Mr. Crewe's Career
CHAPTER XXIV
AN ADVENTURE OF VICTORIA'S
Mrs. Pomfret was a proud woman, for she had at last obtained the consent of
the lion to attend a lunch party. She would have liked a dinner much better, but
beggars are not choosers, and she seized eagerly on the lunch. The two days
before the convention Mr. Crewe was to spend at Leith; having continual
conferences, of course, receiving delegations, and discussing with prominent
citizens certain offices which would be in his gift when he became governor.
Also, there was Mr. Watling's nominating speech to be gone over carefully, and
Mr. Crewe's own speech of acceptance to be composed. He had it in his mind, and
he had decided that it should have two qualities: it should be brief and
forceful.
Gratitude, however, is one of the noblest qualities of man, and a statesman
should not fail to reward his faithful workers and adherents. As one of the
chiefest of these, Mrs. Pomfret was entitled to high consideration. Hence the
candidate had consented to have a lunch given in his honour, naming the day and
the hour; and Mrs. Pomfret, believing that a prospective governor should possess
some of the perquisites of royalty, in a rash moment submitted for his approval
a list of guests. This included two distinguished foreigners who were staying at
the Leith Inn, an Englishman and an Austrian, and an elderly lady of very
considerable social importance who was on a visit to Mrs. Pomfret.
Mr. Crewe had graciously sanctioned the list, but took the liberty of
suggesting as an addition to it the name of Miss Victoria Flint, explaining over
the telephone to Mrs. Pomfret that he had scarcely seen Victoria all summer, and
that he wanted particularly to see her. Mrs. Pomfret declared that she had only
left out Victoria because her presence might be awkward for both of them, but
Mr. Crewe waved this aside as a trivial and feminine objection; so Victoria was
invited, and another young man to balance the table.
Mrs. Pomfret, as may have been surmised, was a woman of taste, and her villa
at Leith, though small, had added considerably to her reputation for this
quality. Patterson Pomfret had been a gentleman with red cheeks and an income,
who incidentally had been satisfied with both. He had never tried to add to the
income, which was large enough to pay the dues of the clubs the lists of which
he thought worthy to include his name; large enough to pay hotel bills in London
and Paris and at the baths, and to free the servants at country houses; large
enough to clothe his wife and himself, and to teach Alice the three essentials
of music, French, and deportment. If that man is notable who has mastered one
thing well, Patterson Pomfret was a notable man: he had mastered the
possibilities of his income, and never in any year had he gone beyond it by so
much as a sole d vin blanc or a pair of red silk stockings. When he died, he
left a worthy financial successor in his wife.
Mrs. Pomfret, knowing the income, after an exhaustive search decided upon
Leith as the place to build her villa. It must be credited to her foresight
that, when she built, she saw the future possibilities of the place. The proper
people had started it. And it must be credited to her genius that she added to
these possibilities of Leith by bringing to it such families as she thought
worthy to live in the neighbourhood—families which incidentally increased the
value of the land. Her villa had a decided French look, and was so amazingly
trim and neat and generally shipshape as to be fit—for only the daintiest and
most discriminating feminine occupation. The house was small, and its
metamorphosis from a plain wooden farm-house had been an achievement that
excited general admiration. Porches had been added, and a coat of spotless white
relieved by an orange striping so original that many envied, but none dared to
copy it. The striping went around the white chimneys, along the cornice, under
the windows and on the railings of the porch: there were window boxes gay with
geraniums and abundant awnings striped white and red, to match the flowers: a
high, formal hemlock hedge hid the house from the road, through which entered a
blue-stone drive that cut the close-cropped lawn and made a circle to the
doorway. Under the great maples on the lawn were a tea-table, rugs, and wicker
chairs, and the house itself was furnished by a variety of things of a design
not to be bought in the United States of America: desks, photograph frames,
writing-sets, clocks, paperknives, flower baskets, magazine racks, cigarette
boxes, and dozens of other articles for the duplicates of which one might have
searched Fifth Avenue in vain.
Mr. Crewe was a little late. Important matters, he said, had detained him at
the last moment, and he particularly enjoined Mrs. Pomfret's butler to listen
carefully for the telephone, and twice during lunch it was announced that Mr.
