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and well. He is a noted duelist—three times has he killed his man;
lighting his cigar coolly and walking away while his adversary lay dying
hard among the sweet summer grasses. He is a skilled swordsman, a dead
shot. More than once, since the beginning of his flirtation with the
fair Felicia, has Lord Dynely been told that. And he—of fencing he
knows next to nothing—a pistol he has not fired three times in his
life. And “a friend will wait upon him to-morrow,” and the morning
after, at the farthest, he will meet Di Venturini somewhere amid the
wooded slopes of Versailles.
Physically, Lord Dynely was the farthest possible remove from a coward.
Life may be tolerably pleasant, and still a man may face the possibility
of leaving it with good grace, if his conscience lie dormant. To fear
death, one must fear what comes after death. Of that, like most men of
his stamp, wholly given up to the pursuit of pleasure, Lord Dynely never
thought. After all, taken with all its dissipations, even at its best
and brightest, here in Paris, life was a good deal of a bore—not so
desirable a thing to keep, by any manner of means, that one should make
much of a howling at resigning it. And that the day after to-morrow,
when he stood face to face with Di Venturini, under the leafless trees
of Versailles, or the Bois de Vincennes, he must resign it, he was as
certain as that he lit his cigar now, and strolled slowly homeward under
the white, shining stars. Yes, life was a bore; a man tired of all
things. A pretty face with two blue eyes bewitches him, he marries it,
and is wearied to death or satiety in a fortnight. One grew tired of
women, of wine, of horses, the rattle of the dice, the croak of the
croupier, the shuffle of the cards, the whirl of the ball-room, the
glare of the gaslight, of all things in this wearisome, lower world.
Even swarth-skinned, topaz-eyed actresses pall after a few weeks, after
a few thousand pounds spent upon them in presents, for which “becks and
nods, and wreath�d smiles” are but a flat return. Vanitas Vanitatem!
The song Solomon sung so many thousand years ago is wearily echoed by
his sons—the jeunesse dor�e of to-day. And one other day must end it
all. There would be the trip down the Seine to-morrow, sunshine above
them, music around them, a golden blue river below them, and two yellow,
black, lustrous eyes smiling languidly upon him. The morning after, in
the gray, cold dawn, there would be that silent woodland meeting, the
sharp report of two pistol shots, a yellow, Neapolitan prince flying in
haste out of the imperial dominions of Napoleon the Third, and a man
lying stark on the blood-stained grass, his dead face upturned to the
sky. As in a vivid picture before him he saw it all. And then there
would be a wedding in Italy a few weeks later, and the topaz eyes would
smile for life on the Neapolitan prince. For the dead man—well,
for him, in the creed of the man himself, the best of all
things—annihilation!
He walked home very slowly, smoking and half dreamily, thinking all
this. He must keep the matter from his womankind, and he must find a
friend. There was Boville—yes, Boville would do—he would see him the
first thing to-morrow, and refer Di Venturini’s second to him. Under
ordinary circumstances, Terry Dennison would have been his man, but
under present circumstances Dennison was not to be thought of. For a
second quarrel had taken place between the two men—a quarrel bitter and
deep; and for the same cause—Dynely’s neglect of his wife. It had
occurred three days after the sudden and somewhat surprising departure
of Gordon Caryll. Eric still held fast, body and soul, by Felicia,
Crystal still drooping with that pathetic, heart-broken face. By command
of Lady Dynely, m�re, Terry had taken Crystal for a drive in the Bois,
and there, face to face, in the yellow afternoon sunshine, they had come
upon the glittering little equipage of Felicia the dancer. Lying back in
her silks and sables and seal skins, her “flower face” smiling behind a
little lace veil, her English cavalier, Lord Dynely, beside her, so Lord
Dynely’s wife had come upon them full. For a second, four pairs of eyes
met—then the bright carriage of the danseuse flashed past, and
Felicia’s derisive laugh came back to them on the breeze.
“Mon Dieu! Eric, a pleasant rencontre for you?” she cried, unaffectedly
amused by the situation. “What is the matter with Mr. Dennison? He gave
me a look absolutely murderous as we passed.”
Crystal had fallen back with a gasping cry as though a brutal hand had
struck her.
“Oh, Terry! take me home,” she had sobbed, as once before, and Terry, in
silence, with flashing eyes and lowering brows and compressed lips, had
obeyed.
Four hours later and there was a “scene” in the salon of the Dynelys.
Crystal, sick heart and soul, was alone in her room; Eric, waiting for
dinner, was reading the evening paper, when Dennison strode in and
confronted him.
“Dynely!” he passionately demanded, “how is this to end?”
Lord Dynely looked up, the conscious blood reddening his transparent,
girl-like face.
“How is what to end? May I request you to take a somewhat less
aggressive tone in addressing me, Mr. Dennison?”
“Your neglect—your shameful neglect of your wife. It is brutal, it is
murderous—you are killing her by inches, before our eyes!”
The flush faded from the blonde face of Viscount Dynely. The livid
whiteness of deadly anger took its place. He laid down his paper and
spoke with ominous calm.
