<h2 class="chap"><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XIX" id="CHAPTER_XIX"></SPAN>CHAPTER XIX<br/> <span class="chap">A CORNER OF THE CURTAIN</span></h2>
<p><span class="smcap">A note</span> was brought in to me at luncheon
time, addressed in a bold yet delicate feminine
hand which was already becoming familiar. It
was from Adelaide Fortress, and it consisted of
a single line only—</p>
<p>“Will you come to me this afternoon?—A.F.”</p>
<p>I went to see her without any hesitation. She
was sitting alone in her room, and something
in her greeting seemed to denote that she was
not altogether at her ease. Yet she was glad
to see me.</p>
<p>“Sit down, child,” she said. “I have been
thinking about you all day. I am glad that you
came.”</p>
<p>“Not very cheerful thoughts, then, I am
afraid,” I remarked, with a certain half-unconscious
sympathy in my tone. For her face was
white and drawn, as though she had spent a
sleepless night and an anxious morning.</p>
<p>“Not very,” she admitted. “I have been
thinking about you ever since you left me yesterday.
I am sorry for you. I am sorry for all<SPAN class="page" name="Page_189" id="Page_189" title="189"></SPAN>
of us. It was an evil chance that brought that
South American girl here.”</p>
<p>“Was she born in South America?” I asked,
with pointless curiosity.</p>
<p>“I do not know,” she answered. “I should
think so. She told me that she had spent most
of her life there. A girl who dresses as she does
here, and wears diamonds in the morning, must
have come from some outlandish place. Her
toilette is not for our benefit, however.”</p>
<p>I looked up inquiringly. She continued, with
a slight frown upon her face—</p>
<p>“She follows Bruce Deville about everywhere.
I never saw anything so atrociously
barefaced. If he were her husband she could
not claim more from him. They have just gone
by together now.”</p>
<p>“What! this afternoon?” I asked.</p>
<p>“Not a quarter of an hour ago,” she declared.
“She was holding his arm, and looking up at
him with her great black eyes every moment.
Bah! such a woman gives one a bad taste in
one’s mouth.”</p>
<p>“I wonder that Mr. Deville is not rude to
her,” I remarked. “He does not seem to be
a man likely to be particularly amiable under
the circumstances. I should not think he
would be very easily annexed.”</p>
<p>She smiled faintly.</p>
<p>“From his general behavior one would not<SPAN class="page" name="Page_190" id="Page_190" title="190"></SPAN>
put him down as a willing squire of dames,”
she said; “but that girl is like a dog fawning
for a bone. She will not let him alone. She
waits about for him. She hates to have him
out of her sight.”</p>
<p>“Perhaps—perhaps it is a good thing. It
might take her mind off other things,” I suggested,
softly.</p>
<p>“That is what I too am hoping,” she admitted.
“That is why I believe Bruce endures her.
There is one thing only of which I am afraid.”</p>
<p>“That is——” I asked.</p>
<p>“That she may send for a detective on her
own account. Anything rather than that! The
girl alone I think we might deal with.”</p>
<p>“Mr. Deville must use all his influence. He
must persuade her not to,” I declared.</p>
<p>She assented.</p>
<p>“He will try. Yet for all her folly, so far as
Bruce is concerned, she is not a perfect idiot.
She knows that he is my friend—and yours—and
she is desperately jealous. She will suspect
his advice. She will not accept his bidding
blindly. She is cunning. She will agree with
him, and yet she will have her own way.”</p>
<p>“He must be very firm,” I said. “There must
be no detective come here. It would be the
last straw. As it is, the anxiety is terrible
enough.”</p>
<p>We were silent, and we exchanged quick and<SPAN class="page" name="Page_191" id="Page_191" title="191"></SPAN>
furtive glances. Something in her sad face
moved me almost to tears—it was strangely
soft, so full of subtle and deep sympathy. Involuntarily
I leaned across and held out my
hands to her. She caught them in hers with a
little passionate gesture. That moment
brought us into a new connection. Henceforth
we were on a different footing.</p>
<p>“My child!” she moaned. “My poor child!
You have a terrible burden upon your young
shoulders.”</p>
<p>“The burden I could bear,” I answered, “if
only I had some knowledge of its meaning.
You know, you could tell me if you would.”</p>
<p>I crossed to her side and fell upon my knees,
taking her hand in mine. She looked away
into the fire and her face was as white as death.</p>
<p>“I cannot,” she faltered, with trembling lips.
“I cannot! Don’t ask me!”</p>
<p>“Oh! but I must!” I cried, passionately. “It
cannot hurt me so much to know as it does
not to know. There is a secret between you
and my father. You knew him as Philip Maltabar.
Tell me what manner of man he was.
Tell me why he has changed his name. Tell
me what there was between him and——”</p>
<p>She had risen to her feet at my first words.
She sat down again, now trembling in every
limb.</p>
<p>“I cannot tell you any of these things,” she<SPAN class="page" name="Page_192" id="Page_192" title="192"></SPAN>
moaned. “I am sorry I asked you to come.
