The Danger Mark. Robert W. Chambers

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The Danger Mark - Robert W. Chambers

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the calf-like transports of Bunbury Gray. She had felt, if she had not returned them, the furtively significant pressure of men's hands in the gaiety and whirl of things; ardent and chuckle-headed youth had declared itself in conservatories and in corners; one impetuous mauling from a smitten Harvard boy of eighteen had left her furiously vexed with herself for her passive attitude while the tempest passed. True, she had vigorously reproved him later. She had, alas, occasion, during her first season, to reprove several demonstrative young men for their unconventionally athletic manner of declaring their suits. She had been far more severe with the humble, unattractive, and immobile, however, than with the audacious and ornamental who had attempted to take her by storm. A sudden if awkward kiss followed by the fiery declaration of the hot-headed disturbed her less than the persistent stare of an enamoured pair of eyes. As a child the description of an assault on a citadel always interested her, but she had neither sympathy nor interest in a siege.

      Now, musing there in the sunlight on the events of her first winter, she became aware that she had been more or less instructed in the ways of men; and, remembering, she lifted her disturbed eyes to inspect this specimen of a sex which often perplexed but always interested her.

      "What are you smiling about, Duane?" she asked defiantly.

      "Your arraignment of me when half the men in town have been trying to marry you all winter. You've made a reputation for yourself, too, Geraldine."

      "As what?" she asked angrily.

      "A head-twister."

      "Do you mean a flirt?"

      "Oh, Lord! Only the French use that term now. But that's the idea, Geraldine. You are a born one. I fell for the first smile you let loose on me."

      "You seem to have been a sort of general Humpty Dumpty for falls all your life, Duane," she said with dangerous sweetness.

      "Like that immortal, I've had only one which permanently shattered me."

      "Which was that, if you please?"

      "The fall you took out of me."

      "In other words," she said disdainfully, "you are beginning to make love to me again."

      "No. … I was in love with you."

      "You were in love with yourself, young man. You are on such excellent terms with yourself that you sympathise too ardently with any attractive woman who takes the least and most innocent notice of you."

      He said, very much amused: "I was perfectly serious over you, Geraldine."

      "The selfish always take themselves seriously."

      It was she, however, who now sat there bright-eyed and unsmiling, and he was still laughing, deftly balancing his crop on one finger, and glancing at her from time to time with that glimmer of ever-latent mockery which always made her restive at first, then irritated her with an unreasoning desire to hurt him somehow. But she never seemed able to reach him.

      "Sooner or later," she said, "women will find you out, thoroughly."

      "And then, just think what a rush there will be to marry me!"

      "There will be a rush to avoid you, Duane. And it will set in before you know it—" She thought of the recent gossip coupling his name with Rosalie's, reddened and bit her lip in silence. But somehow the thought irritated her into speech again:

      "Fortunately, I was among the first to find you out—the first, I think."

      "Heavens! when was that?" he asked in pretended concern, which infuriated her.

      "You had better not ask me," she flashed back. "When a woman suddenly discovers that a man is untrustworthy, do you think she ever forgets it?"

      "Because I once kissed you? What a dreadful deed!"

      "You forget the circumstances under which you did it."

      He flushed; she had managed to hurt him, after all. He began patiently:

      "I've explained to you a dozen times that I didn't know——"

      "But I told you!"

      "And I couldn't believe you——"

      "But you expect me to believe you?"

      He could not exactly interpret her bright, smiling, steady gaze.

      "The trouble with you is," she said, "that there is nothing to you but good looks and talent. There was once, but it died—over in Europe—somewhere. No woman trusts a man like you. Don't you know it?"

      His smile did not seem to be very genuine, but he answered lightly:

      "When I ask people to have confidence in me, it will be time for them to pitch into me."

      "Didn't you once ask me for your confidence—and then abuse it?" she demanded.

      "I told you I loved you—if that is what you mean. And you doubted it so strenuously that, perhaps I might be excused for doubting it myself. … What is the use of talking this way, Geraldine?"

      There was a ring of exasperation in her laughter. She lifted his glass, sipped a little, and, looking over it at him:

      "I drink to our doubts concerning each other: may nothing ever occur to disturb them."

      Her cheeks had begun to burn, her eyes were too bright, her voice unmodulated.

      "Whether or not you ever again take the trouble to ask me to trust you in that way," she said, "I'll tell you now why I don't and why I never could. It may amuse you. Shall I?"

      "By all means," he replied amiably; "but it seems to me as though you are rather rough on me."

      "You were rougher with me the first time I saw you, after all those years. I met you with perfect confidence, remembering what you once were. It was my first grown-up party. I was only a fool of a girl, merely ignorant, unfit to be trusted with a liberty I'd never before had. … And I took one glass of champagne and it—you know what it did. … And I was bewildered and frightened, and I told you; and—you perhaps remember how my confidence in my old play-fellow was requited. Do you?"

      Reckless impulse urged her on. Heart and pulses were beating very fast with a persistent desire to hurt him. Her animation, brilliant colour, her laughter seemed to wing every word like an arrow. She knew he shrank from what she was saying, in spite of his polite attention, and her fresh, curved cheek and parted lips took on a brighter tint. Something was singing, seething in her veins. She lifted her glass, set it down, and suddenly pushed it from her so violently that it fell with a crash. A wave of tingling heat mounted to her face, receded, swept back again. Confused, she straightened up in her chair, breathing fast. What was coming over her? Again the wave surged back with a deafening rush; her senses struggled, the blood in her ran riot. Then terror clutched her. Neither lips nor tongue were very flexible when she spoke.

      "Duane—if you don't mind—would you go away now? I've a wretched headache."

      He shrugged and stood up.

      "It's curious," he said reflectively, "how utterly

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