After the rain and gloom of the week, Sunday dawned gloriously fine.

There was to be a polo match on Monday in the park, which contained an

excellent ground--Patrick and his Oxford friends against a scratch team.

The neighborhood would watch them with interest. But the Sunday was for

rest and peace, so all the morning the company played croquet, or lay

about in hammocks, and more than half of them again began bridge in the

great Egyptian tent which served as an out-door lounge on the lawn. It

was reached from the western side down wide steps from the terrace, and

beautiful rose gardens stretched away beyond.

Theodora had spent a sleepless night. There was no more illusion left to

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her on the subject of her feelings. She knew that each day, each hour,

she was growing more deeply to love Hector Bracondale. He absorbed her

thoughts, he dominated her imagination. He seemed to mean the only thing

in life. The situation was impossible, and must end in some way. How

could she face the long months with Josiah down at their new home, with

the feverish hopes and fears of meetings! It was too cruel, too

terrible; and she could not lead such a life. She had thought in Paris

it would be possible, and even afford a certain amount of quiet

happiness, if they could be strong enough to remain just friends. But

now she knew this was not in human nature. Sooner or later fate would

land them in some situation of temptation too strong for either to

resist--and then--and then--She refused to face that picture. Only she

writhed as she lay there and buried her face in the fine pillows. She

did not permit herself any day-dreams of what might have been. Romauld

himself, as he took his vows, never fought harder to regain his soul

from the keeping of Claremonde than did Theodora to suppress her love

for Hector Bracondale. Towards morning, worn out with fatigue, she fell

asleep, and in her dreams, released from the control of her will, she

spent moments of passionate bliss in his arms, only to wake and find she

must face again the terrible reality. And cruellest thought of all was

the thought of Josiah.

She had so much common-sense she realized the position exactly about

him. She had not married him under any false impression. There had been

no question of love--she had frankly been bought, and had as frankly

detested him. But his illness and suffering had appealed to her tender

heart--and afterwards his generosity. He was not unselfish, but,

according to his lights, he heaped her with kindness. He could not help

being common and ridiculous. And he had paid with solid gold for her,

gold to make papa comfortable and happy, and she must fulfil her part of

the bargain and remain a faithful wife at all costs.




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