I'm sorry, Pauline;
but you've been deceived. This man has got to be shown up, and the
Lindons have had the pluck to do what everybody else has shirked."
Pauline's angry colour had faded. She got up and stood before her
husband, distressed and uncertain; then, with a visible effort at
self–command, she seated herself again, and locked her hands about
her gold–mounted bag.
"Then you'd rather the scandal, if there is one, should be paraded
before the world? Who will gain by that except the newspaper
reporters, and the people who want to drag down society? And how
shall you feel if Nona is called as a witness—or Lita?"
"Oh, nonsense—" He stopped abruptly, and got up too. The
discussion was lasting longer than he had intended, and he could
not find the word to end it. His mind felt suddenly empty—empty
of arguments and formulas. "I don't know why you persist in
bringing in Nona—or Lita—"
"I don't; it's you. You will, that is, if you take this case. Bee
and Nona have been intimate since they were babies, and Bee is
always at Lita's. Don't you suppose the Mahatma's lawyers will
make use of that if you OBLIGE him to fight? You may say you're
prepared for it; and I admire your courage—but I can't share it.
The idea that our children may be involved simply sickens me."
"Neither Nona nor Lita has ever had anything to do with this
charlatan and his humbug, as far as I know," said Manford
irritably.
"Nona has attended his eurythmic classes at our house, and gone to
his lectures with me: at one time they interested her intensely."
Pauline paused. "About Lita I don't know: I know so little about
Lita's life before her marriage."
"It was presumably that of any of Nona's other girl friends."
"Presumably. Kitty Landish might enlighten us. But of course, if
it WAS—" he noted her faintly sceptical emphasis—"I don't admit
that that would preclude Lita's having known the Mahatma, or
believed in him. And you must remember, Dexter, that I should be
the most deeply involved of all! I mean to take a rest–cure at
Dawnside in March." She gave the little playful laugh with which
she had been used, in old times, to ridicule the naughtiness of her
children.
Manford drummed on his blotting–pad. "Look here, suppose we drop
this for the present—"
She glanced at her wrist–watch. "If you can spare the time—"
"Spare the time?"
She answered softly: "I'm not going away till you've promised."
Manford could remember the day when that tone—so feminine under
its firmness—would have had the power to shake him. Pauline, in
her wifely dealings, so seldom invoked the prerogative of her
grace, her competence, her persuasiveness, that when she did he had
once found it hard to resist. But that day was past. Under his
admiration for her brains, and his esteem for her character, he had
felt, of late, a stealing boredom. She was too clever, too
efficient, too uniformly sagacious and serene. Perhaps his own
growing sense of power—professional and social—had secretly
undermined his awe of hers, made him feel himself first her equal,
then ever so little her superior. He began to detect something
obtuse in that unfaltering competence. And as his professional
authority grew he had become more jealous of interference with it.
His wife ought at least to have understood that! If her famous
tact were going to fail her, what would be left, he asked himself?
"Look here, Pauline, you know all this is useless. In professional
matters no one else can judge for me. I'm busy this afternoon; I'm
sure you are too—"
She settled more deeply into her armchair. "Never too busy for
you, Dexter."
"Thank you, dear. But the time I ask you to give me is outside of
business hours," he rejoined with a slight smile.
"Then I'm dismissed?" She smiled back. "I understand; you needn't
ring!" She rose with recovered serenity and laid a light hand on
his shoulder. "Sorry to have bothered you; I don't often, do I?
All I ask is that you should think over—"
He lifted the hand to his lips. "Of course, of course." Now that
she was going he could say it.
"I'm forgiven?"
He smiled: "You're forgiven;" and from the threshold she called,
almost gaily: "Don't forget tonight—Amalasuntha!"
His brow clouded as he returned to his chair; and oddly enough—he
was aware of the oddness—it was clouded not by the tiresome scene
he had been through, but by his wife's reminder. "Damn that
dinner," he swore to himself.
He turned to the telephone, unhooked it for the third time, and
called for the same number.
That evening, as he slipped the key into his front–door, Dexter
Manford felt the oppression of all that lay behind it.
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