He saw half-pleasedly, half-jealously the interest she aroused in other men. Nothing but her almost unbelievable indifference held his jealousy in check. He reflected with satisfaction that she was on a friendlier footing with him than with any other man of her acquaintance, that she had a more instant welcome for him than for any other, and for which cause he was cordially hated by several otherwise amiable gentlemen. And then he waxed gloomy, remembering how emotionless, how impersonal, that friendship really was. At times he laughed at himself wryly, recalling the passionate friendship other women had lavished upon him, and how wearisome it had been to him, how he had wished to escape it. If but a modicum of that passion had been bestowed upon him by this girl, how changed the world would be for him!
And in the meantime Anne Champneys liked him serenely, was grateful to him, aware that his intellect was as a key that was unlocking her own; welcomed him openly and was maddeningly respectful to him. This made him rage. What did she think he was, anyhow? An old professor, an antiquarian, an archaeologist? She might as well consider him an antediluvian at once!
“Marcia,” he said to Mrs. Vandervelde one evening, “I want you to tell me all you know about this Champneys business. Just exactly how does the affair stand?” Anne had been carried off by some American friends, the smart throng that had filled Mrs. Vandervelde’s rooms had gone, and Hayden and his hostess had the big, softly lighted drawing-room to themselves. At his query Mrs. Vandervelde turned in her chair, shading her eyes with her hand the better to observe him.
“Why, you know as much as I do, Berkeley! You know how and why the marriage was contracted, and what hinges upon it,” said she, cautiously.
He made an impatient gesture. “I want to know what she’s going to do. Surely she isn’t going to allow herself to be bound by that old lunatic’s will, is she?”
“He wasn’t an old lunatic; he was an old genius. Jason had an almost superstitious reverence for his judgment. Somehow, his plans always managed to come out all right,—in the end. Even when they seemed wild, they came out all right. They’re still coming out all right.”
“And you think this insane marriage is likely to come out all right in the end, too?” he asked sharply.
“I don’t know. Stranger things have happened. Why shouldn’t this?”
“Why should it? That fellow Champneys—”
“Is said to be a great painter. At least, he is certainly a very successful one. Whether or not he can make good as Anne Champneys’s husband remains to be seen.” Mrs. Vandervelde was not above the innate feminine cattiness. Hayden rose abruptly and began to pace the room. He was vaguely aware that he had been astrally scratched across the nose.
“And you think a girl like Anne will be willing to play patient Griselda?” he asked, scornfully.