used to want to shriek it out to the world in the long nights when
   I could not sleep.  It seemed to me that I could not die with it. 
   It demanded some sort of expression.  And now that you know, you
   would scarcely believe how much less sharp the anguish of it is."
   Everett continued to look helplessly at the floor.  "I was
   not sure how much you wanted me to know," he said.
   "Oh, I intended you should know from the first time I looked
   into your face, when you came that day with Charley.  I flatter
   myself that I have been able to conceal it when I chose, though I
   suppose women always think that.  The more observing ones may
   have seen, but discerning people are usually discreet and often
   kind, for we usually bleed a little before we begin to discern. 
   But I wanted you to know; you are so like him that it is almost
   like telling him himself.  At least, I feel now that he will know
   some day, and then I will be quite sacred from his compassion,
   for we none of us dare pity the dead.  Since it was what my life
   has chiefly meant, I should like him to know.  On the whole I am
   not ashamed of it.  I have fought a good fight."
   "And has he never known at all?" asked Everett, in a thick voice.
   "Oh!  Never at all in the way that you mean.  Of course, he
   is accustomed to looking into the eyes of women and finding love
   there; when he doesn't find it there he thinks he must have been
   guilty of some discourtesy and is miserable about it.  He has a
   genuine fondness for everyone who is not stupid or gloomy, or old
   or preternaturally ugly.  Granted youth and cheerfulness, and a
   moderate amount of wit and some tact, and Adriance will always be
   glad to see you coming around the corner.  I shared with the
   rest; shared the smiles and the gallantries and the droll little
   sermons.  It was quite like a Sunday-school picnic; we wore our
   best clothes and a smile and took our turns.  It was his kindness
   that was hardest.  I have pretty well used my life up at standing
   punishment."
   "Don't; you'll make me hate him," groaned Everett.
   Katharine laughed and began to play nervously with her fan. 
   "It wasn't in the slightest degree his fault; that is the most
   grotesque part of it.  Why, it had really begun before I
   ever met him.  I fought my way to him, and I drank my doom
   greedily enough."
   Everett rose and stood hesitating.  "I think I must go.  You ought
   to be quiet, and I don't think I can hear any more just now."
   She put out her hand and took his playfully.  "You've put in
   three weeks at this sort of thing, haven't you?  Well, it may
   never be to your glory in this world, perhaps, but it's been the
   mercy of heaven to me, and it ought to square accounts for a much
   worse life than yours will ever be."
   Everett knelt beside her, saying, brokenly: "I stayed because I
   wanted to be with you, that's all.  I have never cared about other
   women since I met you in New York when I was a lad.  You are a part
   of my destiny, and I could not leave you if I would."
   She put her hands on his shoulders and shook her head.  "No,
   no; don't tell me that.  I have seen enough of tragedy, God
   knows.  Don't show me any more just as the curtain is going down. 
   No, no, it was only a boy's fancy, and your divine pity and my
   utter pitiableness have recalled it for a moment.  One does not
   love the dying, dear friend.  If some fancy of that sort had been
   left over from boyhood, this would rid you of it, and that were
   well.  Now go, and you will come again tomorrow, as long as there
   are tomorrows, will you not?"  She took his hand with a smile that
   lifted the mask from her soul, that was both courage and despair,
   and full of infinite loyalty and tenderness, as she said softly:
        For ever and for ever, farewell, Cassius;
        If we do meet again, why, we shall smile;
        If not, why then, this parting was well made.
   The courage in her eyes was like the clear light of a star to him
   as he went out.
