<h2><SPAN name="XI" id="XI">XI</SPAN><br/> <small>THE CEDARCROFT SET</small></h2></div>
<p class="cap">Miss Loring had no engagements for the evening,
and excusing herself to her family, spent it
alone in her room, where for a long while she
sat or walked the floor, in dire distress, her faculties
benumbed like those of a person who has suffered a calamitous
grief or a physical violence. Sentence by sentence
she slowly rehearsed the conversation of which she had
been the subject, seeking vainly for some phrase that
might lead her into the paths of comprehension and peace.
The thought of Coleman Van Duyn loomed large, indeed,
but another figure loomed larger. She was new to the
world of men, of men of the world, such as she had met
since she had been in New York, but it had never occurred
to her to believe that there could be a person so base as
Philip Gallatin. He weakened her faith in herself and in
all the world. The dishonor he had offered her had been
enough without this added insult to the memory of it.
Downtown they were using her name scurrilously in the
same breath with that of Phil Gallatin, speaking her name
lightly as they spoke of—of other women they couldn’t
respect. Phil Gallatin’s name and hers! It was the
more bitter, because in her heart she now knew that she
had given him more of her thoughts than any man had
ever had before. Oh, what kind of a world was this into
which she had come, which was made up of men who
held their own honor and the honor of the women of their
own kind so lightly? People received him, she knew. She<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</SPAN></span>
had even heard of his being at the Suydams on an evening
when she had been there. She had not seen him, and
thanked God for that; for since their meeting in the
Park, some weeks ago, her conscience had troubled her
more than once, and her heart had had curious phases of
uncertainty. “What if what he had said about his own
dependence on her were true?” She had questioned herself,
“What if,” as in a few unrelated moments of moral
irresponsibility she had madly speculated, “what if he
really loved her as he said he did—and that his mad
moment in the woods—<em>their</em> mad moment, as she had
even fearfully acknowledged, was only the supreme expression
of that reality?” He had solemnly sworn that
he had kept the faith—that since that afternoon in the
woods he had not broken it. She saw his dark eyes now
and the animal-like look of irresolution which had been in
them when she had turned away and left him.</p>
<p>Could this man they were talking of in the clubs
who gibed at the virtue of women to make a good story,
be the same smiling fugitive of the north woods, the man
with the laugh of a boy, the tenderness of a woman and
the strength of moral fiber to battle for her as he had
done against the odds of the wilderness? It was unbelievable.
And yet how could Coleman Van Duyn have
repeated the story if he had not heard it? There was
no reply for that. Weary at last, trying to reconcile
the two irreconcilable facts, she fell into a fit of nervous
tears at the end of which, relaxed and utterly exhausted,
she sank to sleep.</p>
<p>Even then, though reason slept, her imagination had
no rest, and she dreamed, one vision predominant—that
of a tall figure who carried upon his back the carcass
of a deer, his somber eyes peering over his shoulder at a
shadow which followed him in the underbrush. But when<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</SPAN></span>
she spoke to the figure it smiled and the shadow behind
disappeared. In her dream, she found this a curious
phenomenon, and when the shadow returned, as it presently
did, she spoke again. The shadow vanished and
the smile appeared on the face of the man with the burden.
