please don't," she pleaded; "it's something I don't want you to

  see. Oh, why will you? it's just something low and despicable

  that you can't notice."

  Arthur had gently loosed her hands, and he pointed her to a chair.

  He lit a cigar and read the article through without comment. When

  he had finished it he walked to the fireplace, struck a match, and

  tossed the flaming journal between the brass andirons.

  "You are right," he remarked as he came back, dusting his

  hands with his handkerchief. "It's quite impossible to comment.

  There are extremes of blackguardism for which we have no name.

  The only thing necessary is to see that Flavia gets no

  wind of this. This seems to be my cue to act; poor girl."

  Imogen looked at him tearfully; she could only murmur, "Oh,

  why did you read it!"

  Hamilton laughed spiritlessly. "Come, don't you worry about

  it. You always took other people's troubles too seriously. When

  you were little and all the world was gay and everybody happy,

  you must needs get the Little Mermaid's troubles to grieve over.

  Come with me into the music room. You remember the musical

  setting I once made you for the Lay of the Jabberwock? I was

  trying it over the other night, long after you were in bed, and I

  decided it was quite as fine as the Erl-King music. How I wish I

  could give you some of the cake that Alice ate and make you a

  little girl again. Then, when you had got through the glass door

  into the little garden, you could call to me, perhaps, and tell

  me all the fine things that were going on there. What a pity it

  is that you ever grew up!" he added, laughing; and Imogen, too,

  was thinking just that.

  At dinner that evening, Flavia, with fatal persistence,

  insisted upon turning the conversation to M. Roux. She had been

  reading one of his novels and had remembered anew that Paris set

  its watches by his clock. Imogen surmised that she was tortured

  by a feeling that she had not sufficiently appreciated him while

  she had had him. When she first mentioned his name she was

  answered only by the pall of silence that fell over the company.

  Then everyone began to talk at once, as though to correct a false

  position. They spoke of him with a fervid, defiant admiration,

  with the sort of hot praise that covers a double purpose. Imogen

  fancied she could see that they felt a kind of relief at what the

  man had done, even those who despised him for doing it; that they

  felt a spiteful hate against Flavia, as though she had tricked

  them, and a certain contempt for themselves that they had been

  beguiled. She was reminded of the fury of the crowd in the fairy

  tale, when once the child had called out that the king was in his

  night clothes. Surely these people knew no more about Flavia

  than they had known before, but the mere fact that the

  thing had been said altered the situation. Flavia, meanwhile,

  sat chattering amiably, pathetically unconscious of her nakedness.

  Hamilton lounged, fingering the stem of his wineglass,

  gazing down the table at one face after another and studying the

  various degrees of self-consciousness they exhibited. Imogen's

  eyes followed his, fearfully. When a lull came in the spasmodic

  flow of conversation, Arthur, leaning back in his chair, remarked

  deliberately, "As for M. Roux, his very profession places him

  in that class of men whom society has never been able to accept

  unconditionally because it has never been able to assume that

  they have any ordered notion of taste. He and his ilk remain,

  with the mountebanks and snake charmers, people indispensable to

  our civilization, but wholly unreclaimed by it; people whom we

  receive, but whose invitations we do not accept."

  Fortunately for Flavia, this mine was not exploded until

  just before the coffee was brought. Her laughter was pitiful to

  hear; it echoed through the silent room as in a vault, while she

  made some tremulously light remark about her husband's drollery,

  grim as a jest from the dying. No one responded and she sat

  nodding her head like a mechanical toy and smiling her white, set

  smile through her teeth, until Alcee Buisson and Frau Lichtenfeld

  came to her support.

  After dinner the guests retired immediately to their rooms,

  and Imogen went upstairs on tiptoe, feeling the echo of breakage

  and the dust of crumbling in the air. She wondered whether

  Flavia's habitual note of uneasiness were not, in a manner,

  prophetic, and a sort of unconscious premonition, after all. She

  sat down to write a letter, but she found herself so nervous, her

  head so hot and her hands so cold, that she soon abandoned the

  effort. just as she was about to seek Miss Broadwood, Flavia

  entered and embraced her hysterically.

