It seemed to me that the first thing to
do was to get as much light as I could on the whole
situation; and the obvious way of doing it was to
try to know Miss Viner better. Of course I’ve
talked with her alone—I’ve talked
with her as often as I could. I’ve tried
my best to find out if you were right in encouraging
Owen to marry her.”
She listened with a growing sense
of reassurance, struggling to separate the abstract
sense of his words from the persuasion in which his
eyes and voice enveloped them.
“I see—I do see,” she murmured.
“You must see, also, that I
could hardly say this to Owen without offending him
still more, and perhaps increasing the breach between
Miss Viner and himself. What sort of figure should
I cut if I told him I’d been trying to find out
if he’d made a proper choice? In any case,
it’s none of my business to offer an explanation
of what she justly says doesn’t need one.
If she declines to speak, it’s obviously on
the ground that Owen’s insinuations are absurd;
and that surely pledges me to silence.”
“Yes, yes! I see,”
Anna repeated. “But I don’t want
you to explain anything to Owen.”
“You haven’t yet told me what you do want.”
She hesitated, conscious of the difficulty
of justifying her request; then: “I want
you to speak to Sophy,” she said.
Darrow broke into an incredulous laugh.
“Considering what my previous attempts have
resulted in——!”
She raised her eyes quickly.
“They haven’t, at least, resulted in
your liking her less, in your thinking less well of
her than you’ve told me?”
She fancied he frowned a little.
“I wonder why you go back to that?”
“I want to be sure—I
owe it to Owen. Won’t you tell me the
exact impression she’s produced on you?”
“I have told you—I like Miss Viner.”
“Do you still believe she’s in love with
Owen?”
“There was nothing in our short
talks to throw any particular light on that.”
“You still believe, though,
that there’s no reason why he shouldn’t
marry her?”
Again he betrayed a restrained impatience.
“How can I answer that without knowing her
reasons for breaking with him?”
“That’s just what I want
you to find out from her.”
“And why in the world should she tell me?”
“Because, whatever grievance
she has against Owen, she can certainly have none
against me. She can’t want to have Owen
connect me in his mind with this wretched quarrel;
and she must see that he will until he’s convinced
you’ve had no share in it.”
Darrow’s elbow dropped from
the mantel-piece and he took a restless step or two
across the room. Then he halted before her.
“Why can’t you tell her this yourself?”
“Don’t you see?”
He eyed her intently, and she pressed
on: “You must have guessed that Owen’s
jealous of you.”
“Jealous of me?” The blood flew up under
his brown skin.
“Blind with it—what
else would drive him to this folly? And I can’t
have her think me jealous too! I’ve said
all I could, short of making her think so; and she’s
refused a word more to either of us. Our only
chance now is that she should listen to you—that
you should make her see the harm her silence may do.”
Darrow uttered a protesting exclamation.
“It’s all too preposterous—what
you suggest! I can’t, at any rate, appeal
to her on such a ground as that!”
Anna laid her hand on his arm.
“Appeal to her on the ground that I’m
almost Owen’s mother, and that any estrangement
between you and him would kill me. She knows
what he is— she’ll understand.
Tell her to say anything, do anything, she wishes;
but not to go away without speaking, not to leave
that between us when she goes!”
She drew back a step and lifted her
face to his, trying to look into his eyes more deeply
than she had ever looked; but before she could discern
what they expressed he had taken hold of her hands
and bent his head to kiss them.
“You’ll see her?
You’ll see her?” she entreated; and he
answered: “I’ll do anything in the
world you want me to.”