The listener looked blank. Even with his muddled brains he had an intimation that there was more in the statement than there seemed.
“I don’t see why,” he said bewilderedly.
Again Sidwell leaned forward. Again his face grew passionate and magnetic.
“The reason why is this. I have had enough, and more than enough, of this life I’ve been living. Unless I can find an interest, an extenuation, I would rather be dead, a hundred times over. I’ve become a nightmare to myself, and I won’t stand it. In a few days you’ll have departed, and before you return I’ll probably have gone too. Nothing but an intervention of Providence can prevent my marrying Florence Baker now. Life isn’t a story-book or we who live it undiscerning clods. She knows I am going to ask her to marry me, and I know what her answer will be. We’ll be away on our wedding-trip long before you and Elise return in the Fall.” The speaker’s voice was sober. Only the heightened color of his face betrayed him.
“I say I’m through with this sort of thing,” he repeated, “and I mean it. I’ve tried everything on the face of the earth to find an interest—but one—and Florence Baker represents that one. I hope against hope that I’ll find what I’m searching for there, but I am skeptical. I have been disappointed too many times to expect happiness now. This is my last trump, old man, and I’m playing it deliberately and carefully. If it fails, Florence will probably return; but before God, I never will! I have thought it all out. I will leave her more money than she can ever spend—enough if she wishes to buy the elect of the elect. She is young, and she will soon forget—if it’s necessary. With me, my actions have largely ceased to be a matter of ethics. I am desperate, Hough, and a desperate man takes what presents itself.”
But Hough was in no condition to appreciate the meaning of the selfish revelation of his friend’s true character. Since he married his lapses had been infrequent, and already his surroundings were becoming a bit vague. His one ambition was to appear what he was not—sober; and he straightened himself stiffly.
“I see,” he said, “sorry to lose you, old pal, very sorry; but what must be must be, I s’pose,” and he drew himself together with a jerk.
Sidwell glanced at the speaker sarcastically, almost with a shade of contempt. “I know you’re sorry, deucedly sorry,” he mocked. “So sorry that you’d probably like to drown your excess of emotion in the flowing bowl.” Again the ironic glance swept the other’s face. “Another smile would be good for you, anyway. You’re entirely too serious. Here you are!” and the decanter once more did service.
Hough picked up his glass and nodded with gravity “Yes, I always was a sad devil.” By successive movements the liquor approached his lips. “Lots of troubles and tribulations all my—”
The sentence was not completed; the Cognac remained untasted. At that moment there was a knock upon the door.