Several times she repeated this experiment and each time
the same thing happened. But in a moment the shadow
formed into a definite shape, the bulky shape of Coleman
Van Duyn it seemed, and growing larger as it came,
closed in over them both. This time when she tried to
speak, her lips would utter no sound. She awoke suffocating,
and sat up in bed, gasping for breath. She
looked about her and gave a long sigh of relief, for day
had broken and the cool dawn was filtering through the
warm flowered pattern on her window hangings, flooding
the room with a rosy light.</p>
<p>That shadow! It had been so tangible, so real that
she had fought at it with her bare hands when it had
descended above Phil Gallatin’s head! She lay awhile
looking up at the painted ceiling, her eyes wide open,
fearing that she might sleep again and the dream return;
and then, without ringing for her maid, got out of bed
abruptly, slipping her small feet into fur-lined room-slippers
and putting on a flowered kimono. She was angry
at herself for having dreams that could not be explained.</p>
<p>What right had Phil Gallatin’s image to persist in her
thoughts, even when she slept? And what did the vision
mean? The shadow must be the shadow that had ever
followed the Gallatins, and yet it looked like Coley Van
Duyn! She laughed outright, and the sound of her voice
echoed strangely in her ears. She had thought the shadow
ominous, but she could laugh now because it looked like
Coley!</p>
<p>She drew her bath and peered out of the window at<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</SPAN></span>
the sunlight. Familiar sounds and sights reassured her,
and with her plunge came rehabilitation, physical and
mental. Poor Coley! How jealous he was, and how unghostlike!
So jealous, perhaps, that he had lied to her!
The thought of the possibility of this moral turpitude
caused her to pause in the midst of her toilet and smile at
her reflection in the mirror. It was a gay little smile
which seemed out of place on the pale image which confronted
her. She drew back her curtains and the morning
sunlight streamed into the room bringing life and good
cheer. No, she would not—could not believe what Coley
had told of Philip Gallatin.</p>
<p>She dressed quickly, and before her astonished maid
had her eyes open, had found the dog, Chicot, downstairs,
and was out in the frosty air breasting the keen north
wind in the Avenue. It was Kee-way-din that kissed her
brow, Kee-way-din that brought the flush of health and
youth into her cheeks, the breath of Kee-way-din which
came with a winter message of hopefulness from the distant
north woods. Chicot was joyful, too, and bounded
like a harlequin along the walk and into the reaches of
the Park. This was an unusual privilege for him, for his
mistress carried not even a leash, and he was bent on
making the most of his opportunities. He seemed to be
aware that only business of unusual importance would
take her out at this hour of the day, and came back barking
and whining his sympathy and encouragement. Like
most jesters, Chicot was foolish, but he had a heart under
his Eton jacket, and he took pains that she should know it.</p>
<p>Chicot’s philosophy cleared the atmosphere. Her
course of action now seemed surprisingly clear to Jane.
Philip Gallatin being no more and no less to her than any
other man, deserved exactly the consideration to which
her gratitude entitled him, deserved the punishment which<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</SPAN></span>
fitted the crime—precisely the punishment which she had
given him. If they met, she would simply ignore him as
she did other men to whom she was indifferent, and she
thought that she could trust herself to manage the rest
if, indeed, her rebuff had not already made her intentions
clear to Gallatin. Refusing to meet him or cutting him in
public would only draw attention and give him an importance
with which she was far from willing to invest him.
If, as she had said, he was not responsible for his actions,
he was a very unfortunate young man, and deserved her
pity as much as her condemnation; and it was obvious
that he could not be more responsible for his actions in
New York than elsewhere. She still refused to believe
that her name had passed his lips, for of his honor in all
things save one, reason as well as instinct now assured
her.</p>
<p>The story of Coleman Van Duyn’s no longer persisted.
In spite of herself she made a mental picture of the two
men, and Van Duyn suffered in the comparison. Coley
had lied to her. That was all.</p>
<p>She walked briskly for twenty minutes and then sat
down on a bench, the very one she remembered, upon
which Mr. Gallatin three weeks ago had sat and told her
of his misfortunes. Chicot came and sat in front of her,
his muzzle on her knees, and looked up rapturously into
her eyes.</p>
<p>“You’re such a sinful little dorglums, Chicot,” she
said to him. “Don’t you know that? To go running off
and bringing back disagreeable and impudent vagabonds
for me to send away? You’re quite silly. And your
moustache is precisely like Colonel Broadhurst’s, except
that it’s painted black. Are you really as wise as you
look? I don’t believe you are, because you’re dressed like
a harlequin, and harlequins are never wise, or they<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</SPAN></span>
shouldn’t be harlequins. Wise people don’t wear topknots
on their heads and rings upon their tails, Chicot.
