Silent, abstracted, unsmiling, Rachael got through the days. She ate

what Mary put before her, slept fairly well, answered the puzzled boys

the second time they addressed her. She buckled sandals, read fairy

tales, brushed the unruly heads, and listened to the wavering prayers

day after day. Her eyes were strained, her usually quick, definite

motions curiously uncertain; otherwise there was little change.

Alice, in spite of her husband's half protest, went down to Clark's

Hills, deciding in the first hour that the worst of the matter was all

over and Rachael quite herself, gradually becoming doubtful, and

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returning home in despair. Her tearful account took George down to the

country house a week later.

Rachael met them; they dined with her. She was interested about the

Valentine children, interested in their summer plans. She laughed as

she quoted Derry's latest ventures with words. She walked to her gate

to wave them good-bye on Monday morning, and told Alice that she was

counting the days until the big family came down. But George and Alice

were heavy hearted as they drove away.

"What IS it?" asked Alice, anxious eyes upon her husband's kind, homely

face. "She's like a person recovering from a blow. She's not sick; but,

George, she isn't well!"

"No, she's not well," George agreed soberly. "Bad glitter in her eyes,

and I don't like that calm for fiery Rachael! Well, you'll be down here

in a week or two--"

"Last week," Alice said not for the first time, "she only spoke of--of

the trouble, you know--once. We were just going out to dinner, and she

turned to me, and said: 'I didn't like my bargain eight years ago,

Alice, and I tore my contract to pieces! Now I'll pay for it.'"

"And you said?"

"I said, 'Oh, nonsense, Rachael. Don't be morbid! There's no parallel

between the cases!'"

"H'm!" The doctor was silent for a long time. "I don't know what Greg's

doing," he added after thought.

"The question is, what is Magsie doing?" said Alice.

"In my opinion, Rachael's simply blown up," George submitted.

"Magsie told her they had talked of marriage!" Alice countered. George

gave an incredulous snort.

"Well, then, Magsie lied," he said firmly.

"She really isn't the lying type, George. And there's no question that

Greg and she did see each other every day, and that he wrote her

letters and gave her presents!" Alice finished rather timidly, for her

husband's face was a thunder-cloud. The old car flew along at

thirty-five miles an hour.

"Damn FOOL!" George presently muttered. Alice glanced at him in

sympathetic concern.

"George, why don't you see him?"

George preserved a stern silence for perhaps two flying minutes, then

he sighed.

"Oh, he'll come to me fast enough when he needs me! Lord, I've pulled

old Greg out of trouble before." His whole face grew tender as he

added: "You know Greg is a genius, Alice; he's not like other men!"

"I should hope he wasn't!" said Alice with spirit.

"We--ll!" She was sorry for her vehemence when George merely shook his

head and ended the conversation on the monosyllable. After a while she

attempted to reopen the subject.

"If geniuses can act that way, I'd rather have our girls marry grocers!"

The girls' father smiled absently.

"Oh, well, of course!" he conceded.

"Greg is no more a genius than you are, George," argued Alice.

"Oh, Alice, Alice!" he protested, really distressed, "don't ever let

anyone hear you say that! Why, that only shows that you don't know what

Greg is. Lord, the man seems to have an absolute instinct for bones;

he'll take a chance when not one of the rest will! No, you mark my

words, Alice, Greg has let Magsie Clay make a fool of him; he's been

overtired and nervous--we've all seen that--but he's as innocent of any

actual harm in this thing as our Gogo!"

"Innocent!" sniffed Alice. "He'll break Rachael's heart with his

innocence, and then he'll marry Magsie Clay--you'll see!"

"He'll come to me to get him out of it within the month--you'll see!"

George retorted.

"He'll keep out of your way!" Alice predicted confidently. "I know

Greg. He has to be perfect or nothing."

But it was only ten days later that Warren Gregory walked up the steps

of the Valentine house at about ten o'clock on a silent, hazy morning.

George had not yet left the house for the day. The drawing-room

furniture was swathed in linen covers, and a collection of golf irons,

fishing rods, canoe paddles, and tennis rackets crowded the hallway.

The young Valentines were departing for the country to-morrow, and

their excited voices echoed from above stairs.

