<h2><SPAN name="XI"></SPAN>XI</h2>
<br/>
<p>They had met like flame and wind. It was irrational and
wonderful and conclusive. But after all, it might not have come to
quite so swift a climax if Marna, following Kate's advice, had not
confided the whole thing to Mrs. Barsaloux.</p>
<p>Now, Mrs. Barsaloux was a kind woman, and one with plenty of
sentiment in her composition. But she believed that there were
times when Love should not be given the lead. Naturally, it seemed
to her that this was one of them. She had spent much money upon the
education of this girl whom she had "assumed," as Marna sometimes
playfully put it. Nothing but her large, active, and perhaps
interfering benevolence and Mama's winning and inexplicable charm
held the two together, and the very slightness of their
relationship placed them under peculiar obligations to each
other.</p>
<p>"It's ungrateful of you," Mrs. Barsaloux explained, "manifestly
ungrateful! It's your rôle to love nothing but your career."
She was not stern, merely argumentative.</p>
<p>"But didn't you expect me ever to love any one?" queried
Marna.</p>
<p>Mrs. Barsaloux contemplated a face and figure made for love from
the beginning, and delicately ripened for it, like a peach in the
sun.</p>
<p>"But you could have waited, my dear girl. There's time for both
the love and the career."</p>
<p>Marna shook her head slowly.</p>
<p>"George says there isn't," she answered with an irritating
sweetness. "He says I'm not to go on the stage at all. He
says--"</p>
<p>"Don't 'he says' me like that, Marna," cried her friend. "It
sounds too unutterably silly. Here you are with a beautiful
talent--every one agrees about that--and a chance to develop it.
I've made many sacrifices to give you that chance. Very well;
you've had your trial before the public. You've made good. You
could repay yourself and me for all that has been involved in your
development, and you meet a man and come smiling to me and say that
we're to throw the whole thing over because 'he says' to."</p>
<p>Marna made no answer at all, but Mrs. Barsaloux saw her settle
down in the deep chair in which she was sitting as if to huddle
away from the storm about to break over her.</p>
<p>"She isn't going to offer any resistance," thought the
distressed patron with dismay. "Her mind is completely made up and
she's just crouching down to wait till I'm through with my private
little hurricane."</p>
<p>So, indeed, it proved. Mrs. Barsaloux felt she had the right to
say much, and she said it. Marna may or may not have listened. She
sat shivering and smiling in her chair, and when it was fit for her
to excuse herself, she did, and walked out bravely; but Mrs.
Barsaloux noticed that she tottered a little as she reached the
door. She did not go to her aid, however.</p>
<p>"It's an infatuation," she concluded. "I must treat her as if
she had a violent disease and take care of her. When people are
delirious they must be protected against themselves. It's a
delirium with her, and the best thing I can do is to run off to New
York with her. She can make her next appearance when the opera
company gets there. I'll arrange it this afternoon."</p>
<p>She refrained from telling Marna of her plans, but she went
straight to the city and talked over the situation with her friend
the impresario. He seemed anything but depressed. On the contrary,
he was excited--even exalted.</p>
<p>"Spirit her away, madam," he advised. "Of course she will miss
her lover horribly, and that will be the best thing that can happen
to her. Why did not the public rise to her the other night? Not
because she could not sing: far from it. If a nightingale sings,
then Miss Cartan does. But she left her audience a little cold. Let
us face the facts. You saw it. We all saw it. And why? Because she
was too happy, madam; too complaisant; too uninstructed in the
emotions. Now it will be different. We will take her away; we will
be patient with her while she suffers; afterward she will bless us,
for she will have discovered the secret of the artist, and then
when she opens her little silver throat we shall have SONG."</p>
<p>Mrs. Barsaloux, with many compunctions, and with some pangs of
pure motherly sympathy, nevertheless agreed.</p>
<p>"If only he had been a man above the average," she said, as she
tearfully parted from the great man, "perhaps it would not have
mattered so much."</p>
<p>The impresario lifted his eyebrows and his mustaches at the same
time and assumed the aspect of a benevolent Mephistopheles.</p>
<p>"The variety of man, madam," he said sententiously, "makes no