Oh, it’s all very well for you to be so devoted now, but
you’d run away at once if another vagabond came along—a
tall vagabond with dark eyes and a deep voice that appealed
to your own little vagabond heart. You’re faithless,
Chicot, and I don’t care for you at all.”</p>
<p>She rubbed his glossy ears between her fingers, and
he put one dusty paw upon her lap. “No, I can’t forgive
you,” she went on. “Never! All is over between us.
You’re a dissipated little vagabond, that’s what you are,
with no sense of responsibility whatever. I’m going to put
you in a deep dark dungeon, on a diet of dust and dungaree,
where you shall stay and meditate on your sins.
Not another <em>maron</em>—not one. You’re absolutely worthless,
Chicot, that’s what you are—worthless!”</p>
<p>The knot on the end of the dog’s tail whisked approval;
for, though he understood exactly what she said,
it was the correct thing for dog-people to act only by
tones of voice, but when his mistress got up he frisked
homeward joyfully, with a gratified sense of his own important
share in the conclusion of the business of the
morning.</p>
<p>Jane Loring entered upon the daily round thoughtfully,
but with a new sense of her responsibilities. For the
first time in her life she had had a sense of the careless
cruelty of the world for those thrown unprotected upon
its good will. There was a note of plethoric contrition in
her mail from Coleman Van Duyn. She read it very carefully
twice as though committing it to memory, and then
tearing it into small pieces committed it to the waste
basket, a hard little glitter in her eyes which Mr. Van
Duyn might not have cared to see. She made a resolve
that from this hour she would live according to another<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</SPAN></span>
code. She was no longer the little school-girl from the
convent in Paris. She was full-fledged now and would
take life as she found it, her eyes widely opened, not
with the wonder of adolescence, but keen for the excitements
as well as the illusions that awaited her.</p>
<p>She got down from her limousine at the Pennington’s
house in Stuyvesant Square that night alone. Mr. Van
Duyn, in his note, had pleaded to be allowed to stop for
her in his machine and bring her home, but she had not
called him on the ’phone as he had requested. It was a
dinner for some of the members of the Cedarcroft set, as
formal as any function to which this gay company was
invited, could ever be. Jane was a moment late and
hurried upstairs not a little excited, for though she had
known Nellie Pennington in Pau, the guests were probably
strangers to her. In the dressing-room, where she found
Miss Jaffray and another girl she had not met, a maid
helped her off with her cloak and carriage boots and,
when she was ready to go down, handed her a silver tray
bearing a number of small envelopes. She selected the
one which bore her name, carelessly, wondering whether
her fortunes for the evening were to be entrusted to Mr.
Worthington or to Mr. Van Duyn, to find on the enclosed
card the name of Philip Gallatin.</p>
<p>She paled a little, hesitated and lingered in the darkness
by the door under the mental plea of rearranging her
roses, her mind in a tumult. She had hardly expected to
find him here, for Mr. Gallatin, she had heard, hunted no
more and Nellie Pennington had never even mentioned
his name. What should she do? To say that she did not
wish to go in with a man high in the favor of her host
and hostess as well as every one else, without giving a
reason for her refusal would be gratuitously insulting to
her hostess as well as to Mr. Gallatin. She glanced helplessly<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</SPAN></span>
at Nina Jaffray, who was leaning toward the pier
glass, a stick of lip-salve in her fingers, and realized at
once that there was to be no rescue from her predicament.
Besides, changing cards with Miss Jaffray would not help
matters, for over in the men’s dressing room Mr. Gallatin
by this time had read the card which told him that Miss
Loring was to be his dinner partner.</p>
<p>She could not understand how such a thing had happened.
Had Nellie Pennington heard? That was impossible.
There were but three people in New York who
knew about Mr. Gallatin and herself, and the third one
was Coley Van Duyn, who had guessed at their relations.
