“Don’t touch you!” he cried slowly, as she left her sentence unspoken. “Well, be it so,” he added, with a piteous sigh; “I will not complain.”
“Let it be like some horrible dream,” she said, in the same low, painful whisper. “Let me—let me go away.”
“No!” he cried, with a change coming over him; and he drew himself up as if her words had given him a sudden strength. “You must stay. You have duties here, and I have mine. Claire, you must stay, and it must be to you—to me, like some horrible dream. Some day you may learn the horrible temptations that beset my path. Till then I accept my fate, for I dare not confide more, even to you. Heaven help me in this horror, and give me strength!” he muttered to himself, with closed eyes. “I dare not die; I cannot—I will not die. I must wear the mask. Two lives to live, when heretofore one only has been so hard!”
Just then there was a quick step outside, and the tall figure of Morton Denville passed the window.
The Master of the Ceremonies glanced at Claire, who started to her feet, and then their eyes met.
“For his sake, Claire,” he whispered, “if not for mine.”
“For his sake—father,” she answered, slowly and reverently, as if it were a prayer; and then to herself, “and for yours—the duty I owe you as your child.”
“And I,” he muttered to himself, as he stood with a white hand resting upon the table. “I must bear it to the end. I must wear my mask as of old, and wilt Thou give me pardon and the strength?”
Morton entered the room fresh and animated, and his eyes lit up as he saw that it was occupied.
“That’s better!” he cried. “Morning, father,” and he clasped the old man’s hand.