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That night Joan pulled her shade down. She hated the stars. They looked complacent and distant. She pushed memories of Doris and Nancy resolutely from her. Her world was not their world--that was sure. If this desperate loneliness couldn't drive her to them, nothing could. She must make her own life! Lying on her hot bed, Joan thought and thought.
Of what did she want to make her life?
"I only want a decent amount of fun," she cried, turning her pillow over, "and I will not have strings tied to all my fun, either."
This struck her as funny even in her misery. She sat up in bed and counted her losses--what were they?
Ridge House and that dear, sweet life--sheltered and safe. Yes; she was sure she had lost them, for she could not go back beaten before she had really tried her luck, and if she succeeded she could never have them in a sense of owners.h.i.+p.
"And I will succeed!" Even in that hard hour Joan rose up in arms.
"And I have earned enough to begin real work in the autumn." She counted her gains. "And I can live close to Aunt Dorrie's beautiful life even if I am not of it. And I _am_ sure of myself as dear Nancy never could be--because I have proved myself in ways that girls like Nancy never can."
Toward morning Joan fell asleep. When she awoke it was nearly noon time and half the desert of Sunday was pa.s.sed.
Then Joan, refreshed and comforted, planned a wholesome afternoon and evening.
"I'll go out and get a really sensible dinner; take a walk in the Park, and come home and practise. Monday will be here before I know it."
Joan carried out her programme, and it was five o'clock when she returned, at peace with the whole world.
She took off her pretty street gown and slipped into a thin, airy little dress and comfortable sandals. The sandals made her think of her dancing; she always wore them unless she danced shoeless.
"And before I go to bed," she promised her gay little self, "I'll have a dance to prove that nothing can down me--for long!
"I wonder--" here Joan looked serious as if a thought wave had struck her--"I wonder where Pat is?"
This seemed a futile conjecture. Patricia was too elusive to be followed, even mentally.
As a matter of fact, Patricia was, at that hour, confronting the biggest question of her life.
Heretofore she had always left her roads of retreat open, had, in fact, availed herself of them at critical periods; but this time she had, she believed, so cluttered them that they were practically impa.s.sable and she said she "didn't care."
The heat and her rudderless life had been too much for her; she had, too, been honestly stirred by beautiful things--although they were not hers nor could ever rightfully be hers. She had slipped into the danger, that seemed now about to engulf her, on a gradual decline.
Her connection with the Burke home life was, apparently, innocent enough at first. No one but Patricia herself sensed what really was threatening, but the conditions were ripe for what occurred.
Mrs. Burke, bent upon her own pleasure, utterly indifferent to the rights of others, was glad enough to leave her house and family to the charm of Patricia while she could, at the same time, as she smilingly declared, give a bit of happiness to that poor, gifted young creature.
The gifted young creature responded with all the hunger of her empty heart--she played with the children, who adored her; there was safety with the eyes of housekeeper and governess upon her--but when the eyes of a tired, disillusioned, and lonely man became fixed upon her, it was time for Patricia to flee. But she did not. Instead she gripped her philosophy of "grab"--and really managed to justify it to a certain extent--while she grew thinner and paler.
On the Sunday when Joan stopped short and wondered where Patricia was, Patricia was up the Hudson awaiting, on a charming hotel piazza, the arrival of the Burke automobile.
It was sunset time and beautiful beyond words. Something in the peaceful loveliness stirred Patricia--she wished that the day were dark and grim.
It seemed incongruous to take to the down path--Patricia was not blinded by her lure--while the whole world was flooded with gold and azure.
Then Patricia's angel had a word to say.
"Who would care, anyway?" the girl questioned her upstanding angel--"in all the world, who would care? Why shouldn't I have--what I can get?"
And then, quite forcibly, Patricia thought of Joan! Joan seemed calling, calling. The thought brought a pa.s.sionate yearning. Joan had the look in her eyes that children and dogs had when they regarded Patricia--a look that cut under the superficial disguise without seeing it, and clung to what they knew was there! The something that they loved and trusted and played with.
In a moment Patricia felt herself growing cold and hard as if almost, but not quite, a power outside herself had threatened the one and only thing in life that she held sacred.
"That Look!" Full well Patricia knew that the Look would no longer be hers to command if she held to her course!
Then, her strength rising with her determination, she glanced back over her cluttered trail. She had written a letter to Joan--it would be delivered to-morrow. A black, scorching statement that would leave not a trace of beauty for the old friends.h.i.+p to rest upon. She had also written a letter to the firm in Chicago definitely refusing to accept its offer--but that letter was not yet mailed!
The Burke automobile, like a devastating flood, might at any moment tear down the hill to the left. With this fear growing in her a strange perverted sense of justice rose and combated it. She had deliberately put herself in the way of the flood; she knew all about the risks of floods, and it seemed knavish to promise and then--leave the field.
"Better an hour of raging against the absence of me," she said, pitifully, "than years of regretting my presence. He'll hate me a little sooner, that's all. So--good-bye!" Patricia almost ran inside; left a hasty, badly written note, and, metaphorically, scrambled over the disordered path of retreat; she seemed to be racing against that letter on its way to Joan. She would write later to the man who was drawing near. Only one thing did Patricia pause to do: It was like driving the last nail in the old life. She telegraphed to Chicago, accepting the position of designer!
CHAPTER XVIII
"_Ours, if we be strong._"
Joan had sung herself into an exalted mood. She had floated along on the wings of music, touching happy memories and tender, nameless yearnings.
Her loved ones seemed crowding about her--Doris, dear, sweet Nancy, and pretty Pat. They were pressing against her heart and calling to her.
She began to feel a dull ache for them, a growing impulse stirred deep in her unawakened nature such as always drives the Prodigal unto his Father! The superficial life of the past year seemed husks indeed. It was the beautiful music that mattered and that she could have had with her blessed, safe, loved ones. She need not have left them lonely; she had been shamelessly selfish. Freedom! What was her freedom? Just a tugging against the sweetest thing in life--the false against the true!
Joan felt the tears falling down her cheeks while she sang on--and suddenly it was Patricia who seemed closest to her.
"I will not desert Pat," she actually sang the words into her song fiercely, resolutely. "Patricia must come into safety with me."
With this vowed to her soul, Joan dried her tears and sprang to her feet. She had never felt so lonely, so happy, so free as she did that moment when her spirit turned homeward again.
She kicked off her sandals and began to dance about the studio, lightly, joyfully.
The late afternoon was fading into a sudden darkness--a storm was coming; black, copper-dashed clouds were rolling on rapidly, full of noise and electricity; in a short time they would break over the city--but Joan danced on and on!
In that hour not one thought of Kenneth Raymond disturbed her. He belonged to the time of mistaken freedom; he was one who had helped her to think she could make unreal things true. He had no place here and now. She somehow felt that he had pa.s.sed from her life.
Joan was abnormally young and only superficially old; her experiences had but developed her spiritually--aroused her better self; and in that self lay her womanhood, her knowledge of s.e.x relations; there it rested unharmed, unheeding.
And then came a knock on the door!
The whirling figure paused on the tips of its toes; the brooding face broke into smiles.
"It's Pat! Come!"
The word "come" was all that reached the waiting man outside--and when he entered he gathered to himself the glad, joyous welcome meant for Patricia, and smiled at the poised figure.
"Why!" gasped Joan, and in her excitement almost spoke Raymond's name.