<h3> XL </h3>
<p>When Mary Zattiany returned home at twelve o'clock after a tiresome
morning in Judge Trent's office she told the butler to send her
luncheon upstairs, and ascended to the seclusion of her room, delighted
with the prospect of a few hours she could call her own. These hours
had been increasing during the past fortnight but were no less welcome.
Not a word of that dinner was known to any but those who had attended
it. People do not foul their own nest unless they are ready to desert
it and sometimes not then. Moreover, the women were too ashamed or too
humiliated with their failure to invite the criticism of their friends,
and although they avoided the subject among themselves, their agreement
to bury it was no less final for being tacit. The men, with something
of the deliberation of male guests at a diplomatic dinner where there
has been an unfortunate incident involving dangerous possibilities if
known, called one another up on the telephone the next day and agreed
to "forget it." Even Dinwiddie never heard of it. As for Madame
Zattiany, she could be trusted to dismiss it from her contemptuous
mind. Nevertheless, these young women, who had entertained her almost
constantly, pointedly omitted her from their luncheons and dinners and
parties—in her new lightheartedness she had been induced to attend
several parties during the past six weeks. And they had little
difficulty in persuading others to follow their example. The more
amiable of the younger women might have looked upon their attack that
night with horror if they had heard of it, as, indeed, several at the
dinner had done, but they were no more enthusiastic over the "foreign
invasion" than their militant sisters. The remonstrances of the men
were unheeded, and when one or two tried to arrange theatre parties or
dinners in Madame Zattiany's honor they received graceful regrets.</p>
<p>Even the attitude of her older friends had changed, now that the
dramatic novelty of her return to them, and their first determined
enthusiasm, had worn off. They were betraying more and more their
disapproval of what she had done, the more so perhaps, as the majority
of them, being excessively thin, might have accomplished a like result
had not their standards protected them. This naturally inspired them
with a full realization of their superiority, which increased daily.</p>
<p>If she had made the attempt and failed it would have been bad enough,
for such violations of the law of orthodoxy insulted the code in which
she had been born and reared: but triumphantly to have succeeded in
making herself young again while the rest of them were pursuing their
unruffled way to the grave was a deliberate insult both to themselves
and to God.</p>
<p>Moreover, they hardly knew what to talk to her about, and although this
might still have been the case had she returned to them carrying aloft
the crinkled and spotted flag of time, so far apart their lines had
run, her scientific victory added an ever-increasing irritant. Also,
she had never been a "woman's woman," and it was patent that, as ever,
she was far more animated in the company of men. Inevitably, old
scandals were raked up. They had been frowned upon in the days when
she was protected by her husband and the great position he gave her,
and the rumors had been dismissed for more interesting scandals, both
public and private, at home. They no doubt would have remained in the
limbo of history had she returned looking no better than themselves,
but her ridiculous defiance of nature revived them, and these ladies
discovered that their memories were more lively than might have been
expected of their years.</p>
<p>It would be too much, as Mary told Clavering, to ask a violent
contradiction of human nature from worn out glands, and she bore them
no malice. She only wondered that Jane Oglethorpe, Elinor Goodrich,
and Lily Tracy were still faithful in private—to the world all of them
preserved a united front; they would not even discuss her with their
children, much less their grandchildren; but they made up their minds
that it would be for the good of her soul to let her see, with no flaw
in their politeness, just what uncompromisingly sensible women of high
moral and social responsibilities thought of her.</p>
<p>Mary, being human, felt the pin-pricks, but was glad on the whole to be
rid of them. Those first weeks of almost girlish pleasure in what was
to her a novel society, had vanished for ever on the night of her
dinner. Scornful and indifferent she might be, but although they could
not kill her youth, they drove home to her what she had guessed in the
beginning, that the society and the companionship of young
people—fashionable young people, at least—were not for her. Their
conversations, interests, shallow mental attitude to life, bored her.
