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he had imagined, his troubles were to cease. He had supposed that he

was about to resume the old hermit's-cell life of the studio and live

in a world which contained only Ruth, Bill, and himself.

He was quickly undeceived. Within two days he was made aware of the

fact that Ruth was in the very centre of the social whirlpool and that

she took it for granted that he would join her there. There was nothing

of the hermit about Ruth now. She was amazingly undomestic.

Her old distaste for the fashionable life of New York seemed to have

vanished absolutely. As far as Kirk could see, she was always

entertaining or being entertained. He was pitched head-long into a

world where people talked incessantly of things which bored him and did

things which seemed to him simply mad. And Ruth, whom he had thought he

understood, revelled in it all.

At first he tried to get at her point of view, to discover what she

found to enjoy in this lunatic existence of aimlessness and futility.

One night, as they were driving home from a dinner which had bored him

unspeakably, he asked the question point-blank. It seemed to him

incredible that she could take pleasure in an entertainment which had

filled him with such depression.

"Ruth," he said impulsively, as the car moved off, "what do you see in

this sort of thing? How can you stand these people? What have you in

common with them?"

"Poor old Kirk. I know you hated it to-night. But we shan't be dining

with the Baileys every night."

Bailey Bannister had been their host on that occasion, and the dinner

had been elaborate and gorgeous. Mrs. Bailey was now one of the leaders

of the younger set. Bailey, looking much more than a year older than

when Kirk had seen him last, had presided at the head of the table with

great dignity, and the meeting with him had not contributed to the

pleasure of Kirk's evening.

"Were you awfully bored? You seemed to be getting along quite well with

Sybil."

"I like her. She's good fun."

"She's certainly having good fun. I'd give anything to know what Bailey

really thinks of it. She is the most shockingly extravagant little

creature in New York. You know the Wilburs were quite poor, and poor

Sybil was kept very short. I think that marrying Bailey and having all

this money to play with has turned her head."

It struck Kirk that the criticism applied equally well to the critic.

"She does the most absurd things. She gave a freak dinner when you were

away that cost I don't know how much. She is always doing something.

Well, I suppose Bailey knows what he is about; but at her present pace

she must be keeping him busy making money to pay for all her fads. You

ought to paint a picture of Bailey, Kirk, as the typical patient

American husband. You couldn't get a better model."

"Suggest it to him, and let me hide somewhere where I can hear what he

says. Bailey has his own opinion of my pictures."

Ruth laughed a little nervously. She had always wondered exactly what

had taken place that day in the studio, and the subject was one which

she was shy of exhuming. She turned the conversation.

"What did you ask me just now? Something about......"

"I asked you what you had in common with these people."

Ruth reflected.

"Oh, well, it's rather difficult to say if you put it like that.

They're just people, you know. They are amusing sometimes. I used to

know most of them. I suppose that is the chief thing which brings us

together. They happen to be there, and if you're travelling on a road

you naturally talk to your fellow travellers. But why? Don't you like

them? Which of them didn't you like?"

It was Kirk's turn to reflect.

"Well, that's hard to answer, too. I don't think I actively liked or

disliked any of them. They seemed to me just not worth while. My point

is, rather, why are we wasting a perfectly good evening mixing with

them? What's the use? That's my case in a nut-shell."

"If you put it like that, what's the use of anything? One must do

something. We can't be hermits."

A curious feeling of being infinitely far from Ruth came over Kirk. She

dismissed his dream as a whimsical impossibility not worthy of serious

consideration. Why could they not be hermits? They had been hermits

before, and it had been the happiest period of both their lives. Why,

just because an old man had died and left them money, must they rule

out the best thing in life as impossible and plunge into a nightmare

which was not life at all?

He had tried to deceive himself, but he could do so no longer. Ruth had

changed. The curse with which his sensitive imagination had invested

John Bannister's legacy was, after all no imaginary curse. Like a

golden wedge, it had forced Ruth and himself apart.

Everything had changed. He was no longer the centre of Ruth's life. He

was just an encumbrance, a nuisance who could not be got rid of and

must remain a permanent handicap, always in the way.

So thought Kirk morbidly as the automobile passed through the silent

streets. It must be remembered that he had been extremely bored for a

solid three hours, and was predisposed, consequently, to gloomy

thoughts.

Whatever his faults, Kirk rarely whined. He had never felt so miserable

in his life, but he tried to infuse a tone of lightness into the

conversation. After all, if Ruth's intuition fell short of enabling her

to understand his feelings, nothing was to be gained by parading them.

"I guess it's my fault," he said, "that I haven't got abreast of the

society game as yet. You had better give me a few pointers. My trouble

is that, being new to them, I can't tell whether these people are types

or exceptions. Take Clarence Grayling, for instance. Are there any more

at home like Clarence?"

"My dear child, all Bailey's special friends are like Clarence,

exactly like. I remember telling him so once."

"Who was the specimen with the little black moustache who thought

America crude and said that the only place to live in was southern

Italy? Is he an isolated case or an epidemic?"

"He is scarcer than Clarence, but he's quite a well-marked type. He is

the millionaire's son who has done Europe and doesn't mean you to

forget it."

"There was a chesty person with a wave of hair coming down over his

forehead. A sickeningly handsome fellow who looked like a poet. I think

they called him Basil. Does he run around in flocks, or is he unique?"

Ruth did not reply for a moment. Basil Milbank was a part of the past

which, in the year during which Kirk had been away, had come rather

startlingly to life.

There had been a time when Basil had been very near and important to

her. Indeed, but for the intervention of Mrs. Porter, described in an

earlier passage, she would certainly have married Basil. Then Kirk had

crossed her path and had monopolized her. During the studio period the

recollection of Basil had grown faint. After that, just at the moment

when Kirk was not there to lend her strength, he had come back into her

life. For nearly a year she had seen him daily; and gradually, at first

almost with fear, she had realized that the old fascination was by no

means such a thing of the past as she had supposed.

She had hoped for Kirk's return as a general, sorely pressed, hopes for

reinforcements. With Kirk at her side she felt Basil would slip back

into his proper place in the scheme of things. And, behold! Kirk had

returned and still the tension remained unrelaxed.

For Kirk had changed. After the first day she could not conceal it from