   On the night of Adriance Hilgarde's opening concert in Paris
   Everett sat by the bed in the ranch house in Wyoming, watching
   over the last battle that we have with the flesh before we are
   done with it and free of it forever.  At times it seemed that the
   serene soul of her must have left already and found some refuge
   from the storm, and only the tenacious animal life were left to do
   battle with death.  She labored under a delusion at once pitiful
   and merciful, thinking that she was in the Pullman on her way to
   New York, going back to her life and her work.  When she aroused
   from her stupor it was only to ask the porter to waken her half an
   hour out of Jersey City, or to remonstrate with him about the
   delays and the roughness of the road.  At midnight Everett and the
   nurse were left alone with her.  Poor Charley Gaylord had lain down
   on a couch outside the door.  Everett sat looking at the sputtering
   night lamp until it made his eyes ache.  His head dropped forward
   on the foot of the bed, and he sank into a heavy, distressful
   slumber.  He was dreaming of Adriance's concert in Paris, and of
   Adriance, the troubadour, smiling and debonair, with his boyish
   face and the touch of silver gray in his hair.  He heard the
   applause and he saw the roses going up over the footlights until
   they were stacked half as high as the piano, and the petals fell
   and scattered, making crimson splotches on the floor.  Down this
   crimson pathway came Adriance with his youthful step, leading his
   prima donna by the hand; a dark woman this time, with Spanish eyes.
   The nurse touched him on the shoulder; he started and awoke. 
   She screened the lamp with her hand.  Everett saw that Katharine
   was awake and conscious, and struggling a little.  He lifted her
   gently on his arm and began to fan her.  She laid her hands
   lightly on his hair and looked into his face with eyes that
   seemed never to have wept or doubted.  "Ah, dear Adriance, dear,
   dear," she whispered.
   Everett went to call her brother, but when they came back
   the madness of art was over for Katharine.
   Two days later Everett was pacing the station siding,
   waiting for the westbound train.  Charley Gaylord walked beside
   him, but the two men had nothing to say to each other.  Everett's
   bags were piled on the truck, and his step was hurried and his
   eyes were full of impatience, as he gazed again and again up the
   track, watching for the train.  Gaylord's impatience was not less
   than his own; these two, who had grown so close, had now become
   painful and impossible to each other, and longed for the
   wrench of farewell.
   As the train pulled in Everett wrung Gaylord's hand among
   the crowd of alighting passengers.  The people of a German opera
   company, en route to the coast, rushed by them in frantic haste
   to snatch their breakfast during the stop.  Everett heard an
   exclamation in a broad German dialect, and a massive woman whose
   figure persistently escaped from her stays in the most improbable
   
					     					 			 places rushed up to him, her blond hair disordered by the wind,
   and glowing with joyful surprise she caught his coat sleeve with
   her tightly gloved hands.
   "Herr Gott, Adriance, lieber Freund," she cried,
   emotionally.
   Everett quickly withdrew his arm and lifted  his hat,
   blushing.  "Pardon me, madam, but I see that  you have mistaken
   me for Adriance Hilgarde.  I am his brother," he said quietly,
   and turning from the crestfallen singer, he hurried into the car.
   The Garden Lodge
   When Caroline Noble's friends learned that Raymond d'Esquerre was
   to spend a month at her place on the Sound before he sailed to fill
   his engagement for the London opera season, they considered it
   another striking instance of the perversity of things.  That the
   month was May, and the most mild and florescent of all the
   blue-and-white Mays the middle coast had known in years, but added
   to their sense of wrong.  D'Esquerre, they learned, was ensconced
   in the lodge in the apple orchard, just beyond Caroline's glorious
   garden, and report went that at almost any hour the sound of the
   tenor's voice and of Caroline's crashing accompaniment could be
   heard floating through the open windows, out among the snowy apple
   boughs.  The Sound, steel-blue and dotted with white sails, was
   splendidly seen from the windows of the lodge.  The garden to the
   left and the orchard to the right had never been so riotous with
   spring, and had burst into impassioned bloom, as if to accommodate
   Caroline, though she was certainly the last woman to whom the
   witchery of Freya could be attributed; the last woman, as her
   friends affirmed, to at all adequately appreciate and make the most
   of such a setting for the great tenor.
