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The Genius by Theodore Dreiser

Suzanne stared into his distraught face, his handsome, desperate, significant eyes. She saw the woe there, the agony, and was sympathetic. He seemed wonderfully worthy of love, unhappy, unfortunately pursued; and yet she was frightened. Still she had promised to love him.

“No,” she said fixedly, her eyes speaking a dramatic confidence.

“You won’t leave here tonight?”

“No.”

She smoothed his cheek with her hand.

“You will come and walk with me in the morning? I have to talk with you.”

“Yes.”

“Don’t be afraid. Just lock your door if you are. She won’t bother you. She won’t do anything. She is afraid of me. She may want to talk with you, but I am close by. Do you still love me?”

“Yes.”

“Will you come to me if I can arrange it?”

“Yes.”

“Even in the face of what she says?”

“Yes; I don’t believe her. I believe you. What difference could it make, anyhow? You don’t love her.”

“No,” he said; “no, no, no! I never have.” He drew her into his arms wearily, relievedly. “Oh, Flower Face,” he said, “don’t give me up! Don’t grieve. Try not to, anyhow. I have been bad, as she says, but I love you. I love you, and I will stake all on that. If all this must fall about our heads, then let it fall. I love you.”

Suzanne stroked his cheek with her hands nervously. She was deathly pale, frightened, but somehow courageous through it all. She caught strength from his love.

“I love you,” she said.

“Yes,” he replied. “You won’t give me up?”

“No, I won’t,” she said, not really understanding the depth of her own mood. “I will be true.”

“Things will be better tomorrow,” he said, somewhat more quietly. “We will be calmer. We will walk and talk. You won’t leave without me?”

“No.”

“Please don’t; for I love you, and we must talk and plan.”

Chapter 10

The introduction of this astonishing fact in connection with Angela was so unexpected, so morally diverting and peculiar that though Eugene denied it, half believed she was lying, he was harassed by the thought that she might be telling the truth. It was so unfair, though, was all he could think, so unkind! It never occurred to him that it was accidental, as indeed it was not, but only that it was a trick, sharp, cunning, ill-timed for him, just the thing calculated to blast his career and tie him down to the old régime when he wanted most to be free. A new life was dawning for him now. For the first time in his life he was to have a woman after his own heart, so young, so beautiful, so intellectual, so artistic! With Suzanne by his side, he was about to plumb the depths of all the joys of living. Without her, life was to be dark and dreary, and here was Angela coming forward at the critical moment disrupting this dream as best she could by the introduction of a child that she did not want, and all to hold him against his will. If ever he hated her for trickery and sharp dealing, he did so now. What would the effect on Suzanne be? How would he convince her that it was a trick? She must understand; she would. She would not let this miserable piece of chicanery stand between him and her. He turned in his bed wearily after he had gone to it, but he could not sleep. He had to say something, do something. So he arose, slipped on a dressing gown, and went to Angela’s room.

That distraught soul, for all her determination and fighting capacity, was enduring for the second time in her life the fires of hell. To think that in spite of all her work, her dreams, this recent effort to bring about peace and happiness, perhaps at the expense of her own life, she was compelled to witness a scene like this. Eugene was trying to get free. He was obviously determined to do so. This scandalous relationship, when had it begun? Would her effort to hold him fail? It looked that way, and yet surely Suzanne, when she knew, when she understood, would leave him. Any woman would.

Her head ached, her hands were hot, she fancied she might be suffering a terrible nightmare, she was so sick and weak; but, no, this was her room. A little while ago she was sitting in her husband’s studio, surrounded by friends, the object of much solicitude, Eugene apparently considerate and thoughtful of her, a beautiful programme being rendered for their special benefit. Now she was lying here in her room, a despised wife, an outcast from affection and happiness, the victim of some horrible sorcery of fate whereby another woman stood in her place in Eugene’s affection. To see Suzanne, proud in her young beauty, confronting her with bold eyes, holding her husband’s hand, saying in what seemed to her to be brutal, or insane, or silly melodramatic make-believe, “But I love him, Mrs. Witla,” was maddening. Oh, God! Oh, God! Would her tortures never cease? Must all her beautiful dreams come to nothing? Would Eugene leave her, as he so violently said a little while ago? She had never seen him like this. It was terrible to see him so determined, so cold and brutal. His voice had actually been harsh and guttural, something she had never known before in him.

She trembled as she thought, and then great flashes of rage swept her only to be replaced by rushes of fear. She was in such a terrific position. The woman was with him, young, defiant, beautiful. She had heard him call to her, had heard them talking. Once she thought that now would be the time to murder him, Suzanne, herself, the coming life and end it all; but at this critical moment, having been sick and having grown so much older, with this problem of the coming life before her, she had no chart to go by. She tried to console herself with the thought that he must abandon his course, that he would when the true force of what she had revealed had had time to sink home; but it had not had time yet. Would it before he did anything rash? Would it before he had completely compromised himself and Suzanne? Judging from her talk and his, he had not as yet, or she thought not. What was he going to do? What was he going to do?

Angela feared as she lay there that in spite of her revelation he might really leave her immediately. There might readily spring a terrible public scandal out of all this. The mockery of their lives laid bare; the fate of the child jeopardized; Eugene, Suzanne, and herself disgraced, though she had little thought for Suzanne. Suzanne might get him, after all. She might accidentally be just hard and cold enough. The world might possibly forgive him. She herself might die! What an end, after all her dreams of something bigger, better, surer! Oh, the pity, the agony of this! The terror and horror of a wrecked life!

And then Eugene came into the room.

He was haggard, stormy-eyed, thoughtful, melancholy, as he entered. He stood in the doorway first, intent, then clicked a little night-lamp button which threw on a very small incandescent light near the head of Angela’s bed, and then sat down in a rocking-chair which the nurse had placed near the medicine table. Angela had so much improved that no night nurse was needed—only a twelve-hour one.

“Well,” he said solemnly but coldly, when he saw her pale, distraught, much of her old, youthful beauty still with her, “you think you have scored a splendid trick, don’t you? You think you have sprung a trap? I simply came in here to tell you that you haven’t—that you have only seen the beginning of the end. You say you are going to have a child. I don’t believe it. It’s a lie, and you know it’s a lie. You saw that there was an end coming to all this state of weariness some time, and this is your answer. Well, you’ve played one trick too many, and you’ve played it in vain. You lose. I win this time. I’m going to be free now, I want to say to you, and I am going to be free if I have to turn everything upside down. I don’t care if there were seventeen prospective children instead of one. It’s a lie, in the first place; but if it isn’t, it’s a trick, and I’m not going to be tricked any longer. I’ve had all I want of domination and trickery and cheap ideas. I’m through now, do you hear me? I’m through.”

He felt his forehead with a nervous hand. His head ached, he was half sick. This was such a dreary pit to find himself in, this pit of matrimony, chained by a domineering wife and a trickily manœuvred child. His child! What a mockery at this stage of his life! How he hated the thought of that sort of thing, how cheap it all seemed!

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