Could Philip Gallatin have dared—dared to ask this favor
of their hostess after Jane’s repudiation of him in the
Park? She couldn’t believe that either. Fate alone could
have conspired to produce a situation so full of exquisite
possibilities. She waited a moment, gathering her shattered
resources; and with that skill at dissimulation which
men sometimes ape, but never actually attain, she thrust
her arm through Miss Jaffray’s and the two of them went
down the wide stairway, a very pretty picture of youth
and unconcern.</p>
<p>Jane’s eyes swept the room with obtrusive carelessness,
and took in every one in it, including the person for whom
the glance was intended, who saw it from a distant corner,
and marveled at the smile with which she entered and
greeted her hostess.</p>
<p>“Hello, Nina! Jane, dear, <em>so</em> glad you could come!”
said Nellie Pennington. “Oh, what a perfectly darling
dress! You went to Doucet after all—for your debutante
<em>trousseau</em>. Perhaps, I’d better call it your <em>layette</em>—you
absurd child! Oh, for the roses of yesterday! You know
Betty Tremaine, don’t you? And Mr. Savage? Coley
do stop glaring and tell Phil Gallatin to come here at<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</SPAN></span>
once. My dear, you’re going in with the nicest man—a
very great friend of mine, and I want you to be particularly
sweet to him. Hear? Mr. Gallatin—you haven’t
met—I know. Here he is now. Miss Loring—Mr. Gallatin.”</p>
<p>Jane nodded and coolly extended her hand. “How do
you do,” she said, tepidly polite, and then quickly to her
hostess. “It was very nice of you to think of me, Nellie.
It seems ages since Pau, doesn’t it?”</p>
<p>“Ages! You unpleasant person. When you get as
old as I am, you’ll never mention the flight of time.
Ugh!”</p>
<p>Her shudder was very effective. Nellie Pennington
was thirty-five, looked twenty, and knew it.</p>
<p>“What difference does it make,” laughed Jane,
“when Time forgets one?”</p>
<p>“Very prettily said, my dear. Time may amble, but
he’s too nimble to let you get him by the forelock.” And
turning she greeted the late comers.</p>
<p>Jane turned to Mr. Gallatin, who was saying something
at her ear.</p>
<p>“I beg your pardon,” she said.</p>
<p>“I hope you don’t think that I—I am responsible for
this situation,” he repeated.</p>
<p>“What situation, Mr. Gallatin?”</p>
<p>“I hope you don’t think that I knew I was to go in to
dinner with you.”</p>
<p>She laughed. “I hadn’t really thought very much
about it.”</p>
<p>“I didn’t—I didn’t even know you were to be here.
It’s an accident—a cruel one. I wouldn’t have had it happen
for anything in the world.”</p>
<p>“Do you think that’s very polite?” she asked lightly.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“I mean—” he stammered, “that you’ll have to acquit
me of any intention——”</p>
<p>“You mean,” she interrupted quickly, with widely
opened eyes, “that you don’t <em>want</em> to go in to dinner with
me? I think that can easily be arranged,” and she turned
away from him toward her hostess. But he quickly interposed.</p>
<p>“Don’t, Miss Loring. Don’t do that. It isn’t necessary.
