The Tysons eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 189 pages of information about The Tysons.

The Tysons eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 189 pages of information about The Tysons.

“Did it not occur to you that the things you like are rather expensive luxuries, some of them?”

“No.  Perhaps that’s why I hardly ever get them.”

“My dear girl, I know the precise amount of Stanistreet’s income.  Money can’t be any object to him.  But perhaps you’ve a soul above boxes at the ‘Criterion,’ and champagne suppers afterwards, and the rest of it?”

“I have, unfortunately.  But there wasn’t any champagne.”  Her indifferent voice gave the lie to her beating pulses.  Between playing and fighting there is only a difference of degree.

“Will you kindly tell me why you selected Stanistreet of all people for this business?”

“I didn’t select him—­he was always there.”

“And if it hadn’t been Stanistreet it would have been somebody else?  I see.  I hope you appreciate the peculiar advantages of his society?”

“I do.  Louis is a gentleman, though he is your friend.  He knows how to talk to women.”

“If he doesn’t it is not for want of practice.  I could swallow all this, Molly, if you were a little girl just out of the schoolroom; but—­I don’t think you’ve much to learn.”

Mrs. Nevill Tyson’s eyes flashed.  The play had turned to deadly earnest.  “Not much, thanks to you,” said she.  Her voice sank.  “Louis was good to me.”

“Was he? ‘Good’ to you—­How extremely touching!  Pray, were you good to him?”

“No—­no.”  She shook her head remorsefully.  “I wish I had been.”

Tyson knitted his brows and looked at her.  He had not quite made up his mind.

“Do you know, I don’t altogether believe in your refreshing naeivete.  Stanistreet is not ‘good’ to pretty women for nothing.  I know, and you know, that a woman who has been seen with him as you apparently have been, is not supposed to have a character to lose.”

She rose to her feet and faced him.  “How could you?  Oh, how could you?”

He shrank from her, without the least attempt to conceal his repulsion.  “If you look in the glass you’ll see.”

She turned mechanically and saw the reflection of her face, all flushed as it was and distorted, the eyes fierce with passion.  It was like the sudden leaping forth of her soul; and Mrs. Nevill Tyson’s soul, after three days’ intercourse with her husband’s, was not a thing to trust implicitly.  Without sinning it seemed unconsciously to reflect his sin.  I can not tell you how that was; marriage is a great mystery.

She understood him, though imperfectly; she understood many things now.  Oh, he was right—­she looked the part; no wonder that he hated her.  She sat down and covered her face with her hands, as if to shut out that momentary vision of herself.  Herself and not herself.  What she saw was something that had never been.  But it was something that might be—­herself, as Tyson alone had power to make her.  All this came to her as an unexplained, confused terror, a trouble of the nerves; there was no reasoning, no idea; it was all too new.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Tysons from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.