Warren had supposed them already gone. Rachael was alone, then, he

reflected, alone in that desolate little country village! He nodded to

the maid, and asked in a guarded tone for Doctor Valentine. A moment

later George Valentine came into the drawing-room, and the two men

exchanged a look strange to their twenty years of affectionate

intercourse. Warren attempted mere cold dignity; he was on the

defensive, and he knew it. George's look verged on contempt, thinly

veiled by a polite interest in his visitor's errand.

"George," said Warren suddenly, when he had asked for Alice and the

children, and an awkward silence had made itself felt; "George, I'm in

trouble. I--I wonder if you can help me out?"

He could hardly have made a more fortunate beginning; halting as the

words were, and miserable as was the look that accompanied them, both

rang true to the older man, and went straight to his heart.

"I'm sorry to hear it," George said.

Warren folded his arms, and regarded his friend steadily across them.

"You know Rachael has left me, George?" he began.

"I--well, yes, Alice went down there first, and then I went down,"

George said. "We only came back ten days ago." There was another brief

silence.

"She--she hasn't any cause for this, you know, George," Warren said,

ending it, after watching the other man hopefully for further

suggestion.

"Hasn't, huh?" George asked thoughtfully, hopefully.

"No, she hasn't!" Warren reiterated, gaining confidence. "I've been a

fool, I admit that, but Rachael has no cause to go off at half-cock,

this way!"

"What d'you mean by that?" George asked flatly. "What do you

mean--you've been a fool?"

"I've been a fool about Magsie Clay," Warren admitted, "and Rachael

learned about it, that's all. My Lord! there never was an instant in my

life when I took it seriously, I give you my word, George!"

"Well, if Rachael takes it seriously, and Magsie takes it seriously,

you may find yourself beginning to take it seriously, too," George said

with a dull man's simple evasion of confusing elements.

"Rachael may get her divorce," Warren said desperately. "I can't help

that, I suppose. I've got a letter from her here--she left it. I don't

know what she thinks! But I'll never marry Margaret Clay--that much is

settled. I'll leave town--my work's ended, I might as well be dead. God

knows I wish I were!"

"Just how far have you gone with Magsie?" George interrupted quietly.

"Why, nothing at all!" Warren said. "Flowers, handbags, things like

that! I've kissed her, but I swear Rachael never gave me any reason to

think she'd mind that."

"How often have you seen her?" George asked in a somewhat relieved

tone. "Have you seen her once a week?"

"Oh, yes! I say frankly that this was a--a flirtation, George. I've

seen her pretty nearly every day---"

"But she hasn't got any letters--nothing like that?"

Warren's confident expression changed.

"Well, yes, she has some letters. I--damn it! I am a fool, George! I

swear I wrote them just as I might to anybody. I--I knew it mattered to

her, you know, and that she looked for them. I don't know how they'd

read!"

George was silent, scowling, and Warren said, "Damn it!" again

nervously, before the other man said:

"What do you think she will do?"

"I don't know, George," Warren said honestly.

"Could you--buy her off?" George presently asked after thought.

"Magsie? Never! She's not that type. She's one of ourselves as to that,

George. It was that that made me like Magsie--she's a lady, you know.

She thinks she's in love; she wants to be married. And if Rachael

divorces me, what else can I do?"

"Rachael wants the divorce for the boys," George said. "She told Alice

so. She said that except for that, nothing on earth would have made her

consider it. But she doesn't want you and Magsie Clay to have any hold

over her sons--and can you blame her? She's been dragged through all

this once. You might have thought of that!"

"Oh, my God!" Warren said, stopping by the mantel, and putting his face

in his hands.

"Well, what did you think would happen?" George asked as Magsie had

asked.

Then for perhaps two long minutes there was absolute silence, while

Warren remained motionless, and George, in great distress, rubbed his

upstanding hair.

"George, what shall I do?" Warren burst out at length.

"Why, now I'll tell you," the older man said in a tone that carried

exquisite balm to his listener. "Alice and I have talked this over, of

course, and this seems to me to be the only way out: we know you, old

man--that's what hurts. Alice and I know exactly what has got you into

this thing. You're too easy, Warren. You think because you mean

honorably by Magsie Clay, and amuse yourself by being generous to her,

that Magsie means honorably by you. You've got a high standard of

morals, Greg, but where they differ from the common standards you fail.

