One blue summer morning, Wyndham, for the twentieth time at least, entered the Salon through his customary turnstile, and stood in the great central court, under the crystal roof, amid the gleaming display of statuary. There was already a goodly number of people about; not yet a crowd, but enough for the costumes and hats of the fair sex to colour the whole place like a flower-garden. He moved about among them for awhile, his eye keen and ready; then ascended the staircase, and entered the nearest doorway. He spent an hour or two in leisurely progression through the galleries, long since familiar with all the pictures, and staying only before the interesting ones, yet with attention ever on the alert. At last he had set foot in the particular room, which was to him the shrine, the inner sanctuary, of this Temple of the Arts. It was already crowded here, and his first impression was of a mass of silk hats and beflowered millinery rather than of pictures. He hesitated in the doorway an instant, then began the slow "I am free," he whispered. "Do you understand? Free!" "Free?" He divined rather than heard the breathed exclamation from the movement of her lips—read the amazed questioning of her eyes. "I have not broken my promise to you!" The crowd surged round them, struggling to see his picture, ejaculating banal words of admiration. "You do not doubt!" he whispered tensely. The blood came back to her face at last. "No! But the how?—the why?" "She sought her release!" "She suspected the truth!" She was pale again. "We cheated ourselves. She cared for one of her own kind. Our renunciation was an irony." Lady Betty bent her head. Her brow was wrinkled for a moment in thought, and her hand trembled visibly. "An irony—no," she said gently. "We were true to ourselves—the future lies the fairer before us." The press around them grew closer. "Mais c'est chic Ça!" "C'est exquis!" She took his arm, as if seeking freer air, and they moved through the throng that continued its compliments, unsuspecting of the proximity of either artist or subject. They stood at last on the great balcony, and looked down on the splendid court agleam with sculpture and greenery. "I have searched Europe for you!" he said. "This great change in our lives—it is too wonderful to grasp all at once," she murmured musingly. "I do not see why we should not stroll round to the Embassy now, and inquire," he suggested stoutly. "Inquire about what?" she asked, her deep absent look changing to bewilderment. "As to when they can marry us, of course!" "Oh, I see," she said, with a quick smile; but her glance was inward again. "You don't think me precipitate?" he asked uneasily. "I am thinking of Alice," she returned. "I could have sworn she was the soul of constancy." The End.UNWIN BROTHERS, LIMITED, THE GRAHAM PRESS, WOKING AND LONDON.
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