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"And so do I, but d'you think I'm going to take it? Not I! It's the resters get left. You might telegraph that to your husband, and say it comes straight from me."
He got up from his chair, and threw away the stump of the fourth cigar he had enjoyed that night.
"We've no room for resters in New York City."
"I'm sure you haven't. But my husband doesn't happen to belong to New York City."
As they were leaving Djenan-el-Maqui, after Mr. Crayford had had a long drink, and while he was speaking to his chauffeur, who had the bonnet of the car up, Alston Lake whispered to Charmian:
"Don't wire to old Claude. Keep it up. You are masterly, quite masterly.
Hulloa! anything wrong with the car?"
When they buzzed away Charmian stood for a moment in the drive till silence fell. She was tired, but how happily tired!
And to think that Claude knew nothing, nothing of it all! Some day she would have to tell him how hard she had worked for him! She opened her lips and drew into her lungs the warm air of the night. She was not a "rester." She would not surely "get left."
Pierre yawned rather loudly behind her.
"Oh, Pierre!" she said, turning quickly, startled. "It is terribly late.
Stay in bed to-morrow. Don't get up early. _Bonne nuit._"
"_Bonne nuit, madame._"
On the following day she received a note from Alston.
"DEAR MRS. CHARMIAN,--You are a wonder. No one on earth could have managed him better. You might have known him from the cradle--yours, of course, not his! I'm taking him around to-day. He wants to go to Djenan-el-Maqui, I can see that. But I'm keeping him off it. Lie low and mum's the word as to Claude.--Your fellow conspirator, "ALSTON."
It was difficult to "lie low." But she obeyed and spent the long day alone. No one came to see her. Toward evening she felt deserted, presently even strangely depressed. As she dined, as she sat out afterward in the court with Caroline reposing on her skirt in a curved att.i.tude of supreme contentment, she recalled the excitement and emotion of the preceding night. She had read well. She had done her part for Claude. But if all her work had been useless? If all the ingenuity of herself and Alston should be of no avail? If the opera should never be produced, or should be produced and fail? Perhaps for the first time she strongly and deliberately imagined that catastrophe. For so long now had the opera been the thing that ruled in her life with Claude, for so long had everything centered round it, been subservient to it, that Charmian could scarcely conceive of life without it. She would be quite alone with Claude. Now they were a _menage a trois_. She recalled the beginnings of her married life. How fussy, how anxious, how unstable they had been! Now the current flowed strongly, steadily, evenly. The river seemed to have a soul, to know whither it was flowing.
Surely so much thought, care, labor and love could not be bestowed on a thing in vain; surely the opera, child of so many hopes, bearer of such a load of ambition, could not "go down"? She tried to regain her strength of antic.i.p.ation. But all the evening she felt depressed. If only Alston would come in for five minutes! Perhaps he would. She looked at the tiny watch which hung by her side at the end of a thin gold chain. The hands pointed to half-past nine. He might come yet. She listened. The night, one of a long succession of marvellous African nights, was perfectly still. The servants within the villa made no sound. Caroline heaved a faint sigh and stirred, turning to push her long nose into a tempting fold of Charmian's skirt. But, midway in her movement she paused, lifted her head, stared at the darkness with her small yellow eyes, and uttered a m.u.f.fled bark which was like an inquiry.
Her nose was twitching.
"What is it, Caroline?" said Charmian.
She lifted the dog on to her knees.
"What is it?"
Caroline barked faintly again.
"Someone is coming," thought Charmian. "Alston is coming."
Almost directly she heard the sound of wheels, and Caroline jumping down with her lopetty movement, delivered herself up to a succession of calm barks. She was a gentle individual, and never showed any great animation, even in such a crisis as this. The sound of wheels ceased, and in a moment a voice called:
"Charmian! Where are you?"
"Claude!"
She felt that her face grew hot, though she was alone, and she had spoken the name to herself, for herself.
"I'm out here on the terrace!"
She felt astonished, guilty. She had thought that he would only come when she summoned him, perhaps to-morrow, that he would learn by telegram of the arrival of Crayford and Alston. Now she would have to tell him.
He came out into the court, looking very tall in the night.
"Are you surprised?"
He kissed her.
"Very! Very surprised!"
"I thought I had had enough holiday, that I would get back. I only decided to-day, quite suddenly."
"Then didn't you enjoy your holiday?"
"I thought I was going to. I tried to. I even pretended to myself that I was enjoying it very much. But it was all subterfuge, I suppose, for to-day I found I must come back. The fact is I can't keep away from the opera."
Charmian was conscious of a sharp pang. It felt like a pang of jealousy.
"Have you had any dinner?" she asked, in a rather constrained voice.
"Yes. I dined at Gruber's."
She wondered why, but she did not say so.
"I nearly stayed the night in town. I felt--it seemed so absurd my rus.h.i.+ng back like this."
He ended with a little laugh.
"Who do you think is here?" she said.
"Here?"
He glanced round.
"I mean in Algiers."
He looked at her with searching eyes.
"Someone we know well?"
"Two people."
"Tell me!"
"No--guess!"