If the world is going to put a certain construction upon your

attentions to an actress, it doesn't matter what private construction

you happen to put upon them! Wake up, and realize what a fool you are

to try to buck the conventions! What you need is to study other

people's morals, not to be eternally justifying and analyzing your own.

I don't know how you'll come out of this thing. Upon my word, it's the

worst mess we ever got into since you misquoted Professor Diggs and he

sued you. Remember that?"

"Oh, George--my God--how you stood by me then," Warren said. "Get me

out of this, and I'll believe that there never was a friend like you in

the world! I don't know what I ever did to have you and Alice stand by

me--"

"Alice isn't standing by you to any conspicuous extent," George

Valentine said smilingly, "although, last night, when she was putting

the girls to bed, she put her arms about Martha, and said, 'George, she

wouldn't be here to-day if Greg hadn't taken the chance and cut that

thing out of her throat!' At which, of course," Doctor Valentine added

with his boyish smile, "Martha's dad had to wipe his eyes, and Martha's

mother began to cry!"

And again he frankly wiped his eyes.

"However, the thing is this," he presently resumed, "if you could buy

off Magsie--simply tell her frankly that you've been a fool, that you

don't want to go on with it--no, eh?" A little discouraged by Warren's

dubious shake of the head, he went on to the next suggestion. "Well,

then, if you can't--tell her that there cannot be any talk at present

of a legal separation, and that you are going away. Would you have the

nerve to do that? Tell her that you'll be back in eight months or a

year. But of course the best thing would be to buy her off, or call it

off in some way, and then write Rachael fully, frankly--tell her the

whole thing, ask her to wait at least one year, and then let you see

her--"

Warren could see himself writing this letter, could even see himself

walking into the dear old sitting-room at Home Dunes.

"I might see Magsie," he said after thought, "and ask her what she

would take in place of what she wants. It's just possible, but I don't

believe she would---"

"Well, what could she do if you simply called the whole thing off?"

George asked. "Hang it! it's a beastly thing to do, but if she wants

money, you've got it, and you've done her no harm, though nobody'll

believe that."

"She'll take the heartbroken attitude," Warren said slowly. "She'll say

that she trusted me, that she can't believe me, and so on."

"Well, you can stand that. Just set your jaw, and think of Rachael, and

go through with it once and for all."

"Yes, but then if she should turn to Rachael again?"

"Ah, well, she mustn't do that. Let her think that, after the year,

you'll come to a fresh understanding rather than let her fight. And

meanwhile, if I were you, I would write Rachael a long letter and make

a clean breast. Alice and the girls go down to-morrow; they'll keep me

in touch. How about coming in here for a bachelor dinner Friday? Then

we can talk developments."

"George, you certainly are a generous loyal friend!" Warren Gregory

said, a dry huskiness in his voice as he wrung the other's hand in

good-bye.

George went upstairs to tell the interested and excited and encouraged

Alice about their talk, and Alice laughed and cried with-pleasure,

confident that everything would come out well now, and grateful beyond

words that Greg was showing so humbled and penitent a spirit.

"Leave Rachael to me!" Alice said exultingly. "How we'll all laugh at

this nonsense some day!"

Even Warren Gregory, walking down the street, was conscious of new hope

and confidence. He was not thinking of Magsie to-day, but of Rachael,

the most superb and splendid figure of womanhood that had ever come

into his life. How she had raged at him in that last memorable talk;

how vital, how vigorous she was, uncompromising, direct, courageous!

And as a swimmer, who miles away from shore in the cruel shifting green

water, might think with aching longing of the quiet home garden, the

kitchen with its glowing fire and gleaming pottery, the pleasant homely

routine of uneventful days, and wonder that he had ever found safety

and comfort anything less than a miracle, Warren thought of the wife he

had sacrificed, the children and home that had been his, unchallenged

and undisputed, only a few months before. He knew just where he had

failed his wife. He felt to-day that to comfort her again, to take her

to dinner again, violets on her breast, and to see her loosen her veil,

and lay aside her gloves with those little gestures so familiar and so

infinitely dear would be heaven, no less! What comradeship they had

had, they two, what theatre trips, what summer days in the car, what

communion over the first baby's downy head, what conferences over the

new papers and cretonnes for Home Dunes!