manner of difference. It is the tumult in Miss Marna's soul which I
hope we shall be able to utilize"--he interrupted himself with a
smile and a bow as he opened the door for his departing
friend--"for the purposes of art."</p>
<p>Mrs. Barsaloux sat in the middle of her taxi seat all the way
home, and saw neither street, edifice, nor human being. She was
looking back into her own busy, confused, and frustrated life, and
was remembering certain things which she had believed were buried
deep. Her heart misgave her horribly. Yet to hand over this bright
singing bird, so exquisite, so rare, so fitted for purposes of
exposition, to the keeping of a mere male being of unfortunate
contiguity, to permit him to carry her into the seclusion of an
ordinary home to wait on him and regulate her life according to his
whim, was really too fantastic for consideration. So she put her
memories and her tendernesses out of sight and walked up the stairs
with purpose in her tread.</p>
<hr style="width: 25%;">
<p>She meant to "have it out" with the girl, who was, she believed,
reasonable enough after all.</p>
<p>"She's been without her mother for so long," she mused, "that
it's no wonder she's lacking in self-control. I must have the
firmness that a mother would have toward her. It would be the
height of cruelty to let her have her own way in this."</p>
<p>If the two could have met at that moment, it would have changed
the course of both their lives. But a trifle had intervened. Marna
Cartan had gone walking; and she never came back. Only, the next
day, radiantly beautiful, with fresh flowers in her hands, Marna
Fitzgerald came running in begging to be forgiven. She tried to
carry the situation with her impetuosity. She was laughing, crying,
pleading. She got close to her old friend as if she would enwrap
her in her influence. She had the veritable aspect of the bride.
Whatever others might think regarding her lost career, it was
evident that she believed the great hour had just struck for her.
Her husband was with her.</p>
<p>"Haven't you any apology to make, sir?" poor Mrs. Barsaloux
cried to him. He looked matter-of-fact, she thought, and as if he
ought to be able to take a reasonable view of things. But she had
misjudged. Perhaps it was his plain, everyday, commercial garments
which deceived her and made her think him open to week-day
arguments; for at that moment he was really a knight of romance,
and at Mrs. Barsaloux's question his eyes gleamed with unsuspected
fires.</p>
<p>"Who could be so foolish as to apologize for happiness like
ours?" he demanded.</p>
<p>"Aren't you going to forgive us, dear?" pleaded Marna.</p>
<p>But Mrs. Barsaloux couldn't quite stand that.</p>
<p>"You sound like an old English comedy, Marna," she said
impatiently. "You're of age; I'm no relation to you; you've a
perfect right to be married. Better take advantage of being here to
pack your things. You'll need them."</p>
<p>"You mean that I'm not expected to come here again,
<i>tante</i>?"</p>
<p>"I shall sail for France in a week," said Mrs. Barsaloux
wearily.</p>
<p>"For France, <i>tante</i>? When did you decide?"</p>
<p>"This minute," said the lady, and gave the married lovers to
understand that the interview was at an end.</p>
<p>Marna went weeping down the street, holding on to her George's
arm.</p>
<p>"If she'd been Irish, she'd have cursed me," she sobbed, "and
then I'd have had something to go on, so to speak. Perhaps I could
have got her to take it off me in time. But what are you going to
do with a snubbing like that?"</p>
<p>"Oh, leave it for the Arctic explorers to explain. They're used
to being in below-zero temperature," George said with a troubled
laugh. "I'm sure I can't waste any time thinking about a woman who
could stand out against you, Marna, the way you are this day, and
the way you're looking."</p>
<p>"But, George, she thinks I'm a monster."</p>
<p>"Then there's something wrong with her zoology. You're an--"</p>
<p>"Don't call me an angel, dear, whatever you do! There are some
things I hate to be called--they're so insipid. If any one called
me an angel I'd know he didn't appreciate me. Come, let's go to
Kate's. She's my court of last appeal. If Kate can't forgive me,
I'll know I've done wrong."</p>
<hr style="width: 25%;">
<p>Kate was never to forget that night. She had come in from a day
of difficult and sordid work. For once, the purpose back of all her
toil among the people there in the great mill town was lost sight
of in the sheer repulsiveness of the tasks she had had to perform.