I didn’t want your evening spoiled.”</p>
<p>“I’m afraid I don’t understand,” she said, and the
curl of her lip did not escape him. “<em>That</em> could hardly
happen. But, if you have any doubts about it, perhaps——”</p>
<p>“It was of you I was thinking——”</p>
<p>“That’s very kind, I’m sure. I don’t see any reason
why we shouldn’t get on admirably. I’m not so difficult
as you seem to suppose. Why <em>should</em> you spoil my evening,
Mr. Gallatin?”</p>
<p>She turned and looked him full in the eyes; and he
knew then what he had suspected at first, that she meant
to deny that they had ever met before.</p>
<p>He gazed at her calmly, a slow smile twisting his lips,
acknowledging her rebuke, and acquiescing silently in her
position.</p>
<p>“I’m sure I don’t wish to spoil it. I’m only too happy—to—to
be so much honored.”</p>
<p>“There!” she laughed easily. “You <em>can</em> be polite,
can’t you? Do you hunt, Mr. Gallatin?” quickly changing
the topic to one less personal. “I thought nobody
ever dined here unless he was at least first cousin to a
Centaur.”</p>
<p>“Oh, no,” he laughed. “Mrs. Pennington isn’t so
exclusive as that. But I’m sure she’d have her own
hunters in to table if she could. This is quite the liveliest<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</SPAN></span>
house! Mrs. Pennington is the most wonderful woman in
the world, and the reason is that she absolutely refuses
to be bored. She likes Centaurs because they’re mostly
natural creatures like herself, but she hasn’t any use for
Dinosaurs!”</p>
<p>A general movement toward the table, and Jane took
Phil Gallatin’s arm and followed. A huge horse-shoe of
Beauties formed the centerpiece, from which emerged the
Cedarhurst Steeplechase Cup, won three years in succession
by Dick Pennington. The decorations of the room
were in red and gold, and a miniature steeplechase course
was laid around the table with small fences, brush and
water jumps, over which tiny equestrians in pink coats
gayly cavorted. Miss Loring found to her delight that
the neighbor on her other side was Mr. Worthington. At
least she was not to be without resource if the situation
grew beyond her. But Mr. Gallatin having made token of
his acquiescence, gave no sign of further intrusion. His
talk was of the people about them, of their ambitions and
their lack of them, of motoring, of country houses and
the latest news in Vanity Fair, to which she listened with
interest, casually questioning or venturing an opinion.
The only rôle possible for her was one of candor, and she
played it with cool deliberation, carefully guiding his remarks
into the well-buoyed channels of the commonplace.</p>
<p>And while he talked amusedly, gayly even, in the
glances that she stole at his profile, she found that he had
grown thinner, and that the dark shadows under his eyes,
which she remembered, were still to be found there. The
fingers of his right hand slowly revolved the stem of a
flower. All of his wine glasses she discovered he had
turned bowl downward. His cocktail he had slowly pushed
aside until it was now hidden in the garland of roses
which circled the table. She felt quite sorry for him, as<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</SPAN></span>
she had felt last summer, and now, better attuned to detraction
than to praise, her mind and instinct both proclaimed
him, in spite of herself—a gentleman. Coleman
Van Duyn had lied to her. She was conscious of Coley
surveying her from his seat across the table with a jaundiced
eye, and this surveillance, while it made her uncomfortable,
served to feed the flame of her ire. Coley Van
Duyn had lied to her, and the lot of liars was oblivion.</p>
<p>A pause in the conversation when Nina Jaffray’s voice
broke in on Mr. Gallatin’s right.</p>
<p>“It isn’t true, is it, Phil?”</p>
<p>He questioned.</p>
<p>“What they’re saying about you,” she went on.</p>
<p>He laughed uneasily. “Yes, of course, if it’s something
dreadful enough.”</p>
<p>“Oh, it isn’t dreadful, Phil, only so enchantingly sinful
that it doesn’t sound like you in the least.”</p>
<p>“No, Nina. It isn’t true. Enchanting sin and I are
strangers. Miss Loring and I have just been talking
about original sin in saddle-horses. I contend——”</p>
<p>“Phil, I <em>won’t</em> be diverted in this way. I believe it’s
true.”</p>
<p>“Then what’s the use of questioning me?”</p>
<p>“I’m foolish enough to want you to deny it.”</p>
<p>“Even if it is an enchanting sin? You might at least
let me flatter myself that much.”</p>
<p>Miss Jaffray’s long eyes closed the fraction of an
inch, as she surveyed him aslant through her lashes, then
her lips broke into a smile which showed her small and
perfectly even teeth.</p>
<p>“You shan’t evade me any longer. I’m insanely
jealous, Phil. <em>Who</em> was the girl you got lost with in the
woods?”</p>
<p>Gallatin passed a miserable moment. He had sensed<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</SPAN></span>
the question and had tried to prevent it, cold with dismay
that Miss Loring should be in earshot. He flushed painfully
and for his life’s sake could make no reply.</p>
<p>“It’s true—you’re blushing. I could forgive you for
the sin, but for blushing for it—never!”</p>
<p>Gallatin had hoped that Miss Loring might have
turned to her other neighbor, but he had not dared to
look. Now he felt rather than saw that she was a listener
to the dialogue, and he heard her voice—cool, clear, and
insistent, just at his ear:</p>
<p>“How very interesting, Nina! Mr. Gallatin’s sins are
finding him out?”</p>
<p>“No, <em>I</em> am,” said the girl. “I’ve known Phil Gallatin
since we were children, and he has always been the most
unsusceptible of persons. He has never had any time
for girls. And now! Now by his guilty aspect he tacitly
acknowledges a love affair in the Canadian wilderness
with a——”</p>
<p>“Oh, do stop, Nina,” he said in suppressed tones.
