The Bride of the Mistletoe | Page 7

James Lane Allen
way or another, and you know they must not do that--not this year! There must be one more Christmas with all its old ways--even if it must be without its old mysteries."
He did not reply at once and then not relevantly:
"I heard you playing."
He had dropped his head forward and was scowling at her from under his brows with a big Beethoven brooding scowl. She did not see, for she held her face averted.
The silence in the room again seemed charged, and there was greater constraint in her voice when it was next heard:
"I had to play; you need not have listened."
"I had to listen; you played loud--"
"I did not know I was playing loud. I may have been trying to drown other sounds," she admitted.
"What other sounds?" His voice unexpectedly became inquisitorial: it was a frank thrust into the unknown.
"Discords--possibly."
"What discords?" His thrust became deeper.
She turned her head quickly and looked at him; a quiver passed across her lips and in her eyes there was noble anguish.
But nothing so arrests our speech when we are tempted to betray hidden trouble as to find ourselves face to face with a kind of burnished, radiant happiness. Sensitive eyes not more quickly close before a blaze of sunlight than the shadowy soul shuts her gates upon the advancing Figure of Joy.
It was the whole familiar picture of him now--triumphantly painted in the harmonies of life, masterfully toned to subdue its discords--that drove her back into herself. When she spoke next, she had regained the self-control which under his unexpected attack she had come near losing; and her words issued from behind the closed gates--as through a crevice of the closed gates:
"I was reading one of the new books that came the other day, the deep grave ones you sent for. It is written by a deep grave German, and it is worked out in the deep grave German way. The whole purpose of it is to show that any woman in the life of any man is merely--an Incident. She may be this to him, she may be that to him; for a briefer time, for a greater time; but all along and in the end, at bottom, she is to him--an Incident."
He did not take his eyes from hers and his smile slowly broadened.
"Were those the discords?" he asked gently.
She did not reply.
He turned in his chair and looking over his shoulder at her, he raised his arm and drew the point of his pen across the backs of a stack of magazines on top of his desk.
"Here is a work," he said, "not written by a German or by any other man, but by a woman whose race I do not know: here is a work the sole purpose of which is to prove that any man is merely an Incident in the life of any woman. He may be this to her, he may be that to her; for a briefer time, for a greater time; but all along and in the end, beneath everything else, he is to her--an Incident."
He turned and confronted her, not without a gleam of humor in his eyes.
"That did not trouble me," he said tenderly. "Those were not discords to me."
Her eyes rested on his face with inscrutable searching. She made no comment.
His own face grew grave. After a moment of debate with himself as to whether he should be forced to do a thing he would rather not do, he turned in his chair and laid down his pen as though separating himself from his work. Then he said, in a tone that ended playfulness:
"Do I not understand? Have I not understood all the time? For a year now I have been shutting myself up at spare hours in this room and at this work--without any explanation to you. Such a thing never occurred before in our lives. You have shared everything. I have relied upon you and I have needed you, and you have never failed me. And this apparently has been your reward--to be rudely shut out at last. Now you come in and I tell you that the work is done--quite finished--without a word to you about it. Do I not understand?" he repeated. "Have I not understood all along? It is true; outwardly as regards this work you have been--the Incident."
As he paused, she made a slight gesture with one hand as though she did not care for what he was saying and brushed away the fragile web of his words from before her eyes--eyes fixed on larger things lying clear before her in life's distance.
He went quickly on with deepening emphasis:
"But, comrade of all these years, battler with me for life's victories, did you think you were never to know? Did you believe I was never to
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