Girded by these and a hundred other sacred memories he went to Magsie,

who was busy, the maid told him, with her hairdresser. But she

presently came out to him, wrapped snugly in a magnificent embroidered

kimono, and with her masses of bright hair, almost dry, hanging about

her lovely little face. She had never in all their intercourse shown

him quite this touch of intimacy before, and he felt with a little

wince of his heart that it was a sign of her approaching possession.

"Greg, dear," said Magsie seating herself on the arm of his chair, and

resting her soft little person against him, "I've been thinking about

you, and about the wonderful, WONDERFUL way that all our troubles have

come out! If anyone had told us, two months ago, that Rachael would set

you free, and that all this would have happened, we wouldn't have

believed it, would we? I watched you walking down the street yesterday

afternoon, and, oh, Greg, I hope I'm going to be a good wife to you; I

hope I'm going to make up to you for all the misery you've had to bear!"

This was not the opening sentence Warren was expecting. Magsie had been

petulant the day before, and had pettishly declared that she would not

wait a year for any man in the world. Warren had at once seized the

opening to say that he would not hold her to anything against her will,

to be answered by a burst of tears, and an entreaty not to be "so

mean." Then Magsie had to be soothed, and they had gone to tea as a

part of that familiar process. But to-day her mood was different; she

was full of youthful enthusiasm for the future.

"You know I love Rachael, Greg, and of course she is a most exceptional

woman," bubbled Magsie happily, "but she doesn't appreciate the fact

that you're a genius--you're not a little everyday husband, to be held

to her ideas of what's done and what isn't done! Big men are a law unto

themselves. If Rachael wants to hang over babies' cribs, and scare you

to death every time Jim sneezes--"

Warren listened no further. His mind went astray on a memory of the

night Jim was feverish, a memory of Rachael in her trailing dull-blue

robe, with her thick braids hanging over her shoulders. He remembered

that Jim was promised the circus if he would take his medicine; and how

Rachael, with smiling lips and anxious eyes, had described the big

lions and the elephants for the little restless potentate----

"--because I've had enough of Bowman, and enough of this city, and all

I ask is to run away with you, and never think of rehearsals and routes

and all the rest of it in my life again!" Magsie was saying. Presently

she seemed to notice his silence, for she asked abruptly: "Where's

Rachael?"

Warren roused himself from deep thought.

"At the Long Island house; at Clark's Hills."

"Oh!" Magsie, who was now seated opposite him, clasped her hands

girlishly about her knees. "What is the plan, Greg?" she asked

vivaciously.

"Her plan?" Warren said clearing his throat.

"Our plan!" Magsie amended contentedly. And she summarized the case

briskly: "Rachael consents to a divorce, we know that. I am not going

on with Bowman, I've decided that. Now what?" She eyed his brooding

face curiously. "What shall I do, Greg? I suppose we oughtn't to see

each other as we did last summer? If Rachael goes West--and I suppose

she will--shall I go up to the Villalongas'? They're terribly nice to

me; and I think Vera suspects---"

"What makes you think she does?" Warren asked, feeling as if a hot, dry

wind suddenly smote his skin.

"Because she's so nice to me!" Magsie answered triumphantly. "Rachael's

been just a little snippy to Vera," she confided further, "or Vera

thinks she has. She's not been up there for ages! I could tell Vera---"

Warren's power of reasoning was dissipated in an absolute panic. But

George had primed him for this talk. He assumed an air of business.

"There are several things to think of, Magsie," he said briskly,

"before we can go farther. In the first place, you must spend the

summer comfortably. I've arranged for that--"

He handed her a small yellow bank-book. Magsie glanced at it; glanced

at him.

"Oh, Greg, dear, you're too generous!"

"I'm not generous at all," he answered with an honest flush. "I know

what I am now, Magsie, I'm a cad."

"Who says you're a cad?" Magsie demanded indignantly.

"I say so!" he answered. "Any man is a cad who gets two women into a

mess like this!"

"Greg, dear, you shan't say so!" Her slender arms were about his neck.

"Well--" He disengaged the arms, and went on with his planning. "George

Valentine is going to see Rachael," he proceeded.

