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"Not from you, Mademoiselle. It belongs to a region into which your thought shouldn't enter."
"My thought does enter it, I'm afraid. In fact, I think of it so much that I've invited Mrs. Eveleth to come here this afternoon. I hope you don't mind meeting her?"
"Certainly not. Why should I?" he demanded, with an air of conscious rect.i.tude.
Miss Grimston touched a bell.
"Ask Mrs. Eveleth to come in," she said to the footman who answered it.
As Diane entered she greeted Bienville with a slight inclination of the head, which he returned, bowing ceremoniously.
"I've begged Mrs. Eveleth to meet us," Marion hastened to explain, "for a very special reason."
"Then perhaps she will be good enough to tell me what it is," Bienville said, with a look of courteous inquiry.
"Miss Grimston thought--you might be able--to help me."
There was a catch in Diane's voice as she spoke, but she mastered it, keeping her eyes on his, in the effort to be courageous.
"If there's anything I can do--" he began, allowing the rest of his sentence to be inferred.
He concealed his nervousness by placing a small gilded chair for Diane to sit on. He himself took a chair a few feet away, seating himself sidewise, with his elbow supported on the back, in an easy att.i.tude of attention. Marion Grimston withdrew to the more distant part of the room, where, with her hands behind her, she stood leaning against the grand piano, with the bearing of one only indirectly, and yet intensely, concerned. Bienville left the task of beginning to Diane. In spite of his determination to be self-possessed, a trace of compunction was visible in his face as he contrasted the subdued little woman before him with the sparkling, insouciant creature to whom, two or three years ago, he had paid his inglorious court.
"I shall have to speak to you quite simply and frankly," Diane began, with some hesitation, still keeping her eyes on his, "otherwise you wouldn't understand me."
"Quite so," Bienville a.s.sented, politely.
"You may not have heard that since--my--my husband's death, I have my own living to earn?"
"Yes; I did hear something of the kind."
"I've had what people in my position call a good situation; but I have lost it."
"Ah? I'm sorry."
"I thought you would be. That's why Miss Grimston asked me to tell you the reason. She was sure you wouldn't injure me--knowingly."
"Naturally. I'm very much surprised that any one should think I've injured you at all. To the best of my knowledge your name has not pa.s.sed my lips for two years, at the least. If it had it would only have been spoken--with respect."
"I'm sure of that. I'm not pretending when I say that I'm absolutely convinced you're a man of sensitive honor. If you weren't you couldn't be a Frenchman and a Bienville. I want you to understand that I've never attributed--the--things that have happened--to anything but folly and imprudence--for which I want to take my full share of the blame."
"I've never ventured to express to you my own regret," Bienville said, in a tone not free from emotion, "but I a.s.sure you it's very deep."
"I know. All our life was so wrong! It's because I feel sure you must see that as well as I do that I hoped you'd help me now."
He said nothing in reply, letting some seconds pa.s.s in silence, waiting for her to come to her point.
"On the way up from South America," she began again, with visible difficulty, "you were on the same s.h.i.+p with my--my--employer. From certain things you said then--"
"But I've withdrawn them," he interrupted, quickly. "He should have told you that. Mademoiselle," he added, rising, and turning toward Marion Grimston, "wouldn't it spare you if we continued this conversation alone?"
"No; I'd rather stay," Miss Grimston said, with an inflection of request. "Please sit down again."
"He should have told you that," Bienville repeated, taking his seat once more, and speaking with some animation. "I did my best to straighten things out for him."
"Then he didn't understand you. He told me you had taken back what you had said, but only in a way that reaffirmed it."
"That's nothing but a tortuous construction put on straightforward words."
"Quite so; but for that very reason I thought that perhaps you'd go to him again and explain what you meant more clearly."
He took a minute to consider this before speaking.
"I don't see how I can," he said, slowly. "I've already used the plainest words of which I have command."
"Words aren't everything. It's the way they're spoken that often counts most. I'm sure you could convince him if you went the right way to work about it."
"I doubt that. I'm afraid I don't know how to force conviction on any one against his will."
"You mean--?"
"I mean--you'll excuse me; I speak quite bluntly--I mean that he seemed very willing to believe anything that could tell against you, but less eager to credit what was said in your defence."
"You think so because you don't understand him. As a matter of fact--"
"Oh, I dare say. I don't pretend to understand the gentleman in question. But for that very reason it would be useless for me to try to enlighten him further. It would only make matters worse."
"It wouldn't if you'd put things before him just as they happened. I don't want any excuses made for me. My best defence would be--the truth."
There was a perceptible pause, during which his eyes s.h.i.+fted uneasily toward Marion Grimston.
"I should think you could tell him that yourself," he suggested, at last.
"It wouldn't be the same thing. You're the only person who could speak with authority. He'd accept your word, if you gave it--in a certain way."
"I'm afraid I don't know what that way is."
"Oh yes, you do, Bienville!" she exclaimed, pleadingly, leaning forward slightly, with her hands clasped in her lap. "Don't force me to speak more plainly than I need. You must know what I refer to."
He shook his head slowly, with a look of mystification.
"What you may not know," she continued, "is all it means to me. I won't put the matter on any ground but that of my need for earning money.
Because Mr. Pruyn has--misunderstood you, I've had to give up my--my--place"--she forced the last word with a little difficulty--"and until something like a good name is restored to me I shall find it hard to get another. You can have no idea of what that means. I had none, until I had to face it. There's only one kind of work I'm fitted for--the kind I've been doing; but it's just the kind I can't have without the--the reputation you could give back to me."
That this appeal was not without its effect was evident from the way in which his expressive brown eyes clouded, while he stroked his black beard nervously. The fact that his pity was largely for himself--that with instincts naturally chivalrous he should be driven to these miserable verbal s.h.i.+fts--being unknown to Diane, she was encouraged to proceed.
"You see," she went on, eagerly, "it wouldn't only bring me happiness, but it would add to your own. You're at the beginning of a new life, just like me--or, rather, just as I could be if you'd give me the chance. Think what it would be for you to enter on it, I won't say with a clear conscience, but with the knowledge that in rising yourself you had helped an unhappy woman up, instead of thrusting her further down!
It isn't as if it would be so hard for you, Bienville. I'd make it easy for you. Miss Grimston would help me. Wouldn't you?" she added, turning toward Marion. "It could all be done quite simply and confidentially between ourselves--and Mr. Pruyn."