“Miss Loring can hardly be interested in——”</p>
<p>“But I <em>am</em>,” put in Miss Loring coolly. <SPAN href="#image02">“Do tell
me something more, Nina. Was she young and pretty?”</SPAN></p>
<div class="figcenter"> <SPAN name="image02"> <ANTIMG src="images/image02.jpg" width-obs="600" height-obs="452" alt="" title="" /></SPAN><br/> <div class="caption"><SPAN href="#Page_134">“‘Do tell me something more, Nina. Was she young and pretty?’”</SPAN></div>
</div>
<p>“Ask this guilty wretch——”</p>
<p>“Don’t you know who she was? What was her name?”</p>
<p>“That’s just what I want to find out. And nobody
seems to know, except Phil.”</p>
<p>“Do tell us, Mr. Gallatin.”</p>
<p>“She had no name,” said Mr. Gallatin very quietly.
“There was no girl in the woods.”</p>
<p>“A woman, then?” queried Miss Jaffray.</p>
<p>“Neither girl—nor woman—only a Dryad. The
woods are full of them. My Indian guide insisted
that——”</p>
<p>“Oh, no, you sha’n’t get out of it so easily, Phil, and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</SPAN></span>
I insist upon your sticking to facts. A Dryad, indeed,
with the latest thing in fishing rods and creels!”</p>
<p>Miss Jaffray had not for a moment taken her gaze
from Gallatin’s face, but now she changed her tone to one
of impudent raillery. “You know, Phil, you’ve always
held women in such high regard that I’ve always thought
you positively tiresome. And now, just when I find you
developing the most unusual and interesting qualities, you
deny their very existence! I was just getting ready to
fall madly in love with you. How disappointing you are!
Isn’t he, Jane?”</p>
<p>“Dreadfully so,” said Miss Loring. “Tell it all, Mr.
Gallatin, by all means, since we already know the half.
I’m sure the reality can’t be nearly as dreadful as we
already think it is.”</p>
<p>Her effrontery astounded him, but he met her fairly.</p>
<p>“There’s nothing to tell. If an enchantingly sinful
man met an enchantingly helpless Dryad—what would
be likely to happen? Can <em>you</em> tell us, Miss Loring?”</p>
<p>Jane’s weapons went flying for a moment, but she
recovered them adroitly.</p>
<p>“The situation has possibilities of which you are in
every way worthy, I don’t doubt, Mr. Gallatin. The
name of your Dryad will, of course, be revealed in time.
I’m sure if Miss Jaffray pleads with you long enough
you’ll gladly tell her.”</p>
<p>Nina Jaffray laughed.</p>
<p>“Come, Phil, there’s a dear. Do tell a fellow. I’ve
really got to know, if only for the fun of scratching her
eyes out. I’m sure I ought to—oughtn’t I, Jane?”</p>
<p>But Miss Loring had already turned and was deep
in conversation with Mr. Worthington, who for twenty
minutes at least, had been trying to attract her attention.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />