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at all. She went on vindicating herself. ā€œItā€™s taken me a long while to do anything, of course, and Iā€™ve only begun to see daylight. But anything good isā ā€”expensive. It hasnā€™t seemed long. Iā€™ve always felt responsible to you.ā€

Fred looked at her face intently, through the veil of snowflakes, and shook his head. ā€œTo me? You are a truthful woman, and you donā€™t mean to lie to me. But after the one responsibility you do feel, I doubt if youā€™ve enough left to feel responsible to God! Still, if youā€™ve ever in an idle hour fooled yourself with thinking I had anything to do with it, Heaven knows Iā€™m grateful.ā€

ā€œEven if Iā€™d married Nordquist,ā€ Thea went on, turning down the path again, ā€œthere would have been something left out. There always is. In a way, Iā€™ve always been married to you. Iā€™m not very flexible; never was and never shall be. You caught me young. I could never have that over again. One canā€™t, after one begins to know anything. But I look back on it. My life hasnā€™t been a gay one, any more than yours. If I shut things out from you, you shut them out from me. Weā€™ve been a help and a hindrance to each other. I guess itā€™s always that way, the good and the bad all mixed up. Thereā€™s only one thing thatā€™s all beautifulā ā€”and always beautiful! Thatā€™s why my interest keeps up.ā€

ā€œYes, I know.ā€ Fred looked sidewise at the outline of her head against the thickening atmosphere. ā€œAnd you give one the impression that that is enough. Iā€™ve gradually, gradually given you up.ā€

ā€œSee, the lights are coming out.ā€ Thea pointed to where they flickered, flashes of violet through the gray treetops. Lower down the globes along the drives were becoming a pale lemon color. ā€œYes, I donā€™t see why anybody wants to marry an artist, anyhow. I remember Ray Kennedy used to say he didnā€™t see how any woman could marry a gambler, for she would only be marrying what the game left.ā€ She shook her shoulders impatiently. ā€œWho marries who is a small matter, after all. But I hope I can bring back your interest in my work. Youā€™ve cared longer and more than anybody else, and Iā€™d like to have somebody human to make a report to once in a while. You can send me your spear. Iā€™ll do my best. If youā€™re not interested, Iā€™ll do my best anyhow. Iā€™ve only a few friends, but I can lose every one of them, if it has to be. I learned how to lose when my mother died.ā ā€”We must hurry now. My taxi must be waiting.ā€

The blue light about them was growing deeper and darker, and the falling snow and the faint trees had become violet. To the south, over Broadway, there was an orange reflection in the clouds. Motors and carriage lights flashed by on the drive below the reservoir path, and the air was strident with horns and shrieks from the whistles of the mounted policemen.

Fred gave Thea his arm as they descended from the embankment. ā€œI guess youā€™ll never manage to lose me or Archie, Thea. You do pick up queer ones. But loving you is a heroic discipline. It wears a man out. Tell me one thing: could I have kept you, once, if Iā€™d put on every screw?ā€

Thea hurried him along, talking rapidly, as if to get it over. ā€œYou might have kept me in misery for a while, perhaps. I donā€™t know. I have to think well of myself, to work. You could have made it hard. Iā€™m not ungrateful. I was a difficult proposition to deal with. I understand now, of course. Since you didnā€™t tell me the truth in the beginning, you couldnā€™t very well turn back after Iā€™d set my head. At least, if youā€™d been the sort who could, you wouldnā€™t have had toā ā€”for Iā€™d not have cared a button for that sort, even then.ā€ She stopped beside a car that waited at the curb and gave him her hand. ā€œThere. We part friends?ā€

Fred looked at her. ā€œYou know. Ten years.ā€

ā€œIā€™m not ungrateful,ā€ Thea repeated as she got into her cab.

ā€œYes,ā€ she reflected, as the taxi cut into the Park carriage road, ā€œwe donā€™t get fairy tales in this world, and he has, after all, cared more and longer than anybody else.ā€ It was dark outside now, and the light from the lamps along the drive flashed into the cab. The snowflakes hovered like swarms of white bees about the globes.

Thea sat motionless in one corner staring out of the window at the cab lights that wove in and out among the trees, all seeming to be bent upon joyous courses. Taxicabs were still new in New York, and the theme of popular minstrelsy. Landry had sung her a ditty he heard in some theater on Third Avenue, about:

But there passed him a bright-eyed taxi
With the girl of his heart inside.

Almost inaudibly Thea began to hum the air, though she was thinking of something serious, something that had touched her deeply. At the beginning of the season, when she was not singing often, she had gone one afternoon to hear Paderewskiā€™s recital. In front of her sat an old German couple, evidently poor people who had made sacrifices to pay for their excellent seats. Their intelligent enjoyment of the music, and their friendliness with each other, had interested her more than anything on the programme. When the pianist began a lovely melody in the first movement of the Beethoven D minor sonata, the old lady put out her plump hand and touched her husbandā€™s sleeve and they looked at each other in recognition. They both wore glasses, but such a look! Like forget-menots, and so full of happy recollections. Thea wanted to put her arms around them and ask them how they had been able to keep a feeling like that, like a nosegay in a glass of water.

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