   Of course, they admitted, Caroline was musical--well, she
   ought to be!--but in that, as in everything, she was paramountly
   cool-headed, slow of impulse, and disgustingly practical; in
   that, as in everything else, she had herself so provokingly well
   in hand.  Of course, it would be she, always mistress of herself
   in any situation, she, who would never be lifted one inch from
   the ground by it, and who would go on superintending her
   gardeners and workmen as usual--it would be she who got him. 
   Perhaps some of them suspected that this was exactly why
   she did get him, and it but nettled them the more.
   Caroline's coolness, her capableness, her general success,
   especially exasperated people because they felt that, for the
   most part, she had made herself what she was; that she had cold-
   bloodedly set about complying with the demands of life and making
   her position comfortable and masterful.  That was why, everyone
   said, she had married Howard Noble.  Women who did not get
   through life so well as Caroline, who could not make such good
   terms either with fortune or their husbands, who did not find
   their health so unfailingly good, or hold their looks so well, or
   manage their children so easily, or give such distinction to all
   they did, were fond of stamping Caroline as a materialist, and
   called her hard.
   The impression of cold calculation, of having a definite
   policy, which Caroline gave, was far from a false one; but there
   was this to be said for her--that there were extenuating
   circumstances which her friends could not know.
   If Caroline held determinedly to the middle course, if she
   was apt to regard with distrust everything which inclined toward
   extravagance, it was not because she was unacquainted with other
   standards than her own, or had never seen another side of life. 
   She had grown up in Brooklyn, in a shabby little house under the
   vacillating administration of her father, a music teacher who
   usually neglected his duties to write orchestral compositions for
   which the world seemed to have no especial need.  His spirit was
   warped by bitter vindictiveness and puerile self-commiseration,
   and he spent his days in scorn of the labor that brought him
   bread and in pitiful devotion to the labor that brought him only
   disappointment, writing interminable scores which demanded of the
   orchestra everything under heaven except melody.
   It was not a cheerful home for a girl to grow up in.  The
   mother, who idolized her husband as the music lord of the future,
   was left to a lifelong battle with broom and dustpan, to
   neverending conciliatory overtures to the butcher and grocer, to
   the making of her own gowns and of Caroline's, and to the delicate
   task of mollifying Auguste's neglected pupils.
   The son, Heinrich, a painter, Caroline's only brother, had
   inherited all his father's vindictive sensitiveness without his
   capacity for slavish application.  His little studio on the third
   floor had been much frequented by young men as unsuccessful as
   himself, who met there to give themselves over to contemptuous
   derision of this or that artist whose industry and stupidity had
   won him recognition.  Heinrich, when he worked at all, did
   newspaper sketches at twenty-five dollars a week.  He was too
   indolent and vacillating to set himself seriously to his art, too
   irascible and poignantly self-conscious to make a living, too
   much addicted to lying late in bed, to the incontinent reading of
   poetry, and to the use of chloral to be anything very positive
   except painful.  At twenty-six he shot himself in a frenzy, and
   the whole wretched affair had effectually shattered his mother's
   health and brought on the decline of which she died.  Caroline
   had been fond of him, but she felt a certain relief when he no
   longer wandered about the little house, commenting ironically
   upon its shabbiness, a Turkish cap on his head and a cigarette
   hanging from between his long, tremulous fingers.
   After her mother's death Caroline assumed the management of
   that bankrupt establishment.  The funeral expenses were unpaid,
   and Auguste's pupils had been frightened away by the shock of
   successive disasters and the general atmosphere of wretchedness
   that pervaded the house.  Auguste himself was writing a symphonic
   poem, Icarus, dedicated to the memory of his son.  Caroline was
   barely twenty when she was called upon to face this tangle of
   difficulties, but she reviewed the situation candidly.  The house
   had served its time at the shrine of idealism; vague, distressing,
   unsatisfied yearnings had brought it low enough.  Her mother,
   thirty years before, had eloped and left Germany with her music
   teacher, to give herself over to lifelong, drudging bondage at the
   kitchen range.  Ever since Caroline could remember, the law in the
   house had been a sort of mystic worship of things distant,
   intangible and unattainable.  The family had lived in successive
   ebullitions of generous enthusiasm, in talk of masters and
   masterpieces, only to come down to the cold facts in the case; to
   boiled mutton and to the necessity of turning the dining-room
   carpet.  All these emotional pyrotechnics had ended in petty
   jealousies, in neglected duties, and in cowardly fea 
					     					 			r of the little
   grocer on the corner.