"About the divorce?" said Magsie with a nod.

"About the whole thing. And George thinks I had better go away."

"Where?" demanded Magsie.

"Oh, travelling somewhere."

"Rio?" dimpled Magsie. "You know you have always had a sneaking desire

to see Rio."

Warren smiled mechanically. It had been Rachael's favorite dream "when

the boys are big enough!" His sons--were they bathing this minute, or

eagerly emptying their blue porridge bowls?

"Magsie, dear," he said slowly, "it's a miserable business--this. I'm

as sorry as I can be about it. But the truth is that George wants me to

get away only until he and Alice can get Rachael into a mood where

she'll forgive me. They see this whole crazy thing as it really is,

dear. I'm not a young man, Magsie, I'm nearly fifty. I have no business

to think of anything but my own wife and my work and my children--Don't

look so, Magsie," he broke off to say; "I only blame myself! I have

loved you--I do love you--but it's only a man's love for a sweet little

amusing friend. Can't we--can't we stop it right here? You do what you

please; draw on me for twice that, for ten times that; have a long,

restful summer, and then come back in the fall as if this was all a

dream---"

Magsie had been watching him steadily during this speech, a long speech

for him. At first she had been obviously puzzled, then astonished, now

she was angry. She had grown pale, her pretty childish mouth was a

little open, her breath coming fast. For a full minute, as his voice

halted, there was silence.

"Then--then you didn't mean all you said?" Magsie demanded stormily,

after the pause. "You didn't mean that you--cared? You didn't mean the

letters, and the presents, and the talks we've had? You knew I was in

earnest, but you were just fooling!" Sheer excitement and fury kept her

panting for a moment, then she went on: "But I think I know who's done

this, Greg!" she said viciously; "it's Mrs. Valentine. She and her

husband have been talking to you; they've done it. She's persuaded you

that you never were in earnest with me!" Magsie ran across the room,

flung open the little desk that stood there, and tore the rubber band

from a package of letters. "You take her one of these!" she said, half

sobbing. "Ask her if that means anything! Greg, dear!" she interrupted

herself to say in a child's reproachful tone, "didn't you mean it?" And

with her soft hair floating, and her figure youthful under the simple

lines of her Oriental robe, she came to stand close beside him, her

mood suddenly changed. "Don't you love me any more, Greg?" said she.

"Love you!" he countered with a rueful laugh, "that's the trouble."

She linked her soft little hands in his, raised reproachful eyes.

"But you don't love me enough to stand by me, now that Rachael is so

cross?" she asked artlessly. "Oh, Greg, I will wait years and years for

you!"

Warren's expression was of wretchedness; he managed a smile.

"It's only that I hate to let you in for it all, dear. And let her in

for it. I feel as if we hadn't thought it out--quite enough," he said.

"What does it let Rachael in for?" she asked quickly. "Here's her

letter, Greg--I'll read it to you! Rachael doesn't mind."

"Well--it will be horrible for you," he submitted in a troubled tone.

"Horrible for us both."

"You mean your work can't spare you?" she asked with a shrewd look.

"No!" He shrugged wearily. "No. The truth is, I want to get away," he

said in an undertone.

"Ah, well!" Magsie understood that. "Of course you want to get away

from the fuss and the talk, Greg," she said eagerly. "I think we all

ought to get away: Rachael to Long Island, I to Vera, you anywhere! We

can't possibly be married for months---" Suddenly her voice sank, she

dropped his hands, and locked her smooth little arms about his neck.

"But I'll be waiting for you, and you for me, Greg," she whispered.

"Isn't it all settled now, isn't it only a question of all the bother,

lawyers and arrangements, before you and I belong to each other as

we've always dreamed we might?"

He looked down gravely, almost sadly, and yet with tenderness, upon the

eager face. He had always found her lovable, endearing, and sweet; even

out of this hideous smoke and flame she emerged all charming and all

desirable. He tightened his arms about the thinly wrapped little figure.

"Yes. I think it's all settled now, Magsie!" he said.

"Well, then!" She sealed it with one of her quick little kisses. "Now

sit down and read a magazine, Greg," she said happily, "and in ten

minutes you'll see me in my new hat, all ready to go to lunch!"




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