Crewe was wanted. At first he was preoccupied, and answered absently across the
table the questions of the Englishman and the Austrian about American politics,
and talked to the lady of social prominence on his right not at all; nor to Mrs.
Pomfret'—who excused him. Being a lady of discerning qualities, however, the
hostess remarked that Mr. Crewe's eyes wandered more than once to the far end of
the oval table, where Victoria sat, and even Mrs. Pomfret could not deny the
attraction. Victoria wore a filmy gown of mauve that infinitely became her, and
a shadowy hat which, in the semi-darkness of the dining room, was a wondrous
setting for her shapely head. Twice she caught Mr. Crewe's look upon her and
returned it amusedly from under her lashes,—and once he could have sworn that
she winked perceptibly. What fires she kindled in his deep nature it is
impossible to say.
She had kindled other fires at her side. The tall young Englishman had lost
interest in American politics, had turned his back upon poor Alice Pomfret, and
had forgotten the world in general. Not so the Austrian, who was on the other
side of Alice, and who could not see Victoria. Mr. Crewe, by his manner and
appearance, had impressed him as a person of importance, and he wanted to know
more. Besides, he wished to improve his English, and Alice had been told to
speak French to him. By a lucky chance, after several blind attempts, he
awakened the interest of the personality.
"I hear you are what they call reform in America?"
This was not the question that opened the gates.
"I don't care much for the word," answered Mr. Crewe, shortly; "I prefer the
word progressive."
Discourse on the word "progressive" by the Austrian almost a monologue. But
he was far from being discouraged.
"And Mrs. Pomfret tells me they play many detestable tricks on you—yes?"
"Tricks!" exclaimed Mr. Crewe, the memory of many recent ones being fresh in
his mind; "I should say so. Do you know what a caucus is?"
"Caucus—caucus? It brings something to my head. Ah, I have seen a picture of
it, in some English book. A very funny picture—it is in fun, yes?"
"A picture?" said Mr. Crewe. "Impossible!"
"But no," said the Austrian, earnestly, with one finger to his temples. "It
is a funny picture, I know. I cannot recall. But the word caucus I remember.
That is a droll word."
"Perhaps, Baron," said Victoria, who had been resisting an almost
uncontrollable desire to laugh, "you have been reading 'Alice in Wonderland.'"
The Englishman, Beatrice Chillingham, and some others (among whom were not
Mr. Crewe and Mrs. Pomfret) gave way to an extremely pardonable mirth, in which
the good-natured baron joined.
"Ach!" he cried. "It is so, I have seen it in 'Alice in Wonderland.'" Here
the puzzled expression returned to his face, "But they are birds, are they not?"
Men whose minds are on serious things are impatient of levity, and Mr. Crewe
looked at the baron:
"No," he said, "they are not birds."
This reply was the signal for more laughter.
"A thousand pardons," exclaimed the baron. "It is I who am so ignorant. You
will excuse me—yes?"
Mr. Crewe was mollified. The baron was a foreigner, he had been the object of
laughter, and Mr. Crewe's chivalrous spirit resented it.
"What we call a caucus in the towns of this State," he said, "is a meeting of
citizens of one party to determine who their candidates shall be. A caucus is a
primary. There is a very loose primary law in this State, purposely kept loose
by the politicians of the Northeastern Railroads, in order that they may play
such tricks on decent men as they have been playing on me."
At this mention of the Northeastern Railroads the lady on Mr. Crewe's right,
and some other guests, gave startled glances at Victoria. They observed with
surprise that she seemed quite unmoved.
"I'll tell you one or two of the things those railroad lobbyists have done,"
said Mr. Crewe, his indignation rising with the subject, and still addressing
the baron. "They are afraid to let the people into the caucuses, because they
know I'll get the delegates. Nearly everywhere I speak to the people, I get the
delegates. The railroad politicians send word to the town rings to hold snap
caucuses' when they hear I'm coming into a town to speak, and the local
politicians give out notices only a day before, and only to the voters they want
in the caucus. In Hull the other day, out of a population of two thousand,
twenty men elected four delegates for the railroad candidate."