  "My dearest girl," she began, "was there ever such an

  unfortunate and incomprehensible speech made before? Of course

  it is scarcely necessary to explain to you poor Arthur's lack of

  tact, and that he meant nothing. But they! Can they be

  expected to understand? He will feel wretchedly about it when

  he realizes what he has done, but in the meantime? And M. Roux,

  of all men! When we were so fortunate as to get him, and he made

  himself so unreservedly agreeable, and I fancied that, in his way,

  Arthur quite admired him. My dear, you have no idea what that

  speech has done. Schemetzkin and Herr Schotte have already sent

  me word that they must leave us tomorrow. Such a thing from a

  host!" Flavia paused, choked by tears of vexation and despair.

  Imogen was thoroughly disconcerted; this was the first time

  she had ever seen Flavia betray any personal emotion which was

  indubitably genuine. She replied with what consolation she

  could. "Need they take it personally at all? It was a mere

  observation upon a class of people--"

  "Which he knows nothing whatever about, and with whom he has

  no sympathy," interrupted Flavia. "Ah, my dear, you could not be

  expected to understand. You can't realize, knowing Arthur

  as you do, his entire lack of any aesthetic sense whatever. He is

  absolutely nil, stone deaf and stark blind, on that side.

  He doesn't mean to be brutal, it is just the brutality of utter

  ignorance. They always feel it--they are so sensitive to

  unsympathetic influences, you know; they know it the moment they

  come into the house. I have spent my life apologizing for him

  and struggling to conceal it; but in spite of me, he wounds them;

  his very attitude, even in silence, offends them. Heavens! Do I

  not know? Is it not perpetually and forever wounding me? But

  there has never been anything so dreadful as this--never! If I

  could conceive of any possible motive, even!"

  "But, surely, Mrs. Hamilton, it was, after all, a mere

  expression of opinion, such as we are any of us likely to venture

  upon any subject whatever. It was neither more personal nor more

  extravagant than many of M. Roux's remarks."

  "But, Imogen, certainly M. Roux has the right. I
t is a part

  of his art, and that is altogether another matter. Oh, this is

  not the only instance!" continued Flavia passionately, "I've

  always had that narrow, bigoted prejudice to contend with. It

  has always held me back. But this--!"

  "I think you mistake his attitude," replied Imogen, feeling

  a flush that made her ears tingle. "That is, I fancy he is more

  appreciative than he seems. A man can't be very demonstrative

  about those things--not if he is a real man. I should not think

  you would care much about saving the feelings of people who are

  too narrow to admit of any other point of view than their own."

  She stopped, finding herself in the impossible position of

  attempting to explain Hamilton to his wife; a task which, if once

  begun, would necessitate an entire course of enlightenment which

  she doubted Flavia's ability to receive, and which she could

  offer only with very poor grace.

  "That's just where it stings most"--here Flavia began pacing

  the floor--"it is just because they have all shown such tolerance

  and have treated Arthur with such unfailing consideration that I

  can find no reasonable pretext for his rancor. How can he fail

  to see the value of such friendships on the children's account,

  if for nothing else! What an advantage for them to grow up among

  such associations! Even though he cares nothing about these

  things himself he might realize that. Is there nothing I could

  say by way of explanation? To them, I mean? If someone were to

  explain to them how unfortunately limited he is in these

  things--"

  "I'm afraid I cannot advise you," said Imogen decidedly,

  "but that, at least, seems to me impossible."

  Flavia took her hand and glanced at her affectionately,

  nodding nervously. "Of course, dear girl, I can't ask you to be

  quite frank with me. Poor child, you are trembling and your

  hands are icy. Poor Arthur! But you must not judge him by this

  altogether; think how much he misses in life. What a cruel shock

  you've had. I'll send you some sherry, Good night, my dear."

