Dangerous Days - Page 218/297

One morning, in his mail, Clayton Spencer received a clipping. It had

been cut from a so-called society journal, and it was clamped to the

prospectus of a firm of private detectives who gave information for

divorce cases as their specialty.

First curiously, then with mounting anger, Clayton read that the wife

of a prominent munition manufacturer was being seen constantly in out

of the way places with the young architect who was building a palace for

her out of the profiteer's new wealth. "It is quite probable," ended the

notice, "that the episode will end in an explosion louder than the best

shell the husband in the case ever turned out."

Clayton did not believe the thing for a moment. He was infuriated,

but mostly with the journal, and with the insulting inference of the

prospectus. He had a momentary clear vision, however, of Natalie, of

her idle days, of perhaps a futile last clutch at youth. He had no more

doubt of her essential integrity than of his own. But he had a very

distinct feeling that she had exposed his name to cheap scandal, and

that for nothing.

Had there been anything real behind it, he might have understood, in

his new humility, in his new knowledge of impulses stronger than

any restraints of society, he would quite certainly have made every

allowance. But for a whim, an indulgence of her incorrigible vanity! To

get along, to save Natalie herself, he was stifling the best that was in

him, while Natalie-That was one view of it. The other was that Natalie was as starved as

he was. If he got nothing from her, he gave her nothing. How was he to

blame her? She was straying along dangerous paths, but he himself had

stood at the edge of the precipice, and looked down.

Suddenly it occurred to him that perhaps, for once, Natalie was in

earnest. Perhaps Rodney was, too. Perhaps each of them had at last

found something that loomed larger than themselves. In that case? But

everything he knew of Natalie contradicted that. She was not a woman to

count anything well lost for love. She was playing with his honor, with

Rodney, with her own vanity.

Going up-town that night he pondered the question of how to take up the

matter with her. It would be absurd, under the circumstances, to take

any virtuous attitude. He was still undetermined when he reached the

house.

He found Marion Hayden there for dinner, and Graham, and a spirited

three-corner discussion going on which ceased when he stood in the

doorway. Natalie looked irritated, Graham determined, and Marion was

slightly insolent and unusually handsome.