was in the library giving her husband an account of the work she
   had laid out for the gardeners.  She superintended the care of
   the grounds herself.  Her garden, indeed, had become quite a part
   of her; a sort of beautiful adjunct, like gowns or jewels.  It
   was a famous spot, and Noble was very proud of it.
   "What do you think, Caroline, of having the garden lodge torn down
   and putting a new summer house there at the end of the arbor; a big
   rustic affair where you could have tea served in midsummer?" he
   asked.
   "The lodge?" repeated Caroline looking at him quickly.  "Why, that
   seems almost a shame, doesn't it, after d'Esquerre has used it?"
   Noble put down his book with a smile of amusement.
   "Are you going to be sentimental about it?  Why, I'd sacrifice the
   whole place to see that come to pass.  But I don't believe you
   could do it for an hour together."
   "I don't believe so, either," said his wife, smiling.
   Noble took up his book again and Caroline went into the
   music room to practice.  She was not ready to have the lodge torn
   down.  She had gone there for a quiet hour every day during the
   two weeks since d'Esquerre had left them.  It was the sheerest
   sentiment she had ever permitted herself.  She was ashamed of it,
   but she was childishly unwilling to let it go.
   Caroline went to bed soon after her husband, but she was not
   able to sleep.  The night was close and warm, presaging storm. 
   The wind had fallen, and the water slept, fixed and motionless as
   the sand.  She rose and thrust her feet into slippers and,
   putting a dressing gown over her shoulders, opened the door of
   her husband's room; he was sleeping soundly.  She went into the
   hall and down the stairs; then, leaving the house through a side
   door, stepped into the vine-covered arbor that led to the garden
   lodge.  The scent of the June roses was heavy in the still air,
   and the stones that paved the path felt pleasantly cool through
   the thin soles of her slippers.  Heat-lightning flashed
   continuously from the bank of clouds that had gathered over the
   sea, but the shore was flooded with moonlight and, beyond, the
   rim of the Sound lay smooth and shining.  Caroline had the key of
   the lodge, and the door creaked as she opened it.  She stepped
   into the long, low room radiant with the moonlight which streamed
   through the bow window and lay in a silvery pool along the waxed
   floor.  Even that part of the room which lay in the shadow was
   vaguely illuminated; the piano, the tall candlesticks, the
   picture frames and white casts standing out as clearly in the
   half-light as did the sycamores and black poplars of the garden
   against the still, expectant night sky.  Caroline sat
   down to think it all over.  She had come here to do just that
   every day of the two weeks since d'Esquerre's departure, but,
   far from ever having reached a conclusion, she had succeeded
   only in losing her way in a maze of memories--sometimes
   bewilderingly confused, sometimes too acutely distinct--where
   there was neither path, nor clue, nor any hope of finality.  She
   had, she realized, defeated a lifelong regimen; completely
   confounded herself by falling unaware and incontinently into
   that luxury of reverie which, even as a little girl, she had so
   determinedly denied herself, she had been developing with
   alarming celerity that part of one which sets up an idol and
   that part of one which bows down and worships it.
   It was a mistake, she felt, ever to have asked d'Esquerre to come
   at all.  She had an angry feeling that she had done it rather in
   self-defiance, to rid herself finally of that instinctive fear of
   him which had always troubled and perplexed her.  She knew that she
   had reckoned with herself before he came; but she had been equal to
   so much that she had never really doubted she would be equal to
   this.  She had come to believe, indeed, almost arrogantly in her
   own malleability and endurance; she had done so much with herself
   that she had come to think that there was nothing which she could
   not do; like swimmers, overbold, who reckon upon their strength and
   their power to hoard it, forgetting the ever-changing moods of
   their adversary, the sea.
