When the storm was over, he left his retreat and went down the wet path

to the river bank.

Two swans had come, sheltering in among the reeds. He knew the birds

well, and stood watching the dignity in the curve of those white necks

and formidable snake-like heads. 'Not dignified--what I have to do!' he

thought. And yet it must be tackled, lest worse befell. Annette must be

back by now from wherever she had gone, for it was nearly dinner-time,

and as the moment for seeing her approached, the difficulty of knowing

what to say and how to say it had increased. A new and scaring thought

occurred to him. Suppose she wanted her liberty to marry this fellow!

Well, if she did, she couldn't have it. He had not married her for that.

The image of Prosper Profond dawdled before him reassuringly. Not a

marrying man! No, no! Anger replaced that momentary scare. 'He had

better not come my way,' he thought. The mongrel represented---! But

what did Prosper Profond represent? Nothing that mattered surely. And

yet something real enough in the world--unmorality let off its chain,

disillusionment on the prowl! That expression Annette had caught

from him: "Je m'en fiche!" A fatalistic chap! A continental--a

cosmopolitan--a product of the age! If there were condemnation more

complete, Soames felt that he did not know it.

The swans had turned their heads, and were looking past him into some

distance of their own. One of them uttered a little hiss, wagged its

tail, turned as if answering to a rudder, and swam away. The other

followed. Their white bodies, their stately necks, passed out of his

sight, and he went toward the house.

Annette was in the drawing-room, dressed for dinner, and he thought as

he went up-stairs 'Handsome is as handsome does.' Handsome! Except for

remarks about the curtains in the drawing-room, and the storm, there was

practically no conversation during a meal distinguished by exactitude

of quantity and perfection of quality. Soames drank nothing. He followed

her into the drawing-room afterward, and found her smoking a cigarette

on the sofa between the two French windows. She was leaning back, almost

upright, in a low black frock, with her knees crossed and her blue eyes

half-closed; grey-blue smoke issued from her red, rather full lips, a

fillet bound her chestnut hair, she wore the thinnest silk stockings,

and shoes with very high heels showing off her instep. A fine piece in

any room! Soames, who held that torn letter in a hand thrust deep into

the side-pocket of his dinner-jacket, said:

"I'm going to shut the window; the damp's lifting in."




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