That curious brief period of mental rejuvenescence had been due to the
novelty and excitement of being in love again, after long and arid
years.</p>
<p>And now, Judge Trent had told her that she would be free to leave in a
fortnight. She had walked the three miles from Broad Street with a
buoyant step, and she had vowed that never, not for any consideration
whatever, would she set foot in America again. Vienna was the city of
her heart as well as of her future exploits. She would buy the old
Zattiany palace from her widowed niece-in-law and make it the most
famous rendezvous in Europe. But of all this nothing to Clavering
until they were in the Dolomites.</p>
<p>She rang for her maid and exchanged her tweed walking suit for a tea
gown of violet velvet and snow white chiffon, with stockings and
slippers to match. She expected no one but it was always a delight to
her to be exquisitely and becomingly dressed. Even in the seclusion of
her Hungarian estate she had arrayed herself as appropriately for
outdoors, and as fastidiously for the house, as if she had been under
the critical eye of her world, for daintiness and luxury were as
ingrained as ordinary cleanliness and refinement. During the war she
had not rebelled at her hard and unremitting labors, but she had often
indulged in a fleeting regret for the frequent luxury of the bath, the
soft caress of delicate underwear, for charming toilettes; and she had
sometimes scowled at her white cotton stockings with a feeling of
positive hatred.</p>
<p>Judge Trent, while she was still in Austria, had sent her a cheque for
forty thousand dollars. She had given half of it to relief
organizations in Vienna, and then gone to Paris and indulged in an orgy
of clothes. She looked back upon that wholly feminine reversion, when
she had avoided every one she had ever known, as one of the completely
satisfactory episodes of her life. Even with unrestored youth and
beauty, and a soberer choice of costumes, she would still have
experienced a certain degree of excited pleasure in adorning herself.</p>
<p>She had always liked the light freshness of chintz in her bedroom,
leaving luxury to her boudoir; but here she had furnished no boudoir;
her stay was to be short, and her bedroom was as large as two ordinary
rooms. She spent many hours in it, when its violet and white
simplicities appealed to her mood. Today it was redolent of the lilacs
Clavering had sent her, and through the open windows came the singing
of birds in the few trees still left in the old street.</p>
<p>She loved comfort as much as she loved exercise, and after her careful
toilette was finished and her maid had gone, she settled herself
luxuriously in a deep chair before her desk and opened one of the
drawers. The European mail had arrived yesterday and she had only
glanced through half of it. But she must read all of those letters
today and answer some of them before the sailings on Saturday.</p>
<p>The telephone on a little stand at her elbow rang, and she took the
receiver from its spreading violet skirts and raised it to her ear. As
she had expected, it was Clavering. He told her that he had promised
Gora Dwight the evening before to ask her permission to announce their
engagement.</p>
<p>For a moment she stared into the instrument. Then she said hurriedly,
almost breathlessly: "No—I'd rather not. I hate the vulgarity of
congratulations—publicity of my private affairs. I've always said
that when one marries a second time the decent thing to do is to marry
first and tell afterward."</p>
<p>"But they guess it, you know."</p>
<p>"That is quite different." It was Madame Zattiany who spoke now and
her tones were deliberate and final. "Quite a different thing from
being congratulated, and tormented by newspapers." She dismissed the
subject. "I shall be free two weeks from today. What do you think of
that?" Her voice was both gay and tender. "Judge Trent will see at
once about engaging my stateroom. Don't tell me that that play of
yours will prevent you from following shortly after."</p>
<p>"Not a bit of it. We shall only be gone two months, and even if
Hogarth succeeds in placing it with his manager as he expects, it might
be several months before rehearsals."</p>
<p>"Then it all fits in quite charmingly. You are coming to dinner
tonight?"</p>
<p>"Well, rather."</p>
<p>"Mind you come early. I have many things to tell you."</p>
<p>"It'll not be for that I'll come early."</p>
<p>Mary smiled and hung up the receiver. She would have to let him return
to New York for a time—possibly. But herself, she would go on to
Vienna. No doubt about that.</p>
<p>She returned to her letters. Those that required answers she placed in
a separate heap with a pencilled note on the back, for she was neat and