  When Flavia shut the door Imogen burst into a fit of nervous

  weeping.

  Next morning she awoke after a troubled and restless night. At

  eight o'clock Miss Broadwood entered in a red and white striped

  bathrobe.

  "Up, up, and see the great doom's image!" she cried, her

  eyes sparkling with excitement. "The hall is full of

  trunks, they are packing. What bolt has fallen? It's you, ma

  cherie
, you've brought Ulysses home again and the slaughter has

  begun!" she blew a cloud of smoke triumphantly from her lips and

  threw herself into a chair beside the bed.

  Imogen, rising on her elbow, plunged excitedly into the

  story of the Roux interview, which Miss Broadwood heard with the

  keenest interest, frequently interrupting her with exclamations

  of delight. When Imogen reached the dramatic scene which

  terminated in the destruction of the newspaper, Miss Broadwood

  rose and took a turn about the room, violently switching the

  tasselled cords of her bathrobe.

  "Stop a moment," she cried, "you mean to tell me that he had

  such a heaven-sent means to bring her to her senses and didn't

  use it--that he held such a weapon and threw it away?"

  "Use it?" cried Imogen unsteadily. "Of course he didn't! He

  bared his back to the tormentor, signed himself over to

  punishment in that speech he made at dinner, which everyone

  understands but Flavia. She was here for an hour last night and

  disregarded every limit of taste in her maledictions."

  "My dear!" cried Miss Broadwood, catching her hand in

  inordinate delight at the situation, "do you see what he has

  done? There'll be no end to it. Why he has sacrificed himself to

  spare the very vanity that devours him, put rancors in the

  vessels of his peace, and his eternal jewel given to the common

  enemy of man, to make them kings, the seed of Banquo kings! He is

  magnificent!"

  "Isn't he always that?" cried Imogen hotly. "He's like a

  pillar of sanity and law in this house of shams and swollen

  vanities, where people stalk about with a sort of madhouse

  dignity, each one fancying himself a king or a pope. If you

  could have heard that woman talk of him! Why, she thinks him

  stupid, bigoted, blinded by middleclass prejudices. She talked

  about his having no aesthetic sense and insisted that her artists

  had always shown him tolerance. I don't know why it should get

  on my nerves so, I'm sure, but her stupidity and assurance are

  enough to drive one to the brink of collapse."

  "Yes, as opposed to his singular fineness, they are

  calculated to do just that," said Miss Broadwood gravely, wisely

  ignoring Imogen's tears. "But what has been is nothing to what

  will be. Just wait until Flavia's black swans have flown! You

  ought not to try to stick it out; that would only make it harder

  for everyone. Suppose you let me telephone your mother to wire

  you to come home by the evening train?"

  "Anything, rather than have her come at me like that again. It

  puts me in a perfectly impossible position, and he is so

  fine!"

  "Of course it does," said Miss Broadwood sympathetically,

  "and there is no good to be got from facing it. I will stay

  because such things interest me, and Frau Lichtenfeld will stay

  because she has no money to get away, and Buisson will stay

  because he feels somewhat responsible. These complications are

  interesting enough to cold-blooded folk like myself who have an

  eye for the dramatic element, but they are distracting and

  demoralizing to young people with any serious purpose in life."

  Miss Broadwood's counsel was all the more generous seeing

  that, for her, the most interesting element of this denouement

  would be eliminated by Imogen's departure. "If she goes now,

  she'll get over it," soliloquized Miss Broadwood. "If she stays,

  she'll be wrung for him and the hurt may go deep enough to last.

  I haven't the heart to see her spoiling things for herself." She

  telephoned Mrs. Willard and helped Imogen to pack. She even took

  it upon herself to break the news of Imogen's going to Arthur,

  who remarked, as he rolled a cigarette in his nerveless fingers:

  "Right enough, too. What should she do here with old cynics

  like you and me, Jimmy? Seeing that she is brim full of dates and

  formulae and other positivisms, and is so girt about with

  illusions that she still casts a shadow in the sun. You've been

  very tender of her, haven't you? I've watched you. And to think

  it may all be gone when we see her next. 'The common fate of all

  things rare,' you know. What a good fellow you are, anyway,

  Jimmy," he added, putting his hands affectionately on her

  shoulders.