"It is corruption!" cried the baron, who had no idea who Victoria was, and a
very slim notion of what Mr. Crewe was talking about.
"Corruption!" said Mr. Crewe. "What can you expect when a railroad owns a
State? The other day in Britain, where they elect fourteen delegates, the editor
of a weekly newspaper printed false ballots with two of my men at the top and
one at the bottom, and eleven railroad men in the middle. Fortunately some
person with sense discovered the fraud before it was too late."
"You don't tell me!" said the baron.
"And every State and federal office-holder has been distributing passes for
the last three weeks."
"Pass?" repeated the baron. "You mean they fight with the fist—so? To
distribute a pass—so," and the baron struck out at an imaginary enemy. "It is
the American language. I have read it in the prize-fight. I am told to read the
prize-fight and the base-ball game."
Mr. Crewe thought it obviously useless to continue this conversation.
"The railroad," said the baron, "he is the modern Machiavelli."
"I say," Mr. Rangely, the Englishman, remarked to Victoria, "this is a bit
rough on you, you know."
"Oh, I'm used to it," she laughed.
"Mr. Crewe," said Mrs. Pomfret, to the table at large, "deserves tremendous
credit for the fight he has made, almost single-handed. Our greatest need in
this country is what you have in England, Mr. Rangely,—gentlemen in politics.
Our country gentlemen, like Mr. Crewe, are now going to assume their proper
duties and responsibilities." She laid her napkin on the table and glanced at
Alice as she continued: "Humphrey, I shall have to appoint you, as usual, the
man of the house. Will you take the gentlemen into the library?"
Another privilege of celebrity is to throw away one's cigar, and walk out of
the smoking room if one is bored. Mr. Crewe was, in a sense, the host. He
indicated with a wave of his hand the cigars and cigarettes which Mrs. Pomfret
had provided, and stood in a thoughtful manner before the empty fireplace, with
his hands in his pockets, replying in brief sentences to the questions of Mr.
Chillingham and the others. To tell the truth, Mr. Crewe was bringing to bear
all of his extraordinary concentration of mind upon a problem with which he had
been occupied for some years past. He was not a man, as we know, to take the
important steps of life in a hurry, although; like the truly great, he was
capable of making up his mind in a very brief period when it was necessary to
strike. He had now, after weighing the question with the consideration which its
gravity demanded, finally decided upon definite action. Whereupon he walked out
of the library, leaving the other guests to comment as they would; or not
comment at all, for all he cared. Like all masterful men, he went direct to the
thing he wanted.
The ladies were having coffee under the maples, by the tea-table. At some
little distance from the group Beatrice Chillingham was walking with Victoria,
and it was evident that Victoria found Miss Chillingham's remarks amusing. These
were the only two in the party who did not observe Mr. Crewe's approach. Mrs.
Pomfret, when she saw the direction which he was taking, lost the thread of her
conversation, and the lady who was visiting her wore a significant expression.
"Victoria," said Mr. Crewe, "let's go around to the other side of the house
and look at the view."
Victoria started and turned to him from Miss Chillingham, with the fun still
sparkling in her eyes. It was, perhaps, as well for Mr. Crewe that he had not
overheard their conversation; but this might have applied to any man.
"Are you sure you can spare the time?" she asked.
Mr. Crewe looked at his watch—probably from habit.
"I made it a point to leave the smoking room early," he replied.
"We're flattered—aren't we, Beatrice?"
Miss Chillingham had a turned-up nose, and a face which was apt to be
slightly freckled at this time of year; for she contemned vanity and veils. For
fear of doing her an injustice, it must be added that she was not at all
bad-looking; quite the contrary All that can be noted in this brief space is
that Beatrice Chillingham was herself. Some people declared that she was
possessed of the seven devils of her sex which Mr. Stockton wrote about.
"I'm flattered," she said, and walked off towards the tea-table with a glance
in which Victoria read many meanings. Mr. Crewe paid no attention either to
words, look, or departure.
"I want to talk to you," he said.
"You've made that very plain, at least," answered Victoria. "Why did you
pretend it was the view?"
"Some conventionalities have to be observed, I suppose," he said. "Let's go
around there. It is a good view."
"Don't you think this is a little—marked?" asked Victoria, surveying him with
her hands behind her back.
