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with illness and strong with health。〃 His eyes concentrated on her。 〃Is it really you?〃 he cried gaily。 〃And are you really mine? No wonder I feel strong! It was always that way with me。 I never could leave a thing until I had conquered it。〃
She gave him a sweet smile。 〃I'm not worth all the trouble you seem to have taken about me;〃 said she。
He laughed; for he knew the intense vanity so pleasantly hidden beneath her shy and modest exterior。 〃On the contrary;〃 said he good…humoredly; 〃you in your heart think yourself worth any amount of trouble。 It's a habit we men have got you women into。 And you One of the many things that fascinate me in you is your supreme self…control。 If the king were to come down from his throne and fall at your feet; you'd take it as a matter of course。〃
She gazed away dreamily。 And he understood that her indifference to matters of rank and wealth and power was not wholly vanity but was; in part at least; due to a feeling that love was the only essential。 Nor did he wonder how she was reconciling this belief of high and pure sentiment with what she was doing in marrying him。 He knew that human beings are not consistent; cannot be so in a universe that compels them to face directly opposite conditions often in the same moment。 But just as all lines are parallel in infinity; so all actions are profoundly consistent when referred to the infinitely broad standard of the necessity that every living thing shall look primarily to its own well being。 Disobedience to this fundamental carries with it inevitable punishment of disintegration and death; and those catastrophes are serious matters when one has but the single chance at life; that will be repeated never again in all the eternities。
After their late lunch or early dinner; they drove to her lodgings。 He went up with her and helped her to packnot a long process; as she had few belongings。 He noted that the stockings and underclothes she took from the bureau drawers were in anything but good condition; that the half dozen dresses she took from the closet and folded on the couch were about done for。 Presently she said; cheerfully and with no trace of false shame:
〃You see; I'm pretty nearly in rags。〃
〃Oh; that's soon arranged;〃 replied he。 〃Why bother to take these things? Why not give them to the maid?〃
She debated with herself。 〃I think you're right;〃 she decided。 〃Yes; I'll give them to Jennie。〃
〃The underclothes; too;〃 he urged。 〃And the hats。〃
It ended in her having left barely enough loosely to fill the bottom of a small trunk with two trays。
They drove to the Knickerbocker Hotel; and he took a small suite; one of the smallest and least luxurious in the house; for with all his desire to make her feel the contrast of her change of circumstances sharply; he could not forget how limited his income was; and how unwise it would be to have to move in a few days to humbler quarters。 He hoped that the rooms; englamoured by the hotel's general air of costly luxury; would sufficiently impress her。 And while she gave no strong indication but accepted everything in her wonted quiet; passive manner; he was shrewd enough to see that she was content。 〃To…morrow;〃 he said to himself; 〃after she has done some shopping; the last regret will leave her; and her memory of that clerk will begin to fade fast。 I'll give her too much else to think about。〃
The following morning; when they faced each other at breakfast in their sitting room; he glanced at her from time to time in wonder and terror。 She looked not merely insignificant; but positively homely。 Her skin had a sickly pallor; her hair seemed to be of many different and disagreeable shades of uninteresting dead yellow。 Her eyes suggested faded blue china dishes; with colorless lashes and reddened edges of the lids。 Her lips had lost their rosy freshness; her teeth their sparkling whiteness。
His heavy heart seemed to be resting nauseously upon the pit of his stomach。 Was his infatuation sheer delusion; with no basis of charm in her at all? Was she; indeed; nothing but this unattractive; faded little commonplaceness?a poor specimen of an inferior order of working girl? What an awakening! And she was his WIFE!was his companion for the yet more brilliant career he had resolved and was planning! He must introduce her everywhere; must see the not to be concealed amazement in the faces of his acquaintances; must feel the cruel covert laughter and jeering at his weak folly! Was there ever in history or romance a parallel to such fatuity as his? Why; people would be right in thinking him a sham; a mere bluffer at the high and strong qualities he was reputed to have。
Had Norman been; in fact; the man of ice and iron the compulsions of a career under the social system made him seem; the homely girl opposite him that morning would speedily have had something to think about other than her unhappiness of the woman who has given her person to one man and her heart to another。 Instead; the few words he addressed to her were all gentleness and forbearance。 Stronger than his chagrin was his pity for herthe poor; unconscious victim of his mad hallu… cination。 If she thought about the matter at all; she assumed that he was still the slave of her charmsfor; the florid enthusiasm of man's passion inevitably deludes the woman into fancying it objective instead of wholly subjective; and; only the rare very wise woman; after much experience; learns to be suspicious of the validity of her own charms and to concentrate upon keeping up the man's delusions。
At last he rose and kissed her on the brow and let his hand rest gently on her shoulderwhat a difference between those caresses and the caresses that had made her beg him to be 〃kind〃 to her! Said he:
〃Do you mind if I leave you alone for a while? I ought to go to the club and have the rest of my things packed and sent。 I'll not be gone longabout an hour。〃
〃Very well;〃 said she lifelessly。
〃I'll telephone my office that I'll not be down to…day。〃
With an effort she said; 〃There's no reason for doing that。 I don't want to interfere with your business。〃
〃I'm neglecting nothing。 And that shopping must be done。〃
She made no reply; but went to the window; and from the height looked down and out upon the mighty spread of the city。 He observed her a moment with a dazed pitying expression; took his hat and departed。
It was nearly two hours before he got together suffi… cient courage to return。 He had been hopinghad been saying to himself with vigorous effort at confidence that he had simply seen one more of the many transformations; each of which seemed to present her as a wholly different personality。 When he should see her again; she would have wiped out the personality that had shocked and saddened him; would appear as some new variety of enchantress; perhaps even more potent over his senses than ever before。 But a glance as he entered demolished that hope。 She was no different than when he left。 Evidently she had been crying; and spasms of that sort always accentuate every unloveliness。 He did not try to nerve himself to kiss her; but said:
〃It'll not take you long to get ready?〃
She m