   And d'Esquerre was a man to reckon with.  Caroline did not
   deceive herself now upon that score.  She admitted it humbly
   enough, and since she had said good-by to him she had not been
   free for a moment from the sense of his formidable power.  It
   formed the undercurrent of her consciousness; whatever she might
   be doing or thinking, it went on, involuntarily, like her
   breathing, sometimes welling up until suddenly she found herself
   suffocating.  There was a moment of this tonight, and Caroline
   rose and stood shuddering, looking about her in the blue
   duskiness of the silent room.  She had not been here at night
   before, and the spirit of the place seemed more troubled and
   insistent than ever it had in the quiet of the afternoons. 
   Caroline brushed her hair back from her damp forehead
   and went over to the bow window.  After raising it she sat down
   upon the low seat.  Leaning her head against the sill, and
   loosening her nightgown at the throat, she half-closed her eyes
   and looked off into the troubled night, watching the play of
   the heat-lightning upon the massing clouds between the pointed
   tops of the poplars.
   Yes, she knew, she knew well enough, of what absurdities
   this spell was woven; she mocked, even while she winced.  His
   power, she knew, lay not so much in anything that he actually
   had--though he had so much--or in anything that he actually was,
   but in what he suggested, in what he seemed picturesque enough to
   have or be and that was just anything that one chose to believe
   or to desire.  His appeal was all the more persuasive and alluring
   in that it was to the imagination alone, in that it was as
   indefinite and impersonal as those cults of idealism which so
   have their way with women.  What he had was that, in his mere
   personality, he quickened and in a measure gratified that
   something without which--to women--life is no better than
   sawdust, and to the desire for which most of their mistakes and
   tragedies and astonishingly poor bargains are due.
   D'Esquerre had become the center of a movement, and the
   Metropolitan had become the temple of a cult.  When he could be
   induced to cross the Atlantic, the opera season in New York was
   successful; when he could not, the management lost money; so much
   everyone knew.  It was understood, too, that his superb art had
   disproportionately little to do with his peculiar position. 
   Women swayed the balance this way or that; the opera, the
   orchestra, even his own glorious art, achieved at such a cost, were
   but the accessories of himself; like the scenery and costumes and
   even the soprano, they all went to produce atmosphere, were the
   mere mechanics of the beautiful illusion.
   Caroline understood all this; tonight was not the first time
   that she h 
					     					 			ad put it to herself so.  She had seen the same feeling
   in other people, watched for it in her friends, studied it in the
   house night after night when he sang, candidly putting herself
   among a thousand others.
   D'Esquerre's arrival in the early winter was the signal for
   a feminine hegira toward New York.  On the nights when he sang
   women flocked to the Metropolitan from mansions and hotels, from
   typewriter desks, schoolrooms, shops, and fitting rooms.  They
   were of all conditions and complexions.  Women of the world who
   accepted him knowingly as they sometimes took champagne for its
   agreeable effect; sisters of charity and overworked shopgirls,
   who received him devoutly; withered women who had taken doctorate
   degrees and who worshipped furtively through prism spectacles;
   business women and women of affairs, the Amazons who dwelt afar
   from men in the stony fastnesses of apartment houses.  They all
   entered into the same romance; dreamed, in terms as various as
   the hues of fantasy, the same dream; drew the same quick breath
   when he stepped upon the stage, and, at his exit, felt the same
   dull pain of shouldering the pack again.
   There were the maimed, even; those who came on crutches, who
   were pitted by smallpox or grotesquely painted by cruel birth
   stains.  These, too, entered with him into enchantment.  Stout
   matrons became slender girls again; worn spinsters felt their
   cheeks flush with the tenderness of their lost youth.  Young and
   old, however hideous, however fair, they yielded up their heat--
   whether quick or latent--sat hungering for the mystic bread
   wherewith he fed them at this eucharist of sentiment.
   Sometimes, when the house was crowded from the orchestra to
   the last row of the gallery, when the air was charged with this
   ecstasy of fancy, he himself was the victim of the burning
   reflection of his power.  They acted upon him in turn; he felt
   their fervent and despairing appeal to him; it stirred him as the
   spring drives the sap up into an old tree; he, too, burst into
   bloom.  For the moment he, too, believed again, desired again, he
   knew not what, but something.