“May I inquire if my wife has sent you here to tell me this?”
“Your wife knows nothing of my coming—that you know as well as I. But I
swear, Eric, this must end! You are breaking, brutally breaking your
wife’s heart. All Paris is talking, is laughing over your besotted
infatuation for that old woman—Felicia the dancer! You spend your time,
you lavish your gifts on that painted Jezebel, while Crystal dies day by
day before your eyes. And only seven weeks since you married her!”
Eric rose to his feet—the light of deadly rage filling his eyes, but
before he could speak Dennison interposed:
“Stay!” he cried, lifting his hand, “hear me out! I pledged myself once
never to quarrel with you, do what you might, say what you would. That
promise I mean to keep. It is the farthest possible from my wish—the
thought of quarrelling with you. But, Eric, I say again this must end.”
“Indeed! You speak of my very pleasant platonic friendship with the most
charming woman in Paris, I presume. May I ask how you propose to end
it?”
“For Heaven’s sake, Eric, don’t sneer! I speak to you as a friend, as a
brother. You cannot be quite heartless—you cannot have quite outlived
your love for Crystal. Don’t you see you are killing her—poor, little
soul, don’t you see she worships the ground you walk on, the least thing
your hand has touched. She would die for you, Eric; and you—you neglect
her more shamefully than ever bride was neglected before; you insult her
by your devotion to this worthless woman. If you had seen her after you
had passed to-day–-” he stops suddenly and walks away to a window.
“Don’t let us row, Eric,” he says hoarsely; “I have no wish to interfere
with or dictate to you, but in some way I stand pledged to Crystal since
her happiness is at stake. Our friendship of the past has given me the
right to be her protector at least.”
“The right of a jilted lover!” Eric returns, that bitter sneer still on
lips and eyes. “Let us understand each other, Dennison. This is the
second time you have interfered in this matter. I warn you now, let it
be the last. I have listened to your insolence, because I wish to drag
my wife’s name into no public scandal, or quarrel with you. It is the
last time I will be so forbearing. Be kind enough to quit these rooms at
once, and enter them no more! Be kind enough, also, to discontinue your
acquaintance with Lady Dynely. If I were inclined to take umbrage
easily, I might with reason object to you, her jilted lover, as I said
before, playing the r�le of attendant cavalier, but I let that
pass—this once. I shall order my wife to receive your visits no longer,
and I think she will hardly venture to disobey. After to-day, Mr.
Dennison, you will understand our acquaintance is at an end.”
And then, before Terry could speak, his lordship had quitted the salon,
and nothing was left but to obey. And the only result of his
interference was frigid coldness on the part of Lord Dynely to his wife,
and increased devotion, if that were possible, to Felicia. They had met
more than once since, and Dynely had cut him dead. So matters between
those two, who had grown up as brothers, stood to-night. Verily, a woman
is at the bottom of all the ruptured masculine friendships of this lower
world!
The early dawn was breaking before Lord Dynely reached his hotel.
Crystal, pale as a shadow, wasted and wan, lay asleep. A pang of
something like actual remorse shot through him as he looked at her, so
changed in those few brief weeks.
“Poor little soul!” he thought, “if—if the worst does happen to-morrow,
it will be hard lines on her.”
Of no use going to bed, he thought; he could not sleep. He threw himself
on a sofa in the dressing-room adjoining, still in his evening suit, and
in ten minutes was fast as a church.
The breakfast hour was past when he awoke, and Crystal was seated beside
him, watching him with eyes of unutterable pathetic yearning. She
started up confusedly, as he opened his eyes, coloring, as though caught
in some guilty act.
“Waiting for me, Crystal?” he said, rising on his elbow, with a yawn.
“You were asleep when I came home, and I would not disturb you. What is
the hour? Ten, by Jove! Is breakfast ready? I have an engagement this
morning, and must get off at once.”
Breakfast dispatched hurriedly, his dress changed, a note sent in hot
haste to Boville, Lord Dynely was waited upon by a tall,
fiercely-mustached, soldierly Frenchman. The interview was brief, and
strictly private. Boville sauntering lazily in, encountered monsieur
swaggering out.
“Who’s your military friend, Dynely?” he inquired, “and what the deuce
do you want of a man in such a hurry as this?”
“My military friend is Monsieur Raoul De Concressault, Captain of
Zouaves; his business here, to bring me a challenge from Prince Di
Venturini; and I have sent for you in such a hurry to be my second in
the affair. Take a seat, Boville, and a cigar.”
“By Jove!” cried Boville, taking the seat, but not the cigar. “I thought
it would come to this. Of course Felicia is at the bottom of it?”
“Of course—is not her charming sex at the bottom of all the mischief
and murder on earth? Also, of course everything is strictly _sub
rosa_—it won’t do to let it get wind.”
“Certainly not,” Boville answered gravely. “Tell us about it, Dynely. I
thought M. le Prince was safely away for another week.”
“So did I—so did Felicia,” Dynely said, with a slight laugh. “He turned
up in most dramatic fashion at the bal masque at the
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