The pathos of their temptations, the terrific disadvantages under
which they labored, their gray tragedies, had some way lost their
import. She was merely a dreadfully fagged woman, disgusted with
evil, with dirt and poverty. She was at outs with her world and
impatient with the suffering involved in the mere living of
life.</p>
<p>Moreover, when she had come into the house, she had found it
dark as usual. The furnace was down, and her own room was cold. But
she had set her teeth together, determined not to give way to
depression, and had made her rather severe toilet for dinner when
word was brought to her by the children's nurse that Dr. and Mrs.
Fitzgerald desired to see her. For a moment she could not
comprehend what that might mean; then the truth assailed her, took
her by the hand, and ran her down the stairs into Mama's arms.</p>
<p>"But it's outrageous," she cried, hugging Marna to her. "How
could you be so willful?"</p>
<p>"It's glorious," retorted Marna. "And if I ever was going to be
willful, now's the time."</p>
<p>"Right you are," broke in George. "What does Stevenson say about
that? 'Youth is the time to be up and doing.' You're not going to
be severe with us, Miss Barrington? We've been counting on
you."</p>
<p>"Have you?" inquired Kate, putting Marna aside and taking her
husband by the hand. "Well, you are your own justification, you
two. But haven't you been ungrateful?"</p>
<p>Marna startled her by a bit of Dionysian philosophy.</p>
<p>"Is it ungrateful to be happy?" she demanded. "Would anybody
have been in the right who asked us to be unhappy? Why don't you
call us brave? Do you imagine it isn't difficult to have people we
love disapproving of us? But you know yourself, Kate, if we'd
waited forty-eight hours, I'd have been dragged off to live with my
career."</p>
<p>She laughed brightly, sinking back in her chair and throwing
wide her coat. Kate looked at her appraisingly, and warmed in the
doing of it.</p>
<p>"You don't look as if you were devoted to a career, she
admitted.</p>
<p>"Oh," sighed Fitzgerald, "I only just barely got her in
time!"</p>
<p>"And now what do you propose doing?"</p>
<p>"Why, to-morrow we shall look for a place to live--for a
home."</p>
<p>"Do you mean a flat?" asked Kate with a flick of satire.</p>
<p>"A flat, or anything. It doesn't matter much what."</p>
<p>"Or where?"</p>
<p>"It will be on the West Side," said the matter-of-fact
Fitzgerald.</p>
<p>"And who'll keep house for you? Must you find servants?"</p>
<p>"Why, Kate, we're dreadfully poor," cried Marna excitedly, as if
poverty were a mere adventure. "Didn't you know that? I shall do my
own work."</p>
<p>"Oh, we've both got to work," added Fitzgerald.</p>
<p>He didn't say he was sorry Marna had to slave with her little
white hands, or that he realized that he was doing a bold--perhaps
an impious--thing in snatching a woman from her service to art to
go into service for him. Evidently he didn't think that way.
Neither minded any sacrifice apparently. The whole of it was, they
were together. Suddenly, they seemed to forget Kate. They stood
gazing at each other as if their sense of possession overwhelmed
them. Kate felt something like angry resentment stir in her. How
dared they, when she was so alone, so weary, so homeless?</p>
<p>"Will you stay to dinner with me?" she asked with something like
asperity.</p>
<p>"To dinner?" they murmured in vague chorus. "No, thanks."</p>
<p>"But where do you intend to have dinner?"</p>
<p>"We--we haven't thought," confessed Marna.</p>
<p>"Oh, anywhere," declared Fitzgerald.</p>
<p>Marna rose and her husband buttoned her coat about her.</p>
<p>They smiled at Kate seraphically, and she saw that they wanted
to be alone, and that it made little difference to them whether
they were sitting in a warm room or walking the windy streets. She
kissed them both, with tears, and said:--</p>
<p>"God bless you."</p>
<p>That seemed to be what they wanted. They longed to be
blessed.</p>
<p>"That's what Aunt Dennison said," smiled Fitzgerald.</p>
<p>Then Kate realized that now the exotic Marna would be calling
the completely domesticated Mrs. Dennison "aunt." But Marna looked
as if she liked that, too. It was their hour for liking everything.
As Kate opened the outer door for them, the blast struck through
her, but the lovers, laughing, ran down the stairs together. They
were, in their way, outcasts; they were poor; the future might hold
bitter disillusion. But now, borne by the sharp wind, their
laughter drifted back like a song.</p>
<p>Kate wrapped her old coat about her and made her solitary way to
Mrs. Dennison's depressed Caravansary.</p>
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