Without
even waiting for an answer from her husband regarding his opinion or wishes in
the matter, Edna hastened her preparations for quitting her home on Esplanade
Street and moving into the little house around the block. A feverish anxiety
attended her every action in that direction. There was no moment of
deliberation, no interval of repose between the thought and its fulfillment.
Early upon the morning following those hours passed in Arobin's society, Edna
set about securing her new abode and hurrying her arrangements for occupying it.
Within the precincts of her home she felt like one who has entered and lingered
within the portals of some forbidden temple in which a thousand muffled voices
bade her begone.
Whatever was her own in the
house, everything which she had acquired aside from her husband's bounty, she
caused to be transported to the other house,
supplying simple and meager deficiencies from her own resources.
Arobin found her with rolled
sleeves, working in company with the house-maid when he looked in during the
afternoon. She was splendid and robust, and had never appeared handsomer than in
the old blue gown, with a red silk handkerchief knotted at random around her
head to protect her hair from the dust. She was mounted upon a high step-ladder,
unhooking a picture from the wall when he entered. He had found the front door
open, and had followed his ring by walking in unceremoniously.
"Come down!" he said. "Do you
want to kill yourself?" She greeted him with affected carelessness, and appeared
absorbed in her occupation.
If he had expected to find
her languishing, reproachful, or indulging in sentimental tears, he must have
been greatly surprised.
He was no doubt prepared for
any emergency, ready for any one of the foregoing attitudes just as he bent
himself easily and naturally to the situation which confronted him.
"Please come down," he
insisted, holding the ladder and looking up at her.
"No," she answered; "Ellen is
afraid to mount the ladder. Joe is working over at the 'pigeon house' - that's
the name Ellen gives it, because it's so small and looks like a pigeon house -
and some one has to do this. "
Arobin pulled off his coat,
and expressed himself ready and willing to tempt fate in her place. Ellen
brought him one of her dust-caps, and went into contortions of mirth, which she
found it impossible to control, when she saw him put it on before the mirror as
grotesquely as he could. Edna herself could not refrain from smiling when she
fastened it at his request. So it was he who in turn mounted the ladder,
unhooking pictures and curtains, and dislodging ornaments as Edna directed. When
he had finished he took off his dust-cap and went out to wash his hands.
Edna was sitting on the
tabouret, idly brushing the tips of a feather duster along the carpet when he
came in again.
"Is there anything more you
will let me do?" he asked.
"That is all," she answered.
"Ellen can manage the rest." She kept the young woman occupied in the
drawing-room, unwilling to be left alone with Arobin.
"What about the dinner?" he
asked; "the grand event, the coup d'état?"
"It will be day after
to-morrow. Why do you call it the 'coup d'état?' Oh! it will be
very fine; all my best of everything - crystal, silver and gold, Sèvres,
flowers, music, and champagne to swim in. I'll let Léonce pay the bills. I
wonder what he'll say when he sees the bills."
"And you ask me why I call it
a coup d'état?" Arobin had put on his coat, and he stood before
her and asked if his cravat was plumb. She told him it was, looking no higher
than the tip of his collar.
"When do you go to the
'pigeon house?' - with all due acknowledgment to Ellen."
"Day after to-morrow, after
the dinner. I shall sleep there."
"Ellen, will you very kindly
get me a glass of water?" asked Arobin. "The dust in the curtains, if you will
pardon me for hinting such a thing, has parched my throat to a crisp."
"While Ellen gets the water,"
said Edna, rising, "I will say good-by and let you go. I must get rid of this
grime, and I have a million things to do and think of."
"When shall I see you?" asked
Arobin, seeking to detain her, the maid having left the room.
"At the dinner, of course.
You are invited."
"Not before? - not to-night
or to-morrow morning or to-morrow noon or night ? or the day after morning or
noon? Can't you see yourself, without my telling you, what an eternity it is?"
He had followed her into the
hall and to the foot of the stairway, looking up at her as she mounted with her
face half turned to him.
"Not an instant sooner," she
said. But she laughed and looked at him with eyes that at once gave him courage
to wait and made it torture to wait.