   But it was not in these exalted moments that Caroline had
   learned to fear him most.  It was in the quiet, tired reserve,
   the dullness, even, that kept him company between these outbursts
   that she found that exhausting drain upon her sympathies which
   was the very pith and substance of their alliance.  It was the
   tacit admission of disappointment under all this glamour
   of success--the helplessness of the enchanter to at all enchant
   himself--that awoke in her an illogical, womanish desire to in
   some way compensate, to make it up to him.
   She had observed drastically to herself that it was her
   eighteenth year he awoke in her--those hard years she had spent
   in turning gowns and placating tradesmen, and which she had never
   had time to live.  After all, she reflected, it was better to
   allow one's self a little youth--to dance a little at the
   carnival and to live these things when they are natural and
   lovely, not to have them coming back on one and demanding arrears
   when they are humiliating and impossible.  She went over tonight
   all the catalogue of her self-deprivations; recalled how, in the
   light of her father's example, she had even refused to humor her
   innocent taste for improvising at the piano; how, when she began
   to teach, after her mother's death, she had struck out one little
   indulgence after another, reducing her life to a relentless
   routine, unvarying as clockwork.  It seemed to her that ever
   since d'Esquerre first came into the house she had been haunted
   by an imploring little girlish ghost that followed her about,
   wringing its hands and entreating for an hour of life.
   The storm had held off unconscionably long; the air within
   the lodge was stifling, and without the garden waited,
   breathless.  Everything seemed pervaded by a poignant distress;
   the hush of feverish, intolerable expectation.  The still earth,
   the heavy flowers, even the growing darkness, breathed the
   exhaustion of protracted waiting.  Caroline felt that she ought
   to go; that it was wrong to stay; that the hour and the place
   were as treacherous as her own reflections.  She rose and began
   to pace the floor, stepping softly, as though in fear of
   awakening someone, her figure, in its thin drapery, diaphanously
   vague and white.  Still unable to shake off the obsession of the
   intense stillness, she sat down at the piano and began to run
   over the first act of the Walkure, the last of his roles
   they had practiced together; playing listlessly and absently at
   first, but with gradually increasing seriousness.  Perhaps it was
   the still heat of the summer night, perhaps it was the heavy odors
   from the garden that came in through the open windows; but as she
   played there grew and grew the feeling that he was there, beside
   her, standing in his accustomed place.  In the duet at the end of
   the first act she heard him clearly: "Thou art the Spring for
   which I sighed in Winter's cold embraces."  Once as he sang
   it, he had put his arm about her, his one hand under her heart,
   while with the other he took her right from the keyboard, holding
   her as he always held Sieglinde when he drew her toward the
   window.  She had been wonderfully the mistress of herself at the
   time; neither repellent nor acquiescent.  She remembered that she
   had rather exulted, then, in her self-control--which he had seemed
   to take for granted, though there was perhaps the whisper of a
   question from the hand under her heart.  "Thou art the Spring
   for which I sighed in Winter's cold embraces."  Caroline lifted
   her hands quickly from the keyboard, and she bowed her head in
   them, sobbing.
   The storm broke and the rain beat in, spattering her
   nightdress until she rose and lowered the windows.  She dropped
   upon the couch and began fighting over again the battles of other
   days, while the ghosts of the slain rose as from a sowing of
   dragon's teeth, The shadows of things, always so scorned and
   flouted, bore down upon her merciless and triumphant.  It was not
   enough; this happy, useful, well-ordered life was not enough.  It
   did not satisfy, it was not even real.  No, the other things, the
   shadows-they were the realities.  Her father, poor Heinrich, even
   her mother, who had been able to sustain her poor romance and
   keep her little illusions amid the tasks of a scullion, were
   nearer happiness than she.  Her sure foundation was but made
   ground, after all, and the people in Klingsor's garden were more
   fortunate, however barren the sands from which they conjured
   their paradise.