  Arthur went with them to the station. Flavia was so

  prostrated by the concerted action of her guests that she was

  able to see Imogen only for a moment in her darkened sleeping

  chamber, where s
he kissed her hysterically, without lifting her

  head, bandaged in aromatic vinegar. On the way to the station

  both Arthur and Imogen threw the burden of keeping up appearances

  entirely upon Miss Broadwood, who blithely rose to the occasion.

  When Hamilton carried Imogen's bag into the car, Miss Broadwood

  detained her for a moment, whispering as she gave her a large,

  warm handclasp, "I'll come to see you when I get back to town;

  and, in the meantime, if you meet any of our artists, tell them

  you have left Caius Marius among the ruins of Carthage."

  The Sculptor's Funeral

  A group of the townspeople stood on the station siding of a

  little Kansas town, awaiting the coming of the night train, which

  was already twenty minutes overdue. The snow had fallen thick

  over everything; in the pale starlight the line of bluffs across

  the wide, white meadows south of the town made soft, smoke-

  colored curves against the clear sky. The men on the siding

  stood first on one foot and then on the other, their hands thrust

  deep into their trousers pockets, their overcoats open, their

  shoulders screwed up with the cold; and they glanced from time to

  time toward the southeast, where the railroad track wound along

  the river shore. They conversed in low tones and moved about

  restlessly, seeming uncertain as to what was expected of them.

  There was but one of the company who looked as though he knew

  exactly why he was there; and he kept conspicuously apart;

  walking to the far end of the platform, returning to the station

  door, then pacing up the track again, his chin sunk in the high

  collar of his overcoat, his burly shoulders drooping forward, his

  gait heavy and dogged. Presently he was approached by a tall,

  spare, grizzled man clad in a faded Grand Army suit, who shuffled

  out from the group and advanced with a certain deference, craning

  his neck forward until his back made the angle of a jackknife

  three-quarters open.

  "I reckon she's agoin' to be pretty late ag'in tonight,

  Jim," he remarked in a squeaky falsetto. "S'pose it's the snow?"

  "I don't know," responded the other man with a shade of

  annoyance, speaking from out an astonishing cataract of red beard

  that grew fiercely and thickly in all directions.

  The spare man shifted the quill toothpick he was chewing to

  the other side of his mouth. "It ain't likely that anybody from

  the East will come with the corpse, I s'pose," he went on

  reflectively.

  "I don't know," responded the other, more curtly than before.

  "It's too bad he didn't belong to some lodge or other. I

  like an order funeral myself. They seem more appropriate for

  people of some reputation," the spare man continued, with an

  ingratiating concession in his shrill voice, as he carefully

  placed his toothpick in his vest pocket. He always carried the

  flag at the G. A. R. funerals in the town.

  The heavy man turned on his heel, without replying, and walked up

  the siding. The spare man shuffled back to the uneasy group.

  "Jim's ez full ez a tick, ez ushel," he commented commiseratingly.

  Just then a distant whistle sounded, and there was a

  shuffling of feet on the platform. A number of lanky boys of all

  ages appeared as suddenly and slimily as eels wakened by the

  crack of thunder; some came from the waiting room, where they had

  been warming themselves by the red stove, or half-asleep on the

  slat benches; others uncoiled themselves from baggage trucks or

  slid out of express wagons. Two clambered down from the driver's

  seat of a hearse that stood backed up against the siding. They

  straightened their stooping shoulders and lifted their heads, and

  a flash of momentary animation kindled their dull eyes at that

  cold, vibrant scream, the world-wide call for men. It stirred

  them like the note of a trumpet; just as it had often stirred the

  man who was coming home tonight, in his boyhood.

  The night express shot, red as a rocket, from out the eastward