Red Pottage eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 442 pages of information about Red Pottage.

Red Pottage eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 442 pages of information about Red Pottage.

“I will break it off,” he said again.  “Thank Heaven, not a soul has ever guessed it.”

How could any one have guessed it?

He remembered the day when he had first met her a year ago, and had looked upon her as merely a pretty woman.  He remembered other days, and the gradual building up between them of a fairy palace.  He had added a stone here, she a stone there, until suddenly it became—­a prison.  Had he been tempter or tempted?  He did not know.  He did not care.  He wanted only to be out of it.  His better feelings and his conscience had been awakened by the first touch of weariness.  His brief infatuation had run its course.  His judgment had been whirled—­he told himself it had been whirled, but it had really only been tweaked—­from its centre, had performed its giddy orbit, and now the check-string had brought it back to the point from whence it had set out, namely, that she was merely a pretty woman.

“I will break with her gradually,” he said, like the tyro he was, and he pictured to himself the wretched scenes in which she would abuse him, reproach him, probably compromise herself, the letters she would write to him.  At any rate, he need not read them.  Oh! how tired he was of the whole thing beforehand.  Why had he been such a fool?  He looked at the termination of the liaison as a bad sailor looks at an inevitable sea passage at the end of a journey.  It must be gone through, but the prospect of undergoing it filled him with disgust.

A brougham passed him swiftly on noiseless wheels, and the woman in it caught a glimpse of the high-bred, clean-shaved face, half savage, half sullen, in the hansom.

“Anger, impatience, and remorse,” she said to herself, and finished buttoning her gloves.

“Thank Heaven, not a soul has ever guessed it,” repeated Hugh, fervently, as the hansom came suddenly to a stand-still.

In another moment he was taking Lady Newhaven’s hand as she stood at the entrance of her amber drawing-room beside a grove of pink orchids.

He chatted a moment, greeted Lord Newhaven, and passed on into the crowded rooms.  How could any one have guessed it?  No breath of scandal had ever touched Lady Newhaven.  She stood beside her pink orchids, near her fatigued-looking, gentle-mannered husband, a very pretty woman in white satin and diamonds.  Perhaps her blond hair was a shade darker at the roots than in its waved coils; perhaps her blue eyes did not look quite in harmony with their blue-black lashes; but the whole effect had the delicate, conventional perfection of a cleverly touched-up chromo-lithograph.  Of course, tastes differ.  Some people like chromo-lithographs, others don’t.  But even those who do are apt to become estranged.  They may inspire love, admiration, but never fidelity.  Most of us have in our time hammered nails into our walls which, though they now decorously support the engravings and etchings of our maturer years, were nevertheless originally driven in to uphold the cherished, the long since discarded chromos of our foolish youth.

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Project Gutenberg
Red Pottage from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.