"I can't help it if it is," said Mr. Crewe. "Every hour is valuable to me,
and I've got to take my chances when I get 'em. For some reason, you haven't
been down at Leith much this summer. Why didn't you telephone me, as I asked
you."
"Because I've suddenly grown dignified, I suppose," she said. "And then, of
course, I hesitated to intrude upon such a person of importance as you have
become, Humphrey."
"I've always got time to see you," he replied. "I always shall have. But I
appreciate your delicacy. That sort of thing counts with a man more than most
women know."
"Then I am repaid," said Victoria, "for exercising self-control."
"I find it always pays," declared Mr. Crewe, and he glanced at her with
distinct approval. They were skirting the house, and presently came out upon a
tiny terrace where young Ridley had made a miniature Italian garden when the
Electric dividends had increased, and from which there was a vista of the
shallows of the Blue. Here was a stone garden-seat which Mrs. Pomfret had
brought from Italy, and over which she had quarrelled with the customs
authorities. Mr. Crewe, with a wave of his hand, signified his pleasure that
they should sit, and cleared his throat.
"It's just as well, perhaps," he began, "that we haven't had the chance to
see each other earlier. When a man starts out upon an undertaking of the gravest
importance, wherein he stakes his reputation, an undertaking for which he is
ridiculed and reviled, he likes to have his judgment justified. He likes to be
vindicated, especially in the eyes of—people whom he cares about. Personally, I
never had any doubt that I should be the next governor, because I knew in the
beginning that I had estimated public sentiment correctly. The man who succeeds
in this world is the man who has sagacity enough to gauge public sentiment ahead
of time, and the courage to act on his beliefs." Victoria looked at him
steadily. He was very calm, and he had one knee crossed over the other.
"And the sagacity," she added, "to choose his lieutenants in the fight."
"Exactly," said Mr. Crewe. "I have always declared, Victoria, that you had a
natural aptitude for affairs."
"I have heard my father say," she continued, still maintaining her steady
glance, "that Hamilton Tooting is one of the shrewdest politicians he has ever
known. Isn't Mr. Tooting one of your right-hand men?"
"He could hardly be called that," Mr. Crewe replied. "In fact, I haven't any
what you might call 'right-hand men.' The large problems I have had to decide
for myself. As for Tooting, he's well enough in his way; he understands the
tricks of the politicians—he's played 'em, I guess. He's uneducated; he's merely
a worker. You see," he went on, "one great reason why I've been so successful is
because I've been practical. I've taken materials as I've found them."
"I see," answered Victoria, turning her head and gazing over the terrace at
the sparkling reaches of the river. She remembered the close of that wintry
afternoon in Mr. Crewe's house at the capital, and she was quite willing to do
him exact justice, and to believe that he had forgotten it—which, indeed, was
the case.
"I want to say," he continued, "that although I have known and—ahem—admired
you for many years, Victoria, what has struck me most forcibly in your favour
has been your open-mindedness—especially on the great political questions this
summer. I have no idea how much you know about them, but one would naturally
have expected you, on account of your father, to be prejudiced. Sometime, when I
have more leisure, I shall go into them, fully with you. And in the meantime
I'll have my secretary send you the complete list of my speeches up to date, and
I know you will read them carefully."
"You are very kind, Humphrey," she said.
Absorbed in the presentation of his subject (which chanced to be himself),
Mr. Crewe did not observe that her lips were parted, and that there were little
creases around her eyes.
"And sometime," said Mr. Crewe, "when all this has blown over a little, I
shall have a talk with your father. He undoubtedly understands that there is
scarcely any question of my election. He probably realizes, too, that he has
been in the—wrong, and that railroad domination must cease—he has already made
several concessions, as you know. I wish you would tell him from me that when I
am governor, I shall make it a point to discuss the whole matter with him, and
that he will find in me no foe of corporations. Justice is what I stand for.
Temperamentally, I am too conservative, I am too much of a business man, to
tamper with vested interests."
"I will tell him, Humphrey," said Victoria.
Mr. Crewe coughed, and looked at his watch once, more. "And now, having made
that clear," he said, "and having only a quarter of an hour before I have to
leave to keep an appointment, I am going to take up another subject. And I ask
you to believe it is not done lightly, or without due consideration, but as the
result of some years of thought."
