She clicked the keys of her machine idly. “That is hardly a fair comparison. You can get any number of competent girls for three dollars.”
He rested his chin on his upturned palm. “But, my dear Miss Robson, I happen to want you.”
She thought of any number of cheap, obvious retorts that might have been flung back at his straightforward admission, but instead she said, with equal frankness:
“That’s just what I don’t understand.”
He threw her a puzzled look and the usual placid light in his eyes quickened to resentful impatience.
“Is that a necessary part of the contract, Miss Robson?”
She caught her breath. His tone of annoyance was sharp and unexpected. There was a suggestion of Flint’s masculine arrogance in his voice. She felt how absurd was her cross-examination of him, of how absurd, under the circumstances, would have been her cross-examination of anybody ready and willing to give her work to do and an ample wage in the bargain, and yet, for all the force of his reply, she knew it to be a well-bred if not a deliberate evasion.
“You mean it is none of my business, don’t you?” she contrived to laugh back at him.
His reply was a further surprise. “Yes, precisely,” he said, with an ominous thinning of the lips.
She rose instinctively to meet this thrust and she was conscious that even Flint had never managed so to disturb her. She glanced about hastily as if measuring the room in a swift impulse toward escape. Stillman had chosen the dining-room for a temporary office, and upon the polished surface of the antique walnut table the typewriter struck an incongruous note; indeed, it was all incongruous, particularly Stillman and his assumed business airs. Yes, it was absurd for her to either cross-examine or protest, but it was equally absurd for him to pay her such an outlandish sum for nine hours a week.
“He’s doing it for me,” she thought, not without a sense of triumph. Then, turning to him, she said, a bit awkwardly:
“I guess there isn’t any use to dissuade you, Mr. Stillman. If you say fifteen dollars a week, I sha’n’t argue with you.”
He smiled back at her, all his former suavity regained. She slid into her seat again. Her mind was recalling vividly the one other time in her life when she had grappled vigorously with the masculine spirit of domination, and come away victorious. This time she had been defeated and she had impulses toward relief and fear. She looked up suddenly and trapped a solicitous glance from Stillman that rather annoyed her. And it struck her, as she mentally compared Stillman with most of the men of her acquaintance, how far he could have loomed above them if he had had the will for such a performance. As it was he fell somewhat beneath them in a curious, indefinable way. Had he been too finely tempered by circumstances or had the flame of life lacked the proper heat for fusing his virtues effectively? For the moment she found Flint’s forthright insolence more tolerable than Stillman’s sterile deference. Suddenly she began to think of home, not with any sense of security, but as something unpleasant, dark, disquieting....