methodical; she even slit the envelopes with a paper-knife that was
always at hand for the purpose, and the envelopes were dropped at once
into the waste basket.</p>
<p>The contents for the most part were expected, and related to her work
in Vienna, the disposition of moneys she had sent over, and the usual
clamoring for more. But when she had read halfway through a long
letter from Baroness Tauersperg, in whose capable hands she had left
the most important of her charities, she involuntarily stiffened and
sat forward a little.</p>
<p>Several pages of her friend's letters were always devoted to business,
the rest to gossip. In return Mary enlivened her own letters with many
of her American adventures, although she had made no mention of
Clavering.</p>
<p>"I need not ask if you remember Hohenhauer," continued Frau von
Tauersperg, "although, I suppose, like the rest of us, you saw nothing
of him after the war. He was, as you know, not in bad standing with
the new Government, like the reactionary nobles, as he had always been
a liberal in politics, and had a good record as a generous and just
landlord. But they did not have intelligence enough to ask him to be a
member of the Cabinet, or to send him to the Peace Conference, where he
alone, of all Austrians, perhaps, might have won some advantage for
this wretched country.</p>
<p>"The present Government seems to have appreciated that initial mistake
of ignoring him, for they have invited him to return from his estate in
Switzerland, where he has been staying, and to act in some advisory
capacity. That means, we think here, that he will soon have the whole
thing in his hands. The first step he took was to pay a visit to
Bavaria and have a conference with Count L., and no doubt you will
surmise what that means. He went incognito, however, and few people
even here in Vienna know of that visit, much less the rest of Europe.
Very shortly he goes to America, whether for reasons connected with his
sudden interest in Bavaria, I have no means of knowing, but ostensibly
because his New York lawyers demand his presence in regard to the large
sum of money he invested in the United States. The Government makes no
objection to this journey, as you may imagine, for they know they can
depend on him to spend it in the cause of Austria—under his
leadership! Imagine what it will mean to have the income of several
million American dollars rolling in to be exchanged for Austrian
kronen! Or the capital, if he thinks the end justifies it.</p>
<p>"No doubt you will see him, for he always had the greatest respect for
your opinion—was it not you who advised him to sell out practically
everything he possessed, except the land in Galicia, and invest it in
America? I have no doubt he will confide in you and ask your advice.
You have a wonderful flair for politics, dear Marie, and you know what
we all expect of you. Hurry, hurry and come back to us. We need you
in a thousand ways. But what a rest that sojourn in the gay and
brilliant and <i>rich</i> city of New York must have given you. It is both
wonderful and saddening to read of the almost unbelievable contrast to
our poor Vienna. But they are generous. The second cheque from your
Vienna Fund came yesterday. Do leave the <i>oeuvre</i> in reliable and
sympathetic hands, dear Marie, so that it may go on until—well, God
only knows when."</p>
<p>Mary read this portion of the letter over twice, the serenity of her
face routed by a frown. Of course she had expected to meet this man in
the future, indeed had had a very definite idea of playing his cards
immediately upon her return to Vienna. But that he should come here!
Now. That was another matter. She had succeeded in dismissing the
past, and she resented this dark reminder. Well, she could refuse to
see him, and possibly he would not arrive until after her departure.
And then she sighed again. The futility of attempting to travel
through even one brief cross-section of life on a straight line!</p>
<p>Her luncheon was brought up to her and when it was finished she
answered her letters and settled down to the latest novel of one of her
new friends. But Gora Dwight was announced and she put the book aside
with a sensation of pleasant anticipation. She liked no one better, of
her new American acquaintances, and had made no objection when
Clavering had asked her to let him confide his engagement to Gora
Dwight alone. He felt that he owed her the compliment (how he was to
obtain the forgiveness of Mrs. Oglethorpe was a thought he dared not
dwell on), and Mary, little disposed as she was to intimacies, had felt
a certain release in speaking of her engagement to another woman.</p>
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