Victoria turned to him seriously—and yet the creases were still around her
eyes.
"I can well believe it, Humphrey," she answered. "But—have you time?"
"Yes," he said, "I have learned the value of minutes."
"But not of hours, perhaps," she replied.
"That," said Mr. Crewe, indulgently, "is a woman's point of view. A man
cannot dally through life, and your kind of woman has no use for a man who
dallies. First, I will give you my idea of a woman."
"I am all attention," said Victoria.
"Well," said Mr. Crewe, putting the tops of his fingers together, "she should
excel as a housewife. I haven't any use for your so-called intellectual woman.
Of course, what I mean by a housewife is something a little less bourgeoise; she
should be able to conduct an establishment with the neatness and despatch and
economy of a well-run hotel. She should be able to seat a table instantly and
accurately, giving to the prominent guests the prestige they deserve. Nor have I
any sympathy with the notion that makes a married woman a law unto herself. She
enters voluntarily into an agreement whereby she puts herself under the control
of her husband: his interests, his career, his—"
"Comfort?" suggested Victoria.
"Yes, his comfort—all that comes first. And his establishment is conducted
primarily, and his guests selected, in the interests of his fortunes. Of course,
that goes without saying of a man in high place in public life. But he must
choose for his wife a woman who is equal to all these things,—to my mind her
highest achievement,—who makes the most of the position he gives her, presides
at his table and entertainments, and reaches such people as, for any reason, he
is unable to reach. I have taken the pains to point out these things in a
general way, for obvious reasons. My greatest desire is to be fair."
"What," asked Victoria, with her eyes on the river, "what are the wages?"
Mr. Crewe laughed. Incidentally, he thought her profile very fine.
"I do not believe in flattery," he said, "but I think I should add to the
qualifications personality and a sense of humour. I am quite sure I could never
live with a woman—who didn't have a sense of humour."
"I should think it would be a little difficult," said Victoria, "to get a
woman with the qualifications you enumerate and a sense of humour thrown in."
"Infinitely difficult," declared Mr. Crewe, with more ardour than he had yet
shown. "I have waited a good many years, Victoria."
"And yet," she said, "you have been happy. You have a perpetual source of
enjoyment denied to some people."
"What is that?" he asked. It is natural for a man to like to hear the points
of his character discussed by a discerning woman.
"Yourself," said Victoria, suddenly looking him full in the face. "You are
complete, Humphrey, as it is. You are happily married already. Besides," she
added, laughing a little, "the qualities you have mentioned—with the exception
of the sense of humour—are not those of a wife, but of a business partner of the
opposite sex. What you really want is a business partner with something like a
fifth interest, and whose name shall not appear in the agreement."
Mr. Crewe laughed again. Nevertheless, he was a little puzzled over this
remark.
"I am not sentimental," he began.
"You certainly are not," she said.
"You have a way," he replied, with a shade of reproof in his voice, "you have
a way at times of treating serious things with a little less gravity than they
deserve. I am still a young man, but I have seen a good deal of life, and I know
myself pretty well. It is necessary to treat matrimony from a practical as well
as a sentimental point of view. There wouldn't be half the unhappiness and
divorces if people took time to do this, instead of rushing off and getting
married immediately. And of course it is especially important for a man in my
position to study every aspect of the problem before he takes a step."
By this time a deep and absorbing interest in a new aspect of Mr. Crewe's
character had taken possession of Victoria.
"And you believe that, by taking thought, you can get the kind of a wife you
want?" she asked.
"Certainly," he replied; "does that strike you as strange?"
"A little," said Victoria. "Suppose," she added gently, "suppose that the
kind of wife you'd want wouldn't want you?"
Mr. Crewe laughed again.
"That is a contingency which a strong man does not take into consideration,"
he answered. "Strong men get what they want. But upon my word, Victoria, you
have a delicious way of putting things. In your presence I quite forget the
problems and perplexities which beset me. That," he said, with delicate meaning,
"that is another quality I should desire in a woman."
"It is one, fortunately, that isn't marketable," she said, "and it's the only
quality you've mentioned that's worth anything."