   The lodge was still and silent; her fit of weeping over,
   Caroline made no sound, and within the room, as without in the
   garden, was the blackness of storm.  Only now and then a flash of
   lightning showed a woman's slender figure rigid on the couch, her
   face buried in her hands 
					     					 			.
   Toward morning, when the occasional rumbling of thunder was
   heard no more and the beat of the raindrops upon the orchard
   leaves was steadier, she fell asleep and did not waken
   until the first red streaks of dawn shone through the twisted
   boughs of the apple trees.  There was a moment between world and
   world, when, neither asleep nor awake, she felt her dream grow
   thin, melting away from her, felt the warmth under her heart
   growing cold.  Something seemed to slip from the clinging hold
   of her arms, and she groaned protestingly through her parted lips,
   following it a little way with fluttering hands.  Then her eyes
   opened wide and she sprang up and sat holding dizzily to the
   cushions of the couch, staring down at her bare, cold feet, at
   her laboring breast, rising and falling under her open nightdress.
   The dream was gone, but the feverish reality of it still
   pervaded her and she held it as the vibrating string holds a
   tone.  In the last hour the shadows had had their way with
   Caroline.  They had shown her the nothingness of time and space,
   of system and discipline, of closed doors and broad waters. 
   Shuddering, she thought of the Arabian fairy tale in which the
   genie brought the princess of China to the sleeping prince of
   Damascus and carried her through the air back to her palace at
   dawn.  Caroline closed her eyes and dropped her elbows weakly
   upon her knees, her shoulders sinking together.  The horror was
   that it had not come from without, but from within.  The dream
   was no blind chance; it was the expression of something she had
   kept so close a prisoner that she had never seen it herself, it
   was the wail from the donjon deeps when the watch slept.  Only as
   the outcome of such a night of sorcery could the thing have been
   loosed to straighten its limbs and measure itself with her; so
   heavy were the chains upon it, so many a fathom deep, it was
   crushed down into darkness.  The fact that d'Esquerre happened to
   be on the other side of the world meant nothing; had he been
   here, beside her, it could scarcely have hurt her  self-respect
   so much.  As it was, she was without even the  extenuation of an
   outer impulse, and she could scarcely have despised herself more
   had she come to him here in the night three weeks ago and thrown
   herself down upon the stone slab at the door there.
   Caroline rose unsteadily and crept guiltily from the lodge
   and along the path under the arbor, terrified lest the
   servants should be stirring, trembling with the chill air, while
   the wet shrubbery, brushing against her, drenched her nightdress
   until it clung about her limbs.
   At breakfast her husband looked across the table at her with
   concern.  "It seems to me that you are looking rather fagged,
   Caroline.  It was a beastly night to sleep.  Why don't you go up
   to the mountains until this hot weather is over?  By the way, were
   you in earnest about letting the lodge stand?"
   Caroline laughed quietly.  "No, I find I was not very serious.  I
   haven't sentiment enough to forego a summer house.  Will you tell
   Baker to come tomorrow to talk it over with me?  If we are to have
   a house party, I should like to put him to work on it at once."
   Noble gave her a glance, half-humorous, half-vexed.  "Do you
   know I am rather disappointed?" he said.  "I had almost hoped
   that, just for once, you know, you would be a little bit foolish."
   "Not now that I've slept over it," replied Caroline, and
   they both rose from the table, laughing.
   The Marriage of Phaedra
   The sequence of events was such that MacMaster did not make his
   pilgrimage to Hugh Treffinger's studio until three years after that
   painter's death.  MacMaster was himself a painter, an American of
   the Gallicized type, who spent his winters in New York, his summers
   in Paris, and no inconsiderable amount of time on the broad waters
   between.  He had often contemplated stopping in London on one of
   his return trips in the late autumn, but he had always deferred
   leaving Paris until the prick of necessity drove him home by the