   From her childhood she had hated it, that humiliating and
   uncertain existence, with its glib tongue and empty pockets, its
   poetic ideals and sordid realities, its indolence and poverty
   tricked out in paper roses.  Even as a little girl, when vague
   dreams beset her, when she wanted to lie late in bed and commune
   with visions, or to leap and sing because the sooty little trees
   along the street were putting out their first pale leaves in the
   sunshine, she would clench her hands and go to help her mother
   sponge the spots from her father's waistcoat or press Heinrich's
   trousers.  Her mother never permitted the slightest question
   concerning anything Auguste or Heinrich saw fit to do, but from
   the time Caroline could reason at all she could not help thinking
   that many things went wrong at home.  She knew, for example, that
   her father's pupils ought not to be kept waiting half an hour
   while he discussed Schopenhauer with some bearded socialist over
   a dish of herrings and a spotted tablecloth.  She knew that
   Heinrich ought not to give a dinner on Heine's birthday, when the
   laundress had not been paid for a month and when he frequently
   had to ask his mother for carfare.  Certainly Caroline had served
   her apprenticeship to idealism and to all the embarrassing
   inconsistencies which it sometimes entails, and she decided to
   deny herself this diffuse, ineffectual answer to the sharp
   questions of life.
   When she came into the control of herself and the house she
   refused to proceed any further with her musical education.  Her
   father, who had intended to make a concert pianist of her, set
   this down as another item in his long list of disappointments and
   his grievances against the world.  She was young and pretty, and
   she had worn turned gowns and soiled gloves and improvised hats
   all her life.  She wanted the luxury of being like other people,
   of being honest from her hat to her boots, of having nothing to
   hide, not even in the matter of stockings, and she was willing to
   work for it.  She rented a little studio away from that house of
   misfortune and began to give lessons.  She managed well and was
   the sort of girl people liked to help.  The bills were
   paid and Auguste went on composing, growing indignant only when
   she refused to insist that her pupils should study his compositions
   for the piano.  She began to get engagements in New York to play
   accompaniments at song recitals.  She dressed well, made herself
   agreeable, and gave herself a chance.  She never permitted herself
   to look further than a step ahead, and set herself with all the
   strength of her will to see things as they are and meet them
   squarely in the broad day.  There were two things she feared even
   more than poverty: the part of one that sets up an idol and the
   part of one that bows down and worships it.
   When Caroline was twenty-four she married Howard Noble, then
   a widower of forty, who had been for ten years a power in Wall
   Street.  Then, for the first time, she had paused to take breath. 
   It took a substantialness as unquestionable as his; his money,
   his position, his energy, the big vigor of his robust person, to
   satisfy her that she was entirely safe.  Then she relaxed a
   little, feeling that there was a barrier to be counted upon
   between her and that world of visions and quagmires and failure.
   Caroline had been married for six years when Raymond
   d'Esquerre came to stay with them.  He came chiefly because
   Caroline was what she was; because he, too, felt occasionally the
   need of getting out of Klingsor's garden, of dropping down
   somewhere for a time near a quiet nature, a cool head, a strong
   hand.  The hours he had spent in the garden lodge were hours of
   such concentrated study as, in his fevered life, he seldom got in
   anywhere.  She had, as he told Noble, a fine appreciation of the
   seriousness of work.
   One evening two weeks after d'Esquerre had sailed, Caroline