"A woman's valuation," said Mr. Crewe.
"If it made you forget your own affairs, it would be priceless."
"Look here, Victoria," cried Mr. Crewe, uncrossing his knees, "joking's all
very well, but I haven't time for it to-day. And I'm in a serious mood. I've
told you what I want, and now that I've got to go in a few minutes, I'll come to
the point. I don't suppose a man could pay a woman a higher compliment than to
say that his proposal was the result of some years of thought and study."
Here Victoria laughed outright, but grew serious again at once.
"Unless he proposed to her the day he met her. That would be a real
compliment."
"The man," said Mr. Crewe, impatiently, "would be a fool."
"Or else a person of extreme discernment," said Victoria. "And love is
lenient with fools. By the way, Humphrey, it has just occurred to me that
there's one quality which some people think necessary in a wife, which you
didn't mention."
"What's that?"
"Love," said Victoria.
"Love, of course," he agreed; "I took that for granted."
"I supposed you did," said Victoria, meekly.
"Well, now, to come to the point—" he began again.
But she interrupted him by glancing at the watch on her gown, and rising.
"What's the matter?" he asked, with some annoyance.
"The fifteen minutes are up," she announced. "I cannot take the
responsibility of detaining you."
"We will put in tantalizing as another attractive quality," he laughed. "I
absolve you of all responsibility. Sit down."
"I believe you mentioned obedience," she answered, and sat down again at the
end of the bench, resting her chin on her gloved hand, and looking at him. By
this time her glances seemed to have gained a visibly disturbing effect. He
moved a little nearer to her, took off his hat (which he had hitherto neglected
to do), and thrust his hands abruptly into his pockets—as much as to say that he
would not be responsible for their movements if they were less free.
"Hang it all, Victoria," he exclaimed, "I'm a practical man, and I try to
look at this, which is one of the serious things in life, in a practical way."
"One of the serious things," she repeated, as though to herself.
"Yes," he said, "certainly."
"I merely asked to be sure of the weight you gave it. Go on."
"In a practical way, as I was saying. Long ago I suspected that you had most
of those qualities."
"I'm overwhelmed, Humphrey," she cried, with her eyes dancing. "But—do you
think I could cultivate the rest?"
"Oh, well," said Mr. Crewe, "I put it that way because no woman is perfect,
and I dislike superlatives."
"I should think superlatives would be very hard to live with," she reflected.
"But—dreadful thought!—suppose I should lack an essential?"
"What—for instance?"
"Love—for instance. But then you did not put it first. It was I who mentioned
it, and you who took it for granted."
"Affection seems to be a more sensible term for it," he said. "Affection is
the lasting and sensible thing. You mentioned a partnership, a word that
singularly fits into my notion of marriage. I want to be honest with you, and
understate my feelings on that subject."
Victoria, who had been regarding him with a curious look that puzzled him,
laughed again.
"I have been hoping you haven't exaggerated them," she replied.
"They're stronger than you think," he declared. "I never felt this way in my
life before. What I meant to say was, that I never understood running away with
a woman."
"That does not surprise me," said Victoria.
"I shouldn't know where to run to," he proclaimed.
"Perhaps the woman would, if you got a clever one. At any rate, it wouldn't
matter. One place is as good as another. Some go to Niagara, and some to Coney
Island, and others to Venice. Personally, I should have no particular
preference."
"No preference!" he exclaimed.
"I could be happy in Central Park," she declared.
"Fortunately," said Mr. Crewe, "you will never be called upon to make the
trial."
Victoria was silent. Her thoughts, for the moment, had flown elsewhere, but
Mr. Crewe did not appear to notice this. He fell back into the rounded hollow of
the bench, and it occurred to him that he had never quite realized that profile.
And what an ornament she would be to his table.
"I think, Humphrey," she said, "that we should be going back."
"One moment, and I'll have finished," he cried. "I've no doubt you are
prepared for what I am going to say. I have purposely led up to it, in order
that there might be no misunderstanding. In short, I have never seen another
woman with personal characteristics so well suited for my life, and I want you
to marry me, Victoria. I can offer you the position of the wife of a man with a
public career—for which you are so well fitted."