Go away! Please go away!”</p>
<p>But my mind was made up now, and the
sight of her weakness only nerved me on. I
stood up before her white and determined—brutally
reckless as to her sufferings. I would
know now, though I forced the words from
between her white lips. She was a strong
woman, but she had broken down—she was at
my mercy.</p>
<p>“I will not go away,” I said, doggedly. “You
sent for me, and I am here. I will not go away
until you have told me everything. I have a
right to know, and I will know! You shall tell
me!”</p>
<p>She threw her arms out towards me with a
gesture half pathetic, half imploring. But I
made no movement—my face was hard, and I
had set my teeth together. Her hands fell into
her lap. I did not touch them. She looked
moodily into the fire. She sat there with fixed
eyes, like a woman who sees a little drama in
the red coals. My heart beat fast with excitement.
I knew that in the war of our wills I
had conquered. She was at my mercy. I was
going to hear.</p>
<p>“Child,” she said, slowly, and her voice
seemed to belong to another woman, and to
come from a great distance, “I will tell you a
story. Listen!”</p>
<p><SPAN class="page" name="Page_193" id="Page_193" title="193"></SPAN></p>
<p>I leaned over towards her holding my breath.
Now at last, then, I was to know. Yet even in
those moments of intense excitement the outline
of her face, with its curious white torpor,
oppressed me. A chill fear crept into my
blood.</p>
<p>She began.</p>
<p>“There was a girl, well educated, well bred,
and clever. She was an orphan, and early in
life it became necessary for her to earn her
own living. There were several things which
she could do a little, but only one well. She
could write. So she became a journalist.</p>
<p>“It was an odd life for her, but for a time
she was happy. She herself was possessed of
original ideas. She was brought into touch
and sympathy with the modern schools of
thought and manners. She was admitted into
a brilliant little coterie of artists and literary
men and women whose views were daringly
advanced, and who prided themselves in living
up to all they professed. She herself developed
opinions. I will not dwell upon them; I will
only tell you in what they ended. She set herself
against the marriage laws. At first she
was very strong and very bitter. The majority
of men she hated for their cruelty to her sex.
The thought of marriage disgusted her. Any
ceremony in connection with it she looked upon
as a farce. She had no religion in the ordinary<SPAN class="page" name="Page_194" id="Page_194" title="194"></SPAN>
sense of the word. She was brave and daring
and confident. This was all before she knew
what love was.”</p>
<p>There was a silence, but I did not move my
eyes from her face. Was she waiting for a
word of encouragement from me, I wondered?
If so, the silence must last forever, for I was
tongue-tied. She had created an atmosphere
around her, and I could scarcely breathe. Presently
she went on.</p>
<p>“The man came in time, of course. He was
young, ardent, an enthusiast, fresh from college,
with his feet on the threshold of life and
eager for the struggle. He had a little money,
and he was hesitating as to a profession. The
girl was utterly free—she was her own mistress
in every sense of the word. There was no constraint
upon her movements, no conventionalities
to observe, no one who could exercise over
her even the slightest authority. The young
man proposed marriage. The girl hesitated for
a long while. Old ideas do not easily die, and
she saw clearly, although not clearly enough,
that if she sacrificed them to these new opinions
of hers she must suffer, as the pioneer of all
great social changes must always suffer. Imperial
dynasties and whole empires have been
overthrown in a single day, but generations go
to the changing of a single social law. Yet she
told herself that if she were false to these<SPAN class="page" name="Page_195" id="Page_195" title="195"></SPAN>
tenets, which she had openly embraced and so
often avowed, she must lose forever her own
self-esteem. The eyes of that little band of fellow-thinkers
were upon her. It was a glorious
opportunity. It was only for her to lead and
many others would follow. She felt herself in
a sense the apostle of those new doctrines in
whose truth and purity she was a professed believer.
That was how it all seemed to her.</p>
<p>“She told the man what her decision was.
To do him justice, he combated her resolve
fiercely. They parted, but it was only for a
while. In such a struggle victory must rest
with the woman. This was no exception to the
general rule. The woman triumphed.</p>
<p>“Their after history is not pleasant telling.
The woman and the man were utterly unsuited
for each other. The man was an enthusiast, almost
a fanatic; the woman was cold, calculating,
and matter of fact. The man suddenly determined
to enter the Church. The woman
was something between a pantheist and an
agnostic with a fixed contempt of all creeds.
The inevitable came to pass. She followed out
the logical sequence of her new principles, and
left the man for another.”</p>
<p>I suppose my face expressed a certain horror.
How could I help it? I shrank a little back,
and my eyes sought her, doubtfully. She<SPAN class="page" name="Page_196" id="Page_196" title="196"></SPAN>
turned upon me with a shade of fierceness on
her white face.</p>
<p>“Oh, you are a swift judge!” she cried. “It
is the young always who are cruel! It is the
young always who have no mercy!”</p>
<p>I was shocked at the agony which seemed
to have laid hold of her. That slight instinct
of repulsion of which she had been so quick to
notice the external signs in my face, seemed
to have cut her like a knife. I moved swiftly
to her side and dropped on my knees by her.
I was ashamed of myself.</p>
<p>“Forgive me!” I pleaded, softly. “I am very
ignorant. I believe that the woman did what
seemed right to her. I was wrong to judge.”</p>
<p>She bent her head. I took her fingers softly
into mine. “You were that woman,” I whispered.</p>
<p>She looked at me and half rose from her
chair, pushing me away from her.</p>
<p>“I was that woman,” she moaned. “Your
father was the man! You——”</p>
<p>I cried out, but she would not be interrupted.</p>
<p>“You,” she added, wildly, “are my child—and
his!”</p>
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