<h3> XXXV </h3>
<p>When Mary Zattiany had reached her bedroom on Sunday morning she had
leaned heavily on her dressing-table for a few moments, staring into
the mirror. Then she curled her lip and shrugged her shoulders. Well,
it was done. She had been as bald and uncompromising as she knew how
to be. A picturesque softening of details, pleas to understand, and
appeals to the man's sympathy, might be for other women but not for
her. Life had given her a respect for hard facts and an utter contempt
for the prevalent dodging of them.</p>
<p>She had told him that she was determined to relate her story in full as
much for his sake as her own. But she had told it far more for her
own. Before going any farther she was determined to know this man, who
may only have intoxicated her, as thoroughly as it was possible for a
woman to know any man she had not lived with. If he met the test she
could be reasonably sure that for once she had made no mistake. If he
did not—well, perhaps, so much the better. Surely she had had more
than her share of love, and she had something to do in the world of
vastly greater importance than wasting time in a man's arms. And did
she really want passion in her life again? She with her young body and
her old mind! Did she?</p>
<p>She recalled those brief moments of complete and ecstatic surrender.
Or tried to recall them. She was very tired. Perhaps she might dream
about them, but at the moment they seemed as far away as her first
youth.</p>
<p>She awoke the next day only in time to dress and go to Mrs. Ruyler's
for luncheon. She attended a concert in the afternoon, and she did not
return from the Lawrences' until midnight. On Monday she lunched with
Mrs. Vane and brought "Harry" and Mr. Dinwiddie home with her. She
would give herself no time to think and brood. She was too wise to
harden her heart against him by bitter fancies that might be as
bitterly unjust, and assuredly she had no intention of meeting disaster
weakened by romantic castle-building. Not she. Let events take their
course. Whatever came, she had the strength to meet it.</p>
<p>As Clavering entered the library she was standing by the hearth, one
hand on the mantelshelf. Her repose was absolute as she turned her
head. In her eyes was an insolent expression, a little mocking, a
little challenging. There was no trace of apprehension. As she saw
Clavering's angry face her brows lifted.</p>
<p>"What did you let those fellows in for?" he demanded, glaring at her
from the door. "You set this hour for our meeting and I just missed
finding them here in this room. I should have thought you would have
wanted to be alone before I came——"</p>
<p>And then for a moment Mary Zattiany's mind felt as young as her body.
It seemed to her that she heard ruins tumbling behind her, down and out
of sight. Her head felt light and she grasped the mantel for support;
but she was not too dazed to realize that Clavering was in anything but
a love-making mood, and she managed to steady her voice and reply
lightly:</p>
<p>"I lunched with Polly Vane, and her devoted son was hanging 'round.
Mr. Dinwiddie was also at the luncheon, and as they both walked home
with me I could do no less than ask them in for a moment. But I never
have the least difficulty getting rid of people."</p>
<p>"Ah!" He continued to stand staring at her, and, as he had
anticipated, he saw only Mary Zattiany. As far as he was concerned
Mary Ogden had never existed. But he still felt no immediate desire to
touch her. He came over and stood opposite her on the hearthrug, his
hands in his pockets.</p>
<p>"What have you been through?" he asked abruptly. "I've been through
hell."</p>
<p>"So I imagined," she said drily. "I can't say I've been through hell.
I've grown too philosophical for that! I have thought as little as
possible. I left it on the knees of the gods."</p>
<p>There certainly was neither despair nor doubt in that vital voice of
hers as she looked at him, and she was smiling. He twitched his
shoulders under those understanding eyes and turned his own to the fire
with a frown.</p>
<p>"I don't believe you had a moment of misgiving. You were too sure of
me."</p>
<p>"Oh, no, I was not! I know life too well to be sure of anything, mon
ami. Unlike that nice Vane boy, you have imagination and I gave you
some hard swallowing. Poor boy, I'm afraid you've been choking ever
since——"</p>
<p>"Don't 'poor boy' me. I won't have it. I feel a thousand years old."
He glared at her once more. "You are sure of me now—and quite
right … but I don't feel in the least like kissing you.… I've
barely slept and I feel like the devil."</p>
<p>For the first time in many days she felt an inclination to throw back
her head and give vent to a joyous laugh—joyous but amused, for she
would always be Mary Zattiany. But she merely said: "My dear Lee, I
could not stand being made love to at four in the afternoon. It is not
aesthetic. Suppose we sit down. Tell me all about it."</p>
<p>"I'll not tell you a thing." But he took the chair and lit a
cigarette. "I'm more in love with you than ever, if you want to know.
When will you marry me?"</p>
<p>"Shall we say two months from today?"</p>
<p>"Two months! Why not tomorrow?"</p>
<p>"Oh, hardly. In the first place I'd like it all to be quite perfect,
and I'd dreamed of spending our honeymoon in the Dolomites. I've a
shooting box there on the shore of a wonderful lake. I used to stay
there quite alone after my guests had left.… And then—well, it
would hardly be fair to give New York two shocks in succession. They
all take for granted I'll marry some one—I am already engaged to Mr.
Osborne, although I have heard you alluded to meaningly—but better let
them talk the first sensation to rags.… They will be angry enough
with me for marrying a young man, but perhaps too relieved that I have
not carried off one of their own sons.… Polly is in agonies at
the present moment … we'll have to live in New York more or less—I
suppose?"</p>
<p>"More or less? Altogether. My work is here."</p>
<p>"I believe there is more work for both of us in Europe."</p>
<p>"And do you imagine I'd live on your money? I've nothing but what I
make."</p>
<p>"I could pull wires and get you into one of the embassies——"</p>
<p>"I'm no diplomat, and don't want to be. Rotten lazy job."</p>
<p>"Couldn't you be foreign correspondent for your newspaper?"</p>
<p>"We've good men in every European capital now. They've no use for
more, and no excuse for displacing any of them. Besides, I've every
intention of being a playwright."</p>
<p>"But playwrighting isn't—not really—quite as important as poor
Europe. And I know of several ways in which we could be of the
greatest possible use. Not only Austria——"</p>
<p>"Perhaps. But you'll have to wait until I've made money on at least
one play. I'll be only too glad to spend the honeymoon in the
Dolomites, but then I return and go to work. You'll have to make up
your mind to live here for a year or two at least. And the sooner you
marry me, the sooner we can go to Europe to live—for a time. I've no
intention of living my life in Europe. But I'm only too willing to
help you. So—better marry me tomorrow."</p>
<p>"I can't get away for at least two months—possibly not then. Ask
Judge Trent. And a honeymoon in New York would be too flat—not?"</p>
<p>"Better than nothing … however—here's an idea. I'll get to work
on my play at once and maybe I can finish it before I leave. If it
went over big I could stay longer. Besides, it'll be something to boil
over into; I don't suppose I shall see any too much of you. What's
your idea? To set all the young men off their heads and imagine you
are Mary Ogden once more? It <i>would</i> be a triumph. I've an idea
that's what you are up to."</p>
<p>"Certainly not," she said angrily. "How trivial you must think me.
I've not the least intention of going to dancing parties. I should be
bored to death. I hardly knew what young Vane was talking about today.
He seems to speak a different language from the men of my time. But it
is only decent that I bore myself at luncheons and dinners, for my old
friends have behaved with the utmost loyalty and generosity. Jane
Oglethorpe would have been quite justified in never speaking to me
again, and I have violated the most sacred traditions of the others.
But it has not made the least difference. Besides, I must keep them up
to the mark. I have their promise to form a committee for the children
of Austria."</p>
<p>"Well, that's that. We'll marry two months from today. I can finish
my play in that time, and I won't wait a day longer."</p>
<p>"Very well.… I met Marian Lawrence the other day. I'm told you
were expected to marry her at one time. She is very beautiful and has
more subtlety than most American women. Why didn't you?"</p>
<p>"Because she wasn't you, I suppose. Did she stick a little bejewelled
gold pin into you?"</p>
<p>"Only with her eyes. She made me feel quite the age I had left behind
me in Vienna." And then she asked irresistibly, "Do you think you
would have fallen in love with me, after a much longer and better
opportunity to know me, if you—if we had met in Vienna before that
time?"</p>
<p>"No, I should not. What a question! I should have loved you in one
way as I do now—with that part of me that worships you. But men are
men, and never will be demi-gods."</p>
<p>This time she did laugh, and until tears were in her eyes. "Oh, Lee!
No wonder I fell in love with you. Any other man—well, I couldn't
have loved you. My soul was too old." And then her eyes widened as
she stared before her. "Perhaps——"</p>
<p>He sprang to his feet and pulled her up from her chair. "None of that.
None of that. And now I do want to kiss you."</p>
<p>And as Mary Zattiany never did anything by halves she was completely
happy, and completely young.</p>
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