FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   309   310   311   312   313   314   315   316   317   318   319   320   321   322   323   324   325   326   327   328   329   330   331   332   333  
334   335   336   337   338   339   340   341   342   343   344   345   346   347   348   349   350   351   352   353   354   355   356   357   358   >>   >|  
eur ask:--"Where do you wish to go, sir?" "To the Club," I said. My room was ready, my personal belongings, my clothes had been laid out, my photographs were on the dressing-table. I took up, mechanically, the evening newspaper, but I could not read it; I thought of Maude, of the children, memories flowed in upon me,--a flood not to be dammed.... Presently the club valet knocked at my door. He had a dinner card. "Will you be dining here, sir?" he inquired. I went downstairs. Fred Grierson was the only man in the dining-room. "Hello, Hugh," he said, "come and sit down. I hear your wife's gone abroad." "Yes," I answered, "she thought she'd try it instead of the South Shore this summer." Perhaps I imagined that he looked at me queerly. I had made a great deal of money out of my association with Grierson, I had valued very highly being an important member of the group to which he belonged; but to-night, as I watched him eating and drinking greedily, I hated him even as I hated myself. And after dinner, when he started talking with a ridicule that was a thinly disguised bitterness about the Citizens Union and their preparations for a campaign I left him and went to bed. Before a week had passed my painful emotions had largely subsided, and with my accustomed resiliency I had regained the feeling of self-respect so essential to my happiness. I was free. My only anxiety was for Nancy, who had gone to New York the day after my last talk with her; and it was only by telephoning to her house that I discovered when she was expected to return.... I found her sitting beside one of the open French windows of her salon, gazing across at the wooded hills beyond the Ashuela. She was serious, a little pale; more exquisite, more desirable than ever; but her manner implied the pressure of control, and her voice was not quite steady as she greeted me. "You've been away a long time," I said. "The dressmakers," she answered. Her colour rose a little. "I thought they'd never get through." "But why didn't you drop me a line, let me know when you were coming?" I asked, taking a chair beside her, and laying my hand on hers. She drew it gently away. "What's the matter?" I asked. "I've been thinking it all over--what we're doing. It doesn't seem right, it seems terribly wrong." "But I thought we'd gone over all that," I replied, as patiently as I could. "You're putting it on an old-fashioned, moral basis." "But the
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   309   310   311   312   313   314   315   316   317   318   319   320   321   322   323   324   325   326   327   328   329   330   331   332   333  
334   335   336   337   338   339   340   341   342   343   344   345   346   347   348   349   350   351   352   353   354   355   356   357   358   >>   >|  



Top keywords:

thought

 

Grierson

 
dinner
 

dining

 

answered

 
Ashuela
 
desirable
 
wooded
 

manner

 

anxiety


respect
 

happiness

 

essential

 
exquisite
 
expected
 
return
 
discovered
 

telephoning

 

sitting

 
implied

French

 

windows

 

gazing

 

dressmakers

 

thinking

 
matter
 

gently

 

laying

 

putting

 

fashioned


patiently

 

replied

 
terribly
 

taking

 

feeling

 

colour

 

greeted

 
control
 

steady

 

coming


pressure

 

inquired

 

downstairs

 

summer

 

abroad

 
photographs
 
clothes
 

newspaper

 

evening

 

dressing