Victoria shook her head slowly, and smiled at him.
"I couldn't fill the position," she said.
"Perhaps," he replied, smiling back at her, "perhaps I am the best judge of
that."
"And you thought," she asked slowly, "that I was that kind of a woman?"
"I know it to be a practical certainty," said Mr. Crewe.
"Practical certainties," said Victoria, "are not always truths. If I should
sign a contract, which I suppose, as a business man, you would want, to live up
to the letter of your specifications,—even then I could not do it. I should make
life a torture for you, Humphrey. You see, I am honest with you, too—much as
your offer dazzles me." And she shook her head again.
"That," exclaimed Mr. Crewe, impatiently, "is sheer nonsense. I want you, and
I mean to have you."
There came a look into her eyes which Mr. Crewe did not see, because her face
was turned from him.
"I could be happy," she said, "for days and weeks and years in a but on the
side of Sawanec. I could be happy in a farm-house where I had to do all the
work. I am not the model housewife which your imagination depicts, Humphrey. I
could live in two rooms and eat at an Italian restaurant—with the right man. And
I am afraid the wrong one would wake up one day and discover that I had gone. I
am sorry to disillusionize you, but I don't care a fig for balls and
garden-parties and salons. It would be much more fun to run away from them to
the queer places of the earth—with the right man. And I should have to possess
one essential to put up with—greatness and what you call a public career."
"And what is that essential?" he asked.
"Love," said Victoria. He heard the word but faintly, for her face was still
turned away from him. "You've offered me the things that are attainable by
taking thought, by perseverance, by pertinacity, by the outwitting of your
fellow-men, by the stacking of coins. And I want—the unattainable, the divine
gift which is bestowed, which cannot be acquired. If it could be acquired,
Humphrey," she added, looking at him, "I am sure you would acquire it—if you
thought it worth while."
"I don't understand you," he said,—and looked it.
"No," said Victoria, "I was afraid you wouldn't. And moreover, you never
would. There is no use in my trying to make myself any clearer, and you'll have
to keep your appointment. I hesitate to contradict you, but I am not the kind of
woman you want. That is one reason I cannot marry you. And the other is, that I
do not love you."
"You can't be in love with any one else?" he cried.
"That does seem rather preposterous, I'll admit," she answered. "But if I
were, it wouldn't make any difference."
"You won't marry me?" he said, getting to his feet. There was incredulity in
his voice, and a certain amount of bewilderment. The thing was indeed
incredible!
"No," said Victoria, "I won't."
And he had only to look into her face to see that it was so. Hitherto nil
desperandum had been a good working motto, but something told him it was useless
in this case. He thrust on his hat and pulled out his watch.
"Well," he said, "that settles it. I must—say I can't see your point of
view—but that settles it. I must say, too, that your refusal is something of a
shock after what I had been led to expect after the past few years."
"The person you are in love with led you to expect it, Humphrey, and that
person is—yourself. You are in love temporarily with your own ideal of me."
"And your refusal comes at an unfortunate tune for me," he continued, not
heeding her words, "when I have an affair on my hands of such magnitude, which
requires concentrated thought. But I'm not a man to cry, and I'll make the best
of it."
"If I thought it were more than a temporary disappointment, I should be sorry
for you," said Victoria. "I remember that you felt something like this when Mr.
Rutter wouldn't sell you his land. The lady you really want," she added,
pointing with her parasol at the house, "is in there, waiting for you."
Mr. Crewe did not reply to this prophecy, but followed Victoria around the
house to the group on the lawn, where he bade his hostess a somewhat preoccupied
farewell, and bowed distantly to the guests.
"He has so much on his mind," said Mrs. Pomfret. "And oh, I quite
forgot—Humphrey!" she cried, calling after him, "Humphrey!"
"Yes," he said, turning before he reached his automobile. "What is it?"
"Alice and I are going to the convention, you know, and I meant to tell you
that there would be ten in the party—but I didn't have a chance." Here Mrs.
Pomfret glanced at Victoria, who had been joined at once by the tall Englishman.
"Can you get tickets for ten?"
Mr. Crewe made a memorandum.
"Yes," he said, "I'll get the tickets—but I don't see what you want to go
for."